Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 117, 21 March 1912 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, iMARCH 21, 1912.

PAGE FIVE.

Social Side of Life Edited by ELIZABETH R. THOMAS AoM 1111 before 110 In order to Insure publication la the-ErenlaaT Edltloa

CLAM BANQUET. Tha Ohe Branch Bible clan of the Flrat English Lutheran church has Isuro invitation iwr ine WMWiugn ui Its sixth anniversary, Monday evening. March th t went yd ft h. The affair will be a banquet and will be held In the Sunday school room of the church. It is expected that tbe two hundred persons will be served. The class has showed a rapid growth within the past few mm suiting with a membership of eight it has grown until now one hunderd and forty names are enrolled. The invitations are very attractive and most unique. They represent tbe class button and are in tbe class colors red and white. At the top of the button is fastened a dainty white bow. In the center and inscribed on tbe white is the following: Olive Branch Bible Class Banquet Sunday School room Monday, March tbe twentyflfth Eight p. m. R. 8. V. P. Mr. John Battel Mrs. John Eggemeyer Committee Sixth Anniversary. A program of toasts has been arranged and these programs have been printed so artistically that tbey will Indeed be worth keeping. A border of olive braaehea in green is arranged about the reading matter. Tbe program follows; Toast master E. M. Haas, Tteacher The Bible Class and the Sunday school Dr. A. I Bramkamp. Supt. Tbe Social Spirit Mrs. Anna Engelbreefct. Tbe Old and the New Rev. E. Mlnter The Missionary Spirit Mrs. Lee B. Nusbaum rne aquii uiass ana toe aman vnurcn Mr. W. H. Doney, Cambridge City. The Bible as History and Literature Mrs. W, H. Sudboff. Spiritual Development Her. E. O. Howard, Pastor. Tbw 8unday School Mr. W. O. Hall, Pres. State Sunday School Association, Indianapolis. MusAo by Sunday School Orchestra. I DANCE FRIDAY. The tfanoe which was to have been given some time ago at the Elk's club but which wag postponed on account of the minstrel show will be given Friday evening of this week at tbe club house. This will be the last party to bo , given for sometime by the present social committee. The many dances which the Elks have given during the .winter months have been delightful affairs. Tbe danee tomorrow evening wll be for the members of the lodge their wives and sweethearts. Dancing will begin at eight thirty o'clock. The Hick's orchestra will furnish the dance musio. V HAVI RETURNED. Miss Anna Varley, Mlsa Mary Cesnan have returned from a two days stay In Cincinnati, Ohio, where they attended the opening. , VltlTINQ IN MARION. Mlsa Bunch Conley has been visiting In Marion. Indiana, with Mrs. Oliver James. e TO GIVE SOCIAL. The Fifth - Street Epworth League will give a social at the home of Mrs. Deem, tit Rlohmond, avenue, Friday evening, March the twentysecond. All are Invited to attend. COUNTRY CLUB TEA. The tea at the Country Club yesterday afternoon was a charming affair, a number going out despite the inclement weather. Tea was served at four, the table being set before the replace In which biased a wood-Are, Miss Foulkw presiding. The next social affair to be given for the club membership will be on Saturday evening, March 30th, and will be a dance and card party. . LEAVE FOR THE EAST. Mr. William D. Foulke and Miss Gwendoline Foulke will leave soon for Washington and other eastern cities ana win not return until May. . An enjoyable time was had last eenlng by the young people who attended the skating party given at the Coliseum by the members of tbe Phi Delta Kappa fraternity. The program consisted of twentyfour skates with several ladlea choices. Mr. Herbert Cotton a ad Mr. Chauncey Edgerton had charge of the affair. Skating was participated In until a late hour. Among those enjoying the party were Miss Hannah Herahey. Miss Elisabeth 8hrlber. Miss Elisabeth Kolp, Miss Ivy live Dne G5M Get RM ef Dandruff, stop alllaa Hair an? taeniae eel a, avt Ufa and Beauty ante year Main ' Parisian Sage hi tha fnloa Mt acting hair grower. lavt orator and beauttfler tha world has ever known and a million clean headed and elear headed Americana wont ccept any substitute. The girl with the Auburn hair la on every bottle and carton of Paiislon Sage; in buying see that you get the Cenulne which is made in America by the Glroux Mfg. To., uffalo, N. Y. Parisian Sage dear reader, eldom falls to do as advertised. We gladly guarantee it to

