Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 62, 22 January 1916 — Page 3
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, JAN. 22, 1916.
PAGE THREE
MOVIE FLASHES!
Palace
WEDNESDAY. A dancer achieved a hitherto unheard-of feat of , making a Republic out of Portugal, and it ia a dancer in
a Vita era ft Blue kid Don eature,
"The Price of Folly," at the Palace Wednesday and Thursday, produced
by the Vitagraph company, under the
direction of George D. Baker. . In this
play Edith Storey will achieve her de
sire to portray a character that is absolutely at variance with any she has heretofore essayed. TUESDAY.
The next release on the Metro program is "Emmy of Stork's Nest " pro
duced by the Columbia Pictures cor poration and starring Mary Miles Min
ter. the charming young actress. It
will be shown at the Palace on Tues
day. The story of "Emmy of Stork's Nest," is made from the novel of the same name by J. Breckenridge Ellis,
and is. briefly, as follows:
Benton Cabot, raised in the city,
learns that his uncle has died and left bis home to him in the mountains of Missouri. . , Arrived in the . mountains, Cabot meets Emmy Garrett, the role
essayed by Miss Minter. Though Tin
tutored, she is as fragrant and whole- ..... J 41 V. A
some as a wild riower. ana auui
immediately, falls in love with her.
. SUNDAY. "The Grey Mafek" comes to the Palace Sunday. World Film corporation presents the five-part photo-play, "The Grey Mask," founded on a story of the same name recently published in
"Collier's Weekly." The author of the
story is Charles Wardsworth Camp. . Barbara Tennant makes her re-appearance' for World Film in, this picture. This artist will be favorably remembered by motion picture patrons as having registered remarkable successes in "The Dollar Mark," "When Broadway Was a Trail," "A Marked Woman," "Meliss," and' "The Butterfly." r - ..- -
Palace Tuesday
Stars in "Emmy of Stork's Nest" at the Palace Tuesday.
ZD
99 The Story of
a ureat Love
A f Thrilling Serial of Devotion and Mystery
leading Into the hall. : Then , she paused. . She looked like a woman al
ready dead; but there waB a new light
In her eyes, a light he had never seen before a light of cruel and deadly purpose.
. "There is blackness in my soul, she said. She spoke quietly and deliberately, her beautiful voice thrilled through' the room with a fearful solemnity. . 1 "You have ' broken my heart It matters not whether I die today or tomorrow, or next year. My life is over. But on the day you marry this girl, this Eva Warren. I will kill myself!" Godfrey Brooke was one of those men who ought to have been born in
the day j of Queen Elizabeth, Instead of in the last half of the nineteenth century. The restless spirit of travel
and adventures of those virile days was in his blood, and nothing could root it out. : His parents tried to do so, and his relatives, particularly a wealthy maiden aunt, who loved him, also tried their best; so did his various governesses, schoolmaster and tutors. He was originally intended for the church, as was titting in ine only son of the worthy and erudite Canon Brooke of Kiy; and, despite a really shocking record at Harrow, the canon persisted in his intention with- regard to the boy, and Godfrey Brooke went up to Cambridge.
His relatives and friends, who were
Boston Nuggets ' By Mtaa Grace Parka.
Miss Grace King of Webster, visited the schools in this vicinity last Tuesday;... ..Miss . Helen Anderson spent this week with friends at Brookville, O P. L. Beard was a business visitor at Richmond Thursday Mrs. Lillian Brattain is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Cora Brown of Eaton, O..... Mrs. Mark Bosworth of Summit visited with relatives here this week. . . . . Fred Overholster spent Thursday in Richmond Harry Pottenger is working at C. & O. station.. . .William Dean of Peru was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Piper Thursday night. Mrs. Earnest Druley spent Friday
and Saturday with her parents at Lib
erty Mrs. J. A. Ambrose was called
to Cincinnati by the serious Illness of
a daughter.
