Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 87, 21 February 1918 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. THURSDAY, FEB. 21, 1918
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Friday is meatless day.. Plan your meals for tomorrow keeping In mind that all red meats must be conserved. The protein element found in meat 13 also present in large proportions In eggs, fish, milk, cheese, dried peas, beans, and peanuts, and It is upon these foods that we chiefly depend for our meat substitutes.
Mrs. H. S. James entertained . the the boys and girls of her Sundayschool class last evening with a Oeorgo Washington party. The house, was decorated in patriotic colors. Large American flags were draped about the rooms, and red, white and blue streamers hung from the chandeliers with here and there, flags of the allied nations. Miss Edith Hunt, dressed as Martha Washington, served tea in an upstairs room. The room was lighted with a pale blue light. The evening was spent in games and conteats after which supper was served by the hostess. A cleverly arranged pian of finding partners by using the names of the presidents of the United States and their wives, wa used. The guests last evening were Miss Edith Hunt, Miss Grace Hunt, Miss Helen Cook, Miss Bernice Laymon, Miss Edith Hollingsworth, Miss Ruby Hatfield. Miss Theresa Crebb, Miss Helen Firth. Merle Williams, Ernest Hoos, Cecil Wine, Walter Frame, and Clifford Hale. . Miss Victoria Llndemuth will be hostess for a meeting of . the Alice Carey club at her home tomorrow afternoon. The meeting will be in the form of a George Washington party, and all members are urged to be present. A patriotic program will be given. Mrs. W. O. Ryan was hostess for a rretty Martha Washington party-given by the womn of the First Metbo tlist church. The affair was one of the regular silver circles and forty women were present. The house was r.ttractively decorated with American Hags. The women spent the afternoon knitting. A luncheon was served of coffee, red, white and blue cakes and candies. The Joint meeting of the congregation and the Olive Branch Bible class c.f First EDglish "Lutheran church held last evening in the church, was well attended. Preceding the congregational meeting a picnic supper was served. A program followed, consisting of vocal numbers by Mrs. Clara Jgelman and Mrs. Fred Bartel; quartet by Mrs. F. W. Krueger, Mrs. Bartel, O. P. Nusbaum and Clyde Gardner. Interesting talks were made by Rev. FA. Dressel and Adam Bartel. After the program the Olive Branch class held a business meeting and elected the following officers: E. M. Hass. teacher; president, Adam Bartel: vice-president, Mrs. William Sudhoff: secretary, Mrs. Emma Crivel; assistant secretary, Henry Knollenberg; treasurer. Mrs. Sine, and librarian,Eben Louck. Rev. Ellas Minter, who retired as president was made president emeritus. It was decided to hold meetings quarterly instead of once a year. The next meeting will be on Easter Monday. The Four Corner Club will meet tomorrow afternoon with Mrs. William Schneider at her home, 1023 South Eighth street. Miss Helen Slick, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Perry. Slick, and Arthur W. Ford, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Ford, both of this city were married yesterday afternoon by Rev. Addison Parker at his home. The bride wore an attractive tailored suit of grey with a corsage of roses and lillies of the valley. There were no attendants. After the ceremony a turkey dinner was served at the home of the bride's parents. The dining room was attractively decorated with cut flowers and ferns, the color scheme of green and white being carried out. A large bouquet of white roses and ferns formed the centerpiece for the table. An immense wedding cake also adorned the table. Covers were laid for forty guests, among whom were Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Slick. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Slick. Mr. and Mrs. George Slick, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Ford, Mr. and Mrs. J L. Blossom, Mr. and Mrs. II. C. Slick, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Hollingsworth. