Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 310, 9 November 1914 — Page 5

-HE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. MONDAY, NOV. 9, 1914. PAGE FTVK

Social Calendar Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kolp will meet their class of twenty-four boy and girls iu the afternoon from 4 to 6 o'clock at their home on North Tenth street. A card party will be given in the evening at the Moose hall at the usual hour. A meeting of the Aid Society of the South Eighth Street Friends will begin at 1:30 o'clock at the church. Mrs. Edward Warfel will entertain the members of a card club at her home on South Sixteenth street. In honor of the Hev. Mr. Hanna of Blooniington a social and reception will be given in the evening from 7:30 until 9 o'clock. ' The Social Aid of Reid Memorial Presbyterian church will meet with Mrs. George Gault at her home, 212 South West Third street. St. Anna's society of St. Andrew's church will give a card party In the auditorium of St. Anui'iiw'a school building. Mrs. Edward Cooper will be hostess for a meeting of the Tuesday Whist club at her home on South twelfth street. Ye Old Time Dancing club will hold its first meeting of the year In the Odd Fellows' hall, when a dance will be given. The Woman's Home and Foreign Missionary society of St. Paul's Lutheran church will meet in the afternoon at 2:30 o'clock with Mrs. Herman Kienker, at the home of her son, 424 South Fifteenth street, instead of meeting Wednesday afternoon, on account of the thankoffering meeting of the First English Lutheran church. The Neathrophlan club will meet this day instead of Wednesday with Mrs. J. C. Thomas, 709 South B street. A penny supper will be given at 1113 Hunt street from 6 until 8 o'clock by the Ladies' Aid society of the Whitewater Friends' church. A meeting of St. Paul's Guild of St. Paul's Episcopal church will be held In the afternoon at the parish house. Complimenting Mrs. George Bayer, nee Miss Margaret Cox, who was recently married. Miss Elaine Jones will give a thimble party Thursday afternoon at her home on South Fourteenth street. The guests will be members of the Psi Iota XI sorority. Several other parties are to be given in honor of Mrs. Bayer within the near future. A breakfast, marked by its attractiveness, was given Saturday by Mrs. I. V. Gause and her daughter, Mrs. Charles Nardin, at their home on North Thirteenth St., when they took this means of entertaining in honor of Mrs. Harry Tressler of Dayton, O., who has been visiting Mrs. O. S. Nixon of South Sixteenth street. Chrysanthemums and ferns were used in appointing the breakfast table. Covers were laid for six persons. Mr. and Mrs. George Bayer of South Eighth street, spent Sunday in Indiunapolis, the guests of Mrs. Bayer's mother, Mrs. Millard Cox. Standing out prominently on today's social schedule is the dancing party which will be given this evening at the new barn of the E. G. Hill company, near Easthaven. There will be special music. The proceeds will be given to charity. The function is in charge of Messrs. George Dllks and Raymond Nicholson. Mrs. Perry Rogers and daughter. Miss Charlotte, have returned from Cincinnati, where they visited friends. Mr. Donald Gray of (onnersville visited friends in this city yesterday afternoon and evening. An all-day meeting of the Ladies' Aid society of Chester will be hold Wednesday in the town hall. The morning hours will be spent quilting, whllo in the afternoon there will be a business meeting and the election of officers. Miss Lela Manford will be hostess fur a meeting of the A. N. V. club this evening at her homo on North Sixteenth street. The Neatropltian club will meet tomorrow afternoon instead of Wednesday, the usual time, with Mrs. J. C. Thomas, at her home, 70! South B street. The W. W. class of the New Garden Sunday school enjoyed a chicken bake near the home of Frank Moorman Friday evening. A marshmallow roast also featured the evening. The guests were Misses Ruth Elleman, Gladys Bailey, Elsie Bailey, Mary Harrison. Addle Elleman, Myra Lanncrd, Messrs. Ralph Kemp, Willard Collins, Raymond Eubank, Ralph Knoll, Leister Lacey, and Harold Brinkley. Mr. Frank Moorman chaperoned the party. Among the guests who motored over from Connersville yesterday were: Messrs. Wilson Obrecht, Howard Hurst, Meyer Drebin, Charles Cohan and N. Strauss. The Woman's Home and Foreign Missionary society of St. Paul's Lutheran church will meet Tuesday afternoon at 2:3t o'clock with Mrs. Herman Keinker at her home, 424 South Fifteenth street, instead of meeting Wednesday afternoon on account of

the thankoffering meeting of the Missionary society of the First English Lutheran church.

