Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 299, 21 October 1912 — Page 5

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY OCTOBER 21, 1912. PAGE FIVE.

Social Side of Life Edited by ELIZABETH R. THOMAS Phone 1121 before 11:30 In order to in nre publication In the Evening EdiUo

Glories That Have Pasted. The rainbow comes and goes, And lovely is the rose. The moon doth with delight Look around her when the heavens are bare; Waters on a starry night Are beautiful and fair; The sunshine is a glorioua birth; But yet I know, where'er I go, That there hath passed away a glory from the earth. Wordsworth. AUTUMN DAY8. Aren't these autumn days full of life and energy and don't they just make you want to do things and do them right? Doesn't this weather make you feel that you want to work? Most everyone feels the stimulus of the frosty air and longs to make every day count for full value, longs to produce, to accomplish something worth while. It is surely a relief after the long summer to have these cool mornings. I often wonder though if we stop to think what we are producing with our brain power, and muscle power that i3 giving back pleasure and happiness. It would be great if this fall every person might accomplish something that would make this season of the year ever after stand out prominent in their lives. This is the day of "doing things." Better do them with all your might while you are at it. -THIMBLE PARTY. Tuesday afternoon the members of the Eastern Star Thimble club will be entertained by Mrs. Harry Wood at her home, 004 Kinsey street. The members are cordially Invited to be present TO ENTERTAIN CLUB. Miss Florence McGuire will be hostess Tuesday afternoon for a meeting of the Tuesday Bridge club at her pretty home in East Main street. TO DINNER. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Murray and family. Miss Nora Holthouse, Miss Myrtle Stone and Dr. Dunham, motored to the country home of Mr. and Mrs. Stone, near Fountain City, Sunday, where they were entertained to dinner. AFTERNOON MEETING. The Music Study club has decided to hold its open meeting Wednesday afternoon at three o'clock in the High School auditorium. The public is invited to attend. This will mark the first appearance of Mr. Friermood, vocal teacher at Earlham college, who will give the vocal numbers. The program has been arranged and will be presented as follows: "Overture" to Magic Flute Mozart Miss Harris, Mrs. Hadley, Mrs. Chenoweth, Mrs. Eggemeyer. "Adelaide" Beethoven Mr. Friermood "Pierrot Serenade" Randigger Mr. Hicks. Aria "Vision Fair" Massenet Mr. Friermood v "Invitation to the Dance" .... Weber Mrs. Chenoweth, Mies Guyer "My Heaven" Russell "Pleading" Elgar "A Toast" Salter "June" Beach Mr. Friermood "Concerto" Weber Miss Turner, Miss Harris MARRIED SUNDAY. A pretty wedding was celebrated Sunday evening at the home of Rev. and Mrs. Thomas J. Graham in North Thirteenth street, when Miss Pearl Rigor was married to Mr. Verley Stottlemeyer, by the Rev. Thomas J. Graham of the First Presbyterian church. The parsonage was prettily decorated with flowers and ferns. The bride was attired in a beautiful white gown and wore a corsage bouquet of pink rosebuds and ferns. Mr. and Mrs. Packer and Miss Sylvia Moffett were the attendants. Mr. and Mrs. Stottlemeyer left today for Long Beach, California, where they will take up a permanent residence. They have the best wishes of their hosts of friends for a most happy future. The bride is well and favorably known here. FOR MECHANICSBURG. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Horr left this morning for Mechanicsburg, Ohio, where they will visit with kinspeople for several days. IN ART GALLERY. A meeting of the Aftermath society will be held Tuesday afternoon in the Art Gallery in the High school build ing. The members are asked to heed this announcement. HAS GUEST. Mrs. Minnie Knopf has as her guest Miss Ada Fischer and Miss Berneier Meranda of Muncie, Indiana. TO CHEVY CHASE. Mr. and Mrs Ralph Barnard, who formerly resided in New Castle, Indiana, are now at their place at Chevy Chase after a summer spent at Ocean City, Maine. SPENT DAY HERE. Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Buechly and son, Master Robert Buechly, Mrs. L. C. Miller, Mr. Manuel Miller and Mr. and Mrs. T. R. Christopher of Greenville, Ohio, spent over Sunday here the guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Miller at their home In West Main street. . NEWSPAPER WOMEN INVITED. It is hoped that there will be a sufficient number of newspaper women present at Fort Wayne to hold a conference with a view to making this department of 'work much more effective than It has been heretofore. There are several Indiana club women who are also identified In one way or another

with newspaper work, and they must have valuable suggestions that might well be followed out by those who realize the importance of this field, but who are not in any sense professionals. Publicity is the watchword along all lines of endeavor, and the federation needs to be known by all the women of our state to be the help and power that it might be.