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mabey and family. Miss Dorothy Slick, Miss Virena Slick and John Slick. The bride and groom left last evening for Washington. D. C. where they will be guests of Mr. and- Mrs. Warren Lucas for several weeks. They will reside in Richmond and be at home to their friends after March 10. Mrs. J. H. Broomhall of Hamilton, O., is the guest of her daughter, Mrs. Roy Dennis. A penny supper will be given tomorrow evening at the Second PresbyterIan church from 5:30 to 8 'clock. A tempting menu is prepared and the public is invited. The W. C. B. class held an all day meeting yesterday with Mrs. Will Henderson at her home. Ten members were present. The day was spent in making comforts and sewing for the North End Mission. At noon a picnic dinner was served. The regular monthly meeting of the class will be held March 6 with Mrs. George Mansfield. Members of the Eastern Star will give a George Washington party Saturday evening In the Masonic Temple. Guests are requested to come dressed in colonial costumes. Dancing will form the chief entertainmenffor the evening. - v. ' Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kolp will givft their regular Friday evening assembly dance in the I. O. O. F. hall tomorrow evening ft nine o'clock. Theis threepiece orchestra will furnish music for the dancers. The Frances E. Willard W. C. T. U. will meet tomorrow afternoon with Mrs. Pettis Reid at her home in Wayne apartments. After a short business session, the women will sew for the Red Cross. Mr. and Mm. Harold Powell have relumed from Newcastle where they
have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ingalls for several days. Mrs. Harry Naiden of Indianapolis, is the guest of her parents, Mr: and Mrs. A. R. McMinn. West Richmond W. C. T. U. met yesterday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Harlowe Lindley. There was a large attendance and an unusually Interesting program was given. The program was a memorial to Frances E. Willard. It was voted to send two dollars to the fund for a memorial to her which will be erected. During the afternoon the prohibition law of Indiana was discussed. The next meeting will be with Mrs. S. E. Nicholson at her home, 614 Southwest A street. Mrs. E. E. Meyer who has been spending the winter in Milwaukee, with relatives, returned home Tuesday. Miss Thelma Sells of Hagerstown who is attending DePaw university, has been pledged to the Alpha Omlcron Pi sorority. Members of the Penny club met yesterday afternoon with Mrs. George Bishop at ber home. The afternoon was spent in sewing and mending for school children. Tomorrow ' afternoon the club will work at the Red Cross rooms. On March 6 the club will hold its annual officers' luncheon at the home of Mrs. Lew CarringHome Economics class of, District No. 6 met yesterday afternoon with Miss Alice Macy at her home on College avenue. An interesting program as given by Miss Macy and Miss Nina Short, Wayne county food demonstrator. Miss Short gave a talk on "Conservation and Substitution" and then told of the courses offered in the short course at Purdue University in agriculture and home economics. Miss Macy gave a talk on "Why We Should Save Wheat and How to Save It." The guests at the meeting were Miss Hobson of Earlham ' and Mrs. William Macy. The meeting February 27 will be with Mrs. Emma Landis. Clarence Doyle who is located at Camp Sevier in North Carolina, has been spending the week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Doyle. He will return to camp, Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Percy Sprague left this morning for St. Augustine, Fla., for a several weeks' visit Annual guest day will be observed by the Athenea club tomorrow afternoon with a meeting in the art gallery at high school. Mrs. M. F. Johnson will give a talk on the Indiana artists whose works are on-exhibit. Section No. 1 of Ladies and Pastor's union of Grace M. E. church, met yesterday afternoon with Mrs. Charles Addleman at her home. Nineteen members were present. After the regular business session, a social hour followed. The next meeting will be in March with Miss Emma Lindemuth. Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Davidson have returned from Newcastle, where they have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Kendall.
WILL ELECT OFFICERS
The annual congregational business meeting of-Reid Memorial church will be held Thursday c-venlng at 7:30 o'clock at the church. Reports will be received and officers for the coming year elected. All members of the church are urged to be present.
JUNIORS NAME OFFICERS
Officers as follows were named High school: President, Fred VanAllen; vice-president. Earl KeiEker;. secretary, Miss Helen Eggemeyer; treasurer, Miss Lois Johannlng. Miss Emilie Maue, head of the art department, is faculty sponsor.
