Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 229, 9 July 1919 — Page 7

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1919.

PAGE SEVEN

BRINGING UP FATHER

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By McManus

SO THl"b lb TK f i TO I , NOW THI t L I TC OTHER -LL I I THAT WILL 1 I ND THlb 1( E. von 1 DON'T TALK 1 f I WHERE WE ARE ( j!3S$L, t1 adaot My brrTlN, 0E FOR MX BE m (R ltmBEO 2ftT A i $L , TT I ,v

TO JOIN LABOR FEDERATION.

(By Aocttd Press) PARIS, July 9. The functionaries congress, representing over 800,000 minor officials, has passed a resolution instructing Its federal council to arrange a method by which it can associate itself with the general labor federation's manifestation on July 21.

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CMMSBsaoi d ussaasaassjii MURRETTE. In "Square Deal Sanderson," William S. Hart's newest Artcraft picture, which is shown at the Murray theatre today. Is found one of the strongest stories ever employed for a scenario. It was written by Charles A. Selzer and picturized by Lambert Hillyer. It tells about a westerner who sees a horsethief shot in the back, and later, kills his assailant. A letter tells Square Deal Sanderson that the thief is a brother of Mary Bransford, ftwner of a ranch in New Mexico, who writes that she is beset by a man who is trying to steal her property. Square Deal goes to her rescue and poses as her brother, whom she has not seen from childhood. He saves her, gets into and out of many bad scrapes, but finally bests the villian and his band and wins the girl as his reward.

Ann Little plays the girl and of course Bill Hart is the westerner

whose "handle" typifies his character. This picture is said to be one of

Bill Hart's best photoplays, which in

the parlance of the day, may be said to be "going some." MURRAY.

Do you believe in ghosts? Of course not; neither did Betsy Thome, but if

you saw a weird figure moving aDOUi tn thfi dim lisrht of a dilapidated grave

yard, would you have the courage to

solve the mystery? That was thp task assigned her as

a girl reporter in the latest Thomas

H. Ince photoplay, "lhe Haunted tsearoom," starring Enid Bennett, which Is showing at the Murray theatre today. It was a mystery a detective could not ferret out; it baffled a materialistic doctor; it staggered the reasoning power of the owner of the property, and it surely was too much for the old colored servant. But the woman's wit of Betsy Thorne tore away the veil of mystery and made the meanderings of a ghost look as reasonable as syrup on your cakes for breakfast. Charming Enid Bennett plays the part of a Betsey in this story from the pen of C. Gardner Sullivan. She is supported by an unusually capable cast, including Dorcas Mathews. Jack Nelson. William Conklin, Harry Archer. Otto Hoffman and Lloyd Hughes. WASHINGTON In her new Goldwyn Picture with the interesting title of "Spotlight Sadie," Mae Marsh comes to the Washington theatre beginning today, and the star promises to give an uncommonly good account of herself. She is Sadie Sullivan, a timid newcomer in the chorus of a Broadway musical comedy with the avowed Intention of marrying a millionaire and being happy ever afterward. She tm-tu him and thev love each other,

but their happiness is of short duration because of the jealousy of another girl. Sadie's sweetness and innocence are made capital of by the management of the show, with the result that she is heralded far and wide as "the saintly showgirl. Stories are told of her fondness for reading a prayer book while waiting for her cue and when the young fellow learns that this is true he i3 convinced of her high character. In time he is made to know that it is a part of the role Sadie unknowingly plays. When he sees her at a notorious cafe, where she has gone in response to a false message from a friend, his worst suspicions are realized. A powerful climax is worked up from this point, in which Mae Marsh displays all her whimsical appeal and unique dramatic power.

FILET LACE TRIMS SILK CREPE SKIRT

J V 1VM i ff $k "f i Vi V . " J-' t $j V ' '' ' -fi

lA Chance xol i ve

Dainty, indeed, is this accordion plaited skirt of crepe de chine with its high waistline and filet trimming. It is a new and very attractive innovation, the usinp of bands of filet lace to trim a separate skirt.

