Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 351, 26 October 1909 — Page 5

THE RICII3IOXD PALIiADIUSI AND SUX-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, OCTOBEK 26, 1909.

PAGE FIVE have an all day meeting Wednesday ia j the church parlors. A number of ap- I rons will be on sale at this time. Or- J ders will also be taken. A portion of ! ANYTHING M CLOTMM?. the morning will be devoted to needlework. At noon luncheon, brought by the members of the society will be I served. From three until four o'clock in the afternoon a business session will be held. All members are urged to be present.

ANNOUNCEMENT CARDS. The following announcement cards have been received by local persona: Mr .and Mrs. S. Ward Hunter announce the marriage of their daughter . Lois En y art to Mr. Frank Emerson Hunter, on Saturday, October the twenty-third, one thousand nine hundred and nine, Piqua, Ohio. At Home after November the eighth, 8 Rundle Avenue. Mr. Hunter is well known here, having been a former resident of this city. Mrs. Frank Correll of North Eleventh street, is Air. Hunter's aunt. His many friends extend hearty congratulations. "OLD SONG" CONCERT. The program for the "Old Song'' concert to be given Wednesday evening, October twenty-seventh, at the First Christian church, under the auspices of the East-End Aid Society, is as follows: Part I. Ladies Quartette "My Old Kentucky Home," Mrs. Folks, Mrs. J. J. Boggs, Mrs. S. W. Traum, Miss Edna Smith. Solo-(a) "Sailing" (b) "Nancy Lee" Mrs. J. J. Boggs Duett "No Sir," .Mr. and Mrs. Traum Cornet Solo "Old Irish Airs" , . Robert C. Wilson Quartette "We'll Have to Mortgage , The Farm". Mr. C. M. Wilson, Miss Jessie Minn, Mrs. S. W. Traum, Miss Lova Mansfield Fiddle Music Mr. Kimbrough Solo-"Annle Laurie," Mrs. J. J. Boggs Duett "Under the Umbrella"...... ......... .Don Leighton, Rhea Jone3 v Part II. Mnle Quartette "Tenting Tonight". . Mr. J. J. Boggs, Mr. Leslie Knight. Mr. Harry Sloan. Mr. Ralph Little. Reading Selected ..Mrs. J. N. Hodgin Solo ''Robin Adair" Mrs. Folk3 "Three Blind Mice" (Round.) Solo "Kathleen Mavourneen," . . . . . , , . ........ Miss Jessie Mann Ladies' Quartette "Sweet and Low" Mrs. S. W. Traum. Mrs. J. J. Boggs, Mrs. Folks. Mrs. Strauss. Chorus "Auld Lang Syne." ' The program will begin at eight o'clock. . - i; : J J J IS OUT OF THE CITY. . Miss Ida Mauger left this morning to attend the dedication of the Lambert Memorial Music and Art hall at Otterbein University. She will Bpend a few days with her parents in Columbus, Ohio, before returning home. Miss Mauger is a graduate of Otterbein. . JS JC - JS ! GAVE DINNER. A.; Mr. and Mrs. Clem Harris entertained recently with an elaborate dinner at their beautiful country home east of the city. The. guests were: Mr. and Mrs. John Burns and family, Miss Katherine Joyce and Mr. and Mrs. Horace Logan. jl ji 'ji CELEBRATED BIRTHDAY. Little Miss .Mary Karns celebrated her sixth birthday anniversary, Monday afternoon at her home on North Eighth street." The hours were from three-thirty to five-thirty o'clock. A number of pretty gifts were presented to the hostess by the guests. Music and children's games were features of the afternoo.n's amusements. Autumn leaves and flowers emblematic of the season' were utilized In ' decorating. Luncheon was served In , the , dining room. A large birthday cake with a beautiful frosting and surrounded by six waxen tapers formed a centerpiece for the table. The guests were:

While Paooin( Through ILife

Suppose yew enjoy i-vm imHm r r"stum cnnr'"".raa .:mited

1

Pkgs. 10c and 15c THc Memory Lingers"

" POSTUM CEREAL CO.,

EDITED BY ELIZABETH R. THOMAS.

