Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 315, 16 November 1918 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM SATURDAY, NOV. 16, 1918
PAGE SEVEN
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Those who attended Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kolp's assembly dance last evening were: Miss Lorraine Long, Mies Treva Datler, Miss Hazel Cruz, Miss Helen Hazeltlne, Miss Clara Groce, Miss Helen Geers. Miss Janet Seeker, Miss Elizabeth Tarkleson. Miss Juliet ttisbaum. Miss Mary Chenoweth, Miss Martha Jones, Miss Sarah Kragle of Anderson; Miss Doris Groan. Miss Fay Schmidt. Miss Clara Daub, Miss Margaret Jones, Miss Corlnne Schroeder of Connersvllle; Miss Stella Knode, Miss Helen Eggemeyer, Miss Wilhelmina Boggs, Miss Lucy Dennis. Miss Anna Dallas, Miss Nina Edmundson, Miss Huth Wlckemeyer, Miss Marie O'Brien, Miss Mary Jane Bulla, Miss Irene Bishop. Miss Leon Corey, Miss Mary Marshall, Miss Helen Hadley. Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Hebbeler. Lieut, and Mrs. J. A. Boorman, Albert Chrow, Carl Flenning, Lowell Johnson, Lee Smith, Eugene Rethmeyer, M. E. Henderson, William Dunn, Roland Keyes, August Calvelage, Marlowe Alkin, Frank Chrow, Russell Allen, Fred Van Allen, Earl Kelsker, Harold Sinex. Henry Beck, Ralph Kitcliell of Liberty; Burr Simmonsfl Harry Thomas, Howard Camp
bell. Robert Hodgin, Byron Wettig, Clem Roberts. John Strickler, Nile Pattl, Russell Beck, Oscar Morton, Wilson Pierce, George Weaver, William Connors and W. A. Pitner.
At the Theatres.
WASHINGTON. Sunday Charlie Chaplin in '"A Dog's Life," and Ethel Clayton in "A Soul Without Windows." Monday and . Tuesday Geraldine Farrar in "A Turn of the Wheel." Friday and Saturday Alice Brdy in "The Ordeal of Rosctta."
MURRAY. Sunday, Monday and Tuesday J. Warren Kerrigan in "Prisoners of the Pines." Wednesday and Thursday "Queen of Hcarfs." MURRETTE. Sunday, Monday and Tuesday Marguerite Clark in "Out of a Clear Sky." Wednesday Viola Dana in "Flower of the Dusk" Thursday, Friday and Saturday "Why America Won."
WASHINGTON. Norma Talmadge, presented by Jos
eph M. Schenck In her latest Select picture, will be the attraction at the Washington theatre today. The story of "Her Only Way" is as follows:
Lucile Westbrook (Norma Talmadge)1
loves Joseph Marshal, a young man in her home town. But when she re-
The Do Your Bit Knitting club earned $60.50 last week for the benefit of war funds. The club buys yarn which
lis used for knitting for the Red Cross. I
'Vast week members of the club served ,' turns from boarding school, her guardlnners at two sales. At one of the j dlan tells her that her fortune has sales a pie, made by Mrs. Gertrude ', been swept away and that Paul BelMur'.ey, one of the club members, was j mont, a wealthy man of the village, auctioned for $16.75. Mr. Markley j wno wishes her hand in mariage, and Fred Hartman cave the club $4 j promises to save her father's home, which wa3 proceeds from several ! Joe fears that Lucille will be won by dances given by the men. Next ; the glitter of wealth and bitterly deThursday the club will serve at a sale j nounces her, 'and stung by his lack on the J. S. Miller farm. 0f faJth, Lucille tells him that she ! will give her consent to Belmont's The Unlversallst mission circle will . proposal and before she knows it, she meet next Wednesday afternoon with fin(js herself wedded to the other man. Mrs. Martha Johnson at her home, 206
South Eleventh 6treet. The responses to roll call will be "Thanksgiving." The Mary Hill W. C. T. U. will moot Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Frank Veregge at her home on North Eighth street Mrs. L H. Bunyan will entertain members and friends of the Woman's Home Missionary society of First
Methodist church, at her home, 32'
North Twelfth street, Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Gath Freeman has returned from a ihort business trip to Boston, Mass. Mrs. J. H. Mills. 101 South Tenth street, will bo hostess for the Magazine club Monday afternoon. The members will please notify the hostess as to attendance. The Liberty Car will call for each member. Officers for the year were elected at the regular monthly meeting of the Golden Rule Bible class which was held at the home of Mrs. F. R. McFall. Mrs. S. E. Berry was elected president; Mrs. I. M. Ridenour, Vice presi.1.. f -n T IP riVi oaftratffliv' Tra
tttcdellan White, treasurer; Mrs. R. f H. Crabi, teacher, and Mrs. F. R. Mc- ' Fa'l, chaplain.
