Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 170, 3 June 1916 — Page 8
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PAGE TEN THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, JUNE 3. 1916
Helen and Warren; Their Married Life
By MRS. MABEL HERBERT URNER Originator of "Their Married Life," Author of "The Journal 'of ft Keglected Wire." "The Woman Alone,.' Etc
The- guide with the' megaphone ciirabed in front with the driver, and the heavy car jolted forward. "Residence of Sir John Carpen, expresident of the Canadian Pacific," shouted the guide, as they passed an impressive English-looking mansion. Farther on they turned into a shabby French section, then back to the heart of the city. Before the towerling Notre Dame the car drew up. "We stop here fifteen minutes!" announced the guide. Awkwardly alone, Helen followed the little group up the steps. Inside the great, dim cathedral she forgot her self-consciousness in the impressivene68 of the scene. Slowly ithey passed by the side altars, pallid ; In the purplish light that filtered j through the stained glass. Beyond, ifrom the shadowy darkness, rose the lofty main altar with its golden imagery, glimmering with candles. H When they came out from that :dusky, incense-scented silence, the i streets seemed glarjr and deafening, i Again the car labored up the crowded thoroughfare. Helen had always thought of Canada as a foreign country, but Montreal was very like an American city. It had ncne of the quaintness of Quebec, t The next stop was at a fur store.
according to the guide "the largest
In the world!" The clerks were lined up to receive them. Evidently this
dally call of the tourists was a feature of the store.
The place was smothered with furs. Fur rugs hung sprawling from the walls and carpeted the floor. Even the chairs and benches were fur-UDhol-
Istered, and the odor of moth balls was Insistent.
On the second floor every known fur was displayed in, sections. Here Helen found herself with the man in .gray, talking quite naturally. As all Ithe others were in couples, it seemed ;less conspicuous than to be alone. "No, they're cheaper than In the .States," he smiled at her look of surprise as she glanced at a ticket $35 ;on a mole muff. "And you have to pnv CO per cent duty. They say furs ari
W.INIPR.ED WOR.TH Crochet and Tatting Designs B Sure and Save These Exclusive Patterns As They Ar Published From Time to Tine,
T
wo bisters
T
Gaest ToweL
tr HE supply of towels can not be
too large. Add this beautiful design to your collection and it
will come in handy at some future time if you can not use it now. Satin stitch combined with French knots. There is no embroidery stitch, unless it be the feather stitch, as difficult to make as the French knot, and many workers do not realize that much depends on the quality and textture of thread used. This work was done with 6 strand flochet, using two strands for the knots and one for the satin stitch work.
cheaper in Canada, but I've never found them so. It was an interesting half hour, for he knew much about the raw skins, and they strolled through three floors of this enormous stock. When they returned to the car, he gave Helen his card with a tactful: "I believe we're both stopping at the Ritz I saw you at breakfast!" "Oh, yes, coloring. "Mr. Curtis had some business appointments, so I had to take this trip alone." "Well, it's an easy way to get around. I haven't been In Montreal in ten years, and I wanted to see how much it had changed." "Mr. R. J. Weston, 118 Belgrave Square, S. W.," read the card. So he was from London and his voice was unmistakably English. In the intervals of the megaphoning Helen found herself talking with sur
prising ease. It was usually so hard j Embroidered and Scalloped Edge of for her to talk to strangers. They j Towel, dwelt on the parts of old London. He i -0R the embroidery use lazy daisy had not been back for two years, but! r" stitch with centers of French he knew it as only a Londoner can. j knots is the design as shown in Helen spoke of tb antique shops, and j this very attractive towel. The daisy of her disappointment that there were so few in Canada.. " -
"Have you been to the one on St. Catherine street?" "No, we just got in last night; but I have that address. I'm going there this afternoon. "Why, this is Saturday thev close
at one." Then as Helen looked her I disappointment: "This car goes right i by there on the way back. Shall w e i get out? It's not far from the hotel." j Helen hesitated. Would it be very: unconventional? She knew there! was a certain freemasonary among; travelers, and her eagerness to seej the shop before it closed surmounted!
her scruples. When they turned into St. Calherine street, he signaled to the guide to let them off. Watson's Antique Galleries was in the block beyond. The windows were enticingly crowded with Sheffield, china,' and bric-a-brac. (Merc Monday.)
