Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 16, 28 November 1919 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, NOV. 28, 1919.
Society
One hundred members of the Richmond Country Club attended the Thanksgiving open house at the club. Dancing began at 5 o'clock. A buffet supper was served at 7 o'clock, after which dancing continued. The Har-Jno-Novelty orchestra furnished the music throughout the evening. Mlsa Winifred Comstock delightfully entertained a number of , young people at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Comstock in Reeveston Wednesday evening, with an informal dancing party. The guests were Miss Mary Jones, Miss Jane Carpenter, Miss Benita Monarch, Miss Louise Monarch. Miss Catherine Binkley, Herbert Gross, Wynne Evans, Floyd Nusbaum, Elwin Horner, Burr Simmons and Harry Thomas. Miss Catherine Binkley entertained
Informally at her home on West Main street Thursday evening. The guests were Miss Benita and Miss Louise Monarch, Miss Mary Jones, Miss Dorothy Lebo, Herbert Gross, Elwln Horner, Harry Thomas, Floyd Nusbaum and Wynne Evans. Lawrence Chrow, who Is attending Carnegie Technical Institute at Pittsburg, is spending the Thanksgiving holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Chrow of North Tenth street. Miss Florence Bond, a member of the faculty of Indiana University, Is spending the week end with her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Charles Bond, North Tenth street Mr. and Mrs. John Keys entertained with a 6 o'clock dinner at their home on South Tenth street Thursday evening. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Walter Dalbey, Mr. and Mrs. William N. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hamp- : ton and Mr. and Mrs. Burton Gaines. A Thanksgiving dinner was given at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Jones, South Twelfth street Covers were laid for Mrs. Charles King, Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph King, Miss Pearl Warner, Miss Florence Corns, Leon Shrahan, William Scheler, Walter Byrd and Ray Griffith. Mrs. Josephine Perkins entertained with a family dinner at her home on Sheridan street Thanksgiving. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Perkins, Mr. and Mrs. Francis Via, Mr. and Mrs. George Batchelor, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Longfellow, Mrs. Mary Foreman, Miss Irene Batchelor, Reed Longfellow, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Barnes, Mrs. Paul Redingschafer, Mr. and Mrs. Forest Longfellow, Smith
Batchelor, Ernest Perkins, Clare
Longfellow, Marvin Earnes, John, Donald and Dale Redingshafer, Georgw Batchelor and Mrs. Josephine Perkins. For the pleasure of their house guests, Mrs. I. J. Cannon and Mrs. Ed Hunt of Hyde Park, Cincinnati, Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Cummings entertained with a dinner Thursday at their home on South Sixteenth street. Mr. and Mrs. R. P. Keever enter tained with a Thanksgiving dinner for their son Rufus A. Keever, who has just returned from overseas. The guests Included Mr. and. Mrs. Orville Thalls, Mrs. George Stambaugh and family, Mrs. Andrew Ingerman, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Keever, Mr. Joe Keever and Miss Rlcella Keever. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Anderson of the Kandy Shop entertained their employes with a turkey dinner Thanksgiving at 11 o'clock. The tables were attractively decorated and covers were laid for seventeen, including Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Anderson, William Anderson, Mrs. Marie Smith, Mrs. Clara McGee, Mrs. Loa Bond, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Parshall and son. Miss Frances Seaver, Miss Ruth Bond, Miss Elsie Plats, Miss Gladys Buban, Miss Mae Kendrick, Miss Bert Wall, Kiefer Calkins and Ralph Ward. Miss Isabelle Gerling of Connersville spent Thanksgiving with Miss Mary Huber. Mrs. Elizabeth A. Green, wife of Henry Green of Easthaven avenue, celebrated her eightieth birthday anniversary Thanksgiving day. Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dent, Mrs. Ella L. Crampton and Miss Grace and Indiana Crampton of Rochester, N. Y.
