Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 204, 5 July 1913 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, JULY 5, 1913
PAGE FIVE
Office Phone Social Events For
Monday A meeting of the Mary P. Thomas W. C. T. U. will not be held in the afternoon. The Dorcas society -will not meet again until early fall. Tuesday A meeting of the Tuesday Afternoon Bridge club will be held. The West Richmond Friends Aid society wiil meet in the afternoon at the usual hour. All members are invited to be present. Wednesday The Tebbetts-Smith wedding will be solemnized. A dance will be given In the pavilion at Jackson park. The members of the Wednesday Card club will meet at the usual hour. Thursday a. meeting of the Woman's Relief Corps will be held in the Post rooms at the court house. Members of an afternoon card club will meet. The hostess will be announced later. Friday A meeting of the Mary Hill W. C. T. U. will be held. The meeting was postponed from this week on account of the Fourth of July coming on that day.
PARTY AT REED HOME. Among the many charming social events for Friday was the Fourth of July picnic held in the afternoon and evening at the pretty home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Reed, in the National Road, East. The lawn was beautifully decorated with American flags and bunting. Supper was spread on the lawn at seven o'clock. After supper there was a beautiful display of fireworks. Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Beatty, Mr. and Mrs. W. Q. Butler, Mr. and Mrs. Galen Lamb, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mann, Mr. and Mrs. Omar Murray, Mr. aneTMrs. J. H. Mills, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Braffett. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Reed, Mr. and Mrs. Turner Hadley, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick K. Hicks, Mrs. Jeannette Moorman, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bartel, Mrs.' T. W. O. Braffett, Miss Maxine Murray, Master Moorman Lamb, Masters Stewart and Ourney Mann and Master Thaddeus Braffet. GUESTS HERE. Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Genn, of Connersville, Miss Esther Byars and Mr. Fred .Mullen, of Muncie, spent the Fourth with Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Gennr In South Tenth street. DINNER FOR GUESTS. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Layman of Indianapolis, gave a pretty dinner Thursday evening at the Cedar Springs Hotel in honor of members of their party who are at the hotel for a few days. The table was arranged with flowers and ferns. A dinner in several courses was served. Covers were laid for Miss Betty Hughes, Miss Dorothy Layman of Indianapolis, Mr. Edward Harris, Mr. John Harris, of Cleveland, Ohio, Miss Edith Nicholson, MIsb Helen Nicholson, Mr. Warren Clements, Mr. John Clements, Mr. George Harris, Mr. Raymond Nicholson, Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Butler, Miss Mary Clements, of Richmond, and Mr. and Mrs. Layman, of Indianapolis. FOR MISS YOUNG. The last of a series of parties which have been given throughout the week just coming to a close by various hostesses for Miss Deborah Young of De- . troit, was given this afternoon at the -Jiomeof Miss Eleanor Seidel in North Thirteenth street. The house was attractively decorated throughout with flowers and ferns. The afternoon was spent in a pleasant social manner. An elegant luncheon was served at the close of the function. The guests were Miss Ruth Pennell, Miss Dorothy Land, Miss Esther Coate, Miss Mary Clements, Miss Anna Nicholson, Miss Deborah Young, Miss Eleanor Gifford, Miss Lois Kelly, Miss Mary Johnson, Miss Elizabeth Marvel, Miss Nusbaum, COMPLICATION OF WOMAN'S ILLS Yields to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Athens,' Texas. "I had a complication of diseases, some of them of long .standing. I wrote to you for advice and took Lydia E. Pmkham s Vegetable Compound, and some other things that you sugges ted. I must confess that I am mnch bt L?-! ter in every way and f -Jnl have been relieved of some of the worst troubles. My neiirhbors say I look younger now than I did fifteen years ago." Mrs. Sarah R. WHATLEY, Athens, Texas, R. F. D. No. 3. Box 92. f We know of no other medicine which has been so successful in relieving the suffering of women, or received so many genuine testimonials, as has Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Compound. " In nearly every community you will find women who have been restored to health by this famous medicine. Almost every woman you meet knows of the great good it has been doing among Buffering women for the past 30 years. In the Pinkham Laboratory at Lynn, Mass., are files containing hundreds of thousands of letters from women seeking health, in which many openly state over their own signatures that they have regained their health by taking Lydia E. Pinkham 'a Vegetable Compound, many of them state that it has saved them from surgical operations. If you want special advice write to Lydia . Pinkham Medicine Co, (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter Trill be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence.
