Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 43, Number 349, 27 December 1918 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR ;
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM ANT SUN-TELEGRAM FRIDAY, DEC. 27, 1918.
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The most brilliant social function which has been given at the Country ,Club for many months, will be the t Christmas dance given this evening at X the club. The rooms have been at- . tractlvely decorated for the occasion In Christmas colors. The Evan
ance. No dinner will precede the
' nance, but during the evening re-
; "reshmenta will be served. The cora-
, mlttee In charge of the dance is com
posed of Mrs. Clarence Dennett, chair
man, Mrs. Joseph Hill, Mrs. Fred Carr, Mrs. Julian Cates and- Mrs. R. G. Leeds.
On New Year's day an open house will be held at the club for all members. Music will b provided both afternoon and evening for those who care to danse. All members and their visiting guests are invited to call durlng the afternoon or evening. The Woman's Relief Corps will hold a Joint memorial service with the Post tomorrow afternoon at two o'clock sharp, in the post rooms at ' the court house. Mrs. Omar O. Murray and daughter, Miss Mazine, spent yesterday in In- . dlanapolls. Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Highley entertained the following guests for Christmas dinner Wednesday at their home , In West Richmond. Covers were laid , for Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Highley of , Kokomo, Russell Highley and Albert
wison or Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Wentling and litle son, Miss Mary Highley, Henry Highley and J. S. Moore. Mr. and Mrs. Homer A. VanLue of Dayton and Richard Hague of Wapa--'koneta, O., stfent Christmas with Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Hawk of South Eighth street. Mrs. H. S. Maltby of Reeveston is entertah'ilng Mr. and Mrs. C. Carlton ' Tucker of Cincinnati, O. Mrs. Tucker, a sister of Mrs. Maltby, is a pupil of Lino Nattrolo In Cincinnati, and will s!ng at St. Taul's Episcopal church Sunday morning.
CHARMING VISCOUNTESS FORMERLY ACTRESS
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Miss Cora and . Miss Celia Drinker will go to Louisville Saturday for a visit with friends. They will visit In Cincinnati before returning here. Lieut, and Mrs. Harry Thomp
son, of jjouisvllle, will come to
morrow for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Everett McConaha. Mrs. MeConaha's
. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Perry Becker of
Kankakee, 111., are also guests at the 5 McConaha home. - i Lieut, and Mrs. C. R. Umpleby who ? have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. M. Norris, left Wednesday evening V for a visit with friends In Ohio. Lieut. Umpleby will return to Camp Meade, Md., soon.
Viscountess Drumlanrig, a new portrait. The Viscountess Drumlanrig is the charming wife of Viscount Drumlanrig, son of the Marquess of Queensberry, to whom she was married December 4, 1917. She was well known before her marriage as the actress Irene Richards. She was eighteen at the time of her marriage. Her husband was wounded in the war. , . ,
TRUGCLE-
cj t- t- us i ti -v
Miss Margaret Thornburgh came Tuesday from Ft. Wayne to spend the i Christmas vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Thornburgh of . South Twentieth street. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Waller of Elyrla, O., are the parents of a daughter, ; Charlotte Ilene, born last week. Mrs. Waller was formerly Miss Margaret Knapp of this city. ' Miss Margaret Byfleld has returned ' to her home In Indianapolis after a short visit with Mr. and Mrs. Robert -: N. Land on South Twelfth street. Miss Lucille May of Straughns spent Thursday and Friday with Miss Tres- ' ie Sharpe. Ml3B Gladys Hartman has returned from Indianapolis where she spent Christmas with her mother. Miss
Hartman Is assistant to the secretary of the Social Service Bureau. Clem Stolle and daughter, Miss Mary Stolle of Springfield. O., spent Christmas with Dr. and Mrs. Frank Harding of KInsey street. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Dlffenderfer of New York City are spending the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. John Saylor ot North Fourteenth street. Charles Kienzle of Indianapolis, is visiting friends here for a tew days. Charles Cain of Indianapolis spent Christinas day with Miss Ethel Thomas at her home. i numhpr of young girls attended
the dance given last evening In the
rnmmprria C uft rooms ior me boi
ira nf the trucks which spent the
night here. The dance was piven un
der the auspices oi uie There will be no regular assembly , .hi. .roninr as usual. The Frl-
day evening class of Mr. and Mrs Bert Kolo will meet at 7:30 o'clock in the
l OOF hall but no assemoiy win ollo'w. ' Mr. and Mrs. Kolp will give k New Year's dance Tuesday evening At the hall. Special music will be prodded for the evening. Dancing will continue until intotne New lear. Miss Helen Ozier returned to her home in Mansfield, O., after a week's rHt with Mr. and Mrs. E. M. CampflLid Miss Ozler has been a guest of Honor at a number of pretty parties during her visit here. Miss Edith MartinTof Pleasant Hill O will come tomorrow to spend a fiw da s with nr. and Mrs. George Chrlsman on KInsey street. ... - ik. I11nBa of Rev.
