Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 59, 18 January 1919 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM SATURDAY, JAN. 18, 1919.

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The public is invited to the musical recital to he given this evening in Llndley Hall at Earlham at 7:45 o'clock, by the music department of the college.- The program consists of works of French composers, most of them by Saint Saens. The numbers will be Piano Duo "Dance of Death," (Saint Saens) Miss Marjorie Beck and Miss Laura Gaston; Violin "Menuett" (Qosses), Miss Miriam Hadley; Piano. "Song Without Words" and "La Mandolinata" (Saint Saens), Mrs. Earl Hart: Vocal. "My Heart at Thy Sweet Voice" (Saint Saens) and "The Snows" (Bemberg), Miss Elgia Wittrwe; Piano, "Airs from 'Alceste'," (Gluck-Saint Saens) and "Etude in Waltz Form" (Saint Saens), Miss Helen Hadley; Violin. "Andante from the Ninth Concerto" (De Beriot), Miss Hilda Klrkman; Vocal "Jeanne D'Arc" (Benberg), Miss Elgia Wittwer; Piano, "Wedding Cake" Valse Caprice. (Saint Saens), Mrs. Foss and Miss Gaston. Thirty couples attended the backward dance given last evening by members af the Omicron Pi Sigma fraternity, in their club rooms on Main street. The dance began with "Home, Sweet Home" and ended with a grand march. The dance numbers were printed backward on the program. The girls were required to fill out the program. Pnuch and wafers were served during the evening. Robinson's orchestra played for the dancers. The party was chaperoned by Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hewitt and Mr. and Mrs. Forest Gartside. Miss Martha Doan gave an informal tea this afternoon at Earlham hall for girls of the senior class. The afternoon was spent informally, and dainty refreshments were served. Girls of the senior class are Miss Elizabeth Marvel. Miss Katherine Qulgg, Miss Loma Scott, Miss Marna Johnson, Miss Susie Meeks, Miss Mildred Cutter, Miss Dorcas Hiss, Miss Esther Holson. Miss Ruby Medearis. Miss Ruth Brown, Miss Althea Brown, Miss Zola Clark and Miss Hazel Dixon. Major and Mrs. Fred B. Johnson and little daughter are visiting the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. 3. B. Johnson for a few days. Major Johneon, who has been in the Judge advocate's office in Washington, D. C, has recently resigned and will resume his law practice in Indianapolis. Miss Lola and Miss Catherine Clemmer of Dayton are spending the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Everett McConaha on North Eleventh street. The Ticknor club will meet Monday afternoon with Mrs. Fred Miller at her home on North Tenth street. Miss Mary Anna Stubbs will give a paper on "The History of Richmond." Miss Gladys Hartman has gone to Indianapolis to spend the week end with her mother. Mrs. F. E. Haigie and little daughter have returned to their home in Elizabeth, 111., after an extended visit with the former's parents, Rev. and Mrs. J. J. Rae. Mrs. Haigie lived with her parents while her husband was in the medical corps at an army training camp. Miss Emma Fetta and Miss Mary Henke went to Indianapolis today to nttend the performance of "Oh Look" this evening. Miss Henke will attend ressions of the City Editors' convention tomorrow. The Current Events club will meet Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Carrie Hoiaday at her horn1, 217 Pearl street. Officers will be elected and a full attendance is desired. Lieut. J. X. King arrived last evening from Camp Taylor, where he was discharged. He will leave Monday for Champagne, 111., where he will reHume his studies at Illinois university, where he was studying before enter

ing the army. Mrs. King and little!

daughter will join him later. Mr. and Mrs. L. U. Harris of Bolaire, Mich., left Thursday morning for Saratoga, Fla., after a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Harris of Randolph street. Mrs. R. B. Jones and daughter, Miss Mary, are spending the week end In Dayton with Miss Laverne Jones. They will attend the Heifetz concert while there.

Miss Miriam Little went to Indianapolis yesterday to attend the Short-rlilKe-Richmond basketball game. She will be the guest of Miss Lucille Jones while there. West Richmond W. C. T. U. will meet Monday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the home of Miss Florence Fox on National road. Prof. Harlow Llndley will give a talk on "Indiana LegislatureSome Reforms Now Needed." An invitation is extended to all who ure Interested. Mrs. Mary Keller will entertain mombers of the Golden Rod needle club at her homo on Bridge avenue, Tuesday afternoon.

