Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 125, 30 March 1912 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY
31 ARCH 30, 19t J. PAGE FIVE..
Social Side of Life Edited by ELIZABETH R. THOMAS Phono 1131 before li:M In order to Insure publication In tbe Evening Edition
THE HUMBLE TOILER. To work while yet the dawn is red The humble toller fares elate; And daily earn his meed of bread. And vexes not o'er questions great. He knows no bidden asteroid, Or If the sun Is burning out; To him the far is not the void. ' And God he has not learned to doubt. But be finds joy In simple things. And known the peace of sweet, fair fields; He drinks of sparkling, crystal springs. And sees the beauty nature yields. He cares not if we sail the air, Or bridge the ocean vast and wide But he see thst the world is fair. And love Is toiling by his side. Our lyrlccholr he does not know; For him old Homer sang In vain; But he can feel the soft winds blow. And hear the silver plash of rain. And he can know a child's sweet love. And find at home enjoyment sweet; He sees the heavens smile above And hears the lark the morning greet. A toiler with his spade and plowYet happy as the rich can be; He lives In the unfailing now, A soul content and glad and free! George L. Andrews, In the Christian Herald
SOCIAL EVENTS FOR THE WEEK. Monday The Ticknor club . will
meet in tbe afternoon with Mrs. E. B. Clements at her home in North Thirteenth street Mrs. J. M. Knodle will be hostess for
a meeting of the Magazine club at
her home in North Fourteenth street. The Dorcas society will meet in the afternoon. The Eden Degree staff will give a vaudeville performance in the Pythian Temple. The public is invited to attend. Tuesday Miss Margaret Sedgwick will be hostess for a meeting of the
m t l - l..w . V I.
. I UMUljr cruise ciuu v uer uuuib iu West Richmond. A meeting of the Aftermath society will be held In the afternoon. The hostess will be announced later. Wednesday The Domeetio 8cience association will meet with Mrs. John B, Dougan at her home in North 'Tenth street. A .card party will be given at the Country club. Thursday A meeting of the Wo.man's Relief Corps, will be held in the Post Rooms at the Court House.
.A MV MVMW V I II mwwm cldb will meet. SOCIAL COMMITTEE. The social committee for the Elks' club will be named after the new exalted1 ruler is Installed. The election will be held next Thursday evening at the regular lodge meeting.
TO SPEND THE WEEK-END. Mrs. Hatch and Misses Jennie and Juliet Bobbins of Detroit. Michigan, who have, been In Indianapolis called there by 'the serious accident to Mr. B. C Robblns, will come to Richmond to spend over Sunday with Mr. John Bobbins and family of North Tenth street.
IS IN CHICAGO. Mr. J. M. Lonts is in Chicago for a few days on a business trip. Mrs. Ixnts is .visiting in Hagerstown during Mr. Lonts's absence from the city.
PRETTY DANCING PARTY. A most delightful dancing party waa gtven last evening in the Odd Fel-
luw m usass jvj a iivi ws t, vviwut 41 a Fred Roaslter and Mr. John Longstreth. The music awe furnished by the Mutt, Jeff and Turk Saxaphone Trio. This is one of the best musi
cal; organisations 01 its kind ever heard here, and the music added much to the success of the affair. Dancing waa enjoyed until a late hour. The dancers were Miss Margaret Ferguson, Miss Ivy Russell, Miss Marie Brown, Miss Mona Porter. Miss Eleanor 8eldell, Miss Hasel Piper, Miss Caroline Weaver, Miss Mary Mathew, Miss Josephine Wilson, Miss Ethel
Brown, Miss Marian Russell, Miss Ruth PennelL Miss Dorothy Land, Miss Edna Ferling, Miss Mary Canby, Miss Mary Clements. Miss Grace Kelly, Miss Hazel Roach. Miss Sherman, Miss Marguerite Hasemeier.Mlss Maud Nncher. Miss Elizabeth Bailey, Miss Irwin Gorman. Miss Mabel Reller, Mr. Herbert Cotton. Mr. Fred Rosaiter. Mr. John Ixmgetreth. Mr. Wlllard Kaufman, Mr. Paul Miller. Mr. William Ochiltree, of Connersvtile, Mr. Teeple, Mr. Paul James, Mr. Ernest Mather, Mr. Harold Harold Myers. Mr. Earl Rowe. Mr. W. Carl Sherman, Mr. Gordon Magaw, Mr. Emory Caster, Mr. D. 8. Mathew. Jr.. Mr. Howard Messick, Mr. Ed Williams, Mr. Wray Draper, Mr. Lewis Dlngley. Mr. Seth Dingley. Mr. Harvey Cox. Mr. Homer Ramsey, Mr. Robert Taylor, Mr. Ben Meyers and Mr. GeorgeBrenizer.