THE GREAT EVENT "Well all rignt!" Mrs. Hargan conceded grudgingly. "I want Annie to have all the good times she can. But I can't see her gettin' married unless it's to some man that's fixed in life and is willing to give us a helping hand. And you don't find many men that want to marry girl's whole family. I don't see what's to become of us." Neither did Aunt Moggie. So she kept silent. It was arranged that Bernie should come to the house. Annie planned it for a Sunday so she could have the whole day to get ready in. First of

all, the flat must be swept and garn-,

ished, the kitchen scrubbed and the soupy smell aired out. Then Annie's cot in the corner of the living room had to be made to look like a couch, with an old shawl of Aunt Moggie's spread over it. The red-checked tablecloth had to be washed and ironed and the worst spots rubbed out of the drugget with hot water and ammonia. Then Annie dusted everything and thinned out the collection of broken ornaments, medicine bottles, brushes

and combs, hair ribbons, collars and other odds and ends of small wear

that always graced the mantelpiece,

her mother protesting at intervals

that she didn't see any use in taking so much trouble.

Annie did, however, and it was well

toward 5 o'clock, the hour of Bernie's

coming, when she had the children

neated up and herself washed and

dressed in a presentable frock.

She was very tired. And nervous

for fear her mother would be in one of her querulous moods, or the children on tiptoe to see sister's caller would make nuisances of themselves,

as children of eleven and eight usually

can.

Bernie came at last, bringing a long-

stemmed yellow chrysanthemum nicely wrapped in tissue paper. He intended It for Annie. But Annie, for

diplomatic reasons, made her mother believe it was a delicate attention shown her. Bernie, catching the tiny deception and meeting Annie's eyes,

New School Equipment Installed, Ready For Fall

The summer months are the time for an intensive course of house clean-

past her to lay his hat on the couch. inK jn ciy schools. The corps of jani-

Somehow it put them at ease, anu I tors and assistants are making slight,1

things passed off not so badly, or renovations in some of the buildings course it was like Aunt Moggie to hap-1 an(j all are being cleaned from top to

Kidney Remedy for 40 Years A Pronounced Success

pen in and take the children for a

! walk. And after they had gone Mrs.

Hargan thawed enough to propose

that Annie make a cup of tea.

basement, in preparation of the open

ing o school. Manual training equipment is being

installed in the basement at White-

This helped matters still more, and water school. This work has not been

although the cups were cracked and ; done before in a regular shop at the the saucers didn't match, and the ; Whitewater building, as in the other

sugar was "A" sugar and lumpy, and

there was nothing but ginger snaps to eke out, Annie felt a glow of triumph round her heart and was content. She and Bernie went for a walk afterward in Stuyvesant square and sat on a bench. They said little. But the understanding that had run all along like a subterranean etream seemed stronger than ever. When she felt Bernie's arm go around the back of the bench and touch her shoulder, the same delicious thrill melted through her that she had felt at the Settlement House when Herbert Travis came into the room. Only this was better. There was a realness, a comfort in this and a promise. "Come on, Nan," said Bernie presently, "let's celebrate. D'yer like the Chinese food chop suey and that? 1 know a dandy place near here." (To be continued.)

&chools of the city.

Better stairway facilities are being put in between the first floor and the basement of Starr and Baxter schools. In both these buildings the manual

! training work shop is in the basement

and the children regularly pass up and down the basement stairs.

The Wisest Move He Ever Made Says James R. Miller, of Hartford City, in Telling of His Visit to Inter-State Doctors. HAS GAINED 22 POUNDS He Had Lost 29 Pounds in Weight and Given Up Hope.

