Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 149, 4 May 1918 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUNTfiLEGRAM, - SATURDAYy MAY-4, 1918

Mr. and Mrs, Frank Cook are lnchester, Clifford Hobblck of Winches

Newcastle visiting Mr. and Mrs. Wal

ter McQee. Mrs. Harry Thompson has returned to Louisville where her husband is in the - quartermaster corps, after a month's visit with . her sister, Mrs. Everett McConaha. Mrs. Thompson was accompanied home by Miss Olive Lewis who will visit friends there for several days. "i Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wlsehartiare the guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Armacost In Newcastle. Wayne county War Mothers will meet Monday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock in the Commercial club. Buttons for War Mothers have arrived and will be given out at this meeting. A full attendance is desired.. Miss Mary Stretch of Newcastle is spending the week end with Miss Martha Iliff. The Dorcas society will meet Monday afternoon with Mrs. John Bartel at her home on South Eleventh street Dr. and Mrs. C. S. Bond were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mclntyre at their home in Newcastle yesterday. Mrs. Dayton Adams and little daughter Marv Jane, of Centralia. Mo., ar

rived yesterday for an extended visit

with Mr. and Mrs. L. u. Antnony. Little Miss Roberta Dickinson has returned to her home In Indianapolis after t short visit with her grandparents. Mrs. Conley and Mrs. William Dickinson. r i . The Home Department of the City Bible schools will hold a meeting Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock in the Y. M. C. A. Mrs. Prank Weaver will have charge of the lesson and Mrs. W. F. Henderson, in charge of the music. This is the last meeting before the county convention and each superintendent Is asked to bring reports of attendance. Ah Invitation is extended to anyone who is interested in the work, to attend the meeting. Mrs. Josephine Murray will return to her home in Louisville tomorrow after a week's visit with friends here. Mrs. Murray lives with her daughter, Mrs. Roy Parks in Louisville. , ' A charity dance for the benefit of the Red Cross will be given in the armory at Eaton. O., this evening. This afternoon a "White Elephant'? sale for the benefit of the Red Cross was given. Kolp's complete orchestra win fnmuh music this evening. An

invitation Is extended to Richmond persons to attend the dance. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Miller, and Miss Myra chamness have returned from Cincinnati, O., . after a week's r visit there. . Mr. and Mrs. Roy Dennis will spend the week-end in Hamilton with the latter parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Bromhall. Lieut. F. A. Barr has returned to Jefferson Barracks, Mo., after a short visit with relatives and friends here. , . Thei Progressive Literary society will meet Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Carl Wolfe at her home. The Mary Hill W. C. TA. V. will meet Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Frank Bronson at her home, 120 Linden avenue. A full attendance is de. sired. The Unlversalist Mission circle will meet Wednesday with Mrs. Lizzie Balr to sew for the Red Cross. All members are urged to be present. MISS Elizabeth Casey is spending the week-end in Liberty with friends.

Miss Erma McMath, 'laughter of Mrs. Sarah McMath, and Verne Rider, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Rider of Peru, were married this afternoon at

2:20 o clock at the home or tne onaes sister, Mrs. Morgan Lamott, southeast nf rntprviilf. Rev. Truman Ken-

worthy performed the ceremony In the

presence of the tmmeaiaie relatives and a few friends. There were no attendants. The bride wore a traveling ault of dark blue with grey hat and shoes, and a corsage of spring laurels tt'hth wro nt from Tennessee. Im

mediately after the ceremony the bride

and groom left on a snort weaamg trip and will be at home In ChattaxMnti Tnnn.. after May 15. Mr. Ri

der was formerly connected with the

United Refrigerator company nere and left several weeks ago for Chattanooga where he is now located. Mrs. Edgar F. Hiatt will go to Indianapolis Thursday to attend the conference on Child Welfare which will be held at the Claypool hotel. Mrs. Anne Studebaker Carlisle of Indianapolis will preside at the conference and Miss Julia Lathrop will be the piinclpal speaker. At noon a luncheon will be served in the Riley room to which everyone who is interested, is invited. Tickets will be sold for one dollar and all reservations accompanied by the money must be mailed to Mrs. Albion Fellows Bacon. Room 83, State House, as soon as possible. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Funk entertained with a dinner party last evening in courtesy to Miss Erma McMath and Verne Rider who were married this afternoon. The color scheme of pink and white was carried out in all the appointments. A bouquet of pink and

white sweet peas was used as a center niece for the table. A five course din

ner was served. CoverB were laid for

Miss Erma McMath. Miss Marie Bachmeyer, Verne Rider, Emil Powell and

lr. and Mrs. Frank runic.