MEETS WEDNESDAY. ! Mrs. Frank Chambers will be host-! ess Wednesday afternoon for a meet- i ing of the Domestic Science associa- ' tion In North Tenth street. The mem-; bers are invited to be present. Miss Laura Gano will present the subject for the afternoon. The topic is "Our Wood and Wayside." MEETS TUESDAY. The East End Aid Society of the First Christian church will meet Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Arthur King at her home, 201 South Fourteenth street. The members are invited to be present. ENTERTAINED GUESTS. Dr. and Mrs. S. C. Markley entertained Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Duncan, of Cincinnati, Ohio, over Sunday at their pretty home in South Seventh street. MEET TUESDAY. A meeting of the Ladles Mission Circle of the Universalist church will be held Tuesday afternoon at two thirty o'clock in the Masonic Temple. The work for the coming year will be discussed at this time. All the ladies of the church are invited to attend. CONCERNING SESSION. Mrs. Grace Julian Clarke in writing her club letter for the Sunday Indianapolls Star had the following to say concerning the convention to be held at Fort Wayne this week: Every delegate to the Fort Wayne convention ought to consider very carefully the proposed amendments to the constitution, some of which involve sweeping changes that ought not to be made on the spur of the moment. The proposal to make the former presidents of the Indiana Union of Literary Clubs and of the Indiana State Federation of Clubs honorary members of the federation ought not to carry unless the former vice presi dents of the present organization are to be honored in the same way. We fancy that this was intended, and, of course, by unanimous vote it may be done. The proposition that each district elect its own chairman is a good one. Of course, they do this now, practically, although we have heretofore con sidered that they were simply nominated by the district, the State Federation convention electing them afterward. The change of time of the annual convention from fall to spring seems wise, the chief reason being that this gives the summer for the preparation of the yearbook. This plank, if adopted, will cause confusion every alternate year, by reason of the biennial. It will be hard to attend two conventions so close together, but it can be done, we know, for several states now follow this plan and like it. The establishment of a board of trustees to manage the financial business of the federation, let all contracts for printing, purchase all stationery and administer the educational loanfund, strikes us as really an admirable plan, calculated to relieve the general officers and to facilitate the entire business of the federation. The fact that two trustees are to hold over each year will give a 6ort of permanency to the board which is most desirable. These are some of the most important amendments proposed, but all should be carefully weighed. TO ATTEND WEDDING. Several of the young people of this city will go to Greensfork Thursday to attend the wedding of Mr. Paul Lewis and Miss Lucile Jones. The affair will be celebrated at the home of the bride-to-be's grandfather near Greensfork. The wedding will be a most elaborate event. Mr. Lewis is a graduate of Earlham college and has many friends here. The bride-elect is equally well known in Richmond. HELD MEETING SATURDAY. A meeting of the Daughters of the American Revolution was held Saturday afternoon with Mrs. Clara Myrick King at her home in North Seventeenth street. There was a large attendance of the membership. A report of the State conference held recently at Lafayette, Indiana, was given by Mrs. George Chrisman, a delegate. Mrs. Ohristman's report was interesting and very enthusiastic. A report of the card party given Friday in the Starr Piano parlors was also a feature It was approved. A neat sum was realized. Under the head of new business Mrs. Jamet Judson, regent brought up several important matters. These affairs will be found elsewhere in this publication. After the program a social hour followed. Refreshments were served. The club will hold its next meeting with Mrs. A. D. Gayle at her home in South Sixteenth street. WEEK-END GUEST. Mrs. B. W. Barr and daughter Annette were week end guests of L. D. Bragg and family near New Paris. VISITING HERE. Mrs. Keefe and little daughter. Miss Betty, of Phoenix, Arizona, are the guests of Mrs. Ralph Husson at her pretty home in the National Road, West. TO ATTEND CONVENTION. Mrs. M. F. Johnston, president of the Art association, expects to attend the annual convention of the Indiana j Federation of Women's clubs, which opens in Fort Wayne, Wednesday, ! registration beginning at ten o'clock in j the forenoon at the Hotel Anthony, the convention headquarters. The council

