Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 142, 24 April 1920 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, APRIL 24, 1920.

Society

: ' An Tent - among the numerous ;trlng functions that will be looked forward to with much pleasure Is the t dance to be given by Frank Bescher, jj. C. Coyle, Peter Lichtenfels, Edgar ilioehr and Roland Wrede om the ijilght ot Tuesday May 4. The best i music heard in Richmond this season ;is promised as the Syncopating Five

'has been secured to play. This group of musicians has Just finished a season's engagement at the Gold Dragon cabaret in St Petersburg, Fla. Their appearance here will be one of the few stops they will make en route to New York, where they will fill a summer

engagements. Invitations . will be Issued the first of the week. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kolp were host and hostess for their regular assembly dance Friday evening in the Odd Fellows' haJL Kolp's orchestra furnished the program of dance music The ; dancers were Miss Vivian Harding, I Miss Emily Bailey. Miss Dorothy Le'Do, Miss Kathryn Binkley, Miss Esther Coyle, Miss Edith Lewis, Miss Marguerite Long, Miss Helen Snodgrass, Miss Marguerite Cox, Miss Anna Dallas, Miss Florence "Went. Miss Benlta Monarch, Miss Edna Stemmer, Miss Helen Semler, Miss Gladys LongBecker, Miss Edna Johnston, Miss Miriam Little, Miss Charlotte Rogers, Miss Kathryn Carr, Miss Clara Myriclc, Miss Gertrude "Williams, Miss Clara Daub. Miss Gertrude Estgleston,

Miss Helen Nicholson, Miss Rhea CrandalL-Miss Elizabeth Kolp, Miss Mildred Kemmert, Miss Gwendolyn

Spitler, Miss Martha Jones, Miss Ce-

. cilia Conniff, Miss Lucille Schroeder.

Miss Wllma SudhofT, Miss Vera Schep,man, Miss Mildred Whitely, Miss Marguerite Taggart, Miss Helen Hazeltine, Miss Cornelia Border, Miss Helen (Rethmeyer, Miss Thelm'a Bymaster, Miss Flamijan and Miss Janice Mereidith Ronald Cox. James Wentz, Clarence Coyle, Roland Cutter, Harry Thomas, William Dunn, Keith Calkins, !Oakkley Richie, Robert Graham, Scott '. Kemp, Thornton Brehm, Louis Weid;er, Eugene Messick, Orda Mahin, ' Vernon Hess, Ralph Motley, Kenneth .Whitneek, Myron Hill, Howard Slckjman, Alfred Smith, Irvin Funk, Harjold Sinex, Cecil Cureton, Frederick iNorris, Carleton Smith, Kenneth Doljllns, Mark Golden, Williard Morgan, i Lester loiter, Edward Sudhoff, Roland jLoehr, Herbert Roberts, Wayne Hill. Rudolph Schneider, Richard Robinson, Kenneth Mott, Conrad Ottenfeld, Fred IRomey, Gene Rethmeyer, Henry Zeitz, Joe Burke and Jean Harding. The marriage of Miss Rebecca Car-

jter of Philadelphia and Vincent D. Nicholson, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. i Edgar Nicholson of this city will be solemnized in the Friends' meeting : house in Germantown, Philadelphia, Saturday, May 8. Miss Carter is a graduate of the Westtown Boarding school. During the war she was head of the department of sewing of the Friends' Service committee. She then went to France where she was hostess at the Britanique hotel in Paris. Mr. Nicholson is a graduate of the Westtown Boarding school, of Earlham college in the class of 1910 and of Harvard Law school in the class of 1916. During the war Mr. Nicholson was secretary of the Friends' Service committee and traveled for sometime in Europe in the interests of that committee. He has only recently returned and will become a member of a law . firm in Philadelphia.

Friday afternoon, April 30, a card i party will be given at the Arlington I hotel, for the purpose of raising mon;ty to renew subscriptions for 19 French orphans who have been cared ;for two years. Mrs. John Lontz, Miss iMary A. Wood and Mrs. Henry Gold-.-finger compose the committee in : Charge. Bridge, five hundred and euchre will be played. Prizes will be

Grandma Gibbs. Mrs Henry Heiger; Miss Luella Huggtfns. so sentimental. Mrs, J. V. Burton; Mrs. Strong, the suffragist, Mrs. Will Sudhoff; Mrs. Meeker, gentle and good, Mrs. F. A. Dressel; Mrs. Day, a bride, Mrs. Ernest Renk; Meely. the hired girl, Mrs. Charles Backmeyer. The Trifolean society will meet Monday evening at the church. The Dorcas society will meet Monday afternoon with Mrs. R, P. Whisler at her home on South Fifteenth street.

