Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 3, 13 November 1919 — Page 7
PAGE SEVEN BRINGING UP FATHER Rv VlnVlnn-1 M mTO m.Er 13V ilLiViailUj! Men a,ld wmien ,ufftrinT fron, ba,.k. aclie. rheumatic pain, stiff and s-ol-lt.i Joints, lameness and soreness, will bo triad to read how one woman found relief from kidney and bladder trouble. Mrs. G. Hyde. Homestead. Mich, writes: "I have been troubled Willi weak kidneys; and several times in the last ten yearn I had that terrible backache and tired out feeling, tioarcely able to do my work. Foley Kidney Fills made me feel like a new person."' For sale by A. G. I-.uk en & Co. Adv. EVER CATCH tOU IN THAT ICE BOX AAtN - I'LL eEAT YOU WELL. -FOR OrCE. it WU2.M T ME bHE WUZ. hol-lelr i r at : : Laugh ! Laugh ! Laugh ! Coming Boon "UNCLE TOM WITHOUT THE CABIN" C ) A Mack Sennett Comedy
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND o UN-TjLEvjKAM. THURfcDAY, i0V. 13, lUiy.
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Local Persons to Start Concerts at Earlham
Sunday afternoon concerts will be given at Earlham college by a group of musicians of the college who have recently organized and are now rehearsing. They are Marius Fossenliemper, clarinetist; Miriam Hadley, violin; Helen Hadley, piano; Robert Gentle, violin; Ruth Osborne, cellist, and Mark Heitbrink, bass. With the exception of Miss Osborne, all of these musicians are well known In Richmond. Marius Fossenkemper vas a member of the Richmond high fcchool sextette. The Misses Hadley are talented
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Charlie Davis spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Thornburg Mr. and Mrs. Marion Myers and Miss Isabelle Kienzle spent Sunday afternoon at Millsburogh, visiting friends Mr. and Mrs. Fred Davis and daughter of Newcastle spent Sunday with her mother, Mrs. Byrd . . . . Mrs. Charles Thornburg spent Monday with Mrs. Russell Grubbs. . . .Mr. and Mrs. Tom Gray, spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Everette Tipton ... .Mr. and Mrs. Julian Study and daughter, Martha and Russell Grubbs took a drive Sunday afternoon to their former home.... Mr. and Mrs. Arch Nicholson and son and Mr. and Mrs. Clay Brooks and family of Richmond were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Nicholson. .Mrs. Carrie Hatfield spent Saturday at Richmond . .Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Berkheimer of Richmond spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. John Martindale. . . .Mrs. Ves Nicholson and Mrs. Ed Stanton spent Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Jonathan Cloud Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ridge spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Clyde McMullen, and two children, Mary and Elizabeth of Cambridge City Mrs. Charles Richardson and daughter, Viona, are spending a few days with Mrs. Boggs of Pennville. . . . Mrs. Albert Albertson is visiting in Indianapolis for a few days. .. .Mrs. Em Brooks is attending the funeral of her sister of Centerville ....Mrs. May of Hagerstown is keeping house for George Nicholson and Harry King.... Mrs. Jane Ham took dinner and supper Sunday with Mrs. Lillie Gunckle and son,. Francisr
Palace SPECIAL TODAY .1 BIG PICTURES 3 WALLACE REID In the thrilling 5-act drama "THE DUB"
A scrappy Paramount production with Reid at his best. ANTONIO MORENO In the Vitagraph Western
The Perils of Thunder
Mountain" And for a Big Laugh MUTT AND JEFF
A Big Show at a Reasonable Price.
musicians. Miss Helen Hadley played for the high school orchesra for a number of years and will receive her degree in music at Earlham in Jun?. Miss Miriam Hadley was concert master of the Richmond high school orchestra. Well Known Here. Robert Gentle, also a concert master of the high school orchestra for some time, is well known to all Richmond people as a talented violinist. Mark Heitbrink was a member of the high school orchestra. With the ability of the members of this sextette and the energy which they have expended in the preparation
of their work, the selections the concerts which they will give promise to be interesting. The date of their Initial appearance has not yet been set. Concerts will be given on Sunday afternoon in Lindlcy ball. Not only the college students and members of the college community, but persons living in town are invited to attend. There will be no admission. Plays for Miss Keller. The Zoellner Quartette is to give the third number on the Artists' Recital Course at Earlham, March 24. Season tickets are ready and will be on sale at Fu'.ghura's Victrola shop on and after Nov. 14. Although in the cities this one conert sells for prices ranging from 75 cents to $2. the entire course of three concerts is put on at Earlham as an educational venture, and the tickets are selling for $1.25. An interesting and beautiful experience of the Zoellner Quartette during their long tour of America a short time ago was their meeting and p'aying privately for Helen Keller and her teacher, Mrs. Macy. Miss Keller was in Oklahoma City on account of a lecture engagement. She could not see the players nor hear the music but through her sense of touch and peculiarly developed
sense of feeling, she could appreciate every shade of tone. As they played she stood with finger tips laid lightly
thur Rankin, latest and youngest of ( he Rankin-Davenport-Drew-Barrymore I'umily.
on the resonant wood of f tl ed before her. She could rnotes but the vibrations t
were interpreted as appi though she possessed a ti .. MURRAY, hearing. A princess meets a plowboy, and "It is beautiful," she exclaimed soft-! young love breaks down all barriers, ly, as the music ceased. "You don't! in "The Lost Princess," which, star-
peal when Yano unwittingly falls in love with the woman who has encouraged and Inspired him to win fame, md then learns that her husband was thp man he had killed. At the Murray today.
know how much I appreciate it." Miss Keller responded instantly to the music, swaying In rythm and trembling. Mr. Zoellner in telling of the incident, said it was a most wonderful experience and that the entire Quartette felt that they were playing to a responsive instrument.