The Queen Esther club of Eden KfbikPh ledge will meet Monday afternoon with Mrs. Mae Evans at her home, 427 South Eighth street.
A French orphan was adopted by the Frecces E. Wlllard W. C. T. U. at their meeting yesterday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Mary Boyd on South Twelfth street. The chapter also voted 110 to the state W. C. T. U. war fund. $10 to the furlough holidays for boys overseas, and $5 to the United War fund. Mrs. John Jordan was elected trustee of the chapter. An excellent report of the state convention was given by Mrs. Austin. The next meeting will be in two weeks with Mrs. A. O. Snlvely at her home, 27 North Eleventh street. Thirty-two diplomas were given last night to members of Mrs. J. F. I'ropst's Teachers' Training class. The class has taken a two year course meeting for Btudy ence a week. E. H. IfusemHer presented the diplomas and Rev. F, W. Rohlflng. Rev. A. F. Mitchell and Rev. J. 8. Hill gave short talks. Those to receive diplomas were Augusta Henson, William E. Thomas, Clara Henson, Franklin Chant, Russell
In selecting a title for his first comedy to be released by the First National .Exhibitors' Circuit, Charlie Chaplin is said to have utilized a chance remark made by Harry Lauder during the Scotch celebrity's visit to the new Chaplin studios in Hollywood, California. After showing his visitor about the premises, Charlie turned to Harry and said: "Well, Harry, and what do you think of my new quarters?" "It's a dog's life you're leadin' these days, Charlie," Lauder replied; "a dog's life." When the question of selecting a name for his forthcoming rib-tickler came up a day or two later, Chaplin remembered Lauder's laconic comment, and decided it would make an appropriate title for the first of his $1,000,000 comedies. "A Dog's Life," at the Washington, Sunday.
Ethel Clayton, the famous screen star, is coming on Sunday to the Washington theatre In a great Worldpicture, "A Soul Without Windows.", . This picture is a really remarkable offering. It is one of the most vitally interesting and unusually appealing attractions of the season. ' Not only that but the scenic effects are superb and the role portrayed by "Miss Clayton is sympathetic and charming. "A Soul Without Windows" Is the
most superior sort of screen entertain
ment and you will enjoy it thoroughly. If your family, consisting of an aged father and a twin sister, had been disrupted by an earthquake which destroyed your borne in a Sicilian village and burled your sister; If you had come to New York, learned stenography and secured a position at a typist's agency to support your father and yourself; If you unwittingly loaned your face to an artist to sketch and he used it to top off a risque theatrical poster; and if. after you secured a position as the secretary to a prominent author, the poster was discovered and you lied and said it was your twin dster's portrait and then she came to life and you were both involved In a thrilling sequence of sensational incidentswhat would you do? . That is the problem which confronts Alice Brady, who plays the dual role of Rosetta and Lola Gelardi in "The Ordeal of Rosetta," . the star's latest production for ber Select Star Series which is at the Washington theatre Friday and Saturday.
ter Perry, an accomplished character player, in the chief comedy role. The recent arrest of a dangerous criminal has brought public attention to the wonderful detective ability of a young and charming woman. This young woman's father was found dead under mysterious circumstances by the police, with a bullet wound in hia body. ' v , The young woman's suspicions were strongly directed toward a group of gamblers with ,whom the dead man had been associated. In furtherance of her vow to unravel the mystery she became the head of a well-known gambling establishment. The cunning methods employed by the girl detective that finally fastened the crime on the guilty man form a
sensational and absorbing story. This
y "Wolves of the Rail" introduces Hart in a new role, that of a protector of property, in upholder of law and order, and a guardian of government money.