Miss Leonfay Bvfllerdick went to Dayton Satutday to attend the sixth birthday anniversary party of Miss Phoebe Jane Card, formerly of this city. The Mary F. Thomas W. C. T. U.

will meet Monday at 2:30 p. m. in the

public library. Following the business ' ( 1 , i J.

session mere win ue a uiscusaiun uu home economics. A large attendance is desired.

Alexander, a member of the society, was given. The cast included Alvln Alexander, Ada Lamott, Joseph Smith, Lois Ward, Kathryn Carr and Howard Jennings. Dancing was enjoyed.

FRUIT TREES ARE HIGH PRICED AND SCARCE Despite the- fact that good seedling apple stock has advanced to eight times the price it commanded in the open market prior to the world war, nursery men of Indiana are experiencing much difficulty in obtaining even a limited supply, with the result horticultural interests in the state are slowing up, declares Richard Lleber, director of conservation'in Indiana.

Heart Problems

given. The arrair will begin at 2 p. m. land all those wishing to attend are (requested to notify a member of the i committee. ; ; The Atheneae club closed its year rvith a luncheon at the Arlington hotel

Friday. The tables were beautifully decorated with French baskets filled with Pink rose buds and pink sweet peas, tied with pink tulle bows, and candelabrum filled with pink candles. Miniature bouquets of pink and blue Telvet rosebuds surrounded by a lace frill were tied to the place cards with pink ribbon. Those were designed by Mrs. E. L. Reynolds. The luncheon

"was served in three courses. The i

president, Mrs. W. J. Smith introduced folrs. E. L. Ki;; as toastmistress. Aftler the first course Miss Alice Moorknan responded to a toast "Our Playfiay." After the second course Mrs.

C. Heironimus gave "Reminiscences the club year." After the third

course Mrs. Andrew F. Mitchel gave ""Impressions of the Club Work." Mr3. jrAllen D. Hole read a short story. At Ithe close Mrs. Elmer Lebo read an loutline of next year's work. Mrs. WilEliam J. HIatt gave the invocation. The entertainment committee in charge was composed of Mrs. E. T'j. Reynolds, Mrs. William Bond, Mrs. Foster Hoefbfer, Mrs. Elmer Lebo and Mrs. Wilpiam Quigg. The out-of-town guests rwere Mrs. Phoebe Doan of Westfield (and Mrs. J. J. Dickinson of Indianapolis. . Eaton Rebekah Lodge No. 20, will ;moet at I. O. O. F. hall Saturday at 7:30 p. m. Staff members are urged Ho be present as there will be initiation of candidates.

The Woman's Missionary Society of

the First English Lutheran church

will observe Guest Day at the church!

Thursday at 2:30 p. m. A play "SewMrs. Phoebe Doan of Westfield, Ind., is the guest of her daughters, Mrs. Allen D. Hole of the National road

west, and Miss Martha Doan, dean of i

women at Earlham college, ing for the Heathen", will be presented in the Sunday school room. All members of the church and their friends are Invited. The cast is as follows: Mrs. Judd, the hostess, Mrs. Anna Heltbrink; Mrs. Chesty, the president, Mrs. Oliver Uusbaum; 'Mrs. Powers, Ihe stranger. Mrs. F. W. Krueger;

The West Richmond W. C. T. U. will meet Monday at 2:30 p. m. at the home of Mrs. C. Snyder, 610 National

avenue. Mrs. D. W. Scott will have charge of the lessorr on government. Everyone is invited. The public is invited to view the exhibit of paintings of the New York Society of Painters, Sunday afternoon in the public art gaUery from 2 until 5 p.m. The Ladies' AuxiHary of the Sons of Veterans will meet with the Sons of Veterans Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Knipple will be present. There will be work during the evening. A luncheon will be served. A Starlight dance will be given Saturday evening in Vaughn hall. Kep

ler's orchestra will furnish the music. J. C. Giles, formerly superintendent of schools, will arrive here Saturday evening and will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Hornaday. He will return home Sunday morning. Miss Mary A. Wood, manager of the Arlington Hotel, has returned from Hawaii. For the past few months Miss Wood has been in England visiting her family. A special meeting of the Delta Theta Tau sorority will be held Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Raymond Wickemeyer at her home on South Fourteenth street. A full attendance Is desired. The Tau chapter of the Omricon Phi Sigma fraternity will give a dance

Wednesday evening in the Odd Fellows' half. Parker's orchestra from Columbus, O., will play the program of dance music. Officers for next year will be elected

at a meeting of the Woman s Club, to be held Wednesday at 2:30 p. m. at the Reid Memorial church. Reports of the year will be read. Every member is urged to attend. The Delta Theta Tau sorority will give an informal dance Tuesday evening in the Odd Fellows' hall. Parker's orchestra from Columbus, will play. For the pleasure of Miss Ruth Mumbower, who will leave the city soon for another residence, the Philatnea class of the Second Presbyterian church will give an indoor picnic at the church Tuesday evening, April 27. All the members are invited to be present. The Home Missionary society of the

