Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 295, 16 October 1912 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND rtTXAlIUai AND SUX-TELEGRA3I, WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 16, 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
BELLS OF BATTER8EA. St. Martin's bells and Bow bella, O they ring famously, But have you heard in the mist of night The bells of Battersea? St. Dunstan's and St. Clement Danes', Hew loud they clang and beat! But O, the bells of Battersea Are twenty times more sweet. The meadows and the trees are gone. Where once the birds did sing, But often I could dream them there When the old, old peals do ring. O, they are like the village bells In the place where I was born, Where the solemn curfew tolled at night. And matins waked the morn. And here afar in London town. Where many things amaze, The sweet bells ring into my heart A chime of other days. St. Martin's bells and Bow bells, O they ring famously, But have you heard in the mist of night The bells of Battersea? Russell Alexander.
act as hostess at her home in South Tenth street. The program which had been announced for yesterday .will be presented at the meeting next week.
TO ADDRESS MEN. Rev. B. Earle Parker, pastor of the First M. E. church will address the Brotherhood of the Baptist church Sunday afternoon at three o'clock. All the men of the city are invited.
MEET8 THURSDAY. The Tuesday afternoon Bridge club did not meet yesterday afternoon, the usual day for meeting. The meeting will be held Thursday afternoon when Mrs. Edgar Hamilton will act as hostess at her home in South Fourteenth street.
SEWING CIRCLE. Mrs. Samuel Mather was . hostess yesterday afternoon for a meeting of the Spring Grove Sewing circle at her home in Spring Grove. The afternoon was spent socially and with needlework. Refreshments were served. The circle will meet again in a fortnight.
BASKET SUPPER. After the Initiation to be held Saturday evening by the order of the
Eastern Star In the Masonic Temple, a basket supper will be held. This social phase of the event promises to be most enjoyable. The members and their families are invited to attend.
ALL-DAY SESSION. Rev. Lotta D. Crosley of Kent. Ohio, will hold an all day meeting and home coming at the Pleasant Hill Universalist church on Sunday, October Twentieth. Everybody is invited, A basket dinner will be a feature.
risson-Reeves Library. Mrs. J. E. Cathell will address the meeting. Progressive stamps and certificates of charter membership may be procured at this time. It is asked that all members attend the meeting.
DANCE THURSDAY. The young people of the city are looking forward with pleasure to the dance which will be given Thursday evening in the Pythian Temple by several young men of this city. About one hundred and fifty invitations have been sent out. An orchestra will furnish the dance music.
BARN DANCE. A barn dance will be given Thursday evening, October the seventeenth in the new barn which has recently
j been built on the John Hostetter farm.
south of the city. An orchestra from this city -will furnish the dance music. Everyone is invited to attend.
There was a large attendance of the membership.
ATTENDED MEETING. Mrs. John RatUff of this city was a guest Monday at a meeting of the Monday club held at New Castle, Indiana, at the home of Mrs. T. L. Thornburg in South Twelfth street. The afternoon was spent socially. A luncheon was served.
WAS IN NEW CASTLE. -
Mr. John Shroyer was the week-end ' guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Bundy and Miss Nellie K. Bundy at their home in i New Castle.
DANCE TONIGHT. The Weisbrod Saxophone orchestra will give a dance this evening in the Pythian Temple. The public is most cordially invited to attend. Dancing will begin at eight thirty o'clock.
ENTERTAINED CLUB. Mrs. John Evans entertained the members of a sewing circle yesterday afternoon at her beautiful home in East Main street. The hours were spent socially and with needlework. A luncheon was served.
TO INDIANAPOLIS. Miss Esther Griffin White went to Indianapolis this morning to remain until Thursday.
VISITING HERE. Mrs. Carson, of Indianapolis, is the guest of her daughter, Mrs. Milton Craighead, of South Sixteenth street for a few days.
Mrs. Patterson at her home la North A street. The time will be spend in qffuilting. A good attendance of the
membership is desired. Saturday V ternoon the ladies will give a marks' at the market house.