When kidney diseases have been successfully treated for a period of more than forty years, it is reasonable to assume that the remedy therefore must possess unusual merit. Such is the remarkable record of Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy. Without its ability to give relief and benefit its users so that they would continue its use, it could not have existed 40 months, much less 40 years of its enviable record. Many letters have come to us to prove that it has been a household remedy for years. Here is what one grateful woman has recently written: "I wish to say that your remedies have been used in our family for firteen years. We are never without a bottle of Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy in our home, and it has saved many a doctor's bill. It Is a wonderful medicine for all diseases of

the kidneys and liver." (Signed) Florence E. Schmidt, R. F. D. No. 1. Dunkirk. Ohio. For the elimination of poisons due to impaired kidney action, Warner's Safe Remedy was famous 25 years before this woman so judiciously began its effective use. There are thousands of people wbo realize that their general health depends upon their kidneys and have found Warner's SafeKidney and Liver Remedy a reliable family medicine. Forty years ago It was named "Safe" because it Is SAFE absolutely; equalizing the work of both the kidneys and liver. Satisfactory results are obtained in the most severe cases, and it is sold by Thisttethwaite's drug stores and druggists everywhere. A sample sent on receipt of ten cents. Warner's Safe Remedies Co., Dept. 587, Rochester, N. Y. Adr.

Paul Draley Is III In Hoboken Hospital Private Paul T. Druley, son of Mrs. W. P. Clark, of 601 Main street, is :ii s 1- 1 a. i i. u.i x t r

liAi:on v t flpInff ft r Mr. James R.Miller of Hartford boken N. J . according to v ord re-1 Cltv was in the city on one of his trips

Druley was with the Sixth Engineers and landed at Hoboken last week, taking ill soon after his arrival. He was overseas ten months, saw active fighting on the Marne front and

later went to Germany with the army I

of occupation. He expects to be able to come home In a few weeks.

A new dust-laying preparation, the basis of which is molasses, has been introduced in the South African

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whispered "I getcha," as he slipped i mines

The I'nited States offered bounties under general orders No. 191, series of 1862, June 28. 1862. It offered $302 n new recruits and $402 to veterans.

Ask Compensation For

Officers Lost On Tampa

(By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, July 9 Congress was asked today by Secretary Daniels for special legislation authorizing payment of increased compensation to heirs of four officers of the cutter Tampa, destroyed by a submarine in the Bristol channel last September. The higher pay due them for tempor

ary promotions which they had. earned but had not received when the vessel was lost, cannot be paid because of a ruling of the comptroller of the treasury. "Justice to the supreme service which they rendered to their country in the performance of their duties" said the Secretary, should prompt passage of the legislation. The officers were: Lieutenants John Thomas Carr, John Farrell McGourtyi Roy Ackerman Bothwell and James Maraden Earp.

Y. M. C. A. SECRETARY KILLED

(By Associated Prnssl PRAGUE, Tuesday, July 8. James Ceary, a secretary of the American Y. M. C. A. was killed and an Italian aviator injured when a machine in which they were flying over the Wysehart bridge fell today. The pilot was doing circus tricks with the airplane and Ceary operating a moving picture apparatus, when the plane fell and was wrecked.

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LUXATED DROIftl A DRIVING FORCE

BEHIND KEEN SUCCESSFUL MEN AND WOMEN When ydu think of the successful men and women you know people who are doing things worth while you will find that they possess

xorce, vim ana energy the kind that simply brim over when the blood is filled with iron. Nuxated Iron by enriching the blood and creating new red blood cells, strengthens the nerves, rebuilds the weakened tissues and helps to instill renewed Jorce and energy into the whole system. Three Tnillion people use it annually as a tonic, strength

ana blood-builder. MAKE THIS TEST Fee how long you can work or how fa

valk without becoming tired; next take two five-

prain tablets of Nuxated Iron three times per day after meals for two weeks. Then test your strenpth again and see how much you have pained. Numbers of nervous, run-down people who were ailing all the while have most aston5h!nfir1y Increased their strength and endurance simply by taking iron in the proper foTm.

