Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 111, 20 March 1920 — Page 4

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PAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY FEB. 20, 1920.

Society

ONLY TWO MORE STATES NEEDED TO RATIFY SUFFRAGE; WASHINGTON AND DELAWARE LEGISLATURES MEET SOON

Mrs. W. J. Smith and Mrs. Poster Hoetfer were hostesses tor a silyer shower Saturday afternoon, at the home t .Mrs. Hoeffer, South Twentyfirst street in - honor of Miss Fannie HorelL whose marriage to Albert Gilmer of Economy will take place. Saturday, April 3.. -: The boose was prettily decorated with, shaded candles, pink sweet peas and greenery. A musical program was enjoyed during the afternoon. Refreshments were served by the hostesses.

Inrltations for the wedding of Mlsa j Fannie Horrell and Albert Gilmer, of Economy which will take place at the! suburban home of Miss Horrell April 5, hare een -Issued. A number of parties and showers will be given for Miss Horrell. On Friday afternoon Mrs. Edwin. G. .Crawford was hostess for- a -pretty shower at her home on Twenty-tlret street. The guests Included Miss Horrell, Mrs. Isaac Gause, Mrs. Charles Nardln, Mrs. Frank Crawford, Mrs. Levi Jones. Mrs. Charleu Crawford, Miss Myrtle Crawford, 'Mrs. Herbert Jay, Mrs. Clarence Paljmer, Mrs. Will Crawford and Mrs.

Bert Cook. On Thursday afternoon

Miss' Myrtle - Crawford will entertain

J for Miss HorrelL t . Mr. and Mrs. Frank Seigel entertained a number of friends Informally .Friday evening. A buffet lunchedn

was served in me awing room, wnere

2lnk and green were carried out as a

color scheme. Favors were pink and green. The guests Included Mr. and Mrs. Walter Murray, - Mr- and Mrs. Murray DeHaren, Mr. and - Mrs. George Reid, Mr. and Mrs. "Walter

UBnavely, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Darnell, LMr. and Mrs. Harry Sharp, Mr. and

Mrs. Edward Sharp, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Longfellow, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dove and Mrs. Mary A. Owen. Miss Lelia" Cox and Jay W. Downend were married at 9:30 a. m., Saturday & the parsonage of the United Breth-

3-en church, by the Rev. H. S. James. They were attended by Miss Fay Wlg-

cinaon and R. Smith. Immediately after the ceremony Mr. and Mrs. Downend left for a short wedding trip.

rThey will make their home in Houa-

ion, Texas. - J Mrs. Harrison Scott will b4 hostess tor-the Monday club, Monday afterinoon, 3X9 Klnsey street. -. ,

Miss Hazel Masnmeyer ana miss Mary Bulla went to Indianapolis Sat-

lirday to Attend the "Follies";

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Meyer and Fred Fromm have returned from Indianapolis, where they attended the "Follies".

' Richmond Council 2956 S. B. A. will 1 give a dance Monday evening, March 22, at the Vaughn hall. Dancers must come dressed in old fashioned cosi tumes, the affair being an old fashf loned dance. Prizes will be offered to the most uniquely dressed. Danc- ; ing will begin at 8:30 p. m. and the ' public is invited. Miss Irene Richardson was the hon-

or guest at a birthday party given at ; her home on North Twenty-First

' street Friday evening. Games were

played during the evening after which ; a luncheon was enjoyed. The guests " were Dorothy Boost, Lorra Justice,

Wanda Farlow, Mary Cowles, Hazel

Pearson, Helen Pearson, Dorothy

Pearson, Mary Louise Hawk, Dolores Brodwick, Martha Haworth, Cathryn

llaworth, Louise Haworth, Irene Mc- , Millan Erma Louise McMillan, Fred ; Justice, Paul Lambertine Melvln Mills,

; Robert Hawk, John Brown, Frank

Boost and lid ward McMillan.

The Degree of Honor will give a 1 social dance Tuesday evening on the

J Commercial club rooms for the mem ; bers of the lodge and their families

t Kepler's orchestra will furnish the

music.

Mrs. Louise Wentz and Mrs. Vern Thomas are spending the week end

in Indianapolis. While there they will

attend the Follies.

Mr. and Mrs. Myron Murley, of Connersville, are the parents of a

baby daughter. Mrs. Murley was Miss

Pauline Hoffman of this city. Miss Agnes Cain and Miss Ida Bink

ley went to Indianapolis Saturday to

, attend the Follies.

A number of friends gave a surprise

' party Friday evening for Raymond

Dalbey. who celebrated hi3 twenty'

second birthday anniversary. The eveJ ning was spent in music and dancing.