'tTM of Trinity LuOscsr J. r- 00hlsm classes
S7not m et Saturday morning Rev. qticht of Wernle home, will have Sw Jli' f the services Sunday morncharge of the sem & OBJECTIONS REMOVEDfrom the JJJuon papers Sat0 receive nuraJUation urday morning . ne re wJU circuit court.
REALITY. The Ferrols were In the new house. A fat cook was in the kitchen. The sleek car was in Us neat garage. The dining room had had its east window enlarged and the walls trelllsed "to make It seem like out-of-doors," according to Edith's dream. Most of the furniture was new. Everything was
in good taste.
John was wearing a sixty-dollar suit Edith's wardrobe was complete and appropriate. The children wore no more rusty boots with nailed-on half soles, no more stockings with fourInch patches on the knees. An old Italian came every morning and neated up the garden and the kitchen vegetable patch. And there was a piano. Edith's heart throbbed almost to bursting on the day the piano arrived. It was more than a mere piano. It was a realized dream, and that Is a very rare and very beautiful thing.
When it was duly deposited in its sun- j
ny alcove off the living room, Edith closed the door behind them and ran to that glossy piano. With tears in her eyes she looked at it. She walked around It and touched its smooth sides with ecstatlo fingers. Finally she sat down- to it and struck a few chords. The chords didn't sound as well as she expected. Ah, well she hadn't played for nearly a dozen years. She must be patient, she told herself. It would come back sifter she practiced a little. "Mamzelle" was coming tomorrew to start regular lessons with the children. She would take a thorough course herself with Mamzelle, and In six months she would be playing Chopin and Tschaikowskl as well as when she was a girl. A little feeling of misgiving rose, but she promptly put it down. "I'm only in my thirties." she told
herself. "That's young. Tho French say no woman Is worth talking to till she's thirty. All the great actresses and musicians are thirty or forty by the time they amount to anything. Eleanora Duse was forty-six when she created her greatest furore. Mme. de Stael learned two languages'after fifty. Pierre de Coulevain wrote her first novel when she was nearing sixty." The little brown-eyed Mamzelle corroborated all this , when she arrived next day. She raved when Edith fumbled through a simple "etude," assuring her she had great talent, that her touch was ravishing, her tech
nique sublime, her sense of "color harmony" most astonishingly strong. Edith discounted the little wman's Latin enthusiasm, but was so eager to believe that she drank In the praise with hope and satisfaction. It was when Mamzelle was not there that
Edith grew discouraged over the stiff-'
ness of her workworn fingers, the
slowness of her housewife's brain. She could calculate with trained precision the difference between the cost of three pounds of loin chops and six pounds of stewing beef. But her mind balked over the value of "rests and half notes. She "could mix a cake with deft fingers. But she could not run a scale without bungling. She knew with exactitude how many yards of gingham could be contrived into a dress for Virginia and had at her tongue's end the name of every fabric that could be wrought into little boy's sailor suits. But when she tried to pronounce the French word for "needle" her tongue got tied in knots. She could cut a pattern for her husband's shirts but she could not formulate a single foreign sentence. John came home one night, tiptoeing into the music room with a sur prise for Editha st'.ky-haired Angora kitten and found hr with her face hidden In licr. arms upon the piano keyboard. "It's too late, Jack," she sobbed as her husband gathered her and the surprised kitten Into comforting-arms, "I can't work out my old dreams I'm too old, I guess. My fingers are stiff and my brain won't Work. I I'm discouragefl I don't seem to care for it evertV as I thought I would." John pressed the warm little bunch of fur against Edith's trembling lips, of style, anyhow. We'll get a pianola." She hid her face against the kitten,
wntch frantically mewed and clawed. Ferrol laughed. "Don't you give a rap, Ede!" he soothed. "Hand playing's gone out (To be continued.)
