Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 318, 23 September 1909 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AJP T SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1909.
PAGE FIVE. Mark Twain Is Growing Feeble Healtfi and Beauty IcZis By Mrs. Rice sj
STAG PARTY AT THE CLUB. The following men who are members of the Country club took dinner at the club house last evening: Professor Torrence, Professor Waldrlp, Mr. Rudolph G. Leeds, Mr. Raymond Nicholson, Mr. George Seidel, Mr. John Y. Poundstone, Mr. S. S. Strattan, Jr.; Mr. Dudley Elmer, Mr. Wilbur Htbberd, Professor Thompson, Mr. Frank Braffett, Mr. Charles Shiveley, Mr. Walter Hutton, Mr. William Dill, Mr. Isaac Wilson, Dr. C. S. Bond, Dr. Frank Harold, Dr. S. C. Markley and Mr. Charles McGulre. ! J J J PLEDGES ANNOUNCED. Mr. Philip Starr, who is attending school at Kenyon College, Gambler, Ohio, Is being rushed by the D. K. E. fraternity. The Kappa Alpha Theta sorority of Indiana University, Bloomlngton Ind., is rushing Miss Florence King. Mr. Ldnvllle Ferguson of Cambridge City Is pledged to the Sigma Chi fraternity of Indiana University. . ' jl jl jl INFORMAL CARD PARTY. Mr. audi Mrs. W. R. Poundstone entertained last evening at their flat. South A street, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kaufman, the Misses, Dorothy Vaughan, Juliet Swayne, and the Messrs. Charles Morgan, Carl Bernhardt and Henry Bulla. The evening was spent at cards. Refreshments were served. Messrs. Morgan, Bern hardt, Bulla and Kaufman were ushers at the wedding of Mr. and Mrs. . Poundstone. ' - j j$ J -HA8 RETURNED HOME. Mrs. Clara Fleming has returned home after a visit with her son, Mr. Burr Fleming at New Castle. M J FOR MISS NINA BO DA. Mr. and Mrs. George W. May, of North avenue have been entertaining for the pact few days Mis Nina Boda, a charming young woman of Los Angeles, Cal.. in whose honor quite a number of delightful affairs have been given. Mr. and Mrs. May entertained with a theater party on Friday and on Saturday a picnic was enjoyed at Shartle's, and on Monday evening a dinner was given at the May home on North avenue, the guests repairing later to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schoen of Lexington avenue to spend the evening. Quite a number of other affairs are being arranged tor this "week to render Miss Boda' s visit a most enjoyable one. She with Mrs. May wilt leave next week for Richmond to vlBlt friends and both will return here. Dayton News. j j J IS IN THE CITY. Miss Winnie Mendenhall of Mecca, Ind., is the guest of relatives in this city. J J Jl ' -.-. A HOUSE WARMING. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Wehrley were given a house warming last evening at their newly appointed home on South Sixteenth street. There were about thirty guests. Luncheon was served. . 18 At CAMBRIDGE CITY; Miss Hazel Thomas is spending a few days with friends in Cambridge City, Ind. ENTERTAINED RICHMOND GUEST8 Mrs. Rolla E. Deweese has been entertaining her sister, Mrs. Alice Hollingsworth, Miss Caroline : Hollingsworth, and Mrs. Fred Carr from Richmond, her old home, for the past few days. They returned to their "home on Saturday, Mrs. Deweese accompanying them In the Deweese touring car and returning the same evening. Dayton News. jl jl jl HAS RETURNED HOME. Mrs. I. Hw Harris has returned from a two weeks stay with relatives In Chicago. . J J J$ MRS. L. M. HAYES HOSTESS. A pretty afternoon company was given Wednesday by Mrs. L. ML Hayes at her home on Grosshall street, in Fairview. Point euchre was played a four tables. Favors were presented to Mrs. Mary Clingen peel, Mrs. Dormer, Mrs. Brooks, Mrs. Paddock and Mrs. King. After the game, the hostess served a dainty luncheon. The guests were Mrs. Mary Clingen peel. Mr a. Beard, Mrs. Tieman, Mrs. Reid, Mrs. When a man or woman finds sickness coming on, such as indigestion, weak eyes, kidney trouble, etc., it is time some attention is given to the subject of food and drink. In practically all such cases where coffee or tea is the drink, one can obtain relief by quitting the coffee or tea and taking Postum, for he leaves off a drink that is an active producer of disease and takes in its place a powerful liquid food that contains elements for rebuilding the nerve centres which have heretofore been torn down. "There's a Reason" .
EDITED BY ELIZABETH R.
