Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 193, 26 June 1917 — Page 6
?AGESIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, JUNE 26, 1917
Where Richmond's Society Congregates
' - Beautiful decorations of palms and bride's roses made the home of Mrs. , Joseph Iliff, unusually attractive this morning when a pretty wedding was ' solemnized at 9:30 o'clock. The bride is the daughter of Mr. Lewis Iliff ; and granddaughter of Mrs. Joseph - Iliff and the bridegroom, Mr. Robert " Nelson Land, son of Mr. 'and Mrs. Har- " ry Land. In the parlor were tall and stately palms. Hoosier roses and bride's roses were used. The cerec roony was performed before the mani tie piece which was banked with palms and ferns. The bride was lovely 1i a gown of bride's satin trimmed . handsomely in real old lace and with - gold embroidery. Her flowers were a shower boquet of bride's roses, valley lilies and ferns. The flowers were : fastened with ribbon ties. The cere- - mony was performed by Rev. J. J. Kae. pastor of First Presbyterian church, and the ring service was used, .i There were no attendants. Mr. and . Mrs. Land surprised their friends, and . instead of going west left in a motor tar for a trip through the East. They will visit in New York, Atlantic City, Washington. D. C. and in Yardley. , I'a., will be the guests of Mr. and . Mrs. E. Y. Barnes. The bride wore a teautiful suit of mustard colored jersey with sport hat to match. Upon their return they will be at Lome after August 1 at SO South Twelfth street. Both young people re prominent here. Mr. Land is in business with his father in the Wayne ' Works. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Keck, ' of Dayton. Ohio, Miss Margaret By- ' Held of Indianapolis and Mr. and Mrs. ' Morton E. Edwards of Indianapolis, were uie out of town guests. ' Mr. and Mrs. James Fry, Mr. and ; Mrs. Frank Fry and Miss Leota Corey returned last night from Indianapolis where they spent the week-end at Fort Benjamin Harrison, where Grant ; Fry is In training. Mr. Fry is the son ' of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fry. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kolp have leased
i. Tackson park for the summer and are Manning for a dance to be given Wedlesday evening, July 4. The Kolp orm ihestra will play. r Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Keck of Dayon, Ohio, were the guests of Mr. and trs. Michael Kelly today at their ionic, North Twelfth street. Mrs. Julius Bell of Kennedy. Alanma accompanied by her. two daugbters Misses Ruth and Ethel, are the zuests of her sister, Mrs. Joseph Brunei" nrr, 2217 North E street. Mr. and Mrs. George Wilcox of New- - :astle, and Mr .and Mrs. Earl Roberts 3f Knightstown, motored here Sunday f- nd had dinner at the Westcott Hotel. One of the most Interesting affairs & -t its kind given in this city for many i day by the children was a vaudeville last evening on the lawn, corner South Fifteenth and B streets given by Miss f Emily Bailey and Miss Mary Katherine Youngflesh for the benefit of the Red - 2ross association. Eighteen dollars
was realized. The children who made, cnef not later tnan Wednesday evesuch a "hit" in the performance werej ning Those who do not care for golf
MIspcs Mary Katnerme youngnesn, r.ro:iv tiauey. uanevieve wtuunuirii, Elizabeth McDonnell. Marian Chenojveth, Ruth Harrington, Alice Jean Price. Virginia Youngflesh and Edith Lewis. Masters tSanley Youngflesh and William Williams sold fudge and pop-corn during the evening. Miss Mary Katherine Youngflesh In an old-fashioned costume sang "Lest Rose of Summer," in a pretty and effective manner. Miss Emily Bailey appeared to good advan tage in a Hawaiian song and a Shep-j herdess dance. Little Misses Alice, Jean Price and Virginia Youngflesh appeared as cupids in a fairy queen act given by the children. They also gave a dance. Genevieve McDonnell costumed as a swallow gave a swallow dance and a butterfly dance which 4 Dainty Dress for Mother's Girl. ZO'58 2058 Girl's Yoke Dress. This model is fine for embroidered voile, flouncing, batiste, nainsook, challie, nun's veiling and lawn. The fullnes of the dress is gathered to the square yoke. The sleeve is loose and cut in elbow length. The Pattern is in 5 sizes: 1, 2, 3. 4, and 5 years. It requires 2 yards of 36-Inch material 5 or a 3-year size. A pattern of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 10 cents in sliver or stamps. N: Address City Size Addre$ Pattern Department, Palla-
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was unusually attractive was presented by Miss Mary Katherine Youngflesh. Miss Edith Lewis gave a pretty dcnce. The affair was so successful that the children have been asked to repeat it in some other part of the city. The work of the rehearsals and costuming was all done by the children under the supervision of Miss Bailey and Miss Youngflesh. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Caldwell entertained with a dinner Sunday at their home west of Rushville. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bell and Miss Lulu Hammon of this city, were among the guests.