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Edited by ELIZABETH R. THOMAS
1121. Residence Phone 1874 the Coming Week Miss Helen Nicholson, Miss Marjorie Laws of Minneapolis, Miss Ruth Scott, Miss Eleanora Shute, Miss Martha Jones, Miss Hilda Kidder, Miss Margaret Wickemeyer, Mss Arline Shreeve and Miss Hona Porter. PICNIC PARTY. In honor of Miss Betty Rohrer of Tippecanoe City, a picnic party was given yesterday at the home of Nathan White on the Smyrna. The party was composed of Miss Rohrer of Tippecanoe City, Miss Louise Schroeder of Connersville, Miss Ethel Brown, Miss Hannah Hershey, Miss Alice White, Mr. William Brannon, Mr. George Breneizer, Mr. Allen Jay, Mr. Chauncey Edgerton, Mr. Hilton Long, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Brown and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Rossiter. Miss Rohrer is the guest of Miss Hershey at her home in South Thirteenth street, during her Btay here. HAD DINNER AT HOTEL. Dr. and Mrs. W. O. Mendenhall, Dr. and Mrs. Harry Holmes, Miss Agnes Kelly and Professor Roderick Scott had dinner at the Cedar Springs Hotel, near New Paris, last evening. PICNIC PARTY. A party of young people enjoyed a picnic Friday In the Bond Grove, north of Webster. Both dinner and supper were served. Those composing the party were: Miss Ruth Mullen, Miss Demarus Helms, Miss Mabel Orr, Miss Mary Ferris, Mr. Emory Pitts, Mr. Harpld Mullen, Mr. Owen Thomas, Mr. Milton Bowlln, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Helms, Mr. and Mrs. O. E. Wine, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mullen, Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Trotter, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ferris, Mr. and Mrs. E. Orr, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Faucett, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Lantz, Mr. and Mrs. Omar Wocx!, and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bennett. PICNIC PARTY. The following young people chaperoned by Dr. S. R. Lyons formed a picnic party at "Day Dodger" springs near Clear Creek, all-day yesterday: Miss Eleanora Gifford, Miss Elizabeth Marvel, Miss Lois Kelly, Miss Florence Kampe and Miss Hilda Kirkman, Mr. Ross Lyons, Mr. Robert Lebo, Mr. Kent Morse, Mr. Warren, Beck, Mr. Orville Boone, Mr. Tom Lyons and Mr. Errett Woodbury. TO GIVE CONCERT. The choir of Second Presbyterian church will give the last of a series of concerts Sunday evening at seven-forty-flve o'clock. The program is: Prelude ;'!.; Hymn No. 26 Devotions Choir: Praise Ye the Father C. Gounod Double Quartet Savior Breathe an Evening Blessing : Watkins Duet Far From My Heavenly Home C. Simper Choir, The Lost Chord Sullivan Offertory Announcements Contralto Solo: The Lord is My Shepherd Stebbens Choir: Come Unto Me Rockwell Choir: Te Deum in A Schnecker Abide With Me... .Fearris Ladies Chorus Choir: Praise the Lord Morrison Organist Miss Emily Plummer. Director Jesse Wods. TO RETURN. Miss Deborah Young will return to her home in Detroit, Michigan, Sunday morning, after a pleasant week's visit with Miss Anna Nicholson at her home in North A street. Each day since Miss Young has been in the city a party has been given in her honor. AT SPICELAND. . Mrs. J. Mark Wilson and daughter, Miss Josephine Wilson, of South Thirteenth street, have gone to Spiceland for a short stay. MARRIED AT COLUMBUS. Friends of Miss Elizabeth Brown, who formerly resided in Richmond, will be interested in learning that she was married Thursday in Columbus, Ohio, to Mr. A. J. Surritt of that place. Mr. and Mrs. Surritt came to this city qn their honeymoon and were entertained Friday by Mr. and Mrs. L J. Hollar of North Fifteenth street. IN TOWN. Mr. Stanley Schaefer spent the Fourth in this city the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chris Schaefer of North Ninth street CHARMING AFFAIR. A charming social event for Friday was the dinner-dance given at the Cedar Springs HoteL near New Paris, O-. by the members of the Eastern Star. About eightyfive persons attended.
