Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 40, Number 171, 1 July 1915 — Page 5

M rHE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, JULY 1, 1915 OWNER OF MISSING stolen. Detectives say that servants In the Aldrlch . summer home have identified a picture, Of. well-known criminal as that of a . man who called at the Aldrich home a few days before the robber 09 June 21, and posed as an agent. ..... . service will be of special Interest to Personals Musicals Card Parties OGI E T TST Clubs 11 Teas every member of the church and urges, that all attend.' i? ' PEARL NECKLACE Dances AMUSEMENTS.

' AMUSEMETi f : .

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i ; -n rfT SOUTH 10th ST4 C?

The many friends of Miss Call Stewart, recently of Plttaburg, but formerly of Indianapolis, and Mr. Paul H. Krauaa, Jr.. were much Interested In their marriage yesterday In Lebanon, -where the bride haa been spending some time with her parents Mr. and Mrs. William W. Stewart. I The ceremony which was ; witnessed ionly by the near relatives and a few intimate friends, was solemnized at the Presbyterian church at 11:30

o'clock in the morning, the Rev. O. H. Cannichael, officiating. The bride wore her traveling suit of blue and a hat to match and immediately after the service Mr. and Mrs. Krauss left for a wedding Journey. They will return to Indianapolis t6r a residence. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Engle of the Pelham apartments went to Indianapolis and motored over to Lebanon with a party from that place who attended the wedding. The many friends of the bride In this city extend congratulations. As a courtesy to Miss Mary Mather, who is celebrating her birthday anniversary today, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Mather will give a picnic party this evening on the lawn at their home on South Seventeenth street. The guests will be Messrs. Earl Mather, Lynn Mather, Ernest Mather, Misses Irene and Naomi Mather, Bertha Kelsey, Ruby Clark, Mary Mather, Messrs. Fred Girty, Harry Mather, Wayland Kelsey, Messrs. and Mesdames Mather Kelsey and Raymond Mather. Miss Helen Murphy of East Liverpool, Ohio, is the gnest of Miss Hilda Kidder at her home on North Thirteenth street. Several social functions

will be given in her honor during her

visit here.

Mr. and Mrs. Karl Kessier, nee

Miss Setta Card, are rejoicing over the arrival' of a baby son. The child was born at the Reid Memorial hospital.

Their many friends extend con gr a tula-,

Hons. The Good-Time Needle club will meet Friday afternoon with Mrs. Harry Hazeltine and the members are asked to be prompt. Mr. and Mr-. OrviUe James and

children of r-rrjr "oils arrived today for a vrr'-V visit with Mr. and

Mrs. Ozro DaWwIr at their home in West Richmond The Joy Bearers, a social organiza

tion of the Trinity Lutheran church, enjoyed a picnic at Glen Miller park yesterday afternoon and evening. At

8 o'clock a delicious supper was served

east of the park pavilion. The party was composed of Messrs. and Mes

dames Charles Igelman, O. A. Kemper, Mrs. Mary Voge, Misses Marguerite Deuker, Marjorie Beck, Florence Johnson, Amelia Veitz, Neva Bowman, Rhea Ackerman, Marie Wrede, Mable Sittloh, Katherine Daub, Mary Nicholson, Emerald Kemper, Mildred Cutter, Edna Deuker.

The Tirzah Aid society of the Ben Hur lodge was delightfully entertained by Mrs. S. B. Williams yesterday afternoon at her home on South Twelfth street. The afternoon was spent socially and with needlework: Mr. John Delaney played, several beautiful numbers on the E(ftson diamond disc. Late in the afternoon a dainty luncheon was served. Those present

were Mesdames Charles Mullen, Harry

Jordan. Fred Minor, J. A. Williams,

Ross Robinson, Ray Wright, Omar

Wine, Herman Trotter, Harry Forbes,

John Schneider, Roy Hummer, Howard Frame, Walter Voss, William

Schultz, S. B. Williams. Herman Eck

ler, Irene Needham, Misses John Delanye of New York, S. B. Williams

and Arthur Williams.

Garden flowers including crimson

ramblers and other blossoms of the

Social Calendar

Card party at 2:30 o'clock in the street. Mrs. Fred Gobel of Cambridge City, hostess for meeting of Five Hundred club. Hiawatha Social and Literary society meets with Mrs. A. E. Reber. Good Time Needle club meets with Mrs. Harry Hazeltine.

Francis Willard W. C. T. meets.