First M. E. church will meet at the church Thursday afternoon. Following the business session a farewell party will be given for Miss Ora Conrad, who is leaving the city soon for an

other residence. All members are urged to be present. The meeting of the Criterian club, which was to have been belt! Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Albert Foster, has been postponed one week. The hostess for the next meeting will be announced later. One hundred students attended the party given at the high school Friday

evening in the art gallery by the Commercial Club organization. Clever stunts were given throughout the evening. Vocal duets were given by the MacPherson sisters. Oakley Richey and Robert Graham gave guitar duets. A pantomime was presented by Miss Doris Puckct, Miss Anna Dallas, Russell Allen, Herbert McMahan, Thornton Iirehm and Arthur Porter. Dancing was enjoyed. Punch was served throughout the evening. - Fifty members cf the dramatic society of the high school attended the "spread" given from 4 until 7 p. m. A dramatization of "The Crimson Gardenia" by Rex Beach, written by Alvin

The Diary of an Engaged Girl By Phyllis Phillips .

Dear Mrs. Thompson I am a young man in my teens. I love a girl who is very modest and backward. When 1 call on her, she doesn't even shake hands when I tart to leave. Just to have a real good hand clasp would do

me a lot of good. But she is so indifferent I am afraid to attempt it. Don't girls ever kiss their gentleman friends farewell? From A BASHFUL GENT. Dear Friend Certainly it is quite improper for young women to kiss their gentlemen callers goodbye unless they are engaged. A hand clasp is nofc Improper, but neither is it necessary. Good conversation is the

best mode of entertainment. Content i and most intimate

yourself with that. She is probably not indifferent but merely sensible. Try to win her interest by proving

i to her that you are an agreeable and

congenial companion. You are both too young to think of marriage but you should find great pleasure and benefit in the friendship of the clean, wholesome girl of your acquaintance. MRS. THOMPSON. Dear Mrs. Thompson I am a girl of 17 and work every day making ten dollars a week. I pay half for board, but my mother is so tight on me she will not let me have any girl friends, and will not let me go out on Sunday afternoons. I do not want to go out through the week. Don't you think she ought to let me go out on Sunday afternoon, if I behave myself?

Dear Brokenhearted I do not know 1

what reason your mother has in forbidding you to walk out on pleasant

Sunday afternoons. Why not ask her for specific reasons, then perhaps you would appreciate her point of view better. It is quite natural for you to wish some recreation of a clean and healthy nature. Choose your friends from among girls of good reputation and lay the foundations now for splendid friendships which will always last. You are never too young to form such friendships. Perhaps your mother cannot place herself back in her girlhood and realize the ambitions and desires which are yours. Help her to do this through making her your very best friend. Dear Friend- Do not worry about your skin if it is tanned. A natural complexion if it is clear is not at all undesirable. To clear your skin use good cold creams and do not overeat. 1 cannot personally recommend buttermilk, but I know it would not be detrimental to try.

Had another talk with Aunt Cecilia i this morning. Just had to get some things off my chest or bust. She is so sympathetic, and I felt so blue somehow or other, that it did my old heart good to have her stroke my hair and hug me to her. "My little LIndsey has been going it too hard," said ehe when the tears happened. "Up all night before last dancing ber head off, and gadding-all day yesterday, in a scandalous way. Can't burn the candles at both ends, baby girl, so don't see Jack till you feel in a more cheerful frame of mind." I took her advice, of course, and when he called up, before dinner, it was Aunt Cecilia who answered the 'phone, and told him that I was lying down and feeling tired, etc. That done, she came back into my room and curled up on my bed, all comfy like, and we just talked hard for hours. First of all Bhe showed me her engagement ring, brand new, and a beauty. Pearls and diamonds. Aunt Cecilia is not superstitious about the pearls; she says that's all nonsense about their meaning tears and even if they do, she wept all the tears that any one woman could weep in ages, and does not expect to weep any more. Aside from that she thinks her ring the loveliest ever.