Sarah Semans, Mary Frances Chur
chill and Mary Sprong were admitted
to the rank of fire maker at a meeting of the Tatohekiya Camp Fire Wednesday. Honor beads were awarded at this time. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Siegel of South Ninth street entertained with a Thanksgiving dinner at their home and the guests included Mr. and Mrs. Ed Sharp and family, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Longfellow and family and
GLASS OF SALTS CLEANS KIDNEYS
If .Your .Back .Hurts, or .Bladder Bothers You, Drink Lots of Water.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Murray and family.' Kolp's orchestra furnished music for the annual Thanksgiving dance given Thursday evening in the I. O. O. F. hall by the Knights of Columbus. The dancers were: Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hartzell. Mr. and Mrs. George O'Brien, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Miller, Mr. and Mrs. William Kinsella. Morella Issen, Mary Dillon, Blanche Dillon, Mildred Townsend, Loretta Issen, Julia Llchtenfels, Mary Porter, Lucille Crosby; Josephine Pfeiffer, Mary Pfeiffer, Marjorie Gennett, Mae Weiss, Violet Jelly, Cecelia Jelly, Helen Brewster, Jeanette Schell, Mary Knauber, Bertha Taube, Mary Huber, Isabelle Gerling of Connersville, Flora Torbeck, Loretta Taube, Helen Pelffer, Violet Boucke, Eva Casey, Dorothy Gegan, Violet Sitloh, Katherlne Boucker, Cecelia Stiens, Rosella Vosemeler, Edna Abley, Anna Stolle, Flora Dehner, Catherine Stiens, Margaret Mareno, Catherine Louer, Alice Louer, Corine Essenmacker, Crescentla Als-
flag, Anna Burke, Mary Corvall, Margaret Corvall, Minnie Evans, Agnes
Knauber, Elvira Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
L. Peiffer, R. Roke, Joe Weiss, George Huber, Albert Sipple, H. Frame, Joe ZwlsBler, L. Hillmore, T. Qulgley, Ray Miller, Claude Dagle, A. Noland, Andrew Issen, Paul Reece, Ray Dehner,
Clarence Sauer, John Meyer, W. Boyce,tF. Kiser, James Harrington,
Carl Geien, A. P. Otten, Louis Ripber: ger, Walter Cronin, Ray Llchtenfels. Edward Hoey, Richard Sharkitt, William Kohle, Harry Brokamp, Carl Pfeiffer, William Livingston, F. Fowble, Earl Walterman, George O'Brien, Thomas Faye, Ray Nolan, Peter Llchtenfels, V. Rains, George Weaver, Loretta Korves. One hundred and fifty couples attended the Thanksgiving dance given by the Elks at the club house Thursday evening. This was oae of the largest and most successful dances ever given by the club. Music was furnished by the Venetian Troubadour orchestra with Miss Catherine Roberts as soloist. A concert was given from 8:15 until 9:15 o'clock. Dancing began at 9 : 30 o'clock. Punch was served during the evening. Miss Florence Williams, Miss Jane Newman and Miss Mildred Elliott are spending Thanksgiving in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Buck are spending the Thanksgiving holidays with Dr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Stewart, Madrid apartments, Avondale, Cincinnati. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Nicholson entertained the members of the Nicholson families at dinner Thanksgiving, at their home on North A street. Miss Helen Jessup was hostess Thanksgiving evening for the members of the Ornis Melas at her home on North Twenty-First street. Blue and
gold, club colors formed the color scheme. Games and dancing furnished the entertainment for the evening after which a luncheon was served. The guests were Miss Helen Hazeltlne, Miss Pauline Smith, Miss Gertrude Eggelson, Miss Mildred Whitely, Miss Gertrude Williams, Miss Esther Wilson, Miss Lucille Weller, Miss Mary Reinhart. Miss Marjorie Edwards. Miss Bernice Norris, Miss Igden Shelton, Conrad Ottenfeld, Sidney Watt Robert Reid, Roland Loehr, Harold Latta, John Livingston, Robert Graham, William Emslie, and MarcelIub Pohlmeyer. A family dinner was given Thanksgiving at the home of Mrs. Ida Lemon, South Seventeenth street The guesta were Mr. and Mrs. William Wilson and Bon Robert, Mr. and Mrs. Roland Nusbaum and son, Mr. and Mrs. Loui3 Morgan, Mr. and Mrs. William Morgan, Everett Lemon, Charles Wolf, Mrs. Olive Bowser of Goshen, Mary Lemon and .Everett Lemon, Jr. Miss Elizabeth Porter and Miss Martha Porter, of the Wayne Apartments, spent Thanksgiving in Greensfork, the guests of Mrs. Sarah Borton. Mrs. George Lammert has been called to Cincinnati by the death of her grandmother. Mr. and Mrs. Harry G. Wessel ofl South Fifteenth street, have as their
Thanksgiving guests, their son Earl Wessell, and Edward H. Melster, both of Columbus, O. ' Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kolp will give a Thanksgiving dance this evening in the I. O. O. F. Hall. Kolps orchestra will furnish the music. All contributions for the bazaar to be given by the women of -the First Presbyterian church on Wednesday, must be at the church by 1 o'clock. Fancy work, must be turned in by Tuesday evening. Choir members of the First Christian Church are urged to attend the choir rehearsal at the church this evening. An important matter of business wiU be presented. Mi83 Clara Comstock, physical director of women at Earlham College, addressed the" Home Economics and Civics department of the Woman's Club In the public library this afternoon on "Reconstruction in the Lives
of Women in Relation to Health, Exercise, Dress and Nutrition." The All Stellar orchestra will play for the dance to be given Friday evening in Dublin by the Young' Men's Dancing club and Thursday evening at Williamsburg, when a dance will be given in the I. O. O. F. halL
Here's A Butter Worth While
Genuine Economy Creamery Butter is the ideal butter for your table. Its unusual quality will please you. Ask your grocer he has it look for this trademark.