The guests were served at seven thirty o'clock In the dining room. Pink roses and ferns were used in appointing the tables. An elegant dinner In several courses, was served. After dinner the guests enjoyed dancing. The Rosslter musical organization, furnished the dance music.
PICNIC PARTY. Miss Irene Hart. Miss Betty Hammill. Mr. Harry Smith and Mr. Carl Maag with several other young people formed a picnic party Friday. BEAUTY. Beauty is a desirable thing. It is to a woman what strength is to a man, and is one of the most desirable of nature's gifts. It has its uses and necessities, and a proper gratification of the Invo of beauty is imperative to progress and true advancement. Beauty is a large word and covers a broad field. It used to be thought that every beautiful woman was vain, but it is not the case. Beauty and vanity have little In common. A truly beautiful woman, beautiful in every sense of the word, cannot be vain, and a vain woman is not even pretty. True beauty is mainly of the soul while vanity comes from a superficial nature with little depth. AlwayB try to make oneself as beautiful as possible. A loving heart makes even a plain face beautiful. The first aid to beauty is cheerfulness and the next ie love, and the next is a sense of humor. The men of today are looking for more than a merely pretty face when seeking companionship. HAVE RETURNED. Mrs. Fred Smith and little daughter have returned from Connersville, where they have been visiting with friends for some time. ARE IN TOWN. Mr. and Mrs. William Kuhlman and children came up last evening from Connersville to visit with Mrs. Kuhlman's parents, who have just returned from a trip through California. PICNIC PARTY. The following young people enjoyed an all-day picnic yesterday in Scheffer's grove southeast of town: Miss Jessie Sherb, Mr. Milford Land, Miss Cathryn Sherb, Mr. Ray Davis, Miss Grace Ball, Mr. Herschel Fuller, Miss and Pauline Ball, The party was chaperoned by Mrs. Daniel Sherb and Mrs. Edward Ball. FAMILY REUNION. Mrs. Eliza Schultz entertained with a family reunion in honor of Mrs. William Schultz. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Stout and son of Fort Thomas, Kentucky. VISITING HERE. Mr. C. Allen Kinsey of New York is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dye and Mrs. Ruth Beall-Parry for a few days. A THIMBLE PARTY. Miss Olive Hedges of North Main street gave a small informal thimble party Wednesday afternoon for her guest, Miss Anna Co gill of San Bonito, Texas. Needlework was the diversion of the pleasant afternoon, which concluded with light refreshments. Those invited to meet Miss Cowgill were Mrs. Ward Canaday, Misses Josle Wright, Pauline Saint, Alma Lohr of Richmond, and Lilliam Carson. New Castle Courier. TO FOUNTAIN CITY. Mr. J. H. Bennett and daughter, Miss Josephine Bennett, and Mr. R. E. Lowery, of Eaton, Ohio, motored to Fountain City yesterday and spent the day. AT CONNERSVILLE. Miss Agnes Saunders and Miss Elizabeth Thomas spent over the Fourth at Connersville, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Ridpath (nee Miss Ethel Thomas). Miss Hazel Thomas will remain in Connersville for a few days' visit. VISITED HERE. Miss Theresa Smithmeyer and Mr. John Smithmeyer of Indianapolis, spent the Fourth in this city the guests om M.iss Mayme and Miss Carrie Smithmeyer at their home In South Seventh street. DOUGAN REUNION. A number of persons attended the reunion of the Dougan family held yesterday at the pretty suburban home Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Dougan in Spring Grove. The guests numbered about thirty. Both dinner and supper were