1 At a late hour a luncheon was served.

Aliss Anna Manier of Fiqua, O., was

: an out-of-towu guest.

The Woman's Missionary society of

the First Presbyterian church will

meet next Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Oliver Knode, on South Fourteenth Etreet. Tho O. F. II. club met Thursday afternoon with Miss Ruth Simmons at her home on South Eighteenth street. Dancing and music were enjoyed by the guests, after which a dainty luncheon was served. Those present were Miss Alice Daub, Miss Lucy Massey, Miss Elizabeth Pettibone. Miss Noami Brooks, Miss Elizabeth Kinney, Miss Lorene Rink and Miss Ruth Simmons. The Magazine club will meet Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs; M. M. Paige on North Twelfth street. Mrs. John Taylor has returned from Pittsburgh, where she was the guest of Miss Hulda Kenley. - Miss Anna O'Connor is spending tho week-end in Chicago the guest of her brother John O'Connor. The.Show-Me club will meet Tuesday afteruoon at the home of Mrs. Charles Hasty of East Main street. Among those who went to Indianapolis for the Follies Saturday were Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Candler. Miss MauTeno Chenoweth, Miss Mildred Townsend, Waldo Dubbs, Herbert Bradley and Louis Ripberger. Tho Narcissus Embroidery club will meet with Mrs. Edgar Sharp, 315 North Nineteenth street, Wednesday afternoon.

0tf fANoT ' SOUTH 1 WSCONSwf A J TS'L HES?A;icik IOWA J Y S"mTCTKAT HAVE JrJ Z7Z STATES THAT HAVE NOT X&&. LZJ STATES' THAT HAVE VOTED Jl Nf ACSAtKkfT RATIFICATION.

REAL ESTATE i.1AY BE RE-ASSESSED, IS

TAX BOARD RULING

board In the community affected or at the comity seat, which win eJimtoate the necessity of taxpayers having to attend at Indiana poll either tor or against the petition. The same rule will apply to tax levies to. lb September cession of the tax commission.

Only two more states are needed to ratify the federal suffrage amendment, thirty-four state legislatures bavins already acted fa

vorably. The legislatures of Washington and Delaware will meet in special session on March 22 for the purpose of actin? on the amend

ment. It is believed that both states will ratify. If they do not. the suffragists have hones of winning Vermont and Connecticut.

Baker Exhibit Opens Sunday;

Etchings and Paintings by Reed and : Ort, ate Placed

An exhibition of 52 oil paintings by

George Herbert Baker will be opened on Sunday at 2 p. m. in the Public Art gallery.

The directors of the Art association

with Mr. Baker and other local painters will welcome the visitors. A large attendance is expected In honor of

this Richmond artist.

The paintings fill the east gallery

and the north wall of the west gallery. They range In size from canvases 16 by 20 inches to large ones 36 by 40 inches.

The exhibition contains many pictures that are particularly well suited

in "size and subject for home decora

tion. Nearly all of them were painted

in this neighborhood and practically

all of them are recent w.ork. The large picture centering the east wall, entitled "Old Houses at Centerville" is loaned from the J. D. Nixon collection and was shown in the window of the Starr Piano company some two years ago. A group of

small pastels also from the Nixon collection will arouse the envy of other

collectors. Shows, Autumn Oaks. Another canvas ' showing autumn

oaks, flaming against a blue sky is loaned by Stephen Kuth, and is one of the most richly painted pictures in the exhibition. During the period of the Baker exhibit there will also be shown In the Art gallery an exhibit of 62 etchings by Earl H. Reed, of Chicago. Mr. Reed has added to the fame of the sand dunes of lake Michigan, both by his books and etchings on the subject. Loui3 Orr, painter etcher, of Hartford, Conn., now living in Paris, has three large etchings in the exhibit, loaned by Josiah Marvel. Two of these are duplicates of etchings in the Louvre and Luxembourg galleries in Paris.

Lincoln Trio is Scheduled For Music Club Program The Lincoln Trio, assisted by Thomas B. Nealis, baritone, of Indianapolis, will furnish the program for the next meeting of the Music Study club, to be held at the Murray theatre Tuesday morning at 10 a. m. Mrs. G. B. Jackson, violinist; Miss

Yuba White, cello, and Mrs. Bertha Miller-Ruick, pianist, are, the members of the Lincoln Trio. Thomas B. Cealis, the baritone, is one of the most accomplished singers In Indiana. No admission fee will be charged. The program follows: 1. Overture from "The Pearl Fish. era" Bizet Trio 2. Aria Vision Fugitive (from Herodiade) Massanct