will convene at two in the afternoon, the chief topics for discussion being: "What is the best thing your club has done during the year?" "How can we get the most help from the federation?" and "What is the prime purpose of the Federation?" At four o'clock an informal tea will be given by the Fort Wayne women, and at eight in the evening will take place the formal opening. Business sessions will be held each day from nine in the morning until one o'clock In the afternoons. Mrs. Johnston, chairman of the art committee, both of the General Federation of Women's Clubs and of the Indiana Federation, will have an exhibit of pictures, which will open at eleven o'clock, October twenty-fifth, and at four o'clock that day there will be a musicale. Mrs. E. J. Robinson, 2336 Broadway, Indianapolis, is chairman of the resolutions committee, and all resolutions must be in her hands before she departs for Fort Wayne.

A TALK TO GIRLS. Rose Stahl wrote the following for the Sunday Indianapolis Star which is well worth being reproduced: " 'lit! on the level with yourself,' are the most important words of advice I would give to every girl out in business." In those few words Rose Stahl, who has made a deeper study of the conditions of working girls and who knows more about them and is more interested in their welfare than any other actress on the American stage, sums up her sermon to the working girls in every walk of life. She says, in continuing her advice: "A girl who must be out in the world rubbing shoulders with men day after day and week after week must learn that men aren't looking for women as prey. Good heavens! In most cases the men are trying to get as far away from women as it's possible to get. If a girl will look every man squarely in the eye and think of him as a brother and treat him so, she'll get along swimmingly and have a host of loyal friends. "But the main thing the average working girl should try to avoid is this thing of trying to look more than her position. How many sales girls we see earning meager salaries and struggling hard, wearing their very lives out in their wild endeavor to look like the wealth of customers whom they serve. That's the rock on which most of their poor little lives are wrecked. WThy won't they realize that it's the look behind the eye that counts, and not a few tawrdy clothes and cheap jewels? "It's that look that tells us right on the instant what a girl really Is and what she really is is what counts. ANNUAL DINNER. ' The first general meeting of the Men's club of the First Presbyterian church will be held this evening in the church parlors. At six thirty o'clock the annual dinner will be served. All the men of the church are Invited to be present to inaugurate an enthusiastic campaign for the year. The event promises to be a most delightful and enjoyable function. TO BE HOSTESS. Mrs. Roy will be hostess Tuesday afternoon for the postponed meeting of the Progressive Literary circle at her home in South Tenth street. The program will be the one which was to have been presented October fifteenth and will be as follows: Club Song. Response National Reserves. Marking a Historic Trail Miss Fetta. Piano Solo Mrs. Buell. "The Winning, of Barbara Worth" Mrs. Richard. Pure Foods and Laws Miss Dulin. Mrs. Hast will be the leader for the afternoon. The members are invited to be present. Lost Phi Delta Kappa jeweled Fraternity Pin; return to Palladium or phone 1874. Reward. Needless Alarm. A nervous man took his wife to a party and, having laid aside his things, waited for her to come downstairs from the dressing room. The hostess saw him standing alone in the ball and exclaimed excitedly: "Oh, Mr. Jenks, hasn't your wife come too?" "Dear me, madam," screamed the nervous man, "nobody told me she had fainted!" And he rushed upstairs before the hostess could explain. Woman's Home Companion. "The Busiest, Biggest Little Store in Town." Kennedy's Only 92 Weeks Until Xmas. We advise you to visit our store 2 early to look over our line of new Xmas Jewelry. Pretty Hand Painted China. Elegant line of Umbrellas for ladies' and gents. Fine Watches, all guaranteed. Goods bought now will be laid away for Xmas delivery. Fred Kennedy Jeweler 526 Main Street

