Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 8, 16 November 1908 — Page 5

PAGE FIVE. "LADY OP SMILES" A RICHMOND GIRL Miss Burchenal Makes Lives Of New York Tenement Children Happy. EMI TO SELL 200 COATS IN TEN DAYS TEACHES FOLK DANCES. 20 COATS PER TOTS ACCUSTOMED TO KICKS AND CURSES NOW KNOW HOW TO SMILE SINCE YOUNG WOMAN ENTERED LIVES.

THE RICHMOND FAL'LADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRA3I, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1908.

DAY

FOR

10

DAYS

MAY NOT FIGHT FOR INJUNCTION

Prosecutor to Investigate Merits of Park Case. There is some doubt if the prosecuting attorney will institute proceedings against the Terre Haute, Indianapolis & Eastern Traction company in the effort to prevent its use of North Twenty-third street for freight line purposes. The prosecutor believes he could make his case, but other attorneys are ui Ot uuiereui opinion, me prosecutor can not take up tho matter very soon owing to the press of other cases and during the delay will make an extensive investigation of his chances. Poor Tools And A Good Worker That Is What Makes Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Sour Taste, Foul Breath And Catarrh. The stomach is a good strong vital organ, which is constantly protecting and feeding every other organ of the! body. It is the most abused, neglected and roomed member of man also. Most men abuse their stomach with undercooked food, high living, alcohol, tobacco, pastries and scores of other unhealthy practices. i When the stomach at last sickens of all this abuse and cannot do its full duty; most men are not warned but keep up their assaults on the stomach vmtll at last it rebels and begins to Mrlke back and cry for help. Man by his own abuse has taken away from the stomach the tools to work with. These -tools . are the gastric juices which go to make up the digestive agents. From 7 to 35 lbs. of gastric juice are turned into the stomach every day. When poor, poisonous food consumes this juice, dilutes it, robs it of Its strength and throws it, a fermented mass from the system, of course there is just that much of the gastric fluid which cannot be readily supplied by the blood. When food comes into a stomach filled with depleted fluids lacking of power to do their part, the good strong stomach is using poor tools and. of course, cannot succeed in. Its work. A condition which often prevails 5s that which takes place when the gastric juice contains too much alkali. If the juice were wholly alkaline it would not only devour and digest the fluid but would eat and digest the ctomach itself. Such gastric fluid does the digestion no good and attacks the walls of the stomach making them raw and sore and setting tip inflamation and irritation. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets will strengthen a stomach filled with poor gastric juice. They will remove any abnormal alkaline condition, allay ir ritation, sweeten the breath, remove catarrhal conditions and digest food no matter how the stomach has acted before. These little tablets contain an ingredient, one grain of which will digest perfectly 3,000 grains of food. They will digest an entire meal placed In a jar without the aid of any other force except themselves. They have demonstrated this time after time. Every druggist carries them in stock; price 50c. and 40.000 physicians use them in their practice. Send us your name and address and we will mail you at once a trial package free. Address, F. A. Stuart Co., 150 Stuart Bids-. Marshall, Mich. The Laplanders are the shortest people In Europe, the men averaging four feet eleven Inches, the women four tfamk Bin Inrhs.