served. COTERIE CLUB. The annual picnic of the Coterie club was held yesterday at the country home of Mr. George Thorpe on the Union pike. The members of the club with their families were privileged to attend. Dinner and supper were served picnic fashion. The function was most enjoyable. MET THURSDAY. The Francis Willard W. C. T. U. held its regular meeting Thursday afThere Is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. For a great many years doctors pronounced It a local disease and prescribed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a constitutional disease, and therefore, requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Ca tarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. I
Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer on hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY, & CO., Toledo, Ohio. ' Sold by druggists, 75c -lake Hall's Family Pills for constipation. - C Advertisement)
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MISS MARY JOBE PRINCE RUPERT, B. C, July 5. Accompanied only by two Indian guides, Miss Mary L. Jobe, professor of history In the Normal College of New York city, will on Wednesday start from Prince Rupert on a long trip into the unexplored wilds of Northern British Columbia and Southeastern Alaska. Miss Jobe is the veteran of several explorations into the Selkirk Mountains of this district. She said the purpose of her present trip is largely ethnological; that she expected to make a study of the traditions, ceremonies, habits and language of the Athabascan or "Carrier" tribe of Indians along the Skeena and Peace Rivers. The only knowledge of this tribe has been brought by trappers from the Hudson Bay trading posts. She will be ten weeks away from civilization and expects to discover some tribes that have never been seen by a white man.
ternoon instead of Friday at the home of Mrs. Henry Luring in South Fifteenth Btreet. The affair was in the nature of a farewell meeting and was complimentary to Mrs. Rachel Hill and her sister, who will leave soon for a trip through the sotith. Mrs. S. W. Traum and Miss Wilhelmina Traum sang a pretty duet. A reading from the "leaflet" also featured the after noon. After the program a social hour followed. FAMILY REUNION. The annual reunion of the Mather family was held yesterday afternoon and evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Mather in Spring Grove. About forty persons, Including relatives and Invited guests enjoyed the affair. The afternoon was spent playing croquet, tennis and cards. In the evening supper was served beneath the sycamore and walnut trees. The scene presented when the guests were seated at th festive board, was very pdetty. After supper the young people of the party enjoyed an auto ride about the city. Upon their return to the Mather homestead there was a beautiful display of fireworks. Games also were played. This was one of the most enjoyable affairs ever held by the family. CLUB NEWS ART DEPARTMENT. Among the departments of work of the General Federation of Women's Clubs none is more active than the art department, at the head of which CHICHESTER S PILLS r own, mm. Alwin Hbt SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHEJB
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is Mrs. Melville F. Johnston of Rich mond, Indiana. Born in a log cabin. of Quaker parents, there was little in Mrs. Johnston's early surroundings to suggest a career dominated by the sesthetic. But an innate love of the beautiful in form and color led her to lay hold of every help that came in her way, and ,it Is due chiefly to her
Don't Poison Baby.