SAYS THIS CURED HIS LUNG TROUBLE Mr. Morgan passes insurance examinations now, and feels, perfectly well. "In 1908. my lungs became so badly affected I had to grlv up my work. I coughed all the time and finally had hemorrhages twice a day. My lungs and shoulders ached so I could hardly
! live. Two physicians told me I had Ipnncitmntlnn cat? 4hat7 1 1 1 j 1 A r rr
story is graphically reproduced in the i good, and advised me to change climate. William Fox photodrama "Queen of "Finally a friend gave me a bottle
01 jv.iiKs emulsion, at aia me so mucn
CDS
3Ef
Hearts," to be shown at the Murray thearte Wednesday and Thursday.
PALACE Every lover of Western fiction is thoroughly familiar with Owen Wister and his work. His" novel, "Lin McLean," is one of the best sellers of its year. It has teen made into a moving picture comedy-drama, in which Harry Carey will come to the Palace Theatre on Sunday. Its moving pic ture designation is "A Woman's Foot." Each release of a Wm. S. Hart picture Is an event of unusual importance in the motion picture world, so the announcement that the famou3 Thos. H. Ince star in the latest Artcraft offering, "Wolves of the Rail," will be at the Palace theatre today, no doubt is welcome news to "Big Bill's" many local admirers.
Mary Plckford has two artists in her
support in "How Could You, Jean?"
whose names are not in the cast. However, "support" is not the word as ap
plied to one of the two, one being a cow named "Henrietta" and the other
goat called "William." Of course,
MURRETTE Marguerite Clark's newest Para
mount photo-play, "Cut of a Clear
Sky," which is being presented at the Murrette theatre Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, is a worth while picture in every respect, as is evidenced by the applause that greets every showing. Miss Clark is delightful throughout as a dainty Belgian countess who comes to this country to escape an odious marriage with a German prince. One of the most terrible tragedies
that ever occurred to darken the life pf any man was that which was flashed to the world from the Presidio in San Francisco less than five years ago and which told of the burning of the home of General Pershing and the killing of his wife and three daughters. We did not realize at that time to what greatness the man who suffered so terribly was to reach. General Pershing's life has been most remarkable. At this time he was stationed in
Texas and for months after the tragedy he would ride the plains alone to hide his grief. Always a hard worker he was determined to work harder than ever to win the final victory. We are impressed with this when we see the William Fox film, "Why America Won," which will be shown at the Murrette Thursday, Friday and Saturday.
VHEN A FAMILY
iyEEDS A FRIEND In the Absence cf Doctors Nobly Gone to War, After Influenza, the Grip, Those wonderfully useful medicines. Hood's Sarsaparilla, Peptlron and Hood's Pills comprising the new combination family treatment are warmly recommended. If taken regularly, Hood's Sarsaparilla before meals, Peptiron after meals and Hood's Pills at night as needed, they are" reasonably sure to keep a family in health and prove to be reliable and alwaysready friends. They purify the blood, build up strength and regulate the system. Get all, or any one, as you think you need, from your druggist today. Adv. :
good that I continued taking It, and in i months It cured me sound as a dollar. "My lungs are now as strong as ever. I weigh 147 pounds, which Is more than I ever weighed before. I work all the time, can expand my chest six inches, and am able to pass lodge and Insuranceexaminations without any trouble." Otto Morgan, 420 Pearl St.. Terre Haute, Ind. It is not claimed that all advanced cases of this kind are curable, nor that any such case is curable. But Milks Emulsion costs nothing to try in any case, and it has restored hundreds of hopelefts victims to health. Milks Emulsion Is a pleasant, nutritive food and a corrective medicine. It restores healthy natural bowel action, doing away with all need of pills and physics. It promotes appetite and quickly puts the digestive organs in shape to assimilate food. As a builder of flesh and strength, Milks Emulsion is strongly recommended to run-down nervous people, and it has produced amazing results in many cases of tuberculosis of the lungs. Chronic stomach trouble and constipation are
promptly relieved usually in one dav. This is the only solid emulsion made, and so palatable that it Is eaten with a spoon like ice cream. A truly wonderful medicine for weak, sicklv chil
dren. No matter how severe your case, you are urged to try Milks Emulsion under this guarantee Take six bottles home with you, use It according to directions and if not satisfied with the results, your money will be promptly refunded. Price 60c and $1.20 per bottle. The Milks Emulsion Co., Terre Haute-, Ind. Sold and guaranteed by Thistlethwaite's 6 Drug Stores. Adv.
