Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 41, Number 199, 8 July 1916 — Page 8

PAGE TEN

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM: AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY JULY 8, 1916

Summer Reading ; for People Who Read Palladium

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Helen and Warren; Their Married Life By MRS. MABEL HERBERT URNER Originator of Their Mnrld Life," "Author of "The Journal of a Neglected Wile," "The Woman Alone," Etc. " '

Helen etood before the mirror In the maid's room, buttoning over her own (lender shoulders the embroidered straps of the maid's best serving apron. With tremulous flgers she pinned on the maid's cap. Then slowly she turned around before the mirror wltx a critical, appraising gaze. It was an attractive, trim looking maid that the glaBS reflected. She must change her shoes the rhinestone buckles of her French-heeled slippers were most unservant-like. A 6izzling sound sent her flying to" the kitchen. The potatoes were boiling over. She lowered the gas. looked t the roast in the oven, and then ran into the library to scrawl a hasty note: "Anna left at 5 o'clock. Went off in a rage, because I Insisted that ?he polish the salt cellars. She said she cleaned the silver once a week, and that was enough. There's no ons to erve dinner, so I'm going to serve it myself. I'm going to be the maid. Mr. Hotaling has never seen me and he'll never know. Say I have a sick headache and can't come to the table. Now, Warren, you MUST help me carry this through! Don't come out to the kitchen. Keep him entertained until I announce dinner. Give him your place at the table I want his back to the pantry door." Leaving the note In Warren's room propped against his military brushes, Hflf-n rushed back to the kitchen. Testing the now mealy potatoes with a fork thrust, she dried them over the flame, crushed them through the ricer, and set them in the warming oven At !eaat they were ready. The cauliflower she would serve plain with melted butter; he would not attempt a HolUndaine sauce. Could she carry it through? Now that' she bad undertaken It she dared not. fall. With hot resentment she thought of Anna. After all her kindness, it was the rankest ingratitr.de for the girl to fly up and leave Just before the serving of a company dinner. Sho had tried to get Warren on the

phone so that he could take Mr. Hotaling to a restaurant, but his stenographer had said he had gone for the day. He was bringing Mr. totaling home with him at 7. There was no way to prevent It. In desperation Helen's ingenious mind conceived the plan of serving the dinner herself disguised as the maid. As Mrs. Curtis, in a dinner gown, flushed and disheveled from the kitchen heat, she could not serve. But as the maid she would not be noticed. If -only Warren could be amenabte!He. would be furious. He. loathed any form of dissembling, but it would be too Jate for him to object. He would not risk making a scene before Mr, Hotaling. A quarter of seven. She turned on thj lights in the front room and library and lit the shaded candles on the sideboard. Everything was ready. The cocktails, Scotch, cracked ice, bread, butter and celery were all on the serving table, so that she could serve quickly. As Mr. Hotaling would sit with Ms back to both the pantry door and serving table, he. would hardly see her, (More Monday.) ATTEND AUTO RAGES

CAMBRIDGE CITY, Ind., July 8. Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Hazelrigg and daughters, the Misses Flossie and Neva, are spending a few day3 in Toledo, in attendance at the races.. . ..Mrs. Ray Hlnsky and children of Richmond are visiting the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Beale... ..Mrs. Ell Ball has returned to Kekomo and Mrs. Oliver Pickerel of Charlotteville have returned to their homes after a visit with their parents Mr. and Mrs. William Chase.

The landlord is an unknown personage in Bulgaria, for every resident is said to own a part of the land.

cooxeot it bkohe a nodie soma

3 . ,.y :?.:.: . - :. .,:.:::"..:"....;.:.::::.::-: $

Chicken with Cheese Sauce

By CONSTANCE CLARKE.

WHEN you wish to serve chicken in, a novel way, try boiled chicken with cheese cream sauce. Take a chicken trussed for boiling; rub it over with lemon juice; place a piece of slittcd fat bacon on the breast, tie it on; wrap the chicken in a well-buttered cloth; put it into a stewpan with sufficient boiling water to cover, with three or four sliced onions, a bunch of herbs, about twelve black and white peppercorns, and enough salt to season it; bring to the boll, and simmer for forty to

sixty minutes, according to the size , of the fowl. Then take up, remove the string and paper and dish up on a bed of steamed rice. Garnish, with parsley and button mushrooms; serve the chicken for dinner while hot with cheese cream sauce. CHEESE CREAM SAUCE Take four ounces of good Swiss cheese, cut up into very fine, slices, put it into a stewpan with half a cup of cream and one-half a cup of bechamel sauce and a dust of paprika pep per; . stir these ingredients over the fire until they melt, then use..