The Aid society of Second English Lutheran church will give a reception Friday afternoon from 3 until 6 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Leverett Hazeltine at her home, 216 North West Third street. All friends and members of the church are invited to attend. A silver offering will be taken. The Independent club will not meet Wednesday afternoon. The meeting has been postponed indefinitely. The Boosters class of the Chester M. E. church, will give a market Saturday at the market house. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Iliff and daughtter Miss Martha Iliff.who are spending the summer at James Lake, Angola, Indiana, have come home for a brief stay and to attend the LandIliff wedding solemnized this morning. Mrs. Lillian Cooke has returned from Indianapolis, where she spent several days with her sister, Miss Agnes Horton and her husband's sister. Miss Judith Lowry, who are with the Stuart Walker players at the Murat Theatre. " , The Penny club will meet Wednesdday afternoon with Mrs. Kohler at her home, 28 Laurel street. Miss Hazel Bowers assisted by Miss Thelma Kendrlc gave a lawn party last evening at the home of Miss Bowers, Benton Heights. The law was decoratetd with - Japanese lanterns. Twenty-two boys and girls attended. The wedding of Mr. William Taylor and Miss Rose Mercurio, will be sol emnized Wednesday morning in St. Mary's church. The wedding of Mr. Hugh Foss and Miss Gaynelle Ha gem an will be sol emnized Wednesday morning at the home of the bride's mother, in Cambridge City. Both young people are well known here. The bride-elect is organist at Reid Memorial church. Thursday at the Country club, Mrs. Harry Needham is giving a Red Cross golf party for all women of the club. One cent a stroke will be asked and the members will play for nine holes. Expert players must play with one club. At 1 o'clock a buffet luncheon will be served. All persons who desire luncheon are asked to notify the ,nav brlng theIr knitting. Miss Emerald Hasecoster motored to Miss Emerald Hassecoster motored to Cincinnati this morning. Mr. and Mrs. Leland Shafer are the parents of a baby son born at their home in Peru. Mrs. Shafer is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Zuttermeister. The Ladies Bible class of the Trinity Lutheran church will meet Wednesday f Un M Dan WeD 431 atP(pt Kinsey street. Mrs. Carrie Bennett and daughter Miss Marjorie, of North Eleventh street, have gone to Manitou Beach, Michigan. . Miss Marguerite Hasemeier has rereturned from Cincinnati where she had a series of recitals. A feature of the interesting events was the Thanhauser number played on three violins and two pianos. Miss Hasemeier will receive pupils in violin at her home, South Twenty-firet street. One of the elaborate social functions of the week is the party which Misses Martha and Ruth Scott are giving Wednesday afternoon at the Country club. There will be thirtyfive guests. Several persons from out of the city will attend. A pretty wedding was solemnized this . morning at 10:30 o'clock when Mr. George Schutte and Miss Flora Sperling, daughter of Mrs. Emma Sperling, were married at the St. Paul's Lutheran parsonage by tue Rev. F. W. Rohlflng. The ring ceremony was used. The bride wore a traveling suit with hat to match and her flowers were a corsage bouquet. Miss Clara Sperling, a sister of the bride, was maid of honor. Mr. John Schutte, brother of the bridegroom, was best man. Mr. and Mrs! Schutte left this morning for Chicago on a wedding trip. They will reside In this city. Guests at the wedding were Mr. and Mrs Henry Schutte, Mrs. Emma Sperling, Mr. Rudolph Sperling. Mr. John Schutte, Mr. Lawrence Schutte, Miss Violet Schutte, Miss Martha Schutte, Miss Alice Schutte, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Conner and Mr., and Mrs. Raymond Sperling. A meeting of the Mary F. Thomas W..C. T. U. was held yesterday afternoon in the dome room at the Morrls-son-Reeves library. Mrs. Naplinger had the scripture reading. Mrs. Frank Wearer offered prayer. Reports were read as follows: Nine notices in the press : Flower and relief, 269 bouquets: 206 cards with scripture text distributed; $20 in money; 2 lectures; 6,296 pages of literature distributed; one purity meeting and 26 tidings quizzes were conducted. A study of the constitution was continued. In two weeks a meeting will be held at I the home of Mrs. R. W. Randle, East Main street. The Woman's Loyal club will meet Wednesday evening in the Moose hall at 7:30 o'clock. All members are Invited to attend. Guests from Union City, Muucle,
at the dance to be given Thursday evening in the Pythian temple by the members of the Delta Theta Tau sorority. There will be several feature dances. The committee in charge is composed of Misses Mary Foley, Miriam Morgan and Dorothy Clark. Harry Frankel and a Jass band will furnish the cabaret and music for the occasion. The Ladies Auxiliary of , the Knights of St. John will give a card party this evening. Masters George and Frank Cunningham have returned from .Chicago where they were visiting relatives. Miss Harriet Elliott of Milford, Ind., is the guest of Dr. and Mrs. W. J. Smith. Mr. O. E. Donnelly of Cincinnati, and Miss Anna Horn spent Sunday ia Hagerstown with relatives. The Tirzah Aid society of the Ben Hur lodge held an indoor picnic Sat
