Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 161, 11 May 1912 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, MAY 11, 1912.
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
LIFE'S MIRROR. There are loyal hearts, there are spirits brave, There ace souls that are sure and true, Then give to the world the best you have And the best will come back to you. Give love, and love to your heart will flow, A strength in your utmost need; Have faith, and a score of hearts will show Their faith in your word and deed. For life is the mirror of king and slave, 'Tis Just what you are and do; Then give to the world the best you have And the best will come back to you. Madejlne S. Bridges. SOCIAL EVENTS FOR THE WEEK. Monday A meeting of the Dorcas society will be held in the afternoon. The hostess to be announced later. Tuesday A dancing party will be given in the I. O. O. F. hall by Mrs. Charles Kolp for the members of her former dancing classes, members of the different dancing clubs of the city which she has organized and also for several specially invited guests. This will be the last dance Mrs. Kolp will give this season as she expects to leave the city. The Lucas Saxophone Trio of Columbus, Ohio, will furnish the dance music. Miss Rose Gennett will be hostess for a meeting of the Tuesday Bridge club at her home in East Main street. The Woman's Aid society of the West Richmond Friends' church, will meet in the afternoon. Wednesday The wedding of Mr. Lee Dykeman and Miss Marjorie Pennell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mark W. Pennell will be celebrated in the afternoon at four o'clock at the First Presbyterian church. Thursday Mrs. Thomas M. Kaufman will be hostess for a meeting of the Buzzer's Whist club at her home in the Wayne Apartments. A meeting of the Thursday Bridge club will be held in the afternoon. The Woman's Relief Corps will meet in the Post Rooms at the court house at the usual hour. Friday A meeting of the Friday Bridge club will be held in the afternoon. DELIGHTFUL DANCE. A delightful dancing party was given last evening In the I. O. O. F. hall by Mr.: Harold Myers and Mr. Wray Draper. Piano and drums furnished the dance music. The affair was very Informal. Dancing began" at eight o'clock and continued until a late hour. Among the dancers were Miss Eleanor Seidel, Miss Margaret Wlckemeyer, Miss Olive Lewis, Miss Ruth Pennell, Miss Gladys Bally, Miss Elizabeth Bailey, Miss Myra Scott, Miss Dorothy Land, Miss Grace Kelly, Miss Mona Porter and Miss Esther Gard, Mr. Willard Kaufman, Mr. Wray Draper, Mr. Emory Castor, Mr. Gordon Magaw, Mr. Edwin Flook, Mr. Stephen of Anderson, Indiana, Mr. Harold Myers, Mr. Carl Haner, Mr. Thomas Logan, Mr. Xenophon King and Mr. Robert Taylor. TO MUNCIE. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hinshaw who have been visiting with Mrs. Jennie Henshaw for slme time have returned to their home in Muncie, Indiana. A SURPRISE PARTY. A pleasant surprise was given on Thursday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Moelk in North Seventeenth street. The occasion being in honor of Mr. Moelk's birthday. The evening was spent socially. Mr. Moelk received many useful and beautiful presents. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Balfour, Mr. and MVs. James Kelley, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Moelk and daughter, Alice, Mr. and Mrs. O. V. Kelley and daughters Ruby, Sarah
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and Jessefee, Mrs. Henry Moelk and daughters, Marie, Clara and Hilda, Miss Lena Moelk, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Black, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Aring, Mies Anna Fritz, Mr. Charles Cooley, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Browne and daughter Helen, and Mr. and Mrfs. George Moelk.