A meeting of the St. Paul's Guild of the St. Paul's Episcopal church will be held Tuesday afternoon at the usual hour at the parish house. Mrs. Will Rich will entertain twelve guests Tuesday at her pretty home, Anoka, northwest of the city. Mr. and Mrs. William Marlatt of Winchester, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Marlatt at their home on North Ninth street. The East End Aid society of the First Christian church, will hold an all-day meeting Tuesday at the country home of Mrs. Charles Nuggel, near Middleboro. The members are asked to meet at North Twelfth and E streets at 10 o'clock. The affair will be in the nature of a thimble party and a business session will also be held. Mr. II. R. Kepler of East Main street, has gone to New York where he will spend a week or ten days. Miss Alma Loehr, who is to be married this winter to Mr. Erie Reynolds of East Main street, was a guest at a pretty party given Friday afternoon when the Shakespeare club observed "Guest Day," at the home of Misses Eva and Caroline Coffin on South Eleventh street. There were a number of other out of town guests. Among the pleasant social functions for today is the shower to be given this evening by Miss Hilda Miller at her home on South Seventh street, as a courtesy to Miss Alice Hawekotte, who is to be married Thursday evening to Mr. Gustave Hoelscher. This will be the last of a series of parties which have been given for the popular bride-to-be. Mr. and Mrs. John Shoemaker have returned from a short wedding trip. One of the prettiest home weddings of the season occurred last evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Macy of Straughn, when their daughter Miss Mable was united in marriage with Mr. Alvin Hardin of near Greensboro. The rooms were decorated In an artistic manner. A huge bank of white chrysanthemums formed the altar. The Friend's ceremony was used. The bride wore a beautiful gown of white silk and carried a bouquet of white roses. Mr. and Mrs. Hill, Miss May Griffin of this city, were among the guests. Miss Urie Watanobie of Tokio, Japan, a student at Earlham college was also a guest. The Aid society of the Whitewater Friend's church will give a penny supper in a room at 1113 Hunt street, Tuesday evening from 6 until 8 o'clock. Mr. Royden Hood who has been in North Dakota for about a year has returned home and will spend the winter with his mother Mrs. Myrtle Hood, 208 South Eleventh street. Mr. Stearns, a lawyer of Chicago, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. I. A. Gormon at their home on Fort Wayne avenue. Miss Ruth Bartel entertained the members of a card club this afternoon at her home on South Twelfth street. After the game a social hour followed and refreshments were served. The guests were Misses Mary Canby, Dorothy Dilks, Margaret Ferguson, Irene Gormon, Blanch Bayer, Aline Johnson, and Amy Gamble of Van Wert, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Witt entertainat their pretty farm home near Witt's station in Harrison township, Mr. and MrB. P. W. Smith and Mrs. Eugene Price of Richmond. Liberty Herald. Members of a euchre club will be entertained Wednesday afternoon by Mrs. Fdward Warfel at her home on South Sixteenth street. All members are invited to be present. The first meeting of the year for "Ye Olden Time Dancing club" will be held Tuesday evening of this week in the Odd Fellow's hall. There will be special dance music. The club met fortnightly last season. In an article in the Indiana Daily Times under the headline, "What State Clubs Are Doing," special mention is CHILDREN HATE OIL CALOMEL AND PILLS "California Syrup of Figs" best for tender Stomach, liver, bowels. Look back at your childhood days Remember the "dose" mother insisted on castor oil, calomel, cathartics. How you hated them, how you fought against taking them. With our children it's different. Mothers who cling to the old form of physic simply don't realize what they do. The children's revolt is wellfounded. Their tender little "insides" are injured by them. If your child's stomach, liver and bowels need cleansing, give only delicious "California Syrup of Figs." Its action is positive, but gentle. Millions of mothers keep this harmless "fruit laxative" handy; they know children love to take it; that it never fails to clean the liver and bowels and sweeten the stomach, and that a teaspoonful given today saves a sick child tomorrow. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs," which has full directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly on each bottle. Beware of counterfeits sold here. See that it is made by "California Fig Syrup Company." Refuse any other kind with contempt. adv.

made of the Progressive Literary and Current Events clubs of this city.