urday evening at the home of Mrs. j $7,227.73; Harrison township, $2,293.Anna Holcomb, 435 South Thirteenth j 41 ; Jackson township, $6,684.58; New street. At seven o'clock supper was Garden township, $7.35.16; Perry served to forty, including the aid township, $5,114.90; Washington, $10,members, their husbands and fam-1961.76; Wayne township; $4,029.42. ilies; after which the evening was Boston, $464.62; Cambridge City, spent with music and games. Those ! $7,920.43 ; Centerville is $1,951.33; present were: Mr. and Mrs. Abel and j Dublin, $1,050.57; East Germantown, daughter, Mr. Abel being the new$12960; Fountain City, $667.22; lodge deputy; Mr. and Mrs. Leroy j Qreensfork, $67S.86; Hagerstown, Hummer and family. Mr. and Mrs. j $1.02,293; Milton. $819.78; Mount Aure? and daughter, Mr. and Mrs-! burn, $306.12; Richmond. $102,293.33; ? - ,amSr aDd ,family.' .vIr "d Spring Grove. $368.33; Whitewater, mrs. William Jones, Mrs. Arthur Wil-, B,
ll'.no TirilH D.L..U. , II.. el Ames and family, Mrs. Anna Hoicomb. Miss Maud Holcomb, Mr. and ' Mrs. Harry Jordan, Mr. and Mrs. How- i ard Frame and family, Mr. and Mrs. Damon Mitchell and family, Misses Elizabeth and Gertrude Schneider. Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Boyd Millikan have issued invitations for a dance to be given at their home, North Delaware street, in Indianapolis, Tuesday evening. July 3, in honor of Miss Margaret Grayson and their niece, Miss Catherine Millikan of Arkadelphia, Ark., who will come soon to be their guest, and for their son, Gaylord B. Millikan. The Boyd's have many iriends in this city. The Mission Circle of the TJniversalist church will meet Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Lidia Roser at her home, South Tenth street Wednesday evening the Omicron Pi Sigma fraternity will give a dinner for members and pledges at the Hotel Westcott. Mrs. Fred Miller will be hostess Wednesday afternoon for a meeting of Circle Five of the aid society of the First Presbyterian church. Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Johnson and daughter Miss Edna Johnson, have issued a number of invitations for a reception to be given Saturday evening at their home. East Main street, as a special courtesy to Captain and Mrs. Fred Bates Johnson, who were recently married. Among the out of town guests will be Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Wagner, of Terre Haute, parents of the bride. The hours of receiving will he from 7:30 to 8:30 and from 9 to 10:30 o'clock. Several local persons will assist the hostess in entertaining. Captain and Mrs. Johnson will come over Saturday from Fort Benjamin Harrison and spend the week-end here. Miss Margaret Finch has returned from Red Key, Indiana, where sh visited relatives during the. week end. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cook, South Seventh street, celebrated their golden wedding anniversary today. They observed open house this afternoon for all their friends. This evening an informal reception will be given at the Cook home. - The annual picnic of the Alice Carey club will be held all-day Thursday at the home of Mrs. Charles Hanes, South Twenty-third and E streets. The mem bers may come as early in the morning as they care to. A picnic dinner will be served at the noon hour. A dinner was given Sunday in honor of Mr. E. B. McMahan at his home, 419 Pearl street,' in celebration of his seventy-fifth birthday anniversary. The guests included the children, great-
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grandchildren, Rev. R. L. Seman and, wife of First M. E. church, Mr. andj Mrs. Ora Martin and two daughters,
and Miss Lambert of Centerville. Mrs. Elizabeth Mount who has been ill at the home of her granddaughter,! Mrs. Harry Nelson in Connersville, for a few weeks as a result of injuries she received in a fall is unimproved. RICHMOND TO GET $102,293 IN TAXES Following is the apportionment of the spring taxes paid before May 1, 1917, to the township and corporations of the county, as Issued by County Treasurer Weidner; Abington, $3,491.93; Boston township, $6,727.83; Center township, $9,101.83; Clay township, $5,433.16; Dalton township. $3,733.95; Franklin township, $6,263.28; Greene township, I '1U'"" To the school organizations the ap portionment is as follows: Cambridge City, $4,962.71; Centerville, $2,204.40; Dublin, $1,650.90; Hagerstown, $2,827.14; Richmond, $88,917.25; Spring Grove, $224.67. It has been estimated by a European scientist that the commercial value of the electricity in a flash of lightning lasting one one-thousandth of a second is 29 cents. LADIES! LOOK YOUNG, DARKEN GRAY HAIR Use Grandma's Sage Tea and Sulphur Recipe and Nobody Can Tell. Brush It Through Hair. Gray hair, however handsome, denotes advancing age. We all know the advantages of a youthful appearance. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. When it fades, turns gray and looks streaked, just a few applications of Sage Tea and Sulphur enhances its appearance a hundred-fold. Don't stay gray! Look young! Either prepare the recipe at home or get from any drug store a 50-cent bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," which is merely the old-time recipe improved by the addition of other ingredients. Thousands of folks recommend this ready-to-use preparation, because it darkens the hair beautifully, besides no one can possibly tell, as it darkens so naturally and evenly. You moisten a sponge or soft brush with It, drawing this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears; after another application or two, its natural color is restored and it becomes thick, glossy and lustrous, and you appear years younger. Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound is a delightful toilet requisite. It is not intended for the cure, mitigation or prevention of disease. Adv. 7 Ever see a woman huntinc V bugs? Imaginary bugs are; almost as bad as real ones. Don't worry, kills the bug. Deadly to fleas, chick aa iica, flies, anis, roechrs. mirths, bed bugs, etc. Packed in sealed glass bottle. Nan-poisonous. 10, 25 sod 50 eent, everywhere or BLACK. FLAG 3 OS W. Lombard St.. Baltimore, Md. ra a is. Wnte for t ree airy Story Book
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FINE WASH SKIRTS (ft 98C FIwEAIfTAsSH TOC WASH WAISTS I c$3-50 value $1.50 VALUE Summer Dresses 2 for $1 11 gil98
How Townships Gave
Township Subscription Aoington $ 312.50 Boston 608.95 Center 800.00 Clay 630.41 Dalton 300.00 Greene 608.90 . Harrison 413. C5 Jackson 2,760.00 Jefferson 77S.40 Franklin 476.55 Perry 1.137.00 New Garden ! 767.46 Webster 260.35 Washington 1,195.04 Wayne .....t 1.18S.00 Richmond 19,627.18, Total ....$31,863.84 14 Townships 11,048.00 Wayne Township 20,815.00 Total Amount Subscribed. .$31,863.84 Apportionment 24,500.00
Excess. TWO COUNTIES MUST GIVE 35 TO ARMY Wayne and Union counties must supply thirty-five men in order to do their share in recruiting week, during which an effort is being made to raise 70,000 men for the regular army.. Until Tuesday noon, just three had been sent on by Sergeant Warner, in charge of the Richmond station. Two of these had been in to see him before
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Percent 89 125 54 ' 115 , 100 106 170 103 67 74 263 103 78 135 45 140 $ 484.00 1,467.00 645.00 300 00 568.00 ' 243.00 2,651.00 1,136.00 636.00 431.00 742 00 328.00 885.00 2.615.00 13,953.00 10,775.00 16,568.00 102 125 $7,363.00 the week's drive began, says the sergeant . Unless there is a sudden increase in the number who enlist for the remainder of the week, the Richmond office is not going to get its quota. Walter F. Miller, 24 years old, was sent to Indianapolis by Sergeant Warner this morning. For compressing air an Italian has invented an engine without a fly wheel, a piston being driven back and forth in a cylinder by oil fuel and pushing the air ahead of it at each end. Oil WE ARE THE AGENTS FOR "Six" and
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Women Given Equal Rights, Even on Links iiis mi . CHICAGO. June 26. Equal rights for men and women on the golf links have been established by the Calumet Country club which today announced plans for three new nine bole courses. When the club moves to its new home at 175th street women members who now are not permittted to play on Saturday afternoons, Sundays and holidays will have the right to play every day, the same as men. It is said the Calumet is the first club in the Chicago district to extend full privileges of the links to women.
Today's Beauty Hint I It is not necessary to shampoo your hair so frequently if it is entirely and. properly cleansed each time by the use of a really good shampoo. The easiest to use and quickest drying shampoo that we can recommend to our readers is one that brings out all the natural beauty of the hair and may be enjoyed at very little expense, by. dissolving a teaspoonful of . conthrox, which can be obtained from any druggist in a cup of hot water. This makes a full cup of shampoo liquid, enough so It iseasy to apply it to all the hair instead of just the top of the head. This when rubbed into the scalp and onto every strand of hair, chemically dissolves all impurities. It is very soothing and cooling in its action, as well as beneficial to both scalp and hair. After rinsing out the lather so created, you will ind the scalp is fresh, clean and free from dandruff, while the hair dries quickly and evenly, developing a bright luster and-a soft fluffiness that makes it seem very heavy. Adv. 3
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