Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 117, 27 March 1920 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, MARCH 27, 1920.
Society
PUZZLE PICTURE FIND THE MOTHER
Mr. and Mrs. George H. Evans, 6019 j North Meridian street, Indianapolis, announce the engagement of their , daughter, Mary Margaret Evans, to Mr. Benjamin Nicholson Johnson, eon; ot Mr. and Mrs. John II. Johnson, of Richmond. Miss Evans attended Earl-, ham college and graduated from MTieatoacollegejMassachusetts, to 1918; ' Mr. Johnson Is a graduate of Moses Brown school. Providence, R. I., and graduated from Earlham college In the class of 1915. Mr. Johnson then attended Harvard University for one year. He entered the officers' training camp at Fort Benjamin Harrison and was commissioned captain in 1918. and was for some time stationed at Camp Zachary Taylor, later being sent to England. Mr. Johnson is now associated with his father and grandfather in B. B. Johnson & company. Miss Evans has often' been the guest of Miss Mary Johnson, now, Mrs. Robert Barrett Evans of Indianapolis, and has many friends in Richmond who will-welcome her as a bride. The wedding will take place in the early summer. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kolp were host and; hostess0 for their ' regular Friday -assembly in .the Odd Fellows' -hall Friday evening.- Music was furnished Ty Kolp's i orchestra..' The dancers
were Miss Gertrude Williams, Miss
Catherine Miller of Winchester, Miss Gwendolyn Stittler, Miss Vera Schep-
raan. Miss Louise Mather, Miss Flor
ence Cummins, Miss Milrded Town-
send, Miss Maurine Taylor of Winchester, Miss Frances Asbury, Mrs,
"Edna Btamer, Miss Helen Snodgrass,
Miss Miriam Hutton, Miss Helen Kllng, Miss Amy Fltzpatrlck, Miss Lorraine Long, Miss Jane Carpenter,
IMiSB Mary Jones, Miss Thelma Bymaa-
ter. Miss Mary Rebecah Pieman, Miss
Olive Lewis, Howard Ross, J. E. Hunt, Nell Bly, Robert Mosler, Lester Iielt-
tr, Willard Morgan, Clyde Semler,
(Waldo Dubbs, Louis Ripberger, Har-
told Sliiert George Tarkelson, Arva
Manlin, Robert Graham, . Carlton
ftnlth, Arthur Gardener, Russell Beck, dmond Sudolph,. William Simmons, arr Simmons, Elwln Hoerner, George
fvveaver, Robert Stevens, Ray Jones,
Carl Maag, Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Elmer, Mr. and Mrs. Everett McConaha, Mr.' and Mrs. Xenophon King and Dr. and Mrs. E, J. Dykeman.
One of the successful high school iTartles was the G. A. A. Leap Year dance given Friday evening In the public art gallery. The gallery was (decorated in red and white, high j school colors. Dance programs were !ln red and white. Muslo was furnished jby ' the Karmo Novelty orchestra. Members of the high school faculty chaperoned the affair. The guests included: Esther Fonts, Margurite Cox, Ruth Crowe, Wilma Sudhoff, Martha Holcomb, Janice Meredith, Rhea Cran-
dall, Laureen Jenks, Catherine Binkley, Miriam Jordan, Hazel TJnderhill. Edna Johnson, Winifred Comstock, Jane Carpenter Benita Monarch, Ada Latnmott, Glenna Miller, Pauline Marshall, Helen Massey, Martha Eggemeyer, Edith Lewis, 'Marian Berry, Dorothy Koryes,. Jenevleve McDonnell H-len Roblnsori."Dorothv Flnley.
