Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 147, 1 May 1914 — Page 8

PAGE EIGHT

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1914 Bv NELL BR INK LEY DISTURB "Good-Bye, Winter. Hello, Spring!"

WEDDING

I BY LEASED WIRE LONDON, May l.-rA squad of militant suffragetes created an uproar at St. James church in Piccadillo yesterday during the wedding of Noel Baxton, a prominent member of parliament, and Miss Lucy Pelham. The women entered the church several hours before the time set for the ceremony and hid under seats. As the bridal party entered the militants emerged from their hiding places and shouted: "Votes for women; we want votes." They were seized by the ushers and ejected, screaming and fighting their captors. , : V Keep Bowel Movement Regular. Dr. King's New Life Pills keep stomach, liver and kidneys in healthy condition. Rid the body of poisons and waste. Improve your complexion by flushing the liver and kidneys. , "I got. more relief from one box, of Dr. King's New Life Pills than any medicine I ever tried." says C. E. Hatfield, of Chicago, 111. 25c. Recommended by A. G. Luken & Co. (Advertisement)

EATON GRADUTION

EATON, O., May 1. The annual commencement exercises of the Jackson township schools will be held next Tuesday, May 5, in the Central high school building at Campbellstown. The chief address will be delivered to the class by Superintendent C. W. Cookson, of the Troy high school.. The program follows: Invocation Rev. Frank J. Long. Address Superintendent Cookson. Presentation of Diplomas 1 rincipal Joseph S. McDivitt. The class is composed of the following members: Esther M. Sloane, Everett G. Geeting, Gladys M. Larsh, Lowell C. Culbertson, Edith A. Cail, Carl W. Watts, Ethel M. Earmar, Wilbur B. Duffield, Mabel Thompson and Harold V. House.

TO INVADE OHIO

Richmond high school nine will invade New Paris, O., today to do battle with the high team of that place. Hafner will start the heaving for the red and white, with Williams to cover a possible retreat. Kinsella, who starred in the Earlham game, will be in the right garden again.

Married Life the Fourth Year

BY MABEL HERBERT URNER. "Witn no prices on me menu!" repeated Helen in amazement. "Then mey can cnarte us anyming they pitase V '1 hat's the idea. Most of the smart places in Paris never price their food, juey rt suppooea to cater to people wno re concerned only with the quality of the dishes not witn the price." "But Warren, WE don't want to ko

Winter in her yellow fox furs and her velvet coatee is wringin out her hanchnafis andi Spring Spring in her trouser-skirt and her ribboned ankles her side-light curl, and her littla holdin' up one cold foot, cause mankind is kissin' her good-by and turning to the soft, bare arms of i bit-liddie stuck high on her head, and her bouf fa nt draperies ! It's Goodby, Winter, Hello, Spring 1

to such a place! I'd be so worried

herself up to a study of the place. "Not a bad looking girl over there

menu a large card with a fantastica Hit Hopnro f oH Vk-TH cur rf lAhotra a r rl

wruai. me lueii was going io crabs. She had hoDed all alonz that In vellow." commented Warren.

v r, dnt eat. a tnin8- . i Warren was wrong and that the prices j "I was just going to speak of her Well, were going to one right nowiwould De glveDi but there was not a that's the most WONDERFUL gown!" lor Uiuiier cate d Armenonvine. One Singie figure. This bill of fare was to i The girl was dark and slender, with oi tne snow places in the Bols. You'll , show only what you could get not i heavy brown hair drawn low Into a see more smart Parisians there than j what you vould have to pay for lt j simple coll on her neck. Her dress ouv seen yet. While were over j ..oh dear just order one or two i was of pale yellow chiffon, with brown uere were going to do Paris. Whatjthings? rm not very hungry and I fringe; her hat of the same chiffon ditference noes a few dollars make , yotl had luncheon, didn't you?" was wreathed with yellow petalled, UD-RnfyriJr in. nnV Hro.H ' But Warren only glowered at her, brown eyed daisies, and the stream...B.USdrllx.DOt dressed for aiand Eave his order to the waiter bv ers of brown velvet ribbon were knot-

pieieilllUUS JJiace. I i ,s ,. u,. .-, ". toH unHor hor r-hlti

viumu w &- . " vu iiio pvn.ii rvuav y-f l

this sauce didn't want a price put on Helen leaned forward to see the total, it. You can't price a thing like that But Warren took it up quickly, glanced any more than you can price a rare 1 over the items, drew a crisp note from picture," enthused Warren, growing j nis wallet and laid it over the check, eloquent under the influence of the j Helen was not familiar enough with vintage wine. ; French money to know the amount