Sold by Thistlethwaite's Drug Stores and all other druggists.

r vou can jSfl

(fi)wwln)5l Results

from the

COMFORT FOR YOUR SOLE Fosler's Corn Remover Relieves the pain Puts the "EES" in feet 25c PER BOTTLE MAKE YOUR LIVER BEHAVE and get some joy out of life by using FOSLER'S ACTIVE LIVER PILLS (Formula on every package) 25c Per Pkg., but worth a Dollar Fosler Drug Co. "The Rexall Store" Corner 6th and Main and 105 Richmond Ave.

to see the Inter-State Doctors from whom he has been taking treatment, and when asked about these specialists, he became very enthusiastic, saying his first visit to their office in the Starr building was the wisest move of hs life. He also handed In the following

statement of hi3 case and treatment so his friends may know where he received such skillful attention. Hartford City, Ind., Dec. 12, 1918.

To the Inter-State Doctors:

I want in this way to publicly thank you for the manner in which you handled my case and saved me from the jaws of death. I had been suffering for over a year with a general breakdown. Doctored all the time could get no relief and no satisfaction as to what ailed me till I called on you last January. Before coming to you I had lost 29 pounds in weight. Practically going to nothing. Hadn't been able to do any work for ten months. It seemed that death was my doom. I was induced to visit you people last January and I went to you expecting my case to be pronounced hopeless. Your Doctor Culver gave me a very thorough examination and said I had an enlarged liver and breaking down of the left kidney and told me if it had gone much longer it would have resulted in general dropsy and death. He gave me some hope, however, and I placed myself under his care that day and began treatment and it was the wisest move I ever made in my life. For today I am a living monument of your efficiency and skill. I began to improve rapidly in about two weeks and have ever since been on the upgrade. 1 I went to work in two weeks and

have been at It ever since and when I quit treatment I had gained 22 pounds in weight. Never felt better in my life and my friends think it nothing short of a miracle how you brought me out, and rest assured I shall always have a good word for the Inter-State Doctors, and I feel it my bounden duty to write this letter for publication and thus guide suffering humanity to the sure and safe place to get relieved of their ills. JAMES R. MILLER. The Richmond Institute of InterState Doctors Is located on the second floor of the Starr Building, corner Main and Tenth. The offices are at all times in charge of a competent specialist who is prepared to give

I you a morougn ana rigia examination

for which he will make no charge. He will not. accept for treatment any cases that he considers in his opinion to be of an incurable nature. DOCTOR CULVER, the head physician, will be in the Richmond office all day next Friday. Dr. Culver having been sick in bed with a fever for a week had to disappoint his many patients last Friday, but will fill his

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Adv.

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TODAY AND TOMORROW

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Today WILLIAM DUNCAN in Cyrus Townsend Brady's Sensational Western "THE MAN OF MIGHT" also WALLACE REID In the Paramount production Believe me Zautippe a mile of laughs

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ae Marsh

"Spotlight Sadie" 1

In "Spotlight Sadie," winsome Mae Marsh has the role of a daughter of Erin who becomes a chorus queen to win the man she loves. There Is a villian in the play; a sly old fox who thinks chorus girls are toys for men. He bargains and Sadie well, see Mae Marsh as the saintly show girl and learn the truth. A Fox Comedy, "VIRTUOuThUSBANDS" and the Popular PATHE NEWS BOYANS and ROBINSON playing the pictures. Music with pep Coming Sunday, Monday, Tuesday CHARLIE CHAPLIN in "SUNNYSIDE"

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Girls! MURRAY Girls! Now Playing Billy Purl Musical Comedy Go. Presenting the snappy musical play "Broadway Brevities" 15 People Special Scenery Ginger Chorus of Eight Girls Complete change of program Thursday. Also ENID BENNETT in "The Haunted Room" Usual Prices. "Better Come Early"

MURRETT JL V JLL Home of Stars

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Wednesday and Thursday Dorothy Dalton

-in-

"QUICKSAND" Only a cabaret singer? Don't you believe it! This girl Is trying her best to earn the bread while her husband serves his time on a false charge. And It's no easy Job, as you'll learn when you see this

picture.

Good Comedy "NOBODY'S BABY"

Friday and Saturday How'd you like to wake up as heir to millions? That's what happened to GEORGE WALSH in "PUTTING ONE OVER" BETTER COME EARLY PRICES 10c and 20c