WEEK-END GUEST8. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnard of Cornell Apartments, North Fifteenth street, have as a week-end guest, Mr. Paul Barnard, of Billings, Mont., formerly of New Castle, Indiana. MEETS MONDAY. The Mary F. Thomas. W. C. T. U. will meet Monday afternoon at twothirty o'clock in the dome room of the MorrlBon-Reeves library. VI8ITING HERE. Miss Genevlevev Chapman, of Benton Harbor, Michigan, is in town visiting Miss Ethel King of South Ninth street. Miss Chapman and Miss King are college friends. Last evening Miss King and Miss Chapman were entertained to dinner by Mrs. Fisher and Mrs. Martha Parry at their home in East Main street. Miss Chapman will return home Sunday. FOR NEW YORK. Mrs. Fred Burnham, nee Miss Stella Roney, who has been visiting her mother, Mrs. J. W. Romey of North Ninth street, returned to her home in New York City, yesterday. PARTY AT MURRAY. Mrs. J. Bennett Gordon of Washington, D. C, Miss Jeannette Landwer, Mrs. Mary Landwer, Miss Hazel Roach and Mrs. Roach, formed a box party at the Murray theater last evening. TO GREENFIELD. Miss Elizabeth Thomas and Miss Hazel Thomas went to Greenfield, Indiana, this morning to spend over Sunday the guests of Miss Anna Pearl Hamilton. Miss Hamilton formerly attended Earlham college and has many friends here. REVIEW OF THE WEEK. In reviewing the week just coming to a close it is just a little difficult to select the most important event from the many charming affairs. However, in the calendar for the week the scarcity of dancing parties and diners has been noticeable. Monday at noon Mrs. Frances Campbell-Corwin and Miss Marie Campbell gave a luncheon at the Country club In honor of Mrs. Norman Craighead. Several other pleasant social events made up the schedule for the day. Tuesday the circus held the attention of all both young and old, slumber and circus parties being very conspicuous. Wednesday" a number of the different missionary societies of the city held their regular meetings. Among these) was the meeting of the Friends' Missionary society at the home of Mrs. Erie Reynolds in East Main street. Thursday afternoon Mrs. Jennie Yaryan gave an informal tea at her home in North Tenth street out of courtesy to Mrs. Joseph Cook, of Chicago and Mrs. Guy McCabe of Evanston, Illinois. Mrs. John B. Dougan also gave a luncheon on this day for the guests. Covers were laid for twelve persons. There were no parties at the Country club during the week. Friday evening Mr. Harold Myers and Mr. Wray Draper gave a dance in the Odd Fellow's hall. Piano and drums furnished the dance music. HAVE RETURNED. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bernhardt arrived in the city yesterday from a wedding trip through the East. DANCE NEXT WEEK. What promises to be a pleasant social event for Tuesday evening of the coming week will be the large dance to be given' by Mrs. Charles Kolp in the Odd Fellow's hall. The Lucas Saxophone Trio q Columbus, Ohio, which orchestra played recently in this city and was so favorably received, will furnish the dance music for this occasion. The program will be a dollar. The galleries will be open to specta-
I
Now Facing A
WHEELING, W. Va., May 11. Members of the prosecution are en deavoring to complete arrangements in a hurry so that the second trial of Mrs. Laura F. Schenck may begin in the near future. Mrs. Schenck is charged with having attempted to poison her husband, John Schenck, a millionaire lumber merchant of Wheeling, in order that she might enjoy the fortune he would leave her with a young society man of this city, with whom she is alleged to have been infatuated.
tors. This is one of the most important social events scheduled for the coming week. LAST MEETING. The last meeting of the season for the Thursday Bridge club was held Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. S. E. Swayne In North Eleventh street. There was only one substitute for the afternoon, Mrs. Fred Carr being given the privilege of attending. Bridge was played at four tables. The favors went to Mrs. Howard Campbell and Miss Alice Forkner. After the game the hostess served, a dainty luncheon. The club will probably be reorganized again next season. Y. M. C. A. CIRCUS. Positively the greatest show on earth will be seen in the Y. M. C. A. gymnasium Friday and Saturday, May 17 and 18, for the benefit of Boys Department summer camp. The spectacle of the rousing, romping, roaring, realistic reproduction of the most fiercely contested struggle of modern times the Battle of Vaniller and Lemenade will be wonderful. This circus is the acme of accomplisment, the climax of the ages, the pride of its admirers, the despair of its competitors. It is surpassing, surprising, superb. It will be refreshing, reviving, rejuvenating. Grand entry pageant will start at 8 o'clock sharp in the gymnasium. TO VISIT MISS MANN. Miss Hopkins who is to sing in the May festival here will be entertained by Miss Jessie Mann of South Eighth street during her visit. Miss Mann is a pupil of Miss Hopkins who is a well known vocal teacher of Chicago. TO VISIT HERE. Mr. Ralph Barnard of New Castle came to this city today for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Paul Barnard. IS HOME. Mr. Paul Fisher came home from Indiana University to spend over Sunday here with his mother. Mrs. Fisher and Aunt, Mrs. Martha Parry of East Main Btreet. Mr. Fisher will attend a meeting of the Indiana Press club this evening at Earlham where he will make an address. TO ENTERTAIN CLUB. Thursday afternoon of next week, Mrs. Thomas Kaufman will be hostess for a meeting of the Buser's Whist club at her apartments in the Wayne Flats. The members are invited to attend. MISS BURSON HERE. Miss Mina Burson, of Pasadena, California, has arrived here for a few months' visit at her former home in Spring Grove. VISITING HERE. Mrs. Leslie Knight, nee Miss Bessie Bnrr, of New Orleans, who was called here a week or so ago by the death of her father, William Burr, j will remain in the city for a 6hort time with her mother. ATTENDED DANCE. Miss Florence Burgess visited friends in Knightstown, Indiana, and attended the commencement dance. HAVE RETURNED. Dr and Mrs. I. M. Hughes have returned from an extended visit in the East, having spent some time with their sons. VISIT IN COLUMBUS Mrs. Edward Hall and two daughters. Miss Helen and Miss Hazel Hall New Wall Paper and Mouldings Also another lot of Art Window Paper, just received at Moorminn'i Book Store, 520 Main Street.