MUM
EE-TTE
SUNDAY, MONDAY and TUESDAY
yVargileritc
Qark j
',
OutofaCleafSlcy
jn
Aana Thompson. Davksceaznb ly Charted Maign. dincimd fa Marshall noiiaa. Last Showing Today ANNETTE KELLERMAN in "QUEEN OF THE SEA" UNIVERSAL WEEKLY
OUR GREAT WANT AD MEDIUM READ PALLADIUM WANT PAGE
"William" is the one referred to, be
cause he was such a bad actor that he
nearly put the little star out of com
mission by depriving her of her physical support. In other words, he butted the highest salaried woman in the
I world during a tense moment in the
comeuy, wnicn or course, oecame much tenser. "Henrietta," however, was a perfect lady throughout, even if she did rat onions, thereby precipitating the denouement mentioned. "How Could You, Jean?" will be showri at the Washington theater next Monday and Tuesday with all the accessories essential to a most artistic presentation.
Byrkett, Rosa Jones, Edna M. Fye, Susie Hawkins, Alice Hawkins, Sadla Hawkins, Elsie Rogers, Ethel L. Strohmier, Ethel Crickmore, A. Leonidas Ellis, Jane O. Ellis. Inez Vore. Alice Vore, Clara B. Furstenberger, Chester Harter, James Jacona, Lena Webb, Frank Rogers, Lucy Garrett, Martha Solomon, Alice Newman, Bertha M. Lawrence, Eva Conley, Leona Klingeblel, Gladys Lamne and Rev. J. F. Propst. The TicknorClub will meet Monday afternoon with Mrs. Fred Lemon at her home on the National road east. Mrs. Lemon and Mrs. E. B. Clements are hostesses for the meeting.
A Combination Good Qualities invrfces your a-bierrtion -to Grapeirts No sweetening required. : No cooking. : Needs but littfe milk or cream. Fine with evaporated milk. : Keeps indefinitely. Not a particle of waste. : A wonderfully attractive flavor
Mrs. Harrison Hoggatt will entertain the euchre club at her home, 504 North Eighteenth Btreet. Wednesday afternoon. Instead of Mrs. Roy Wagner as was previously announced. An informal luncheon bridge party will be given at the Country Club next Wednesday afternoon. Luncheon will be served at one o'clock, and the women who expect to attend are asked to make reservations as early as possible. The October social committee has charge of the party. All women of the club are invited. Mrs. E. E. Meyers will sing the offeratory solo tomorrow evening at Grace Methodist church services. Special services will be held in the evening. Sergeant J. C. Johnson of Camp Taylor, Ky.. is spending the weekend with his wife at the home of her mother, Mrs. Walter Jones.
44
The res a Reason
s for Grape-Nuts.
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The West Richmond W. C. T. U. will meet Monday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Mansfield, 521
West Main street. A short business session will be held and the following program will be given: Devotional, responses to roll call will be a Thanksgiving text, Mrs. Emma Unthank will give a talk on "How to Adopt a French Orphan," and Mrs. E. Harrison Scott will tell of the needs of garments by frontier children. A general discussion by all the members on the value of poster contests will conclude the program. Earl Cartwright, baritone, of Boston, Mass., will sing a solo tomorrow morning at First Presbyterian church. The Penny Club will meet Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. John Roberts at her home, 736 North Tenth street. ,
Bay Harbor, Me., had a new novelty a woman with a corps of attendants that would be a credit to the medical
department of a fighting force in France. She blew into town one day accompanied by a whole retinue of assistants and a collection of baggage, which, when unpacked, disclosed pulmotors, first aid equipment and a stock of bottles that gave the impression that she planned to open a drug store. But that wasn't her intention, as soon became evident. When she headed for the beach some of the cottagers decided she wasn't proposing to take any chances during her vacation. And thi3 really proved close to the truth of the matter. For the woman was Annette Kellerman. The reason for the doctors and the drug store was apparent when Miss Kellerman did her eighty-five foot dive from a wire stretched across a section of the ocean. The dive is shown in "Queen of the Sea," the newest Kellerman photodrama, which is billed for today at the Murrette theatre. MURRAY. French-Canadians and Indians are fond of affixing names onto people that suggest their likeness to bird3
and animals. Thus it happened that! they called Michel de Montcalm the! "Eagle" and Caesar Le Noir the! "Wolf." Le Noir and de Montcalm I are two characters in "The Law of Va1i " fV.A Intent I -
luc iiuiiu, laicsi l til dluu u III. JJIUture, starring Charles Ray, which will be shown at the Muray theatre today. The characters of Le Noir and de Montcalm are given excellent portrayala by Robert McKimm and Charles French. "Prisoners of the Pines," the new J. Warren Kerrigan, product which will be seen for the first time in this city Sunday, Monday and Tuesday at the Murray theatre, is heralded as the
most ambitious cinema effort of Kerrigan's extended screen career. The photography reflects actual scenes and episodes in lumber camps in Oregon and California. Lois Wilson is Kerrigan's leading actress, with Wa!-
HOW A SALESMAN StTFERED. Tt. J. Porter, Sterling-. Col., -writes: ""For six months I suffered with a pain ful weak back. As a traveling salesman I had tc stoop frequently to pick up my srrips, which I grew to dread as the pain when I Btralghtened up was awful. Numerous remedies failed to reach my case. I was induced to try Foley Kidney Pills. Relief was immediate. Say, they are great! Anyone afflicted as I was should try a bottle or two of Foley Kidney Pills." Good for pain In the back, rheumatic pains, aching- joints, sore muscles. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co. Adv.