The Dorcas society will meet Monday afternoon with Mrs. Frank Haner at her home on South Fourteenth street. Those who attended Kolp's dance last evening in the I. O. O. F. hall were: William Dunn, Isaac Loehr. Lawrence Hoover, Lowell Johnson, Howard Campbell of New Paris, Richard Motley, Leslie Sinex, Russel Whitnack, Waldo Dubbs, John Dunn, Harold Grimes, Myron Hill, R. H. Pitney. Roscoe Marin, Lewis RIberker, Thos. Feye, Ray Jones, Charles Robinson. Charles Twigg, W. B. Allmen, Miss Olive Lewis. Miss Leon Cory. Miss Mildred Townsend, Miss Margaret BeaBly, Miss Mary Bulla, Miss Helen Hadley, Miss Miriam Hadley, Miss Mary Foley, Miss Dorothy Merln, Miss Mabel Feltman, Miss Louise Roberts, Miss D. Devoe. Miss Wilhelmina Boggs Miss Alta McPherson. Mies Bessie Cruze. Miss Hazel Cruze, Miss Bernice Judy. Marguerite Wlckemeyer, Miss Mary Jones, and Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Glick. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Smith were pleasantly surprised Wednesday evening at their home by a number of neighbors and friends. The evening was spent in dancing and playig games, after which a two course luncheon was served. Those present were Misses Hilda Garrett, Bertha Hickman, Marguerite Ealman, Ruth Garrett, Harriet Pitman. Agnes Brown, Younge, Mable Hod gins, Ida May Garrett and Thelma Smith, Theodore Garrett, David Marshall, Clem Turner, Clifford Bradley, Fred Garrett, Omar Putoff, Otis Garrett, Kenneth Thomas, Russell Smith, Messrs. and Mesdames Harry Thomas, William Putoff, Joseph Pitman, Oliver Garrett. Bert Hodgins, Charles Shelly, John Weidenbah, Henry Smith and Mrs. Railsback. A musical will be given Monday evening in St. Andrew's hall by F. H. Georgette's players of musical novelties. The men will play organ chimes, dulcimer, violin, mandolin, cello, banjo, saxaphone, harp and other instruments. A small admission will be charged at 'the door. The public is invited. Mrs. Harry McBride was pleasantly surprised last evening at her home on South Eighth Btreet In celebration of her birthday anniversary. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Harry Graham, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Klein, Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Carver, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Gaits. Mr. and Mrs. Gilmer Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Elsworth Hunt and Mr. and Mrs. Harry McBride.

Miss Glenna Miller was hostess last evening for a meeting of Miss Elsie Bullerdick's Sunday school class of First English Lutheran church. A social time was enjoyed and a luncheon served by the hostess. The members present were Miss Helen Long, Miss Lucile Loufburrow, Miss Marjorie Miller, Miss Bernice Wehrley, Miss Georgia Rowe, Miss Mildred Minnick, Miss Ruth Pyle, Miss Dorothy Renk, Miss Lola Vogelsong, Miss Georgia Healy, Miss Anita Sudhoff, Miss Violet Murray. Guests of the class were Miss Garnet Wehrley. Miss Mary Minnick and Mrs. Oren Miller. The twenty-second annual exhibit of Indiana artists will open tomorrow afternoon in the Public Art Gallery. The public is invited to visit the rooms between two and five o'clock. The Nusbaum quintet will furnish music for the afternoon. Seventy-two paintings, sixty pieces of pottery and twelve batiks are on exhibit. Mr. and Mrs. William Hartman and family entertained with a six o'clock dinner last evening at their country home north of the city. Covers were Hid for Mr. and Mrs. William Eldridere, Mr. and Mrs. Whitt Roe, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Albright and family, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hartman and daughter Rosiland, and Georgo Swain. The regular meeting of the Delta. Theta Tan sorority will be held Monday evening with Miss Mary Foley at her home on North Fourteenth street.

WHEN IN Cincinnati A room and a bath for two dollars. Also 150 rooms at $1 and up. Free

showers and detached baths on every

floor. Needle baths and CO-foot plunge free. Send

postal card.

taxi will meet you iege sts. Cin at the train. cinnati, O.

