Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 225, 2 September 1915 — Page 9

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIU1I AND SUN-TEIGBAIi. THURSDAY. SEPT. 2, 1915 ; PAGE NINE

uncus coo:c teiit PROVES REVELATION TO OUTSIDE PEOPLE

The "cook tent". If on of the our tU of the modern circus. It was" the custom for many years for the- man-, agement to send Its employees to the local city" hotels for their food. The ' undertaking for providing the, meals of the army on the grounds" was so stupendous that " the " hest regulated ' Show hesitated to take the task. Finally the objects to the old method made the accomplishment necessary. As Ike circus grew is size the com- " pitied efforts or hotels and restaurants. -'. were unable to meet- the' ? demands thrust upon them. - ' B. K. Wallace was the ifst man to carry complete commissary department with his aggregation, and later other shows followed in pursuit. Advance men now see that all needs of the commissary department are supplied, meat, vegetables and other requirements await the hands of a do an chefs. There are two separate and distinct culinary department with the Carl Hagenbeck-Wallace Jircu. which comes to Richmond Thursday, sm- uWaaMiiM at . anil fi

DVJfl. - IU f ivi uiwuca w p. m. One Is occupied by the workingmen, whose stomachs are not satisfied until tke tents are raised and all tk nirinhnillo le, An th lot. This

is a wise idea, which Insures prompt

and hasty work. Under a nearby canvas are fed the

executive staff, performers, men, wo

men and cnuaren 01 in circus, mere - are neat tables, table cloths and china iUrrm. There Is a bill of fare, and

one may find anything that Is supplied

In the dining room or me oesi metror1itn hotel. The food Is cooked In

the open and It has Its own peculiar

.'-appetising flavor. u serveu in , abundance, and a happier, heartier . noriv nvr did more Justice to a meal.

Skillful waiters, neatly attired in

i white, CO prompt awenq,ance.. --a--. . - ;

! NEW PARIS ')

Mitt HHsabeth of ttndlav. O.. Is the

guest of her sister, Mrs. B. S. Davis. Mr. and Mrs. George Harter of New Madison spent Sunday with Mesrs. and Mesdames C. A. and C. W. Northrop, Miss Opal Harter returned with the Harters for a visit. Miss Lydia Gray entertained Mls3 Wanda King at dinner Sunday. Miss Juanlta Moreley of Richmond was the guest of M. E. Barnett Sunday. Donald, the young son of Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Young, Is quite sick. C. E. Corwln and Adair Harshman of Eaton were here Tuesday on buainew. Several from here are attending the Ohio ttate fair at Columbus. Fred Dunn of Collinsville, 0., spent

i Sunday with his brother, Charles.., 1 iMai friend of Mrs. Ethmer Reid

will be sieved to learn that she is, not tmisnwinir she wu removed to the

home of Mr. Reld's parents at Rich- - a. at . . . A

rcond, Tuesday, sne nas oeen mi xor twelve weeks with typhoid fever. G. A. Hill and Bert Daugherty and their families motored to Mills Lake. Ind., Saturday to attend the Fraieeftrn fumilv reunion.

Word received from Fred Burtch. who is at Reid hospital, Richmond is to the effect that he is improving rapidly and will be brought home arely

next week.

Earning His Ticket 4i ft V X )) y?vfr w f

Her Husband's Widow

SYNOPSIS.

: t.eu Morne. a a-overness, goes to

; walk by the sea and Is spoken to by a

man she does not Know, sne is rescued. from his. attentions by Victor iKtenie ' serceant In the British army,

i'whom she later marries. She finds married life wearisome and refuses to follow Steele to Egypt. Than she hears of his death and conceals the fact that she Is his widow. .Four years later, married to Oswald Varney and mother of a boy, she meets Steele face to face In Jerusalem. He tells her to keep the . past secret, and her husband announces that Steele Is going to sail with them. Leslie, retiring to her stateroom, could not sleep. She returned to the deck, and in a dark corner she saw two figures. They were Captain Steele and Mrs. Melas. She stood still looking at them. She was far out of earshot of their voices. The stillness of the sultry night was emphasised rather than broken by the rhythmical stamp of the engines and the swirling of the waters cleft by the throbbing vessel. As she gazed another picture shaped itself before her. She saw two other figures side by side like these, drawing ever closer, watching the path of the moonlight over a grayer, wilder sea she saw the man stoop toward the girl, she saw her face raised to his she saw their lips meet. Those figures were Victor and herself. A high-pitched laugh broke the silence. The vision faded. She saw instead this other woman lift a smiling face toward the man who had once been her lover her husband and lay her hand caressingly on his arm. All the melody of starshlne and rushing water was changed to discord. Leslie gulped down something in her throat. She turned and went back noiselessly the way she had come: As she passed the open port of the smdfcint room she heard Oswald's voice raised In emphatic assertion. "Say what you like, man, she Is a pretty woman. It's her eyes. I tell you!" Apparently the lights in Mrs. Melas's eyes were everywhere powerful enough to put out the lights in her own. Her ghost-like flitting across the deck had not escaped those keen eyes, v "There's that pretty .Mrs. Varney looking for her husband,? said Mrs. "Melas. Victor turned sharply round, but Leslie had already left the deck. He let out an exclamation. His companion flashed a ray of inquiry upon him. "Perhaps it wasn't the festive Oswald she was looking for It might have been you." Captain Steele blushed. It was a weakness. of. which he., like many, very fair men, had never been able to cure himself. He took out a cigarette and