WORST WIMEH IX YEARS Snow, win4 and extreme cold caused more colds this winter than in past years. Foley's Honey and Tar proved its worth in thousands of homes. Men, women and children checked colds and coughs and prevented serious consequences from exposure. It clears the passages, heals raw Inflamed membranes, banishes Irritation and tickling throat. Mrs. Edward Strevy, R. 37, Clinton. O., says: 4:I think Foley's Honey and Tar the only medicine for coughs and colds and recommend It highlv." For sale by A. G.- Lukcn & Co. Adv.
600 Americans in England Subject to Call LONDON, Feb. 20. Approximately 600 Americans resident in the United Kingdom are subject to the draft under the Anglo-American treaty, it was announced today by the American consul-genertl, Robert P. Skinner. There are approximately 12,000 American citizens "of both sexes and all ages now ' resident in the United Kingdom.
Revelations of a Wife
DICKY'S WORDS STRIKE HOME I had shown him Jack's letter, but I had not realized before that he mast have read it repeatedly. That could mean only one thing. He must be furiously jealous of Jack. For a moment I did not know what to do. I started to speak, but Dicky went on without noticing me. "Of course, after writing a letter like that. Jack is going to be delighted to find the 'realest girl' grabbed off the Christmas tree while he was away. He'll just be dying to meet me." "Don't be so nonsensical, Dicky," I said sharply, ''Jack Bickett is not in love with me, never was, nor I with him. If we had cared for each other we would have been married long ago for my mother wished it, and we both knew it. You are making me very unhappy by acting this way about my meeting him. I don't want to leave you feeling angry." "For heaven's sake don't get melodramatic, Madge," he returned disagreeably as he went Into his room. When he came out a few moments later he was dressed for the street. He came over to my chair and kissed my cheeck so profunctory a caress that I would rather he had omitted it. "If you get through with your romantic reunion in time, telephone me at Lil's," he said. "If we're not there, we'll leave word where you can reach us. So long." He walked to the door, opened it and turned with the knob in his hand. "I really believe you are going to meet this chap with the idea that he is a simon pure platonic admirer of yours," he said. "But, you mark my words, youH find out before the day is over that his brotherly attitude will come off." He shut the door and hurried away. I felt as if I had been stunned by an unexpected blow. Twice during the morning I had heard this terrifying thought voiced,
once veiled by Mrs. Stewart, now openly from Dicky's lips. Jack in love with me? Preposterous! But the thought that Dicky and Mrs. Stewart believed it made me very uncomfortable. Why Madge Dreaded the Dinner with Jack. Eleven o'clock! I looked at my watch again to make sure that I was right It was time for me to telephone Jack's old apartments to see if he had yet arrived. I moved toward the telephone, then remembered that I had forgotten the number of the Hotel Alfred, the oldfashioned Greenwich "village" hostelry where Jack had established bachelor quarters when things began to go well with him in his profession. The rooms were always kept for him, so that when he returned from any of his long trips he had at least the semblance of a home to welcome him. I stopped short as 1 realized that I had forgotten the number. Nothing could have brought home to me so vividly the strength of my feeling for my husband as did this simple failure to remember a telephone number. I had called that number literally hundreds of times. My distant cpusin. Jack Bickett, the only brother I had ever known, was the one person besides myself that my invalid mother trusted and loved most in the world. It was one of her pleasures, during her shut-in last year, to talk to him over the telephone. I had called his number for her daily for months before she died. "Whafa the Matter?" And now in one short year my mother had died and Jack had gone for a year's trip to the wilds of South America. In his absence I had met and married Dicky. Until I received Jack's letter announcing his return I had almost forgotten his existence, 60 absorbed had I been in Dicky. No wonder the telephone number had fled my memory. The telephone directory lay upon a
THE NEW TRIPLE COMBINATION Treatment for the blood, r.erves and liver purifying, strengthening, cleansing, winning its way wonderfully just now is: Hood's Sarsaparilla, the superlative blood purifier and appetite giver, known for over 40 years. Peptiron, the superlative pepBln-nux-iron-celery nerve, blood and digestive tonic. . . Hood's Pills, the superlative family laxative for biliousness, constipation; pleasant, easy, effective. "What are your troubles? If such as to. need all three medicines, why not have perfect, well-rounded relief by getting the combination? If you need only one medicine, get it and take it but do it now. Adv.