SOCIAL CALENDAR FOR TODAY Mrs. Christian Lichtenfels is entertaining for Mrs. Arthur Bundy at her home on South Eighth street. Mrs. George Cates is hostess for a bridge party at the Country Club house. Mrs. John Hewitt is entertaining the Teddy Bear euchre club. Members of the Helen Taft sewing circle are meeting with Mrs. Harry Dennis. East End aid society of the First Christian' church is meeting with Mrs. A. H. Gist of Main street. Mrs. Ellis is hostess for a meeting of the West Side aid society. Dormer, Mrs. Paddock, Mrs. King, Mrs. Felner, Mrs. .Arthur Hodgin, Mrs. Turner, Mrs. Brooks, Mrs. Will Irvlu, Mrs. Rich, Mrs. Nieman and Mrs. Geo. Muey. J J A RARE TREAT. Music lovers of this city will be given a rare opportunity of listening to one of the most famous singers when Madame Gadski appears in recital at the coliseum, "Wednesday, October twentieth. The patroness list contains the names of a number of the . most prominent women of the city, both in social and club circles. ; Jl Jl J ARE GUESTS IN THE CITY. Miss Laura Reynolds, Miss Elsie Reynolds and Mr. Archie Reynolds are spending the week with Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Elrode, 50 South Sixteenth street. 4 FOR A NEW RESIDENCE. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bundy of South Eighth street, will soon take up a residence in their new home in West Richmond. j$ jH Jl INVITATIONS ARE OUT. The following invitations have been issued: ' Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Lott request the honor of your presence at the wedding of their daughter Bonnie Luclle to . 1 ! Mr. John Yeats on Wednesday evening, September twenty-ninth, nineteen hundred and nine, six-thirty o'clock v , .-J" Richmond, Indiana. CLUB NOTES GOOD-CHEER CLUB. A pleasant meeting of the GoodCheer Club was held yesterday afternoon at the home of Mrs. James Coots, north east of the city. Golden rod with purple and: white asters were used in decorating the various rooms. Officers were nominated at this time, the election to be held at a later date. A number of important business matters of interest to members were also discusser. The remainder of the afternoon was devoted to needlework. Light refreshments were served. In two weeks Mrs. Anna Albright will entertain the club. . jl Jl ORGANIZE A C. W. B. M. A number of the members of the First Christian church. C. W. B. M. went to Whitewater Tuesday to organize a branch of the local society. Dinner was served in the new church dining room. A social hour followed. Later, a program was presented, Mrs. SAW. Traum; president of the Richmond branch presiding. Mrs. Judge Boggs gave two vocal numbers and Mrs. William Burr gave an entertaining account of the history and organization of the society of the First Christian church of this city. Mrs. J. A. Walls, the district manager of the C. W. B. M., gave an interesting talk on the administration and purposes of the general organization, after which a society was organized. jl jl jl LEAGUE IS ENTERTAINED. , The members of the Epworth League of Grace Methodist church were pleasantly entertained last evening by Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Ward at their home on South Sixteenth street. About fifty guests were entertained. Supper was served in the attic. A program consisting of music numbers was given. Various games also furnished amusement The occasion was much enjoyed by all in attendance, jl jt jl . LADY FORESTERS ENTERTAIN. The second of a series of card companies was given yesterday afternoon by the Lady Foresters of St. Andrew's church in the school assembly hall. There were guests present for four tables at euchre. Mrs. Matlock, Mrs. Darnell, Mrs. John Hafner and Mrs. Roy Taylor won the favors. Jl Jl JE ST. ANN'S SOCIETY, An evening card party will be given Thursday, September thirtieth by the St. Ann's society of St. Andrew's church in the school assembly room. Jl Jl Jl MEETING POSTPONED. . The missionary meeting of the First Presbyterian church which was to have been held Friday afternoon has ,been postponed until Thursday, September thirtieth on account of the death of Mrs. S. A. Thompson! Jl Jl jl INDIANA FEDERATION OF CLUBS. Mrs. Grace Julian Clarke of Irvington, Ind will be a candidate for the office of president of the Indiana State
THOMAS.
