Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 223, 1 July 1919 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, JULY 1, 1919.
4
-v... (
mo
At an attractive auction bridge party this afternoon at her home in
Reeveston, Miss MiriamTCrone, daugh
ter of Mrs. Fred Krone, announced aer
'i annroachine " marriage to William
Pierce Loer, son of the late James
f Loer of Newcastle, which will be soi
emnized July 15. Bridge was played at three tables, which were arranged
'on the veranda. Large bowls of dai-
. ses were used on the porch and in
. the living room. Late in the after
noon a two-course luncheon was serv
ed at the tables, where covers were
'laid for Miss Janet Millikin of Newcastle, '- Miss Olive Lewis, Miss Jose
phine Wilson, Miss Hazel Sarles, Miss Margaret Wickemeyer, Mrs. Phil
ip Robbins. Mrs. Irene Ryan, Mrs. . Robert L. Study, Mrs. Byram Robbins!
Mrs. Xenophon King and Mrs. Ev-
erette McConaha.
be enjoyed and a dance for members and friends will be given.
Miss Josephine Porfido, of North G
street, and Chester Bizzar, will be
married Thursday morning at St.
Mary's church. They will reside at 724 North Thirteenth street, after their marriage.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kolp will give their regular dance at Jackson Park this evening.
Miss Helen Buckley is in Chicago
attending the national convention of
the Alpha Chi Omega sorority which
convenes there July 1-5. Miss Buck
ley is a member of the Purdue unl versity chapter.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Mendenhall of
Mt. Sterling, O., are the guests of Dr. and Mrs. E. H. Mendenhall at their
home on South Seventh street.
Miss Helen Edgerton has returned from a visit with friends in Detroit,
Michigan.
' A pretty wedding, simple in all de-
- tails, was solemnized last' evening at the home of Mrs. Susan Dickinson, of
Randolph street, when her daughter, ! Mlss Edna, was united in marriage
to George Welsh, son of Mr. and Mrs
Timothy Welsh, of this city. Rev. F.
A. Dressel of the First English, Lu
.theran church, performed the cere
mony, using the double ring service. '., Daises were used everywhere about the house. Intermingled with fern and amilax. An altar of ferns studded with bouquets of daises was arranged In the living room, before which, the vows were spoken. The bride wore a dainty gown of white georgette crepe and carried Aaron Ward roses. There were no attendants. Following T the ceremony a buffet supper was served in the dining room, where" the color scheme of yellow and white wa3 most artistically carried out; A " French basket of daises was used as a centerpiece for the table and huge bouquets of the same flowers, tied with white tulle were attached to the four corners of the table. Mr. "and Mrs. Welsh left last evening on a short wedding trip, the bride traveling
Miss Geneva Snedeker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Snedeker, and Leo YTeiss, son of Mrs. Anna Weiss, were married this morning at 8 o'clock at St. Andrew's church. The Rev. F. A. Roell officiated. Miss Mae Weiss, sister of the groom, was bride's maid
and Miss Lillian Snedeker, sister of the bride, was maid of honor. The
groom was attended by Christopher Kinsella. The bride wore a gown of
Photoplay Masterpiece At mm ' rm '. WtW " I
murrette l heatre 1 ms ween Showing at the Murrette theatre,
July 2, 3. 4 and 5 one of the greatest of film successes "The Unpardonable
Sin." The story of "The Unpardonable Sin" written by Major -Rupert
Hughes of the American army and made Into a master photoplay by Harry Garson is more than fiction. The starring of Blanche Sweet in this great picture Is noteworthy. The subject matter of this photoplay is based
upon facts developed by various investigating commissions which were active In Europe some months ago. Not a little has been written of the care with which modern photoplay productions are made. When one sees
reproduced before him on the screen
a series of incidents which combine to tell a dramatic story it Is easy enough
to forget the myriads of little things
which the producer and his staff have
had to think of in order that the rep
resentation may be true to life. Quite
naturally the interest centers in what
the principal characters in the story
are doing, and as long as there is nothing in the picture atmosphere to jar, this mass of details is forgotten,
but let some little apparently unim
portant fitting be something other than what it should be, and the whole
effect is destroyed.
