Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 244, 21 August 1913 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, AUG. 21, 1913
PAGE FIVE
W &njmm Elizabeth r.
mm?
Office Phone 1121.
THOMAS Residence Phone 1874.
SURPRISE PARTY. A surprise party was given Mr. and Mrs. W. HollingBworth Tuesday evening at fhelr home In North Sixteenth street, in honor of her thirty-fifth birthday anniversary. A pleasant social time was enjoyed and refreshments were served. Those composing the party were: Rev. II. S. James and" wife, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Crebb, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Montgomery, Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Hanna, Miss Edith Bradbury, Miss Tresa Crebb, Miss Edith Hollings worth and Miss Josephine Holllngsworth.
HOME FROM NEWCASTLE. Miss Mabel Sanders, who has been visiting with friends In Newcastle, has returned home.
FAMILY REUNION. In honor of Mr. and Mrs. James Harter's birthdays, both of which occur In August, their children and families spent the day in a reunion fashIon. A bountiful dinner and supper was served. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. James Harter and son, Chester, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Harter and daughter, Edith, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Harter, Mr. and Mrs. Orval Harter and son, Melvin Rife, and Mr. and Mrs. Oro Harter and daughter, Martha Andrea.
ENTERTAINED WEDNESDAY. Miss Marie Backmeyer entertained the following guests yesterday afternoon at her home, east of the city: Miss Esther Aue, of Emporia, Kansas, Miss Gladys Ebenhack, of Coldwater, Michigan, Miss Mary Bayer, Miss Lelo Ebenhack, of Coldwater, Michigan.
MISS GILLIES A GUEST. Miss Elaine Jones entertained Monday noon with a luncheon at her home in South Fourteenth street in honor of Miss Margaret Gillies, of Newcastle.
ICE CREAM SOCIAL. An ice cream social will be given at Chester Saturday evening on the lawn of Frank Pickett's home.
THEATRE PARTY. A theatre party was given last night in honor of Miss Edna RItter, of Hamilton. The party was composed of Miss Winifred Farrer Miss Edith Uhl, Miss Hazel Thomas, Miss Ritter, Miss Sylvia Uhl and Mr. and Mrs. B. M. Thomas.
TO CLEAR LAKE. Mrs. Otto Helns and Mrs. William Moffett left today for Clear Lake, Michigan.
RETURNED HOME. Miss Lucy Smyser returned to her home in North Fifteenth street, after spending a month at Bay View, Michigan.
RETURNED HOME. Miss Marie Retz, who has been
visiting with her brother, Mr. Ernest
Retz, of Newcastle, has returned home.
GAVE LUNCHEON.
Mis Marie Kaufman entertained the members of the Chicago Operatic
company, which filled an engagement at the Chautauqua, at luncheon Monday noon at her home in National avenue. An attractive decoration for the tabl was formed of a cluster of pink
tea roses and ferns. LEAVE FOR MT. CLEAR.
Miss Nellie Shaw, Miss Cornelia Shaw and Mrs. Nannie Shaw left today
for Mt. Clear, New Jersey.
RETURNED HOME. Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Harris and fam
ilv have returned from a two weeks
vacation at Shriner Lake.
TO ATTEND REUNION. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Moss and daugh ter Bernicu of Flora, Indiana, and Mr,
James Moss of Binghurst, Indiana,
came to be the guest of Mrs. Perry Moss of South Thirteenth street and to also attend the Moss reunion which
is being held at Glen Miller Park to
day
FIVE HUNDRED PARTY.
Miss Laura Schatz gave a card party yesterday afternoon at her home in
South Thirteenth street. The favor
was given to Miss Alice Harrington.