When we had gotten well settled

1 confided In Aunt

Cecilia about having a st udio. First

of all she looked truly pained at the news, but after a minute she blinked hard, and then grinned over at me and said, "Keep it." 1 assured her that I intended to, and then she told me how Jeffry bad come to her, himself, and almost abjectly, and told her that she was to have her etudio and her work, after ehe was married to him, just as she

had always planned and hoped to have before the quarrel. Now I ask you, isn't that Just like a man? Aunt Cecilia was delighted to see that he had become enlightened with time, though she was far too tactful to say much more than sweet words of gratitude, or something akin to that emotion, and to kiss him. She was so excited at the idea of my having had the nerve to go ahead on my own, in spite of Jack, mother, and all the relatives! I explained how it had come about, and about meeting mother when I was buying my curtains, and I thought Aunt Cecilia would never stop laughing. When she had stopped finnlly, told

her I was crazy to have her Jeffry come down and pose for me; that the portrait, when finished, would be pre

sented to them for a wedding present, which tickled the lady extremely. She said for me to set my own date, and she and Jeffry would be punctual and proud to keep it. Wasn't that sweet of ber? And to think that I am so stingy about my fiance; it made me blush really. Of course I had lots more to tell Aunt Cecilia, very private sort of stuff, which I'm too sleepy to write about now, but will do so in the next. (To be continued.)

We have a form of government under which more people have lived free and happy than any other in history.

BAD BREATH Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets Get at the Cause and Remove It

Marriage in Building Adds

New Activity to I. M. C. A. $ The Richmond Y. M. C. A. has been a community center for a long variety of activities, but it remained for Dan Cupid to open the way for a new department. The Rev. Charles Chadwick, H. J. Weaver, Miss Frances M. Keever (now Mrs. Weaver) and Mrs. Burney Weaver, all of Hagerstown, were the active participants, and Miss Ruth Ferguson, manager of the Y. M. C. A. cafeteria, and Miss Martha Jones, stenographer, administered the rice.

Hand Sapolio-

Thel

Ideal forToilet and Bath

Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets, the substitute for calomel, act gently on the bowels and positively do the work. People afflicted with bad breath find quick relief through taking them. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are a vegetable compound mixed with olive oiL They act gently but firmly on the bowels and liver, stimulating them to natural action, clearing the blood, and purifying the entire system. They do that which calomel does, without any of the bad after effects. Take one or two exery night for a week and note the ' pleasing effect. 10c and 25c a box,

So Good! they dont last That's what Ma says about those best corn

flakes

Post

Toasties

SPRING AILMENTS Relieved by a Well-Known Medi; of Superlative Merit.

;me

Spring ailments are due to impure, impoverished, devitalized blood. Among them are pimples, boils and other eruptions, loss of appetite, that tired feeling, a run-down condition of the system, and sometimes chronic weaknesses made worse. Hood's Sarsaparilla combines the roots, barks, herbs, berries and other medicinals that have been found, in many years of intelligent observation, to be most effective in treatment of these ailments. Successful physicians prescribe these ingredients for diseases of the blood, stomach, liver and kidneys, and in cases where alternative and tonic effects are needed. Hood's Saraarparilla Is the spring medicine that purifies, enriches and revitalizes your blood, increasing power of resistance to disease. For a laxative take Hood's Pills. Advertisement.

$5 $5 $5 $5 $5 $5 SB $5 SB 'SI

SB SB SI

SB SB SI

m

lift m Oft

aft Oft m aft Oft

Oft

aft

Oft

The Oldest and Largest Retail Millinery House in the State of Indiana namely

OELHO

UN'S

$500

We offer the sensation of the season in Trimmed Hats valued to $12.50, for

There are five hundred of these patternsno two alike, and sale will continue until all are gone come early for best selection. Sale begins this evening at 6 o'clock

No Charges, C.O.D's or Lay Aways During Sale

KIELHORN Millinery Company 525 Main St.

KM

KM

km

km

KM

km

KM KM KM

KM

KM

km

KM

KM

km

SB SI

$5

$S $5 $5

5 SS S5

Don't Move Your Dead Pino Trade it in on a Player Piano

and we will take care of moving the instruments. You will be glad many times if you take advantage of this offer. Let's talk it over now

urn

LIGMX ELECTRIC

n

iiii i milium

inimmmium mi

1

llilllllil

PHE Milburn Ligkt Electric telongs just as much to the man who smokes a pipe and likes his dog and gun as to the woman who wants a smart easy-to-drivecar. He appreciates the way this car gets him over the ground- while he rests as he drives.

She likes the feeling of proprietorship as she grasps the starting lever and knows the car will instantly respond. There is no car quite like the Milburn to win you by its appearance and then hold you by its performance.

Chenoweth Auto Go.

The Starr Piano Go.

931-35 Main St.

FOR GOOD

PHONE 11072

PHONE 1072

I. MOODY WELLING A Good Dry Cleaner

1107 Main Street

Established 1S4S

Richmond, Ind. Vhe Milburn Wagon Company

Phone 1923 or 2121

Toledo,'0hi4

1

r J

6