Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 58, 5 January 1910 — Page 5

'THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUX TTLEGItAM. TVFD :! DAT, JANUARY 5, 1910.

PAGE FIVE.

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V Communications to be Inserted In the society news and the club notes columns must be signed by the writer to insure publication. No consideration will be given anonymous communications. BRIDGE PARTY. A charming bridge party was given this afternoon by Mrs. Frederick J. Carr at her pretty home in Westcott riace, complimentary to Mrs. S. S. Saxton of Chicago and Mrs. John Kendriok Taylor of Boston, Massachusetts. Bridge was played at six tables. Favors were given. The house was appointed with flowers and ferns. After the game a lunch was served. jS S AT HOME. An important "At Home" was observed yesterday afternoon by Mrs. 11. KIDNEY OR BLADDER M YOUR LAME Several doses will make your out-of-order Kidneys act fine. Hundreds of folks here are needlessly miserable and worried because of out-of-order kidneys, backache or bladder trouble. If yoi will take several doses of Pape's Diuretic all misery from a lame back, rheumatism, painful stitches, inflamed or swollen eyelids, nervous headache, irritability, dizziness, wornout, sick feeling and other symptoms of overworked or deranged kideneys will vanish. Uncontrollable, smarting, frequent urination (especially at night) and a'l bladder misery ends. This unusual preparation goes at 1 once to the disordered kidneys, bladder and urinary system, and distrib utes Its healing, cleansing and vitalizing Influence directly upon the organs

FBasimeyer

Buy Your Buy Your

THIS WEEK !

Every One "Bran Splinter New" Big Midtiois ! Greater Even Than You Think, For Women, Misses and Children.

"Where All Cars Stop"

EDITED BY ELIZABETH R. IL Huntington, when she received callers in honor of Mrs. Marie Wisner and daughter, Mrs. Walter Schmidt of Utica, New York, who have been in Cincinnati for a temporary residence. The dining room was attractively decorated with red carnations. Mrs. Walter Jones, assisted at the tea-table. During the afternoon Mrs. Schmidt, who has a beautiful soprano voice, sang two numbers. A number of friends of the hostess called during the afternoon. Sl GAVE EUCHRE PARTY. A prettily appointed euchre-party was given Tuesday afternoon by Mrs. Will Knollenberg at her home on South Seventh street. Euchre was played at several tables. Mrs. Richard Cutter, Mrs. Henry Schneider and Mrs. Knollenberg were presented with the favors. At the close of the game a luncheon was served. The guests bidden to enjoy the function were: Mrs. Henry Schneider, Miss Alma TurMISERY GOES BACK FEELS FINE. and glands affected, and completes the cure before you realize it. The moment yo ususpect any kidnev or urinary disorder, or feel rheumatism coming, begin taking this harm less medicine, with the knowledge that there is no other remedy, at any price, made anywhere else in the world, which will effect so thorough and prompt a cure as a fifty-cent treatment of Pape's Diuretic, which any druggist can supply. Your physician, pharmacist, banker or any mercantile agency will tell you that Fape, Thompson & Fape of Cincinnati, is a large and responsible medicine concern, thoroughly worthy of your confidence. Only curative results can come from taking Pape's Diuretic, and a few days' treatment means clean, active, healthy kidneys, bladder and urinary organsand you feel fine. Accept only Pape's Diuretic fiftycent treatment from any drug store anywhere in the world.

Cloak Suit PJOW!

MflDF

THOMAS.