A dainty luncheon was served in several courses, to the following guests: Mrs. Frank McDonnell, Mrs. T. C. Harrington, Mrs. Edwin Green. Mrs, Edna Jay, Mrs. W. A. Klein, Mrs. A, Isersser, Mrs. Leo Fihe, Mrs. I. C,
Harrington, Mrs. William Schooley, Miss Mary Laurence, Miss Margaret Conroy, Miss Anna Harrington, Miss
Emmajean Lawrence, Miss Kather-
RAILSBACK REUNION. The ninth annual reunion of the
Railsback family will be held at Glen
iller park on the twentyeighth of
August.
RETURN HOME. Dr. and Mrs. Cox and son, Master
Joseph, who have been spending the
summer at 'The Breakers," Virginia
Beach, Norfolk, Va., left Monday to
spend the week in Richmond, and
Sulphur Springs, Va. They will return home Friday evening.
Fine For Freckles, Too VERY POPULAR.
Opera Cream is very largely used
by ladies who are troubled with freck
les, pimples, blotches, etc. It does not
lemove or irritate the skin, but first hides these blemishes, and gradually
removes them completely.
After usin? Opera Cream regularly for a few months you will be agreeably surprised at the softness and
clearness of your complexion. It never
roughens the skin. OPERA CREAM, A LIQUID BEAUTIFIER When properly applied with
sponge, will never show, and imparts
to the skin a velvety loveliness that is impossible to get from the use of any
similar preparation. Just try it once
For sale by all druggists, or by mail direct from manufacturers on receipt
of price, 25c. Manufactured by Dayton
of the Rev. H. S. James, when Mr. !
Jesse Rodenburg of East Germantown, :
ana Miss Flora Bertseh of C entervllle were married. The many friends wish them much happiness.
FIGHT EFFORT TO
COLLECT $3,000,000!
THEATRE PARTY. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Walling of Pittsburg and Mr. and Mrs. William Walling formed a theatre at the Murray last evening.
ine Conroy, Miss Alice Harrington, Miss Lucile Carney, Miss Marcella Luken, Miss Alice Heck, Miss Mary Luken. Miss Alice Griffin, Miss Katherine Graves, of Indianapolis, Miss
Blanche Griffin, Mrs. John Collins, of
Chicago.
LUNCHEON PARTY.
Honoring Miss Lelia Ebenhask of Coldwater, Mich., Miss Norma Han-; ning gave a prettily appointed lunch-
eon at noon Wednesday. The house was arranged with goldenglow and hydrangeas. Those present were Misses Charlotte and Blanche Bayer, Imo Eikenberry, Ada Ebenhack, Norman and Edyth Runge.
MRS. DALBEY ENTERTAINED. Mrs. Walter Dalbey entertained yes
terday with a picnic luncheon in her
tent at Chautauqua in honor of Mj and Mrs. Ben Cuyler. Mr. and Mrs. Cuyler will motor to Greenville where
they will be the guests of friends and
relatives. Upon their return they will
be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Dalbey. A number of social functions will be given in their honor.
TO DETROIT. Mrs. Horace Hollopeter and daugh
ter Doris has gone to Detroit, Michi
gan, to be the guests of relatives.
ASTERS, PINK, WHITE AND LAVENDAR, AT 35c AND 50c PER DOZ., DURING AUGUST. THE FLOWER SHOP, 1015 MAIN ST. " L0VEMAKING IN SPAIN.
PASTCHIEFS' CLUB. The Pastchiefs' club of the Pythian
Sisters will not meet with Mrs. G. Duvall on Friday. The meeting has been postponed indefinitely.
MRS. IGELMAN ENTERTAINS. Mrs. Charles Igelman entertained
yesterday at her home in South Fourth
street with a thimble party. The
house was beautifully decorated with ferns and garden flowers. A luncheon
in several courses was served. Those
composing the party were Mrs. Adam
Feldman, Mrs. Gus Sudhoff, Mrs. Edward Feldman, Mrs. Howard Sudhoff,
Mrs. Widup, Mrs. Will Knollenberg,
Mrs. Charles Runge, Mrs. Dan Weber, Mrs. Walter" Wagner, Miss Otte Kemper, Mrs. Eiward Warfel, Mrs. George
Kemper, Mrs. Liza Jurvens, Mrs. August Kemper, Mrs. George Schultz.