Helen Hazeltine, Ella Susan Castator, Mary Meagan. Martha Iliff, Thelma Morgan and Violet Brucker. j j . GIVE ENTERTAINMENT. On Friday evening. October 29th, the pupils of Bessie M. Buhl will give an elocutionary entertainment at the First English Lutheran church, the program to be as follows: Recitations. Who Speaks First I'll Tell a Story. Ethel Lane. , Hearin Bad. I Dun'no. William Price. Mamma's Hair Pin. Since Ma's Got Christian Science. Mary A. Wilson. The Picture of the Christ. The Dutchman's Snake. Howard Messlck. The Doll's Pill. Tommie Tompkins. Ada Terry. Kentucky Philosophy. Our Hired Girl. Mary Christine Carman. Bridge Keeper's Story. Nervous Woman at the Phone. Katheryn Ensmlnger. The Deaf Doll. The. New Baby. Helen Louise Hill. Dialogues. Reading a Letter. Mary Wilson, William Price. Taking the Census. Katheryn Ensminger, Howard Messick. Not Ready to Marry. William Price and Katheryn Ensminger. Song. Smarty. Helen Louise Hill. Pantomimes. Backward, Turn Backward Mary Wilson, Mary Carman. Consecration. Helen L. Hill. Piano. Duet Miriam Krone, Lucile Nusbaum. Solo Florence Bartel. J J J WILL COME THURSDAY." . Mrs. Budd Thomas, Mrs. Harry Greyer and Mrs. John Jackson will come Thursday from Muncie for a few. days visit in this city. Mrs. Thomas and Mrs. Greyer will be entertained by Mrs. George Reid at her home on South Fourth street, while Mrs. Jackson will be the house guest of Mrs. Edward Klute of South Fourteenth street. Several social functions will be given in their honor. J j j WILL RETURN WEDNESDAY. Dr. and Mrs. J. H. Kinsey who have been spending a fortnight at West Baden, Indiana, will return home Wednesday. 3l i HALLOWE'EN FESTIVAL. Miss Lorena McLane, teacher at Doddridge Chapel, assisted by the pupils and patrons will give a box supper and festival. Friday evening, Octo ber twenty-ninth at the scBool. Invitations as follows have been extended: -' , "Come one, come all. Come great and small We have stuff enough To feed you all." . ' jJ tjt CLUXTON-GENN. Mr. Clyde R. Cluxton and Miss Lois May Genu were quietly married Saturday afternoon at four o'clock by the Rev. R. J. Wade at the First Methodist parsonage. The announcement comes as a surprise to their many friends. Mrs. Cluxton has been quite prominent in church circles. Their many friends extend hearty congratulations. They will reside at 123 North Seventeenth street. Jit J ENTERTAINED INFORMALLY. Miss Gladys Karch entertained a number of her friends recently at her home on North Fourteenth street, in honor of her fifteenth birthday anniversary. Music and games were the main features of the evening. The the good things.

Wi Post

Toasties fa Is an economical, wholesome, delightful food right from the package, and served with cream or fruits it is delicious. It also doubles the joy of other foods if you know how i to combine. Tells how in the little booklet Tid-Bita made with Toasties in packages. LTD., Battle Creek, Mich.