FADS AND FASHIONS

NEW YORK. Oct. 21. There is every indication that the coming season will see an unusual popularity of velvet. Velvets of all kinds have been quite in vogue for some time, but the brocades are rather novel and promise to become extremely popular. They are undoubtedly rich and gorgeous, and beautiful effects may be obtained with them. The embossed velvet designs on chiffon foundations or on metallic gauze are particularly lovely and lend themselves to readily to the drapery effects that the French designers have taken them up enthusiastically and makers .here are following suit. Much Is done with all blac kmaterial of this class and the supply imported by the dealers in this city is practically exhausted. Taupe one-tone effects are enormously successful too, in these materials and some of the handsomest afternoon frocks shown have been in taupe velvet embossed chiffon, made up with plain taupe chiffon and relieved by soft white satin and lace. White satin is surprisingly effective, but of course other relieving colors are also used with the taupe shades, certain of the soft old red tomes being perhaps the most successful. These reds are good with all the mole brown shades, as well as with the grayer shadings of taupe, and even with browns less gray and ranging from dead leaf and light Havana to seal, they are very satisfactory. Velvets striped on chiffon or crepe foundations are in demand and are often used for frocks less formal in character than those of brocade velvet, though quite as elegant in their own way. The prevailing thick fleecy woolen materials are complicating the problem of the wool frock this fall. A one-piece frock, or bedice and skirt frock of such material is altogether too warm for comfort in our overheated houses; yet the Parisian autocrats of dress have set the stamp of their approval on such frocks and have sent over some models attractive enough to win favor. The probabilities are that we shall see later on many such frocks worn on the streets without coats, but with furs enveloping enough to supplement the wamth of the frocks. Only for such service, it seems, can the high-necked, longsleeved bodices of velous de lalne, peau de chamois, corduroy velours and similar thick though light weight woolens be practical. But consideration of comfort are seldom allowed to interfere with the demands of fashion, so perhaps these warm frocks will be as generally worn as the light weight serges have been. That many

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BUY IT BY THE BOX of any dealer. It costs little by the package but less by the box.

Look for the spear

of them are charming no one can deny and where the original materials seem too thick and warm to b desirable, at least the details of the models may be worked out in other materials. The Medici collar, by which designers seem to mean any sort of collar that shows the slightest tendency to stand up or flare at the back, is one of the distinctive Items of the new season's models and seems designed to play an important part in the winter's frocks, coats, furs, etc. Very high, close, choker collars are much used too; collars of the frock material, that la, rather than of transparent stuff such as tulle or lace, and then there are innumerable variations on the Directoire idea, a collar high and close on sides and In tha back, but leaving the throat uncovered or covered only by a transparent material in front. On the high, close collar of the frock material a line of fur is often used as a finish, and this adds to the warmth of these new woolen frocks. Models in corduroy and In velvet similar to those in wool and about as warm are shown by the Importers, and are charming for street wear or steamlees housese. More practical than the all-wool frock is the model in silk or wool and silk or wool and chiffon. Chameuse is more than ever used for the general utility one-piece frock and for the dressiest models, too. The crepes, particularly crepe de chine, and some of the weaves with crinkly or rather rough surfaces but firm texture are lined for the purpose too, and broche or jacquard weaves in crepe and kindred materials are extremely modish. Soft colored silks, not the firm, heavy ottoman or bengaline class, but crepe textures and lightweight cord, such as the cote de cheval, make up admirably for the informal little frock. Black relieved by white or by color is tremendously popular once more. Much baby lamb cloth in. black is being made up for dressy two-piece and three-piece costumes and various other black cloths, including the lustrous and supple black broadcloths, are used for both frocks and suits.

Monkeys' Rouge. "Kamala" is the vernacular name of the red dye produced from the glands of the mature fruit of a tree named Mallotua phllllplnenals, which is also called the monkey face tree because monkeys paint their faces red by rubbing tbein with the fruit. Here is a striking instance of the influence of heredity.

Lunch time? Not yet!

Don't lunch because your watch says so. Chew mint leaf flavored EZ2I22Z2. You'll lunch because your appetite says so. And the appetite - sharpening tidbit is equally useful and enjoyable after lunch. It brightens teeth and aids digestion and purifies breath besides.

