Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 254, 29 August 1912 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRA3I. THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 1912.
PAGE FIVE.
Social News
HEDGES-MOSS. The most beautiful wedding of the late summer in the city was the Hedges-Moss wedding celebrated last evening at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and MrB. Perry J. Moss, on South Thirteenth street. The bride was their only daughter, Pearl Ella, and the groom, Mr. Horace J. Hedges, son of Mr. and Mrs. John S. Hedges, of New Castle, Indiana. The rooms were filled with many wedding guests, including relatives and friends of the bride and groom. The home was beautifully decorated. The ceremony was performed in the parlor, which had been - transformed into a bower of beauty. An improvised altar had been erected in front of the large window banked with palms and ferns. At either side were tall pedestals holding large baskets filled with pink roses. In the living room was a plaque of delicate pink asters. The color scheme of pink and white was also carried out in the dining room, where the centerpiece of the table was a large basket of pink bridesmaid roses. Preceding the ceremony Miss Donna Parke played a program of bridal airs. The bridal party entered to the strains of the Lohengrin wedding march. The bridesmaid, Miss Olive Hedges, a sister of the groom, entered the ceremony room flrBt. She was gowned in a beautiful pink and white marquisette with net draperies. Next came Miss Edna Jones as mald-of-hon-or. She wore a beautiful pink chiffon gown with lace trimmings. Both carried 'bouquets of pink asters. The bride entered alone, beautiful in a gown of white marquisette, fashioned over white silk, with band lace and pearl trimmings. She and her maids were met at the altar by the" groom and his best man, Mr." Harold Chapman, of Columbia City. . The Rev. Elbert Russell performed the ceremony. After the ceremony an elaborate buffet luncheon was served in the dining room. Among the out-of-town guests present were Mrs. J. S. Hedges, the Misses Olive and Laura Hedges, Mr. and Mrs. Emory Ratcliffe, and Mr. Ernest Payne of New Castle; Mrs. Nannie McDivitt and Miss Ella McDivitt, and Mrs. Emma Huffman of Eaton, Ohio; Miss Esther Cook of Knightstown; Mr. and Mrs. Will Moss of Kltchell, and Mr. Harold Chapman of Columbia City. Mrs. Hedges graduated from the local high school and Earlham college. Mr. Hedges also is a graduate of the latter institution. Mr. and Mrs. Hedges left at noon today for their wedding trip to Chicago and other points. . They will be at home after October first in Sioux City, Iowa.
RETURNED HOME. . Mrs. W. P. Robinson returned home Tuesday after several weeks visit at Indianapolis.
FOR MISS LORENZ. Miss Constance Bell, entertained a number of friends at tea last evening, complimentary to her house guest, Miss Mable Lorenz of Louisville, Ky.
TO INDIANAPOLIS. . The Rev. John Carson and daughter Jennie, who have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Milton Craighead will return to Indianapolis tomorrow.
TO GREENVILLE. Mrs. John McMlnn and daughter, Misa Pearl, have gone to Greenville, where they will visit friends and attend the' fair. They will later go to Dayton to visit relatives.
FAREWELL VISIT. A farewell visit was paid Mr. and Mrs. Nab'e Study, at their home three miles north' of Richmond by friends and neighbors. Mr. and Mrs. Study will move to Richmond. RETURN NEXT WEEK. Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Henley and son, Harry, will return to this city next week, from Northern Michigan, where they have been spending several weeks. PRESENT PROGRAM. The pupils of the fourth and fifth grades of Miss Grace Brennan's music class will present the following program at the M. E. church, at Fountain City, on the evening of September 3: Organ Solo Lois Hughes Prayer Rev. John Richardson Piano Solo Eva Reynolds Vocal Solo Eve Griffls Piano Solo Thelma Overman Piano Solo Blance Pegg Class Address . .Rev, John Richardson Presentation of Certificates r Rev. Richardson Benediction. Public cordially invited. VISITING HERE. Mrs. Lucinda Beall and daughter, Miss Elizabeth, of Cincinnati, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Cash Beall for a few weeks. RETURNED FROM WEST. Miss Bertha Larsh, who spent the summer visiting at Vancouver, B. C, and Portland, Oregon, returned to the city today. IN NEW YORK. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bent are spending a few weeks in New York city. TACOMA VISITOR. Mr. H. Pochert, a retired business man and capitalist of Tacoma, Wash.,
WE PAY $1 PER SET FOR frrFTTT OLS FALSE lUIlilO which are of no value to you. Highest prioaa paid for old Gold, Silver. Old Watches, Broken Jewelry, Precious Stones. Money Sant by Return Mail Phila. Smelting &. Refining Co. Established 20 Years 863 Chestnut" SL, Philadelphia, Pa.
