Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 213, 19 July 1918 — Page 4
PAGE FOUK
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, JULY 19, 1918.
Miss Florence Bartel entertained with a knitting party this afternoon at her home on South Sixteenth street, as a courtesy to her guests. Miss Anna Keuthan of St Louis, Miss Ughtle Jacobs of Murfreesboro, Tenn., and Miss Cora 8udhoff of Cincinnati. The house and veranda were attractively decorated with garden flowers. Late In the afternoon a light luncheon was served. The guests were Miss Keuthan. Miss Jacobs, Miss Sudhoff, Miss Camilla Haner, Miss Corlnne Nusbaum, Miss Lucille Haner, Miss Marguerite Lemen, Miss Mary McMullen, Miss Marie Wlgle, Miss June Robinson, Miss Letha Chrowe and Miss Mary Williams. More than fifty persons called last evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Fox who were celebrating their silver wedding anniversary. The Fox home was decorated with a profusion of cut flowers, large bouquets of roBes being used In all the rooms. At noon a family dinner was served at which several out of town guests were present. Last evening little Miss Thelrna Thomas entertained the callers with a number of readings. As a courtesy to her guests, Miss Miriam Stackhoua of Philadelphia, Miss Pauline Strauss of Springfield, O., and Miss Marian Holden of Frankfort. Pa.. Miss Miriam Hutton gave an informal Five Hundred party yesterday afternoon at her home on North Fifteenth street. Five hundred was played at three tables, after which luncheon was served by the hostess. The guests were Miss Stackhoua, Miss Strauss, Mies Holden, Mies Emma Fetta, Miss Jane and Miss Thelma Robinson, Miss Jean Saline of Owentown, Ky., Miss Carolyn Hutton and Miss Matilda and Miss Natalie Yeo. Mr. and Mrs. John Taggart, Mr. and Mrs. Garland Willett, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wright went to the Sedgwick cottage on Morton lake, last Saturday evening for a two weeks' outing. During their stay there, they will give several informal parties. Dr. and Mrs. E. H. Mendenhall, ac
companied by Miss Margaret and Miss Carolyn Garber of Springfield, O., have
returned from a motor trip to Ridge
Farm. III. Tbey were accompanied home by. Miss Helen Hester who will visit with Dr. and Mrs. Mendenhall for some time. Mr. and Mrs. Everette McConaha left this morning on a motor trip to Louisville, Ky., where they will visit Clem McConaha, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Thompson for several days. Miss Gertrude McPherson of East Main street, left last evening for Washington, D. C, where she has accepted a position.
Members of the Royal Bible class were entertained Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. L. H. Bunyan. Mrs. George I Irwin, president of the class, had charge of the program. Miss Ella LurLjg gave several musical numbers. Rev. R. L. Semans gave a patriotic talk. Light refreshments were served and a social hour enjoyed. Fred W. Smith, of Danville. 111., is spending a few days with Mrs. W. O. Lamb and Mr. and Mrs. William Schultz. . . Miss Thelma Spencer of Ossian is the guest of Miss Mildred Crabb for a few days. The Recreation circle met yesterday afternoon with Mrs. Giles Williams at her home south of the city. The responses to roll call were current events. Mrs. Ralph Druley gave a talk on "Our Forest Trees." The next meeting will be in three weeks with Mrs. Harvey Wilson. A call has been received by Mrs. W. W. Gaar of the Sock Shop for handkerchiefs for the Rainbow division in France. Indiana has been asked to furnish 4,000. Mrs. Gaar has asked that all women who have muslin pieces 12 Inches square which they will donate, send or bring them to her at the Westcott hotel. These will be hemmed for handkerchiefs. Also any one who has flowers is asked to donate thera tomorrow for the flower sale, the proceds of which will be used to buy handkerchiefs. The annual reunion of the Royal Neighbors and Modern Wodmen will be held Sunday at the home of C. P. Strlckler on the Easthaven farm. All members are urged to come with baskets of lunch. Miss Marie Smith of Connersville, Is the guest of Miss Ethel Lockwood at her home on North Fourteenth street. Miss Smith formerly lived in Richmond. The advisory committee of the Better Homes association will meet tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock In the office of Miss Nina Short in the court house. Eighteen members of the Loyal Helpers club met yesterday afternoon in School No. 14, on the New Paris pike. The afternoon was spent in sewing for the Red Cross. Three guests, Mibs Mary Fisher, Miss Mary Behnen and Mrs. Mary Riser, were