SOCIALISTS TAKE IN THREE NEW MEMBERS
Three new members were taken in' to the Socialist local last night. Ar
very numerous, never spoke of those ' angements have been made to bring n!iv.M: j", Tmu . I two national lecturers here in March.
"I have come to ask you to take me with you."' "Zoe!" His voice was shocked beyond expression. "I want you to let me stay here with you tonight," she went on, "and to take me with you to Paris tomorrow. I can't bear my life any longer away from you. I will be your slave. I ask nothing only to sit and watch you work, if that is all that you can give me. But I can't be separated from you I can't." There was a dark veil over her voice.
1 -"Good heavens!" Crawley said in
horrified tones, "you don't know whatj
you are saying: "I do! I dbr You have stolen my heart from me my soul my life. I
Arcade
TUESDAY. . "The Fable of the Heir and the Heiress," at the Arcade Tuesday. ,
horse, who had Mormon whiskers and
a Mackerel eye. 1 He was out for the kale and would lie' awake night scheming how he could corner more collateral. He was going to provide for HIS family. His wife was a good woman and never - wasted money on jewelry or cut flowers. The fond parents saved and skimped. They wanted Bert rand and Isabel to go through life on ball bearings. TOMORROW. Adele Clinton- poses for a picture for her husband, who is an artist. The picture is exhibited and called "The Woman With a Rose," at the Arcade tomorrow. Lechison sees the picture and falls in love with the woman.
Anton Czerny, a musician, appreciates art and wants to buy the picture for its beauty. Lechison leases a studio and advertises for a model. ; Adele sees the ad and, hoping to help out her husband gets the position.
Lyric
TONIGHT. What is it about a romantic crook that makes us want to see him . go free, when we know that he should be punished for his criminal activities? Although you may have admired Raffles as a fiction character, when you meet "X-3", the leading figure in a gang cf criminals in the Big U threereel detective drama at the Lyric tonight, yoc are going to add a new companion to your friends among the ciiminalu. TOMORROW. 'Taiher and the boys," at the Lyric tomorrow, the five-reel Broadway Uni--dlstinguisht-d Broadway star, Digby Bell, is an amusingly entertaining stcry written by George Ade of an old man's "come back" and . put on by Joseph De Grasse.' It tells how father put3 one over on his two sons, who have social and athletic ambitions. Dad runs off with a prettier girl than
either of them are paying court to, but he does so just to make his boys come to time fand to make them take an interest in the business which he wishes to turn over to them before he retires Into private life.
El RD TRAVELS WEST.
SHELBY VILLE. Ind.. Jan. 22. William C. Miller shot a. large hawk near St. Paul, January 7 and found on one of its legs a metal band asking anyone who discovered it to write to the American Museum of Natural History
in New York. Miller did so and wasi
Informed that the bird was branded in Branch port, N. Y., in July of last summer. In the six months the bird had traveled quite a distance.
you have done."