' Peanuts and pink lemonade will soon be ripe and the odor

of sawdust tanbark' will permeate the air.' The Carl HagenbeckWdllace Circus,: gayest, grandest, gladdest galaxy in all the wide world, is coming to Richmond on Thursday, Sept. 16 for two performances. This year the big show in reality there are two shows will come aboard three special trains, the longest ever used to transport a circus aggregation.

lit it with clumsily affected nonchalance. "I? Why on earth should she want to see me?" "Yes, but we are on the sea. You're the best-looking man on board. Vickey, though Varney is a nice man though fat." Mrs. Melas paused to consider the two men's personal advantages. "Where did you pick . up the .Varneys?" she inquired. Most of Therri Were Jr. - j. Out-and-Out Brutes. " "I knew Varney years ago when I was a ranker. I was under his orders for some time at Aden. Then I ran across him with his . wife at Jerusalem." "At Aden? That's the place you went to after that scrap at Cairo,

wasn't it? I never shall forget that

night. I can just see you a raw, red'

faced Tommy taking the great fat

Greek by the collar and running him out of the bar.: Do you remember me screaming? It was very dear of you, old boy" she put her hand on his cuff and her eyes glowed for a moment with , a softer light. "It wasn't everybody who would have stood up for a barmaid at the East-and-We6t Bar. Why, we were used to being insulted. I didn't know that I had been insulted when you pitched that man out.''' Victor smiled with amused recollection. "Well, since you put it that way, I may say, if I haven't before that the ..Greek dldnlt seem o know -either. Every time he got on his feet he tried to explain but I never gave him time. He appeared more surprised than angered at my interference." "They were brutes pigs most of them!" hissed the heroine of this episode. This time those wonderful eyes seemed to dart forked lightning. "Those Levantines! You should hear what the Muslins say about them. Oh, f tell you they know a good deal behind those lattices. Cairo is an awful hole for a girl to earn her living in. There were times, Vickums, when I wished myself back in Lancashire tramping every morning to the mill at 5 in clogs too large for me,' shivering with the cold beneath my shawl." "Um um, yes." Victor's tone expressed his incredulity. "You didn't stick to that life longer than you could help, seem to remember your telling me." To Be Continued. ATTEND REUNION WEST MANCHESTER, O., Sept. 2. M. N. Surface attended the Surface family reunion Saturday at New Hope. Eighty-three relatives and visitors registered during the day.-

SINGER RAISES FUND

TO ASSIST ALLIES

CHICKEN COST&HEAVY.

INDIANAPOLIS, Jnd.. Sept. 2.--Charles Ray is held under $1,000 bond pending his explanation to the grand Jury, of how he came into the possession of . a chicken - which he waved about his bead and invited the police to come nd get him. ?

Li - vv,fcW-h, vim, 1 i L "-" w

Paris Life Changes Tp One of Simplicity Sorrow and Trials Unite Nation and Poetry and Romance Supplant Pleasure and Excitement of .Former ;Days in Gay Capital.

BY LA RECONTKUSS. ; PARIS, Sept. 1. There ts something wonderful in witnessing', the renaissance of s great nation and If any nation has ever, after years of frtvolousness and' decadence, -once more' found its soul, it is surely the French bf today. Parts is today,, as it always was, the heart of France, and here In Paris you may witness better than anywhere else the transformation that has taken place, in France during the last year. A year ago all of us .who love Paris had witnessed with sincere grief how the city had gradually lost Its character; how it had degenerated Into an immense international: pleasure resort, whose- people had become satisfied to cater to pleasure loving tourists of all nations; how Pari! haJ become Americanized in the' bad sense of this word, how its old time poetry and charm had disappeared; how it was becoming shunned by artists, who no longer found here the inspirations they had come in search of. Become One Family. The war has grought a great change. The old time Paris of Murger has once more returned , with its indefinable charm. . The people here are like one great family, sorrow and trials have united everybody, the distrust of strangers has gone, because everybody feels that those who remain are only the true friends of France, and homes and hearts are readily opened to you, . More than once lately when I have been sitting in a favorite restaurant of mine, a modest little place, frequented mostly by students and artists,, an the Boul Mich', people whom I have never seen before have entered Into, a conversation with me and open, their hearts ' to me, a thing which would have been utterly unthinkable before the war. ". .. . . . ' September" and May have' 1 always been the best times to see Paris,' but Paris this September is greater, nobler, lovlier, and more Inspiring than ever. Story of Valor. Every day brings, its crop of stories of wonderful heroism and of humble heroes, dead or living. J. F. Laurent, a private in the 65th regiment of infantry, was hit by a shell fragment in a recent action. His one arm was almost torn from Its socket. His comrades rushed to his assistance, but thinking only of the fact that the assault must go on, be called to them: "Go on boys, it's nothing."

