Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 198, 2 August 1915 — Page 10

PAGE TEN

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, AUGUST 2, 1915

EN CANVASS HILTON NODES FOR CONTRACTS

: MILTON, IND., Aug. 2. -The following young people enjoyed a moonlight picnic at (he old fair grounds at Connersville, Thursday evening. Vernon Thompson, guest of honor, Ralph Moore, Ross Doddridge, Delmar Doddridge, James Murphy, Glen Elwell, Misses Gussie Miller, Irene Crook, Lorene Warren, Lora Beeson, Blanche and Helen Coyne. An elegant picnic supper was served. Miss Mary Ward, who recently returned from a visit at Dayton, Ohio, returned to her aunt's at Brookville, Saturday. W. H. Harris, who has been visiting relatives here and at Cambridge City, was called to his home at Indianapolis, by the sudden illness of his wife. Mrs. Emma Frazee and daughter, Miss Berta, have gone to Duluth, Minnesota, to spend a few weeks with the son and brother, Charles Frazee, and wife. The Eastern Star will meet Wednesday evening. The Rebekah Lodge will have work Tuesday evening. Mrs. Emma Winsett, who has been in attendance on her sister, Miss Nora Campbell, returned to her home at Richmond, Friday evening. Miss Campbell is better again. Canvass Milton. Ccn-ii'tees on lighting the town, ' f town board, are making the now for subscribers for con- : of lighting their houses with .ekcUiclty. Mr. and Mrs. Will Scott, of south of town, had as their guests, Friday, Mr. "and Mrs. Frank Scott, of east of town. The Christian Church orchestra enjoyed a fine rehearsal at the church f'rlday evening. Walter Templin, who recently bought the W. P. . Moore grocery in . the south part of town, is making several improvements that makes his store more attractive. Will Stahl, of Richmond, spent Friday with his wife's parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Coons. Dan Hess and Lafe Raylc are employed laying floors at the new building being built by Alonzo Boyd, of Cambridge City. ; Mrs. Rebecca Werklng and daughter, Mrs. Lafe Rayle, spent Friday at Cambridge City, the guests of Mrs. John Ohmit.

' Northern Argentine has 34,668 acres devoted to peanue growing.

A Man and His Wife

BY VIRGINIA TERHUNE VAN DE WATER. CHAPTER XLVI. - (Copyright, 1915, Star Company.) ; When the stream of vehicles had passed, David Duval touched his companion's arm lightly. "Come," he said, "we can ' cross now." When they had reached the street, she looked up into his face, her eyes full of piteous Inquiry. "Yes," he answered her unspoken question, "I saw them, dear Mrs. Hamilton. But please don't look so unhappy. It's nothing really. ! Lots of men and women have such pleasant friendship, and" She cut short his lame attempt to explain away a situation that she felt to be unexplainable. "Don't!" she ejaculated sharply. "Don't lie for me. I would have died before I would have told you but you have seen for yourself. This Is but the culmination of things that I have pretended not to see and not to believe. But now you can understand that it was not the weather that depressed me. Oh" throwing back her head with a harsh laugh "what has come over me that I should talk like this to you? John has a right to his friends and friendships. I don't care what he does. His life is bis own, and my life is my own. 1 am glad yes, glad that he has shown me this truth. "At first I was a silly girl-wife, with all kinds of ideals about love and marriage about each of us being the counterpart of the other. You know the stuff silly sentimentalists talk 'two souls with but a single thought, two hearts that beat as one' and all that nonsense. Well, I believed that. Now I know better. Poor John!" with another laugh "what a horrid time 1 must have given him since our marriage! for I have been very exacting. But now I understand the rules of the game and) I will take things differently." She was walking rapidly up Eighth avenue, a bright red spot in each cheek. , Her companion knew that she was talking wildly, yet he did not try to check her. Instead, he seemed to fall in with her mood. "Well," he observed, "different people have different ideas of marriage. Some people consider the state one of pleasant companionship and expect nothing in the way of romance. But most young people are taught to think of marriage as perfect happiness." Natural to Want to Be Happy. "Isn't it natural," she asked more more quietly, "to want to be happy?" "Perfectly natural," he replied. "But from what I have seen of marriage it is ' not always here that true happiness is to be found."