4.
begin in center of towel, and mark toward each end. stitch twice closely on machine around each scallop; cut out dc. closely around for foundation. 1st How Make 6 open meshes on each scallop. Thus. 4 rh.. skip 3 dc, si. 'st in 4 dc, 4 ch, and corst'nua at point of scall p. Pull thread through, pull through next st., holdiag on needle until there are three stitches taca- vjII Qrough all three at once, thus tying corners so they will not stretch. Treat each scallop in same manner. Be sure and have six open meshes to each scallop. .
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is in pink, but the little branches j of feather stitching from between the J petals, are made of green. Detail of Scallop of Towel 53. Mark scallon as larse as desired; I
2nd Bow 2 dc, 1 p., 2 dc, 1 p., 2 dc, 1 p., 2 dc; repeat until the 6 meshes are filled. Repeat to end of work.
"The Crevice"
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By Wm. J. Burns and Isabel Ostrander
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A charming reception gown is shown here, in which black Bilk net, gold lace and gold tissue cloth are combined. In the skirt rt double i tunic edged with jet drops over the tissue cloth underskirt,which is veiled with lace. The bodice is simple, with long in front and revere collar of lace. The sleeves are quite interesting, for they are elbow length and effectively trimmed with black .iet. A crushed girdle of blue satin affords a smart detail
OPENED
Heary Blaine sat in his office, leisurely turning over the pages of a morning newspaper; his attitude was one of apparent idleness, but the occasional swift glances he darted at the clock and a slight lifting of his eyebrows at the least, sound from
j without betokened the fact that he I was waiting for some one or someI thing. j His eyes scanned the columns of each page with seeming carelessness,
! yet their keen glances missed not one
significant phrase. And suddenly his gaze was transfixed by a paragraph tucked away in a corner of the second page. It was merely an account of trouble
between capital and labor in a distant manufacturing city, and a hint of an organized strike which threatened for the immediate future. The great detective was not at all a politician, and the social and economic conditions of the day held no greater import fcr him than for any other conscientious, tarseeing i iiizen of the country, yet he sat a long moment with wrinkled brow and pursed lips, musing, while the newspaper dropped unheeded upon the
i desk. j His- reverie was suddenly interruptI cd by the sharp, insistent tinkling of ; the rclephone; a clear, girlish voice ; ci:mo to him over the wire: j - Is this Grosvenor 0760? This is j -liss Law ten speaking. An alteration i must he made at once in that last gown yen snt me, and it is imperai tive thst I see you in person concerni iiig i'- It will be inconvenient for me tc hc you come here this morning, j Where shall I see you? At your esI t. biiEhmcnt or " i She qaused suggestively, and he rej plied with a hurried question, j "It is absolutely necessary, Miss I Lav.ton. that you see me in person? j You are quite sure?" "Absolutely." Her voice held a : ring of earnestness and something more whic h caused him to jump to a j lightning-like decision. I "Very well. I will meet you in I twenty minutes at your Working Girls' j Club. I am an architect, remember, i and you wish to build a new and more improved institution of. the same order on another site. Therefore, ! you have met me there to show me
over the old building and suggest ' changes in its plans for the new one. You understand. Miss Lawton? My name is Banks, remember, and be a few minutes late." "I understand perfectly. Thank you. Good-by." The receiver at the other end of the line clicked abruptly, and the detective sprang to his feet. A quarter of an hour later Blaine presented himself at the Anita Lawton Club, where a trim maid ushered him into a tiny office. There, behind the desk, sat a girl, and at sight of her, the detective, master of himself as he was, gave an imperceptible start.