PHONE 1121 Federation of Women's clubs, the election for which will be held at the state meeting at South Bend, during the last week of Oriober. Mrs. Clarke has been indorsed by the women's clubs of the Seventh Congressional district, where she has won distinction as a club worker. Mrs. W. S. Majors of Shelbyville is now president of the state federation. RESPECT BINDS EHTIHE COUNTRY Sincerity of the South Recognized in North, Says Dickinson. NOT HELD AS "TRAITORS" 8ECRETARY OF WAR STATES DIXIE FOUGHT FOR WHAT IT BELIEVED WAS RIGHT MAKES A FINE IMPRESSION. Nashville, Tenn., Sept. 23. The people of the north have no protest against the people of the south for cherishing old traditions rather do they feel that in teaching its children to reverence the heroes of the "lost cause," the south is pursuing the only proper course. - The one time bitterness has disappeared and a spirit of respect now binds the sections once separated by Mason and Dixon's line respect of the children of the victors for the children of the vanquished, because now it is recognized that the south was not treasonable in its action, but true to what it believed was right. This, in effect, was what Secretary of War Dickinson, in his address at the state fair told the Daughters of the Confederacy, whose guest he was. "The verdict of the world upon the action of those who sustained the south already is recorded," said Mr. Dickinson. "Not only, in the esteem of those for whom they, foughtbut in the general judgment of. men, the names of Davis, Lee, Jackson, and their comrades forever will be enshrined in honorable memory. Kept Southerner's Portraits. "I always kept conspicuously displayed in my residence in Illinois portraits of Davis, Lee and Jackson, and with them the confederate colors. They were seen there by our president, by the son of Grant, by the son of Lincoln, and by many union soldiers. It never occurred to me to offer explanation or apology. "Sensible people of the north know that in cherishing these sentiments and teaching our children to reverence the memory of those who sustained the southern cause there is no protest against the government under which we live. "Gen. Luke E. Wright told me that one day his boy came from school and asked if his grandfather, Raphael Semmens, was a pirate, showing in his history, where it was so recorded. Different Spirit in North. "A different spirit for a long time has prevailed in the north. This has come from the forceful, persistent appeal from the south to a dispassionate judgment upon the constitutional history of our country, the facts leading up to the war, and the convictions of the southern people. "Their cause was stated by such great publicists as Davis, Stephens, Lamar, and Hill. Their character was illustrated by such living examples as Lee, Gordon, Walthall, our late commander, Stephen D. Lee, and thous-
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Archduchess Maria Theresa, of the Austrian Royal House, nrho was guest at nuptials of Miss Stewart, now Princess Anita, to Prince Miguel, of Braganza, at Tulloch Castle, Dingwall, Scotland.
ands of others who in place of prominence won by their spotless reputation esteem for the people of which they were exponents. "The people of the north ought to want to honor the people of the south for their devotion to the memory of their cause and ought to rejoice in the belief that the acts of the southern people were not treasonable, but in ac cord with the interpretation of the con stitution believed in by them, and their forefathers." "Mary Jane's Pa" Coming. Without sensationalism, Manager Henry W. Savage will present Henry E. Dixey at the Gennett, Oct. 5th. in a realistic comedy, "Mary Jane's Pai," by Edith Ellis. It ran for six months in New York, three months at the Chicago Opera House and four weeks in Philadelphia. Juvenile Leva of the Morbid. An observer of child life says that not only among the poorer classes, but in every rank, children have a curious love of the morbid. Their dolls are always 111 and have operations. The death of a pet. however beloved, brings with it tbe deep and solemn Joy of a funeral. Workers for tbe Children's Happy Evenings' association of London have found that tbe children among whom they labor occupy themselves in playing at domestic brawls and funerals and have tried to lead them into more cheerful and healthful amusements. Many of the children, they say. have to be taught bow to play just as they would be taught geography or arithmetic. Prince Bismark was once pressed b a certain American official to recommend his son for a diplomatic place. "He is a very remarkable fellow," said th , proud father, "he speaks seven languages." Indeed," said Bismark, who did not hold a very high opinion of linguistic acquirements; "what a wonderful head water he would make." Filipino prisoners in Bilibid. both men and women, are now allowed a certain number of cigarettes a day at government expense.
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HEW AUTOCOMPAHY Pilot Car Will Be Manufactured by Prominent Business Men.
OUTLOOK IS FLATTERING With the addition of the Pilot Motor Car Company, a new concern for this city, for which articles of incorporation were filed at Indianapolis Tuesday, Richmond is rapidly gaining a reputation as an automobile center in this section of the country. The factory will be located on North Tenth street across the railroad, in the building formerly occupied by the Kramer. Manufacturing company.. The new company, under the management of George Seidel, Clarence H. and Horace M. Kramer, is capitalized at $100,000. Work has already begun on the manufacturing of automobiles and the company has a brilliant outlook for the ensuing year. It is said that the concern has enough business in prospect at present to keep the factory running the first season. The promoters who are at the head Time For Hardy Shrubs Fred H. Lemon & Co. Florists and Decorators. FOR SALE Small tract of land near tbe city saltable and equipped for aardenlna and chicken raising W. H. BRADBURY dt SON 1 and 3.Westeott Block
Foreign Exchange
Sally Ann: Hot baths are weakening and should not be prolonged beyond a few minutes.