PHONE 1121

guests bidden to participate In the celebration were: Miss Blanche Wiedner. Miss Gertrude Clarke, Miss Pearl McMinn, Miss Ruby Yingllng. Miss Lillian Karch, Miss Evelyn Shoemaker, Miss Pauline Wrede, Miss Lena King and Miss Marjorie Stigleman, Messrs. Carl Reid, Edward Hart, Warren Baker, Charles Muhl. Oran Harris, Roland Ball, Wilbur Ball, Everett Mitchell and Rudolph Price. J j V HAS RETURNED. Mts. James Barkdell has returned from Cincinnati, where she spent Sunday and Monday the guest of friends and relatives. J ,4 . HALLOWE'EN SOCIAL. A Hallowe'en social will be given Wednesday evening, October twentyseventh by the McCauley Mission band of the Second English Lutheran church at the church. Refreshments will be served. Everyone is invited. J J J GIVEN A SURPRISE. Mrs. Grant Hunt arranged for a pleasant surprise party last evening on her sister, Mrs. Roy Cooper, it being Mrs. Cooper's thirty-seventh birthday anniversary. The evening was spent in a social manner. A luncheon in several courses was served. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. Grant Hunt and son, Leo Hunt, Master Gilbert Fowler. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Stevenson and daughter. Miss Mayt Mr. and Mrs. Roy Cooper and son Denver and Miss Lola Fowler. J J J 'A GUEST HERE. Mr. Carl A. Buckholz of Jamesville, Mo., 1 former superintendent at the Westcott Carriage company is in the city the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Webster Parry for a few days. . J J j OCCUPY NEW HOME. Dr. and Mrs. S. C. Markley will soon occupy their beautiful new home on South Seventh street,, which is rapidly nearing completion. 2& 3C J$ GAVE DINNER. A dinner company was given last evening by Mrs. Hannah Francisco at her home on Kinsey street, in honor of Mr. Charles Coffin df Chicago, Places were arranged at the table for Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Dickinson. Mrs. Oliver White and. Mr. and Mrs. William J. Hiatt. 3 j OF LOCAL INTEREST. Prof. H. H. Kollng of Richmond, who formerly lived in Dayton, was guest of the Phillips Sunday. He came over to spend the day with his daughter, Miss Nina Roda Koling. who has been visiting friends in this city. Miss Koling has been living in Lor Angeles, Cal., for several years. She will return to the City of the Angels to become the bride of an official of the police force. Prof. Koling learned the trade of a barber In the Philips house when that hotel was conducted by Louis Reibold, forty-four years ago. Dayton News. J , CLUB NOTES CLUB EVENTS FOR TODAY. A card party is being held this af ternoon at the Country club house A masquerade Hallowe'en party will be given this evening at the First Presbyterian church by the members of the Sunday school. A musical will be given this evening at the Third Methodist church. The public is invited. Mrs. C. K. Chase will lecture on art this evening in the lecture room of the Morrisson-Reeves library. Mrs. Sol Frankel is entertaining the "Congenial Twelve" Whist club at her apartments in the Reed flats. St. Paul's Guild of St. Paul's Episcopal church is meeting this afternoon in the Parish house. A mee'ting will be held this evening at the Country club house to discuss the report of the building committee. AID SOCIETY TO MEET. The Ladies Aid society of the East Main Street Friends church will meet Thursday afternoon in the church parlors. All ladies of the congregation and community are cordially invited to attend. J Ji J OLIVE BRANCH CLASS. The Olive Branch Bible class met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Nusbaum last evening. After the business session was over a program was given. Mr. Frank Braffett sang several solos. Miss Lucile and Mr. Roland Xusbaum rendered a piano duet. The speaker, for the evening was the Rev. Tarl Ellsworth of Eaton, Ohio. His subject' was "Men in the Sunday School." Mr. Ellsworth is a very forceful speaker, and he treated his subject in a very practical way. Men in the Sunday school means men in the church, and men in , the church means better communities, better government, honor in business and a general uplift all along the line of civic life. The attendance at the meeting was quite large, the rooms were tastefully decorated in keeping with the hallowe'en season, and refreshments were also of that character, consisting of cider and doughnuts. t WAYS AND MEANS. The Ways and Means society of the Fifth Street Methodist church will

