Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 155, 10 May 1920 — Page 4
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PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, MAY 10, 1920.
Society j
She Resists Cupid's Darts
One hundred and fifty Invitations
will be Issued this week for the dance !
to be given Wednesday, May 19. by Frank Bescher, Clarence Coyle, Peter Llchtettfels, Edgar Lohr and Roland Wrede In the Odd Fellows hall. It was previously announced that only the first 75 couples would be admitted, but this statement has ,. been -withdrawn and any persons receiving Invitations will be admitted. The Syncopating Five will furnish ' the dance music. This group of jazzateers recently created a tremendous hit in Richmond and because of their popularity were secured for another dance. During the past winter they have play- . ed at the Gold Dragon cabaret in St Petersburg. They were enroute to New York for a summer engagement. Three of them are Indiana boys and are visiting at their homes before going on east.
Sixty children enjoyed the children's party given Saturday afternoon at the Richmond "Country club. During the afternoon games were played. Paper balloons, hats and other favors were distributed. A snowball fight was one of the enjoyable features of the afternoon, the snowballs being filled with confetti." The gay colored streamers presented a fectlve scene. The club house was artistically decorated with redbuds. Late in the afternoon luncheon was served to the kiddies and the mothers were served tea. . Miss Ruth Otte furnished the music throughout the afternoon. The committee in charge was composed of Mrs. Wilson Magaw, Mrs. Wilbur Hibberd and Miss Eleanor Seldel. . Mrs. Charles Kolp assisted. The Happy Hour club will give an "Old Clothes" dance Monday evening in the Odd Fellows hall. Music will be furnished by the Evan Smith orchestra with Benton Barlow as soloist. Persons attending must present Invitations. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Charles of. the Wernle Road had as their dinner guests Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Lawrence, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lawrence, Benjamin Lawrence, Richard Lawrence, Robert Lawrence, and Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Woolman, of Fountain City. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Taylor of Dayton, entertained with a dinner party at Cliffdale Sunday, for the pleasure of Miss Caroline Lytle of Clarkdale, Miss. A large French basket filled with sweet peas formed the centerpiece for the tablp. The guests included Miss Lytle, Miss Meda Evans. Miss Julia Stamm, Miss Helen Taylor, Carl Smith, Clarence Tate. Frederick Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mitchell and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lucius. The Sophomores of Earlham college will entertain the Seniors with a banquet Saturday, May 15 at 6:30 p. m., at the Westcott Hotel. One hundred and fifty persons will attend. The faculty guests will be Dr. and Mrs. Jones, Dr. Martha Doan and John Haramy. The marriage of Miss Florence Guthrie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Guthrie of the Middleboro pike, and Richard Lee of Greentown, Ind., took place Saturday at 9 a. m., at the parsonage of the United Brethren church. The ceremony was performed by the Uev. H. S. James, in the presence of the immediate families. The copule will reside in Greentown. The annual luncheon of the Richmond Day Nursery association will be held Wednesday at 12 o'clock at the Grace M. E. church. Reservations may be made for 75. Officers will be elected and every member is urged to be present. The Young People's class of Middleboro will give a pMze social and entertainment Friday evening at the Middleboro school house. Everyone is invited. Women are asked to bring pies. The East End Aid society of the
First Christian church will meet Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Charles Part-
low, 524 South Twelfth street.
1 The Ladies' Aid society of the First
M. E. church will meet Wednesday at ' 2:30 p. in. at the church.
The Eden Rebekah lodge will meet
I Monday at 7 p. m. at the home of Mrs. Pearl Christopher, 123 Richmond J avenue, to hold funeral services for
-Mrs. aaiue Aiiicneu at me nome, io : Richmond avenue. t ii n.it.f ' i 1 1
i ue woman s iteiiei tuips win '. meet at the home of Mrs. Pearl Chris-
topher Monday at 7:30 to hold funeral I services for Mrs. Sallie Mitchell, 41S j Richmond avenue. . The Tirzah club will meet in the ' Ben Hur hall Wednesday afternoon. The hostess will be Mrs. Louis KirchI gessner. Mrs. Grace Kamp has returned to her home after undergoing an operaj tion at Reid Memorial hospital. Miss Doris Puckett will entertain the Tyrolean club with a "kid" party Tuesday evening at her home on South Fourteenth street.