Even Helen forgot her dread of the : of the note, nor could she tell by the

the dishes with the longest and, as

"Well put on something light then

anvthiTicr Hn Thaw rl rr, 'r Avwtn

Americans to dress much. They think "ele th&ht most expensive look-

we all come from a sort of wild and; 6 x

woolly west. All thev want is our ; rsow, see nere, w

money." 1 had gone," his Isn't so bad as you

Well I don't think we've got so much, ' laughed Helen. "Not enough to go to a place where they don't price

their food.

think. The theory of this is that they

charge in proportion to what you order. For instance, if you only have a

j roast and a salad, you pay more pro

Most of the hats had either ties or

streamers with the trimming placed at some daring angle. While they must

hen the waiter hav! looked very extreme in the shop

women who wore them. "After all, the French women DO know how to wear their clothes." "The ones you see here ought to,"

Warren's comment. "That s

check and became enthusiastic when the waiter served the fruits au champagne. It was a tall glass dish of cut fruit, wonderful strawberries, cherries, pineapples and peaches floating in iced syrup of blended wines and cordials.

ten that the cab was waiting and they had been there almost three hours! Warren located their driver and in a few moments they were whirling back through the Champs Elysees,

change returned

"Dear, how much was that check?" unable to keep back the question. "Well, I've paid it, haven't I? And it was a blamed good dinner. Now we'll have no harangues over expenses

this evening. Come on

When later the check was brought we can find that cab."

face down on a place, instinctively The cab! Helen had wholly forgot- Instead she was sitting bolt upright,

I

I now more beautiful than ever with the lights gleaming through the wark

j trees, and with every now and then a ! glimpse of the Seine and its jewelled bridges.

But the charm of all this was lost

-let's see if on Helen. She was not leaning back

and enjoying the beauty of the drive.

every muscle strained, as she tensely tried to figure out how much that dinner and-the three hours' wait of th cab must have cost.

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' 1 .wv. ) r - wan ... . i j m . nnrtinnntalv fr,l- thnaa t urr, rllchAa than 1

uuess we tau o tall U 1L lur once. " """ " " . nHniit their nnlv Inh " liurry up-it s almost seven." you would if you had four or five, j haveVt any idea what I'm A little later they left the hotel. That fair enough. ! eating," Helen exclaimed suddenly. Outside Warren raised his cane at a! Well, if that s their method, then "Well it's good isn't if That's pilE.ax.l,.,... 'why don,t they put down the Prices; sweet bread with ' truffles and wine WARREN DETERMINED. j and deduct a certain percentage when ' sauce, en casserole--one of their spe"Of course we've got to have a i you order a number of things? i cialties here. Only place in Paris you cab,' impatiently, as Helen made her i Wouldn't that be a good idea for any 1 ran ef,t u,o this "

uouaj luicDt. l a iuc uuij way yuu j i esiauraui ; J mil ft uuw mucu mure can get to that place. Now you leave people would order if they felt they this to me. We're going to Armenon- were getting a discount."

vine's tonight, and we're going to do the thing right. Hang the expense!" When Warren started out in this spirit Helen knew it was useless to try to curb him. He was in the mood to spend money and he was going to spend it. She learned back in the cab with a sigh of resignation. But as this was Helen's first drive through the Champs Elyses, she soon forgot everything else in the beauty of the scene. Under the trees, all along the drive.

were chairs and tables, mostly desert

ed now. the few

"Huh! Sort of on the principle of, five cents apiece, six for a quarter!", grinned Warren. "But don't you see people WOULD j order more," insisted Helen growing enthusiastic over her idea. "I'm sure any of the big New York restaurants would coin money on that plan." "Better try to sell 'em the idea when you get back," scoffed Warren. "They might pay you something for it." "Well, they might!" defiantly. Just then a striking beauty, in a rllnpln? white enwn anri a rirnnnin?

But from the gay gowns Of I jot,v,nrn v.at with rfr1 nnnnlps Bwent

people who still lingered : hv ,MVre a trail of tiprfume.

Helen could imagine what have been an hour earlier.