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VISITING HERE. Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Betts and Sam Roberts of Galveston, Ind., are visiting Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Hitchins of the National Avenue, West.
RETURNED HOME. Mr. H. S. Weed returned today from Shelbyville, where he attended the Presbyterian Synod.
MEETS THIS EVENING. A meeting of the Woman's Progressive League will be held this evening at seven forty five o'clock in the Mor-
MET THIS MORNING. The members of the Art Study club met this morning at nine thirty o'clock in the Art Gallery at the High school. The hours were spent in studying pictures in the different rooms.
TO ENTERTAIN. Honoring her guest. Miss Marie Busjahn, of Logan sport, Indiana, Mrs. John Smyser will entertain informally Thursday afternoon at her apartments In the Wayne Flats.
VISITING HERE. Miss Ruth Langley, of Columbus, Ohio, is visiting with Mrs. F. J. Allen at her home in Randolph street, for a few days.
MEETS THURSDAY. A meeting of the Ladies' Aid society of the Fifth Street Methodist church will be held Thursday afternoon with
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SUNNY SIDE OF LIFE. Some one has remarked that the way to live a long life is to be natural, eat what you want, and walk on the sunny side of the street These rules are simple but they might not be so easy to carry out as they seem. Not all people are able to lead natural lives if they would. Not all have" stomachs sound enough to eat all they want and others who have sound stomachs don't always have the wherewithal. And not every man or woman's way to work lies on the sunny side of the street. Yes, the pessimist always has arguments at hand. Life has shadow places and we alm- , ply can't ignore them or get free from 'them if we would. It would be foolish to attempt to cultivate cheerfulness denying the existence of the evils ' which curse humanity. To live naturally is not to live for oneself alone. Man is a social animal in his sympathies as well as in his associations. It is on the shady side of the street that our sacredest duties often lie. But it is a good thing to remember that little can be done in the dark places unless we carry sunshine into them. We can do little for those in trouble unless we have smiles of our own. Genuine cheer can be transmitted only from a cheerful heart. Real j troubles are easily borne. It is the imaginary ones that are intolerable. A walk on the sunny side of the street will dispel the illusion. True, life has its real tragedies and its pains from which there is no escape. Happiness and discontent are in the main a state of the mind. Nine tenths of the little ills and worries would disappear if the will were absolutely set against them. Actual affliction we learn to bear. We can get out of a lot of unhappiness if we will. The natural life is the life that carries sunshine with it wherever it is.
MEETING POSTPONED. The Progressive Literary society which was to have met Tuesday afternoon postponed its meeting until Tuesday of next week when Mrs. Roy will
FACE A SIGHT fflffl TETTER t Began With Pimple. Spread All Over Face. In Agony All the Time. Itched and Smarted. UsedCuticuraSoap and Ointment. Was Cured.
Moberly, Mo. "My trouble began with a small pimple on the left side of my face and it spread all over my face and to my
neck. It would be scarlet rfd irtaen I got warm. My face was a sight. It looked very unpleasant, and it felt uncomfortable. My faco was something awful ; it just kept me In agony all the time. Some said it was tetter, and some said it was that awful eczema, but I
rather think it was tetter. I had been troubled with it for about two years and tried many remedies but got no relief until 1 used Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment. "When I would wash my face with the Cuticura Soap and apply the Cuticura Ointment it would cool my skin and draw great big drops of matter out of the skin. You would think 1 was sweating; It would run down my face just as though I had washed It. Jt itched and smarted and I suffered in the day time most from the beat from the stove. I used the Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment for a month and I was cured of it. X will tell everyone I know who baa any trouble of the skin." (Signed) Mrs. 3 Brooksher. Apr. is. 1913. Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are old throughout the world. A single set is often sufficient. Liberal sample of each mailed free, with 82-p. Bldn Book. Address post-card "Cuticura. Dept. T, Boston." 49Tender-f aced men should use Cuticura Soap Shaving Stick. 23c Sample free,
MISS MABEL
134 oath Seventh street, a graduate of the Ohio Wsaleyan University School of Muslo, has pened her
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