The Foreign Missionary society of the First Methodist church will meet Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. Frank Davenport on the National Road East. An interesting program has been arranged by the young
people. Mrs. Mary Price, North Fifteenth street, will entertain the Home Missionary Society of Grace M. E. church Tuesday afternoon. The auxiliary of the Sons of Veterans will meet Tuesday at 2:30 p. m. in the post rooms. Every one is urged to be present as there will.be special work. The Woman's committee of the St. Paul's Episcopal church will meet Tuesday at 2.30 p. m. at the church. The Ladies' Aid society of Chester will meet Wednesday at 2:30 p. m. In the hall. Officers will be elected. Miss Martha Doan and Mrs. Homer Morris. Earlham college, will entertain the Friends Missionary society Wednesday at 2:30 p. m. The Woman's Home Missionary society and the Foreign- Missionary society of the St. Paul's Lutheran church will meet Wednesday afternoon in the church chapel. Mrs. Henry Slekman, South Twelfth street, will entertain the Woman's Missionary society of the First English Lutheran -church - Wednesday ' afternoon. "Sewing for the Heathen," a comi edy in one act, will be given Wednesj day afternoon at the Trinity Lutheran jichurch by the. Ladies' Aid society. ! Mrs. Edgar Dickinson. 229 North Seventh street, will be hostess for
J'Wi - . l h ' t2
ftyrift
Mrs. Guy Chetwynd.
Mrs. Guy Chetwynd, American beauty who obtained a divorce from Sir
George Guy Chetwynd in 1909, has turned a deaf ear to Cupid'B pleas since, She was formerly Rosamund Secor, daughter of Charles Secor.
Circle one of the First Presbyterian church Wednesday afternoon.
J. H. Cunningham will hold his regular assembly dance Tuesday night in Vaughn Hall, he announced Monday. Bculley'B orchestra will play the pro
gram of dance music.
Volcano Looks Like Giant Wedding Cake Alice Day MacLaren in Scribner's Sunrise got us up again, and we were soon pulling off sweaters and knitted caps. By nine we were on the march, this time on mules. I had a white one. La Blanca. especially recommended as being "muy rica," very rich, a great expression in Chile
for any and everything. Food, weath
er, motors, babies, even shots at tennis or hands at bridge, may be "rich." La Blanca was, in truth, rich in tricks and sloth, and as she started off with her little mincing steps I felt a bit foolish. Our tall hydraulic engineer, his feet almost touching the ground. ' looked ridiculous, too, and the Judge, who is rather a dude in dress and was clothed in a perfectfitting though slightly elderly riding suit, looked distinctly out of place. Perky, his hlue eyes twinkling and his lips freshly reddened, might have been on a trick animal in a circus. W., on a big, rather evil-looking, Roman-nosed mule with soft black hair, was the only one who seemed suited to his mule. That is a doubtful compliment. W. has neither a Roman nose nor soft black hair, nor is he evil-looking, but I mean his mule was more appropriate that is, W., not being excessively tall, and the mule being big, the pair was less incongruous than the rest of us. That day was one of wonders, for we began to climb around Toconco into a rift between two volcano ranges. I wish I had the power of poetic description, for if ever a scene deserved it. lhat one did. There was
every variety of volcanic eruption; sometimes a great river of hardened gray lava flowing away like huge rap
ids; again a point, miles long, of soft
ly rounded brown hills which had bubbled out of one of the big peaks ages ago, here there would be great clefts and breaks in the solid stone; there a huge series of steps; once we passed an enormous round hill built tier upon tier exactly like a giant wedding cake. In the cracks between the tiers the earth had gathered and the scrub desert bushes had taken root, so that the cake looked as if it had wreaths of smilax around it. (Now, that wedding cako idea is quite poetic, is it not?)