TOURIST CLUB. President and Mrs. Robert L. Kelley were host and hostess last evening for a meeting of the Tourist club at their home in College avenue. Three short papers were read. Mrs. C. S. Bond read one entitled "Wallensteln." This was followed by one on Maria Teresa read by Miss Francis Robinson. Professor Edwin P. Trueblbod talekd on "Louis Kossuth." The conversation, "Plays a Necessity in Adult Life" was led by Dr. S. R. Lyons. After the progra ma social hour followed. Refreshments were served. The club will meet again in a fortnight.
R EES-HOCK ETT. The following from the Kokomo Tribune is of local interest: Schuyler C. Rees of Richmond and Miss Jessie O. Hockett of this city, went to Indianapolis, Thursday morning, where they were married at two
o'clock In the afternoon, the ceremony being performed by the Rev. Hearlstone, a minister of the M. E. church, at his residence. They left Indianapolis in the evening, going to Cincinnati, and after a few days in that city will go to their home in Richmond, Ind. The bride Is the sweet and lovable daughter of E. S. and Mrs. Hockett, of West Taylor street. - She is an accomplished pianist and is well known In musical and . social circles, especially In the various activities of the Union street Friends' church. Mr. Rees formerly resided in Kokomo where he was most favorably known, but for the past year has been in business in Richmond. The 'very best wishes of all who know them, go with them to their new home.
ANNUAL PLAY. The annual play of the Nomad club will be given this evening at the home of Miss Mary Lemon, in South Seventeenth street. This will be guest night. Each member will be privileged to invite two guests.- The play will be a burlesque on Shakespeare. The meeting promises to be most en
joyable.
FARMER'S WIFE IIADJIEAP TO DO Mrs. Shepherd Was in Bad Shape When She Could Not Stand on Her Feet
Durham. N. C "I am a farmer wife," writes Mrs. J. M. Shepherd, of this city, "and have a heap to do." "Four months ago I could not stand on my feet, to do anything much, but at this time I do the most of my work. I took Cardui and it did me more good than all the doctors. "You don't know half how 1 thank you for the Cardui Home Treatment. I wish that all women who suffer from womanly trouble would treat themselves as I have Ladies can easily treat themselves at home, with Cardui, the woman's tonic. It is easy to take, and so gentle in its action, that it cannot do anything but good. Being composed exclusively of vegetable ingredients, Cardui cannot lay up trouble in your system, as mineral drugs often do. Its ingredients having no barsh, medicinal effects, and being nonpoisonous and perfectly harmless, Cardui is absolutely sale for young and old. Ask your druggist. He will tell you to try Cardui. N. a Wrttt Ladies' Advisory Dept. ChattaDooea Medicine Co.. Chilian oot a. Tcdil. lor Specie Instructions. and64-pac book. "Hrme Treatmen ist Women, sent in v'.-, -Ara,rrr. en request
Mrs. A. S. Johnson in South Eleventh street. Wednesday afternoon Mrs. Qeorge Dilks, Jr., and Mrs. Harry Jay, gave a beautifully appointed bridge party at the home of Mrs. Dilks in Spring Grove, for Miss Juliet Swayne, an April bride. The engagement of Mr. George Hodge and Miss Shiloh Van Meter, of Cambridge City, was announced on this day. The wedding will be celebrated sometime in June. The Wednesday Dancing club gave a pretty dance in the Odd Fellows' hall. Friday evening the engagement of Mr. Carl Bernhardt to Miss Dorothy Vaughan was announced. This will be an April wedding. Many other events including luncheons, dinners and surprise parties made up the week's schedule.
APRIL COMMITTEE. The social committee at the Country club for April will be composed of the following persons: Mrs. Charles Marvel, chairman; Mrs. Thomas M. Kaufman, Mrs. A. D. Gayle, Mrs. Henry Gennett, Mrs. Omar G. Murray, Mrs. Lee Ashley, and Miss Genevieve Newlin. Among the events which will be given at the club during the month will be a musicale, Monday evening, April the fifteenth.
ATTENDED FUNERAL. Mrs. Tiehe and Mrs. Dadisman atten
ded the funeral of their uncle. John
Wolfe, at New Hope, Friday afternoon.
BUSINESS MEETING.
A business and social meeting of
the Four Leaf Clover Class of tho First M. E. Sunday School was held
last evening at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. James E. Perry in North Twea
ty-second street. Mr. Perry is the teacher of the class. At this time the business for the past six months was concluded and new officers elected. The reports showed that the past six
months have been most successful;
the enrollment has been tripled, fifty-
five young ladies having been enrolled
and the average attendance being
about twenty; the class has also paid
fifty-one dollars and sixty-eight cents to missions. The officers elected were
as follows: President Donnle Stinson. Vice-president Vlra Benton. Secretary Elizabeth Phelps. Treasurer Opal Quigg.