"Zoe!" His voice was gently pitiful. "Don't say any more! Remember ours has been such a ' pleasant friendship, so full of good things. And remember your husband! You have never spoken about him to me, beyond telling me that he existed ; but you must have cared about him once. Remember him, Zoe!" "My husband exists for me no more," the woman said, fixing her eyes, dark with anguish, on his face. "He is gone right out of my life. He's a shadow, more strange than a stranger. You are everything to me, and now you are going to play me false. Oh, Noel, take
me with you to Paris! Don t leave me in darkness! I can't live without you!" "And I cannot listen to you," Crawley said, still in the same shocked tone. "You pain me horribly. But I must tell you the truth; I am going to be married soon." "Who is it, Noel? So you have de
ceived me all this time." "What can it matter who it is?" he asked uneasily. "But I want to know I must know." "Her name is Eva Warren." "And .you love her?" There was a look on her face as of a woman facing death. "For pity's sake" don't!" the man cried in a choked voice. "You love her! How you have chang
ed! I am nothing to you nothing at all." "Zoe," he said suddenly, commandingly, "I have not . changed. You mustn't say that. I was never different. You have been a dear friend to me. Ever since , that day when you asked me to paint your . porprait, I have tried to be a good friend to you. And we have had much in common, and you have been goodness itself in allowing me to paint you, to try to put down on canvas or paper a faint shadow of your wonderful self." "And you have kissed me only as a dear friend?" the woman cried with
frightful bitterness,- the dawn of a fearful awakening in her eyes. "And you have allowed me to pour out the whole treasure of my heart at your feet only as a friend. Oh, you are like all men you are greedy, and take all; you are a pitiful coward!" . "You have no right to say such things,", he replied, almost sternly; "Have our relations ever been those of ordinary man and women? Have we not always insisted on their strangeness, on their mystery? I have always looked on you as a woman unique, who came out of the darkness into my life, who was a very good companion, my artistic Inspiration and nothing more. You must have known it. I thought you understood. Why, I don't even know your name. Although you have been here nearly every day for a
year, I don't know where you come from or where you go to. Is that an ordinary relationship? We have made a world of our own a dream world. But I thught you understood that we could not live in it forever. Before Heaven, I thought that, too, Zoe!" "But you never thought of me," she cried. "You never thought that I loved you that I learned to worship Suddenly she fell on her knees at his feet; her sobs echoed wildly through the room like a cry of a soul abandoned in the darkness of eternal
night. . It was terrible to the man to see this regal, glorious creature grovelling in
such terrible abasement. He had not been consciously guilty; and yet guilt clutched with iron fingers at his soul. He bent down and lifted her bodily to her feet. "Hush, Zoe, hush!" he murmured. "What can I say? What can I do?" "Swear to me that you will not marry this woman!" she cried. "Heal my broken heart, Noel. Let us be as we were before. I will be your slave, your dog oh, don't desert me. Swear it, Noel swear it before Heaven! Before Heaven you are mine, because I have nothing else nothing else in all the world, but you." "I cannot do that," he said, and his voice was harsh. "What you ask of me is an impossibility. For heaven's sake, my dear, be reasonable." "Very well." Her tone was suddenly calm. He turned from her in overwhelming relief, meaning to pour out a cup of tea, anxious for any trivial cause to end this superhumanly painful scene. - But a little jerky movement, a little gasping sob, made, him turn suddenly round. He saw her fumbling in her
muff; he saw her take a little glass phial, pull with swift fingers at the stopper, and raise it to her lips.
For a moment his brain reeled. Then in one stride he was beside her, grappling with her. She fought like a cat; but he wrenched the little bottle from her hand and flung it with all his force into the big uronze coalscuttle near which they stood. The glass shivered to atoms, and a pungent smell of bitter almonds rose to his nostrils. "Prussic acid!" he gasped. "Good heavens how could you be so wicked?" "Wicked and good they are merely words to me now," she answered recklessly. "I don't want to live. I have lost everything." She seemed on the borderland of hysteria, of madness. She wept" and raved in his arms. He talked to her soothingly, but did not know what he said. He even kissed her ghastly cheeks with gentle tenderness. It was an awful thing to think that a woman would have taken her life for his sake. "Zoe, how could you think of such a thing? You tried to kill yourself! Poor soul, you were mad!" "I was not not mad," she said, and now she whimpered like a child. "I
brought it here on purpose. I meant
to kill myself if you wouldn't take me to Paris." "Oh, I hate myself!" he cried. "I loathe myself! To think that I was so blind! I can never forgive myself, never as long as I live!" Gradually she fell into a sullen apathy, and when he had soothed and
cajoieu ana caressed ner ror more than an hour she consented to go
away. He helped her into her splen
did sables; he gripped her hands desperately, like a man bidding farewell
tq a most valued friend.
She walked steadily to the door
Cambridge days, which ended abruptly and unceremoniously when Godfrey Brooke, ' then in his third term at Caius and in his nineteenth year, gave a great feast to all his friends, gave away all his things, and disappeared, leaving the feast unpaid for and many other little things besides.