Preparations Similar in Name are on the Market Be sure and ask fcr Parisian Sage (see illustration of Carton Above) yea can always ctt the cenuine at Leo H. Fine's.

Russell, Miss Mary Canby, Miss Hazel Thomas, Miss Grace Graves, Miss Marie Brown, Miss Blanch Bayer, Miss Marguerite Ferguson, Miss Mary Bayer, Miss Fleming, Mr. Fred Bollmeyer, Mr. Robert Tomlinson, Mr. Peter Lich-

tenfels. Mr. Ben Meyers, Mr. Howard Messlck, Mr. Ernest Lehman, Mr. Chauncey Edgerton, Mr. John Longstretb, Mr. Earl Cotton, Mr. Herbert Cotton, Mr. Robert Fitcglbbons, Mr. Clark Myers, Mr. Ednor Rossiter, Mr. Gerald Fitzglbbons, Mr. Everett Meconaba and Mr. Cox. The party was chaperoned by Mrs. Robert G. Sbriber and Mrs. Charles Kolp. WERE IN CINCINNATI. Mrs. Frank Keller and Mrs. George Henson were guests in Cincinnati, Ohio, yesterday. CANDLE DANCE. A candle dance was given last evening in the Knights of Pythias hall by tbe members of tbe White Lily Dancing club. Dancing was enjoyed by candle light. Harris and Stelnkamp furnished tbe dance music. Despite the inclement weather tbe affair was largely attended. MINSTREL SHOW. What promises to be one of the most delightful and enjoyable musical events of the week will be tbe minstrel show to be given Friday evening, March tbe twentysecond in the High school auditorium by the high school boys. The affair will be a benett. The proceeds will be given to tbe boys department of the Y. M. C. A. The promoters of the affair have gone to quite a little expense in securing costumes for the event and it is hoped that tbe public will attend tbe affair. An admission of twentyflve cents will be asked. There will be no reserved seats. The program will be as follows: Part One Gee! But It's Great to Meet a Friend From Your Home Town Opening Ragtime Violin Clarence Turner The Harbor of Love Philip Gates Sextette from Lucia Edward Ryan The Rosary Robert Taylor Chop House Rag Ralph Snaveley The Vale of Dreams. . . .George Hodge Lord Have Mercy on a Married Man Benton Barlow My Honolulu Lou Finale Intermission ten minutes Olio Calkins and Ashinger Tumblers Barlow and Snaveley Mirth Provokers. Howard 3teeick in Recitations and the Panic proof City quartet Ryan and Turner "Those Boys" Second Part The Hickville Coon Rally, written by Whiffele and Piffele Entire Company. MISS CAMPBELL HOSTESS. Miss Marie Campbell will be hostess Friday afternoon for a meeting of the Busser's whist club at her home in East Main street. All the members are invited to attend. REGULAR MEETING. The regular meeting of the LindenLodge number fourteen hundred and fortynine. Knights and Ladies of honor, waa held last evening in the Red Men's hall. District Secretary Sister Sands was present at the meeting. Several candidates were initiated at this time. After the business session a banquet was served and an enjoyable social hour followed.' . MRS. BROWN HOSTESS. Mrs. Guy Brown was hostess Wednesday afternoon for a meeting of the Ladies Aid Society of tbe First Baptist church at her home in South Thirtenth stret. The afternoon was spent socially and wit needlework. Refreshments were served. MEETING CHANGED. - The Magaflne club will meet Monday afternoon of next week with Mrs. W. W. Gifford at her home in North Thirteenth street Instead of meeting with Mrs. Paige as was the original in tention. Members are asked to note this change. PLANS FOR DANCE. What will be one of the most elaborate dances of the Easter season in Marion Indiana, is being arranged by tbe young men of the Beta Phi Sigma fraternity and will be given at the Commercial club hall on the night of April the ninth. Xn invitation will be sent to fraternity member in this city and no doubt several will attend. Mr. Charles Arnold. Mr. Ernest Wendt and Mr. Glen Maddux, comprise the com mittee that is making arrangements for the dance to which about one hunWSflfli fflSc eradicate dandruff. To stop falling hattr and scalp Itch. To put life, luster and even brilliancy into dull faded hah. To grow hair if used before dandruff germs destroy the , roots. Parisian San la the most delightful and freshing hair dressing in the world, and H sold for only SO cent a bottle ' at successful druggists everywhere. On March 25. E. A. Widman. 8 Norfolk St, Newark. N. J., wrote: My hair was falling out and my head was full of dandruff. Since using Parisian Sage the dandruff has disappeared and now I have quite a good growth of hair.