Monday Moulded Rice Pudding with Cherries

AWEAITH OF LUXURIANT HAIR

DUE TO CARE AND CUTICUM Shampoos with Cuticura Soap preceded by light touches of Cuticura Ointment do much to cleanse the scalp of dandruff, allay itching and irritation, arrest falling hair and promote a hair-growing condition. . Samples Free by Mail Cuticura .Soap sad Ointment oM everywhere. I.!rral isuiple of fvh mailed fres wltb 33-p. book. Addron poiwa.-3 "Cuticura," Dept. ICG, Boston.

OXFORD HIRES NEW TEACHERS

OXFORD. 0., July 8. The village board of education has filled the last two vacancies in the public school teaching "staff for the coming year. Miss Lieah Smelser. Oxford, a graduate of Teachers' college. Miami university, this year, will teach the second grade, salary $55 a month. Miss Ada

Morris. Hamilton, a graduate of the

Liberal Arts college, Miami university, will teach the seventh and eighth grades, salary $75 a month.

MRS. BARNES RETURNS

NEW PARIS. O., July S. Miss Helen Harris is the guest of her grandparents at Zanesville, O., for the

I summer Mrs. Elizabeth Barnes, who has been the guest of Mrs. Juliet F., and Miss Frances Means returned Saturday to her home in Hugo, Okla I Cam, ml T Uactlrw nf TVjvtrMl ic tha

guest of his mother and his daughter, Mrs. George Mann.

Carelessly thrown away cigar and

i cigarette stubs are blamed for 1,306

I fires in New York city last year.

"I'm tired of being hounded, and I'm too weak and too tired to opposet.you, even if it did matter." He gave the required names and addresses, and slouched away, his animosity gone, and only a dull, miserable lethargy Eagglng upon his worn body. When the outer door- of the offices had closed upon him, Henry Blaine again called up Anita Lawton. This time her voice came to him sharpened by acute distress. "I did not recognize the tones of the person's voice, Mr. Blaine, only I am quite sure that he was not the man in the library, with my father the night of his. death.-' But oh, what did he mean ,by the terrible things he said? It could not be that my father brought ruin and tragedy upon any one, much less drove them to suicide. Won't you tell me, Mr. Blaine? Ramon, won't although I. am convinced he knows all about it. I must know." "You" shall, Miss Lawton.' " I think the time has come when you should no longer be left in the dark. I will tell Mr. Hamilton when he comes to me this afternoon for the interview we have arranged that you must know the whole story " But Ramon Hamilton failed to appear for the promised interview: Henry Blaine called up his office and his home, but was unable to locate him. Then MlS6 Lawton began making anxious inquiries, and finally the mother of the young lawyer appealed to the detective, but in vain. Late that night the truth was established beyond peradventure of a doubt. Ramon Hamilton had disappeared as If the earth had opened and engulfed him. The disappearance of Ramon Hamilton, coming so soon after the sudden

death of his prospective father-in-law, caused a profound sensation. In the small hours of the night, before the press had been apprised of the event and when every probable or possible place where theh young lawyer might be had been communicated with in vain, Henry Blaine set the perfect machinery of his forces at work to trace him. ' ! : It was dawn before he could spare a precious moment to go to Anita Lawton. On his arrival he found -her pacing the floor, wringing her slim hands in anguish. "He is dead." She spoke with the dull hopelessness of utter conviction. "I shall never see him again. I feel It! I know it!" "My dear, child!" Blaine put his hands upon her shoulders in fatherly compassion. "You must put all such morbid fancies from your mind. He is not dead and we shall find him. It may be all a mistake perhaps some important matter concerning a client made it necessary for him to leave the city over night." She shook her head despairingly. "No, Mr. Blaine. You know as well as I that Ramon is just starting in his profession. He has no clients of any prominence, and my father's influence was really all that his rising reputation was being built upon. Besides, nothing but a serious accident or death wouid'keep him from me!" (More Monday.)

-By-

Virginia Terhune

Van de Water

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5S

FOURTH JOINS ARMY.