Among the dancers at Kolp's dance

last evening were Misses 'Jiara uross,

Letha Chrow. pons uroan, .Mane o'Rrian. I.eona. Corev. Anna Dallas.

Helen Edgerton, Rosamond Border,

Cornelia Border, Mary Parks. Mary Relnhard. Miriam Kelley, Dorothy Land. Laura Walker. Mildred Town-

send, Treva Daffler, Neva Bowman,

MAbelle Feltman. Mary stretch ot Newcastle, Martha Iliff, Alma Morford, Katharine Elliott, Hazel Mashmeyer, Mary Bulla. Vera Pfafflln, Helen Snodgrass. Ruth Weldner, Mary Foley. Martha Jones. Olive Jones, Mary Williams, Mrs. Marian McCarthy, Robert Qulgg, Drew Lacey, Roger Beales of Win-,

ter, William Pryor of Eaton. O., Oscar Morton, Joseph Swearinger, Rudolph Crandall. John Towrie, Harold Grimes,

Talbert Jessup. Walter Caskey, Henry

Beck. Toni Bell, William Dunn, Fred VanAUen. George Weaver, Robert Tomllnson, Linden Edgerton, Frank Crowe, Clarence Coyle, Howard Ball, Ralph Clendennin, Wilson Pierce, H. P. Mueller, Harry Bockhoff, Ralph Englebert, Mahlon Sherldau, Carl Fiennlng. Ray Woods, Roland Wrede and Marc Golden. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Taylor and Mr. and Mrs. James Fry spent yesterday in Dayton, O. Mrs. J. W. Brammer is spending the week end with friends in Indianapolis.

The Aftermath club will close its season with the annual luncheon Thursday at the home of the Misses Moorman on South Sixteenth street. The luncheon this year will be less elaborate than in former years, in keeping with the food conservation. The last meeting of the ParentTeachers' association of Joseph Moore

Lschool was held at the school yester

day afternoon. The women spent the afternoon sewing for the Red Cross. Since Christmas the association has made 46 pairs of bed socks, 24 bed shirts, 25 small comforts, 8 small baby comforts, 8 large comforts and 26 pairs of knitted socks. After the work yesterday, a program was given. Miss Etta Rose gave a solo, Mrs. O. K. Logue several readings. Miss Ruth Henderson piano selection, Mrs. E. E. Cartright a vocal solo, and little John Cully a reading. F. E. Glass of Chicago came today for a few days visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Glass. . The Penny club will mf-et Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Frank Stein at her home, 524 South Seventh street. The annual business meeting of the Alice Carey club will be held Thursday afternoon with Mrs. Emma Eva, 516 North Nineteenth street. This will be the last meeting of the club this year. , , The Fourteen Minute women of the state will hold a conference at Indianapolis next Friday at the Claypool hotel. . Among the speakers will be Dr. H. E. Barnard, Mrs. Anne Studebaker Carlisle, and Michael Foley, state chairman of the Council of Defense. A luncheon will be served at noon, one dollar a plate. Reservations must be mailed at once to Mrs. R. Harry Miller. 1301 North Alabama street in Indianapolis. Mrs. Frank Druitt, secretary and acting chairman of Wayne county women during the absence of Mrs. F- S. Bates, will be among the women ; who will attend from here.

Foreign Legion's : "Hero Visits Home

THE EYES OF THE DOOMED

7 VtSfi v& .-53! Y ' '"1

Oscar Mouvet. NEW YORK, May 3. Oscar Mouvet, who is one of the few survivors of the original foreign legion of France, is making a short visit to this country, after which he will return to the battlefields. He was the only non-com-missioned American officer in the foreign legion. He received wounds in Champagne, the Somme drive and at Verdun, but the most memorable event according to him was the death of Allan Seeger, the poet, which he witnessed on the

battlefield. .

On his shoulder Mouvet wears a

cord which signifies that the legion to which he belongs has been cited

more than six times for conspicuous bravery. That the legion must have

gone through many hard battles can

readily be imagined from the fact that it is reduced from its original strength of 50,000 to a bare 2,500.