PHONE 1121 ner, Mrs. Frank Hebbler, Mrs. Edgar Heiger. Mrs. Adam Feldman, Mrs. Edward Warfel, Mrs. Will Hawekotte Mrs. Edward Feldman, Mrs. Clarence Foreman. Mrs. Carl Meyers and Mrs Richard Cutter. ! & ARE AT HOME. Dr. and Mrs. W. J. Smith and baby have returned from Grand Ridge, Ilinois; where they spent the holidays, the guests of Mrs. Smith's parents. jt TO MARTINSVILLE. Mrs. J. M. Lontz will leave Thursday morning for Martinsville, Indiana where she will spend a fortnight. v K4 LUNCHEON MENUS. Let me suggest a few luncheon menus for our girls who want to look wholesome and feel well, says the Woman's Home Companion. For instance, try a glass of sweet milk or buttermilk with Boston brown bread, between thinly cut slices of which cream cheese has been spread. If these sandwiches are made at home, variety may be obtained by adding to the cheese a few chopped nuts, a little chopped sweet pepper, a few pistachio nuts, etc. je j j RETURNED THIS MORNING. Mis Edith Duke returned to Indiapolis his morning, after having spent the Holidays with her parents. Mr. i and Mrs. John Duke West Lincoln street. Miss Duke is a teacher of muic at Indianapolis. She is a graduate if the Indianapolis Conservatory of Music. j je MISSES EDWARDS ENTERTAINED. Miss Grace and Ruth Edwards entertained a few friends in a very pleasant manner recently at their home on South Seventh street, complimentary to Miss Letha Hayes, of Indianapolis. .4 . ENTERTAINED RECENTLY. Miss Nellie Parks entertained a company of young people recently at her home, southeast of Boston. The evening was spent with various games and social diversions. Oysters were served late in the evening. The guests were: Misses Pearl Brandel, Leah Jerome, Ada Parks, Bertha and May Stout, Elizabeth and Chloe

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Parks; Messers Lester Parks, Dellert and Garner Fleisch, William, Edward and Rcy Brandly, Richard Duvall, Alexander and Raymond Stout, Harry Jerome and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Sheets. Jt J J QUIGLEY-SAMPLE. The wedding of Mr. Lewis B. Quigley and Miss Bessie Sample w ill be celebrated this evening at eight o'clock at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sample, I S16 North Thirteenth street. Rev. R. J. Wade of the First Methodist church will perform the ceremony. 8 I LEFT TODAY. Dr. J. E. Cathell left this morning for a month's sojourn in Philadelphia and Boston. & . HAS RETURNED HOME. Mr. Leonard Englebert, who spent Christmas and New Year's the guest of friends and relatives in Cincinnati, has returned home. J Jt SPENT HOLIDAYS HERE Mr. Henley Bell has returned to Buckley. West Virginia, after having spent the Holidays in this city, the of relatives and friends. HAVE RETURNED HOME. Mr. and Mrs. M. F. McDonald of Richmond, Virginia, who have been visiting Mrs. McDonald's parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Bell at their home on the National Road, returned home. jC HAVE GONE TO FLORIDA. Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Overman, of West Seventh street, have gone to St. Augustine, Florida, where they will spend the remainder of the winter. CLUB NOTES LADIES' AID-SOCIETY. The Ladies' Aid-Society of the First English Lutheran church will meet Thursday afternoon in the church parlors. Members are requested to bring their own work. J Jt CLUB MEETING FOR FRIDAY. Wednesday Evening Assembly meets in the Odd Fellow's Hall this evening. Good Cheer club is meeting with Mrs. llayden. Mrs. T. M. Guild is entertaining the Foreign Missionary society, of Grace Methodist church. woman s i-weien Missionary so ciety of the First Methodist church is visiting with Mrs. S. E. Beery. Ladies' Aid-Society of the Reid Memorial church is meeting this afternoon. Woman's Organization of the First Baptist church will hold an open meeting this evening at the home of Mrs. Parker. Penny club is meeting with. Mrs. Millard Warfel of South Tenth street.

Ladies of the G. A. R. are meeting this afternoon. An entertainment will be given tills evening in the Pythian temple. Domestic Science association Is meeting with Miss Reba Stutson. J J J HAPPY HOUR CLUB. The Happy Hour club will meet Thursday afternoon with Mrs. Eadler at her home on the Union pike. All members are invited to attend.