SCREEN NEWS

"FRIENDLY ENEMIES" AT THE MURRAY

WASHINGTON Whether a child could be adopted by an ape and brought up with the monkey tribe as one of their number would be difficult to say. This, how

ever, is the case in "Tarzan of the Apes." tho unusual . photoplay to be screened at the Washington Sunday. Monday and Tuesday, being an adaptation of the story by Edgar Rice Burroughs. . ? " ' Tarzan, from childhood to manhood, makes his home with the apes in the forests of Africa, seeing no one of his own race and speaking nothing but the gutteral language of the apes. When a child his parents die in Africa and leave Tarzan alone with an old nurse in. their cabin. The boy is stolen by a mother ape and is brought up as her own offspring. The nurse, who was with the child at the death of its parents, is rescued and returns home to England, where Bhe informs the relatives of the kidnapped boy of his fate at the hands of the mother ape. As the relatives have reasons for concealing any knowledge of the child on account of titles and estates, they keep the setret of Tarzan's disappearance for many years, but it Anally comes to' light and an expedition party sets out to search for the missing Tarzan. In this party is a young woman who meets Tarzan, now grown to manhood in the wilds of Africa, and here a romance is begun which is one of the most weird and fascinating ever conceived. Tarzan rescues the girl from a lion and an exciting battle takes place between the two inhabitants of the forest, which results in the death of the lion. Tarzan then takes the girl with him into the forest and a second time rescues her from a cannibal. Her gratitude turns into love fof this great wild man, who, in spite of bis great physical development and brute nature, had acquired a knowledge of the land of his parents through books which had been left at the cabin. Through laborious study and with the aid of the pictures, he bad been able to spell out words and get their meaning, beings his own teacher for years. The picture has the flavor of the African jungle and is made realistic by the wild animals, the savages and dense tropical growths. Africa, the country of mystery, has always held a fascination for everyone, and this picture of "Tarzan of the Apes" feeds the imagination plentifully with romance, thrills and adventures. Elmo Lincoln as Tarzan, is a giant and well fitted for the part which he portrays. The picture is one that will appeal to all. "The Burden of Proof," Marion Daviea' second Select Picture, in which she Is directed by Julius Steger, will be shown at the Washington theatre for the first time in this city on Friday and Saturday. The story has to do with the potting of a German secret service employe, whose work for a moment threatens to dis

rupt the love of a newly married young

couple. Marion Daviea is the young

married girl and her husband is Robert Ames, whose uncle is a member of the United States cabinet.

Miss Davies plays the part of Elaine

Brooks, who, with her mother, is prominent in Newport social circles. Before Elaine becomes Ames' wife, a Mrs. Durand, the German secret service agent, tries to gain Ames love for herself. Charles Kemp, the publisher of a society journal in Washington, who is also a member of the German secret service, has information that Ames in about to he sent abroad with valuable papers. He en

lists Mrs. Durand in the attempt to se

cure them, and as her first step in the matter Mrs. Durand has Kemp pay Elaine's mother liberally for furnishing society news for Kemp's paper. A letter with a peculiar phrase enablese Mrs. Durand to throw the

M

UNRO

HOTEL

STRENGTHENS BLOOD You can't expert weak kidneys to filter the acids and poisons out of your system unless they are given a little help Don't allow them to become diseased when a little attention now will prevent it. Don't try to cheat nature. As soon as you commence to have backaches, feel nervous and tired. GET BUSY. These are usually warnings that your kidneys are not working properly. Do not delay a minute. Go after the cause of your ailments or you may find yourself in the grip of an incurable disease. GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil capsules will give almost immediate relief from kidney troubles. OOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules will do the work. They are the pure original Haarlem Oil Capsules imported direct from the laboratories in Haarlem, Holland. Ask your druggist . for GOLD MEDAL and accept no substitutes. Look for the name GOLD MEDAL on every box. Three sizes, sealed packages. Money refunded if they do not quickly help you.

The annual celebration of Foundation Day of Indiana university will be held here next week by graduates, and for former students of the university. A committee has been appointed to make arrangements for a meeting and to obtain a speaker for the event. Definite plans will be nnnounced later, and a cordial invitation is extended to all alumni and former students to be present.

Spanish Influenza Brazilian Balm Kills the germ in the blood in 3 days prevents pneumonia, or cures it quickly if it has developed. Saves every case. Take 10 to 15 drops every hour, (on tongue or In little water), and rub hot on chest. Get . 60c or $1.00 bottle. Druggist or sent by B. F. Jackson & Co., Arcade, Wyoming Co., N. Y.