WE THINK WE

8th and Main NEWS OF TO REACH THE SOCIETY The announcement of the engagement of Miss Jessie Garver, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Garver, 223 South Fourteenth street, to Mr. Oliver Keese White, of Hart, Michigan, has been made. Miss Garver is a popular young woman and has a host of friends in this city. She was a graduate in the class of '06 from the Richmond high school and also attended Earlham College. Miss Garver is a member of the South Eighth Street Friends' church and is identified with a number of church societies. Mr. White is a graduate of the Michigan Agricultural College and is quite prominent in business and social circles of his home city. The date for thti wedding has not been decided upon, "but the affair will probably be celebrated some time in December. Several social functions will be given for Miss Garver in the next few weeks. 3 Mr. and Mrs. Fred Marchant entertained with a dinner party yesterday at their home on the Henley Road, in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Halsey Marchant, of Ogden, Utah. Among the guests were Miss Hilda Shute, Miss H. M. Jones, Miss Sophia Marchant, Miss Florence Corwin, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Critchet, Miss Ruth Critchet, Mr. Ray Marchant and Mr. Harry Marchant. An informal reception was held in the afternoon. The hours were from three until five o'clock. Among the guests received during the afternoon were: Miss Mustard, Miss Magdalena Engelbert. Miss Edna Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Study, Miss Martha Boyd and Mr. and Mrs. Myrick. j jt ji Miss Ruby Brehm entertained with a dinner company last evening at her j home on North Eighth street. The affair was given to celebrate her birthday anniversary. Pumpkins, corn stalks and various fall decorations were used in embellishing this apartment. In the dining room, Earlham pennants and banners were used. The color scheme, yellow and white was carried out in the table appointments. An elegant dinner In several courses was served at six o'clock. Places were arranged at the table for a large' number of out-of-town guests. Among whom were Miss Bola Rule, Miss Dordt.hy Kirkpatrick, Miss Jessie Weaver. Miss Gertrude W7eaver, and Mr. John Schell of Eaton, Ohio, with Mr. Armstrong, Mr. Tuder, Mr. Wilfred Caufman, Miss Anna Simons. Miss Marie Caufman and Mr. Roller of Indianapolis. Several town guests were also included in the enjoyable function. tS 8 Several town people have received invitations for a dance to be given in Indianapolis by Mr. and Mrs. John Aufderhetde, Friday evening, November 20, at their home on North Meridian street. ,4 w ,st Mr. James Harrington, who attends St. Mary's school at Dayton, came 'home yesterday in order to attend the Collins-Harrington wedding. Jt . Mr. and Mrs. Frank Critchet and daughter Miss Ruth, who have been visiting with Mrs. Crit chefs parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jones, of Denver, Col., have returned home. They also attended the wedding of Mr. Halsey Marchant in Cheyenne, Wyo. s Dr. and Mrs. N. S. Cox of 201 South Fourteenth street are entertaining Mrs. Cox's mother, Mrs. J. L. Smith c Greenfield, Ind., for a few days. j v Miss Josephine Cates sang a beautiful solo at the morning service of the St. Paul's Episcopal church yesterday. . i A surprise was given on Mr. and ' Mrs. Mason Byer Saturday evening at j their home, 1714 North E street. The I celebration was complimentary to

KNOW HOW.

WE KNOW, YOU KNOW WHAT IT TAKES

BEGINS TUESDAY MORNING, NOV

THE MASHMEYER STORE

SOCIETY EDITOR, CALL PHONE 1 121 their fourteenth wedding anniversary. The members of the party had preparedan elegant dinner, which was , served at small tables. Unique favors j were given each guest. Later in the evening eucL. e was played at six ta- ' bles. The score cards were made in. the form of hearts decorated with cupids, bearing the dates 1804-1'.H8. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. Byer, Mr. Adolph Stauber, Mrs. Harry Wessel, Mrs. Harry Chase, Mr. Harry Mills and Mr. Byer. Those enjoying the affair were: Mr. and Mrs. Harry Chessman, Mr. and Mrs. George Reid, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Igleman, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Chase, Mr. and Mrs. Adolph Stauber, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wessel, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mills, Mr, and Mrs. Alfred Collett, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Miller, Mrs. Harmon Wierhake, iss Nettie Chase, Mr. Harry Reid, Mrs. Alice Reid, Miss Ruby Reid, Mr. Car Reid, Mr. Walter Snaveley, Mr. Campbell of Frankfort and Mr. Earle Wessel. Jt JJ J! Mr. and Mrs. John Saunders of Indianapolis, are guests of friends "and relatives in this city. Mr. Saunders will return home this evening, Mrs. Saunders remaining over for a week's stay. .jj jt Miss Nettie Paulson will give a miscellaneous shower Thursday afternoon at her home, on the Straight Line pike in honor of Miss Bertha Davenport, whose marriage to Mr. Frank Burg will take place Thursday evening, November twenty-sixth. & & Invitations have been issued by Judge and Mrs. J. I McMaster of Indianapolis for the marriage of their daughter, Miss Adele McMaster to Mr. Ovid Butler. The wedding will take place Saturday afternoon, November twenty-eight at four o'clock. Miss McMaster has often visited in this city as the guest of Miss Edna Johnson. CLUB NOTES One of the most important events for the week is the Keramic art exhibit, which opens Wednesday evening. November eighteenth. The evening of the initial exhibit will be in charge of Mrs. Henry Gennett, a musical program having been prepared. A large number of visitors and out-of-town GREAT DRAMATIST WHO DIED RECENTLY. VICTORIEN SARDOU. Sardou was he dean of the French drama j of 77. He recently died at the age