.S w J HELEN TAFT CIRCLE. Mrs. Eva Clemens will be hostess for a meeting of the Helen Taft sewing circle Thursday afternoon at her home on Richmond avenue. All members are urged to be present. J . J MEN'S SOCIAL UNION. The Men's Social union of the East Main street Friend's church will hold an open meeting Thursday evening in the church parlors at seven o'clock. Mr. Leander J. "Woolard will speak on the "Layman Movement." jl k4 Jl C. W. B. M. MET. A meeting of the Christian Woman's '"oard of Mission was held yesterday fternoon at the home of Mrs. 1. F. Harris, on South Eighth street.' There was a large attendance. Mrs. S. V. Traum presided at he meeting. Mrs. Anna Hoover was presented with a life membership. "The Story of Italy" was the subject for an interesting paper read by ".Mrs. Hoover. A mission-j ary-quiz" was conducted by Mrs. ! Elizabeth Wright. The remaining hours were spent sociallv. Mrs. Chas. i Tennis and Mrs. Windsor of Muncie.t were guests for the afternoon. Refreshments were served. SHEEPSHEAD CLUB. A meeting of the Sheepshead club J was held last evening at the home of j Mr. and Mrs. Sol. Frankel in the Reed j Flats. Mrs. George Reid. Mr. Mason J Byer and Mr. Kdward Klute were giv- j cn the favors. Mr, and Mrs. Edward Klute will entertain the next meeting of the club. J " AID-SOCIETY MEETING. The Ladies' Aid-Society of the 'old Memorial Hospital will meet liursday afternoon at the home of is. Gus Scott on North Tenth street. 1 e meeting will be called at twoirty o'clock. w Jit CONGENIAL TWELVE CLUB. Mrs. Henry Wickemeyer was hoss for a meeting of the Congenial welve card club Tuesday afternoon it her home on North Seventh street. Irs. Howard Townsend, Mrs. Edward Cooper, and Mrs. George Ferling were riven the favors. Lunch was served. Irs. Lon Fox entertains the club In wo weeks. j j we TICKNOR CLUB TO ENTERTAIN. The Ticknor club extends a cordial invitation to all club members of this city, with their husbands, to attend a lecture Saturday evening at eight o'clock in the First Presbyterian church. Dr. D. W. Dennis will give a lecture on the St. Gaudens exhibitions now being exhibited at the Herron Art Institute, in Indianapolis. The lecture will be ilustrated. A discussion will follow, led by Mr. William D. Foulke and Mrs. Cleveland K. Chase. The affair promises to be one of the most notable in club circles. ALICE CAREY CLUB. A meeting of the Alice Carey club will be held Thursday afternoon at ! the home of Mrs.. Abrara Johnson, 206 South Eleventh 6treet. Members are urged to be present. MRS. CLARK ENTERTAINED CLUB. Members of the Aftermath were pleasantly entertained Tuesday afternoon by Mrs. Frank Clark at her home on North Eleventh street. "Awakening of the Civic Conscience Paris during the Second Empire," was the subject for the principal paper for the afternoon, read by Mrs. Anna E. Kaminski. An interesting discussion followed. In two weeks Mrs. T. M Guild will entertain the society. YOUNG MEN WANTED GOVERNMENT PAYS RAILWAY MAIL CLERKS $800 TO $1,400 A YEAR. Free Scholarships Are Offered. uncie am noia3 Fpring examin ations for railway mail clerks in this vicinity. The job is for life; hours are short. salary twice monthly and vacation To any young man this is the oppor tunity of a lifetime. Thousands of appointments are to be made. Common school education is all you need; city and country people have equal chance. Start to pre pare now free information. Free scholarships this month. Write immediately to Central Schools, Dept. 232, Rochester. X. Y. In Ireland spiders are largly concerned in the cure of ague; in many localities the sufferer is advised to swallow a living spider. This ought to make one shake nearly as bad as the ague, and no doubt the better way would be to put a large black Epider in a box and leave it to perish, as is the vogue in Somerset and some of the nearby counties. A lingering faith in this old world superstition must have been alive quite recently, for the making of spider web pills not an uncommon industry In Xew England, and Longfellow tells of a popular cure for the fever "by wearing a spider hung around one's neck in a nutshell." Chicago Tribune. Good old fashioned cakes are made from Mrs. Austin's Buckwheat flour. Xow at your grocers. CHICHESTER S PILLS CbUefcM mi" Mmm bo MX. Mud vitfc at b . Taa m oucr. mmy or At fa c uXtMis.m a ut BU1MS BKiSB riUA tm