present. Miss Fisher gave a humorous reading, "Beyond Endurance, Almost." The club made plans for a stereoptlcon lecture which will be given at the school August 8. Rev. Charles A. Mitchell, of Modoc, will lecture and the latest war pictures will be shown. The proceeds will be used for the Red Cross. Mrs. E. D. Kingsbury, of Indianapolis, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Curtis over the week-end. Philip Furnas, of Indianapolis, Is visiting here for a few days. Officers were elected at the meeting of the Boston Home Economics class which was held at the school In Boston Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Marthat Cramer was elected president; Mrs. Walter Lafuse,- vice-president; Mrs. Will Dills, treasurer; and Mrs. Wilfred Masse, secretary. The club will hold several called meetings during July and August for canning and cooking demonstrations. The next regular meeting will be held in September. Mr. and Mrs. O. R. Beanblo3som and son, Edward, and Miss Flossie Biehl will leave tomorrow for a ten days outing at Colin, Mich. Miss Dorothy Williams of Grand Rapids, Mich., arrived this afternoon for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Lew Kluter of North A street. Miss Williams has visited in Richmond for several summers. Among the dancers at Cedar Springs last evening were Miss Maude Watt, Miss Laura Walker, Miss Treva Daffler, Miss Louise Mather. Miss Leona Corey.lMiss Helen Terryl, Miss Lou
ise Poos, Miss Lucile Reel, Miss Zeller, Howard Campbell, George Weav
er. Carl Fienning, Clyde Semler, Don Bell, Whitney McGuire, John Crawford, Clarence Coyle, William Keys, William Dunn and Harry Bockhoff.
Mrs. Omar Brumfield entertained a
number of guests at dinner yesterday
in compliment to her daughter, Mrs. Manford Faucett of Anderson. The table was decorated with garden flowers and patriotic colors. A two course dinner was served. Covers were laid for Mrs. Carrie Bennett and daughter, Marjorie, Mrs. Hettie Horn, Mrs. Doner, Mrs. Bruer, Mrs. Mamie Toney, Mrs. Manford Faucett and son, Richard, Mr. and Mrs. Omar Brumfield, Al House and Permelia Null.
The West Side Red Cross rooms will open at 1.30 o'clock instead of 1 o'clock, beginning next Monday. The rooms are open each Monday, Wednesday and Friday afternoon from 1:30 to 5 o'clock. Workers are needed at the rooms and all women of West Richmond are urged to help.
VEHICLES COLLIDE.
CENTERVILLE, Ind., July 19. The machine of Dr. Allen of Centerville and oil wagon from Richmond collided Wednesday afternoon on a bridge north of the Isaac Spahr farm. Dr. Allen was driving south and the oil wagon wa3 driving north. Each man thought that the other was waiting to let the other Cross the bridge first. Both men then crossed it at the same time. The machine of Dr. Allen was thrown down an embankment and badly damaged. Both men escaped without injuries.
Little Brother Run-Down Cried and Fretted How He Recovered. Mountainville, N. Y., "My little brother had typhoid fever, and it left him with no appetite, weak, rundown and always crying. Vinol proved a wonderful tonic in building him
up and restoring his strength after
everything else had failed." Lucy Sherman. The reason Vinol was so successful in this little boy's case, is because it
contains the very elements needed to
build up a weakened, run-down sys
tem, make rich, red blood and create
strength. Clem Thistlethwaite and druggists everywhere. (Adv.)
CHIROPRACTIC
Your health depends upon the condi
tion of your spine. E. A. DeMENT, D. C. 718 Main St.
Examination and spinal analysis free.
Children treated free Thursday from 8 to 12 a. m.
JULY
CLEARANCE SALE OPENS SATURDAY
Ad in Thursday's Paper, Page
.Five
Lemon Juice Clears Skin
Make a beauty cream cheaply to soften and whiten the complexion. Massage the face, neck, arms and hands. Read directions!
What girl or woman hasn't heard of lemon juice to remove tan. freckles, sallowno8s and complexion blemishes; to bleach the skin and to bring out the roses, the freshness and the hidden beauty? But lemon juice alone is acid, therefore irritating, and should be mixed with orchard white in this way. Strain through a fine cloth the Juice of two fresh lemons Into a bottle containing about three ounces of orchard white, then shake well and you have a whole quarter pint of skin and
complexion lotion at about the cost one usually pays for a small Jar of ordinary cold cream. Be sure to strain
me iemon juice so no pulp gets Into the bottle, then this lotion will remain pure and fresh for months. When applied daily to the face, neck, arms, and hands It should help to bleach, clear, smoothen and beautify the skin. Any druggist or toilet counter will supply three ounces of orchard white at very little cost and the grocer the lentons. Adv.
