Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 134, 10 April 1912 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 10, 1912. N
PAGE FIVE.
Social Side of Life Edited by ELIZABETH R, THOMAS Phone 1121 before 11:30 In order to insure publication in the Evening Edition
THE DREAMER. Dream the Great Dream, though you should dream you only, And friendless follow in the lonely quest: Though the dream lead you to a desert lonely. Or drive you, like the tempest, without rest: Yet tolling upward to the higher altar There lay before the gods your gift Supreme .A human heart whose courage did not falter Though distant as arcturus shone the gleam. Ah, question not if others did not see it, Who nor the yearning nor the passion share; Grieve not if children of the earth decree it Cherish the truth, for what you saw is there. The soul has need of prophet and redeemer, Her outstretched wings against her prisoning bars. She waits for truth; and truth is with the dreamer. Persistent as the myriad light of stars. Florence Earl Coates.
MRS. CARR'S LUNCHEON. Mrs. James A. Carr opened her beautiful home today to about a dozen guests when she entertained charmingly with a one o'clock luncheon as a courtesy to Miss Juliet Swayne, who will be married Wednesday of next wek to Mr. John Shirk of Tipton, Indiana. The decorations were unusually pretty and attractive consisting for the most part of apple blossoms. Susipended from the chandelier were Japanese parasols entwined with the ap:ple blossoms. The color scheme pink and white was carried out in all the table appointments. A mound of the pink and white blossoms formed a pretty centerpiece for the table. The place cards were hand painted, Japanese design, also being adorned with apple blossoms. Covers were laid for twelve guests.
VISITING HERE. Professor Jesse Reeves of the University of Michigan, is in town for a visit with his mother, Mrs. James Reeves of South Sixteenth street.
TO INDIANAPOLIS. Mrs. Minnie Hinchman Karns and daughters, Agnes and Mary, returned last eevning from Indianapolis after a short stay. Mrs. Karns has accepted a position with the Western Union Telegraph company of that city and will remove there within a few days. Mrs. Karns has made many, friends during her residence here, which covers a period of eighteen years, . and will be greatly missed by her many friends.
direction of Prof. Kietz. The place was prettily garbed in spring colors, ferns used around the center and forming a place for the orchestra. A blue and white canopy covered a large part of the dancing floor and neat favors were given. Anderson Bulletin.
HOME FROM SCHOOL. Miss Mable Hasemeier is home from school to spend her spring vacation here the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Hasemeier of South Seventh street.
DANCE THIS EVENING. On account of the success of the dance given last evening in the Odd Fellow's hall which was partly due to the excellent dance music, guests who expect to attend the party to be given this evening in the Pythian Temple under the direction of Mrs. Charles Kolp are expecting a good time. The Lucas Saxophone trio of Columbus, Ohio; will furnish the dance music. The music last evening furnished by the same organization was excellent. The guests this evening will include members of the Fortnightly dancing club, the Wednesday Assembly of the Country club and the Tuesday Cotillon club members. Dancing will begin at eight thirty o'clock.
CHILD WAS SICKLY i Mother Says, "I Think Vinol Saved Her Life." Parents are wise in trying to break up children's caughs quickly, but they are not always as wise as this moth-
jer in the means they adopt
Mrs. Willis Van Inwegan of Bloomingsburg, N. Y., says "My small girl had bronchitis all winter till the doctor said it was chronic and we were afraid we should lose her. I commenced giving her Vinol three times a day and now she is growing fine. I think Vinol saved her life." Children like to take our delicious tonic, Vinol, because it is pleasant. And it is much better for them than so-called "cough-medicines" for they have no strengthening power, while Vinol builds up the body and makes the blood rich. Give Vinol to your delicate run-down children (and take it yourself if you are not as strong as you sholud be), and you will be delighted with the results. If you are not we give back your money. Leo H. Fihe, Druggist, Richmond, Indiana.
ENTERTAINED THURSDAY. Thursday evening of this week an entertainment will be given at the K. of P. Hall. The Iola and Calanthe lodges will give the program.
VISITING HERE. Mrs. Florence Macy Parker of Carthage, Indiana, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Macy, 401 College avenue.
MISSIONARY MEETING. A meeting of the Woman's Home Missionary society of the Grace Methodist church was held last evening at the home of Mrs. Isaac Laning in North Seventh street. Several interesting papers were read. After the program a social hour followed. Refreshments were served.
AID SOCIETY MEETING. The Woman's Aid Society of the East Main Street Friends church will meet Thursday afternoon in the church parlors.
WERE IN MODOC. Mr. A. Johnson, Mr. Howard Johnjson and Mr. Ora Kirkman spent over 'Sunday in Modoc, Indiana, the guests 'of Miss Hawkins.