The canon never really recovered from the shock he received when his beloved son and heir sent him a la
conic and somewhat irreverent telegram from Southampton, telling him he was going out to South Africa for a change of. air, and requesting him to settle up his various little affairs at Cambridge. As a matter of fact, Mrs. Brooke died very shortly afterward, as
a direct result of her son's action. She had hoped to see him Archbishop of Canterbury. The canon, however, tore out his living heart and made a new will, and he had much real personal
estate to dispose of. He never men tioned his son's name in that will.
As far as Godfrey Brooke was con
cerned the gods looked most especial ly after him, and he prospered marvel
ously well; no one knew where or by
what means, because no one really knew where he was or what he was
doing.
He had been away about two or
three years when he made much
money in some big boom, and wrote to his father, enclosing him a check for
quite a large sum toward a certain
deaconesses' home in which the canon
was particularly interested. The wor
thy cleric died very shortly after re
ceiving, his son's letter from Johan
nesburg, and- his personality was
sworn at something in six figures
Godfrey, however, never saw a penny;
but he lid not much care. At the age of three-and-twenty h was uite a rich mn, and he had seen a IV. of life
and the world
He came to England ver;' shortly afterward with a very substantial bank balance, looking very tanned and much stouter of build; he was very serious, too, and had great ideas of empire expansion, combined ' with ai
George H. Goebel, well-known Social
ist, will be in the city on March 17, while prior to that time Anna Maley, leader among women Socialists, will
sneak March 10. Pat Quinlln . in a
letter appealed for assistance in ob
taining his release from the New Jer
sey prison. A . pie social conciuaea
the evening's program.
of the company between March 1 and June 1. when $40 will be offered to
this class for best record In efficiency
and punctuality. . ;
So far aa known, the Atlas com
pany is the first In this section of the country to adopt the Innovation which promises much to all concerned. - So confident Is the management that the plan will result satisfactorily for the employes and for the firm that they do not hesitate to declare that a simi
lar arrangement will be made next year. .
There are nearly 300 employes in
the the Richmond Branch and a simi
lar number in the Piqua headquarters.
Additional help is now needed at the
local plant. AU departments are working steadily, and the knitting department Is working at night "We seek to obtain through this plan, permanent, efficient employes." said Mr. Harwood today. "We believe the giving of this money in addition to the salaries will work well for both the firm and the employes. "We have the experience of seeing employes remain with us a short time, then securing employment In another place and a few months later coming back to us. It seems that oar free coffee and tea dispensary la not a sufficient attraction to retain them, bat we believe by hitting the pocketbook we can get what we desire." . .
Are You Going to Need Cement? Yoa Will Want the BEST!
BUY
5 Q9 Ss 0
. Because of Its Great Strength. Durability ai
Strength, Durability and
Fine Color, it Wfll Give Yoa the BEST Results.
Look For the Turkey on Every Bag Yoa Bay. 'r Wabash Portland Cement Co. General Offices ' -. Works Ford Bid?., Detroit Mich. -v Stroh, Ind. For Sale by Standard Supply Co Richmond, Ind ;
r
FRIENDS GET BEHIND
HOBSON AMENDMENT
Members of the Society of Friends, including Richmond members, will as
sume active participation in the ef
forts of dry leaders to secure the passage of the Hobson amendment providing for national prohibition which will again be submitted to the House within the next few weeks. S. Edgar Nicholson, editor of the American Friend and chairman of the Board of Legislation and Temperance of the Five Years' meeting said today that that body would meet a short time prior to the debate on the resolution to decide a program of action to assist the congressmen favoring the bill. Local Friends In the mean time will seek by appeals through letters to have Senators and Congressmen of Indiana vote for the resolution.
SELL TWO MONROES.
Horace Airedel and Leslie Cook are the latest purchasers of Monroe cars, which were sold to them by Maurice Jones of the firm of Spangler & Jones.