SPANISH VENGEANCE

Fat of a Faithless Solen In the Relan of Emperor Charles. It was la the early days of tha reign ef tha Emperor Charles, when the Spanish people, ever Jealous of their rights, became Infuriated at a submissive eortes for voting Imperial grants without obtaining redress for popular ; grievance. Tordesillas, the rpreent- ! stive of Segovia, being a bold and j haughty man. returned to his native I city to defend his conduct and. ac cording to custom, summoned his fellow townsmen to the church that he might give an account of his actions In the eortes. But the multitude. Infuriated at bis insolence in attempting to justify conduct they deemed Inexcusable, burst opeu the doors of the church and, seizing TordesIUus. dragged him through the streets with curves and insults toward the place of public execution. The dean and canons came forth with the holy sacrament to awe the mob: the monks In the monasteries, by which the luckleaa deputy was dragged, prayed on their knees that his life might be spared or. at least, that he be allowed time for absolution: but. without regard for humanity or religion. Ihey banged their Tictlm up j bead downward on the common gibbet. II. C. Chat field Taylor, "The Band of the Castanets." ROAD TO WEALTH. Maxima te Which Rothsehild Aaerteao Hi Early Sucoota. Rothschild cotmnouly ascribed his j early success in n great degree to the following rules: "1 combined three profits. 1 made the manufacturer my customer, and the one I bought of my customer that is. I supplied the manufacturer with raw materials and dyes, on each manufactured goods, which I 9old at a profit, and thus combined three profIts. "Make a bargain at once. Be an offI hand man. j "Never have anything to do with an unlucky man or place. I have seen many ciever men wno oaa not shoe to their feet. I never act with them. Their advice sounds very well, but fate is against them. They caunot get on themselves. How can thej do me good? "Be cautious and bold. It requires a great deal of boldness and a great deal of caution to make a great fortune, and wben you have got It it requires ten times as much wit to keep it." The last idea was one which Rothschild frequently expressed, and there Is no doubt be was thoroughly Impressed with it truth. Life. OA The flavor lasts

INVISIBLE LIGHT. Only WImm It Strike, the Retina ef the Eye Cam It Be What la the simplest demonatxatlea of the fact that light la Invisible? The blackness of midnight sky demonstrates this fact most readily. We may see the planets brilliantly illuminated by the sun's rays, but the surrounding space Is dark, although we know that light must be rassiax there. The passage of a beam of light through a darkened room U only visible on the dust la the air. sod tae cone of light seen when the sun shiaes through a small bole In a shutter Is not risible, but only light reflected from the mote. In the beam. This eaa be easily and simply demeastrsted by placing In the beam a glass vessel from which the dust haa been .carefully removed. The beam then may be sen before and behind the Teasel, but is Invisible within. A Bunsen burner or a redhot poker held so ss to destroy the motes will sleo render the beats Invisible at that spot Light is only risible when It strike on the retina of the eye. and It cam only do ao when it reacbea it la a direct line or is turned by a reflectloa r refraction into a direct line. Just as the bullets from a gun do a rasa ao barm unless aimed or turned In their course toward his body, so light is without effect unless It Is aimed or turned toward the retina. I'earsoa'e Weck'y

WELL. DRILLINO Bertsch Bros. C.ntenrllle. Ind. For tbe blood, and kindred alia. Kota-t tog better; try it At all drug stores. - I 8 Soon the Autumn Weddings will be commencing, and. as you have doubtlessly anticipated, w have prepared for these happy events by stocking up with the handsomest, most beautiful designs la SILVERWARE CUT GLASS BRASSWARE CLOCKS we could obtain. You can best buy the wedding gift HERE for articles bought at this establishment have that envied charm of vslue end exclustveness besides genuine intrinsic vslue. Moderate prices. J. F. RATLIFF Jeweler 12 North 9th Street KEEP THE CHAPS OFF Cold and ley winds cause fselsl roughness, chapped hands and Hps. -HESS" WITCH HAZEL CREAM ia healing, soothing and cooling. It la not greaay or sticky, being completely sbeorbed by the skin, 25e per bottle. It is the largest package on the market, and it's all quality. CON KEY, THE DRUG FELLER, Ninth A. Main. Note We have more to say on another page. To relieve ycur EYE STRAIN, let us fit your eyes with glasses that are "comfortable." neat," and "up-Uvdate." Our KRYPTOK LEXfiES for FAR and NEAR TSIOX are a success. MISS C M. SWEITZER OPTOMETRIST 9274 Main St. Phone 1C99. JUST TELL US The AMOUNT of money and the TIME you want to use the same and we will make you RATES that can aot be anything but satisfactory to you. We loan from 15.00 to $ 100.00 cu furniture, pianos, teams, wagons, etc, without removal, giving you both the use of the money and security. Tour payments can b made In small weekly, bimonthly or monthly Installments to salt your Income. Can at our office, write or phone U la seed of money. THE STATE INVESTMENT & LOAN COMPANY Room 40, Colenial Bldo, Phone 2560. , Richmond, lad.

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