Mr. Nealis Romance Svendsen At the Brook BoisdefTre Hungarian Dance.... Brahms

Trio 4. (a) I Am Thy Harp Huntington Woodman

(b) Bedouin Love Song . . Chadwick

Tuvictus Bruno Huhn Mr. Nealis Moment Musical. ., . Schubert Why? Schumann Serenade Chaminade Peasant Dance Hartman Trio

MANY WOMEN WILL NOT TAKE OFF RING

Many women are so rigid, not to say superstitious, in their notions concerning . their wedding rings, that neither when they wash their hands, nor at any other time will they take the ring off their finger, extending, it would seem, the expression of "till death do part' even to that circlet which has been the pledge of matrimony. Herrick, the Cavajier poet, has written of the wedding ring: And as this round Is nowhere found To flow, or else to sever, So let our love. As endless prove, And pure as gold forever. And there is likewise a famous old

proverb which is often quoted which says: As your wedding ring wears Your cares will wear away. The loss of a wedding ring was in former times, and is not unfrequently now, looked upon as an omen o'f mishap. The widow of Viscount Dunlee was met and wooed . by William Livingstone. As a pledge of his betrothal he presented her with a ring. She lost it one day in the garden, and as it gave rise to sad presentiments, a large reward was offered for its finding and restoration. Strange as it may seem, several years after the lady had married she was killed in Holland as the result of a fall from her horse. And it was not until some time later that a tenant in the garden in which the ring was lost discovered it one day while he was digging potatoes. According to an Arabian legend. King Solomon, on going to the bath left his ring behind him a ring which he intended giving to his favorite wife. A jealous Jewess on seeing it stole it and threw it into the sea. Deprived of his miraculous amulet which prevented him from exercising the judicial wisdom for which he was celebrated, Solomon abstained forty days from administering justice, when at length the ring was found in the stomach of a fish that was served at his table. The legend does not say whether or not he gave it to his favorite wife.

countries as an ardent Socialist, and as radical Comrade Fieldman has

studied the United States with critical, unbiased eyes. His verdict is that this is a country worthy of devoted love and that here destructive agitation is not in place, that only constructive thought and labor can be tolerated. At a time when many native' and foreign-born citizens have caught some of the contagious old world distempers and in true old world fashion would tear down and burn and overturn, Mr. Fieldman, student of the old world and the new, will tell the people that the rioter and the . agitator for violence and obstruction in this country is working against labor, against the poor, working for the destruction of those very advantages that make America the most favored among the lands of the world, that such agitators here are working to undo the freedom, the opportunity and the comfort that at present are guaranteed to all partakers in this great commonwealth. Mr. Fieldman has been talking political Idealism for the last twenty-five years. He has spoken for good government and honest legislation from coast to coast . He has won from William Howard Taft the approving description of " two dynamos in one"; and Jerome Myers, who was chief of

the Liberty Loan committee bureau

here on outdoor activities, said of

him: "He is the most eloquent orator

in connection with the Liberty Loan

drives under my supervision.." Mr. Fieldman has sampled life in Russia, Spain, Italy, Switzerland, Australia, New Zealand, Egypt, Germany, Sweden, France, Austria, Hungary.

A ruling, providing for the re-assess

ment of real estate property not properly assessed last year, was adopted

by the state tax commission in Indianapolis Friday. The ruling was made primarily to correct real estate essessments be lieved to be wrong, as under the farmer ruling the last year's' valuations would have had to remain In effect until the next regular appraisal la 1923.

Taxpayers can appeal to the board for re-assessment of their property

any time before May 1 and any tax

payer can seek re-assessment of any

real estate prior to April 20.

A county assessor, treasurer or

auditor, or any two of these county officials, can recommend to the state board the re-assessment of any prop

erty where it is necessary "in order

to maintain an equitable and just val

uation .

Another ruling adopted by the board Friday includes temporary and

time loans of municipalities, at which

the tax commission will be practically a court of appeals, for it proposes to

grant, without formal hearings, all

such petitions, except those that are contested. Notice of Applications Needed The board points out that notices of applications for loans are required

and that if there are no remonstrances filed it may be taken for granted that the community is favorable to the proposal and it will be approved. Where a remonstrance is filed in the matter of temporary and time loans, a hearing will be held by the board, or a representative' of the

Indiana Brevities

BLOOMINGTON The board of

trustees of Indiana University has ac

cepted the resignation of Dean Horace

A. Hoffman, as professor of Greek, the

resignation to become effective August

1st

LOUISVILLE Passing the flood

stage of 28 feet, with a rise of several

more feet apparent, the Ohio River is

out of bounds here for the first time since the flood of 1912.

LAPORTE IL C Hepler, former

state representative from St. Joseph county, has entered the race for the

Democratic Congressional nomination from the Thirteenth district, who will be supported by the wets, will be opposed by Ralph N. Smith, former Laporte county prosecuting attorney. EVANSVlLLEeyThe Ohio river here will reach a state of 41 feet Mondavi pr Tuesday, which is six feet above the danger line, A. L Brand, U- S. weather observer has announced.