1 11 not nave the time, but you i

ought to come out to the Bois some afternoon for tea, ' suggested Warren. "Nothing like it in the world. One of the snow places of Paris. There's Armenonvllle's through there," pointing to a mass of brilliant lights glimmering through a grove of trees. Cabs, taxies and- victorias were lined up three and four abreast In the wide graveled driveways before this famous restaurant. "But we're not going to keep this taxi?" asked Helen anxiously, as they waited their turn to drive up before the entrance. "That'B just what we're going to do," snapped Warren. "We'll not take any chances of getting one when we're through." To order dinner from an unpriced menu, and to feel that a taxi was Industriously ticking up the francs the evening held little prospect of pleasure for Helen. Warren led the way through the spacious hallway to the garden beyond. The place was like fairyland, with banks of red geranlus, a gleaming fountain, and ropes of colored lights festooned through trees and shrubbery. There must have been a hundred or more tables on the lawn, yet all were taken, and a group of people were waiting. "You stay here." Warren strode off determinedly after a headwaiter. Helen's gaze followed him anxiously. She saw him slip some money into the hand of the suave Frenchman, and a moment later they were being seated at one of the few tables that had been "reserved." "Warren, I thought you didn't believe in bribing headwaiters?" "Well, you've got to do It here. This is a show place, I tell you, and you've got to come across. We'd have stood there all night without a table if I hadn't forked up." HER FIRST CONCERN. Helen's UrBt concern was in the

it must j "Dear, some of the gowns ARE

! beautiful," mused Helen, now giving

But to Helen the food was always

secondary to the atmosphere of .the place and the people. And now she absent-mindedly ate her dinner, intent upon the scene about her. "A woman never has any palate," grumbled Warren. "This dish is a work of art. There's a smoothness and flavor to this sauce that you wouldn't get anywhere else in the world. But. you don't appreciate it! A dinner like this is wasted on any woman." "Why, dear, that isn't fair," indignantly. "I think it's delicious, and I'm eating every bit of it." A TREAT. "Oh, you're eating it. but might as well be eating corned beef hash in a dairy lunch room. I tell you this is a treat! No wonder the chef who made

A Doctor's First Question Is.

. G. W.

"How are Your Bowels?" A Simple Remedy that Guarantees Good Bowel Action. Trace the origin of the commoner ills of life and almost invariably you will find that constipation was the cause. It is not to be expectea that a mass of fermented food can remain in the system beyond its time without vitiating the blood and affecting the nerves and muscles. It congests the entire body. The results are colds, fevers, piles, headaches, and nervousness, with its accompanying indigestion and sleeplessness. There is only one thing to do, and that is to remove the trouble;

and when nature seems unable to do i it, outside aid is necessary. You will find the best of all outside aids a rem- j

edy that many thousands are now us- temporary good,. Syrup Pepsin cures ing for this very purpose, called Dr. permanently. The effect of its action Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. Many hun- is to train the stomach and bowel musdreds of letters are received by Dr. cles to do their work naturally again, Caldwell telling of the good results ob- i and in a short time all forms of meditained, and among the enthusiastic let-, cine can be dispensed with. It can be ters is one from Lieut. G. W. Vaughan, 1 bought without inconvenience at any of 623 W. North St., Decatur, 111. He nearby drug store for fifty cents and is 72 and has had a bad liver and ! one dollar a bottle, the latter size bestomach since he came out of the ' ing regularly bought by those who alarmy. He says he tried about every- ready know its value. Results are althing, but never succeeded In getting : ways guaranteed or money will be repermanent relief until he took Dr. funded. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. He Is never Families wishing to try a free samwithout a bottle in the house, and he I pie bottle can obtain it postpaid by adis never without good health. j drescing Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 419 WashIt has untold advantages over pills, j Ington St., Monticello, 111. A postal salts and the various coarse cathartics j card with your name and address on it and purgatives, for while these do but will do. j

LIEUT

VAUGHAN

Another Remarkakle Offering From Our New Millinery Section

Second Floor

! fr m

DAY

Tomorrow, SATUR

We place on sale 150 Fashionably Trimmed Hats, worth $5, $650 and $7 While they last r

In the lot are pretty Ribbon trimmed hats, pretty flower trimmed hats, so many that are equally beautiful, equally stylish, that we could hardly make up our minds how or which to describeThere are new Sailors that are tilted and Sailors that are straight, Sailors that are trimmed beneath and Sailors with ribbons and flowers all around the crown, new gros-grain moire ribbons, new lacquered ribbons, new little posies and quaint little flowers. And the new flat hats a plenty. Hats that shelve out at the side or back to accommodate great bows of silk, jaunty little cornered affairs and Toques and Turbans and Watteau effects in endless variety values at 59 6o5D aod Tt

9 TirSmmimiedU Special Tomorrow

the: home: of bvtterick patterns