. . LYRIC George Walsh productions all over the United States furnish one of the strongest features of the William Fox program. His productions are full of

vigor and action, are lively with laughj

getting situations are marked by a spirit that is rare in photoplay features. George Walsh in "Melting Millions" is at the Lyric.

MAKE WASHDAY A PLEASURE No more Blue Mondays by using MITCHELL'S MAGIC MARVEL For sale by Con key Drug Co., 9th and Main; Haseltine's Grocery. 103 Richmond Ave.: D. O. Hosin. Cor. 3rd and

Nat'l Ave. D. W. WALTERS, Mfgr , , 107 South 9th St. , J

MURRETTE. One of the most remarkable and thrilling scenes in "Du Barry" at th? Murrette Sunday and Monday, is laid in the bedroom of the famous French woman. What occurs there is a matter of history. "In the film which Theda Bara has made for William Fox this scene is brilliantly and wonderfully done! It is one of the most elaborate and beautiful - pieces ' of stage architecture that hasever, been created.. ; It ;was necessary -t to have a strong touch of realism regarding the

furniture, and the country was ran sacked for a Louis XV bedroom set that was authentic and in a good state of preservation. - - MURRETTE. A 'story that will appeal to men and women of all ages i3 "The Belgian," Sidney Olcott's-stupendous visualization of tha tragedy of Belgium, which comes to the Murrette Theater on Tuesday. v The story opens in Belgium Just be

fore the terrible mailed list descends upon the peaceful nation and crushes j out the Hie of the country. One of ! the artistic touches with which the pic-

ture aoounas is tne snaaow or a cross showing Belgium crucified and the heel of th Hun about to trample her under foot. WASHINGTON. The- mo3t important film production of the year is the big superfeature made from Ambassador James -M. Gerard's startling book, "My Four Years in Germany." The picfure vividly shows the incidents that forced America into the war and the intrigues of Germany's militaristic leaders. Beginning when the first cloud began to gather on the European horizon, the picture begins with the Zabern incident, the cutting down of a lame shoemaker by a young Prussian officer, then follows Gerard's presentation at the Imperial German court. The gradual rise of the spirit against militarism. The defiance of the Reichstag. The thooting at Sarajevo. The Kiel celebration in which the British fleet took part. The-meeting of Sir Edward Goschen and Hollweg and the proposal that England stand by while France is beaten. The announcement of danger of war on .July 31. The ultimatum to Russia., -Gerard's futile efforts to avoid war. The order to mobilize. The address of the Kaiser on Auguist 4. The rape of Belgium. The taking over of the British Embassy by Gerard. The exodus of Americans. The Kaiser's explanation of the war, so different from that of Von Bethman Ilollweg. The scene before

the Japanese Embassy. The battle of ih Marne and ' the Aisne. The raid on the American Embassy. The cruel treatment of prisoners, in camps. .The attacks of the press on America. The

sinking of the Lusitania. President Wilson's notes.. The unrestricted submarine warfare. The Kaiser's threat that he would stand no nonsense from America ' after the war. The Fryatt shooting. - The Roger Casement incident The deportation - of Belgium women and children The dinner to the Ambassador so soon to be followed by the break of .relations between America and Germany. Mr. "Gerard's detention as .a. virtual, prisoner. His return and America's answer to the Kaiser in the troops going over the eop and the armies over there. The picture will be shown atv the Washington four days, beginning Monday. MURRAY An amusing story i$ told ef Douglas Fairbanks' ingenuity. At one time

he wanted to attend a dance at Newport which the girl of his dreams attended. But Douglas had no pass. And he had no way of getting one to the "swell" affair. Putting on his full dress suit,' however, and trusting to his proverbial luck, he made a bold "front" and marched nonchalantly up to the entrance. An Ethiopian bade him stand and deliver. Douglas had no invitation to deliver, and putting on his best company smile, tried to hyp-; notize the darky. Failure crowned his efforts. Like a military general, studying his future battle ground. Fairbanks roamed around the hotel and discovered what he thought was n susceptible darky. . The comedian held up a dollar bill temptingly in the air. The darkey stirred, smiled, hemmed,

end commenced to gently vibrate toward the bill, but a cautious look around disclosed the fart that the proprietor of the hotel had fixed an eagle eye on both parties to the verbal contract and the agreement was automatically cancelled. But Douglas would not acknowledge defeat. She was in There. He had to see Her. And hew he accomplished his end i3 shown in a screamingly funny manner at the Murray Theatre on Sunday in "American Aristocracy."