"No perhaps not," she said. "You see," with a little catch in her breath, "I fas Ignorant when I married. I was an Idealist and tried hard to live up to my ideals. Now I have learned more wisdom but the learning has been hard- And I can't help wanting my happiness." "And you have a right to it!" he declared, his face flushing. This woman awakened in him a desire to give her that for which she longed. He was a man of the world, and had thought that he had passed the age where he was susceptible to the charms of most women. '.:.V But Isabel Hamilton had appealed to him from the first; he had called himself a fool when he felt his heart beat faster at sight of her. Now he wanted to tell her that he cared for her; that he wished he could make her happy. Yet he hesitated. Expediency and good taste are powerful factors even when a man's morals are somewhat lax. ':' .' v "I don't know just where I will find the happiness you say is , my right," she mused. "But," she added, her eyes flashing, "I am going to have it; I won't have my life cramped and spoiled just because I had ideals that nobody could live up to. That has nothing to do with myself now. I mean to take my happiness I mean to help myself to it." They had reached Ninety-fourth street, and were waiting to cross the avenue. The rumble of a passing car made David Duval's words almost Indistinct as he i bent his head close to hers. "Perhaps," he murmured, "when you know me a little better you will let me help you to your happiness will you, dear lady?" She did not reply until the car had passed, and they had turned down Ninety-fourth street. Then she smiled, but her lips trembled. "I don't know what I shall do," she said. "Everything is so jumbled and mixed up in my mind that I don't know myself or anybody else." "Won't you try to know me well enough to believe that I am your friend?" he asked. She was silent until she reached the house in which she lived. Then she turned to him with a gesture of appeal. "Please believe that I know you are my friend," she said impulsively. "Please believe, too, that you have come into my life just when I needed a friend. And one thing more and this is the biggest 'please' of all. Please oh please try to forget all the things I said a while ago the silly, crazy, wrong things the things that were in such wretched taste! I don't know why I shiuld have spoken as 1 did. It was the impulse of an insane,

suspicious moment, I suppose. But yon will forget it, wont you?" She was standing on the step above him, and he stood with his hat In his hand, looking up at her. "If you said wrong or foolish things," he promised, "I will surely forget them indeed, I must already have forgotten them, for I recall no such speeches on your part. But" a softer cadence in his voice "there are some thing you have said that I do not want to forget that I could not forget. Good-night!" As she turned from him and climbed the stairs to her apartment, the pressure of his hand-clasp was still warm on her fingers. Unhappy as she had been, life did not seem as dark as it had seemed a little while ago. An hour later, when John came in, he greeted his wife pleasantly, and she returned his greeting in the same way. She told herself that she was so tired of thinking that nothing mattered much. If she was unusually quiet, he did not notice it. Nor did he notice that the vase on her desk held a dozen beautiful tea-roses. Yet before she went to bed she bent over them and inhaled with delight a long breath of their perfume". They had come with David Duval's card a half hour after he had told her good-bye at her front door. To Be Continued.

DUNLAPSVILLE

Mr. and Mrs. Claude Geise and son spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Huntington near Cottage Grove. Wallace Nickels visited his sister, Lizzie Nickels, Wednesday at Freeport. She is in ill health. Mrs. Burr and Mrs. Ollie Collyer of Quakertown were here Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. George Hughes, Miss Stella Leech and Charles Wright motored to Connersville Thursday evening. Mrs. Ira Shepard and son were in Liberty Friday. Born, to Mr. and Mrs. Frank Murphy, of Indianapolis, a boy. Mrs. Maud Husted and Mrs. Ella Husted spent Friday here with Mrs. Allie Brandenburg. Misses Lorella and Dorlys Kennett were in Liberty Saturday. Miss Ella Husted spent the week here with friends. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fisher entertained Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. George Stanley and children, Mrs. Jennie Hill and daughter, James Bryson and family.

BETWEEN THE LINES

A special train will go through Richmond on August 3. with a party of Shrtners from St Louis, on their way to attend the convention at Pittsburgh.. ; F. S. Campbell, baggage man at the Pennsylvania depot, is away on a vacation.