The manner in which Harry Gar-
son's "The Unpardonable Sin" was produced, is in point along the lines
which have been suggested
The story of "The Unpardonable
white georgette crepe with a tulle
veil and carried a shower bouquet of . Sln. told ls a thrilling one of love and bride roses. Miss Weiss was dressed adventure, with locations that emin pale sreen georgette crene with i . ni j v w.
large picture hat of the same color, section of the United States, Washingand carried a bouquet of pink sweet , ton D c one or two of the iarger peas. The maid of honor wore a gown j c,tieg of Beigiura, some of the rural of. pink georgette crepe, with large j sections of Belgium, a couple of the pink picture hat, and Carried pink Jmnnrtant HtU nf fiarmnnv. tvntoal
sweet peas Following the ceremony, j mllltary communities occupied by the a wedding breakfast was served at the; arman nrmv an n9iiv New York
home of the bride's parents, on the National road, east. Covers were laid for twenty-five guests. Mr. and Mrs. Weiss left this afternoon on a short wedding trip.
' The Missionary society of the First Methodist church will not meet tomorrow. Announcement of the next meeting will be made later.
in a tailored suit of navy blue serge, i Second street.
They will be at home at 107 North, Fifteenth street after a few weeks. Out of town guests at the wedding were 'Mrs. Frances Thomas of Newark, Ohio, and Mrs. Elsie Thornburg, of Hagerstown.
' Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Smith and daughter Mabel, are spending a few days with Mrs. William Schultz on North
Dr. and Mrs. J. E. Wright of Camr, bridge City, were the guests of friends here yesterday. I '"' Mrs. A. W, Roach spent the day in i. Logansport. r Lieut. V. K. Curtis and son, Edwin, of Circleville, Ohio, will return home j tomorrow after a visit with the forV flier's . sister, Mrs. Frank Lehman. Lieut. Curtis recently returned from ;" overseas duty. A dance will be given far the genf pral public at Glen Miller park pavil- ; ion, July 4. Dancing will begin at 2 ' and continue until 10 o'clock.
" The Missionary society of First Christian church will hold its regular meeting tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the church.
Miss. Mary Banfill returned from a three weeks' visit with Mrs. William M. Place, of Dayton, Ohio.
Mrs. J. E. Donson and daughters,
Leona and Irene, left this morning for Elmira, N. V., where they will spend several weeks with Mr. and Mrs. George Donson, formerly of Richmond.
Mrs. Alex Murphy and daughter, Emily, of West Point, Miss., are visiting Mrs. Murphy's mother, Mrs. Mary T. Windsor, at her home in the Windsor apartment on South Eighth street.
Frank Bescher has returned from Indianapolis, where he spent the week end.
Marius Fossenkemper will leave tomorrow for akeside, Ohio, on Lake Erie, where he will join the Lakeside Chautauqua orchestra for the summer. Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Baker of North
Eighteenth street visited friends in Indianapolis yesterday.
Mrs. Alber D. Gayle was hostess this noon for a pretty luncheon at the Country club. The table was decorated with bowls of cut flowers and covers were laid for twenty-four guests.
The Missionary society of the First Baptist church will meet tomorrow afternoon with Mrs. Adline Sponenturger, at her home, 2024 South A street. The picnic meeting of the Woman's Foreign Missionary society of Grace Methodist church will be held tomorrow afternoon with Miss Margaret Beard at West Fifth and Asylum avenue. Mrs. Scott McDonald and daughters, Virginia and Betty Anne, of Huntington, W. Va., who have been visiting Mrs. W. E. Bell, will leave tomorrow for Wisconsin to spend the summer. The Luther League of St. Paul's Lutheran church will give an ice cream social this evening on the lawn at the home of Mrs. George Knollenberg at South Fourth and B streets.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McClure spent Sunday in Indianapolis; where they attended the Columbus-Indianapolis
baseball game. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Mayhew have returned from an extended trip through California and Yellowstone park. Mr. and Mrs. Harry M. Macke and son, Marshall, of Chicago Heights, 111., motored here for a short visit with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Ratliff and Mr. and Mrs. Ira Bishop. The Ladies' Auxiliary of the B. of L. F. and E., will give an ice cream social tomorrow evening on the lawn at' the home of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Hagerty, 226 North Eighteenth street.
city.
There is strain of story in this picture of particular interest to Boy Scouts. Much of the comedy and not a little of the tenser dramatic action depends upon the activities of two members of the Boy Scout organization. One is a Belgian Boy Scout and the other is a wayfaring Scout from Kansas, who happens to run into a lot
of terrible hardships while in Europe l
with his mother. Very few people in this country are
familiar with some of the coldly in-
ruman philosophy of Nietzche before
the world conflagration began in Europe. Harry Garson's tremendous
photoplay versions uses some of the extracts from Nietzche in a striking manner to show the falsity of the mad philosophers teachings. A scene in which Blanche Sweet appearing as Dimmy Parcot is subjected to a military search by a character calculated to strike terror to the heart of any woman. The action shows the herione's garments being torn from her body piece by piece.