U.

early summer, were used In arranging the home of Mrs. Raymond

Mather on South Seventeenth street,

when she entertained in honor of Miss

Mary Mather. The afternoon was

spent socially and with music and games. Needlework was also a feature

of the occasion. A delicious collation

in several courses was served. The hostess was assisted in entertaining by Mrs. Mather Kelsey. The guests were Misses Hilda Kidder, Mary

Canby, Helen Buckley, Myra Scott, Marguerite Davis, Margaret Ferguson,

Gladys Weiss, Esther Gard, Margaret Wickemeyer and Helen Murphy of

East Liverpool, Ohio.

The Dorcas society of the Earlham Heights Presbyterian church met this

afternoon with Mrs. Thomas Runyan.

Mrs. Tickhardt asslssted the hostess

in entertaining. Misses Lucile Vance and Ethel Mc

Clure left today for Eldorado, where they will spend the week-end with

their grandfather. Mrs. M. B. Galvin left this morning for Toledo, O., where she will visit her sister until after the Fourth. Mr. Fred D. Fromme, a former resi

dent of this city, who has been at ruadue university, Lafayette, where he had charge of laboratory work and was assistant botanist, is here for a few days. Mr. Fromme will go to Virginia, where he will have charge of the department of plant mythology and biology in the Virginia Polytechnic college, near Blacksburg. Mr. Fromme will be joined later by Mrs. Fromme and baby, who are visiting relatives in South Dakota. Last evening Mr. and Mrs. Will Reller gave an informal dinner at their home on South Fifteenth street for Mr. Fromme. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. Colin Schafer and Mr. Ray Newman.

Miss Mary Bulla was hostess last evening for a meeting of the A. N. C. club at her home on East Main street. Miss Nola Russell entertains the club in two weeks at her home on North C street. The annual picnic of the Alice Carey club was held Wednesday afternoon and evening In Glen Miller park. Special guests of the club were Mesdames Shugars of Union City, S. E. Chucr, C. F. Walters, Everett Davis, Mount, and Dempsey Dennis. Others who enjoyed the outing were Mesdames Mary Price, Mary Compton, Mary Moore, Margaret Barr, Laura Bowman, Will Cunningham, Emma Eva, Laura Whitesell, Eunice Frame, M. S. Johnson, Eva Lamb, Miss Emma and Victoria Lindemuth, Lucile Mahr, Alice Price,

ALWAYS HEMO More than Malted Milk Poerf ul,concentrted nourishment Buy it at the drug store

The STAR GROCERY

227 NORTH 6TH ST.

PHONES 1105

TO OUR CUSTOMERS We will close all day Monday, July 5th. Please give us your orders Saturday for your Sunday and Monday supplies and we will try to please you all.

SPECIAL MENTION Boiled Ham Boiled Tenderloin Cheese Brick Cheese Potted Ham Deviled Ham Potted Tongue Salmon Pickles Olives Salad Dressings Potato Chips Fancy Cakes Baked Beans Tuna Fish PICNIC PLATES Put Up in Sanitary Packages. WAX PAPER For Wrapping Up Your Lunches. PLENTY OF GOOD EGGS Some that you Can Hard Boil.

FRIDAY and SATURDAY Swift's Premium Brand DRIED BEEF, Per Lb., 34c HEINZ TOMATO SAUCE BAKED BEANS 10c Size, 2 Cans, 15c Pinnrta Ttranri Pickles

Fine Stuff Sweet, Sour or Lemons Dills, per bottle, 9c.

Clown Brand Kippered HERRING 8c per can; 2 cans for 15c Old Dutch Cleanser "Some Powder" Sc a Can 2 Cans, 15c Hershey's Famous Cocoa Small 10c size cans 9c

Large 25c size cans. .

NAVY BEANS Michigan Firsts 7c per Pound; 4 Lbs. 27c CARNATION MILK

The Good Milk

6 Small Cans

FRUITS Bananas Oranges Apples Canteloupes Watermelons

Pineapples

Vegetables Peas Beans Cucumbers Lettuce Radishes Onions Beets

19c Asparagus Cabbage New Potatoes

Be Careful

...23c and Buy

6 Large Cans 45c EDGEMONT

This Assortment for 25c:

Swift's Pride Laundry Soap,

3 bars

CRACKERS

Thev Won't

Fvnlrtrlo

Swift s Cream Laundry Soap v 1 bar 5c Burn Your

Swift's Naptha Laundry Soap, 1 bar 5c Swift's White Laundry Soap, 1 bar 5c

Swift's Snap Laundry Soap, 2 bars

United Profit Sharing Coupons In these Soaps.

Fingers.

