Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 337, 12 October 1909 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUX-TEULGKA Jl, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1909.

PAGE PITEL

RETURNED HOME. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lehman of Bellefoutaine, Ohio, have returned home after a few days' visit with Mr and Mrs. Wesley Brown. J Jl J MISS LARSH TO ENTERTAIN. An Informal company will be given Thursday by MIsb Bertha Larsh at her home. 127 South Thirteenth street, in honor of Miss Kiturah. Parsons who will leave soon for New York where she will study this winter. jl jl Ji WILL ENTERTAIN. Mrs. Frank Edmunds will entertain Informally this evening at her home, 521 West Main street. The affair promises to he one of the pleasant social events of the wek. J Jl Jl IS IN THE CITY. Mrs. Fred Burnliam, formerly Miss Stella Roney, is visiting relatives and friends in this city. Later she expects to go to New York and Join Mr. Burnham. They will spend the winter In the Bast. Jl Jl jl HAVE RETURNED. Mr. attd Mrs. Milton Craighead; have returned! from a fishing trip in Michigan. In their party were: Mr. and Mrs. Miles Bland, and Mr. and Mrs. Foot of Toledo, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Craighead spent several days visiting Mr. and Mrs. Bland enroute home. jl jl jl A GUEST HERE. Miss Lucy Barnett of Chicago Is the guest of her aunt, Mrs. Judson Rupe, 74 South Fourteenth street. Jl Jl J RECITAL A SUCCESS. The first of two Shakespearian recitals was given last evening in the St. Paul's Episcopal Parish house by Mr. John F. Howard of Boston, Mass. He appeared in "Julius Caesar," and

Anty Drudge Suggests an Essay. Tair Graduate "My commencement essay is on 'The Indisputable Superiority of Mind over Matter. " Anly Drudge "Why not make your essay about practical things: 'How Fels-Naptha Has Lightened Woman's iWork.' After you are married, and have a house v of your own, you will find that Fels-Naptha has done more to take the sting out of housework than anything ever invented."

The three great forward steps in woman's housework are: The modern range in place of the old fireplace and kettle; The sewing machine in place of laborious hand-sewing; Fels-Naptha soap, which makes it easy to wash clothes in cool or lukewarm water, without boiling or hard rubbing. Of these three, Fels-Naptha saves the woman more back-breaking labor, more tlm,c more money, and does more to make life pleasanter than either of the others. At the very first, you can see how it saves time and labor, but perhaps you'll wonder how Fels-Naptha saves money. In two ways: First it saves the cost of coal or gas to heat water and boil the clothes. Then the clothes last longer when washed with Fels-Naptha in cool or lukewarm water. Their fibre isn't weakened by boiling nor strained by hard rubbing. . You can't realize just what a help Fels-Naptha is until you've tried it in your own washing. Why not begin next washday ? i Fels-Naptha easy way of washing in place of the tiresome, tedious back-breaking method. Use it according to directions on the gdand green wrapper, winter or summer.

EDITED BY ELIZABETH R. THOMAS.

SOCIAL CALENDAR FOR TODAY A recital will be given by Mr. John F. Howard this evening in the St. Paul's Episcopal Parish house at eight fifteen o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Wehrley will be host and hostess for an Epworth League social at their home, 66 South Sixteenth street. A card party is being held at the Country club house. Mrs. N. C. Heironimus is entertaining the members of the Aftermath society this afternoon at her home, corner National and Central avenue. The Woman's Foreign Missionary society of First Methodist church is meeting this afternoon with Mrs. O. S. Harrison, 700 National avenue. delighted his audience. His intellectual interpretation of the great poet's dramatization of various phases of the life of one of the heroes of history was beyond par. He received the heartiest applause by his excellent delivery of Mark Anthony's oration and the quarrel between Julius and Cassius. Mr. Howard has several times been called one of the greatest dramatic readers of the age and the truth of the assertion was forcibly and thoroughly demonstrated to his listeners last evening. He is in truth distinctively scholarly and has thoroughly gained control of the spirit and purpose of his presentations. This evening Mr. Howard will interpret "Hamlet" The program will begin at eight-fifteen o'clock. RETURNED HOME. Miss Ruth Boaz, who has been the guest of Miss Coral Weeghman, 214 South Sixteenth street, returned to her home in Cincinnati today. 8 s5 HAS GONE TO CHICAGO. Mrs. Warren Hill of Chicago, who