ANNIE'S FIRST. REAL TASTE OF
PLEASURE Annie's spirits rose as they walked
down Broadway in the halt-holiday crowd. . Young Carroll was easy to talk to; and did most of the talking himself. As they passed down Wall
street he gazed down its crooked can
yon with an admiring eye.
"Ha, that's the little street! he
cried. "There is where the dough is!
Just you keep an eye on Bernie and
you will see him dodging down there one of these days in his automobile to keep a date with a millionaire. "Is it so easy to get rich?" asked Annie. ' "Well you got to get in with the right crowd," conceded Bernie. When they were on the boat, well forward to get the cool bay breezez, Bernie talked some more. He told how he and his "crowd" sometimes picked up stray tips and took "flyers."
"Why, I couldn't make out on only my salary," said Bernie. "I've got
$20 a year to pay in boat club dues
alone!" Annie was even more interested in the boat club than in high finance. And as Bernie would rather hold forth on these subjects than anything else, and could not always get so eager a listener, the two were soon getting on swimmingly. "There's a dance on at the club this very night," he presently remembered. "Come on go! You'll have a crackerjack time." Annie thrilled at the thought. But clothes she was sure she hadn't "the right clothes." "Shucks! Wear what you got on. You look fine in that. Nobody fusses up."
The Waterwitch Boat club on the Harlem river was the portal of a new world to Annie. The fresh air and decent surroundings, the wholesome boys and girls she met Oh how different, how blessedly different from Fidelbaum's Dancing academy on East Broadway! How much, nicer and
more fun even than Miss Wells set
tlement house! Annie beamed and backed and blossomed out in the first real gayety she had ever known. She thought of the girls she hid gone to Coney island with that time, and the horrid youths in the party. And of their rowdy pleasures. Why didn't they, too. free themselves from that life cross the chasm from factory to office, from East Side dance ball to West Side boat club, no matter what the struggle to cross it cost! She had done it If they would renounce their cheap fun along with
their cheap clothes, and knuckle down hard enough. Get Into the "right crowd," as Bernie Carroll put it. "You know." said Annie to Bernie as they were sitting out a dance on the gallery overhanging the lapping river. "I'd love to bring someone I know to this delicious place a girl who works in a shop. She stitches shirt waists all day from eight to six, and never has any decent fun. "Oh, Lord, no! We don't want factory girls. They'd be awfully out of place, really. And besides, they wouldn't care for it DOn't go getting this idea of uplifting the downtrodden factory girl in your head. It doesn't pay. If they wanted anything different they'd have it. You can get anything if you go after it right. Come On, here's our one-step." i (To be continued.) mmmmmmwmmmmmmmmxammmmmumwmmuwmwmmmmmmwmmmmm
Unsightly Hair -DeIliracfe De Miracle tfc original aanttarr liquid, la trnXy a revelatlra la o4era aelntea. It la Jut aa ffleaetoaja for aamln; mtm, bristly rrowtaa mm it tm for twlmmry . Only aeanlae DcaUnket Jaa a encT.baek piiuM la caea packana. At toilet eoaaters la Oc 91 sad 99 iba, mr ay stall Croat aa la plaia wrapper mm recctpt at price. FREE fc00 wlt taatfaaoalala mt ala-aeat aataortttea explain, what caoaaa hair mm face, nclc aad arm a, way It inn and haw Deltllraele devKalsaea It, availed la plat a aealad eatrelop am rvaaeat. DcMlraele, Park Ava. aaai USth St New York.
MENDENHALL BREAKS ARM
Illinois Physician To Locate In Richmond
Dr. Frank E. Hagie, who is now located in Elizabeth, 111., will move to Richmond soon, according to an . announcement made by his father-in-law, Dr. J. J. Rae, pastor of the First Presbyterian church. Dr. Hagie will establish a down-town office and take up the practice of medicine and surgery within a few weeks. Dr. Hagie ls an honor graduate of the Physicians and Surgeons college of Chicago and has his M. A. from the University of Illinois.
Since breaking his arm at the
shoulder two weeks ago on a revolv
ing table at the Soldiers' Home amuse
ment Park in Dayton, Dr. E. H. Men
denhall of this city has suffered much
pain. Upon the advice of several sur
geons, including a bone specialist in Indianapolis, Dr. Mendenhall has not
yet had his arm set. He wa3 ad-1
vised yesterday to allow it to set as it is, although this may cause him to suffer a stiff shoulder. The doctor is at his home here.
MEDprnm iillllllliuniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinii!umiiniiiiiiniiii,l
om!