FOR THAT AWFUL PAIN IN THE BACK AND LOINS. This prescription I can recommend with the conviction that you will receive relief from kidney and bladder troubles, if you will but use it conscientiously and give it a thorough trial. Valuable in the treatment of Kidney and Bladder troubles of various forms, Brlghts Disease, Backache, Dropsy, Incontinence, (bedwetting) of children and adults, Rheumatism, Gout, Scrofula, Intestinal Catarrh and all Uric Acid conditions. Write me for variations of this prescription to suit your personal needs. Comp. Fluid Senicum 1 oz. Comp. Syrup Sarsaparilla. .4 ozs. Fluid Extract of Buchu 1 oz. Mix in a 6 ounce bottle. Dose adults 1 teaspoonful before each meal and 1 at bed time. Drink plenty of hot water. Children' H to teaspoonful according to age. was in the city today calling on friends. He left for the West this afternoon.
ATTENDING MEETING. Mr. Edwin Flook went to Terre Heute today to attend the sessions of the Beta Phi convention.
HIAWATHA CLUB. Mrs. E. Bond will entertain the members of the Hiawatha club at her home on State street Friday afternoon.
A ONE O'CLOCK LUNCHEON. Miss Janet Millikan charmingly entertained at a 1 o'clock luncheon Tuesday at her home on East Broad street, and the affair proved to be one of the pleasant social events of the week. The table was artistic in its arrangement, a basket filled with black eyed Susans being used as the center piece. Dainty cards, done in yellow and black to correspond, marked the place of each guest. A luncheon in three courses was served. Covers were laid for Misses Pauline Bradbury, Marion Gronendyke, Harriet Goodwin, Josephine Jeffrey, Winitred Brown, Josephine Wilson of Richmond and Adah Granger. New Castle Courier.
GUESTS FROM DIXIE. Mrs. William Bailey, 35 South Seventeenth street, has as her guests, her mother, Mrs. Henry H. Gregory of Sumter, S. C, her sister, Mrs. R. S. McClelland of Sumter, S. C, and her sister, Mrs. Harry Ellis, of Atlanta, Ga.
HOME FROM DETROIT. Mr. and Mrs. Frank I. Braffett and young son have returned from a vacation spent at the home of Mrs. Braffett's parents in Detroit.
HOME FROM COAST. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Nusbaum and children have returned from a two months trip to various points on the Pacific coast.
TO RETURN SATURDAY. Miss Elizabeth Thomas, social editor of the Palladium, will return Saturday from a two weeks vacation spent with relatives and friends at Starved Rock, 111., a popular summer resort.
GOE3 TO SOMMERVILLE. Judge L. C. Abbott left today to visit his relatives at Somerville, Mass., his former home.
.TO VISIT MISS MALSBY. Miss Ruth Flayback of Hamilton, O., will arrive tomorrow to visit Miss Louise Malsby at her apartments in the Wayne. They were roommates at Oxford college.
MANY TO LEAVE CITY. Owing to the fact that next Monday Labor Day, is a public holiday many Richmond people will visit relatives and friends in nearby cities and towns Sunday and Monday. An equally large number of people will be the guests ol local people those two days.
GO TO COLUMBUS. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Needham of the Cornell flats have gone to Columbus, O.,,to spend a week visiting relatives. They will then go to Atlantic City and Philadelphia.