With an almost superhuman effort

he managed to get up on his feet and ttaaldeS- ben walked back to the ambu

lance, where his only words to the sur

geon were: "Cut this off, it notners me. . -. :-. - , Letter to Wife. : Here is a letter from a soldier to his wife to which attaches a story as beautiful as the letter itself. The soldier wrote: ' : "My Dear Jeanne:

"While I am writing ydu the guns

are thundering and we are every moment expecting an order to storm the

German trenches. You told me to do

my duty, but never to expose' myself

Chi$f Cause of Pimples. Blotches. Sallow Sarin

(Messenger of Health.) Unsightly eruptions, pimples, bolls, fclotehes, sallow or muddy skin, usually ar due to a htSRlsh liver, a constipated bowel a.nd a polluted' blood Strm as a eonio.unc. how foolish in such cases, to resort to outward Application a, wblcU can never have natural, permaneat- results. 'If more people only knew it, there Is a. very simple remedy, to be found nt any drug store, which le u effective a it I harmless and quick acting. It la an old formula, lona raeogoised by the medical prctfessloSk which ha beea put la tablet form, aad at auea amaQ cost no one seed stow ft deprived of lis wonderful bene fits. eataael tablets- ttata the same are . entirely vegetable and there a

rernua

hablt-fo

ifag ingredleat. Tou need only

get about dime's worth, and swallow one at bedtime to rea live ware's aetata; else quite so good for the purpose. The

action in tne moraine; is so eaax, so aootaInc. aad instead oTa weak ecu na- after

effect, you feel truly refreshed and luvig . orated, fientanel tablets - are net only the finest remedy known for constipation and torpid liver, but offer . the sanest, most sensible treatment for oomplexloa difficulties of the character .T.vntlZfiiX

recklessly. -The hour, has come now,

and I hope you shall have reason to feel proud of me. I love you more than words can describe but I shall go forward without looking back once, be

cause I know that no matter how the

day ends today, it Will render me more worthy .of you.

we are getting ready to attacx now.

dearest, and my every thought is with

you. I shall go forward tor trance and never flinch. t Is my love of you that gives me courage and If I should

fall you will tell our children of the

bombardment of 8 " . .

Here the letter end6. The soldiers

went forward never to return, but at

the bottom was added the following

postscript signed by his captain and

the surviving officers and non-com

missioned officers of his company:

"After your husband had seen all the

officers and non-commissioned officers of his section fall at bis side, he took

command of his comrades and singing the Marseillaise ho led them forward to victory until he fell mortally wounded.-We had in the entire regiment na soldier Of whom we are more- proud.

May this help you to bear jrour; great

sorrow." -,.- a r

QUITS INTERURBAN

FOR LIFE ON FARM CAMBRIDGE CITY. Ind., Sept. 2.

Eira Thompson has voluntarily severed his connection with the T. H., L & E. Traction company, and will engage in farming near Bethel. Mr. Thompson has been in the service of the company eighteen years. He and his wife will be greatly missed by the people of this community, where they are held in the highest esteem.

Great Demand for New Constipation Remedy

They sar that the advent of the "sentanel tablet' as a vave table substitute for Calomel ha resulted in an extraordinary demand for this remarkable product, ft ems to have made a hit particularly with those afflicted with chronic constipation, who were quick to recognise its advantages over calomel aad the usual laxatives. Sentanel tablets, aside from their efficacy, doubtless owe their success largely to a tendency to aid in brtnsinar about natural functioning Instead of encouraging the "cathartn habit." Also, instead of injuring the membraneous lining of the organs involved, they exert a healing Influence. Instead of weakening, they add. ton to the Intestinal wall. - And they work so easily and gently, they are of course preferred on this account to the violently actios purgatives. Their inexpenslveness is another reason for the popularity of sentanel tablet. One need procure only a dime's worth, and take one tablet upoq retiring, to be convinced that the Ideal remedy for constipation, torpid liver, and their many evil consequences, has finally . been found. Drvrist Review,

FALL HATS $2.00 and $3.00 Best Styles and Quality . LICHTENFELS " ' in the Westcott. ; . . '

INSTIGATOR OF WAR - V . ..'(.

