Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 222, 30 July 1917 — Page 6

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. MONDAY, JULY 30, 1917

PAGE SIX

ociety News BereiB'What Yonr Neighbor is Doing Here am f!tnh Tpa TLfiiM. TWanees. Fb-Kmtri-

ments, Weddings and Chorch Societies about which Richmeed Women Axe TfcBrinc.

Misses Olive Lewis and Gladys Bailey will give a card party tomorrow afternoon at the home of the latter in compliment to Miss Irene Gorman who will be married to Edwin Ryan, Saturday. About twenty guests will be present. Thursday afternoon Miss Miriam Krone will -be hostess at a knitting party at her home In Reeveston, for Tdlss Corman. Mr. and Mrs. Hassal T. Sullivan, formerly of this city, but now living in Indianapolis, were guests of" relatives here Sunday. The following persons have gone to the Elliott cottage on Crooked Lake for a two weeks vacation: Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rund, Mrs. James Lewis, Miss Virginia Clements, Harry Clements, Miss Gladys Stephens of Centervllle and F. O. Miller of Hagerstown. Ansel Elliott has been at Crooked Lake for several weeks and will remain for some time. A picnic supper and social will be given Tuesday evening on the lawn of the East Main street Friends' church In compliment to Rev. M. S. Hinckle who Is leaving soon. The social will also be a reception for all new members of the church. All members of the congregation are cordially invited to come with filled baskets. The supper will 'be served at six o'clock. Announcement has been made of the approaching wedding of Miss Leona Smith and Robert Jackson, both of this city. Mr. Jackson is a clerk at the Pennsylvania station. Miss Smith Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Smith. The wedding will take place the first of September, tember. Mrs. Howard Merrill will entertain the V. V. club members this evening at her home, 105 North Thirteenth street. Miss Pauline Strauss" of Springfield, O., Is the guest of Miss Miriam Hutton at her home on North Fifteenth street.

Mr. and Mrs. Perry Beecher of

Kankakee, I1L, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Everett McConaha, of North Eleventh street. Miss Bertha Walterman has returned from a short visit with relatives in Cleves, O. The Union Bible class of First English Lutheran church, will give an ice cream social Tuesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Onie Williams. The public is invited. An ice cream social will be given Wednesday evening In the West Richmond Friends church. The proceeds will go to the French Reconstruction fund. Miss Lela Manford will entertain members of the A. N. C. club this evening at her home on North Sixteenth street. The evening will be spent in knitting and sewing.

Misses Esther Bundy and Ruth Pierson, of Spiceland, Ind., who have been the guests of Mrs. F. G. Haisley

have returned to their homes. Mrs. Edwin Flook left Sunday morning for her home in Saginaw, Michafter an extended visit with her par-

A Pretty Dress for the Little Miss.

2129 Girls' Dress with Bolero In j Either of Two Outlines, and with Two Styles of Sleeve. (Waist In Round or Square Neck Outline.) This is a very pleasing model and one that will lend Itself readily to various materials or combinations of materials. The bolero may be omitted or may be cut short under the arms, as in the back view. Batiste, embroideries, voile, challie, lawn and crepe are nice for this style.' The Pattern is cut In 4 sizes: 4, 6, S and 10 years. Size 8 requires 1 yard for the bolero and 44 yards for the dress, of 27-inch material. A pattern of this illustration mailed to any address on receipt of 10 cents In silver or stamps.

Name .. , Address

City

Size

Addreas Pattern Department, Palladium.

ents, Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Scott She was accompanied home by Miss Florence Spaulding who will be her guest for a short time. Mrs. Flook and Miss Spaulding will stop in Springfield, O., for a short visit before going to Saginaw. t Mr. and Mrs. Harry Turner have returned home after visiting friends and relatives In Newcastle fo several days. Messrs. William -Loar and V. L. Mendenhall of Newcastle, were guests of friends here yeaterday. The Epworth League of Grace M. E. church will give a Japanese lawn fete at the home of Horace and Clarence Kramer, 402 and 1406 Main street tonight. The public is Invited. Mr. and Mn. F. Robert McFall left Sunday morning for an extended trip through Minnesota, and Wisconsin and points in the east. Marc Shofer of Dayton, spent the week end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George H. Shofer on West Main street Miss Elizabeth Morris who has been attending Wellesley college, arrived home Saturday, to spend the summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Elwood Morris, of South Fourteenth street. Miss Helen Yeager has gone to Muncie for a visit with her sister, Mrs. Howard Clements. Mrs. Elizabeth Kirby of Logansport is visiting her aunt, Mrs. Edwin White of East Main street Miss Emma 'Fetta who has been visiting in Cincinnati, O., has returned home. She motored home with Mr. and Mrs. Harry Roberts of Chicago. Joseph Pollack, a well known cellist in the Chicago Symphony, spent the day with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fetta. Mr. and Mrs. George Gard and little daughter, Phoebe Jane, and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schettel motored to Muncie Sunday. Henry Fuller, Wilber Fuller, Clarence Schneider and Harry Kehlenbrink were in Cincinnati Sunday attending the baseball game. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Hasemeler and daughters, Elizabeth and Marguerite, motored to Lake Wawassee to spend their vacation. Mrs. Charles Smith, of Indianapolis, is the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. If. Bradley, 215 North Sixteenth street.