ATLAS UNDERWEAR
Continued From Page One.
the record of attendance, punctuality and service, and a tfMrc? $200 will be -Hiually distributed nong the next
insatiable longing to be back again in sixteen employes in rank., the wilds. Another contests will bv, stituted (To Be Continued.) for the employes entering the service
Palace Wed. and Thur.
Suth Starcy H4 Aftamr VMM im tk BUDstB Imii A Fries for Folly:. A Firs-fart Vitssrss Bins llibbsa Fsstar
For Economy's Sake
Use borax!
Borax saves 50 per cent, of laundry
soap. Borax makes soap do more work
at less expense. It makes better, easier
washings. The clothes last longer, too. Borax is absolutely non-injurious. And its cost is trifling. A 25c package of "20 Mule Team Brax Soap Chips" will do more clean
ing than 50c worth of bar soap or
washing powders. adv.
ARE YOUR HOUSEHOLD GOODS INSURED? If not, phone us and we will see that you are given proper, r-ctscticn. , - Dougan, Jenkins & Co. Phone 1330. Cor. Elgh' and Main Sts.
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SHOWING A VARIETY PROGRAM OF SELECTED PHOTOPLAY8
TODAY L. C. SHUMWAY, the eminent Lubin leading man in a 3-part mystery drama "The Inner Chamber" TOMORROW Essanay presents HENRY WALTHALL and EDNA MAYO in a masterpiece feature in 3 splendid acts "BLIND JUSTICE WALTHAL the "Little Colonel" of "Birth of a Nation" fame, has never played to better advantage than in this thrilling production. In pleasing contrast and to go with this drama, we present G. M. ANDERSON in an entertaining little society comedy in 2 parts
99
The Book Agent's Romance
MONDAY The usual high class variety program featuring HELEN GIBSON, the girl of many daring exploits. TUESDAY The fable of the "HEIR AND THE HEIRESS" one of George Ade's (the famous Hoosier humoris) stories. Watch for "THE STRANGE CASE OF MARY PAGE." It's coming to the Arcade. Watch for it In the magazines. Read it in your dally; paper. HENRY WALTHALL and EDNA MAYO are the stars.
Theatre RED FEATHER FEA TURE PLAY
TONIGHT 3-Reel Big U Feature Drama
3
6 REELS SUNDAY 5 REELS Digby Bells In the Bis Feature
Fate- the loiis"
MONDAY TUESDAY 3-Reel Bison 2 Reel Rex "AcrOSS the "TheUttler.lascot" One Reel RiO Grande" GerUe,sDosyDay"
WEDNESDAY 2-Reel Feature
One Reel, "Flivver's Good Turn."
THURSDAY 3-Reel Gold Seal "The Reward of Chivalry" 2 Reels Chapter 6 iTD A L " B '
FRIDAY
2 Reel Victor
99
Her Better Self
One Reel
"MingUng Spirits
PA
ACE
THEATRE
SUNDAY World Film Corporation Presents EDWIN ARDEN
-IN-
66
The irey GviJaslk
99
WITH BARBARA TENNANT A wonderfully thrilling detective photodrama remarkable for powerful acting, strength and originality of story a tense and exciting production. A SHUBERT FEATURE MONDAY For a Good Laugh OTIS HARLAN in the Rollicking Farce "THE BLACK SHEEP" A Scream From Start to Finish Selig Red Seal Play. " TUESDAY " METRO DAY The Screen Production of J. Breckenridge Ellis Great Novel "Emmy of StorEt'o Nest" With That Winsome Star of the Screen Mary Miles Minter in the Star Part A Five-Act Photoplay Brimming With Thrills and Picturesque Episodes. WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY While all of our pictures are good one of them has to be the best, and for these two days we offer the Vitagraph Bine Ribbon Feature ... -
A Price for Folly
WITH ANTONIO MORENO AND EDITH STOREY
A Vampire Story With the Supreme Star of the Screen, Edith Storey
.. as the "Vampire ,