This Will Stop Your Cough in a Hurry

lev tn ar ' IfiM at This recipe makes a pint of better cough syrup than you could bay ready made lor (2.60. A few doses usually conquer the most obstinate cough stops even whooping eoogfa quickly. Simple as it is, no better remedy can be had at any price. Mix one pint of granulated agar with Va pint of warm water, and stir for 8 minutes. Put 2b ounces of Pinex (fifty cents worth) in a pint bottle; then add the Sugar Syrup. It has a pleasant taste and lasts a family a long time. Take a teaspoonful every one, two or three hours. You can feel this take hold of a eough in a way that means business. Has a, good tome effect, braces up the appetite, and is slightly laxative, too. which is helpful. A handy remedy for hoarseness, croup, bronchitis, asthma and all throat and lung troubles. The effect of pine on the membranes is well known. Pinex is the most valuable concentrated compound of Norwegian white pine extract, and is rich in gusiacol and all the natural healing pine elements. Other preparations will not work in this formula. This Pinex and Sugar Syrup recipe las attained great popularity throughout the United States and Canada. It has often been imitated, though never successfully. A guaranty of absolute satisfaction, or money promptly refunded, goes with this recipe. Your druggfot has Pinex, or will ?t it for vou. If not, send to The inex Co., Ft. Wayne, lad. dred couples will be invited. The. members of the Marion chapter will send invitations to and expect representation from the other twenty-four chapters of the organization scattered over the United States. The decorations will be ohe of the most elaborate features of the affair and will be in keeping with the' Easter season. The music will be furnished by the Smith Saxophone orchestra of Springfield, Ohio. You can say goodbye to constipation with a clear conscience if you use Chamberlain's Tablets. Many have peen permanently cured by their use. For sale by all dealers. Cookery points Hew e Serve an Informal Dinner. An informal home dinner, If there are guests, Is served much as tbe formal one. An exception may be made In the Item of soup. This may be f served on tbe table from the tureen. But one soup plate at a time la placed before the host or hostess, whichever one may serve. These are taken from the sideboard by the maid as each Is required. Then It Is passed to the guest at the right of the hostess. Fish may be served by the host and ln'the same manner, but aa many as fonr plates at a time may be placed for serving before tbe host Entree are always served from the side table. All sauces and also the vegetables are served from tbe side table and at the left side Of each guest. If the host desires tbe salad may be dressed and served at the table. It Is the duty of the hostess to serve dessert If this is not served from the aide and pour the coffee. Though the cream and sugar for the .coffee are passed at the left of the diner, the coffee la placed, at the right Wine is not necessary. The iced water and bread are on the table before the guest enter the dining room; also bonbons and hors d'oeuvres may be on tbe table. At informal dinners and luncheons the service plate may be omitted. Wholesome Sandwiches. It was the memory of a childhood appetite which Inspired a woman to serve brown bread sandwiches spread. with horseradish and sugar with her afternoon tea the other day. It was a crisp kind of afternoon, and the snappy pungency of the horseradish was delightful. The horseradish had. of course, been mixed with vinegar, the slightest possible amount used, and it was sprinkled lightly with powdered sugar. Tbe brown bread was made of whole wheat and graham flour and was cut as thin as possible. White bread sandwiches sprinkled with sugar are a delight in one household where everybody has a sweet tooth. It may be that the fashionable "nervous stomach" has been cultivated as much by the goodies in the way of cakes and bonbons served at daily teas as anything else. 8weet sandwiches are twice as healthy and to most persons are a welcome relief from the universal American cake habit Turkey Salad. Roast turkey left from dinner make delicions salad mixed with celery seasoned with capers and dressed with mayonnaise. The usual directions call for equal parts of meat and celery, : but there Is no hard and fast rale. Tbe amount of the meat on hand and tbe taste of the family are strong considerations. The meat left from roast fowl of any kind makes a delicious souffle. An old rule calm for two cupfuls of meat chopped fine, a cupful of breadcrumbs, a cupful of white sauce , and two eggs, the yolks beaten creamy and added to tbe mixture, and the whites beaten stiff, folded In at tbe last minute. Bake about fifteen or twenty minutes and send directly from the oven to the table. Homemade Corn Pepper. A woman looking for an electric corn popper tbe other day found that she had everything needful for such a utensil except a ten cent popper of tbe usual long handle and wire cage kind. There is a little oblong electric stove that comes complete with griddle and toaster which makes an ideal arrangement for popping corn, and it is a great improvement over tbe gas or coal stove, for it may be used on any table in the 'louse with a tray under it It dee not tient the face, and tbe heat Is very .ren. The smallest popper is beat tor it,