JUST RECEIVED ANOTHER SHIPMENT Saitairdlay mDy
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Mrs. Etta Dorion, of Ogdensburg, Wis., says: " I suffered from female troubles which caused piercing pains like a knife through my back and side. I finally lost all my strength so I had to go to bed. The doctor advised an operation but I would not listen to it. I thought of what I had read about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and tried it. The first bottle brought great relief and six bottles have entirely cured me. All women who have female trouble of any kind should try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound."
How Mrs. Boyd Avoided an Operation.
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Every Sick Woman Shdtt
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stand near me. I picked it up and turned to the A's. What a bulky thing the directory was! I carried it to. the table, laid it down and drew up a chair that I might hunt for the number comfortably. But no Alfred Hotel met my gaze. I ran my finger down the column. "H. H. Alfred, L. M. Alfred, Mrs. S. H. Alfreds, The Alfredo apartment," but no hotel. I was about to ask central for the information desk, when with an exclamation at my own stupidity I turned to the "H's." Of course, here it was under the' heading. "Hotels." "Hotel Alfred, Stuyvesant 4698." How familiar it looked when the printed page recalled it to my gaze! I shut the book and moved toward the telephone, when its familiar ring startled me. Jack must be calling me! , Hurrying to the telephone, I took down the receiver. "Hello!" I did not know my own voice. It was so strained. No wonder the man at the other end of the wire did not recognize it. "Hello!" It was Jack's voice, the heavy bass tones, with just a suspicion ofhuskiness, the result of a slight throat trouble. "Is this Madison Square 2468?" ' "Yes." "Is Miss Margaret Spencer there?" So Mrs. Stewart had kept her word! He did not yet know that I was married! I breathed a little sigh of thank
fulness. I wanted to tell him- that news myself. "This is Margaret, Jack," I said quietly. - "Margaret! You! Why, what's the matter with your voice, dear? 1 would have sworn I'd known it anywhere, and I didn't recognize it at all. Is anything the matter?"
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Hair On Face OratssmrT katr srrowtia m Cbob, eek b4 anus aoon become cmtm nasi tatatty when merely remoreel ttmm the antrface of the skU, The oaty eoBaamoa snste war to remove hJectloaaiMe hair ta t attaofc M mataw tha akiau DeMJracle, the rtetaa sanitary ttaaja, etoea this by absorption. Oaty Kotmlne De-Miracle has a msaeywbach araaraatee ta each
pack are. At taflet coasters la We, $1 anal 93 alaea, or by anafl fcrssa aa ta plain wrapper mm reeetvi of pi-tee. FREE with testf osjtals off -- blarbest aatborttJea. emptafaaa what eaoaee hair, why tt tacMMMea aad haw DeM trade dewttaltaaa tt, marled In plain scales eaveiopc oa reaaest. Deattracle, ravfc Ave. ana 128tb St., New York.
On Meatless and
1
you can &et all tKe nourishment of these two products, and serve your Government if you Drink Cocoa The one cocoa that combines tKe nourishing elements of meat and wheat in just the ri&ht pro
portions, is Jsunte Dutch Process Cocoa so pure and so hi&h in the food values that brin& health and nourishment to younfe and old alike. Recipe book with every pound of Bunte's Cocoa. It contains many delightful recipes by Famous Pastry Chefs. Get yours at your grocers, or
send to us direct. Bunte Brothers Chicago Makers of World Famous Candiss
Cocoa Without Milk Mix thoroughly one teaapoon Bunte Cocoa withoneendon. half tetspoons suftar. Add cold water to make paste. Add twothirds cup boiling water. Stir briefly and serve.