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With Salad Flavor
Jiffy-Jell desserts come in many fruit flavors. But Lime JiffyJell flavored with lime fruit makes the best salad jell. It is tart and green. The flavor comes in liquid form, sealed in a vial.
jr.
this Mm
Serve with your salad. Or mix in vegetables, cooked or uncooked, before the Jiffy-Jell cools. Leftovers will do. Ormixin
meat scraps and make a meat loaf. Try Loganberry Jiffy-Jell for a dessert, and Lime for a salad jell. One package serves fix. These quick, economical dainties serve a big need today. 2 Package! for 25 Cant At Your Grocer ' Jiffy-Jell Waukeiha, Wisconsin Pf)
Kroger's Special
SYRUP
J ust arrived, a fancy sweet Table Syrup in bulk. Bring your kegs and buckets. 535 MAIN STREET Pottenger and Schradin," Distributors.
DARDANELLES ARE GREAT PROBLEM TO BULGARIANS
(By Associated Presa)' j SOFIA, BULGARIA, Dec. 27. Bui-' garlan political leaders profess to be gratified by the entrance of the entente fleet into Constantinople and express the belief that It assures an equitable and reasonable solution of the interminable question of who shall control the Straits of the Dardenelles. This problem has been the constant nightmare of most of the Bulgarian states, particularly of Bulgaria, Rumania and Greece. These countries always have considered the possibility of Russian occupation of Constaiiti--, nople to be a serious menace to their : own national existence. ' j This fear was one of the causes which led Bulgaria to take sides with the Central Powers in the war. Later when Russia abandoned her exclusive
claim to Constantinople, Rumania's entry into the war on the side of the Entente was facilitated. .i Political circles in Bulgaria are profoundly impressed by the giddy rapidity with whichT events of far reaching International , importance now are transpiring. The folly of the policy pursued by the former King Ferdinand and his government in Bulgaria has been brought home in a striking manner to Bulgarians by the recent developments. The same feeling is expected to prevail among the yousg Turks, who prefered to trust Germany rather than Great Britain and France although, it is said, these powers and Russia gave to the Portea formal declaration guaranteeing the integrity of Turkey if she would remain neutral In the war. The great mass of the Turks, as well as all other nationalities in Turkey are said to be overjoyed to witness the termination of the rule of the governing clique in that country and the success of the Entente powers. They now realize, it is said, that Germany cared nothing for the condition of the Turks but was solely concerned with her own commercial and industrial schemes affecting Turkey. The general feeling of tranquility has succeeded the recent troublous times and all political parties replace confidence in the ability of the present democratic ministry of Bulgaria to extricate the country from its present condition. The organization of a society in Sofia to promote the idea of a Balkan Confederation is criticized here on the ground that it is premature.
Dtdton, Ind.
Hobey" Baker Killed in Plane Fall in France
;- NEW YORK, Dec. 27. Capt. Hobart A. H. Baker, the .famous Princeton athlete, known in his college days as "Hobey" Baker, an aviator in the American army in France, has been killed in the fall of his plane. News of his death was received here today by his friend Percy Pine. - Mr. Pine received a cable message from Paris signed "Inglehart," a member of Baker's air squadron, which said that Capt. Baker had been killed in an airplane accident and requested that his family be notified. No details were given.