F ORTY YEARS AGO almost every fAtttAJtumu or laudanum to sleep, and a FEW DROPS
FROM WHICH THERE IS NO WAKING. Many are the children who have been killed or whose health has been ruined for life by paregoric, lauda
num ana morpnine, eacn ox wnicn is a narcotjo product of opium. Uruggists are prohibited from selling either of the narcotics named to children at aJJ, or to anybody without labelling them 'poison.' The definition of "narcotic' is : "A medicine which relieve pain and produces sleep, but tchtch in poisonOtis doses produces stupor, coma, convulsions and death," The taste and smell of medicines containing opium are disguised, and sold under the names of " Drops," " Cordials," " Soothing Syrups," etc You should not permit any medicine to be given to your children without you or your physician know of what it is composed. C ASTORIA DOES NOT
CONTAIN NARCOTICS, if it bears or unas. ii. x letcner. Genuine Castoria always bears the THE PEOPLE'S MODERATE . if rf : mTi-j ' g-"1 & JSKTJ . r . , Cjc5f s& SfJlTf J W l lharU to I
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efforts that Richmond has come to
be one of the best-known art centers In the United States. Mrs. Johnston believes emphatically In art for the masses, and that wom en's clubs can do a vast deal In pop ularizing the Ideals of the art departmen, that is, in striving for and preaching simplicity and beauty in homes and cities, in urging the establishment of art associations, of art galleries in high school and library buildings, of city and state commissions, and finally in educating the people to demand of the government the recognition of the true place in our democratic civilisation of art and the American artist. Mrs. Roland P. Murdoch, of Kansas, the vice chairman of this department, is an experienced decorator, and under her supervision has been arranged an exhibit illustrating good household decorations and furnishing at a moderate outlay. This exhibit will be sent anywhere for the expense of transportation and the payment of $5 to cover insurance. Another member of the department, Mrs. Howard T. Willson, of Illinois, has charge of four exhibits of paintings that are sent to clubs on the same terms as the above. These are small exhibits of meritorious work. Mrs. Johnson, who as chairman of the art committee of the Indiana Federation of Clubs, has for years been sending out exhibits In that state, has four large exhibits of more pretentious work. These are personally selected by her from the work of the foremost American painters, and rank with the best exhibits shown in this country. In talking with members of the art department, one finds that they believe every person to be endowed with an innate capacity for enjoying beauty in nature and art, but that taste Is a matter of cultivation, requiring the presence of art. They Insist that instruction in art appreciation should be taught in the public schools along with arithmetic and grammar, because such instruction is character-forming and will help mightily in the realization of an ideal republic They cite case after case of the refining and elevating effects of art exhibits in different parts of the country. Some of the true stories told in this connection are pathetically amusing and all demonstrate the popularity of the exhibits as well as the great educational value. The many art clubs In the General Federation are a witness to the wide"spread interest of women along this line, and that this Interest is steadily communicating itself, is shown by the increasing demand for the exhibits and the fact that -each year new art associations are formed and the school buildings erected with rooms' set apart especially for galleries. Federation Bulletin. (Continued on Page Ten.) mother thought her child must hav make it sleep. These drugs will produce TOO MANY will croduca the SLEEP the signature signature of PRICE DENTAL OFFICE Gold Crowns $3JJ0 Brldoe Work 3.00 fuh st $5.00 Go'd FHInfl 11.00 up miay worn a specially. Examination Free. All Work Guaranteed. We not only claim, but have Indlsoutable Droof of the greatest and moat Dee. feet method now used for the painless xxracuon ot icein. Nw Ynrlr Dental Parlnre U4S Main BL RICHMOND, IND. Open Evenings. Worry PAYMENTS
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8r. Houssurif "Mrs. Busybody called after dinner yesterday. She always comes after dinner, and it is so aggraTating when yon hewe a big wash on scalding. I didn't have time to prepare anything nice for her. And shell go around telling everybody what a mean table I set," Anfy Drudgs "She's a regular aft-' er-dinner' caller. Dinner is what she is after. But why don't you try Fels-Naptha Soap? You would have your wash all through and dinner, too, before she rot here.Do you make your head save your hands? With Fels-Naptha Soap you can wash clothes in cool or lukewarm water in! about half the time it takes by the old-j fashioned boiling.j hard-rubbing way.! It's easier on the! clothes, easier' on! you, saves fuel, time and bother. One cake ofj Fels-Naptha willj prove this to youj next washday. I Bs rrt to follow directions Jt4 mmd Oretn Wrapper. rU C. rfciteeelahla, e IVr. AUTOMOBILE TOPS BUGGY TOPS Trimmings of Every Description. Recovering Tops a Specialty. REPAIRS . . Parks Trimming Room In -Alley Weet of Pottofflce. AH the pleasure of your outing brought home. Your vacation is not complete without a Kodak. It's so easy. Let us show you. Prices to suit any purseW.H. Ross Drag Co. The Place for Quality Phone 1217. - 804 Slain St. Take a Kodak wth you on your 4th of -July picnic
lake 9 Kodak'
With Too-