l ed

guests are expected to attend the affair during the week, 5 A social will be given this evening in the parlors of the Fifth street M. E. church by the Ways and Means committee of the church. An old fashioned luncheon will be served. Music will be a feature of the evening. The public is invited to attend. A "winter picnic" will be given Friday evening by the members of the Athenaea literary society in the parlors of the South Eighth street Friends' church. Dinner will be served at six-thirty o'clock, after which Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mills will talk on "The Yellowstone Park." fcjC The Garsfield orchestra will furnish music for the Penny club Wednesday, when the members will serve dinner in the Pythian temple. The public is

I cordially invited to attend. DOMESTIC WOESTOLD Two Divorce Cases Occupy Attention of Court Today. x HUSBANDS ARE INHUMAN. Applications for divorce, that were continued from Saturday, owing to another case occupying the attention of the court, were heard in the Wayne circuit court this morning. At the conclusion of the hearings, the court intimated that Anna Dcvers would, be given a divorce from Joseph Devers and Nellie Renk. would be granted her request for a divorce from Frederick Renk. Proof of residence by a witness Is necessary in each case. But one witness was on hand, i Charles Potter, township trustee, was the other witness, but was out of the city. The plaintiff in the Devers case said her husband was commonly known as Edward Devers. She admitted he is the man who a few years ago assaulted Joseph Reddinghouse and slashed his throat, so that the death of the man was expected. Mrs. Devers told a story of habitual mistreatment at the hands of her husband. She will be granted the custody of two minor children, when the decree is entered. The trial of the case of Nellie Renk vs. Frederick Renk, was interrupted for a short time, while the deputy sheriff sought the defendant. He was within the jurisdiction of the court, and in accordance with the rules the court demanded the defendant's presence. He was located at one of the factories. Mrs. Renk told a story of cruel and inhuman treatment and failure to provide. She said her husband had not provided food and clothing for her as he should and she had been compelled to work out in order to secure money enough to make these necessary purchases. Cariyle Had Been Dead Too Long. Scotland has a great reputation for learning in the United States, and a lady who came over from Boston recently expected to find the proverbial shepherd quoting Virgil and the la bor der who had Burns by heart. She was disillusioned in Edinburgh. Accosting a policeman, she inquired as to the whereabouts of Cariyle' 8 house. "Which Cariyle?" he asked. "Thomas Cariyle," said the lady. "What does he do?" queried the guardian of the peace. "He was a writer, but he's dead," she faltered. "Well, madam," the big Scot Informed ber, "If the man is dead over five years there's little chance of finding out anything about him in a big city like this." Glasgow News. Kodol For Ingestion. - Relieves soar stomach, aalnitstxm of the heart. tHaests whatvaaeal.

WATCH US DO IT.