An earl's wife Is a countess.

the guaranteed J ft battery, it makes (WT f good lUOlU

I STORAGE BATTERY i

D. A. R. Celebrates 82d Birthday of Mrs. Braffett The . eighty-second birthday of Mrs. Elizabeth Braffet was celebrated at the regular meeting of the D. A. R., at the home of Mrs. Hobert Study, on ' South Sixteenth street, Saturday affternoon. A birthday cake and box of flowers j was presented Mrs. Braffet. Special I singing was furnished by a trio.

WILLS BED FOR DOG LONDON, Eng. In her will-Miss Katherine Harriet left $100 a year for her dog's keep and license, but insisted that the animal must sleep in

( some one's bed.

(a) (b) (c)

(c) (a) (b) (c) (d)

NO HEAT, FiNED $200 NEW YORK Jacob A. Glass, owner of an apartment house in the Bronx was fined $200 for failing to keep the building properly heated.

D c'R Y

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Service is the kind that builds customerconfidence. And our Golden Rule of Service is Not to sell you a new battery if your present one is worth repairing, and to back up our repairs with an adjustment guarantee for eight months battery "pep." Why not get our expert advice on your battery? No matter what its make we will help you to get the maximum service. Bring it in, and while here you'll learn something new in Service. RICHMOND BATTERY AND RADIATOR CO. 12th and Main Sts. Phone 1365 Richmond

CLEANING

Spic and span from the cleaning man is the way your wrinkled or soiled clothes come from us. We renew them with a freshness, crispness and sparxle that makes them look like new and adds days and days of prepossessing wear.

WILSON CLEANER-TAILOR 1018 Main St. Phone 1105-1108

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SUITS DRY CLEANED AND PRESSED, $1.25 Suits pressed 50c; Trousers cleaned and pressed 50c. Carry and save plan. Altering, repairing. JCE MILLER, Prop. Main Street, Second Floor

Service Shoes

No matter what the Job a Shoe .for Every purpose. To make your Dress Shoes give longer service, come in and try a pair of our Service Shoes You will see a slump in your shoe costs.

Radical Declares U. S. is the Best Country in World New York Evening Sun Solon Fieldman, wanderer, radical, an agitator on behalf of the oppressed

in other lands than the United States,

a naturalized citizen and soldier, has i made arrangements to tell the people from one end of the country to the' other that from the point of view of j

even the most radical, provided he knows conditions under foreign governments, America is the best of all countries for high and for low and that there exists no reason for obstructing unrest here. There is utterly no justification for those who come here from other countries, and while fattening upon their greater advantages in the republic abuse their new-found freedom by malicious trouble making, Mr. Fieldman will tell those of foreign birth among his hearers. And his message will have tho more weight as he himself was born in Europe, has struggled

against aaverse conditions in various

WARM DAYS and chilly nights make it necessary to keep your fires up. When in need of coal, just call. Hackman-KIefoth & Co. N. 10th & F Sts. Phone 2015 or 2016

A BANK FOLKS LIKE TO PATRONIZE Safety and Service DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY

A NEW MARKET

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Say it With Flowers"

LEMON'S FLOWER SHOP 1015 Main Street Phone 1093

THE SPIRIT OF SPRINGTIME

rt jLwa WMI "iZ ?

Miss Genevieve Anderson impersonating Spring. Spring fantasies- are being rehearsed by the girls of Mills College, Oakland, Cal. Above is shown Miss Genevieve Anderson of Denver, one of the star athletes of the college, impersonating Spring on the college grounds.

Beading TxlitjM Braiding r Button Holes LACEY'S SEWING Buttons MACHINE STORE Covered 9 S. 7th. Phone 1756

We have opened a cream buying station in Richmond, Ind., establishing a per

manent market where we will pay TOP PRICES AT ALL TIMES

IGRAN'S

LADIES' SHOP

923 Main St. New Bargains added daily to our Remodeling Sale Bargains. Come in.

The Coffee we serve is roasted and packed expressly for us. We retail this coffee for 55c per lb. Ask for a pound of The Kandy Shop's Special Coffee. THE KANDY SHOP 919 Main St. -

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Our station in Richmond, Ind., is located at 24 North Seventh Street, with competent operator in charge. SUNLIGHT CREAMERIES Washington, C. H., 0. GET EVERY CENT THAT IS DUE YOU FROM YOUR COWS New plant with starting capacity of 25,000,000 pounds of Butter and Oleomargarine annually just completed at Washington, C. H., 0.

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