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SCUIrClSTSHHrcZIS

CALIFORNIA AERO EVENT A BIG ONE

Majority of the Famous BirdMen Will Participate at Los Angeles. FRENCHMEN ARE COMING THE EVENTS WILL LAST FOR TEN DAYS AND THE PROGRAM WILL OPEN MONDAY AEROPLANES AND BALLOONS. American News Service) Los Angeles, Jan. Preparations on a scale of magnificence never hitherto attempted in the interests of another sport, will give to the first American conceived international aviation Angeles. Jan.; 10-:, inclusive, a distinctive place in the history of man's effort to navigate the air. Leading aerialists of the world are either here or are on their way, and inventors an "Perinients even more Jiu e great carmyaLT he .y' , tt Te Angeles aviation meet had ts inception several months ago. The indorsement of leading civic and lummrrtiai uuuirs was immediately forthcoming, and in order to give the project the full weight of popular ap proval, the merchants and manufarturers 'association, one of the strongest bodies in the west, agreed to promote the meet and handle all of the details. A Good Foundation. . iur luuuiiawuii mr suiress n&s Dpen so well laid that the entries are already far more numerous than those of the Rbeinis meet, the prizes are more generous and there is every reason to believe that the achievements will outrival those of t'ie French tour-1 nament. Leading French and American aviators have been engaged on contracts.! the amount to be expended In this way exceeding $.. Prizes aggregating have been offered and it is not stage money. Among the aviators of world renown, who are undf r contract to take part in the meet are Glenn H. Curtiss, winner of the Grand prize at Rheims; Louis Paulhan. M. Hasson. M. Miscarel and the Baroness de la Roche, all under the management of Edmund Cleary, the French aeronautic lmpressairies: Roy Knabenshue, with a biplane and two dirigibles: Capt. Thomas S. Baldwin, the balloonist: Capt. John Berry, champion balloon pilot of the world: Clifford B. Harmon, who has made over 200 flights in his aeroplane. Charles K. Hamilton and many others. In all there are more than fif ty entrants in the aeroplane division, or three times as many as started in the Rheims events. Preble's Big Balloon. There will be eight balloons and six dirigibles. These figures do not con sider two balloons which are being constructed and the $T5.O0O dirigible balloons of Preble of Portland. Ore. Preble has announced that he has a dirigible which can easily make the Los Angeles-San Francisco run of 4S0 miles. If so he will win a prize of $10,0 offered for that event. The list of aeroplanes does not Include that of Tilllnghast of Worcester. Mass.. to whom a good deal of mystery attaches. For the aviation events the committee in charge has selected a magnificent field at Dominguez, eighteen miles south, of Los Angeles and convenient to the Pacific electric railway SHOP AT

Qefflim-ILJp oil HoIMay SttocUss Before Inventory Reductions. Staple merchandise in Holiday Stocks You'll find them in all our regular lines. Everywhere in our store you'll find our orders: "Get the stocks as low and as clean as possible before inventory." 150 Library Tables, specially priced, $6.75, $9.75, $11.00 and up. $1.00 Tabourettes, valued up to $1.25, choice only 49c 300 Pictures, valued up to $1.50, choice 79c 35 Dining Tables ranging $6.95, $9.75, $14.50 to $37.50 Buffets and Sideboards from 10 to 20 reduction; China Closets, Combination Book Cases, Chiffoniers, Toilet Tables, Odd Iron and Wood Beds, all go at a special reduction.