A young Richmond, man, twenty years old, joined the infantry service of the United States army today at the local station. This makes four recruits for the seven days of July. '7

"I am," Delaine affirmed calmly, although he hoped that Somerdyke would not notice that his face grew a shade darker. "I am Interested in any good, refined woman who is fighting as fairly and honestly as she Is. And as I don't care to see her miserable I'm asking you not to make a fool of her sister. For, Harry, you know you don't care a rap about her except to have fun with her." Harry Somerdyke was an ease-loving mortal with no very strong principles of any kind. Delaine was right when he said that he cared little for Caryl Marvin except to amuse himself with her. Yet, if she threw herself at his head the fault was not his. However, as he had not seen her nor heard of her since, their parting last week, she seemed less of a temptation and less attractive than when he was with her. And he liked Kelley and was willing to please him if he could do so without inconvenience to himself. "All right!" he agreed, "I promise to let the girl alone that is, not to seek her out, unless, of course, she takes the initiative, and sends for me. Which isn't likely." "Not at all likely," observed Delaine dryly. "She and her sister are ladies, you know not adventuresses," Then, dropping the subject abruptly, he talked of the horse of which Somerdyke had told him, saying he would ' look him over" tomorrow. Ten minutes later he went away, almost satisfied with his interview, leaving Somerdyke just, time to gulp down a sandwich before hurrying off to meet Ben Hadley on the Coney Island boat. For a long hour after their return

Suffrage Leader Heckles President

NEW PARIS PASTOR LEAVES ON VACATION

" : ?j I ' 4 ' 'J- '"' ''-" i ' mmw :

from Coney Island Harry Somerdyke and Hadley sat together in the grill room of Somerdyke's hotel, wrapped in a haze of tobacco smoke and talking of Venezuela and Iron mines over ice-filled glasses. Before the pair parted Hadley again turned the conversation to the subject of Caryl Marvin. "Look here, -Harry," he said, "do I or do I not get a knockdown to that very classy article you claimed to know on the boat this evening? If so. when?" , Somerdyke hesitated. Then he sent a puff of tobacco smoke whirling toward the ceiling and spoke. "I don't know, Ben; I really don't. I'd half made up my mind not to see her again. Oh, you needn't grin in that sardonic way. I'm not the kind you seem to think I am. All the attraction that child has she carires in her face. I've taken her out to lunch twice. She has a fine complexion, pretty eyes, and never a sign of intelligence. Likewise she can lie faster and in more ways than a horse can kick. After the first hour or so she bores me. Besides that. Kelley Delaine old Puritan has been reading the riot act to me about not raising expectations, etc in the child's silly mind. No, on second thought, Ben, I guess you don't get that introduction after all. I wont be the one to set the cat on the canary. Of course, if the lady should insist on seeking my acquaintance in spite of my noble resolutions, that's another mater!" He smiled complacently. "If by any chance she does that I'll introduce you." "How wonderful Is this sudden reformation," Hadley mused aloud. "At times you sound like a hero in a dimo thriller, Harry. I'll bet your engaged to someone. I can see it standing out all over you." Somerdyke laughed. "Guess again, old scout," he replied, 'it isn't that. Ben, but Kelley Delaine is a good

friend of mine, and he made me promise for reasons best known to himself, but not because he cares about the girl that I wouldn't turn the head of his pretty little stenographer an r further. I told him that I would leave her alone. To tell the truth. I began paying attention to her more to plagu Kelley than for any other reason." (More Monday.)

HELP YOUR STOMACH

TO DO ITS WORK

NATURALLY NORMALLY-

0 "FIRST AH)

IS

NATURE'S

IN STOMACH

OR BOWEL DISORDERS

TRY IT

NEW PARIS, O., July 8. Methodist: Rev. ,F. F. McLaughlin, pastor. Sunday school 9:15 a, m., H. W. Bragg.

superintendent. Morning worship at j 10:30 o'clock, District Superintendent i Rev. W. H. Wehrley, Cincinnati, O., in j charge. Communion will also be ob- ; served. Epworth league 6:45 p. m. Evening service at Gettysburg church. ; Presbyterian: Rev. E. J. Vance, ; pastor. Sunday school, 9:15 a. m., M. O. Penland. superintendent. Morn- ; ing worship, 10:30 o'clock. Subject: : "On the Emmaus Road." A large ?.t-,

tendance is anticipated at this service, being a farewell sermon by the popular pastor before leaving for a six weeks' vacation in Tennessee. ChristianEndeavor, 6:45 p. m. Farewell evening sermon at Gettysburg church. Subject: "Life's Rosary." Christian: Rev. George F. Crites, pastor. Bible school, 9:30 a. m., C. E. Denny, superintendent. Morning worship, 10:30 o'clock. Evening worship, 7:30 o'clock. New Paris Colored: Rev. R. Thomas, pastor. Preaching 11 a. m. Class meeting 12 noon. Sunday school at 2 p. m. Worship, 3 p. m.

MRS. POHLMEYER RECOVERS.

Mrs. H. J. Pohlmeyer, 106 South Fourteenth street, who was severely burned about the face and hands yesterday morning by paraffin, was reported today to be recovering from her injuries, and is suffering much less pain.