3
H I V VV S DOISE is the art of holding V'Jl l I AWJOS cJ Phone's sell correctly. It is the ?5r7'W II H 1 ll f 7 object of the "setting up" jAr y 11 - i 1 VVi, I exercises of all armies, resulting ff nJ v ft I in th military carriage so P " fj fYvl l!vV universally admired. iirtfJf If f Poise raesns tree breathins, B . rfffifriZZfiX ?vl 1 1 j unimpeded circulation, better heslta. M "jEfammum JZr!r' tri V areater atrensth and lest isticuc. 11 fjmmu' l' IbT Pe statelineis and trace. j R .9J " V tyC 111 vl Peiee, in social life, airea distinction. H 1 If fi sMr '111 lUl i ItYlr I I areance and an air of patrician J ll III f W 1 llllill 111 UI 5 'v Poiae commands respect, and B nrt iH K I'l V 1 I n l l V. & deference; it is an eaaet of sU aocial M Ify 1 1 ji' M li III ' ir leader women who direct and fl g all I I ill 1? i W Phjraicel poiae beeeta mental poiae, 1 II S aj j 111:4 ftr ' 55 iurt aa healthy body ber eta a normal M J I ' j z ,, B". fir Comci fiobe h attained and natural potte ft II I KM 1 II! 3 lf s7 it impnntd thiough the wearing of kl II r V III All Modsrt Front Laced Coraete. pi 114 V j I Ml J Iff 'm Mo dart Coraeta ate tolx-designcd. Trie El II 1 is I i lUl il aJil s correct poiae they eive the hsure at the bf III yJ ill . if mWi f S lUl It M time they are fitted ia maintained by IS If n j'B ll fl 1 jl MIJ R VJU u,e ' I'Shteat of clock-apring I j u t i i nil jt ml' 1 1W' boninc which yielda yet reatraina Ejl K i j II jl ill 1 tki If H I which does not become "aet" thatia, jjjj II j l 'ill' 111 I rmiri .f it does not atay permanently bent. III! li 'llii ll ll V'riw,l IrK Poiae.deaisnins. aa it ia found in the $ ill I v il 1 lll-MfJ fe" vm? Modart alone, civee you corset that 4 ilfll IL II 11 ll jS' fPi wiU brins out all the graceful linea of 3 J I 19 I 1' i !1V S 15 style end beauty that the deaignera of tj I II If ill "V: I Tk 1 if II your towns and auita created in them. 3 III ! I I 1 1 I I V I l llA 1 Poise-deaieninc, by holding the body a III f I ! li l:MwV I I 3aV I correctly, gives you a coraet that ia I I III I I il '" 'i aupremely comfortable. 1 I I I I I u V jb7 kest stores everywhere, for the I II I I 'W II (S st-J fourteenth succesaive season, are kll 1 Mllill'lll V(M l If $ Vv featurina; Modarta. the poiaeIJ 1 f M 1J Wl 'l li designed coraet. ISl ' l I'll ' K They ask you to accept a Free Trial till I v ) 1 I ! Fitting of the Modart model that has I nil 1 I 11 I I X- 1 " BT been poiee-deaianed for your hgure. Mil I lliV 1 im I IJ ll""' "l I Make thia teat, which coats you W f ' Vir HlBrlA WL f li SS nothing, and you will immediately see ilWi' lr llll! ll JVlN, C 11 why social leaders, famous actreasea. I'lWV liW'iW l lt'1 II beautiful women, everywhere, pro liV V CVU'l A'C TV LN. M claim the Modart their faWccrset. j lhTOtcedfase j
Gomplete Showing of the Famous
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