Earlham Audience Hears Walger Concert; Singing Mrs, McCullou'gh Feature A rood sized andiencA hearrf tho
concert in Lindley hall Saturday
nignt Dy tne Earlflam College Orchestra, under the direction of Prof. C. L. Walter. While the niimhd
were for the most part semi classical.
ine audience was pleased.
The outstanding feature of the evening's entertainment was the singing of Mrs. Edith Ayers McCuIlough, a mezzo soprano of Chicago. Mrs. McCullough has a full mellow voice, not long as to range but she is able to do soprano roles creditably. However, the middle voice makes by far the strongest appeal to her hearers. She is possessed of a charming personality, good stage presence, together with a lovely voice. Besides the numbers programmed Mrs. McCullough sang a charming song by Stbella and "My Heart is a Lute", by Woodman.
SHE MAY HEAD FEDERATION OF WOMEN'S CLUBS
. Tf-.'s-'N- s- ' ., X
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Earlh
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FATE PLAYS HAND IN ARREST OF JAIL BREKER NEWCASTLE, Ind., May 10 Fate played a hand in the arrest at Hamilton, Ontario, of Archibold Armstrong, the 10-year old boy who with Jesse McCord escaped from the Henry county jail after locking the sheriff In a cell. He was being subjected to an investigation by the Hamilton police an complaint of his landlady who missed 15. Armstrong did not know why he was held, and thinking it was for escaping from here, told tie entire story. It later developed that he was not guilty of taking the money.
l 0 fill
3Zie
Which Is Extravagant Sex? Philadelphia Record The London Daily Chronicle has discovered, apparently much to its surprise, a condition of things that is surely as prevalent here as in England. The men of England have been calling meetings for the purpose of urging the women of the country to acquire habits of saving. The Chronicle, doing a little investigating of its own, has found that the procedure should be reversed; that the women are already natural savers. A woman who goes once or twice a week to the movies was rated "extravagant" at the men's meetings, while he was judged a "natural' man who blew in $1 or $3 a week for his little "relaxations" liquor and tobacco and such like.
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President David M. Edwards delivered commencement addresses at Westvllle, Ind, and New Madison O last week. When the Alumni association meets at Earlham on June 8, it will select either Murray S. Barker of Thorntown of Wilmer N. Lindley of Kokomo as official representative on the board of trustees. Josephine Threewits, a junior, was elected president of the Girls' Student council last week. She will serve during the remainder of this year and next. Miss Mildred Wilson will be senior member next year., Mildred DeLong and Glenna Morris, Junior members, and Gertrude Bedell, sophomore member. Ross Hadley, general secretary of the American Friends board of foreign missions, addressed a mass meeting of Earlham men Sunday morning on "The Missionary Career," This was the second of a series of vocational talks to be presented under the auspices of the Sunday school. Prof. Arthur Charles, who is in Germany in service committee work has a six-page article on "The Work of the American Friends Service Committee" in a recent issue of the "Transatlantic Trade," official journal of the American Asociation of Commerce and Trade, published in Germany. Morris Tomilson was elected president of the Policy club for the coming year, at the regular meeting last week.
VAN NUYS CALLS WYCKOFF'S EXPLANATION FAR-FETCHED Stanley Wyckoff's explanation that he resigned as federal fair price commissioner for Indiana because he could not obtain proper co-operation
gjj
Circuit Court
Miss Georgia A. Bacon. Miss Georgia A. Bacon of Worcester, Mass., first vice president of the General Federation of Women' Clubs, is expected to be elected president of that organization without opposition at the federation' meeting in Des Moines in Jane.
Suit was filed Monday morning by the Welfare Loan society demanding $65 on a promissory note from George C. Graef, which It alleged is overdue. The suit of Rachel E. Campbell against Lucas Campbell asking authority to convey lands without consent of husband is on the docket for trial Tuesday. MARRIAGE LICENSES Clarence Plarter, machinist, of Newcastle, and Velma Irene Allen, dispatcher, of Hagerstown. Elmer Hughes, laborer, of Richmond, and Elsie ,Wisman, machine operator, of Centerville.