SUNDAY Universal Special Production HARRY CAREY
In his greatest screen success
Woman's Fool' From Owen Wister's famous story of the early west "Lin McLean". Undoubtedly one of the greatest Western stories screened. 2 Big Comedians 2 FOx'sUNSHINE "A SELF MADE LADY" ' and CHARLIE CHAPLIN ,
Tonight PARAMOUNT-ARTCRAFT offers W. S. HART in Wolves of the Rail Also 2 big comedies
TUESDAY DOROTHY DALTON in "FLARE UP SAL" THURSDAY Pathe Natural Color Play "THE LIFE OF OUR SAVIOUR"
EXTRA! I
PICK 0' THE
PICTURES
EXTRA! WORLD PICTURES Presents
A Big Double Feature SUNDAY
ET H E
3oui
Wifhou
t Window
again. A picture
The kind of a picture that sticks in the memory and that you want to see again and
that is pleasing from start to finish, that holds tho attention enthralled throughout and that presents this immensely popular star in the Ijest role she has ever had.
CHARLIE CHAPLIN
Also the $1,000,000 Comedy
S
MONDAY AND TUESDAY An ARTCRAFT PHOTOPLAY
-in-
"Mow Could Yoy, Jeara?
9?
The life of a kitchen maid shouldn't be all stew and spuds and onions. There's nothing heavenly about hash. Mix a little Peach Melba in a dyspeptic bank president, his fancy-free son, a couple of highbrow book worms. Oh! You think it doesn't sound reasonable! Well, just you see "How Could You, Jean?" Mary Pickford will show you how to hold your cook! Also a side-splitting Comedy "CUPID VS. ART" . WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY A GOLDWYN FEATURE
-in-
"The Tu
rri of the W
heel55
RflUJIR KAY Home of the Big Pipe Organ 3-KEITH VAUDEVILLE ACTS-3 SUNDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY J. WARREN KERRIGAN In "A PRISONER OF THE PINES"
TODAY CHAS. RAY in "LAW OF THE NORTH DON'T MISS THE VAUDEVILLE NOW PLAYING
Rosalie Dean, an American girl at Monte Carol, see3 a player, Maxwell Grey, leave the tables broken in fortune. Singularly attracted by him, and knowing what so often happens at the tables, she follows him, and arrests hi3 hand just as he is about to commit suicide. With a stake she forces upon him he wins back his money and more. In the midst of their happiness Grey is arrested charged with the murder of his divorced wife in New York. Rosalie follows him and never loses faith, though he declines to offer any explanation. It is due to her shrewd detective work that the matter is finally cleared, and it is shown that Grey is protecting others at the cost of his own safety.
Extra added attraction, a Rip Roaring MACK SENNET COMEDY "HIS WIFE'S FRIEND" FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SELECT PICTURES Presents
Tit ordeal! MITA"
Alice Brady attains the zenith of her career to-date; she enacts a dual role, the twin sisters who differ radically in every physical, mental and moral aspect and she makes each one live! Also Showng HAROLD LLOYD in "BEES IN HIS BONNET" pathe news : : : : : : , : : pathe news
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