TO ENTERTAIN. Mrs. Harry Mills will entertain Thursday afternoon in honor of her little son, Master Datlof Curtis Mills, at her home in South Seventh street. The occasion will be his third birthday anniversary. The guests will number
twenty
SELBY-CRONER. Mr. Paul Selby and Miss Opal Croner were quietly married yesterday afternoon at two o'clock by the Rev. H. S. James of the United Brethren church in the church parsonage. The young people will take up a residence in this city.
WILL MEET THURSDAY. The Ladles Aid Society of the First English Lutheran church will meet Thursday afternoon at two o'clock at the church.
EASTER DANCE. The annual Easter dance of the Kappa Alphi Phi fraternity given at the town house of the Anderson Country club last evening was one of the brilliant events in the affairs of the local fraternity and a very delightful time was spent by the twenty-five couple present with a program of sixteen dances, music for which was furnished by the opera house orchestra under the
HEAD WAS SCALY HAIR ALL CAME OUT
And Baby's Face Broke Out in Red Bumps. Spread on Hands and Arms. Got Worse All the Time. Mother Says, "I Don't Think Anything Else Would Have Cured Him Except Cuticura." "When my first baby was six months old he broke out on his head with little bumps.
They would dry up and leave a scale. Then it would break out train and it spread all over his iiead. All the hair came out and his head was scaly all over. Then his fare broke out all over in red bumps and it kept spreading until it was on his hands and
arms. I bought several boxes of ointment, gave him blood medicine, and had two doctors to treat him, but he got worse all the time. He had it about six months when a friend told me about Cuticura. I sent and got a bottle of Cuticura Resolvent, a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box of Cuticura Ointment, In three days after using them he began to improve. He began to take long naps and to stop scratching his head. After taking two bottles of Resolvent, two boxes of Ointment and three cakes of Soap he was sound and well and never had any breaking out of any kind. His hair came out in little curls all over his head. I don't think anything else would have cured him except Cuticura "I have bought Cuticura Ointment and Soap several times since to use for cuts and sores and have never known them to fail to cure what I put them on. Cuticura Soap is the best that I have ever used for toilet
IMPORTANT EVENT. An important social event in Logansport social circles today was the wedding of Mr. John Smyser and Miss Lucy Uhl. The wedding was quietly celebrated at ten o'clock at the home of the bride's mother. The wedding
guests included the relatives and a few intimate friends. There were many guests from the city in attendance. The young people will leave for the south where they will spend a part of their honeymoon later coming to this city where they will reside with Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Smyser of North Fifteenth street.
en last evening in the Odd Fellows' hall by Mrs. Charles Kolp. The Lucas Saxophone trio of Columbus, Ohio, furnished the dance music. The guests included the members of Mrs. Kolp's Thursday and Friday evening dancing classes and other young people.
THEATER PARTY. Miss Mildred Kemper gave a theater party Monday evening at the Murray theater in honor of her guest Miss Loretta Hoppe of Indianapolis.
THE BEST SHAMPOO Mrs. Mason's Old English Shampoo Cream makes a pure antiseptice, tonic wash for the hair, which keeps the scalp clean and healthy, and the hair bulbs active and strong. Safe and delightful to use. Leo H. Fihe and other druggists.
to composed of Mrs. Margaret Fitzgibbons, Mrs. Dempsey, Mrs. Dan Galvin. Miss Sesnan and Mrs. A. Meyers.
RECEPTION THIS EVENING. A reception will be given this evening at the Fifth Street Methodist church in honor of the Rev. McMarlane and family. The members of the church and friends are invited to attend.
MISSION CIRCLE. The Mission Circle of the Universalist church will meet tomorrow afternoon with Mrs. Edward Owens at her home in Randolph street. All members are invited to be present. To persons who did not bring their mite boxes at the last meeting the request is made that they do so at this meeting.
BRIDGE CLUB. Mrs. W. R. Poundstone entertained the members of the Tuesday Bridge club yesterday afternoon at the Country Club. The guests for the afternoon were Mrs. Wilson Magaw of Kansas City; Miss Edna McGuire and Mrs. Thomas M. Kaufman. The favor went to Mrs. Magaw. The club will not meet until the latter part of next week on account of the Shlrk-Swayne wedding.
MANY GUESTS. It is expected that about twentyeight out of town guests will come to attend the Shirk-Swayne wedding which will be celebrated Wednesday evening, April the seventeenth in the St. Paul's Episcopal church. It will be the most important wedding of the week.
DANCE LAST EVENING. Many of the young people of the city attended the pretty dancing party giv,-
TO EARLHAM. Miss Mary Redmond, who is a student in Earlham college, Richmond, has been summoned home on account of the death of her grandmother, Mrs. D. T. Reiff. Kokomo Tribune.