17TH Richmond

THE SCRAP BOOK

Wigwams and Snakes. An American had been seated at a London dinner table next a rosy cheeked, gray eyed English girl who affected an absorbing and flattering interest In the United States, about which she seemed to have Imbibed the usual extraordinary ideas of some Britons, especially with regard to the perils to be encountered In the more sparsely settled regions of the west. She tried her best not to be incredulous when assured that things were not really so bad as she Imagined. "It's reassuring to be told that there are not rattlesnakes In all the gardens," she said, with a dazzling smile, "but my cousin wrote me not long since that he had seen over twenty wigwams in one litfle village. Perhaps," she added as her companion made no immediate response, "perhaps the wigwams are not as venomous as rattlesnakes." A Sartorial Reflection. A young clergyman on his first appearance in the pulpit made a faux pas in a sermon directed against the very human fault of vanity. "Many a good woman comes into God's house to show off (perhaps she doesn't quite realize it, but the fact is unchanged) to show off her best clothes." Then he glanced arross the crowded pews and added, "I am thankful, dear friends, to see that none of you has come here for so unworthy a reason." When God Lets Loose a Thinker. Beware when the great God lets loose a thinker on this planet. Then all things are at risk. It is as when a conflagration has broken out in a great city, and no man knows what is safe or where it will end. There Is not a piece of science but its flank may be turned tomorrow. There Is not any literary reputation, not the so called eternal names of fame, that may not be revised and condemned. The very hopes of man, the thoughts of his heart, the religion oft nations, the manners and mon ; of mankind, are all at the mercy of a new generalization. Generalization is always a new influx of the divinity into the mind; hence the thrill that attends it. Ralph Waldo Emerson. Easily Wakened.. When Dr. Blomfield was bishop of London he received several letters complaining that the architect of a new church In his diocese had disfigured the interior and exterior with "useless gewgaws." Consequently the bishop went down to the little town to make an inspection of the building and summoned the architect to meet him there. The bishop could find nothing amiss with the exterior of the church nor with the interior until jus: ho reached the chancel he Iookc.; ... mid saw four wooden images apparently guarding the pulpit. "What do those figures represent?" he inquired. "The four evangelists, my lord," replied the architect. "They appear to be asleep," said the bishop. "Do you think so, my lord?" "That's the way they look to me," said the bishop decidedly. "John," called the architect to a man who was at work on one of the pews, "bring your chisel and open the eyes of the evangelists." Sleep With Windows Open. A famous doctor said recently, "It is safe to say that the breathing of bad air produces, directly or indirectly, more disease, especially among th poor, than all other Influences com bined." If that be so, how foolish for us to go on groaning and paying doctors bills when the remedy is at hand, wlti no greater effort than to shove up windows at every excuse. We bear a iot about the open aii cure, but most of us seem to thiak that unless we adept it with all its frills of fully equipped sleeping porches oi lean-tos on some breezy mountain tor. tbexe j .no thin? in itior us--

rew ot "us can sleep out of doors.

but all of us can bring out of doors j Into our sleeping rooms. It Is only a matter of wide opened windows and getting over an inner! tod dread ot drafts. Clever Sayings. Most things will come your way 1! you go after them. Most people have too much of out thing and too little of another. Swapping compliments is a good deal like swapping green goods. Our follies give the doctors a chance to make experiments at our expense. The wife of a shiftless man always has an excuse for him. He means well. Occasionally the world loves a lo4r, but more often it sympathizes with him. Advice as to how to get rich is about as cheap and profitless as the otbei kind of advice. Marshmallow Fudge. To make a very toothsome candy arc by the following recipe: Use two cups of granulated BUgai and one cup of cream. Put this In saucepan and heat. Add two square of grated chocolate and boil until It hardens when dropped Into cold water Before it is done add a tablespoon ol butter. Do not put it In all at once but a little at a time. Then put in th marshmallows, half a pound of them crushing and stirring with a spoon. Add the other bait pound after th candy Is taken from the fire. Pour It into buttered pans and when nearlj cold cut Into cubes. Should Have Plenty of Air. When an unwasbable garment hat Just been taken off never put It intt the wardrobe until it has been alrecfor an hour or so. Clothing which hai been worn a long time If not aired properly contracts most disagreeable odors. Air and sunshine have disinfecting qualities which are purifying, and w should know how to avail ourselves ol them. Hypochondriac I suffer a great deal with my eyes, doctor. Busv Doctor You'd suffer a great deal more without them, madam. Step lively, This is a new sensation to many and an utter impossibility on the majority. Many have given up all hope of ever stepping lively again, but It's a fact that they can and here is the means. "Ritten, the. Rheumaline Expert, is located for a short time at A. G. Luken & Co's Drug Store, Main street, expounding the wonderful Rheumaline Remedies which are really the only scientific relief for Rheumatism. Neuralgia, Lumbago, Sciatica, Gout and any disorders arising in the Kidneys, Liver, Bladder, Stomach or Blood, due to Uric Acid and they positively will not injure the stomach or affect the heart in any way. They contain no injurious or habit forming drugs and