j J j BRIDGE CLUB MET. Members of a bridge club were de

lightfully entertained Monday afternoon by Mrs. Charles McGuire at her home on South Eighteenth street. The game was played at four tables. Mrs. Henry Gennett, Mrs. George Williams and Mrs. George Cates were presented with the favors. The mergers are: Mrs. Henry Gennett, Mrs. George R. Williams, Mrs. Will Campbell. Mrs. P. W. Smith. Mrs. Jqhn Nicholson, Mrs. B. B. Johnson. Mrs. Leroy Brown, Mrs. Charles McGuire, Mrs. W. O. Crawford. Miss Alice Forkner. Mrs. Maude Jones, Mrs. Maude Grey, Mrs. Clarence Gennett. Mrs. Edwin Cates, Mrs. Thomas Nicholson, Mrs. Howard Campbell. v WILL MEET FRIDAY. A meeting of the Ladies of the G. A. R. will be held Friday afternoon in the post room at the court house. All members are urged to be present as the session will be an important one. PENNY CLUB. Mrs. Frank Kitson will be hostess Wednesday afternoon for a meeting of the Penny club at her home, 305 North Eighth street. A lunch will be served. J J . DORCAS SOCIETY. Members of the Dorcas society were entertained Monday afternoon by Miss Alice Knollenberg at her home on South Fourth street. The time was spent with needlework. The guests for the afternoon were: Miss Jessie Beeler, Miss Ida Windhorst of Cincinnati and Miss Bertha Latimer of Newark, Ohio. An all day meeting will be held in two weeks. jf CRITERION CLUB. The second meeting of the season for the Criterion club was held yesterday afternoon at the home of Mvs. Harry Penny on South Tenth street. This was the initial program meeting for the year. A number of business matters were considered. Mrs. John Woodhurst was appointed as secretary. Two new members were also admitted to the society to take the places of vacancies made by Mrs. W. O. Wissler and Mrs. Edwin Crawford. The organization Is arranging for a Hallowe'en party to be held soon, to which husbands of the club members will be invited. Mrs. Harry Penny and Mrs. Charles Groce were asked by the membership to attend the meeting to be held with Mrs. Mark Wilson Wednesday afternoon at which time plans for a Civic league will be gone over by representatives from the different women's clubs of the city. iC sS MIS8 KELSEY HOSTESS. The members of the Ticknor club met yesterday afternoon with Miss Susan Kelsey at her home on North Thirteenth street. Act two of King John was read at this time. Mrs. E. B. Clements Mrs. John Dougan and Mrs. Gilbert Dunham furnished the principal part of the program. 3 MAGAZINE CLUB. Mrs. Erie Reynolds was hostess for the .weekly meeting of the iIagazine club Monday afternoon at her home on East Main street. Two articles from late magazines were read. Roll call was responded to with current events. A luncheon was served. Mrs. Harriet Dill entertains the club next week. Terrible Indigestion L. H. Fine has a Remedy That he Guarantees to Promptly Relieve All Stomach Distress. People go on suffering from little stomach troubles for years and Imagine they have a serious disease. They over eat or over drink and force on the stomach a lot of extra work. But they never think that the stomach need 8 extra help to do extra work. If these people would take a Mio-na tablet with or after meals it would be a great big help to the stomach in its strain of overwork. No matter what you eat or drink Mi-o-na tablets will sweeten your sour stomach and stop gas belching in 5 minutes. The heaviness disappears and the stomach is greatly aided in its work of digestion. And Mi-o-na not only promptly relieves all distress but if taken regularly will absolutely cure indigestion by building up the flabby overworked walls of the stomach and making them strong enough to digest the' most hearty meal. L. H. Fine sells and guarantees Mi-o-na. The price is 50 cents a large box. Leading druggists everywhere sell Mi-o-na, Test sample free from Booth's Mi-o-na, Buffalo. N. Y. due catarrh or money back. Just breathe it iu. Complete outfit, including inhaler $L Extra, bottle 60c Druggist. Tailing tha Aga cf a Fish. The age of a fish can be determined With accuracy by Inspection of the otoliths, or bony concretions which are found ia the auditory apparatus. These otoliths increase la size during the entire life of the fish, each year adding two layers, a light colored Jay er formed in summer and a dnformed in autumu and winter. The ! alternate layers are sharply contrasted ; and Tery distinct, so that there is no ; difficulty in counting them. The nnsa- , ber of pairs of layers is number of years the fish has Hred. Scientific American. Sharkey's for hats, 7 S. 7th.

J U (fOKmco ram-O M) J

You Would Make 8,064 Boxes Matches

(By Dr. J. N. Hurty) A Chemical View: An average man of 150 pounds contains the constituents found in 1,200 eggs. There is enough gas in him to fill gasometer of 3,649 cubic feet. He contains enough iron to make four ten penny nails. His fat would n.ake seventyfive candles and a goc? sized cake of soap. His phosphorus content would make 8,064 boxes of mutches. There is enough hydrogen in him in combination to fill a balloon and carry him above the clouds. The remaining constituents of a man would yield, if utilized, six teaspoonfuls of salt, & bowl of sugar and ten gallons of water. A Physiological and Anatomical GIVES THEM PRAISE , Charles Rager, superintendent of the fifth division of the railway mail service, which district includes Indiana. Ohio and Kentucky, In his semi-monthly bulletin, eulogizes the work of Burt Hatfield, Charles A. Johnson and Oscar O. Raines, who were killed in the Collinsville wreck. According to this bulletin. Mr. Hatfield joined the service Aug. IS, 18!1: Mr. Johnson, June 2S. 1S95 and Mr. Raines, April 24, 1904. A Quter Wooden Flower. A queer wooden flower is to be found In Guatemala. This flower is called he rose ol hell from the fact that It grows on the sides of Mount Agua and round the seared edges of the volcano of Fuego. It has four distinct petals, the outsides of which are covered with bark like that of a tree. The stem, usually about a foot high, is of solid wood covered with bark. The flower measures nearly a foot across. WIFE NUMBER TWO. Uncle Josh says, "Few women like to put up a large quantity of pr?serves." They are afraid they would be putting them up for wife number two. Perhaps he is right However, every woman likes her linen a good color, even If number three gets to usp them. It is easy enough to keep them that way when you use rub-a-lac for your washing. You will admit it la the best yet. Try it.