W. E. Hudson, general superintend

ent of the C. & O. railroad; passed

through Richmond, in his private car

this morning on an inspection trip from' Covington, Kentucky to Chicago. R. E. McCarty, general superintendent of lines west of Pittsburgh, for the Pennsylvania - railroad, passed through Richmond yesterday on his way to his summer home at Walloon lake, Michigan. Edward Henshaw, an operator on the P. R. R., is spending his vacation in the New England states Walter S. Reed returned yesterday from a trip to New York and Washington.

residents, Philip Hamm, a liquor deal

er will fight charges niea against nun at Tipton,; a dry town.: tor selling liquor without a license.

Chocrful

Story

Three members to take the place of George Eggemeyer, C. W. Jordan and E. Gurney Hill, whose terms expire, will be elected to the board

LIBERTY

DEAD BUT LIVES.

DANVILLE, Ind., Aug. 2. Following the receipt of a letter from Omaha, Neb., stating that he was ill, relatives of Madison Gregg Dibble, declared legally dead twenty years ago, are planning a family reunion after forty years' separation.

Siam postoffices last year handled 5,873,652 pieces of mail.

Miss Margaret Dugan was in Connersville Saturday and Sunday. Mrs. Dan Hollingsworth of Indianapolis is visiting Clint Hollingsworth and family. Misses Ruth Kain and Ascha Hollingsworth visited Joe Bennett and family last week. Miss Phoebe Cunningham of Dunlapsville Is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Burton Clark. Miss Jacqueline Swain of Indianapolis is visiting Miss Leta Logue, east of town. E. R. Beard will spend next Saturday and Sunday in Greenfield. O. Eli Pigman returned to his home in Birmingham after a week's visit with his parents. Miss Clementine Phares spent Monday with Miss Ruth Brookbank, south of town. Mrs. Louise Cummings and daughter Ruth are visiting home folks. Miss Laura Hill was the guest of her sister, Mrs. George Stanley, near Philomath last week.

POLICE HOLD BEER.

ELWOOD, Ind., Aug. 2. Because the police confiscated a truck load of beer consigned by him to Tipton

of Roy Dunham 6th St. Tailor Catarrh Yields to the Master Medicine.

FASHION SHOP Suburban Day Sale WEDNESDAY

Perhaps one of the most convincing testimonials yet received for Tanlac, the Master Medicine, now being Introduced in Richmond, is that of R. E. Benham, the popular tailor of 14 North Sixth street, this city. Mr. Benham, ho is a member of the Clerks' Union and also of the T. M. A., in talking to the Tanlac man yesterday, said: "I do not know of a more severe case of catarrhal disorder than that with which I suffered. My stomach was in a terrible condition and gas accumulations after meals caused me agonies. "I was nervous all of the time; sleep brought but little rest, and I would awaken in the morning, all tired out. "A friend of mine suggested Tanlac; 1 am now taking my second bottle of this splendid preparation, and it has made a new man of me; all catarrhal pffections have disappeared. I sleep soundly, eat heartily and have not the slightest pain or digestive trouble. I gladly recommend this Master Medicine to any one suffering as I did." Tanlac, the celebrated new medicine, which has accomplished such remarkable results in and about Richmond, is sold exclusively at Thistlethwaite's drug store, 6th and Main streets, where the Tanlac man Is meeting the public daily and explaining the remedy. Adv.

Sale-ins: l along: in I I I Great Style. I I 1 The Vogue 923 MAIN.

LYNN, FOUNTAIN CITY, tzj RICHMOND AUTO UNE

Headquarters Knollsnberfl's '.- Anne

; Owned and Operated by J. H. Oenlson ,

Two Regular Trips Are Made Dai

Between the Above Points. Leave Richmond at 10:30 and : p. m. Leave Fountain City at 11:30 and B: p. m. Arrive Lynn at 12 noon and 6:00 p. : Leavo Lynn at 7 a. m. and 1 p. m.

Leave Fountain City at 7:30 a. m. si

1:30 p. m.