Mr.and Mrs. Henry Goldfinger have

returned from a three weeks motor trip through the East Women of a euchre club entertained their husbands at an all day picnic in Walker's Grove, Sunday, west of the city. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sschramm, Mr. and Mrs. Elijah Brokamp, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stephens, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brokamp, Mrs. Ethel Sharkltt. Mr. and Mrs.

Bert Stephens, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Ste

phens, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fowler, and Homer McFerson.

Quaker City Temple No. 14 held it'3

seventeenth annual picnic Sunday at

the house of Mr. and Mrs. Francis

Rich, northwest of Richmond. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. William

Knorre of Gas City, Mrs. Fannie

Handley of Muncie, Messers and Meads mes, J. W. Bosler, Walter Sener,

Oscar Porterfield, Elsworth Larmore, Charles Beverlin, Ruben Rich, Frank King, Charles E. Vinton, Francis Rich,

Elliott F. Austin, William Shinn, Sr.

Frank S. Murley, Emmet Moss. Will

iam Seaney, Emory Evans, William

Shinn, Jr., Edgar Adams, Sam Culbert-

son, Mesdames Jane Herrald, Mollie

Bishop, Maggie Brown. Misses Grace

Harris, Marie Evans, Lilliam Carpen

ter, Henrietta Vinton, Dela Vinton,

Helen King, Francis Culbertson, Alene Adams, Virginia Shinn, Erma Moss, Luvile Seaney, Messrs. Charles Herrald, Leroy Vinton, Myron Murley, Harry Klser, Robert Starr, Dale Rich. John W. King. Willis Culberson and Grayson Murley. The picnic of the Women's Aid society of Second English " Lutheran church has been postponed. - The regular meeting of the society will be held In the church Thursday afternoon. At that time a date for the picnic will be decided upon. , Section No. 3 of the Women's Aid society of the Grace M. E. church will give a social Tuesday evening on the lawn at the home of Miss Carrie Lesh, 215 North Eighth street. In case of rain the social will be held in the lower flat of the Lesh apartments. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Zuttermelster and family have returned home after an extended trip through Tennessee, Illinois sand Michigan. The trip was made by automobile and by boat Miss Helen G. Barens of Indianapolis is visiting Miss Mae Appleton at Ler home on South Ninth street William Price has returned to Munising, Mich., after a three weeks' visit with his mother, Mrs. Mary Price. Price is attending the Wyman School of the Woods, taking a course in forestry. He has been studying there for a year. Mr. and Mrs. George Paulson, who live south of the city, entertained the following persons at dinner yesterday: Mr. and Mrs. Colin Shaefer and son James of Richmond, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Davis, Master Gaar Davis, Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Davenport, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Davenport, Miss Nellie Davenports Miss Fannie Clark, Mrs. Henry Campbell and daughter, Nancy, Mrs. Dora Campbell, Myron Davenport and Hugh Williams. Miss Florence Muegenberg was pleasantly surprised last week by a number of her friends celebrating her birthdav anniversary. The evening

was spent in games and music. Those

who attended were Amy Doner, Mary West, Viola Earnest. America Thornton, Anna Rohe, Anna Unechter, Thelma Duvall, Eva Whalen, Lula Holloway, Florence Schwizer and Hortense West. Miss Olive Dolllns, who has been visiting friends in Richmond for several days has returned to Indianapolis. Miss Dollins is taking training at the Methodist Hospital at that place.