IIATiOdAL ROAD V7EST-CQ

Almost Impassable for Horses, Carriages Sink to. Hubs and Automobiles Have to Be Pried Out. Rides Like Pioneer Days.

BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. The writer was perusing a fascinating work of fiction the other day. A commentary on Indiana roads. A certain report stated that Indiana had more mile of good roads than many another, state which boasted of its well heeled highway. , This statement wa baaed upon the number of miles of roads "worked out" by tbe celebrated road tax, and, on paper, made an Imposing showing. The truth is Indiana ha more bad roads to the square mile than tbe majority of the older states. The test of goodness of a road is the all year one. A road that is in condition seven months, say, and impassable live Is not a good road. In the summer the roads in Indiana are fair enough. The mud-roads and the graveled ways are beaten down into form and are pleasant for driving or automobiling. But in tbe winter! No-one who rides into the country need be told what jostling tortures are endured by the ridee. The whole matter could have been straightened out and some state-wide (system "of improved roadways been inaugurated if the measure brought up at the time of the last Legislature had been put through. Instead the excellent gentlemen, more or less elected by the people, who congregate in tbe legislative halls of the state capital once every two years to clean up Indiana, put on their usual political vaudeville and nothing was done. It is a good deal more important, of Only One "BROMO gUiNINK," that Is Laxative Bromo Quinine Curw a CoJd in One D.y, Gr 3 Days Everything for your Comfort in Our Flow Root Rooms

Ht io our intention to chow only ainrnora4o tHhaH have poiimto of cporiority-individltLaality-wollfl madoood n&toriMoohapo rotaliminrf-diriidl "M io a, noticeable fact that all our oulto rbqiuibo HSihlllo alterations

As An Opening Special We are offering an unusual line of high class sample suits In whipcords, serges and all the newest colorings, like and similar to illustrations, sold in other shops for $35.00, PrPicein8.. ..... $25.00

These are high class models, whipcords, fine imported serges, novelty stripes, trimmed with combinations to blend, ordinarily sold at $25.00, Opening . 01 Q 7 Price V . ID

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SAMPLE LINGERIE WAISTS Sample Lingerie Waists All new Spring models, high or round neck, entirely different from the Fall models, values $1.98 and Qfl $1.48, for vUC