A Man is Murdered By a Woman A fter a Dispute Over Roast Pork

Chicago. Oct. .Heartbroken and hysterical, Mrs. Anna Van Eyck made a tearful plea of self-defense yesterday to free herself of the charge of murdering Philip Barrington Hardy, who was killed Sunday night in her home, 721 West Twenty-Fifth street. Her husband, Joseph Van Eyck, tried in vain to comfort her. "I didn't want to kill him." she sobbed, as she told incoherently her story at the Inquest in Ryan's undertaking establishment. " West Twenty-Sixth and South Wallace streets. "He struck me. I did it all in self, defense. It was my revolver. He had taken it from my trunk. When he hit me I fell. When I got up he was pointing it at me. I Jumped at him and tried to grab it from him, but he jerked it, and the shot went into his own breast. Oh, I am so. so sorry. Then the woman almost broke down, and in fragments they got from her the story of the tragedy. Hardy's appetite for roast pork and apple sauce had been the Indirect cause of the shooting which ended In his death. He ate it in Mrs. Van Eyck's absence from the kitchen. "I had been sleeping. she said, "and when I awoke It was dark. I went into the kitchen and there was Hardy washing his trousers and shirt. On the table lay the remains of a roast of pork and apple sauce which t had cooked and prepared. I scolded him for eating so much and asked him wbv he ate so much. He said he was paying his "board and had a right to eat it- . : "He struck me across the face with the wet trousers and t fell to the floor. As I was getting up he pointed a revolver at me. Yes. it was my own. He had taken it from my trunk. ! jumped at him and grabbed him. He jerked and then he shot. He fell. From his . chest - spouted blood. I screamed, and William Elliott, one of the boarders, came. I sent him for

Well, we're here to fit yon out ust like you want to look -Correct styles, correct patterns, correct lit. We want to clothe you and can assure you when you purchase a suit or overcoat of us, it's bound to be correct. Prices $10 to $25

K - One Price B & Clothiers K - Datters II View: A man has 500 muscles, one billion cells. 200 different bones, four gallons of blood, several hundred feet of arteries and veins, over 25 feet of intestines and millions of pores. His heart weighs from eight to twelve ounces, its capacity is from four to six inches in each ventricle, and its size is 5 by 3 Vi by 2 inches. It is a hollow muscular organ and pumps twenty-two and one-halt pounds of blood every minute. In twentyfour hours it pumps sixteen tons. It beats about seventy-two times a minute. In one year an average man's heart pumps 11,680.000 pounds of blood. The heart is a willing slave, but sometimes it strikes, and it always wins. HOPE FOR ECZEMA PATIENTS D. D. D. Prescription Now Offered at 25 Cents A Trial Will Convince. The oil of wintergreen compound for eczema known as D. D. D. Prescription can be secured at present from any druggists in Richmond in a 25cent bottle. This offer is especially made to convince those skin sufferers who have not yet tried the remedy. One bottle will suffice to cure a mild case, and the first application will Instantly prove to you that you get relief at once from the itch. The moment you wash the skin with this mild, soothing liquid the itch is gone. If upon special recommendation you want to try a bottle of this proven eczema cure at 25 cents, telephone or call at your drug store. Eating With tho Knifo. Use of the fork is comparatively modern. The original fork was two pronged, and its adoption was held to betoken an unusual degree of elegance and refinement. The taste for cleanliness has preserved the use of steel forks with two prongs," writes Lady Newdigate. (She spoke to the closing years of the eighteenth century.) "With regard to little bits of meat, which cannot so well be taken hold of with the two pronged forks, recourse Is bad to the knife, which Is broad and round at the extremity. Peas at that time were eaten with a knife. a doctor. In fact, he went to six. I didnt know what to do." "I ran into Sullivan's saloon and told him Phil was bleeding to death and to get a doctor. Then the police came and I was taken to a police station." "How long have you known Hardy?" was asked. "I have known him for twelve years, altogether," she replied. The coroner's Jury returned a verdict of murder, holding Mrs. Van Eyck to the grand jury without ball.

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You Can Get What You Wont at Our Store.

New, seasonable goods arriving every day. Maple Syrup, Old Fashion Buckwheat Flour. Self Rising Pancake Fiour of all brands. Empson Colorado Peas are now in. Ve would advise you to place your orders early as the pack in these fine peas Is very limited; order today. : : ; Backmeyer Kraut, New Sorghum, the finest you ever ate. Sweet Cider made as ordered;

Clothiers to Mankind Krone & Kennedy sos Mai st.

GIRL'S MILITARY COAT. Navy blue serge is the material used in this coat. The collar, tope of raffs and covered with the red and crossed bjr bands of black braid, like that used to trim the coat. This pattern is cut in three sises, 4, S and 8 years. Site 6 requires S yards of 21 inch material. Price of pattern 40 L 10 cents. No. m. Name Address Size Fill oat blank and send to Pattern Department of this newspaper. PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY. Established 1851 You'll be Satisfied If yon boy that vctcb, ring, bracelet or diamond of 0. E. Bieliioson. Dl&xnosds 2ocnted Watch Repafrfsa