Lubrication

Explanation: In the chrt below, the letter en. potite the car indicate! therade of Gargoyle Mobil' oil that should be used, hor example: "A" means Gargoyle Moblloll "A " -Arc." means Gargoyis Mooiloil "Arctic." etc. The recommendations cover all models of both pleasure and commercial vehicles unless otherwise no'.ed.

NEURALGIA YIELDS

to the healing:,

A purifying

stimulating influ ence of

7y)rj L, E3mQnscn Wa& D C. While speaking at the dedication of the new home of the American Fee' eration of Labor here, President Wilson was heckled by Miss Mabel Verncr. a Nevada suffrage leader. It was admitted today at the headquarters of the Congressional Union fo Woman Suffrage that Miss Vernon's action was part of a plan which will bs continued "as a demonstration of the growing dissatisfaction with this administration's treatment of the woman suffrage amendment."

DR.

JONES'

LINIMENT

as no other remedy. Mrs. Edward Heiser, of Elizabethtown, N. J., 6ays : "Dr. Jones' Liniment is excel

lent for neuralgia, tootnacne, sore throat,

6prams, ana we nna it useful in many other ways." Used fifty years. Look for the Beaver trade mark.

nui bus 25 and 50 cents per bottle.

A Chart of Recommendations printed, in part, on the right, specifies the correct grades of Gargoyle Mobiloils for almost 600 makes and models of automobiles. Let us supply you with the correct grade for your car. This is but one example" of our equipment to give sound advice on all manner of repairs or supplies. Our policy is to hold business, not merely to get new trade from time to time. McConaha's Garage 413-420 Main St. Phone 2121.

Iff try

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OHIO EHAN INJURES WOMAN SHOT BEFORE ARRESTED

OXFORD, O., July 8. With a, bullet in his left breast, and several cuts in the head, inflicted with the butt of a revolver in the hands of Deputy Marshal J. C. Duerr. A. H. Gray, 54, farmer, was locked up Thursday evening after a terrific struggle with the officer. On the John Freeman farm, near Gray's place, Martha Freeman, 22. is in a serious condition with a gash in her head caused by Gray when he struck her with a shot gun barrel. Also Mrs. John Freeman, 65, was similarly wounded, though not 6o seriously. Meets Officer With Gun. When Duerr went to arrest Gray, he was met by Gray with & shot gun, and ordered to halt. Duerr proceeded and Gray fired, but just as he pulled the trigger Mrs. Gray, who was standing at his side, struck the gun barrel and the load went wild. Wanted Possession of Child. The trouble grew out of an attei'ipt by Gray to secure possession of his

grandson, Clifford Freeman, 4, son of Walter Freeman and Jessie Gray Freeman, who were recently divorced, the child going to the father. Gray's condition is not serious. He is said to have told Freeman women tha. he would have the child if he had to kill the whole Freeman family. Friends of Gray claim that worry over his daughter's domestic troubles has unbalanced his mind. The daughter last week became a "war bride" in Dayton.

A. R. IL, O System Builder & Tonic For Sale Quigley's Five Drug Stores.

VM is l.ome ITrtW an Heir!

This is a subject that has a place in all !

ranas m an times. And it naturally di

rects thought as to the comfort of the mother during that wonderful period of expectancy. Mothers who know rec-omti-.encl "Moth er Friend." It is an externa! remedy for the Btrctchinj muscles, enables them to expand without undue strain, assists the organs to crowd against nerves, to pull at ligaments to thus avoid pain.

Thus restful days are assured, peaceful

nights are experienced, morning sickness, headache, apprehension and other distresses tre among the various thiDgs which womer everywhere relate they entirely escaped by using "Mother's Friend. And by its effect upon the muscles the form is retained and they return to their natural, smooth contour after baby Is born. Get a bottle of this invaluable aid to expectant mothers. Any druggist will supply you. It is harmless but wonderfully effective. Write to Bradfleld Regulator Co., 413 Lamar Bldg., Atlanta, Ga for a specially written guide book for women interested in the subject of maternity. It will prove an inspiration. It contains information that every woman should know all about, Yvntc today.

Iffiiagaira FaSD

$9

EXCURSSO

.f ROUND TRIP From

mJJ RICHMON

DDra $9.00

Wednesday, July 12th Tickets Good Returning Until July 25, Inclusive Via Ohio Electric Railway CEDAR POINT AND LAKE ERIE

For full information and reservation of berths, see agent or address - - J. S. Waters, District Pass.- Agent, Dayton, Ohio. W. S. Whitney, Gen. Pass. Agent, Springfield, Ohio. Later. Excursions, July 26, August 2, and August 16.