Dr. Max Armstrong, who has been visiting friends in Iowa the last month is here visiting at the home of his grandmother, Mrs. Sarah Armstrong, East Sycamore street, after which he will go to Richmond where he will take a position in the hospital. Kokomo Tribune.
HE WAS THANKFUL
THE SERENADE.
An
Has
Old Romantio Custom That
Fallen Into Desuetude. In recalling the serenade of the Philharmonic society of Mile. Nilsson I am reminded of a custom now fallen into desuetude, but which at the time I speak of (1870) waa a favorite method of bestowing a marked compliment upon any one wbom you wished particularly to honor. The serenade was not only offered to visitors of distinction, but prevailed extensively as a delicate attention which you might pay to the lady of your choice. It waa thought the proper thing at that period for a man to engage the best brass band he could afford and to proceed with it after midnight to the house of his preferred and then to stand beneath the windows while the musicians played their most sentimental and sonorous selections. It was not an uncommon sound even to hear a double quartet of male voices, with a French horn thrown in, singing beneath the windows of some favored damsel, while paterfamilias or the butler made ready some light refreshment for the donors of this graceful compliment These romantic attentions have taken flight with the advent of electric lights, elevated railroads and other voices of the night, but even New York bad a few hours of stillness after midnight, and the night watchman lent an indulgent ear to these revelers, who would doubtless be locked up as disturbers of the peace did they hazard such an enterprise under our modern regime. Richard Hoffman's "Musical Recollections."
But Still He Thought There Was a Little Mere Ha Might Get. Old Simon, as we will call him. is quite a character in his way. He believes in asking for a thing until he gets it, and then-well, he is imme diately in need of something else. He has lived on the same estate all his life, and until quite recently he was
paying a merely nominal rent-1 a year for the small cottage be occupied. Simon, however, wasn't quite satisfied. Whenever he paid an installment of his rent he called his master's attention to the fact that this thing wanted doing and that thing wanted doing to the property. At length Simon's master decided on a bold move. The next time Simon turned up with the quarter's rent and the usual list of suggested repairs the owner was prepared to meet him. "Look ' here. Simon." he remarked. "I've been thinking the matter over, and in recognition of your long and faithful service I'm going to make you a free gift of the cottage you live in. From this moment it's yours to do as you
like with. Now, what do you say to that?" Thank e. sir thank 'e." returned the old fellow. "An now. sir. what about that bit o' paint for the back door? Ye'll throw that in. o course?" London Answers.
One Cell Animals. Only one cell animals which hare no differentiation are immortal and never grow old. Physical immortality, deathless youth, is possible, but you must be an infusorian or a yeast plant to attain It. and one wouldn't even be a clam or a jellyfish for the price. The process has no limits any more than it has beginnings. Life if just that, one-third dying that two-thirds may live, whether it be the single cell or the body. Dr. Woods Hutchinson in Hampton's.
Sure te Knew. "I understand that you have bought some remarkably expensive gowns here in Paris." "Yes but what's the use? Few peo ple know whether a gown is really expensive or not" "Watt until you reach the customs inspectors."-Pittsburg Post.
ROYAL
Waterlogged Servians. An Englishwoman travweling in Servia thus gives a striking glimpse of her own prejudices and tastes. The Servians drink too much cold water, and they drink it till they are pulpy. An average Serb drinks enough cold water for an English cow. I doubt whether the language contains an equivalent for 'bad training,' for when I tried to explain the idea it created surprise. A doctor told me he had never heard the theory before. To him it seemed a natural and wholesome habit. Moreover, he added "there is plenty,' and seemed to think it was rather wasteful to leave any unswallowed. To me it explained the lack of activity. The nation is waterlogged. All day long and every day the Serb calls for a glass of cold water, and when he has drunk it he calls for another. Perhaps owing to this he has little space for alcohol. At any rate, I never saw a drunken man, even among the peasants."
Among the birds seen for the first time in the British islands last year, were a North American sandpiper, a Siberian pine bunting, a North American peregrine falcon captured in a plover net on the Lincolnshire coast, and an American pipit. The last named bird was not only the first in Britain but the third ever noted on the whole continent of Europe.
Water bills due April 1.
l-10t
RRINE
CURES DRINK HABIT So uniformly successful has ORRINE been in restoring the victims of the "Drink Habit" into sober and useful citizens, and so strong is our confidende in its curative powers, that we want to emphasize the fact that ORRINE is sold under this positive guarantee. If after a trial, you get no benefit, your money will be refunded. ORRINE costs only $1.00 per box. Ask for Free Booklet. A. G. Luken & Co., 630 Main street.