Arrive Richmond at 8: so a. m. ai

m -d ost

Si

Beautiful Stenciled Borders

Decorate your rooms the fashionable way, with, beautifully ( tinted walls and charming stenciled borders of

M I -- r

The BtMdM Wan Tbt

The beautiful wall tinting material that does not rub off, chip nor peel when applied according to directions on package. A. G. LUKEN & CO. 630 Main Street

COOP

;rs

Coffee

Palladium Want Ads. PayJ

i i ' n i i j LJ l -v--i i i i 1 i ygp-i

Good Furniture Our reputation for selling onlyfurniture of good quality, give our customers perpetual confidence.

Take Adlvannttaigs Now 2 ttHne

Lowest! PirilcBcs we Even0 Qiinottcdl A I WAYS A LITTLE BETTER FOR A LITTLE LESS

Good Furniture

The policy of this store demands that we distribute only furniture of the highest character. To maintain a quality shop is our greatest ambition.

BIG REDUCTIONS ON ALL

$33.00 White Enamel Solid Oak Re- QOQ CA frigerator, now $29.75 Solid Oak Refrigerator, now $22.00 $9.50 Knickerbocker Refrigerator, now.. $6.95 $8.00 Knickerbocker Refrigerator, now.. $5.00

Library Furniture ROCKERS IN ALL FINISHES ROCKERS COMBINATION BOOK CASES SECTIONAL

At Close Out Prices $4.00 Reed Arm Rockers, now $2.98 $5.00 Roll Arm Rockers, now $3.40 $6.50 Old Hickory Rockers, now $4.20 $5.00 Old Reed Arm Chairs, now $3.15 $19.50 Imported Sea Grass Rocker. . $6.95 $10.00 Couch Hammock, now $5.98

SPECIAL BED Quarter'd Oak Only $29.75

Like Cut. Highly Polished. Parlor Style. One Motion Guaranteed Chase Leather. Only

$29.75

Dining Room Furniture Make Your Dining Room Complete During This Sale. $32.00 Buffets, now .$25.40 I $37.00 China Closets ...$26.40 $26.00 Buffets, now $20.80 $27.00 China Closets ...$19.50 $49.00 Buffets, now ....$33.00 Others at $14.85, $16.70 Up.

All Oak Library Tables as Low as $6.40, $8.00, $10.00, $12.50, $18.00, $22.50 Up.

All Merchandise In Our Store Marked Down 20 to 33 -1-3. Excepting Trade-mark Goods.

OUR HYGENO CARPET SWEEPER $3.00 Value Our Price $1.18

Extra Large Size OIL MOP And One Quart of Oil A Big $2 Value Sale Price $1.00

Qt. Sawed Oak 6-foot Extension Top Golden Oak or Fumed

This Good Looking TABLE Only $12.95

DINING CHAIRS . . . . .70c, $1.00, $1.20, $1.60 and Up

Bed Room Furniture Extraordinary Showing in This Department. 20 to 33 1-3 off on Dressers, Chiffoniers, Beds, Bedding, Etc.

Biggest Showing of Brass Beds in the City. We Have Them as Low as

Mattresses and Springs Buy our $11.00 Newton Felt MATTRESS Sale Price, Only $8.80 Others $3, $4.95, $6.50, $7.65, $11 up.

Metal Sanitary Springs on sale at $2.75, $3.95, $4.40, $5.75 and Up

KITCHEN NEEDS Kitchen Cabinets in all grades. We have them in six different styles and makes. These carry a big discount.

r

Drop Leaf Tables All Oak Finish Now $4.40

Kitchen Tables at $2.00 Kitchen Chairs 70c up.

STOOL SPECIAL A strong ladestule, regular $1 value now 79c We sell the celebrated Jewel Stoves and Ranges. Ask to see our new Florence Oil Stove, the oil stove that does satisfy.

Matchless Oearance Sales in All Departments

RUG SPECIAL A 27x54 Velvet Rug, worth $2.00; our price

FRENCH PLATE MIRROR Heavy 12x12. white Enamel and Golden Oak Frame, only 69c

Suburban Friends , Please Note. Our big auto truck will deliver . your purchases to your home FREE

u tafi