Jos. Smedinghoff, Dist.
Hear Ye! Hear Ye! This Man Wants The public's Ear Richmond Citizen so Proud of the Change in His Condition Desires All to Know What Brought it About. Declares His Constipation, Indigestion, Gastritis, Sluggish Liver and Weak Kidneys Greally Helped by Dreco.
When your kidneys hurt and your back feels sore, don't get scared and proceed to load your stomach with a lot of drugs that excite the kidneys and irritate the entire urinary tract. Keep your kidneys clean like you keep your bowels clean, by flushing them with a mild, harmless salts which removes the body's urinous waste and stimulates them to their normal activity. The function of the kidneys is to filter the blood. In 24 hours they strain from it 500 grains of acid and waste, so we can readily understand the vital importance of keeping the kidneys active. Drink lots of water you can't drink too much; also get from any pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoon in a glass of water before breakfast each morning for a few days and your kidneys will act fine. Thi3 famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon Juice, combined with lithla, and has been -used for generations to clean and stimulate clogged kidneys; also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder weakness, Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot injurej makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone ehould take now and then to keep their kidneys clean and active. Try this, also keep up the water drinking, and no doubt you will wonder what became of your kidney trouble and ; backache. Adv.
Constipation 13 one of the worst of modern ailments. Can you imagine a sewer pipe being stopped up for days at a time? You have probably seen that happen and you know the consequences. Then just think of the sewer pipe in the human body .srettinc; stopped up by constipation. Think of the foul gases kept in the system and the poison being absorbed by the blood and carried to every organ of the body. Do you -wonrlor that the breath is foul, that there is always a bad taste in the mouth; that there are
splitting headaches; that the appetite vanishes; that t he weight falls away and nerves po all to pieces, the rest being broken at night? Do you wonder that the liver and kidneys become affected. Go the limit and pet rid of constipation as soon as possible if you want to again enjoy good health. "I want every person Fuffering like myself to know that ripht in the city there is a medicine that will give splendid relief, just as it did for me; that, medicine is Dreco." said Mr. Charles A McLain, a well known employe of the American Seeding Co., who lives at 423 X. ICth St., Richmond, Ind. "I have suffered years from constipation and never hit the right thing to overcome it till I found Dreco. My stomach was also deranged and failed to digest my food completely, for it fermented and caused nausea and gastritis and gave me no strength. My liver got lazy so that I often had headaches and dizzy spells and soon my back and right over my kidneys ached, but these troubles are all gone since I took a treatment of Dreco, and I give all the credit to this medicine for my greatly improved condition; really it is a great medicine." Dreco is a vegetable compound containing no oil, acid, iron, mercury nor potash but is the pure juice of twelve herbal plants which act on the vital organs to restore them to healthy activity. Mr. Powers, the well known Dreco expert, has headquarters at Thlstlethwaite's Drug Store, Cth and Main Sts., to meet the local public and explain the merits of this great remedy. See his today. Adv.
We've Got 'Em Guaranteed Rubber Boots Red or Black New Method
Up-Staris Colonial Bldg.
2 Millions Hear Edison's Proof The truth about the New Edison sounds stranger than fiction. People would not believe that the art of the living artist and its RECREATION by the New Edison could not be told apart. So Edison dared again. He gave them the actual proof. In public performances all over the United States he matched the voice of the living artist against the New Edison's Re-Creation of that voice and challenged the audiences to tell which was which. Forty great artists participated in these tests. Two million people heard the tests, and said "there is no difference."
500 newspapers stories of the triumph.
recorded these New Edison's
Uie NEW EDISON "The Phonograph with a Soul" RE-CREATES every subtle beauty, every rush oi feeling, every inflection of tone that distinguish the living artist's voice. This extraordinary power is written in the public records. It is proved every day in this store. Come in. Learn for yourself that the truth about the New Edison surpasses even the claims of other in-
HARRISON' EDISON SECTION
In the Westcott Pharmacy
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The quickly emptied Bread plate is a sign of growing health. Where the maid calls for "more Bread quick" you can rest sure the family in the dining room are a robust lot. Bread is not only the most wholesome and nutritious of all foods and unsurpassed in food value. It is the most economical food also the only economical food to-day. More Bread and proportionately less high-priced foods will make an amazing cut in your table costs. Try it start ordering more Bread today. Eat it Richmond-baked Bread is your best food always wholesome, tempting and highly nutritious.
Two Slices for One Zwissler's Bakery Bayer's Bakery Richmond Baking Company
PALLADIUM VANT A'U& mMHU Kt&ULTS