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(Tnd.-ll.rk IUl..raU Mabel Dunbar, S415 Perry Are.. ChieMO. ts: My oorna were so painful (both aaft and hard corns), had to wear shoes a size too laxas- Tried plasters, salves, eorn ales, everything-. 'BiDgo' proTed the only real cure. Stopped pain at onoe: in I days corn bad rone completely. " "Blnro',poliTlT hu ao aqnal for Cwn, CO. a. lmlM. Warta. R.llr Instantly. Ia Botla, tec al 11 Drng-jl.c, or diraet, aoatpaM, by Dmnlaon Pharaaaaal Co., Ill M. Paarbern St., Ohk.ro, 111. She tollawia arucslat Mil aa4 1 1 -n iaiaa"ltmn "i A. G. Luken; Conkey Drug Co., 9th and Main Street
Little Children's Eyesight Should be preserved and protected for them until they reach the age of discretion. Often weakness of the Eye can be cured during the formative period of childhood, by wearing glasses of a proper nature to strengthen the muscles of the eye. Let me prescribe glasses to help your children's eyes today. MISS C. M.SWEITZER 927J4 MAIN, PHONE 1099
Good form
Afternoon Tea Etiquette. The duties of a hostess should be added to the modern curriculum of education. Have simple entertainments gone out of fashion, submerged in the tidal wave of extravagance? There have been of late many references made to the king and queen of England having expressed their wish that afternoon tea, as a fashionable function, should be abolished as being an unnecessary and unhealthful custom. Whether the king and queen really did make such a statement and issue a royal command, to that effect has not as yet been authoritatively made public, and in the meantime "5 o'clock teas" flourish apace both in England and in thia country. It is possible to give to tbis entertainment such distinctive originality to make of the simple repast a suitable function to which invitations are eagerly sought, so that small wonder is it that women and men alike fall vletims to its charm. Every good housekeeper has some recipe that she guards with jealous care, and to be known as having the most delicious of cakes, biscuits or sandwiches at afternoon tea is every whit as desirable as in the olden days when every woman was taught the art of making cake. In all well appointed households the tea table is made ready at 5 o'clock, even though for the moment the hostess may not have returned from her afternoon drive. The tea service is set forth on a low tea table in winter near the fire, in summer on the pleasantest corner of the veranda. lOnly the tea service is for toe tea table. If there is a lower shelf the cups and saucers may be placed on it A pile of small tea plates, each with Its dainty tea napkin, occupies one shelf of the "curate's assistant," a three tier stand. On the renmlning shelves are hot biscuits of diminutive size and small tea cakes and one large cake. All kinds of sandwiches, from the wafer thin bread and butter to the endless variety of tomato, lettuce, cream cheese and nut sandwiches, are included. Only there must not be too great a variety served the same time. The hostess makes the tea. If the head of the house be at home it is htr Antv hnr if she be not oresent then the
eldest dangnter taxes ner piace at ute tea table. The kettle most be boiling, then the teapot be warmed. A aponful of tea for each guest and one for the teapot is the rule. A small quantity of the boiling water la then poured on the tea and stands for three minutes, and then the teapot is filled with boiling water. On the tea table must be cream, sugar, saccharin and sliced lemon. In winter a small decanter of rum is also added. The camomile tea. so fashionable now, must not be forgotten, for it is said to have the most marvelous effect upon tired nerves and sleeplessness. It is brewed In the am fashion as other tea. and no tea table should be without it The older woman or the young girl of today who makes of the afternoon tea hour an entertainment (in the best sense of the word) for her friends finds nothing pays so well for the time and thought given it while for the woman who from forced economy cannot give dinners and luncheons as she would there is nothing to take its place. And there is no time nor place where a woman is seen to such advantage. Attired in becoming gown in front of a fire with the tea table and tea service artistically arranged, she must shine as a hostess. And, "May I bring an entertaining friend in for tea?" often introduces a stranger of note into the charm of the American home life in a way he could never have found through a formal dinner or dance. All young girls should be instructed how to play hostess at the afternoon tea. should know how to make tea and, if not, how to make the cakes and sandwiches and to tell how they should be made; to take interest in having the silver tea service kept in perfect condition and, above all, be taught bow to make the guest feel he or she is welcome to the home life and not regarded as an outsider. And afternoon tea is possible even with the smallest of incomes, for it can be most delightfully served in the house where but one maid or no maid at all is kept.