Mrs. John Igelman and Mrs. Howard Grottendic, of Kokomo, Ind.
SOCIETY MARKET. The Ladies' Aid society of the Unit
ed Brethren church will hold an allday market in the market house Sat
urday.
MARRIED YESTERDAY. A very quiet wedding was solemn
ized yesterday afternoon at the home
It Is Done Right Out in the Open, and No One Seems to Mind It. The best of the Alcazar is the Alcazar gardens. But 1 would not ignore the homelike charm of the vast court by which you enter from the street outside to the palace beyond. It is planted casually about with rather shabby orange trees that children were playing under and was decorated with the week's wash of the low, simple dwellings which may be hired at a rental moderate even for Seville, where a handsome and commodious house in a good quarter rents for $G0 a year. One of those two story cottages, as we should call them, in the antecourt of the Alcazar had for the student of Spanish life the special advantage of a lover close to a ground floor window dropping tender nothings down through the slats of the shutter to some maiden lurking within. The nothings were so tender that you could not hear them drop, and, besides, they were Spanish nothings, and it would not have served any purpose for the stranger to listen for them. Once afterward we saw the national courtship going on at another casement, but that was at night, and here the precious first sight of it was offered at 10 o'clock in the morning. Nobody seemed to mind the lover stationed outside the shutter with which the iron bars forbade him the closest contact, and it is only fair to say that he minded nobody. He was there when we went in and there when we came out, and it appears that when it is a question of lovemaking time is no more an object in Spain than in the United States. The scene would have been better by moonlight, but you cannot always have it moonlight, and the sun did very well: at least the lover did not seem to miss the moon W. D. Howells in Harper's Magazine.
! j ' -w ' - .1 f i fiy- '. ' r VeN? J.V ; le jji j Off . M ! EI f r ; ' " V i I h y? r - v -
GENN TO ERECT SIGNS WARNING AUTO DRIVERS
To Discard Freckles, Tan, Pimples, Wrinkles
j is allowed inside the corporation line Speed Limit PoStS Will Be J where there is little settlement. In Plarerl nn All Rnark I mH. tbe residence districts, according : Placed on ah Koaas Leaa- . . . h u Mceed
iflg IntO ThiS City by the I fifteen miles an hour while in the busi
ness districts. Ten mues an nour is allowed where there- is little other traffic. Whether the speed demon could be prosecuted under this law is a question of authorities. The autoist has
Commissioners.
Automobile speed limit posts are being put up by Street Commissioner Genn on the roads entering Richmond.
enacted at the last session of the state j a chanc to ,rove that he w nCt legislature. j endangering the public; that he was The warning posts are eight feet I not running at a sped higher than the
nign. i ney arc constructed entirely i jaw an0ws
of iron, and an iron cross-piece at the top warns the motorists to go slow. The posts are painted with the following: "City limits; speed. t." miles an hour." Although tho speeds of ten. fifteen.
or he can attack the limits
of the prosecution for the three speeds allowed in the corporation limits, while the state must prove any one or all of these things. A fine discrimination would be required to separate
tw enty and twenty-five miles an hour j the residence district and the thickly are named in the 1 V I J speed limit act j populated residence districts, acortlfor certain localities, the law is not j iK to authorities, specitic as to where a person may j
operate an automobile at the rates of t speed named. The law says that while on a public highway, an automobile should not be operated at a greater speed than Is heasonable and prudent for the public safety. In the same section, the law would be interpreted to read that automobiles should not be run to exceed twenty-five miles an hour any place. A speed of twenty miles an hour
I From Feminine World.) The use of creams on the face sometimes causes hair to grow. You can avoid the risk of acquiring superfluous hair by avoiding cosmetics nd using mercolljed wax Instead. Tber is nothing better for any condition of the skin, as the wax actually absorbs the oSensive cuticle. The latter is naturally replaced by a clear, smooth., healthy complexion, full of life and expression. It's the sensible way to discard a freckled, tanned, over-red. blotchy or pfmpled 6kin. Get n ounce of mercoliied wax at any druggist's and apply nightly like cold cream, erasing In the morning with soap ami water. It takes a week or so to complete the transformation. The ideal wrinkle eradicstor is made by dissolving an ounce of pewdered saxoiite In a half pint witch
haiol Bathing the face In the solution brings almost Instantaneous results. (Advertisement)
The shades of the builders of the pyramids might have been interested onlookers at the sight of iron girders weighing forty-six tons each going up nineteen stories to the top of a building being erected in New York city. This is said to be the first time that girders of this weight have been lifted to such a hight.