AMERICAN FRIENDS

Continued From Page One. Jones, when he read this letter to the boys in training at Haverford, "the French, men and women, do a lot more kissing than we do here." "This old lady," Leeds' letter says, "had been living in a cellar temporarily roofed over for many months when the Friends built a house for her. She had brought up eight grand-children and now lives with a grand-daughter and several great grandchildren: Her home Is now surrounded by a wellcultivated garden, and its red-tiled roof makes a really attractive home. It is one of the wooden houses built at Dole. Her gratitude for what had been done for her and the clear evidence of a strong bond of affection and understanding established between her family ad the Friends was most touching and was most typical of what we saw In many other places." Greeted by Tots. "At Villers-aux-Venls Baker, who was showing us about was enthusiastically greeted by a group of children who followed the automobile to its stopping-place and stormed over it and him as if he were a favorite uncle returning from a long absence." Seeds, chickens, and rabbits have been provided to peasants who lost their all in the German invasion. Rabbits form a more important source of meat supply than chickens, for grain is scarce and the rabbits thrive on alfalfa and other greens. "The extent of the agricultural work," the letter says, "can be judged by the fact that they have had as many as one hundred and fifty mowing machines. Most of these have now been given to various villages where they are intended to be used by the entire community, but thirty of them are still retained and loaned directly. All of the one hundred and fifty are

Wednesday Will Be

H. DAY

M(D)LPEM9 Watch This Space Tomorrow for Particulars

When You Want

You Can Get What You Want of Edmunds Optometrist

10 North 9th Street.

Phone 2765.

What can be more of a wonder than the ttajr Infant. Its entire being is new and Dtranf e and glorious. Millions of woman have used the splendid penetrating preparation, "Mother's Friend", before baby is born. By Its use tho muscles relax naturally -whoa baby arrrves. Nervousness and the usual tendener to stretchinc and bearing down pains Is avoided. Write to The Bradneld

Regulator Co., Dept. M . 205 Tamar Bide Atlanta, Ga. They will sebd you a valuable book. "Hotbernood and the Baby", free. It Is not only very interesting, but it will make you helpful to otiiers. By no chance fan to get "Mother's Friend" from your druggist. It is indispensable to expectant mothers and is absolutely and entirely safe.

1 Romance ofjfcfa&turQ

TALBOT MUNDY

HM Bar Tm Be

It was a bold answer, and Ismail laughedknowing well that neither of them believed a word of it at that moment. Onlv . eiLrh thniieht. better

of the other, that the one should have

carea to ask. and that the other should be willing to give the lie to a fear that crawled and could be felt Too many men are willing to admit they are afraid. Too many would rather condemn and despise than ask

followed up to see that they are kept in rapair and are being used. Have Threshing Machines. They have forty-two reapers and binders which are used In a similar manner; and five motor, and five horse-power threshing machines. Te men go out with the threshing machines and operate them, living when they do so with the families for whom they are working. They also have a Mogul tractor which pulls three plows. For all of this work they charge only for the gasoline used. Throughout this region a very large part of the agricultural machinery was destroyed when the villages were wrecked and in addition there is a great scarcity of farm labor and horses. The Friends distributed forty-five tons of potatoes for seed this spring." The main bath-house of the old resort hotel at Sermaize now serves as a garage and automobile repair shop; and the Friends clothing stores are installed behind the stage of the little theatre. Dining-room and kitchen are In the old amusement building. In all this work the Friends have struggled against the handicap of strange people and a strange tongue, of the unlimited red taps which seems necessary In war-time, the over-strain of the French railroads; and a certain very natural suspicion of pacifists and men of military age engaged In civil work. But they have won the confidence and admiration of the people for whom they have been working. This is the kind of work the American Friends now training at Haverford are preparing for. In the unit of one hundred men are about twety who are ot Friends, but whose opposition to war and desire to serve in other ways are keen. The work is under the direction of the American Friends' Snrvice Committee of No. 20 South Twelfth Street. Philadelphia, of which Vincent D. Nicholson is Executive Secretary. Submitted by Will Jenkins.

and laugh. But It Is on the edges of eternity that men find each other out, and sympathize. Ismail went down on his hands and foot at a time in front of him and carrying it in his teeth by the bail the last part of the way. It seemed like an hour before he stood up, nearly a hundred yards away on the far side, and yelled for King to follow. The wind snatched the yells away, but the waving lantern beckoned him, and King knelt down in the dark. It happened that he laid his hand on a loose stone, the size of his head, near the edge. He shoved It over and listened. He listened for a minute but did not hear, it strike anything, and the shudder, that he could not repress, came from the middle of his backbone and spread outward through each fibre of his being. If he had delayed another second his courage would have failed; he began at once to crawl to where Ismail stood swinging the light There was room on the ledge for his knees and no more. Toes and fingers were overside. He sat down as on horseback, and transferred both