5c

A Big Package of Fourth of July

Ina Lamb, Lela Manford, Blanche

Compton, Helen Buckley, Messrs. A. C. Lindemuth, Dempsey Dennis, Orville and M. Price and Mr. Frame. Miss Victoria Lindemuth and Mrs. Osborn will leave next week for an extended stay in Petoskey. Mr. D. Lee Fitzpatrick left Wednesday for a Chautauqua tour through Ohio and other states.

Mrs. George Schell entertained the

members of a card club yesterday af

ternoon at her home on North Twelfth

street.

Mrs. Osa Cowgill and children of

Liberty,' are the guests of the Rev.

and Mrs. T. E. Kenworthy, north of

tne city.

Mrs. Henry Kampe of New Castle, a former resident of this city is enter

taining with a house party. Today she had as her guests the following persons from this city: Mesdames Roy

Taylor, Henry Korves, Harvey Brown, Harry Chase, Daniel Van Etten and Hal Robbins. A pretty wedding was solemnized Wednesday evening when Mr. Clayton Knight and Miss Ima Fasick were married in the presence of the immediate families and a few intimate friends at the new home of the young people on the New Paris pike. Rev. W. R. Motley, pastor of the Central Christian church performed the ceremony. The rooms were prettily arranged with garden flowers and ferns. The bride wore a pretty white muslin gown trimmed in laces and insertions. She carried a shower bouquet of white roses and ferns. Mr. and Mrs. Knight left for a short auto trip, and upou their return will be at home to their many friends. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Pike and Miss Leota Walsh of Richmond and Mr. E. O. Craig of Indianapolis are spending a week's vacation with Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Hull at their summer cottage on

Lake wawasee. Mrs. Anthony Stever was hostess yesterday afternoon for a meeting of the Penny club.

asMr ....

CALLS CONFERENCE Rev. Dr. Somerville Light, district superintendent of the Methodist church, will speak at the Fairview church at 7:30 o'clock Friday evening. Following his address he will call the first quarterly conferences. Rev. J. P. Chamness, pastor, announces that this

Mr. Paul Jones, a former resident of this city and son of Mrs. Jesse Jones of the National road, west, who has been employed in the Pennsylvania offices at Zanesville has been transferred to the offices at Toledo, O. A surprise was given Mrs. Elmer Cooney at her home on North Fifth street, by a number of friends. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Elza Monroe and daughters, Edith and Clara; Mrs. Pearl Moss and daughter, Florence Phyllis, Mrs. Pearl Brokamp and daughter, Ruth; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Neal. Mrs. Georgia Mattix and Mrs. Davis, Mr. and Mrs. John Palmer and son, Wilbur; Mrs. Minnie Pitcher, Mrs. C. S. Cooney of Centerville, Misses Pearl and Jeannette Vore, Miss Emma Dent, Mrs. John Schneider, Mrs. Everett Bradfield, Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Webbere, Mr. John E. Hichiov tm

Elmer Cooney and daughters, Misses

josepnme ana Mildred Coohey.

MF&.

ALPHICH WEAfttH 0 JC fO,OOtS

Pinkerton detectives say they have a clue to the thief who stole Mrs. Sherwood Aldrich's $10,000 pearl necklace, the theft of which stirred the

fashionable summer colony of Southampton, L. I., and led to the anonymous offer of $10,000 and no questions asked, for its return. The identity of the owner of the necklace and the one who offered the reward in New York newspapers, has been a mystery until Mr. Aldrich, who is president of the Consolidated Copper company, admit ted that the necklace in question was the seventy-one pearl string belonging to his wife. A marquise ring was also

WOMEN VOLUNTEERS In stress and trouble the women of a nation are always to be counted upon. In Servia the women went to the front with muskets in their hands; they were as strong and brave as the men on the firing line. In this country

few of our women escape the weakening troubles peculiar to their sex. For every disease or ailment of a womanly character, no matter how recent or how long standing, the one sure, reliable remedy of proved merit is Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. It is prepared from nature's roots and herbs and does not contain a par

ticle of alcohol or any narcotic. It s not a secret prescription for its ingredients are printed on the wrapper. Women are earnestly advised to take it for irregular or painful periods, backache, headache, displacement, catarrhal condition, hot flashes, sallow complexion and nervousness. For girls about to enter woman

hood, women about to become mothers and for the changing days of middle age Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription

should always be on hand.