The Theatres j
ring Albert Ray with pretty Elinor Fair, will be shown at the Murray Theatre today. "The Lost Princess" is a William Fox picture, and is described as an unusually sweet romance which begins in Europe and ends in California. It is spid to be full of keenly sympathetic touches. The story deals with conspiracy aimed at a throne and with the love of a princess and an American youth.
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WASHINGTON When Selznick Pictures presents "A Regular Girl" at the Washington Theatre the week of Nov. 16, we shall all get our chance to welcome Elsie Janis to the American footlights again. Elsie has been abroad two years teaching the Yanks to sing their Chateau Thierry marching songs in French, and now she is back again, proving her faithfulness to the public by entering movies, so that her initial performance may be spread broadcast at once. "A Regular Girl's" story, scenarioized by Frances Marion and Edmund Goulding, tells how Elizabeth Schuyler returns to New York, not to rest from her war activities, but to take up the completion of the battle over there. She must find her A. E. F. pals jobs! And she does, with the aid of her fiance, a young "discharged" attorney, in a most unique way Matt Moore plays "Lizzie's" ardent side-kick, and Roert Lyton, her dotir.g dad. In the supporting cast are Harold Forshay, Tammany Young and r-
Cl'T THIS Ol'T IT'S WORTH MOXEY DON'T MISS THIS. Cut out this slip, enclose with 5c and mail it to Foley & Co.. 2S35 Sheffield Ave., Chicago. 111., writing your name and address clearly. You will receive in return' a trial package containing Foley's Honey and Tar Compound, for coughs, colds and croup: Foley Kidney Pills for pain in sides and back; rheumatism, backache, kidney and bladder ailments; and
Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome j and thoroughly cleansing cathartic, for i constipation, biliousness, headache, '
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MURRETTE. Sessue Hayakawa, the Japanese star in "The Gray Horizon," is seen in a production that for artistic photography and dramatic strength reaches the high-water mark of excellence. The locale of a great part of the story is in the Siera-Nevada mountains where lives Yano Masata, a young Japanese artist who has sought the solitude of the mountains for inspiration and work. To this retreat comes Furthman, an art connoisseur who specializes in forging bonds. When Yano learns that Furthman expects to utilize Yano's talents in his criminal schemes, and then discovers that the forger is the man who has betrayed his sister, O Haru San, he kills the forgerbigapiist by throwing him over a cliff. The subsequent action develops situations of tremendous emotional ap-
DID YOU EVER USESLOAN'S? Keep It handy to promote prompt relief from rheumatic paina and aches WHEN you know what Sloan's Liniment will do, as thousands of men and women the world oyer know, you, too, will keep it handy. You will use it for those "twinges of rheumatu," for relieving that lame back, muscle 6tiftness and soreness, aches, all sorts of external pains, and exposure aftermaths. Only takss a little, applied without rubbing. Soon penetrates, scattering the congestion, bringing merciful relief to the throbbing, jumping part. Three sizes 35c, 70c, $1.40. Anv druggist has it. If not, we'd like to know his name.
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MURRAY THEATRE.
New Bill and Picture Today Last Half
Four Meryle Prince Girls Vaudeville's classiest girl quartet In harmony singing, popular, high class and comedy.
MARILEES and DORIA "Gems of songs and Opera," Special stage settings
WHITE BROS. "The Tip-Top Boys" Comedy acrobats Albert Ray & Elinor Fair In "The Lost Princess," Five-reel Fox comedy Coming Monday HIPPO AND NAPOLEON, the baby elephant and chimpanzee. Greatest animal act In vaudeville. "Better Come Early"
BOYS AND GIRLS Remember the special show Saturday Morning, Nov. 15th
IF YOU HAD A NECK
AS LONG AS THIS FELLO.V AND HAD SORE THROAT
alTI I WAY I 1 DOWN
TONS I LI HE
WOULD QUICKLY RELIEVE IT Soo. and fide . Hospital Biz, Si, ALT. Dr.JGGiSIS
URRETTIGV The Home of Stars "
Last Times Today SESSUE HAYAKAWA in "THE GRAY HORIZON" Also "MIXED DRINKS" A Good Comedy Coming Friday and Saturday DOROTHY GISH in "NUGGETT NELL"
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TO RESIDENTS OF RICHMOND : BEFORE NOON TOMORROW YOUR CITY SHALL BE
Three Days
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Three Days
EACH BOMB CONTAINS A TICKET TO ELSIE JANIS in "A REGULAR GIRL" WATCH FOR THE AIRPLANE
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Today, Tomorrow and Saturday-
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A picture you are sure to like also Pathe News and Harry Frank el in songs
Coming Sunday 3EN TURPIN in "UNCLE TOM WITHOUT THE CABIN" and Elsie Janis in "A REGULAR GIRL"
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