Doris Puckett, Helen Hazeltine, Luclle t
Scliroeder, Vera Kinert, Dorothy Lebo, Esther Reid, Dorothy Rees, Lorraine Long, Faye Schmidt, Amy Fitzpatrick, Elizabeth Marshall, Martha Plummer, Marguerite Taggart, Rosella Elstro, Esther Coyle, Helen Semler, Elizabeth Bell, Ethel Tillman, Emily Bailey, Clara Daub, Anna Dallas, Helen JesBup, Lona Weist, Geraldine Pettibone, Katherine Carr, .Lois Ward, Iris Cook, Cathryn Williams. Virginia Livingston, Emily Parker, Mildred Whitley, Alice Smith, Louise Calvin, AliceStarr, Harold Sinex, "Bumps" Brehm, Richard Thornburg, Charles Yeager, William Hale, Alfred Smith, Edwin Ross, Donald Vice, Merrill Scoville. Marion Zuttermeister, Cecil Cureton,, Roland Loehr, Roy Johnson, Wilson Pierce, Gurney Mann, Robert Evans, Keifer Calkins, Carl Amick, John Kelley, Griffin Jay, Herbert Gross, Burr Simtoons, Conrad Ottenfeld, Richard Peed, Robert Williams, Jean Harding, Herbert Roberts, William Marshall, John
Younsflesh, Homer Meyers, Ted Johnson, Edmund Sudhoff, Wynne Evans, Olyn Haynes, Elmer Bescher, Harry Thomas, Herbert McMahan, Wayne tllll, Eugene Messick, Earl Tauer, ttalph Motley, Harold Latta, Roland tenglebert, Harold Hyde, Lewis Wilson, )ale Harkins, Levi Underbill, Kenneth pollins, Alvin Alexander, and Bartley
Gordan. The program given at the Athenea, Vhich met Friday , afternoon with Mrs. Lewis King, of South TwentyjMrst street, consisted of the lives and worlfs of well known Richmond men. Irs. fe. L. Reynolds read A paper on the atists including J. E. Bundy, Miss Anna Newman, Mrs. Maude Kaufman Eggemeyer, and Howard Clawson. A t)aper written by Mrs. Howard Gluys bn Cari Ackerman was read. Mrs. Atwodd Jenkins ha(J a paper on J. Wilbur Chapman, and Mrs. Effie A. Hall, t. paper on William Dudley Foulke. Irs. Willian Bond read a paper on "Woman's Suffrage which was followed 4ya general discussion on the same topic-. Following the program the Jiostess served refreshments. Miss Louise Willis, of Earlham college, was & guest. Mrs. E. B. Lebo will be hostess for the club in two weeks. Mrs. Richard Study and Mr. and tors. Oliver Gaar have returned from Florida, where they spent the winter, br. Mark Marshall. - who holds a
Chair in, the University of Michigan
at Ann Arbor., was in the city Friday
j,he guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Marshall, of South Sixteenth street. Miss Elizabeth Morris is the guest of ,,fcer father, Mr Elwood Morris, of South Fourteenth street. . Miss June . and Miss Thelma Robinson, who are students at Mt HolYoke have come to spend the spring jracation with their parents, Mr. and Mrs-. W. P. Robinson In Reeveston. Miss Jane Brobbank, a student at tVeBtern College for Women in Oi-
.. .
I f S2 & 1? &Jki J lmgm& yes lmzm i J Sk fir Haras&S ig -ilrJ fcs5- m4fm
The mother of the three Charming yomiR ladies shown in the photo tries to keep young: so she can have as rood a time as they
Mrs. William A. Ayres (second from rlfht) and her three daoshters.
gTes&man Ayres of Kansas. She is a charming hostess and is often
'when the four are oat together. The measure of her success is indicated in the picture. The mother is Mrs. William A. Ayres, wife of Con-
assisted by the girls, who are sooa
t bo presented to society.
ford. Is spending the spring vacation with her parents at the Hotel Westcott Miss Florence King, an instructor in Indiana University, is the guest of her parents, Dr. and Mrs. J. E. King, ot
South Ninth street. r Mr. ami Mrs. Robert Barrett Evans, nee Miss Mary Johnson, are the guests of Mrs. Evans' parents, Mr. and Mrs. John H. Johnson, of North Eleventh street. Mr. and Mrs. James W. Eby have returned from Florida where they spent the winter. Mrs. J. M. Staughton ot Atlanta, Ga., and Mrs. Will Cartentel of Covington, Ky., are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Rice of the Pelham apartments. Benjamin Johnson, who has been spending several weeks 'in Missouri,
came today to spend a few days with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John John-
Nson. Mr. Johnson will go the early
impart of the week to Kentucky and will
later return to Missouri.
Mrs. Florence Bell of San Diego, Cal., who has been spending the past week with Mrs. Charles Sinex of
N-th, Ninth street has gone to In
dianapolis to spend a week with her
sister, Mrs. John L. Hawkotte. Miss Lela Longman, student bf De
Pauw university, has been initiated into the Mu Phi Epsilon Borority, a
national muslo sorority.
Raymond Beetley and Ted Atkins have gone to Auburn, N. Y., to be the
guests of friends.