P PI A V WEDNESDAY RuM II -EVENING--

Matinee and One Big Night Only Wed. Evening Jan. 22 Positively first and only appearance here (in person).. After four capacity months in New York and direct from his triumphant trans-continental tour. The distinguished young actor.

By Willard Mack and Lou Tellegen Absolute New York production and notable cast including Jennie A. Eustace, Mark Smith, Ralph Locke, Jean Robertson, Constance Molineaux, Sidney Riggs, Maria Noralina, Nan DeVoy and otherB. Direction Charles Emerson Cook '. PRICES $2, $1.75, $1.50, $1 and 50c. Seats now Selling at Box Office Matinee 50c to $1.50

''Si""- V . ? v

"Oh, Johnny!" tells the story of a daring Westerner, who smiles as he fights. The story is built around the discovery of a lost mine and a beautigul girl in the mountains of the great West The girl becomes the real pal of Johnny Burke (Louis . Bennlson), and when she Journeys to the East and falls the victim of treachery of capitalists who seek her interests In the found mine, Johnny trails In her ContlnueOj.On Page Five.

II Spumedlo era ay le nimallrrUfrftb ' oa appUcatloa of

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NEW PRICES SO 00e 91.20

blame for the loss of. the papers on

Elaine, which Mrs. Durand steals from

Ames' desk. Ames first believes his

wife guilty but a friend forces Mrs. Durand to confess, which ends in a happy honeymoon for Elaine and her husband.

' "Oh, Johnny!" is buro to thrill and delight you. Hfre are the nuT-Khell reasons why Louis Bennison'e first Goldwyn release "Oh. Johany!" will be one of the most talked of screen attractions produced in months.

MONDAY EVENING Only Performance January 20

Presents

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rSN I P hhosthefauthsor -h fMM I V xJ'POmSHPeBLMVTTER." JU I fl ond the tears of- . I 111 1 5 MVSIC MASTER- 1 V S 1 I WILfcb SAID KM fJ If ) 1 I i L 1 l hot that the sbirii I ) L V J

y'F" 111 I of this beautiful plw I J VV

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I hope that the spirit of this beautiful play

FRIENDLY ENEMIES

will soon iripthewqrkC . -

"Friendly Enemies" Is part of the times. So are you who read this. You must get together. Prices 60c, 75c, $1, $1.50, $2.. Seats now selling at Box Office.

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The Sensation of the Season ays

Starling Sunday Jan. 19 The Film Triumph of Modern Times

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It ran a Thrill up Broadway's Spine and gave New York its first real sensation in years ! NEW YORK CALL: This great tale of adventure hits the bull's-eye of your imagination every instant. " NEW YORK TRIBUNE: The magnitude of this wonderful film must be seen to be realized. NEW YORK TIMES: It Is thrilling and entertaining. : It is one of the remarkable works of motion pictures and will stay on Broadway many months.

r THE STRANGEST STORY EVER WRITTEN As lightly as a bird he skimmed across tho tree tops, in his wake followed the strange population of his primoridal realm. From a babe he had nestled at the breast of a mother Ape and spoke only the tongue of the long tails who leaped from limb to limb. The Jungle resounded with a din that seemed to wrench the limbs of the mighty trees. Wierd cries pierced through the tangle of tho primordial realm; scaled monsters squirmed away through the ooze and fungus of an empire ages old before the birth of man; apes gibbered; huge gorillas sought the topmost branches; elephants trumpeted; the wall of hyenas sounded through the forests like the death chant of lost souls beyond the fringe of madness. a Hon stood crouched ready to spring his dripping Jaws agape his eyes like fire of magic. Before him stood a woman, pale of face, fair of form, like a pallid lily transplanted to an exotic garden. She screamed, the cry of civilization. across chasms he leaped, hurling himself from tree to tree until he towered above the monarch of the Jungle. Then with a wild cry he plunged forward and grasping the eager Jaws of the lion wrenched life away. THUS CAME TARZAN, "TARZAN OF THE APES" TO THE WHITE WOMAN they who were desired to find love In this strange trystlng place that might have been brought to earth on the wings of Time's first dawn. It leaps Beyond the Frontiers of Imagination. But strangest of all is Tartan, giant of the primitives, who leaped from tree to tree like the apes who were his companions. But who loved with, the heart of Man. Time of Shows 1 : 30, 3 : 30, 5 : 30, 7 : 30, 9 : 30 ADULTS-25c CHILDREN 10c

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