Mrs. Harry Tressler returned to her home in Dayton, Ohio, Saturday afternoon after spending the week-end with Mrs. O. S. Nixon at her home on South Sixteenth street. A number of charming social functions were given in her honor. The members of the executive board of the Richmond Federation of Clubs invited all members of the Federation and all Federated club members to attend a meeting to be held Wednesday afternoon at 4 o'clock in the lecture room of the MorrissonReeves library and which will be addressed by Rev. Mr. Wells, pastor of St. Stephens' church of Philadelphia. His subject will be "American Institute of Child Life." The Happy Hour club will give a dance this evening in the Pythian Temple. The grand march will begin at 8:30 o'clock. The Hicks orchestra will play the order of dances. Miss Ethel Boal of Urbana, Ohio, Ohio, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Kamp at their apartments on North A street, during the week-end. The Ladies' Aid society of the South Eighth Street Friends church will hold an all-day meeting Tuesday at the church. All members of the society are cordially invited to attend. Mr. Randolph L. Coats and Mr. Lynn Morgan of Indianapolis spent the week end in this city and visited the art gallery Sunday. Miss Constance Fosler lias resigned as organist of Reid Memorial church. Miss Fosler's resignation is the result of additional duties she has assumed since her appointment as acting head of the German department at the high school. The Loyal Daughters of the First Christian church will meet this evening at 7:30 o'clock with Mrs. Grover Buckingham, at her home, 210 South Eleventh street, instead of meeting with Mrs. Merle Brown. Mrs. M. F. Johnston attended the Federated club meeting at Racine recently. In the afternoon of one of the session she gave a talk on "Democratic Art," in which she urged that the best is none too good for the masses, and made some telling points She was warmly applauded, and the art conference following was largely attended. Mt. and Mrs. Edward H. Harris were guests in Indianapolis Saturday. Miss Christabel Pankhurst, daughter of Mrs. Emmaline Pankhurst will make a suffrage address in Indianapolis December 8, under the auspices of the Woman's Franchise League of Indiana. The wedding of Mr. William F. Hilling and Miss Lena McFarland was celebrated Saturday evening at 7:30 o'clock at the parsonage of Grace M. E. church, the Rev. U. S. A. Bridge, pastor of the church, performing the ceremony. At 7 o'clock Mr. Charles Monroe Chenoweth and Miss Gladys Elizabeth McCoy were married by the Rev. Mr. Bridge. Both bridal couples reside in the city. Win-My-Chum week is being observed this week at Grace M. E. church, and services will be held each evening.

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land sleeves with net and with a ball buttons. j This evening a minister from Economy will have charge of the services. Miss Dorothy Hartzler of the Reid apartments. South Seventh street, enI tertained her cousin, Miss Gladys Cro mer of Hagerstown, Sunday. A surprise in the nature of a housewarming was given Mr. and Mrs. George Walker Saturday evening at their country homo, three miles north- ! west of the city. The evening was spent with dancing and card playing. Hart and Miller played the order of dances. Calico dresses were worn by the women and overalls by the men. At a late hour refreshments were served. Those enjoying the affair were Messrs and Mesdames George Walker, Omar Woods, Sid Benham, Charles Mullen. Fred Eastman, Omar Wine, Ross Robinson, William C. Jones, Ray Wright, Henry Knopf, Bernard Kreimeler, Emanuel Adkins, Walter Bernizer, Clarence De Armand, Haward Frame, Walter Jones, Bert Williams, William Schultz, Mesdames Edward Ball, Herman Ekler, Flo Wissinger and Jennie Taylor, Misses Iieba Volsted, Edith Decker, Lucile Eastman, Virginia Adkins, Pauline Ball, Messrs. Edward Decker, Harry Grimes, Walter Frame, Ralph Knopf, Roland and Everett Eastman and Harry Kreimeier. Just received a large shipment of Hats to be sold regardless of cost. Mrs. R. Van Zant, 31 N. 8th. 9 1t Amusements Move to Murray. Commencing tonight the Hawkins players will play at the Murray theatre for this week excepting Saturday ; when they will play again at the Den nett for the matinee and night performances. The company will present for its last week in Richmond Eugene Walter's great drama, "The Easiest Way." Like every play Mr. Walter has written the plot starts at the rise of the curtain, and there is no unnecessary by-play or lines for an introduction. LOCAL DRUGGIST GETS APPOINTED Fosler Drug Co., the enterprising druggists has been appointed local disj tributor for the new prescription for j ASTHMA and CATARRH recently disj covered by an Ohio physician. These ' ; prescriptions are distributed FREE : by one druggist in each town, in or- ! der to secure exact data, of the cura- ; i tive percentage of these diseases. , When seen today Mr. Fosler expressed the desire, that all persons suffering with these diseases, call and ob- j tain this FREE! prescription. Adv. 9-2t