Your Dollars Get Big Returns YOU'RE WELCOME

Cor. 9th

QUICK RELIEF OF ITCHING ECZEMA

Was Surprising Inflammation Reduced in a Few Hours and Cure Soon Followed Boy's T;rture had Been Intense for Years Friend's Child had Eczema, Too. MOTHER TELLS HOW CUTICURA CURED BOTH "When mr dot was six years old. h. suffered terribly with ccrera. Hcoul4 neither sit till nor l.e quietlr in bed, f or t he itching u dreadf ul. lie would irritate upoU by scratching with his ti&iU and that only made thorn worse. A doctor treated him and we tried almost vrerytbinjr. but the enema seemed to spread. It started in a small place on the lower extremities and spread for two years until it very nearly covered th. back part cf his leg to the knee. "Finally I got Cuticura Soar. Cuticura Ointment and Cuticura Pills and gave them according to directions. I used them in the rooming and that evening, before I put my buy to bed. I used them again and the improvement evea in those few hours was surprisinc. the inflammation seemed to lx so much less. I used two boxes cf Cututiri Ointment, the same cf Iho Fills and the Soap and my boy was cured. My son is now in his seventeenth rear and ho has never had a return cf 0x eczema. " I took care rf a friend a child that had eczema cn its t&r and limbs and I vsed the Cuticura Soar and Ointment. They acted on the child just as they did cn rnv Bon and it has never returned. I would recommend the Cuticura Remedies to anvone. Mrs. A. J. Cochran. 1823 Columbia Ave., rtulaik-lpbia, Pa Oct. 20. 1900." FOR SKIN HUMORS Torturing. dif gurinst patches cf humor on the skin, scalp cr hands ara instantly relieved and speedily cured, ia the majority f cases, by -ara baths with Cuticura Soap and pentl anointtags of Cuticura Ointment. For eczemas, rashes, itching, irritations, irsfarm&tions. dandruff, dry. thin ar.d falling hair, for eanative. antiseptic cleansing and all purposes cf thftoiM. these pure, sweet, pernio emollients ere unrivaled. Cutk-ura Soap f5 V to rintnar lh Skin. Cntmm Ointmral 5iV to tint tfw Skin and Clirr Kfoivrct jOr.l. (or IB lh fnrmcf 4bwoatrraaa'4 Fill, tie . per ul of f-Ot to Pur inp ttMV) old tbrourtioiM -t worm. Prtttr Pro Ctx-ra. Corp . So Prniw. ISSAluDtrus An, notion. Ham. y-XliJ Frrv. 3rr mttrara n.vk. rotar pit l (iiade to tac Trcatsicsl ut Sua uu cal? line. The railway company HI run a train a minute and will be able to handle :hVk passeners a day. "Ablation Camp as the field is to be called. Is two and a half miles long and commands a splendid view of the mountains. Popular Subscription. The funds to finance the meet have been secured through popular subscription, the nucleus for the sum having been the $.V,00O contribution of Henry E. Huntington, the multi-millionaire president of the Pacific Electric Railway company. Through the meet, the people of Los Angeles wish not only to bring out all the possibilities on aviation to flate and to advance the science, but to demonstrate to the world that flying in Southern California can be indulged in all the year around, and especially In mid-winter when the East Is snowbound. Perhaps the most interesting feature of the tournament, because it involves the element of uncertainty, is the result of experiments now being mad? all over the West by aerial enthusiast. The most remarkable novelty Is a monoplane being constructed by Capt. A. E. Hueller. who has won distinction as a balloonist. Mueller's machine Is l()i feet long, has a p:ane surplace of 5,x square feet and carries a 50 h. p. motor, weighing S.V pounds. Capt. Mueller expects to make a flight from Los Angeles to San Francisco In the strange gigantic craft. LrcBFTiA: JuMt learned thst Gold Medal Flour to !ftcd tm ttmrm tro;k finrut milk. EnoBVIA, KOMEY'S Oar Curtain d Drapery Dep'L Lace Curtain Portieres antGrill Work. A straight discount of 20 on anything in this department for a period of 10 days only. Some remnants will be sold at half their regular value. Many bargains in Oil Cloths, Linoleums, Ingrain Carpets, etc and Main