Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 101, 9 March 1914 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND FAIiLABTUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, MARCH 9, 1914

. PAGE FTO3

Social, Club and Personal Items

Elizabeth R. Thomas

Phones 1121-1874

SOCIAL CALENDAR FOR TUESDAY The Aftermath society will meet In the afternoon with Mrs. F. W. Stevens at her home on South Sixteenth street Mr. and Mrs. W. E. OUrer will entertain, the members of the Criterion and their husbands in the evening at their home on North Twentieth street.

Mrs. George Ganlt will be hostess for a meeting of the Young Married Women's club at her home on North Twenty-first street. The Tuesday Bridge club will meet to the afternoon at the usual hour. The Blast End Aid soolety of the First Christian church will meet In the afternoon with Mrs. Nellie Wolfe at her home, 312 South Eleventh street. 'Mrs. A. E. Schuh win be hostess In the afternoon for a meeting of the Woman's Home Missionary society of Grace M. E. cnurch at her home. 420 West Main street . The Moose degree team will give a oard party In the Moose hall. SOCIAL GATHERINGS Beautiful In all its appointments was the elaborate dinner given Saturday evening by Mr. and Mrs. James Carr at their pretty home in Westcott place, when they toot this means of extending courtesy to Mr. and Mrs. William Thomas of Springfield, Ohio. Pink roses were used copiously. In appointing the table. A dlnriefin several courses was served. Covers were laid for Messrs. and Mesdames William Dudley Foulke, S. E. Swayne, John H. Nicholson, William Thomas, Omar Hollingsworth, George Seidel and James Carr. Mr. and Mrs. Ray K. Shiveley will give an informal dinner this evening at their pretty new home in Westoott place. The affair will be one of the important social functions of the day. A pleasant surprise was given Miss Louise Horr Saturday, afternoon at her home, 303 Lincoln street In celebration of her thirteenth birthday anniversary. The hours were spent serially and with music and games. At a late hour a dainty lunch was served by Mrs. Jacob Horr. The guests were

Misses Mary Carman, Coral Hazeltlne, Ruth Horr, Louise Meerhoff, Agnes Meerhoff, Hazel Clark, Mildred Ramsey, Gladys Arnett, Doris Gordon, Louise Roberts, Kotherine Kamp, Emma Horr, Anna May Horr, Helen Horr, Louise Horr, Master Albert Horr and the Misses Flora Lyons and Edith Duke. In honor of their guest, Mrs. Lesh of Chicago, Mrs. L. M. Jones and Miss Alice Forkner will entertain with a bridge party Wednesday afternoon at their home on North Eleventh street Among the guests will be members of the Thursday Bridge club. - A pretty matinee danoe was given Saturday by Mrs. Frank Crichet at her home on North Ninth street Several members of the class brought guests. A Victrola and piano furnished the music. Miss Isabell McLear entertained at her home on the National road, east Saturday evening with a dinner party. The guests were Misses Pearl Warner, Eva King, Ruth Mumbower, Mary Leftwick and Cora Johnson. Complimentary to Miss Elaine Jones of Richmond and Miss Charlotte W. Ham of Boston, Mass., Miss Ruth Barnard gave an Informal thimble party at her home on North Tenth 6treet. Ample enjoyment for the delightful hours was derived from needlework, and vocal and instrumental music. Afterward the hostess served a tempting lunch. New Castle Courier. Thirty-five friends of Mr. and Mrs.

i Robert Commons gathered at their ! home on the Beeler farm Friday even

ing and gave them a pleasant surprise. Mr. and Mrs. Commons will soon move to a farm in Ohio, and the affair was in the nature of a farewell party. The evening was spent socially and with games and music. Refreshments were were served. The gusts wereMessrs.

! and Mesdames Homer Farlow, Joseph j Helms, Lawrence McCashland, Albert j Rallsback, Charles Williams, Elmer

Sittloh, Mesdames Coral Williams, Mary Wickersham, Misses Nora Fallow, Ada Rallsback, Lucile Helms, Florence Guthrie, Irene Florence, Elsie Williams, Florence Wickersham, Eva Parshall, Messrs. Hubert and Homer Williams, Loren and Warner Rallsback, Waldo Wadsworth, Ora Williams, Raymond Chester and Murray Helms and Ivan Sittloh.

hw v iii w, q - aM All ladles of the church, new members and . all persons affiliated with the soolety are urged to be present.