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has been the house guest of her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. John C. Bayer for a fortnight, returned to her home Mon day. RETURNED HOME. Mr. A. S. Strattan who has been visiting relatives in this city for the past week left for Greensburg this afternoon. He will stop at Lewisville Ind., enroute home for a visit with his sister. GUESTS AT WEST GROVE. Mrs. S. C. Doughty of Hollywood. California; Mrs. Sarah M. Dobbs and daughter Mrs. Emma Eva of this city were guests of Mrs. Freeman Smith and daughter at West Grove, ovct Sunday. LEFT FOR EVANSVILLE. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Bayer of South Eighth street left this morning for a week's visit with friends in Evansville, Indiana. J J JL LLANELLY CHOIR. The Llanelly Royal Prize choir of Wales during its American tour, 19091910 commencing the first week in October, will appear in this city at the First Methodist church, January twelfth. The choir has been organized for thirty year? ami is a most excellent one. Mr. John Thomas is director of this celebrated organization. Glyndwr Richards says in writing of the choir: "It is an honor for anyone to direct such a superb choir as the Llanelly Prize Choir. Its appearance in this city will no doubt be welcomed by many music lovers. 4 WAS A GUEST HERE. Miss Lillian Meyer who has been the guest of Miss Florence Lacey of North Seventeenth street has returned to her home in Milwaukee. 8 j?t ENTERTAINED AT LEWISVILLE. Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Wilson and Mr. and Mrs. James Wilson were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wib Forkner at Lewisvllle, Indiana, over Sunday. til (fw DANCING CLASS MET. Mrs. Charles Kolp's dancing class met last evening in the Odd Fellows' Hall. The meetings are usually held on Friday evenings, but on account of the Fall Festival was deferred until last evening. After the class had received its instructions the former members of Mrs. Kolp's classes were permitted to dance. Piano and dTums furnished the music. Miss Fisher of Noblesville, Indiana; Miss Ruth Boaz of Cincinnati, and Miss Shad of Tiffin, Ohio, were the only out-of-town I guests. The class will meet again next Friday evening at the usual hour. CLUB NOTES WOMAN'S ORGANIZATION. A meeting of the Woman's Organ lzation of the First Baptist church will be held Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. J. W. Ferguson, 115 South Fifteenth street. Mrs. L. A Mote will be the leader. The topic, "Foreign Missions" will be discussed by the members. J jt MISSIONARY MEETING. The Woman's Missionary society of the Whitewater Meeting has postpon ed its meeting from Wednesday to Friday evening. The session will be held at the home of the Misses Moor man on South Sixteenth street. J j WOMAN'S MISSIONARY SOCIETY. Mrs. O. S. Harrison is hostess this afternoon for a meeting of the Wom an's Foreign Missionary society of the First Methodist church at her home, 700 National Road. The meeting was called at two-thirty o'clock. J j TICKNOR CLUB MET. The first meeting of the season for the Ticknor club was held Monday afternoon with Mrs. J. M. Coate at her home on North Twelfth street The meeting was in the nature of a social session preliminary to the inaugura tion of the year's study. The club will study the historic plays of ShakesFamily Cough Syrup Cures Any Cough in Five Hours. NEW PRESCRIPTION HERE. Here is given the most effective cough prescription known to the med ical world. It is a mild laxative, too, and this is what the body needs whet. suffering with cough and cold on tte lungs. A cough or cold indicates poisons in the system, causing inflamma tion and congestion. Nearly all cougn syrups relieve, but make the trouble worse by their constipating effects. This prescription not only reliev s quickly, but It cures any cough that is curable. Get one-half ounce fluid wiia cnerry oarK. one ounce com pound essence cardiol and three ounces syrup white pine compound. Mix In a bottle. Take for acute cough or bronchitis twenty drops every half hour for four hours. Then one-half to one teaspoonful three or four tims daily. Give children less according to age. A few hours" treatment will en re and heal the throat and lungs of til but consumptives. Cut this out end give. It to some friend who n ay need it to be saved from an early death by consumption. J -