BRIEFS

Robert D. Henley to Be Brought Here For Burial M. C. Henley received word Saturday morning of the death fit . his nephew, Robert D. Henley in Kansas City Friday. ' Henley is the son of the late Charles ' F. . Henley, formerly ot Richmond.; The body will be .brought here for burial. He is survived by two sisters. Mrs. David Coldwell and Miss Irene Henley, both of Louisville, Ky. Announcement for the funeral will be made later.

Roy E. Reynold Writes Of Arrival Overseas . . . . -1 ? Roy E. Reynolds,-Richmond postoffice clerk, who enlisted in the American postal service for overseas duty, has written of his safe arrival in England. In his letter he stated that he was to leave, for France at once on a troop transport.

PHONE 2834 FOR CLASSIFIED ADS r

(Political Adv.) . i CONSPIRACY TRIAL '.. i . On Tuesday, May 7th, Frank M. Jones and Five (5) accomplices will be tried. ; The charge is for conspiring to take from M. W. Kelly the office of County Clerk on January 1, 1919, for a term of Four (4) years. - ' " Jones pleads guilty but demands a Jury Trial and will ask every Republican Voter of Wayne County to sit on the Jury which will convene at 6 a. m. Tuesday, May 7th, and render a verdict at 6 p. m. same day. The main charge against Jones is trying to obtain more votes than either of the other five, to which he pleads guilty and makes the following statement. Being one of the defendants for trial, I wish to say tbiit I believe it an injustice to the jury to try and tell them Lsw to cast their ballots as they enter the room to make their verdict by passing cards, nd I will have no one doing so. I have had several weeks in which to present my case, and at this time want to thank the jury in advance. If it sees fit to find me guilty tf receiving the majority of votes cast for Clerk of Wayne county, I hope their verdict will be to confine me at hard labor in the clerk's office for the term of four (4) years only. Said term to begin January 1, 1919. . In conclusion I want to say that the County Clerk's office should not be used for Political purposes and if elected I promise not to use same for such, reserving the right to help elect all Republican Nominees as long as I live. Yours Respt., FRANK M. JONES, 117 S. 14 St. Richmond, Ind.

For Taxi, phone 2704. NOTICE DRUIDS Special meeting tomorrow aiternpon at 2:30 p. m. at Druids Hall. GrMid officers will be present to install new officers. U. L Parshall, Sec'yRobert Hart, N. A. EAGLES ATTENTION Eagle Memorial services'

will be held at Eagle Hall

Sunday: afternoon at 2:30 in honor of brother Eagles who are in service with Uncle Sam. All Eagles are requested to be present. Committee.

Palladium Want Ads Pay.

(Political Adv.)

T . tttoe Vtteir

fl,;WfflymB Co

Not being able to see all of you personally I now take this way in asking your support during the coming Republican Primary.. My four years of serving you as Market Master In a most efficient manner has given me a record above reproach. I fully realize the responsibility of the office I am now seeking and It nominated and elected I will serve you to the best of my ability.

Geo. A. unlev

Candidate for

Clerk of Wayne Circuit Court Subject to Republican Primary, May 7th.

Trlangle'8 mystery photo drama, "The Hand at the Window," explains the baffling finger print found on. the window, in one of the Aost interesting photoplays of the season. "The Hand atihe Window," with Margery Wilson and Joe Kins in the lead, will be shown at the Murray Theatre on Wednesday and Thursday.

AT THE MURRAY SUNDAY.

Douglas Fairbanks -:American Aristocracy'

Fa

Yoi Are in the 'nDsurfk' as to the real value and service of clothes if you have never been the happy owner of a DENNIS

ranlldpiredl

SUIT

It's so easy to go to the Ready-made store for your clothes, but it's much easier and you'll be better satisfied if you let Dennis take your measure and make for you the kind of a suit that you actually want and the kind that will suit you. Get your order in now for that summer and vacation suit. The RaDy Wo ID3Enihi8e

Tailors 1018 Main Street

ks.

7A

.V,