The Penny club will meet Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Edith Carrington at her home, 635 West Main street All members are invited to be present. The Golden Rule Bible Class of the FlrBt Methodist church will hold an all-day Quilting party at the church Thursday. Members are asked to bring well-filled baskets. At noon dinner will be served. The husbands and families of the members are invited in for dinner. The Ladles Aid society of Chester will meet Wednesday afternoon m the town hall. All members are urged to be present. One hundred and thirty persons attended the initiation and basket supper held Saturday evening In the Masonic Temple by the order of the Eastern Star. Five candidates, Messrs and Mesdames Oscar Porterfield, Stan-

j ley of Boston and Miss Marjorie Mayj hew were taken into the order. After ! the Initiation a basket Bupper was en-

Joyed by the guests. The Moose degree team will give a card party In the Moose hall Tuesday evening f at 8 o'clock- All members and friends are invited to attend.

afternoon was spent socially and refreshments were served.

A box supper will be given Monday evening by the Standard Bearers of the First M. K. church. The public is cordially invited.

RICHMOND PROOF

Should Convince Every Richmond Reader. The frank statement of a neighbor, telling the merits of a remedy, Bids you pause and believe. The same endorsement By some stranger far away Commands no belief at all. Here's a Richmond case. A Richmond citizen testifies. Head and be convinced. Benjamin Lunsford, 20th and South B streets. Richmond. Indiana, say3: "I was annoyed by attacks of kidney complaint for fifteen yeera. Whenever 1 Caught cold, my back ached, j'ometlmes the kidney secretions were profuse. Doan's Kidney Pills checked these annoyances completely. Once ar twice since then, when I have taken this remedy, it has done good wark. 1 he endorsement I gave Doan's Kidney Pills a few years ago still holds good." Price, 50c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mr. Lunsford had. Foster-Milburn Co., props., Buffalo, N. Y. (Advertisement)

Mrs. Charles Tebbetts will be hostess for a meeting of the Friends Missionary society Wednesday afternoon at 2:15 o'clock at her home on College avenue. The program will be as follows:

Devotional, I Cor. xli:4-31. Frapces ; Newman. j Prayer for the foreigners within our

gates. Review Chapter in "The New American." Miss Carolyn Carpenter. Review Dr. Steiner's "The Problem of the Immigrant." Cecilia Kelly. Talk by Mrs. Fitzpatrick.

Little Miss Elizabeth Price was hostess Saturday afternoon for a meeting of the King's Herald of Grace M. E. church at her home on North Elev

enth street. Over thirty members were present Songs were sung after which the lesson study was presented by the leader. Mrs. M. H. Miller Is in charge of the organization. "China" was the subject discussed. Miss Blanch Cunningham, a missionary of India, made an Interesting talk to the children. After the program a social hour followed and refresh-

j ments were served. Miss Sarah Kelly I is president Miss Miriam Freeland.

secretary. : AS THEY COME AND GO

Mr. and Mrs. William Thomas of Springfield, O., were the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Carr at their home in Westcott place. ' Misses Dorothy and Carolyn Rodefeldt, of South Tenth street, were entertained over the week end by Miss Ruth Lawson at her home In New Castle. Friday evening the girls witnessed the New Castle-Richmond high school basketball game. Misses Rosemary Sharkey and Anns Katherine Sharkey, returned to their home In Indianapolis last evening after a pleasant visit with relatives. I Miss Helen Buckley of South Elev-I enth street, was the guest of Miss Margaret Hindman at her home in New Castle Sunday. Miss Hazel Thomas went to Connersvllle this afternoon to spend the week with her sister, Mrs. Wilbur Ridpath. Mrs. Walter Eaton has returned to her home in Indianapolis after a week's visit with Mrs. Walter Engle at her apartments in the Pelham.

MUSICAL EVENTS SSStSjjfOS'Jl

Hurst will attend. This makes the third of the family to be cremated. They were Mr. Commons and a daugh- . ror Commons, who died a few weeks ago.

Mr. J. Louis Shenk, of Dayton, O., who comes to Richmond each Thursday to meet his large class of pupils In vocal, will present Mr. Edwin Price, a tenor of ability. In recital Thursday evening March 24. in Dayton. Later In the month Mr. Price and Miss Dorothy Kirkpatrlck, violinist, willnppear in recital in this city under the auspices of the Penny club. The Music Study Club will meet Wednesday morning at 9:30 o'clock In the Public Art Gallery.