FRENCH SOCIALISTS RESIGN
PARIS, June 30. The entire Socialist representation on the Chamber committee to examine the peace treaty has resigned on account of the rejection of two of their candidates, including Jean Longuet, leader of the Minority Socialists, who were opposed by the other parties on account of their Bolshevist sympathies. The Chamber will elect the successors of the Socialists representatives tomorrow.
For deep fat frying Mazola is matchless. It positively does not smoke up the kitchen. The smoking point is far above the temperature required to cook food properly. It does not carry the odor or taste from one food to an
othereven fish or onions. It can be used over and over again. Try this astonishing test of Mazola economy and universal use yourself today.
Pprr Wonderful Cook Book.
Write
Corn Product Refining Conpaay P. O. Bex 161, N.w York.
NATIONAL STARCH COMPANY Sales Raprcaentatieea 712 Merchants Bank Bids- Indianapolis, lad.
MAKERS C?
The Tirzah aid society, will meet tomorrow afternoon with Mrs. Fred Minor at her home, 21 Southwest Fifth street. Officers will be elected. The Hubbell fanily reunion was held Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Hubbell, near Bentonville. Twenty-live relatives of the family were present. Garnet Lowry, of Cadiz, who has just returned from over seas service, was a guesf of honor during the day, and told some interesting stories of soldier life. An elaborate dinner was served at noon. The afternoon was spent informally and light refreshments were served late in the afternoon. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Hubbell and daughter, Elfie, of Milton, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Brown and family, of Knightstown, Mr. and Mrs. Arlie Lowry and family of Cadiz, Miss Marie Cunningham of New Castle, Charles Beeson. of Bentonville. M. W. Manlove of Connersville, Miss Emma Lynch of Cambridge City, and Miss Daisy Kuntz of Bentonville.
Mrs. Louis V. Schneider, of Indianapolis, will come Thursday for a visit with relatives and friends here. Mrs. Schneider was formerly Miss Mona Porter.
The entertainment committee of the Knights of Columbus has arranged for a series of dances to be given this summer. The first one will be at Jackson Park. Thursday evening, July 10. Kolp's four piece orchestra will play for the dance. Members and friends are urged to attend the dance. Miss Cora Bartlemay, of Goshen, Ind., who has been visiting relatives here, left yesterday for New York city where she will study at Columbia university. She was accompanied by Miss Shirley M. Crane of Adrian, Mich. r who will also attend the university.
Papal Secretary Reports On Visit To Conference ROME, Saturday, June 2S Archbishop Bonavantura Carretti, Papal under-secretary of state, returned from Paris today and made a full report at the Vatican on his mission to the peace conference. Monsignor Cerretti
had lengthy conversations with Pope Benedict and Cardinal Gasparii, papal secretary of state. Both congratulated him warmly on the success of his mission. The report dealt with changes made in the peace treaty regarding Catholic missions in former German colonies and the protection of their property. He also reported on other questions including unofficial conversations with members of the various peace delegations at Paris and discussions there regarding the league of nations.
Say "Nope" ! to your Grocerman
nTTnFfF if he tries to put over on JiL
Miss Janet Millikin, of Newcastle is j 0od as'
urn ft ura i ui iuias ;uuiaiu muuc tit licri home in Reeveston. i
you something "just as
For
Pies,
WILL EXHIBIT NC-4.
The Degree of Honor will meet this evening at 7:30 o'clock in the Commercial club rooms. Following the business session, a social hour will
NEW YORK, July 1. Announcement was made here today that Secretary Daniels has approved exhibition in Central park of the American naval seaplane NC-4, first to fly across the Atlantic. . The NC-4 will arrive here from Plymouth, England, on the U. S. S. Aroostook, the end of this week.
Red Cross Ball Blue In the word3 of the immortal Josh Billings "There aint no sich thing." There is positively nothing as good as, or equal to RED CROSS BALL BLUE for producing. clothes of such white purity as bring a blush to new fallen snow. Try It Prove It 5 Cents Everywhere
V- " j
For Cakes,
As Well as Bread--The All Purpose Flour No matter what you're baking, Pillsbury's Best is the ideal flour for you to use. Tender, flaky pie crust; light, fluffy, full-flavored cakes; delicious biscuits and bread; all are made better with Pillsbury's Best flour. Milled to a definite standard, Pillsbury's Best flour is wonderfully adapted to every baking need of the home. You need no special flours for special purposes when you have Pillsbury's Best in the house. It is remarkably efficient for all baking; a true all-purpose flour. Buy Pillsbury's Best today and be sure of your baking every time. Stop the inconvenience of keeping "special" flours on hand. Order a sack of Pillsbury's Best from your grocer now. V PILLSBURY FLOUR MILLS COMPANY Minneapolis, Minn.
i)
f Hi L