PRINCESS LOUISE OF BELGIUM.
BRUSSELS, Aug. 21 Much interest is being shown by those in court circles in the effort that is being made by Princess Louise of- Relgium, eldest daughter of the late King Leopold, to wipe out her debts, which are about $3,200,000. She is invoking the question of extra-territoriality against her debts. The value of the Princess" estate is about $1,000,000. She has not resided in Belgium for several years, but maintains an extravagant establishment in Paris.
WANTS DIVORCE
Laura A. Mull today filed suit for divorce against John Mull in circuit court. The troubles of the estranged couple will be heard before Judge Fox during the October term of the circuit court.
CHICHESTER S PILLS 0 sr THE lIAVOSI SBA.il. X l
I . a S M X
. J I a . - f - r,
x.nups. ask uur idt A hl-.iiea.ter'ii IMuruond Ir.d IMIU In Red Hd t.,14 reftilllAV boies. sealed with Blua Ribbon. 'X
I kf ifl other, flav at tam, r
Ti
IPottl.t. A.K for t III-4 JIKH-TFH ! DIAMOND It KAMI FILLS, for 8
yea.- known as Best. Safest. Always RellaH SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EYERYWHBtf
THE LON ESOM EST. The desert waste is not the loneliest place, Nwr the tnidoeenn, nor the mountain's crest. Oh. these be lonesome spots for men to face. But not the loneliest! One feels alone amid the bustling crowd Of strangers in strange cities, too, but not So much alone, though Silence shrieks aloud. As in one lonely spot I know of. 'Tis the place you've visited Once with a loved one sometime, anywhere And visit once again, when years are fled And that One Is not there! Cleveland Plain Dealer.
The Plums are ripe. The Time is right. SO BixshclsBra.dsHa.WQf, Lombards and Damsons ARRIVING IN QUANTITIES FROM THE ORCHARDAS THEY RIPEN FOR THE NEXT 10 DAYS BRADSHAWS AND LOMBARDS NOW DAMSONS NEXT WEEK Call and look over the stock and get our prices and place your order for delivery on such a day as is convenient for you within the next 10 days. ON DISPLAY AT BOTH STORES. John M. Eggemeyer & Sons
S
401-403 Main Street
GROCERS
1017-1019 Main Street
Youll'Fmd It ffl roir tutt9
WE FURNISH YOUR HOME ON LIBERAL CREDIT!
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JJJ sxBssLa
"Trmrrrn i " 1 w niT m j nm n th miyip itiitpitpihhi' nimwrm wmi kiimhipi n wnnimsi
$16.50, $1 8-00, $20.00, $22.00, $25.00 WMLUES A charming exhibit of dresses in fancy and tailored models at enormous price reductions is now your opportunity. The materials are Crepe voile, Cotton eponge Plain Voile, Linen and Ratine.
An overstock of these dresses is the cause of this unusual price inducement. The styles and materials are desirable. See the window Visit the department-second floor.
2.00, $25.00
VALUES $16.50, $18.00, $20.00,
lens Cj2r
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cnznoivo,
V! 11
'Hicfiaim.
Drug Co., Uftyton, Ohio. Advertisement)