Mrs. Albert Rost of South Fifteenth street will be hostess for the Dorcas
society at her home Monday afternoon.
The Home Missionary society of the
First M. E. church will meet Wednes
day afternoon at the home of Mrs. J.
H. Bentley, National Road west.
Mrs. Ruth Yeo cortez, an accom
plished pianist, has gone to New
York city to study.
Thirty-five members attended the meeting of the Woman's Missionary
society of the First Presbyterian
church, held at the home of Mrs. Oliver Knode on South Fourteenth street, Friday afternoon. The topic of the afternoon was Missionary work in Cuba. Announcements will be made later concerning the next meeting of the society. The Calantha circle of the Pythian Sisters met Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Edward Stigleman, North Fourteenth street. Plans were discussed for an entertainment to be given in the new hall. Twenty-four members were present. The next meeting will be held in the Pythian
temple Wednesday, March 31, at which time the members Will take their suppers. The Criterion club which was to have met Tuesday afternoon, has been postponed until Monday, April 5. Miss Edith Evans, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Evans, of Indianapolls, was a guest at Earlham college Thursday and Friday. Miss Evans is a student at Swarthmore college, Pennsylvania, and is spending the spring vacation with her parents. Mr. Arthur Gardener of Patterson, N. J., is the guest at the home of Walter J. Huttom North Fifteenth street.
Miss Emma Fetta and Gladys Hart-
man went to Indianapolis Saturday to
be the week-end guests of Miss Hart-
man's mother, Mrs. Anna Hartman. A special musical program will be
'given at the First English Lutheran
. a
cnurcn at vesper services ounaay. a
double mixed quartet will sing a Lenten cantata "The Story of the Calvary" by Schnecker. Robert Watt, a student at Carnegie
Technical institute in Pittsburgh came
itSaturday morning to spend ten days
with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Watt of South Fifteenth street.
The public is invited to view the
George Herbert Baker exhibit of paintings in the public art gallery Sun
day afternoon from 2 until 5. At 3 p
mwMrs. M. F. Johnston will give a
short talk on the etchings.
The Alice Carey club will meet Thursday afternoon with Mrs. Everet
Davis at her home on South Thir
teenth street.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kepler will give
which ie being polled, her name must also be listed. Because if she rooms in the house, she will vote in the precinct in which
she lives., . . . ,
These may seem things that are
more or less well known but the wo
men, having never voted before, many
questions are being put to them whose answers embody the foregoing infor
mation.
The poll of women voters, as has
been said, is nothing but a list of
women voters.
" 7 Registration Different. .
The question of registration is &n
other matter. -
And will be governed, in a way, by
the action of Delaware or some other
state which will ratify the federal
amendment.
At this writing the federal amend
ment giving universal suffrage to all
the women of the United States lacks
just one vote of becoming operative
If the federal amendment becomes
operative before May 4, the date of
the nominating election, then the wo
men would vote on May 4. -
But this is not at all sure at this
writing.
And its consideration will be dis
cussed later.
Women in Politics
By Esther Griffin White,
Republican woman chairman lor
' Wayne county. What is a poll? This Is a Question that is being
asked by many women apropos of the poll of women voters now under way
in Wayne county. J
A poll is merely the process of
making a list ot all the women oi voting age in a certain community.
This does not mean that the women
who are listed are obligated to vote;
but a list of those wno are lesawy, entitled to vote if the individual wishes
to take advantage, of tne ngni bub possesses.
Is Political Census. In other words it is a political
census.
The object is to find out, as near as
It is possible to do, tne pouucai affiliations of the women in Wayne County in order to gain some sort of nn Idea of how the county stands in
relation to its women voters.
Thn questions asked are simple ana
easily answered and concern the number of women of voting age in each house or apartment, whether or not
they expect to vote witn any pamcuia! party, if married, what party their husbands are affiliated with, if the woman is employed or is engaged in any business or professions, and one or two other inquiries of a kindred character. To Be Used for Information. The information, like that acquired when taking a census, will be used for nf information only.
The poll is being taken under the onaniMH of the County Republican
chairman and the precinct committee-
wmnpn.
whn will be very glad for the co
operation of all of the women of the city anfi the county, so the work can be expeditiously and comprehensively
completed by the first ween in aphi. In reply to many questions concerning the present voting status of women in Indiana, it may be interesting to know: First That women of Indiana are legally entitled to vote for the president of the United States on Nov. 2. No matter if the suffrage amcndmend to the federal constitution is not
ratified by a sufficient number ot states to make woman's sufrage uni
versally operative, tho women of In
diana can vote for president in November. .