FIGHT FOR RUSH

VIENNA, Sept. " Z. Major Tanko-

sitch. the instigator of the double murder that caused the present terrible war, is now serving in the Russian

army as an officer of the general staff.. The major was the leader of

the Serbian secret society "Narodna

Obrana." and planned the assassina

tion of the Austrian heir to the throne.

Archduke Francis Ferdinand, and his wife- at Sarajevo. . At th trial of tha Drinin

and Gabrinowitcb and their confed-l

crates It was proven that they had

oeen urea, armea and instructed by) Tankosltch. After the hostilities be-!

gan it was said that Tankosltch had

been removed from the Strblan army

and later his death was reported. The Bulgarian Official paper "Narodni Prawar" now furnishes proof that the major is alive. . When he left Ser

bia he entered the Russian army and was attached to the general, staff. Loves bloom ington.

Arrow

BLOOMINGTON, Ind.. Sept. 2. Believing that he could not be happy anywhere, but in Bloomington. Arthur Parks, a policeman, has relinquished an inheritance of $150,000, A relative offered him that amount if he would move to Plymouth and care for

him in his ' old age. ' Parks at first

was-tempted: to accept. 'but -later changed his mind. . t -..

Bring in

Have It made Into new. i e We pay cash for old gold.

Jenkins & Co. "The Hall Mark Jewelry "store"'

PALLADIUM 'WANT AOS. PAY.

. r ' r SPECIAL TRAIN SERVICE TO INDIANAPOLIS . , SEPTEMBER 3th and 9th " - TERRE HAUTE, INDIANAPOLIS A EASTERN TRACTION ' -' Accbunt ; RIDIATIA STATE FAIR . Leave Richmond 4:65 A. M............. Arrive Indianapolis 7:30 v Leave Richmond .5:55 A. M . .Arrive Indianapolis .8:S0 ... sa Local Agent for Further Information. "

r

CO.

A. M. A. M.

sasasssaanw saaassaiiaasss. ,1 ,, - " '; ' 1 - - -:i L . i ,- ai It m i fc, mj. eiin . isTT?ffSaffHi?!s75ff?HeSa

1916MODEL

"THE PALACE CAR OF THE ROAD

A Car That Stands tor Value

The Pullman company, who carried out the streamline dessigh in its entirety in their higher priced models; have incorporated in this car, which is offered at a price within the'i reach of the great majority, the same graceful lines. And, ' where the workmanship and material in this model is of

the highest quality, it is fully worthy of the Pullman title; "j

the Palace Car of the Road. . . ; -

$740 Mo

F. O. B. York Pennsylvania

TAUEE

AUTO INN.-

PHONES 1925 or 1992

Mme. Melba. the famous singer, has raised $150,000 for various partiotic funds since the war started. Her farewell concert at the town hall' at Melbourne, Australia, brought in $15,000 for wounded soldiers.

REUNION DRAWS 249

WEST MANCHESTER, O., Sept. 2. The annual Blacfcford-Banfill-Iler reunion was held Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Banfilr.-south of town. Guests to the number of 249 did Justice to the repast' of good things of the season. - 1 . . . 1

MODERN I

Good Teeth are an ar solute necessity and we make their possession possible. , All our work is practically painless. Highest Grade Plates $5.00 to $8.00 Best Gold Crowns.. $3.00 to $4.00 Best Bridge Work. . $3.00 to $4.00 Best Gold Fillings. .. . .... $1.00 up Best SUver Fillings... 50 eent tip We Extract Teeth Palnleesly New York Dental Parlor. Over Union tfationaK Bank. 8th and Main - streets. . jElevator entrance on 8outh 8th. street. Stair entrance on Main street. ' "

fflUSE Will ittP YU TO tt SAFELY:

I want everybody to be happy and will gladly help you if I possibly can, in the way of extending credit and I easy payments to all responsible parties.

TIHIE IHWDME

When on goes Into a library, one judges the character .of the possessor by the books upon the shelves. There is as much-character In furniture as in books. When you enter a bouse which contains good, solid, tasteful furniture, you are safe in deciding that there Is character back of it The homo furnished in good taste

is one of the pleasing features of American life. I invite you to see furniture carefully chosen to practically And economically meet every need of the cosy bungalow or finest home. Whether you are interested in home furnishings from the standpoint of quality, style, or price. I can serve you with satisfaction. : . , According to my policy, my goods are marked exceedingly low at a close margin of profit. I want to be fair to those who buy at regular prices, and so all my-goods are marked extra low the whole year round the same price to every man every day no one pay less than anyone else no on pays more. I offer everyone a fair opportunity to save money on all purchases. Just watch my ads in this paper each week.

EflllDnD)ifflse 530 IVtain Street

FmnpnnntlnniFe

Richmond, IncllQno