peare beginning with King John. Several poems were read at yesterday's

meeting by the president Mrs. David W. Dennis. Mrs. E. B. Grosveaor will entertain the club members Monday afternoon at her home. 770 National avenue. j o je ANNUAL BANQUET. The annual Sunday school banquet of the First Methodist church will be held Friday evening at the church. A number of toasts and short speeches will be given. The program is in charge of Mrs. S. C. Bevington. J j j LADIES AID SOCIETY. The regular meeting of the Ladies Aid society of the United Brethren church will be held Wednesday afternoon at two o'clock in the Sunday school room. As this will be a business session members are urged to attend. ?5 WILL SERVE LUNCHEON. The Ladies Aid society of the First Methodist church will serve luncheon Wednesday evening in the church dining parlors. The public is invited to attend. JS J MRS. FRED LAHRMAN HOSTESS. A meeting of the Woman's Foreign Missionary society of the First Eng lish Lutheran church will be held Wednesday afternoon at two-thirty o'clock at the home of Mrs. Fred Lahrman on South Sixteenth street J J MARY F. THOMAS W. C. T. U. A meeting of the Mary F. Thomas, (By Dr. J. N. Hurty, Secretary State Board of Health, written expressly for the Palladium.) Not a few of our laws are resultants of our complex civilization, which cer tainly tends toward higher complexity. Among such laws are those which have for their object the protection of the public health, and the protection of the food supply against adulteration. Within the memory of living man, such a thing as food adulteration was Unknown. In pioneer days, feeding was simple and more rational than in these times. Then, families sat down to tables which were supplied with pork and beans of home production, to corn bread, apple sauce, chickens raised naturally in woods and fields, to milk and butter produced from non-tuberculous, non-swill fed cows, which stood almost at the kitchen door, doughnuts, hot from the 6izzling lard; pumpkin pies made from pumpkin which had been confined for months: hominy made in the very room In which it was eaten, instead of being taken from a can filled in a frame shed somewhere and called a canning factory. And what delicious flavors were attendant upon all of these articles. With what joy did they salute the gustatory nerve, and how gratefully they wero received by the stomach. But these days are not necessarily gone, for even now it is not necessary to live the canned life. The city cliff dweller finds the canned life handy and convenient, and lives it at the cost Of the good health and superior enjoyment which attend simple and more natural nutrition. If he would supply himself with a "fireless-cooker," and in the evening before retiring would start his plain breakfast in it. he would in the morning have food, which would give him superior gustatory pleasure, a clear head and abundant energy. Instead of a simple rational breakfast, our cliff dweller has embalmed hog, better known as ham and bacon, or highly spiced sausage, or beefsteak from a tuberculosis animal or from an animal slaughtered and its meat kept under the most revolting conditions. Eggs, most always from cold storage, are added, and all is washe-1 down with black coffee. Such a breakfast is not a balanced ration. It makes too much soot and ash and so clogs the furnace grates and the boiler's flues. Clearness of bead does not attend, and kidneys and liver suffer from over work in clearing away the debris. In time, Bright's disease appears, and the victim wonders where it came from. "Why was I selected to have this malady?", he asks. Eat plain, unembalmed foods, cooking them well. Potatoes, rice, hominy, vegetables, fruit, cornmeal, well baked, whole wheat flour bread, milk from healthy animals and a clean dairy, fresh eggs or none. What more can one want? Darwin. Spencer, Pasteur lived entirely upon such food, and they did some good work. too. A gentleman of my acquaintance was one time a guest of Darwin's on his farm In Kent For supper bread and milk was offered: nothing more, and no apology. Darwin's work was certainly worth a million times more to humanity than the work of Harriman. Rich, highly spiced foods, pickles, fancy cooking, much meat are all hard on kidneys and livers. Excessive Use of salt is injurious. The blood and the body need only a very little salt. A body weighing 150 pounds contains only a little over one ounce. We all eat a great deal more salt than is for our good. Certain forms of stomach troubles are caused by excessive salt eating. If your stomach hurts, try cutting out salt, salads, pickles, meats, and chew your plain foods extra well. You will find tti3 treatment has the pepsin and drug treatment skinned a mile. Well, the , whole lesson is pure food laws are needed principally because we will not eat rationally. It is the same with: health laws. We need health laws because we refuse to live according to J the natural laws of our well-being. We i have consumption, because we spit, be-; cause we just will not thoroughly ven-; tilate our school-rooms, our bed rooms, our offices, our churches and our public halls. We ride in closed trolley cars and breathe the fetid air which has already been down into the lungs of others, we heave in alcohol and meats and spices, and fray our nerves with caffein. Old Solomon said: "Be ye not among wine bibbers, among riotous eaters of flesh." We have typhoid fever, and spend enough on it annually to present every member of the legislature and each

j ' " Pure Food and the State Health Law

W. C. T. U. was held Monday after-j noon In tha dome room of the Morris-' son-Reeves library. Mrs. Nell Barnard a delegate to the state convention held recently in Muncie. gave an Interesting account of the affair. The next meeting will be held the second Monday in November. Jl J DORCAS SOCIETY MET. A pleasant meeting of the Dorcas society was held yesterday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Anna Heitbrink on North Twentieth street The afternoon was spent in a social manner