After the business session the even
ing was spent socially, music and games affording the entertainment. Refreshments were served, tiny white Easter rabbits and carnations being
given as favors.
MANY EVENT'S.
The past week has ben replete with many delightful and charming social
events. Several engagements were al
so announced adding to the complete
ness of the social calendar. Monday evening the Olive Branch Bible class gave an elegant banquet in the Sunday
school room of the First English Luth
eran church. There were a number of club meetings on this day. The an
nual banquet of the Alice Carey Club
was held Tuesday at the home of
Used and praised by the most competent and careful pastry cooks the world over
The only Baking Powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar made from grapes
COUNTRY CLUB DANCE. Hick's orchestra will furnrsn the mu
sic for the dance to be given at the Country Club this evening to which all
members of the club are cordially in
vited. Cards will also be played and a woman's favor presented. A buffet
lunch will be served.
TO FORMLAND. Mr. O. O. Deering has gone to Farmland, Indiana, to attend a sale.
RETURNED HOME. Mrs. Grace Julian Clarke, who made an address on "Equal Suffrage" in the high school hall last evening and who was the guest of Mrs. Gertrude Hill, while in town, returned to Indianapolis this morning.
VISITED HERE. Mrs. George Hughes of New Haven, Connecticut, a former Earlham student, visited friends in this city and at the college yesterday.
TO GIVE PANTOMINE. The Young People of the First Methodist church Epworth League are arranging to give a pantocaine of "Enoch Arden" the latter part of April or the first of May.
MRS. STUTSON HOSTESS. A meeting of the Athenaea Literary society of the South Eighth Street Friends' church was held Friday afternoon with Mrs. C. W. Hoeffer at her home in South Twentyflrst street. Mrs. John Johnson read an interesting paper on "Amsterdam." Mrs. Mark Wilson was also one of the readers for
the afternoon. "Porcelain Wear" was
the .subject presented by Mrs. Harry Doan. After the program the hostess served a luncheon. The society will meet in a fortnight with Mrs. Charles Stutson at her home in South Thir
teenth street.
A GUEST HERE. Mr. H. G. Schellert of Dunkirk. Ind..
was in the city yesterday to visit his father, Mr. A. G. Schillert, who has been ill for some time at the home of ftis daughter, Mrs. C. A. Seifert, of North Eighteenth street.
Many sufferers from rheumatism have been surprised and delighted
with the prompt relief afforded by applying Chamberlain's Liniment. Not
one case of rheumatism In ten requires any internal treatment whatever. This liniment is Tor sale by all dealers.
Her Banking Plan. I should like to open an account at this bank. If you please." "We shall be glad to accommodate yon. madam. What amount do yon wish to deposit? "Oh, but I mean A charge account, such as I have at the big dry goods tores." Chicago Tribune.
Business Associates. Messenger Who's the swell 70 was talkin' to. Jlmmie? Newsboy Ah, him an me's worked together fer years. He's the editor o one o" my papers. London Opinion.
Of Course. Sirs. A. Where did yon go for yoor sew hat? Mrs. B. Through my husband's pockets. Where do yoa think? -New York Journal.
TWO STRANGE WOMEN. .What They Would Do if Closeted Together For Night. Edna Ferber writes a fiction story in the American Magazine in which the principal character Is Emma McCbesney. a traveling saleswoman. On one of her trips she took her eon with her, a boy of seventeen. This boy had to spend the night -with a stranger in a country hoteL Next morning his mother asked him about his roommate. The boy know very little, not eyen the name of the man with whom be stayed, whereupon Emma McCbesney broke out as follows: "Men are the enssedest creatures. This chap occupied the same room with you last night and you don't even know his name. Funny! If two strange women had found themselves occupying the same room for a eight they wouldn't have got to the kimono and back hair stage before they would know not only each other's name, but they'd have tried on each other's hats, swapped corset cover patterns, found mutual friends living in Dayton, O., taught each other a new Irish crochet stitch, showed their family photographs, told how their married sister's little girl nearly died with swollen glands and divided off tbe mirror Into two sections to paste, their newly washed handkerchiefs on. Don't tell me men have a genius for friendship.'
Th.-oe Manifestations. "You may give threo important illustrations of the power of the press," says the teacher to the class. Tbe pupil -who had not hitherto particularly distinguished himself was the first to reply: "Cider, courtship ald polities." Judge's Library.
Oroooro Who Dress sd In Celers. In the early part of the fifteenth century it to recorded that the "grocers guild appeared in livery of scarlet and green. A few years later scarlet and black were adopted. Funeral services of deceased members "were attended with much show of pageantry." At tbe burial of 81r Philip Sidney, who was a member of the grocers guild, his worship the mayor, aldermen and other eivic officials were present, "rydlnge In purple." London Telegraph.