Legislature Gives Right. How did they et this right? Through a law passed by the 1919
legislature
Second That because tho women can vote for president on Nov. 2, a list of women voters must be taken. Why? Because If they vote for but one office the machinery of voting at the polls, where every woman casts her ballot, must be arranged so the women can be taken care of. , By being "taken care of is meant this: Up to this time only men have votedi The voting places have been arranged to accommodate a certain number of men voters who are known to reside in each precinct; No voting place can take care of more than a certain number of people. Must Have More Room. Hence if, through the addition of a number of women voters in one precinct, the polling place originally arranged for cannot accommodate them all within the hours prescribed by law for casting the vote, more room
will have to be provided. How was the number of men voters ascertained? Through a poll. In this way the number of voters living in the precinct was found out. And this is the purpose of making a list of the women voters in each precinct So that, after all, the taking of a list of women voters is a simple and practical thing. If you are a Republican or a Demo
crat or a Socialist or an independent voter, all you have to do is to say bo. The main thing is to know whether or not you are of voting age and how you will vote. Don't Need to Tell Age. No woman has to tell her age. It is sufficient if she states she is over the legal age set for the first vote. If, however, she is not 21, but will be on or before Nov. 2, she should also be listed. Every woman of voting age in the house, whether she is at home or not should be given. If she is away on a visit or trip or out of town for any length of time, she must also be listed. If a woman voter rooms in a house
BAKER'S COCOA
is -welcome
J)0 not make die mistake of thinking that cocoa is only an occasional drink. It is so valuable a food beverage, so rich in the elements of nutrition, so delicious in flavor, and so wholesome that it should be used regularly and often. Booklet of Choice Recipes set fret
WALTER. BAKER & COM
Established mo. DORCHESTERMASS
Moore Parent-Teachers
To Show Education Film Mrs. Harlow Lindley, chairman, Mrs.
Walter Test,, and Mrs. Oscar Green form a committee appointed by the
Parent-Teachers association of the
Joseph Moore school at a meeting Fri
day afternoon to make arrangements
for an educational motion picture at
the school on Friday evening. April
16th.
Miss Frances M. Berry, supervisor
ot kindergarten and primary work in
the Richmond public schools, spoke on "The New Educational System Recom
mended for Primary Grades."
Officers for the coming year will be
elected at the next meeting, on April
23. Retiring officers are president.
Mrs. George Hayward; secretary, Mrs.
James R. Rlckels, and treasurer, Mrs. Oscar Green.
F)NEUMONIA Call a physician; Immedi- . .. u
iciy Degin emergency treatment with .
VICES VAP0R1
!"YOU(? BODYGUARD " - 50. 00.i.20
4B
mm
REDS OCCUPY MAIKOP LONDON, March 27. The Bolshe-
vikl have occupied Maikop, a town in
the territory of Kuban, Circausia, ac- " cording to a wifeless message sent out by the Russian soviet government at Moscow Friday.
Mas Being Out At LuncKtime Dorit Bother Me
We always have a supply of
Post
ToAsnES
1
a dance Saturday evening in the Knights of Pythias hall. Lewis Taylor of Eaton is spending
the week-end with his brother at Earlham college. Mr. Taylor is a member
of the class of 191k Samuel Garton and Miss Agnes Hollister, of the department of music at Earlham college-, will present a num-
oer ot piano ana voice pupils in a re
cital Saturday evening in Lindley hall at the. college, to which the public is cordially invited.
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HASEMEIER CO.
The Great Month-End REMNANT SALE
Starting Monda
V-
Every month we gather together all the short lengths of goods sold by the yard, reduce their prices drastically and clear them away in short order. In fairness to the reader, we wish to say that there is always a rush for these Remnants and we urge you to buy them as soon as you can possibly come to the sale. Remnants of Silks Remnants of Wool Dress Goods Remnants of Wool Coatings . . Remnants of White Goods Remnants of Ginghams Remnants of Wash Goods Remnants of Table Damasks Remnants of Sheetings Remnants of Muslins Remnants of Curtain Materials Remnants of Towelings Remnants of Shirtings Remnants of Canton Flannels
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Easter Sunday April 4 th The day of EASTER EGGS, LILIES, RABBITS and the most welcome of all
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Just Phmc 1188
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