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hand tucked vest finished with When the play was first produced in the east the press ridiculed Mr. Walters and pronounced the play an immoral one. The author has taken a very delicate subject for the story, and patrons are assured that there is nothing immoral about the play. Inez Southern, who has been the mistress of a wealthy broker in New York, meets and falls in love with a young newspaper reporter, and he, knowing what her past has been, still loves her and wants to marry her. The agreement is that she is to give up her past mode of living and lead a straight life. The second act shows her apartConstipation a Penalty of Age Nothing is so essential to health in advancing age as keeping the bowels open. It makes one feel younger and fresher and forestalls colds, piles, fevers, and other dependent ills. Cathartics and purgatives are violent and drastic in action and should be avoided. A mild, effective laxative-tonic, recommended by physicians and thousands who have used it, is the combination of simple herbs with pepsin sold by druggists everywhere under the name of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin. The price is fifty cents and one dollar a bottle. For a free trial bottle write to Dr. W. Caldwell, 451 Washington St., Monticello, III. THIS WEEK COM. NOV. 9, EXCEPT SATURDAY. Hawkins Players Prey ents By Eugene Walters, author of "Wolf," "Paid In Full," "Fine Feathers," Etc. To-nite Country Store. NOTE Company will play at the Gennett Saturday. i

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ments in a cheap boarding bouse, and after trying to get along finally goes back to Rockwell. Gilderson goes west and makes his fortune and wires Inez that be is coming to take her back to the home he has built for them. In the last act some very Intense situations are seen when he finds her living again with Rockwell, and the climax is one that is different from the general run of plays.

LOSES TWO FINGERS. EATON, O., Nov. 9 John Miller, well-known farmer, living two miles southeast of Eaton, lost two fingers of bis right hand Saturday morning when he was caught between the rolls in a TAX COLLECTOR 74 YEARS OLD . j Expected to Resign on Account of Feebleness Gained Strength and Twenty-four Pounds by Taking Vinol. Corinth, Miss: "I am a city tax collector and 6eventy-four years of age. I was in a weak, run-down con-; dition so that I became exhausted by every little exertion. My druggist told me about Vinol, and I decided to take it. In a week I noticed considerable ; improvement; I continued its use and now I have gained twenty pounds in : weight, and feel much stronger. I consider Vinol a fine tonic to create ! strength for old people." J. A. Price, ' Corinth, Miss. ; As one grows old their organs act more slowly and less effectually than in youth, circulation is poor, the blood gets thin, the appetite poor and digestion weak. Vinol, our delicious cod liver and iron tonic, is the ideal strengthener and body builder for old folks because it creates a good healthy appetite, strengthens digestion, enriches the blood, improves circulation ' and in this. natural manner builds up, strengthens and invigorates feeble, run-down, nervous and aged people, and if it does not do all we say, we will pay back your money. Leo II. j Fihe, druggist, Richmond, Ind. j NOTK You can get Vinol at the I leading drug store In ever town where j this paper circulates. adv

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Next Monday, Tuesday Wednesday, Thursday. Friday, Nov. 16, 17, 18, 19, 20.

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corn shredder. Fingers of the hand were so badly lacerated that amputation was deemed necessary by Dr. J. C. Ryder of this city.

CASTOR I A For Infants and Children. The Kind Yea Hits Ataijs E::t Bears the Sixnatareof AMUSEMENTS PROGRAM Moving Pictures TONIGHT A.R cad e PHOTOPLAYS TONIGHT 'THE IRON MASTER" (Two-Reel Biol "THROUGH EYES OF LOVE" ( Essanay) LYRIC TONIGHT "THE RETURN" "WHITE ROSES" Murrette TODAY Gentlemen of Nerve The Dead Line Sheriff for an Hour. of Pauline this unusual display of glittering - - ..