PROMINENT EVENT. Prominent among the social events of Easter week will be the large dancing party to be given by the Wednesday Evening Dancing Club this evening in the Odd Fellows Hall. Elaborate decorations appropriate for the season have been planned by a local decorator. About fifty invitations have been issued by the club members to their friends. Dance music will be furnished by Jelly and Smith's Orchestra.
Control Themselves
insomnia,
FOR MEMPHIS. Mrs. D. H. Webb, who has been visiting in this city for the past five weeks, the guest of her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Saunders of South Tenth street and other relatives left this morning for her home in Memphis, Tennessee.
MARRIED LAST EVENING. Last evening at seven o'clock Miss Ida Mlnneman, daughter of Mr. C. F. Minneman, was married to Mr. Howard Studt, in the parsonage of the Trinity Lutheran church. The ceremony was performed by the Rev. Joseph Beck, pastor of the church and of which organization the bride and groom are members. The bride wore a beautiful cloth traveling suit of blue with large black hat trimmed in plumes. She wore a pretty corsage bouquet. Mr. and Mrs. Studt went immediately after the ceremony to their home south of the city where they will take up a 'permanent residence. Both young people arc well and favorably known here and have the best wishes of their hosts of friends for a most happy future.
purposes." (Signed) Mrs. F. E. Harmon. R. F. D. 2, Atoka, Tenn., Sept. 10, 1910.
Cutricura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Send to Potter Drug & Chem. Corp., Dept. 16B, Boston, for a liberal sample of each, post-free, with 32-p. book on the skin.
MET LAST EVENING. The Ladies Auxiliary of the St. Mary's church met last evening in the school assemby hall. There was a large attendance of the members. Fif-
teen new members were taken into
the organization a this time. A delicious luncheon in several courses was served. The committee in charge was
PAPER HANGER
L. M. HAYS DECORATOR
Full and complete line of Wail Papers includes 500 samples shown in your own home.-Lowest prices. 9-inch Border, special values-8 yards, 5c and up. 18-inch Border, special values-8 yards, 8c and up. Phone your orders to No. 2767 or address card to Post Office Box No. 125 and I will call with samples.
If coffee or tea has control of you, causing headache,
nervous prostration, and other aches and pains Better be the governor and oust the trouble-maker. One. thing is certain, relief cannot be had until the cause of the trouble is removed. Some improvement may be expected from simply quitting the coffee or tea, but the way will be easy and the return to health hastened if you shift to the food-drink
TUM
It is made of choice wheat and a small percent of New Orleans molasses; not a particle of coffee or any drug whatever. The morning cup will be just as hot, just as snappy, just as satisfying, and no hurt following if you use Postum in place of coffee or tea. Why tear down nerves, heart and stomach with coffee or tea, when you can do better? For quick, convenient serving try This is regular Postum in concentrated form nothing added. Made in the cup no foiling ready to serve instantly.
INSTANT POSTUM
Postum made right is now served at most Hotels, Restaurants, Lunch Rooms, Soda Fountains, etc. Instant Postum is put up in air-tight tins and sold by grocers.
a
9
REGULAR POSTUM 15c size makes 25 cups; 25c size makes 50 cups.
INSTANT POSTUM 30c tin makes 40 to 50 cups; 50c tin makes 90 to 100 cups.
"There's a Reason" for Poster
Postum Cereal Company, Limited, Battle Creek, Michigan.
BAKING
1 ft
1 L I is
mi u
Some men do not make fortunes for the sake of living, but. blinded by avarice, live ofr the sake of money getting.-Juvenal.
n i
0J.. 0
Absolutely Pure Economizes Butter Flour, Eggs; makes the food more appetizing and wholesome
The only Baking Powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar
A Great White Season This one is going to be, and we're ready for it. Look over the following list: Ladies' White Nu Buck Boot $4.00 Ladies' White Canvas Boot ... $3.00 Ladies White Nu Buck Pump $3.50 Ladies' White Nu Buck Colonial $3.50 Ladies' White Nu Buck one-strap Turn $3-50 Ladies' White Canvas Pump ... $3.00 Misses' White Boots $1.50 to $2.00 Misses' White Nu Buck Pumps $1.75 to $2.50
Low Heels Predominate in High Grade Pumps Our excellent line of Misses and Boys Low Shoes will please you in style and wear.
TEEPLE SHOE CO.
718
FACTORY SHOE REPAIRING IN CONNECTION
MAIN
FOR SALE! Modern House
Fine Location. Immediate Possession Move in the Next Day. Big barn and full size lot. Buy it now. Price is low. E. G. KEIMIPEIR W ... . s PHONE 3234 or 3247