Charles Dairy. Ulance, O.. Signal electrician, and Violet Murley, school teacher, of Wayne township. Julia James McCarthy, talesman, and Martha Jeannette Iliff, at home, both of Richmond. George H. Lilly, telegrapher. Ha
gerstown, and Kate Dwigglns, stenographer, Hagerstown. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS George W. Taylor and Martha C. Taylor to Samuel Ketron and P. Ketron, part of section 3 in township 2, range 1 west, Wayne township. LEAVES FOR SOUTH AMERICA. BLOOMINGTON, Ind., May 10. Dr. William Allen, an Indiana University student, whose home is at Hartford City, left Bloomington to head the Indiana university centenial expedition to South America. The present expedition is to be financed entirely by the school.
from the department of justice, was characterized as "far-fetched" by Frederick Van Nuys, United States district attorney. According to Mr. Van Nuys, an investigation of Mr. Wyckoff's accusation of sugar profiteering against James I. Barnes, mayor of Logansport, showed that the alleged transastion had not been made.
8 DEAD IN CRASH. PORTLAND, Ore.. May 10. Eight persons were gkilled and 3S injured eight miles south of here Sunday, when two electric trains of the West Side Line of the SouthernP acific company collided headon. Railroad officials said disregard of orders toy the crew of the Portland-bound train led to the disaster.
The k-nrlfl nntmit nf fiilk amounts to
'about 700 tons a day.
G.O. P. CHAIRMANSHIP
(Continued from Page One) believed that the county was opposed to Bossert. If Zell, who has beeri neutral, throws his vote for an antlBossert man, the elimination of the Liberty man will be assured. Bossert has made many enemies in
Wayne and Henry counties. Leaders
here have never forgotten his action
in the special congressional conven
tion, in which Bossert, after having promised Wayne county leaders that
he would not permit his name to bo used as a candidate, obtained control of five delegates, neventing a solid Wayne county vote for its candidate. Been Blamed Ever Since When 27 delegates who voted consistently for a Wayne county candidate realized they could not vole their entire delegation, owing to Bosseit's control of five Wayne count v
Here Is great relief frora
Headache, Neuralgia
DR. JONES'. LINIMENT
Rub it in, pain goes oil
men, they threw their vote solidly for Richard N. Elliott, assuring him of the nomination. Bossert has been blamed ever since for his part in the defeat of the Wayne county candidate. Bossert has never been on, friendly terms with Henry county leaders. Open opposition to his re-election as chairman developed there months ago. ' The Newcastle Courier has charged that Bossert raid no attention to Republican affairs in that county and was not conversant with conditions in the district. Even if Bossert is re-elected Tuesday, it is believed that the opposition that has been engendered in the four principal counties of the district, even if not publicly expressed, will mill- . tate against his success as a chairman. Watson Again Him. Senator Watson, in a statement, said : "I have taken an interest in Sixth district politics for a quarter of a century and have always had something to do with the organization. I think
I am well within the truth when I say that I had much to do with the election of Mr. Bossert in 191Q and 1918, and that, being interested in the organization, I feel that I still have th right to express my opinion as to who should compose it. "I had advised with a number of my friends throughout the district and while I had no personal feeling In the matter at all it was the opinion that under all conditions that existed at that time, Mr. Bridges would be a more satisfactory chairman than Mr. Bossert." The following committees were appointed by the Wayne county committeemen Saturday: Rules and Organization Thomas Murray of Hagerstown, Charles Harris of Richmond, and Max Kitterman of Cambridge City. Credentials John H. Taylor of Richmond, Edward McCaffey and Ross J Cramons. Resolutions W. E. Floyd, Frank Benn and Harvey Brown--
Doctor Tells How to Strengthen Eyesight
By the simple
use of
Bon-Opto, says Dr. Lewis, I
have seen l vl rj.mJW mit!i3 'tren ft V rSSw enedno 3X9iMy inaweek' JC n& time in i mnn
many instances, and quick relief brought to inflamed, aching, itching, burning, work-strained, watery eyes. Read the doctor's full statement soon to appear in this paper. Bon-Opto ia Fold and recommended everywhere by D "crpists.