There was nothing remarkable about her; she was quite a common type of girl: slender, not too tall, with a wealth of red-brown hair, and soft
A Resl Detective Story by the World's Greatest Detective. A Fascinating Love Story Interwoven with the Tangled Threads of Mystery. - Copyright, 1916, W. J. Van Company. Newspaper ri'-ts by International News Serv'ce
hazel eyes; yet she reminded Blaine vaguely but insistently of some one else some one whom he had encountered in the past. (More Monday.)
(More Monday.)
TYLES FOR THE
Woman's Eye
She paused, but as Julia made no re-1 she was quick to see her advantage
ply, she continued: "You mustn't and to seize it.
worry about her, my dear child. She'll have to learn sooner or later to fend for herself. It's yourself I'm worried about. You're as white as the nillow
slip there. By the same token, it J wouldn't be a bad thing for you to lay I down your head on that same pillow and get a mite of rest. Do, there's a' good child!" ' I Julia obeyed the suggestion and j made an effort to speak gratefully. "You. are very kind. Mrs. Halloran." !
she said; then, with a gasp, she added: "Oh. I wish that my sister would come! It's getting late!" It had been at this juncture that the
door was pushed open by Caryl her-l
self. So there was, besides disapproval, j perhaps a little baffled curiosity in the sentiments which made Mrs. Hallo-! ran glare indignantly at the newcomer ! as she left her and Julia alone. I But all that Caryl understood was i that her sister was angry with her for '; having lied to her. It Is very hard to forgive cne whom we have deceived j and who has discovered our deception.
iaryi .Marvm was proving this tact, and was so uncomfortable in the experience that she felt no twinge of sympathy for her sister; indeed, she did not give a moment's thought to the anxiety that Julia might have suffered. Why couldn't an older girl mind her own business and let a younger one have a good time in her own way? There was sullen spitefulness in the reply she made to Julia's threat to ask
Kelley Delaine with whom Caryl had spent the afternoons of yesterday and today. "Ask him, if you like," she sneered. "A pretty show you'd make of yourself going to his rooms and prying into my affairs, and whining 'Who went out with my sister?' as if he was
j the ruler of my actions when I am not I busy with his work! I can just fancy
what he would think of you if you did that. Besides, while you claim to be so prim and proper, I hardly see how you can suggest going alone to any man's rooms on such a private matter as this. You may think I am imprudent, but I am" sure that I would
not do such a vulgar thing. You really ought to have more care for your reputation, Julia. I tell you it takes the goody-goody girls like you to do
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Your Daily Laugh
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HAGERSTOVX. Ind., June 3. The Kindergarten will be opened next Tuesday. There will be a forenoon session and it will be held in the basement of the Christian church. The kindergarten will be conducted by yiisz Esther Porter and .Miss Lucile Geii-ler and will be of six weeks duration Mr. and. Mrs. Charles Knapp nnd .Mrs. Sam Seirsdorfer, Mr. and Mrs. Mart Knapp and Mrs. Violetta Knapp, Mr. and .Mrs. James Knapp and family attended the funeral of Joseph Gray at Dublin Wednesday. Decorate Parents' Graves. Mrs. Dora Hughes of Logansport, anie here Tuesday to decorate the graves of her parents and sister at
way. who is sick Alonzo Smith .spent a few days this week at Detroit Mich.
WLL GO BAREFOOT TO SAVE LEATHER
BERLIN. June 3. Lack of leather which is beginning to be felt here very much, and the price of shoes has become prohibitive to many. The "Strassburger Post" advises: "Walk barefoot during the summer of 191fi! "It will not only be a hygienic but also a patriotic act. How much leather could not be saved for morp
"The fcg."
world
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SOME DEBT.
owes every man a. lrv-
the kind of thing you propose! To his rooms, indeed! You oueht to be
I ashamed to propose it."
This sudden reversal of positions made Julia gasp with astonishment. Caryl might not be wise, she might not seem to have any especial intellect, but she was no fool where her own interests were concerned, and
Some of the quaint evening frocks and those used for the dansant are shown with hats to match, thus lending an effective touch to the outfit. Here is an dance gown in Joffre blue taffeta, with quaint waist and full skirt, cloth trimmed, with puffings of self material and bands of velvet ribbon. The snug waistline, puffy sleeves and' floral bouquets add odd little picturesque details.
of
"At the present hlffh cost of living ttafs some debt."