FOES OF THE SALOON Will Gather in Biennial Conference to Discuss Evil.
Mr. W. S. Gunsaius, a rarmer living near Fleming, Pa., says Tie nas used Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy in his family for fourteen years, and that he has found it to be an excellent remedy, and takes pleasure in recommending it. For sale by all dealers.
Who Was He? Mrs. Blase Who was this man Washington, anyway? Mrs. Hlghupp Some horridly un-American person, I guess. They say he actually advised against our making any foreign alliances. Puck.
Post Toasties nutritious are simply delicious; They're flaky and crispy and brown; Their exquisite flavor has surely won favor, Just try them and banish that frown.
Written by D. WHEDOX, 531 Millard Ave., Chicago. Ills.
One of the 50 Jingles for which the Postum Co., Battle Creek, Mich., paid 1,000.00 in .Tune.
(National Newa Association) TORONTO, Ont., Aug. 2?. Toronto has completed all preparations for the reception and entertainment of the many visitors expected here next week for the biennial conference of the AnUSaloon League of America. Noted
temperance advocates from nearly every state of the Union and all of the Canadian provinces are expected to take part in the conference. The aeeaions.will be held in one of the halls of Victoria University, beginning Tueaday and continuing three days. Clergymen, educators, public officials, leaders of organised labor and other men and women of wide prominence will address the gathering.
Moving Picture Film. It Is estimated that the life of a moTlag picture film is five or six weeks' running.
8e He Room. An Irish M. P. ooee declared witS doe solemnity. -Mr. Speaker, I can not alt atlll bere and keep talent wltb at rising and saying a few words rLondon Telegraph.
PIANO TUNING D.E. ROBERTS 15 Years Practical Experience. Formerly with the Stelnway House at Indianapolis. V PHONE 3684
Cleans. Polishes and Brightens Simply By Dusting With It
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You will be pleased to see how quickly and easily it removes the dust, dirt and blemishes from your piano, furniture, woodwork and floors. It makes everything bright, clean and sanitary. It restores all the brilliancy and beauty of the original finish, makes it just like new. Dust with it regularly all over the house. It is simple to use. Just dampen a piece of cheese cloth with it and go ahead and dust that's all. It is supreme in a hundred ways for cleaning and renewing all varnished, enameled, japanned and lacquered surfaces. Get a bottle today. 4-oz. Size, 25c 12-oz. Size, 50c 32-oz. Size, $1.00 .All Leading Dealers Sell It Be sure you get VVTO&V Accept no substitute. Satisfaction guaranteed with every bottle or money refunded.
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Best Patterns on the Market May Manton Patterns 10c
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CT CHOOL DAYS are here and the bells will be ringing soon, and the little ones must have some new things to start in witL We have all the nice, new School Clothes to show--girlsfdresses ready-to-wear, school hats, school shoes- Boys suits, all styles, boys' caps and hats and school shoes. We can fit the school children out from head to foot.
GIRLS' DEPARTMENT FOR SCHOOL CLOTHES Girls' Dresses in nice percales at 50c & 75c. Girls' Dresses in best Ginghams at 75c, 98c & $1.25. Girls' Hats at 50c, 75c, 98c & $125. Girls' Shoes at 98c, $125, $1.48 & $1.75. Girls' Hose in fine fast black, 10c, 15c & 25c.
Best quality Gingham for school dresses, 10c & 11 2S-inch Percales, worth 8 l-3c, at 6c Yd. Best quality Percales at 10 & 12'c.
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BOYS' DEPARTMENT FOR SCHOOL SUITS Boys' Cassimere Suits at $1.98. Boys' Heavy Cassimere Suits at $2.48, $2.98 & $3.48. Boys' Fine Worsted Suits at $3.50, $3.98, $4.50 & $4.98. Boys' Caps at 25c fine worsteds. Boys' Shirts, 25c & 45c. Boys' Knee Pants at 5Cc, 75c, 98c & $125. Boys' Shoes at 98c, $125, $1.48, $1.75 & $1.98. Bring the Boys and Girls to our store where you can always get exactly what you want at the very price you had planned to pay.
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