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left today to visit friends in Columbus, Ohio. Later they will join Mrs. Hall's sister in Piqua, Ohio, where they will visit for several days. MISS GENNETT HOSTESS. Miss Rose Gennett will be hostess Tuesday afternoon for a meeting of the Tuesday Bridage club at her home in East Main street. The members are invited to attend. It would surprise you to know of the great good that is being done by Chamberlain's Tablets, Darius Downey, of Newberg Junction, N. B., writes, "My wife has been using Chamberlain's Tablets and finds them very effectual and doing her lots of good." If you have any trouble with your stomach or bowels give them a trial. For sale by all dealers. Boosting a City. There is a great opportunity for city boosting through the combination of the municipal bond and municipal advertisement This Is the day when the bond Issue builds the city. With money coming to it from every side of the country, money drawn from the savings bank and sometimes the stocking hidden between the mattresses, the modern city has gained the beauties which make It famous. The public school buildings of the southeast are made possible by the money of orange growers of California, and the Massachusetts mill owner and his operator often furnish funds for bridges and boulevards in a western city. John J. Duffy In Leslie's. "Complexion Secrets Of An Actress" In a recently issued volume bearing the above title, the author says: "Continuous use of grease paints, rouge and the like, had ruined my complexion. My skin was colorless, wrinkled, flabby, coarse and punctured with large pores. In England I heard of the virtues of mercolized wax; my first evperience with this marvelous substance convinced me it was more valuable than all cosmetics combined. Now whenever my complexion begins to go wrong I get an ounce of mercolized waz at the nearest drug store, spread on a thin layer of it before retiring, washing it off next morning. The wax, after a few such treatments, seems literally to absorb the wornout cuitcle, when a brighter .healthier, younger-looking skin appears. "For the enlarged pores, wrinkles and flabbiness, I began using a solution of savolite, one ounce, dissolved In a half pint witch hazel. Bathing the face in this soon relieved the condition most wonderfully."