Before You Slip or Get the Grippe Insure with E. B. Knollenberg 11 S. Eighth St. ACCIDENT ... HEALTH

COR. 9m and MAIN STREETS. FURNITURE BEDDING PICTURES

"The Iady of Smiles" is hai Miss "Betty" Burchnel is called by the children of the tenement, district of New York. Before she ascended the throne of their hearts to reign as a goddess, these pitiful children did not know how to smile. They played about the litter of the East Side streets, kicked out of the way by foot passengers and cursed by teamsters. Then she entered their lives and

now they know how to smile. The young woman who brought the joy of living into the hearts of the tenement children of New York, was formerly a Richmond girl and she Is known to a host of people In this city. Before "Betty" Burchenal won the hearts of the juvenile poor of New York, she won the hearts of her many Richmond friends, consequently they are not surprised at the wonderful I success she has met with in the me tropolis of America. Miss Burchenal was the daughter ol the late Judge Burchenal of th's city and she resided here until about eight years ago, when the moved with her mother, her two brothers and two sis ters to New York. Miss Burchenal has won the hearts ftf Ylf. little rhsriraa Kv t . . . K i .. K . ....... p.. t iru ii i i i;ivM She works under the dlrectloa of the Public School Athletic league of New York. For the past three years. Mist Burchenal has taught the teachers twin. uaiRt'B aim uiey ipicu ineir gin pupils. At first the teachers coasidered themselves too tl-ed'and-it too great a bother, but most everyone who lingered to watch dance joined in and now the teachers are enthusiastic. ' . The dancing rests them no matter how tired they are. Highland. flings and Scotch reels, Irish jigs. Russian, Hungarian, Italian peasant, Bohemian, Swedish dances all are entered into with a vim. Last spring had you been in Central park one sunny day you would have seen the 15.000 eirls who know the folk dances, no one could count the thousands of spectators, a big band to play and the head center and one who received the most compliments and the highest praise, Miss Burchenal, who originated the dances. - Miss Burchenal has given years of thought and study to the subject of making Americans drop their, peculiarities of voice. She to In llne'tflth a movement here in the East to really rescue the American from slang, bad enunciation and other faults and to lead him to speak a pure, cultivated English. One point that Miss Burchenal firmly maintains is that it seems nonsensical for the "elocution" teach, era to contend that t'aey teach yon how to speak pure Knglitth and correctly, and then train you to declaim all kinds of dialect. Miss Ruth will bring out a book on the subject in the spring and has contributed largely to magazines. There's nothing like , bread md from C;oll Mdal Flour. Dcborar. Kodol f SZ"S palpiU'ion of the heart. Digests what jrooeaL MUSIC WILSON Phone 2071 Adams Drug Store ' Bkenmafles.' beside curing the above diseases, the nature of the Rheumaline Remed.'fe is such that they act as a tonic to evry organ and put them all In a healthy state. Rheumaline attacks the cause, removes it, and stops its formation. Ritten can explain all this and give you the reason why, so go to see him. Get in line. Step lively. Rheumaline will take the swelling, stiffness and pain away. It's up to you to avail yourself of this opportunity. Your money is returned if you are not benefited. Rheumaline routs the disease and costs $1.00. Rheumaline capsules stop the pain and cost 50c per box. Get Rheumaline today. It removes the cause.