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Farlow of Fostoria, 0 and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Farlow, of Mishawoka, Ind., are here.. .. .Mi6S Lois Wilkinson entertained at Christmas dinner ber Sunday school class and a few friends. The house was decorated in Christmas colors. A tree was enjoyed by the children. The following were present: Misses Mary Beeson, Marie Grey, Eva Bales, Lovall Lamb, Zelma Dennis, LoiB Wilkinson and Florence Alread; Messrs. Guy and Everett Wilkinson and Mr: and Mrs. Bert Wilkinson.. ...Mrs. Roxle Covalt, Miss Myrtle Farlow and Clyde Covalt attended a funeral at Muncle Friday.. .Miss Harriett Williams took dinner with Miss Meta Davis Sunday. In the afternoon they called on Miss Essie AH read. ...... Messrs. Herbert, Charles and Bernard Beeson were in Richmond Sunday evening.. .. .News was received Fridav . evenine that
Charles Huffman has returned from j
France and Is now in Virginia.. . . .Jennie Lilly has been visiting Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dennis..... Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dennis, daughter Dot, and Jennie Lilly visited Mrs. Dennis' mother, Sunday.. ..Mr. and Mrs. William Farlow, Misses Myrtle Farlow, Hazel Farlow, Messers Charles, Lorenzo and Keith Farlow, Perry Covalt, Dewey Williams, Arch Taylor and Mrs. Roxie Covalt attended the funeral of Helen
Farlow, last Sunday.. . ..Misses Cophene and Kathene Johnson entertained at dinner Sunday Misses Sara Smith, Elizabeth Kuhn and Bernice Smith.. . Messrs. Curtis Bales, Fred Leuwallen, Ernest Matchett apd Arch Taylor motored to Newcastle Saturday evening. ..Messers Charles Farlow and Dewey Williams were In Muncle and Newcastle Saturday afternoon.. ..... Dan Machett was home from Lynn Saturday and Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Roy Harter, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis .Smith and son and Miss Edith Harter spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Porter Deardorff at Mooreland Dr. Davis of Mooreland made a professional call at Joe Harter's Saturday..... Mr. and Mrs, Sylvester Bllhelmer were in J)ayis county attending the funeral of Mts. John Bllheimer. Mrs. Bllhelmer has returned.. .Mr. and Mrs. Walter Clapper took Snuday dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Homer Jones and daughters Helen and Rachel Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Beeson called on Mr. and Mrs. Walter Beeson Sunday evening.. .. i ..Mr. and Mrs. Fred Leuwellen went to Losantville Sunday.
ABINGTON SERVICES
Sunday school at 10 a. m. Christmas exercises by the children at 7 p. m.. followed by a Christmas message by the pastor, E. E. Hale. Everybody invited.
Rumely's Father Dies at Home in La Porte
LAPORTE, Ind., Dec. 27. Joseph A. Riimely, father of Dr. Edward A. Rumely, died at his home Thursday, following an illness extending over a period of two years. He was bom January 26, 1SS9. in Laporte, and was the eldest son of Melnrad Rumely, founder of the M. Rumely Company, now . the Advance-Rumely Company.. He was educated in the Laporte schools and at Notre Dame university, after which he went Into his fathers business first In the foundry." then In the machine sho pand later in the office, where he became manager of the concern and was greatly responsible for Its success. Until his health failed, he applied himself strenuously to business, and from the period of 1880 to 1890 bad worked almost day and night, this being during the period the Rumelybuslness was being built up. Surviving him are the widow, nine children and three brothers.
VAGRANT RELEASED.
James Conley was arraigned in city court Friday morning on a charge of vagrancy. He was dismissed providing he got out of town.
; Tf. D 77 lit
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WK'VwOOGJOQCOdk,V m Jmm mmmm
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