and with needlework. Mrs. L. H. Besselman of St. Louis. Mo.. Mr6. Harold Kolp of Cincinnati and Mrs. Howard Grottendick of Kokomo, Indiana, were guests of the club. A luncheon was served. In two weeks Miss Alice Knollenberg will entertain the club at her home, 212 South Fourth street J J FRANCIS WILLARD W. C. T. U. Mrs. Joseph Gorman will be hostess for a meeting of the Francis Willard. W. C. T. U. Wednesday afternoon at two-thirty o'clock at her home. 2U6 North Seventeenth street At this time reports from the delegates who attended the Muncie state convention will be given. J v PENNY CLUB WILL MEET. Mrs. Baltz Bescher will be hostess for a meeting of the Penny club Wed nesday afternoon at two-thirty o'clock at her home. 231 South West Second street The meeting will be in the nature of a basket social. Members are requested to bring luncheon. door keeper with a red automobile, just because wo will not dispose of human and animal manure in a sanitary way. Sir Henry Treeves. King Edward's physician, who has grown rich off disease, has said: "When simplici ty and frugality of living is achieved voluntary celibacy will become dis creditable, and the premature deaths of the bread-winners will disappear be fore sanified cities and vanishing in temperance." FUNERAL WEDNESDAY Ralmaro Paige, Who Died Sun day, Will Be Given Private Burial. WAS A PROMINENT MASON The funeral of Ralmaro Paige, who died from the result of an operation in a hospital in Indianapolis, Sunday night, will take place Wednesday after noon at 2 o'clock from the home of his mother, Mrs. Mary Paige. UC8 North Twelfth street The Rev. I. M Hughes, pastor emeritus, of the First Presbyterian church, will officiate Friends are invited to attend the ser vices. The burial in Earlbam ceme tery. however, will be private. Friend; may call Tuesday evening from 7 to o'clock. It is requested that flowers be omitted. Mr. Paige was a well known attorney of Richmond and had an office for number of years at the corner of Sixth and Main streets. He was promi nntly affiliated with one of the local lodge of Masons, being a past grand master. The Bed-Rock Of Success lies in a keen, clear brain, backed by indomitable will and resistless energy, Such power comes from the splendid health that Dr. King's New Life Pill impart, lney vitalize every organ and build up brain and body. J. A. Harmon, Lizemore, W. Va., writes: "They are the best pills I ever used." 25c at A. G. Luken & Co. Diplomatic Objection. "My dear. sys the cigar manufacturer to his wife, 'while It would be very plenslng to you to have a Paris gown, have you stoppod to think of the criticisms and jests such a procedure would Insure from my competitors? It would hurt my business, really." "Nonsense: now could It?" asks the wife. "Why. they would point me out as the man who didn't know the business any letter than to allow a domestic filler to be put into an imported wra pper. LI f e. G. H. Clark, manager of the Clark Show Case Co.. of Columbus. O.. will be in Richmond Oct. 11th. for the week. Anyone interested in show cases can see him personally by leaving word with Ross Drug Co. ll-at All persons having bills against the Fall Festival, and people to whom awards are due, should file their bills before Friday, this week. 11 31 WE HAVE A BEAUTIFUL ASSORTMENT of Hand Painted China, showing new things that will certainly please you. Portraits in Oil, Water Color, India Ink and Sepia. Special attention will be given to picture framing. Hand colored post card for five cents each. Richmond Art Co., 14 N. 9TH STREET. The Store for Things Beautiful."

DR. PARK DENTIST 12 North Tenth St.

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Gives $15,000 For Fun of Seeing Women Spend It

Chicago. Oct. 12. Adolph J. Lich6 tern. 3736 Michigan avenue, believes his wife and daughter should have plenty of spending moneywithout waiting for his death. The idea of getting rid of wealth while alive and seeing how it is being spent caught Mr. Lichstern's fancy. As soon as the idea flashed across his mind Mr. Lichstern put it into active operation. He called up his lawyer on the phone. Arrangements were made and soon after the idea was born Mrs. Lichstern, her daughter Luclle and Mr. Lichstern's four sisters, Mrs. Alma Becker, Mrs. Gertrude Sickle, Mrs. Clara La Londa and Mrs. Flora Skillings. were the possessors of an annual Income of $2,500. Mr. Lichstern had arranged that the income fiom the property at 160-162 Washington street, amounting to $15,000, be equally divided among the Fix relatives. "Ixve and affection fcr the beneficiaries" is the consideration mentioned in the declaration of trust filed yesterday. "I wanted to give them this property while I am alive," explained Mr. Lichstern last night. "Of course, I could not very well divide the property itself, so I have arranged that each will receive her share of the Income from it. They will begin to receive the money beginning today. The trust Lower Rates than can be had from any similar concern m the city, is our unconditional guarantee to you, when you iilace your application for a loan with us. Actual comparison of rates will prove the truth of this guarantee to your entire satisfaction. We loan monev in sums of from $5 ud. on all kind3 of personal property, without removal and we malce the time and payments such as may best suit your convenience. We solicit your Investigation and patronsge. All applications. Including those by letter and 'phone, receive our prompt attention. PRIVATE. RELIABLE. INDIANA LOAN CO. "Phore 1341. Rooms 40 and 41 3rd floor Colonial Bldg.. Richmond. Ind.

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