CAMBRIDGE CITY MAN HELD FOR BEATING NURSE
Town Aroused by Brutal Attack on Woman Employed in His Home. Arthur Cornthwaite, of Cambridge City, was arrested by Sheriff Clem Carr on &"n afidavit charging assault and battery, after he Is said to have cruelly beaten Nora Myers, a trained nurse, who was caring for Cornthwaite's aunt, Mrs. Miller. The affidavit against the man was sworn out by Sheriff Carr after Joshua Allen, deputy prosecuting attorney, had made an investigation of the case. Mr. Allen said considerable feeling was aroused in Cambridge City against Cornthwaite, and that there was talk of mob violence the day of his attack on Miss Myers. The nurse, who is about 45 years old, had been engaged by Mrs. Miller while she was ill in bed, and was living at her home during this time. Cornthwaite and his father, it is said, were also living in Mrs. Miller's home. For some reason or other, the deputy prosecutor said, he learned that Cornthwaite had taken a dislike to the nurse and had tried to get his aunt to dismiss her from the house. This the aunt refused to do. Mr. Allen's investigation developed the fact that there was an argument In Mrs. Miller's sickroom in which Cornthwaite sought to order the nurse to leave the house and she refused to do so. It is said that he struck her and knocked her to the floor, and then hit her several times, causing serious bruises on her face and the upper part of her body. Cornthwaite's father then swore out an affidavit against his son, Mr. Allen said, and realizing that the younger man would probably get into considerable trouble he sought to have the case brought up in the office of a justice of the peace in Cambridge City. The deputy prosecuting attorney learned of the matter and went to Cambridge City to make an investigation. He learned, he said, that the justice of the peace had scheduled the hearing for 1 o'clock in the afternoon of the same day the attack on Miss Myer occuired, and Mr. Allen said that her injuries were such that it was known by the principals in the case that she would be unable to appear against Cornthwaite in the justice court. Mr. Allen immediately ordered the case dismissed and carried the matter to the circuit court, arresting Cornthwaite on the affidavit sworn out by Sheriff Carr.
K. OF C. EXTEND WAR WOPfK.
NEY YORK, July 19. The Knights of Columbus committee on war activities announced today that it will extend the scope of its work by aiding in the care of American prisoners interned in Switzerland. This decision was reached after conferences with officials of the United States government.
WORKERS TO ACT ON I). S. LABOR BOARD
WASHINGTON, July 19. Admission of employers and workers to the counsels and operation of the government's war labor recruiting and distributing machinery, which will be put into effect as regards unskilled labor on August 1, was announced today by the department of labor. Details of this co-operation were to be worked out today at a meeting here of representatives of employers and employes in 28 states east of the Mississippi with officials of the United States employment service. A similar conference will be held July 25 in Denver for states west of the Mississippi. The recruiting of workers, according to the plan announced today .calls for the formation in each state of a state advicory board of the employment service, composed of the State director of the employment service and two representatives each of employers and workers. The state boards will supervise the apportionment among communities of quotas the number of workers to be supplied. The community boards, having the apportionment among the non-esBentlal Industries of the men to be furnished, will be organized on the same basis as the Btate boards. The representatives of labor in each case will be nemaed by labor organizations and the employers members by employers' associations.
On The Screen
WASHINGTON Country politics in every phase has its innings in Mae Marsh's latest Goldwyn production, "All Woman," by E. Lloyd Sheldon. Everything pertaining to a rural pre-election campaign is vividly reproduced, from the parade with the loading candidate at its head to the big mass meeting In the town hall, where he makes the age-old stereotyped promise that reforms long dreamed of by the natives will be instituted immediately he is inducted into office. How she rids her hostelry of all liquor and the dlers who infest it, makes some stirring scenes in "All Woman," which comes to the Washington theatre today and Saturday.
Protests Use of U. S.
Flag in Poster Designs
CHICAGO, July 19 E. R. Lewis, president of the American flag day association, in a letter to President Wilson today protests against the use by government officials of the American flag as a background in poster de
signs. In his letter, Mr. Lewis declares that posters of the food, administration are direct violations, not only
of the Illinois flag law, but of the laws
of thirty eight other states and four
territories.
CHANTLAND COMMISSIONED
Aeronauts aver that the barking of a dog can be heard at an elevation of four miles.