GOOD RUBBER RINGS IMPORTANT IN HOME CANNING The fate of the food material canned or preserved at home may depend upon the quality of the rubber rings used on the glass jars. If the rubbers are of poor quality, the food may spoil. Good rubber rings for the average pint and quart jar, glass top, etc., should be not less than 1-4 nor more than 5-16 of an inch wide, and 2 inches on the inside diameter, and be cut 12 to the inch, that is, 12 rubber rings placed side by side will measure one Inch in thickness. They should be able to stand up under sterilization in boiling hot water or in steam under pressure for at least three hours without injury to the rubber. Good Rubbers will stretch and return promptly to place without changing the inside diameter. They should also be reasonably firm, and able to stand bending without breakage.

slippers to bis pockets, and then went forward again with bare feet, waiting whenever the wind snatched at him with redoubled fury, to lean against it and grip the rock with numb fingers. Ismail swung the lamp, for reasons best known to himself, and half-way over King sat astride the ridge again to shout to him to hold It still. But Ismail did not understand him. "Khinjan graves are deep!" he howled back. "Fear and the shadow of death are one!" j He swung the lamp even more violently, as if it were-a charm that could exorcise fear and bring a man over safely. The shadows danced until his brain reeled, and King swlre he would thrash the fool as soon as he could reach him. He lay flat downward on the rock and crawled like an insect the remainder of the way. And as if aware of his intention, Ismail started to hurry on while there was yet a yard or two to crawl, and anger not being a load worth carrying nor revenge a thing permitted to interfere with the sirkar's business. King let both die. Hunted by the wind, they ran round

a bold shoulder of cliff Into another black-dark tunnel. There the-win4 died, swallowed in a hundred fissures, but the track grew worse and steeper until they had to cling with bod . hands and climb and now and then Ismail set the lantern on a ledge and lowered bis girdle to help King up. Sometimes he stood on King's shoulder in order to reach a higher level. They climbed for an hour and dropped at last panting, on a ledge, after squeezing themselves under the corner of a boulder. The lantern light shone on a tiny trickle of cold water, and there Ismail drank deep, like a bull, before signing to King to imitate him. To be continued

ASK FOR and GET The Original Malted Milk Substitutes Cost YOU Sams Prtcsv

NOTICE

Having sold my shoe store at 718 Main Street, I desire to close up all accounts owing and take this means to request that everyone knowing themselves to be indebted to the store to call at the store and make such payments promptly. I will greatly appreciate your co-operation.

Bath Tubs vs. Autos

Do you know it is estimated that there are more than three automobiles in Indiana for every bath tub (and it is said that the proportion is even worse in the benighted states beyond our borders) . A fine automobile may show the possession of money, but cleanliness is a sure indication of real refinement that should go with wealth. Be Fine As Well As Fine Appearing Our modern facilities for personal cleanliness and comfort are installed in a sanitary manner and you will be proud of their appearance. Put in a bath outfit, raise the proportion of bath tubs to autos in our state and learn how much comfort and satisfaction you've been missing these many years. Bathe Often Buy No Tires No Gasoline Chas. Johanning PLUMBER 11th and Main Streets

HANER'S JEWELRY STORE Bracelet Watches THE NEW WALTHAM WRIST WATCH WITH DISAPPEARING EYE This is the gem of the convertible bracelet Watches. The invention of the disappearing eye makes it possible to wear this watch as a Bracelet Watch, and merely closing the eye, convert it into a regular watch, which can be used on a Chatelaine Pin, Sautour Chain, Long Chain or Fob. What could make a more practicable and attractive gift than one of these quality Watches. May we show you? Haner's 810 MAIN STREET

Attend the Bargain Frolic

Tuesday Morning, the Last

Day of Our Bi

gS

Ladies! Just glance at these prices! They tell a story a story of surprising bargains in Dresses and Waists. Come early you know that such values will attract a throng of early buyers and you must be on hand along with the crowd to get your share.

Waists

No need to describe them. No need to mention former prices. Suffice it to say that you'll find some of the biggest bargains in these four lots of waists that it's ever been your pleasure to buy. 25c, 50c, $1.00, $1.95 Out With Them! 15 Ladies' Light Colored Wool Suits, $10 and $20 values Tuesday Bargain Frolic, $5.00 One table Odd Waists, Middies, Wash Skirts, etc.; don't miss this bargain table, choice ...$1.00

Three Groups of Dresses at Absurdly Low Prices Silk, White Voile, Colored Voiles and Pongee. Group No. I. $10.00 values, Tuesday sale $5.00 Group No. II. $15 and $20 values, Tuesday Sale $10.00 Group No. Ill $22 to $25 values, Tuesday sale $15.00

Remember a Ten Per Cent Discount prevails throughout the store. The big Summer Clearance Ends Tuesday.

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