CHR8PIL1

Mr TCriwiirA Dnllnn wm hnntesn

! Sntiirdftv afternoon for a meeting of

the King's Daughters of the South Eighth Street Friends church at her home on North Eighth street. The

A St Patrick's dance will be given Wednesday evening, March 18, at the Elks club by a committee composed of Messrs. Harry Shaw, Harry Kates and Earl Kessler. The affair will begin at 8:30. Runge's orchestra will play. All members of the lodge and their families are Invited to attend. ART NOTES Indiana cities represented at the annual exhibition of paintings, sculpture and applied arts, the work of Indiana artists which opened at the John Herron Art Institute in Indianapolis Friday, are Richmond, Brookvllle, Lafayette, South Bend, Greenfield, Mun-

' cie, Frankfort, Bloomington, Laporte, i New Castle, MooresviUe, Martinsville, : New Albany, .Vevay and several other. The xh!fcU is 'be bent shoeing Hoosier artists have made; so good, in : iact, inat their rork in no way sufj fers by comparison with the recent Society of Western Artists' exhibit.

CLUBS AND SOCIETIES Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock the Woman's Home Missionary society of the Grace M. E. church will meet with Mrs. A. E. Schuh at her home, 420 West Main street. Mrs. E. E. Meyer and Mrs. Warren Lacey will sing. Mrs. M. H, Miller will talk on

Relief From Constipation It's Me for Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets.

That Is the Joyful cry of thousands since Dr. Edwards produced Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel. Dr. Edwards, a practicing physician for 17 years and calomel's old-time enemy, discovered the formula for Olive Tablets while treating patients for chronic constipation and torpid livers. Dr. Edward's Olive Tablets do not contain calomel, but a healing, soothing vegetable laxatives. No griping is the "keynote" of these little sugarcoated, olive-colored tablets. They cause the bowels and liver to act normally. They never force them to unnatural action. If you have a "dark brown mouth" now and then a bad breath a dull tired feeling sick headache torpid liver and are constipated, you'll find quick, sure and only pleasant results from one or two little Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets. Thousands take one or two every night Just to keep right. Try them. 10c and 25c per box. The Olive Tablet Co., Columbus, O.

Special Rargain ier Hue QOTmnimgj Get ready for the warmer days, so near at hand. Save one-third by taking advantage of this advertising offer. We make new friends every time we offer these bargain rates. That's why we do it. We have the capacity and guarantee every piece of work up to the standard for which full price is charged.

FOR ONE WEEK

$1.00 $1.00 50c 50c $1.00 $1.00 50c

5 ANY LENGTH KID GLOVES, PER PAIR 5

LADIES' DRESSES Dry Cleaned and Pressed .... LADIES' LONG COATS Dry Cleaned and Pressed .... LADIES' SKIRTS Dry Cleaned and Pressed LADIES' WAISTS Dry Cleaned and Pressed, 35c and MEN'S SUITS Cleaned and Pressed MEN'S OVERCOATS Dry Cleaned and Pressed MEN'S PANTS Cleaned and Pressed

The only modern steam dye works in the city. See us for dyeing. Plumes and feathers correctly cleaned and curled, without risk of loss or substitution. French Benzole Dry Cleaning The Chauncey Cleaning Co

Phone 2501

Auto Eelivery

1030 Main Street

FORMER CENTERVILLE RESIDENT CREMATED

Tin, Slate and Iron Roofir7, Guttering, Spouting and Job work. Furnaces and all kinds of furnace work. HARRY E.IRETON 937 Sheridan St. Phone 31 93 9-2t

mms mran ru

SOU lC3JCdSTS ETCTCZZ?

4t g STORAGE Household Goods - only. Good dry place and rates very reasonable. Phone

1283. H. V. McLeland Co.

MILTON, Ind.. March 9. Mrs. Martha Commons, aged 70, died Saturday morning at her home In Dayton, Term. She was born at Dublin, and was the daughter of Samuel Boyd of Dublin, and the widow of Judge Commons, formerly of Centerville. She was the mother of Mrs. Horace Hurst, of 60uth east of Milton. She leaves two sisters Mrs. Mary Witt and Mrs. Susan Wilson, of Richmond, the widow of the late Dr. Charles Wilson. The body will be taken to Cincinnati and crem-

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RUB

PAIN FROM

ALL BACKACHE

GONE

Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Rlegla of Richmond were here a short time this morning on their way to Sunman, where they will visit for a while. Rushvllle Republican.

Mrs. Levy of Bay City, Mich., is the guest of her sister, Mrs. George Fox, at her home on South Sixteenth street.