WASHINGTON, July 19 William
T. Chantland, of Iowa, today resigned
as chief examiner for the federal trado commission to accept a commission as major of infantry in the army. He formerly was senior colonel in the Iowa national guard.
Sock Shop to Hold Flower Sale Saturday Under the auspices of the sock shop, J a flower sale will be held Saturday afternoon at the corner of Tenth and i Main streats. The proceeds of the j sale will be used to buy handkerchiefs i for the Rainbow Division In France. Indiana has been asked to furnish j 4.000 handkerchiefs and Mrs. W. W. j Gaar, of the sock shop here, is anx- j ious for Wayne county to send several i hundred. I
they will donate are asked to send or bring them to Mrs. Gar at the Westcott hotel Saturday morning. Also any women who have large muslin pieces, about twelve inches square, are asked to donate them to the sock shop. They will be made Into handkerchiefs.
RECORD OF THE PAST
No Stronger Evidence Can Be Had In Richmond.
Look well to their record." What they have done many times in years gone by is the best guarantee of future results. Anyone with a bad back; any reader suffering from urinary troubles, from kidney ills, should find comforting words in the following statement. William Cooper, 414 South Eleventh street, Richmond, gave the following statement in September, 1915: "My back was weak and lame and ached a great deal. I have used Doan's Kidney Pills when these spells have become severe and have never failed to get relief in a short time. I believe Doan's will help any kidney sufferer if used right and I advise anyone who has this trouble to get Doan's Kidney Pills at Thistlethwaite's Drug Store." On November 22, 1917, Mr. Cooper added: "I know Doan's will do good work when the kidneys are out of order. They never fail to help me when my kidneys give me the least trouble." Price 60c at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mr. Cooper had. Foster-Milburn Co., Mfgrs., Buffalo, N. Y.
PHOTOS
722 MAIN ST R1Q1MONCUND
Edward H. Klute and Earl T. Smith FUNERAL DIRECTORS 14 NORTH 9TH ST. Phone 1284
Tires That Stand Up
The average car is called upon this year to do more work and harder work than ever before. Loads are bigger. Trips more frequent. More constant service is demanded. Time must be saved. Now if ever, the car owner must select tire equipment wisely to get the greatest use of his car. United States Tires are built up to the job. They have the stuff and workmanship in them to stand up long
after they have paid for themselves in faithful service. Whether your car is heavy or light, passenger car or truck, there is a type of United States Tire scientifically made to fit your needs, to give you greater freedom from tire delays, to give extreme mileage at minimum cost. Consult the nearest United States Sales and Service Depot. It is there for your convenience.
'Royal Cord' 'Nobby' TfaiV 'Ctco' 'Plain'
United States Tires are Good Tires
We Know United States are GOOD Tires That's Why We Sell Them. McCONAHACO. WEBB-COLEMAN CO.
CHENO WETH AUTO CO.
A. J. MILLER.
Special Shoe Bargains at NEFF & NUSDAUM'S all This Week
50c to $2.00 a pair discount on all small sizes of low shoes, 2J to and narrow widths up to, and including size 5J.
Special lots of Slippers, Pumps and Oxfords at HALF PRICE.
Ladies' White Button Boots Special Ladies' tan and gunmetal Oxfords. Ladies Satin and Canvas Slippers, lots at ...M
One lot of Ladies' Gray Cloth Lace Boots. B. C. &D.,2ito7. This year's styles, $5.00 and $6.00 values..... $2.98
20 discount On all Ladies White Lace Boots any size.
Neff and Nusbaum
a
The Growing Scarcity of Good Diamonds! is becoming more and more PRONOUNCED and will eventually result in their DOUBLING and TRIPLING in price. For the past twenty years this conditon has been ANTICIPATED by us and we have each year bought far in advance of our immediate needs. Today our stock of diamonds in quantity and quality is second to none in the country and our prices are much less than the present market quotations. A small investment in one of these stones at this time is one of the safest and surest bits of good business judgment you can make. We have a diamond suited to your particular requirements. Let us explain their EXCEPTIONAL merits. $10.00 to $1000 Each' JENKINS & CO. Richmond's Foremost Jewelers
m
The Beauty of the Home
is in It's Order The Joy of the Home tn It's HosMalitv The Piano Greatly Contributes to Both A conprehensive display of Upright and Player-Pianos, to choose from, a moderate range of prices at
The McCONAHA Go 415 Mam St ' Phone 1079