Com potent. Garslde Women ought not to be allowed to vote. Could a woman sit on a Jury? Hillside Could she! A woman like my wife could sit on the Jury and the Judge and tho lawyers and the whole department of Justice If she took the notion. Newark New.
Ho Know a Thing or Two. Mrs. Eze It isn't right to charge Willie with taking that money out of your pocket. Why dont you accuse me? Mr. Eze Because it wasnt all taken. Boston Transcript.
Tho Cook Lane Oh i. St. John's, CleckonweU. to a
structure architecturally, bat
two Interesting hlstoricaksssociattons. one romantic and tho other ludJcroaa. It la the headquarters of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem, part of the choir of whose ancient priory can still bo seea tn the early English crypt. This crypt was the haunt of tho "Cock lane ghost," which excited all London in February, 1762. and attracted Johnson. Goldsmith and Horace Walpole. The "ghost, proved, as Dr. Johnson surmised, to be the mischievous little daughter of a parish clerk. Westminster Gazette.
Drawing the Line. "Before we were married yon aatd yoa would die former "I know I did. and I would, bat wearing that necktie you selected oat on the street to different I wont do that. Houston Post.
BEST-YET Is a Self Rising Flour and Just what the name implies. Made from high grade Winter Wheat Floor, with the purest of Baking Powder, Soda and Salt added. Can be used for anything, but light bread. You will know best after you try it. The price is 25c and most good grocers sell it. Mar-22-23-26-28-M
Very Much In Love. Walter (waiting for his order) Have yon made yoor choice, sir? Lovesick Diner Oh, yes; it's Laura. Fllegende Blatter.
THE FAI-fflY MEDICINE
SCEENOrS IfANDBABS FILLS are mild and gentle, because they are wholly vegetable they are always effective, because they follow Nature's corrective and curative methods they are agreeable to the most delicate in all cases of biliousness, liver complaint, dvspepsla, Indigestion, sick headache, giddiness, malaria, heartburn, etc. Used and proved for more than 73 years. At dracttats. Ste. 8a4 to tor tr book. Dr. J. D. Scbeadt & Sa. PtSsiel!i
DO YOl NEED A TONIC this Spring? Then get the best the one that is backed by a proven reputation HOSTETTER'S STOMACH BITTERS It Invigorates, Rebuilds, Nourishes. Don't experiment. INSIST ON GETTING HOSTETTER'S
After Our First Showing of MILLINERY We find the Hats to be . Unusually Becoming and More Attractive than Ever
OUR HATS ARE OF PROVEN QUALITY AND KNOWN WORTH. WE HAVE AN ATTRACTIVE LINE OF EASTER HATS AND BONNETS.
Miss Austin
Westcott Hotel
KNOLLENBERG'S STORE
Wool Textile Week MONDAY, APRIL 1 TO SATURDAY, APRIL 6 We Offer Our Magnificent Lines of Spring Woolens at TEN PER CENT. DISCOUNT QUALITY AND STYLE are paramount, while price is an important consideration with every woman in the buying of her clothes. Directed by this principle and fact we have prepared our stock of Spring Dress Goods, which, because of its exquisite beauty and remarkable extent, is truly best described as a Magnificent Exposition of the Newest Creations in Dress Fabrics. With our prices always consistent and with the special price inducement we offer during Wool Textile Week, our Dress Goods Department is exceptionally attractive. An elegant stock of New Spring Dress Goods, consistently priced with a special discount of 10 per cent during our Wool Textile Week that in short is the irresistible offer we make to our patrons.
Let us show you something for your new suit.
Suitings, Skirtings, Etc. Almost bewildering in extent is our showing of Suitings, Skirtings, and various weaves for separate coats. Here is a list of some of the good things: Diagonals, Storm Serges, Birdseye Weaves, Bedford Cord, Whip Cord, Pekin Stripes, .Nub Stripe Patterns, and Fancy Weaves. We have all the new colors and shades and are particular, ly proud of our great range of tan shades and black and white patterns. Let is held plan your new costume. Prices 50c to $4.25 Yd. SPECIAL! Mottled Suitings, 56 inches wide, regular $1.25 to $2 values, Sale Price . 00c Yard
Let us thing' Dress.
show you somefor your new
Dress Goods See the great line of Novelties, Pin Stripes, Ombra Stripes, the remarkably complete line of plain weaves, silk and wool Coleen Poplins, Shepherd Checks, French Challies in Borders and Floral, designs. Broadcloths of the highest grade for evening use. This magnificent line must be seen to be appreciated. SPECIAL! Imported French Challies, regular value, 58c yard. Sale Price 20c Yd.
V
UrTW
Let us show you something for your new Coat
THE GEO. H. KNOLLENBERG COMPANY Richmond " . ; " Indiana
I