Write Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., for free 136 pae book on woman's dis

eases. Every woman should have one,

New Treatment For Varicose Veins and Ulcers Swollen veins are dangerous and often burst. Sufferers are advised to get a two-ounce, original bottle of Moone'3 Emerald Oil (full strength) at any pharmacist and start to reduce the veins and bunches at once. Physicians recommend Emerald Oil; it is used in hospital practice and a small bottle will last a long time, because it is very concentrated. Apply night and morning with a soft brush as directed until the swelling is reduced to normal. So marvelously powerful is Emerald Oil that swollen glands, varicocele and even goitre disappear when used steadily. Leo H. Fihe can supply you. Generous sample on receipt of 10 cents from Moone Chemical Co., Rochester, N. Y. Adv. SOFT, SORE, SPONGY GUMS. are quickly made strong and healthy and loose, sensitive teeth, Riggs disease and Pyorrhea are successfully treated with Ginglnol. Get a small original bottle today at any leading pharmacist; it will last for weeks. Adv...

NO CHARGE FOR THIS

GRAND HOME MEDICAL BOOK Every home should have one. Every

man and woman who isn't afraid to read a book so plainly written that any

one can understand it should write today for a revised copy of The People's

Common Sense Medical Adviser to Dr.

Pierce, Invalids' Hotel, Buffalo, N. Y.

This is a large cloth bound book of 1008 pages, 8 inches long, 1 inches thick, brimful of knowledge not found in ordinary books, sent postpaid to any reader who will 6end this clipping with 20 cents. Adv.

it

99

READ

Her Guilty Secret

Greatest White Slave Story ever published. F. R. CHAMNESS, 812 North I Street

NOTICE If you wish dental services, make your appointment at once as my office will be closed August 5th to September 20th. Dr.W. A. Parke 12 North 10th St.

HPnonnnnnnnnnnnn

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

Wife Shoe m

FRIDAY n

01 AND

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SATURDAY a

D a a

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TWO

DAYS

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"7 T7 I trill) Jj

Last Time Tonight

JESSE l LASKY I in association with . I DAVID BELA6CO ' Presents the World-wide Favorite Star Blanche Sweet In a gigantic picturization of Wm. C. DeMille's Civil War Dramatic Classic, originally produced by David Belasco, entitled "The Warrens of Virginia" A tremendous moving pic

ture of battlefield suffer

ings and the domestic

tragedies of Civil strife.

Produced under the direction of Cecil B. DeMille 5c ADM. 10c

- "-"ii-u-ij-Lri-ru-uuT-iL

A R C A D TCP PHOTO-PLAYS Big Comedy "ALMOST A HERO" Drama "IN THE AMAZON JUNGLE"

KlURRETTE 2-Reel Majestic "THE WOMAN FROM WARENS" (One Reel Comedy) "WHERE BREEZES BLOW."

PALACE Five Big Reels "THE BLACK TRIANGLE" Admission, Sc.

TONIGHT That RoUicWa Coc that has made millKO people inpeople In all laugh themselves sick. - "Pecft's Bad Boy"

Two Shows Each Nlffct

i

Admission 10c 20c

THE SKY BIS Main Street, Near 1 it St.

TONIGHT

We will offer the mejniflosnt World Film Corpratlai Photoplay ; J -

The FaSir

and

The !rJ

With Mary Milr Produced by I Amusement Co. Gustave Frohnt Also One Reel Admission

I I

I

LYRI

An All Star Cast Wolcamp,

"THE TEST OF

We Will Put Our Entire Stock of White Shoes and Slippers on Sale at Prices that Are About Half of Regular.

All of our Ladies' White Shoes, val- EXTRA SPECIAL 200 prs. of odd ues to $2.50; Friday and t"J HA straps and pumps, slightly soiled and Saturday finger marked, values to $2, extra ftf Ladies' White Rubber Sole Ox- QQ Spedal Friday &nd SatUrday-' ' fords, Friday and Saturday TOt Ask To See Our White Rubber Soled Barefoot Sandals a new creation for Ladies' White Baby Doll Pumps QQn children, Misses and Ladies, and Straps, Friday and Saturday .2. Mens White and Palm Beach - Misses' arid Growing Girls Pumps and Oxfords, $2.00 regular, at PX Straps, all sizes, Friday and Qfis Tennis Slippers in White and Black for Saturday ................. . . . t0 Everybody. The Best White Cleaner to Be Had, for Sale in Our Shoe Dept.

a

a

TOWOGHT

Union Air lo

ill

Under Now Managemo)

Sam. CuyD3e Lessee

The dome will be devoted here after

a

at a price that will reach every body I'

A (rb n A IP )

0' 11

Fyir

Change of Bill

Monday & Thursday

An

Give me your support and I'll give you the SHOW Big Vaudeville For Monday

July 5th

S I

1

30c CRACKERS some i0c and 15c

a SPEND 25c AND GET GOOD SOAP. V -A--A- -trk -A- -A--A-an coon p a sc c