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From the Herpicide Girl. You are becoming bald. The hair is getting thin on top of your head and unless you take my advice you will, before long, be as hairless as a roquet ball. Remember too that chronic baldness is incurable. It is all due to dandruff. I can tell, because you always have dandruff flakes on your coat collar. Besides being an indication of impending baldness, it also suggest untidiness. Newbro's Herpicide will kill the germ that causes dandruff, checks further accumulation of scarf skin and stops falling hair. You are not taking any chances when you purchase Herpicide and you are tempting fate when you use anything else. Herpicide has thousands upon thousands of satisfied users who testify to its germ destroying and hair preserving qualities. Your druggist is authorized to guarantee one dollar size bottles. The best barbers recommend and use it. Send 10c in postage to The Herpicide Co., Dept. R., Detroit, Mich., for sample and booklet. A. G. Luken & Co., Special Agents. Things China Knew Long Ago. There is a distinct tradition of flying machines at a very remote date in China, according to the author of "The Civilization of China," and rough woodcuts of such cars have been banded down for many centuries. There are even hints of the X ray. there being a record of a physician of the fifth century B. C. who was able to see Into the viscera of his patients, while another physician, who lived about 1,800 yean ago, was accustomed to use an anaesthetic and operated upon the bowels and offered to cure the headaches of a military commander of his day by opening his bead. Hypnotism has been used for hundreds of years, but is for. bidden by law. The ranks of the Boxers were largely recruited from the society of the vegetarians, who neither eat meat, smoke nor drink. The Office Boy's Windfall. It takes little to eucourage a poet. A typographical error, sa,fs the Washington Star, fanned the flame of hope in the breasts of the Crestville versifiers. The local editor bad written this notice for the head of the editorial page: "Poultry taken in exchange for subscriptions and advertising." But in the paper the note appeared as "Poetry taken in exchange." However, the only person who profited by this error was the office boy. for the next fortnight he sold to the junkman a quarter's worth of paper from the wastebasket every day. Youth's Companion. Womanly Intuition. Mrs. Flatleigh The new family upstairs have a lot of money, but they used to be very poor and ordinary. Mr. Flatleigh How do you know? Have you called on them? Mrs. Flat leigh No, but there was a half eaten' broiled lobster and a whole Camem-1 bert cheese In their garbage can on tne j dumb waiter this morning. Judge. Why His Habits Changed. "I thought you used to shave yourself." "I did. but I gave it up." "Why!" "I got tired of being called to ttv telephone Just the minute I was lathered." Detroit Free Press. Too High. A visitor said to the small boy of the family, "Johnny, can you stand or. ' your head?" j Johnny looked startled. j "No." he replied after a moment's! thought; "it's too high up!" New York i Telegraph. j BRAZILIAN BALM "The Old Reliable'- ts magic for coughs, grip, croup, asthma, catarrh j and quick consumption to the last j tase. KILLS THE GERMSI !
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IN THE KITCHEN.
Many Brushes For Medsrn Dishwashing. THK LATEST CLKAJTOQ BBCSrnW. Modern housekeeping requires doseus of brushes(ftnd a towel for every sort of dishwashing. This photograph, taken In a model kitchen, depicts the various brushes necessary to clean properly coffee cups, coffeepot, tumblers, pans, sieve and even coffee and tea pot spout. The towel rack also has accommodation for hand and glass towels and separate towels for drying crockery and table silver. The Mimosa. The little yellow tnfted flower known as mimosa Is really a species of acacia the Acacia dealbata and in Australia, its native country, is known as "the silver wattle." Some of these acacia trees attain a height of a hundred feet. The wood is extremely hard, and the bark la useful In tanning leather. 'ECZEMA ITCHED SO IT STAND W Began by Little Pimples. Scratched Until Blood Came. Kept Getting Worse. Could Not Sleep Nights. Used Cuticura Soap and Ointment and the First Day They Relieved Itching. In 3 Weeks Eczema Cured. "I suffered with eczema on my neck for about six months, beginning by lit lie pimples breaking out. I kept scratching till the blood came, it kept getting worse, l couldn't sleep nights any more. It kept itching for about a month, then I went to a doctor and got soma liquid to take. It seemed as if I was going to get better. The itching Hopped for about threo days, but when it started again, was even worm than before. The eczema Itched so badly I couldn't stand it any more. I went to a doctor and ho (rave me some medicine, but didn't do any Kood. We have been haririr Cuticura Remedies in the house, so I decided to try them. I had been using Cuticura Soap, so 1 rot mo a box of Cuticura Ointment, and washed off the affected part with Cuticura Soap threo times a day, and then put the Cuticura Ointment on. The first day I put it on. it relieved mo of itching so I could sleep all that night. It took about a week, then I could see the scab come off. I kept the treatment up for three weeks, and my ecxema was cured. "My brother got hh face burned with runpowder, and he used Cuticura Soap and Ointment. The people all thought be would have scars, but you can't see that he ever had his face burned. It was simply awful to look at before the Cuticura Remedies (soap and Ointment! cured it." (Signed) Miss Elizabeth Ueiukl. Forrest City. Ark., Oct. 16. 1010. Although Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are sold by druggists and dealers everywhere, a liberal sample of each, with 32-page booklet on the skin and hair, will te sent, post-free, on application to Potter Drug & Coem. Corp., Dept. 17B. Boston. Y. M.C. A. GYMNASIUM VANILLER AND LEMERNADE. THE SLACK WIRE WALKERS THE COMICAL CLOWNS THE AERIAL ACROBATS CLEANER
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