A DAINTY LOUNGING ROBE Pattern 3219 is here portrayed. It is cut in four sizes: Small, 32-34; me
dium, 36-3S; large, 40-42; extra large, I
44-46 inches bust measure. A medium size will require 7'i yards of 36-inch material. The width of the skirt at its lower edge is two yards. Dotted Swiss, dimity lawn, percale, crepe, printed volls,
challie and albatross, also flannel, silk! and satin may be used for this style.! A pattern of this illustration mailed j
to any address on receipt of 10 cents in silver or stamps. Name .
Address
City
Size
Address Pattern Department, Palladium. Patterns will be mailed to your address within one week.
ONE EYELET TIES
In Black and Brown Kid, with leather Louis heels, at $7.50 Bowen & Fivel 610 Main Street
It is gratifying to be able to give our customers Silks at prices so near normal they seem dirt cheap.
MASHMEYER'S
Everybody knows M a s limey er Silk's and are surely taking advantage of the Lower Prices Now in Force.
I
'WHERE ALL THE CARS STOPw:SSZS
A Continuation of Our
SILK
AJLIi
A Week of Unusual Selling in Wonderful Silks
A timely purchase of Twenty Thousand Dollars Worth of New Silk, on sale much below today's market value to break the backbone of the high prices.
Silks for Every Purpose at Prices for Every Purse
Silk Crepe de Chines . . $ 1 .98 Silk Georgette Crepe. .$1.98 Wash Satins ....... .$1,98
Silk Canton Checks . . .$1.19 Silk Poplins $1.29 Silk Faile $1.48
Chiffon Taffeta Silks ..$2.98 Satin Messalines $2.98 Satin Charmeuse $2.98
This sweeping reduction in pric effects every piece of -Silk in our store. We cannot enumerate every item, but we frankly tell you everything is less. Silks for every conceivable purpose and at prices within reach of the most moderate purse. The woman who likes to express her individuality in beautiful Silks can satisfy her desire here at very low prices. Only in the larger cities are Silks, such as we are showing, to be found in complete color ranges and qualities dependable.
We are, indeed, grateful to the silk operators who dared in the face of the manufacturers' steadily advancing prices throw on the market three million dollars worth of wonderful Silks at price concessions ranging from 50c to $2.00 a yard less than today's market value for the sole reason of breaking the backbone of high prices. What the ultimate result will be, we have no way of knowing. All we can say is we have for your selection a wonderful assortment of Silks at prices not thought possible a week ago.
A Companion Sale of SUMMER WASH FABRICS
VOILES 36 inch Voiles, were 75c; now 597 French Voiles, were $1.00; now 75 Georgette Voiles, were $1.25; now 95J Columbian Voiles, were $1.50; now $1.19 Floral Voiles, were $1.75; now 1.39 Our Best Voiles, were $2, $2.50; now $1.69
CREPES
Blue Bird Crepe, wag 89c; now Lingerie Crepe, was 69c;, now
69 59
A delightful collection of beautiful Voiles, Organdie. Ginghams and Crepes. Never before have we been able to show such a wonderful collection and they are not at all expensive. FLORAL PRINTED VOILES TRI COLOR PRINTINGS FRENCH GEORGETTE PATTERNS Practical Designs Qualities' the Very Best.
GINGHAMS Dress Ginghams, our 50c quality 39 Dress Ginghams, our 7Dc quality 59 Dress Ginghams, our 95c quality ....79 Madras Gingham, our 89c quality ....69 Tissue Ginghams, our 95c quality ....79 Shirting Ginghams, our 59c quality . -49 ORGANDIE White Orgindie, our $1.50 quality, 1.19 White Organdie, our $1.25 quality .-95