SOUNDED SUSPICIOUS. Frank I offer you my heart
leans. Maude What's that? How many learts have you been passing 'round tnong the girls?
ENOENHALL FAMILY TO HOLD REUNION IN ECONOMY ON JUNE
Absolutely Puro No Alum No Phosphate
TfraiiLL-V-g-"-TH- -r
ECONOMY. Ind.. June 3. The fifth annual reunion of the Menhenhall family and relatives will be held Thursday, June 8, at Peirce's Lake The Friends Aid Society of Williamsburg furnishes the dinner at 35c per head. A program will be rendered. Rev. Martisha Carter of Indianapolis, will be present and deliver an address. Mrs. Myrtle Shallenburg and Miss Helen Chamness of Richmond, are on the program, the former for a reading, the latter for a recitation. President Bazil Mendenhall of Popular Run, Secrtary Schyler Mendenhall of Winchester Mrs. Robert Fletcher and son Worth, were at Richmond Wednesday William Bullenger returned from Richmond Wednesday afternoon Mrs. Nora Hadley of West River, was here Thursday afternoon. ....Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Cain and son Kenneth, were over near West River Wednesday afternoon fern hunting Miss Fae Hadley is visiting relatives at Greensfork this week.. . . . Ezra Frasier and Joe Cain just finish
ed painting Eldo Cain's farm build- j
ings and will commence painting the M. E. church Mondav.
Whooping Cough. "When my four children had whooping cough a few years ago I gave them Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. There is no better remedy made for this disease," writes Mrs. John Gratz. Bluffton, Ohio. Obtainable everywhere Adv.
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Cremation Children, $15 Cincinnati Cremation Co. Office, 30 Wiggins Blk., Cincinnati, O. Booklet free.
u estlawn cemetery Mrs. Enoch useful purposes if all who are able to Taylor of Dayton, O.. was a guest of do so would walk barefnnt in ha c
Miss Annie Dilling Tuesday night.. .
Mifs Sadie Shaffer of New Lisbon, spent 'Monday night here and went to Greensfork Tuesday. Entertains Monday. Miss Maude Hays entertained Miss Frances Camperr Monday night Bert Wimmer jind granddaughter of Chicago, were gniests of Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Wimmer Monday and on Tuesday they went to Richmond, accomannied by Mrs. E. M. Wimmer, to see he latter's brother, Clayton Hatha-
mer!"
MILITARY COURTS ARE VERY SEVERE
PARIS, June 3. French military courts are severe in war time. As an instance, a man named Petitnot, an auxiliary soldier of the 1913 class employed on munition work, has just been sentenced to five years' penal servitude for absenting himself from his factory without leave.
HIS LITTLE JOKE. The one above Hey! where are yon joing? The one below Oh, Just taking a troll around the block!
FOR ME BLO
OB
ELL-AM
Absolutely Removes Indigestion. Onepackago Droves it 25c at all druQgisiz.
CINCINNATI
At All Drua Stores
iA ROUND
EVERY SUNDAY (Commencing May 7) FROM RICHMOND Excursion Train Leaves 4:30 a. m
See Local Agent.
AN
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OPEN A SAYINGS ACCOUNT at the German-American Trust and Savings Bank for $25.00 or more and a genuine PREMO CAMERA will be given to YOU. During the month of May we will present one of these Cameras to every person opening a new Savings Account for $25.00 or more. It makes pictures 2 x3.i inches. Call and See It at The German-American Trust and Savings Bank 9TH AND MAIN
tif iLoiie::aS
and a hard pull for your car. Bring it to this garage, and have our mechanics look it over. There may be something the matter and there may not, and if we find no trouble, there will be no charges. Our repair men know how to repair your car, no matter what the trouble may be, they can soon have your car in perfect running condition.
Utij oor Tiros H oro
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THE McCONAHA CO. Eastern Indiana's Oldest Established Automobile House. 418-420 MAIN ST. PHONE 1480
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