Stylioh Spring (Coattb all tho nowcot conccito fos SprinrfeScirdcoe raovoltty Hotilhoo. whin cordo axnudi a,W

f J D ITIO H A DISGRACE

the course, to ballywhack round contending for supremacy in the appointment of a keeper of the spittoons than to earn their salaries doing something for the advancement of the common wealth. The local effect of this is seen in the condition of the National road West at this moment. The public of no other country is as long suffering and Indulgent as Is the American. While politicians wrangle and wirepull and pursue their devious waya for their own personal emolument the public shuffles along the best way it can. Tbe stretch of road from West Fifth to Asylum Avenue is a disgrace to any civilized country. , There is no excuse of any sort for such a state. All last summer, warm and dry, slipped past while the County Commissioners and the Traction Company rowed and rumpused and shook their metaphorical fists at each other and called each other names. The Traction Company, of course, owns everything in sight and the County Commissioners are not to be explained by any mere process of reasoning. They are strange, mysterious, weird beings. They should In fact, be extinct as the dodo. They've outlived their time. New political and social systems are being evolved in which County Commissioners have no part. They have been carried over from this country's stone age. -lit, ym f UI W0jfr 25c These Cuts Are Not 829.75

Richmond's Daylight Storo . 1 .

A has the County Commissioner! Here's the place to execute the celebrated recall. (Stage aside These remarks are directed toward the office, not the man. The writer, personally, never saw a County Commissioner and like the man with the purple cow "never hopes to see one." They may or may not be immured In the remote fastenesses of the court house. It remain that their personnel is vague, nebulous like the wraiths which float phosphorously around at a "spiritualistic seanee.) So the while these gentry amuse themselves the Richmond public wades, detours, picks its way mineingly, tiptoes through puddles, side-steps the mire only to sink deeper Into the mud, and "cusses" both strongly, loudly and also sub-rosa. The writer the other evening took a cab for a point on the outskirts of the town and had the ride of her life. The streets and roads on the fringes are bad enough in all conscience and should be put into condition. But the National Road is a quagmire. Tbe cab pitched and careened about like a ship at sea. The horse crawled and. at intervals, stopped to rest. On the stretch just this side of the Country Club-house the whole carriage sank to tbe hub. Horses floundered and stumbled through reeking slough. Automobiles stick helpless. A machine on tbe same evening was imbedded almost to the tonneau and wabbled about crazily on one wheel. "Outside help" was needed to pry it loose. ,

Pictures But Actual Reproductions of What We Show.

a

$25

o u c o

While plunging and splashing round in this horrible mesa one might Imagine oneself an early settler, A pioneer in the wilderness making for the block house for protection from the savage. Resident of this road have for many weary months hopped about from curb to stone, from board to board, swinging perilously to the fence posts and hanging to their own bootstraps. Many of them have become such accomplished acrobat they contemplate an entrance into vaudeville. What a good road may be in . all weathers, on the other hand, may be seen on West Fifth street from the National Road to Main street. Notwithstanding the assaults of the weather this short stretch Is fairly comfortable, and. in contrast, takes on the proportions of the Applan Way or a continental macadamised road. If the women had any say in the management of public - matters, it wouldn't take long to straighten out this bad road business. They would vote, as a unit, for the men who would put through a measure for a system of good roads. Roads that are good all the year round. As for the National Road West that is, as said, a disgrace to the. people and these are the men who permit a corporation and a set of useless officials to hold up the public and deprive it of comfort, convenience and right of way.

That ffiddy i edfcirr indicates liver and stomach trouble. Schenck's Mandrake Pills afford quick relief rand permanent cure follows steady treatment with them. 70 years specific for liver and stomach, sick headache and jaundice. Wholly vegetable absolutely harm less sold everywhere. 25c. Send a postal for our free book and learn how to prescribe for yourself. Dr. J. H. SCHENCK ft SON, Philadelphia, Moot Your at O ur Flow RcstRoomo 819.75 M is

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