Alice: You say'that your sweetheart is drifting from you to go with a more attractive girl. Can you blame him wben you confess that you have neglected to take proper care of your complexion? Try this If you want to win him back again: Get from your druggist 4 ounces of spunnax. put In a half-pint of hot water and add 2 teappoonfuls of glycerine. This makes a complexion beautifier that clears and whitens the skin without the use of powder. Apply to face, forearms and hands, rubbing lightly until dry. This spurmax lotion is just fine for the removal of pimples, cold sores, tan and freckles. It gives sallow and oily skin a pink and youthful appearance. V. D.: The best tonic I know for purifying the blood, arousing the liver and restoring lost appetite is made by dissolving an ounce of kardene and a balf-teacupful of sugar in a half-pint of alcohol, then adding enough boiling water to make a full quart of tonic. Take 1 tablespoonful five minutes before each meal and before retiring and it will strengthen and build up your entire system while relieving you of dullness, languidness, liver blotch and pimples. It keeps tbe blood In excellent condition during the winter. Edith: Yes. most face creams contain oils or fats that may encourage growth of hair on the fare. Use this complexion cream Jelly and you need not worry: Get from your druggist 1 ounce of almozoin. put in a fruit jar and add half a pint of cold water and 2 tea spoonfuls of glycerine. Stir briskly: let stand. If too thick, add water until It is of the consistency you prefer. Almoioin cream Jelly most satisfactorily meets the require ments of both cold cream and massage cream, and is Inexpensive when made at borne. It will keep the skin free from blackheads and thoroughly clean the pores, permitting them to become of the new company, are all business men of wide experience, who have been very successful in their other manufacturing interests in the city. The company will manufacture tourinsj cars and runabouts only, and state that they will put out a very highclass car. Between 75 and 100 men will be employed, and It will be necessary fo practically all of them to be imported from other cities. Holland has no clam on aviation records, but, according to a report from Amsterdam. It Is the first country in which an airship has been seized for debt. It Is a flying machine of the Voisin pattern, owned by La Mouette, a Paris aeronaut association, which was organized to give exhibitions in Holland. X There la NottJsia to X ZWISSLER'S QUAKER DREAD For eale sy all aocera DR. L. S. CHENOWETH Dentist. Now on vacation: will be In New w Offices In Murrsy Theater Bldg.. w Oct. 15. Cor. 10th Main Sts. OF RICHMOND ORGANIZED 1872
I I DR. PARK I I DENTIST 12 North Tenth SL
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normal and smaller. Good for chapped hands and face, too.
Harriet: To make a never-falling flesh reducer dissolve 4 ounces of parnotls In a pint of hot water. Take 1 tablespoonful three times a day just before meals and that awful fat will go away. W. P.: I advise using ranthrox for shampooing In preference to eggs or any soapa. because with ranthrox the hair dries mora quickly and is left soft and fluffy. Just put a teasroonfol of ranthrox In a teampfnl of hot water and stir until dissolved. Then pour on the hair and rub well. It makes a quantity of fine rich lather. Anrthing mentioned In my recipes can to bought from your druggist. If he hasn't ranthrox he ran get it for you from his wholesaler and win do so It he values your trade. Viola: Yes. healthy eye are clear and sparkling. If yours are dull. r4 and Inflamed, you need an eye tonic. Get an ounce of crystoa from your drugKist and dissolve It In a pint of water. One or two drops In each eye every day Is all that Is required. This eye tonic will not smart or bum and will give relief when the eyes are tired. Inflamed or sore. It strengthens the eyes and will benefit yea It you wear glasses. Zella: As yon are troubled with scaly scalp and falling hair you certainly need a good hair tonic to nourish the roots of the hair and restore the scalp to a healthy condition. To make the best quinine hair tonic I know, get from your druggist 1 ounce of qulnola and dissolve It In a halfpint of alcohol and add a half-pint of cold water. Rub In with the fingers until absorbed by the scalp and hair once or twice a week. Q.: A good foot wash Is made of a pint of water to which are added a tablespoonful of salt, a pinch of alum and a few drops of arnica. One of the reforms which bars been placed to the credit of the Young Turkish party In the Ottoman empire Is tbe abolition of the "red ticket regulation. Until this took place a red card was Issued to a Jew on arrival la Palestine, the possession of which entitled the holder to a three months residence. If the red ticket man wish to remain longer the credential had to be renewed, and this naturally lad to abuses In the nature of graft. The abolition of this restrictive measur was urged upon the authorities by Israel Zangwlll. Cosdkma: Gold Medal Flour la cheapest It's best, too more loaves to the sack. Kmnmu, NOW 13 tbe tlS to bay tbet new vntsSi CHEAP! nmm am o.LBiraEissrj -Watch EcSirf3