Rub Backache Awav Witn a1

Small Trial Bottle of "St. Jacobs Oil." Ah! Pain is gone! Quickly? Yes. Almost instant relief from soreness, a stiffness, lamenes and pain follows a gentle rubbing with "St. Jacobs Oil." Apply this soothing, penetrating oil directly upon the ache, and like manic, relief comes. "St. Jacobs Oil" is a harmless backache, lumbago and sciatica cure which never disappoints, and doesn't burn the skin. Straighten up! Quit complaining! Stop those torturous "stitches." In a moment you will forget that you ever had a back, because it won't hurt or be stiff or lame. Don't suffer! Get a small trial bottle of "St. Jacobs Oil" from your druggist now and get this lasting relief.

FOURTEEN YEARS growth and service have given a thorough test to the strength and stability of this ....... STRONG BANK Growing Larger and Stronger with each succeeding year, we solicit your banking business in all of our various lines.' RESOURCES OVER $lf800000.00

DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY

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NEW YORK Dental Parlors 904 '2 Main Street (Over Notte'a Carpet Store) Gold Crown 13.00 . $4-00 Bridge Work $3.00 Full Seta $5.00 Gold Filings $1.00 up Silver Filling 50c up

Overwhelming Verdict A few months ago, a man in no way connected with the making of Postum or the marketing of coffee, wrote to quite a number of physicians all over the country asking their unbiased testimony in the case of Postum vs. Coffee. The following excerpts from their letters constitute an overwhelming verdict. In Favor of Postum

"I have discarded coffee altogether in my family, and instead use Postum which we find makes a rich, delicious drink, without any of the deleterious effects attendant on the continuous use of coffee." "Our family have been users of Postum for a long time. We were very liberal coffee drinkers, but were conscious that coffee was harming us our nervous system, digestion and heart action so we quite the coffee and began using Postum. Now we relish it far more than we did coffee, and are all relieved of the old coffee troubles. As a physician I have induced several families to quit coffee and use Postum." "Postum when it is desirable to leave off coffee on account of overstimulation or gastric disturbances." "Postum has been used in my family nearly ever since it was placed on the market, and I recommend it to my patients. It is a nourishing drink. A great many families, are giving their children Postum in place of coffee with best of results." "I have used Postum in my family for years with the most satisfactory

result so much so that we have practically abolished coffee, and with it the coffee headaches, nervousness, and lying awake the best part of the night." "I drink Postum every morning, and recommend it to my friends who have 'nerves' and indigestion." "No more coffee for me. I am using Instant Postum and advise my patients to do likewise. I prefer it to the best coffee, and have no more sour stomach attacks as I used to." "For years I have been using Postum in the family and advocating it for my patients. I consider it to be exactly what its manufacturers claim for it. Postum is excellent in place of coffee where the latter is contraindicated. The food value of Postum plays an important part when compared with coffee." "Have had many cases that could not drink coffee on account of its reflex action on the heart. Postum always supplies the place of coffee without the bad effects." "I have used Postum for the past eight years in place of coffee. Before that I was troubled with fre

quent bilious headaches due to excessive use of coffee, and was then advised to use Postum. Since that time I have not had a single attack, which effect I attribute entirely to Postum. I frequently recommend it to others who experience equally gratifying results." "Hardly a week goes by that I do not advise some patient with an irritable acid stomach and nervous heart to stop at once the uc of all coffee and take up the use of Postum and always with good results. "I am satisfied that coffee is responsible in a great degree for the premature breakdown of our active men and women. They suffer from caffeine poisoning. Of the truth of this there is not the shadow of a doubt. Our common sense tells us that the daily swallowing of caffeine over-stimulating the heart and brain will be followed by nervous depression, and finally by more or less disastrous results. I believe if people in general would use Postum as a beverage in place of coffee and tea their mental and physical condition would be much improved."

In the light of such testimony it would seem the part of wisdom to stop coffee and use Postum. Postum is a genuine food-drink, made of whole wheat and a small per cent of molasses. Contains the nutritious values of the grain, but is pure and absolutely free from the coffee drug, caffeine, or any other harmful substance.

Postum comes in two forms:

- 'Regular Postum must be well boiled to bring out its fine flavor. 15c and 25c packages. Instant Postum-r-a soluble form. A teaspoonful stirred in a cup of hot water with sugar and cream makes a delightful beverage instantly. 30c and 50c tins. The cost per cup of both kinds is about the same.

added-

"There's a Reason" for Postum sold by grocers everywhere

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