Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 239, 17 August 1920 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., TUESDAY, AUG. 17, 1920.

Society

. Mrs. John B. Dougan. North Tenth street, entertained with a luncheon at the country club Tuesday for her guests. Miss Mildred and Miss Maida Wellboren of Pasadena, Calif. Gladioli in tall vases were used to appoint the clubhouse, while in the center of the long table where the guests were seated was a large boquet cf asters. Covers were laid for 25 guests. 'Mrs. E. M Campf ield, North Elev enth street, will entertain informally Wednesday afternoon for the pleasure of her guest, Mrs. Dwight Young, of. Dayton, Mrs. Mark Thistlethwaitc ol Washington. D. C, who is the guest of Miss Maude Thistlethwaite, and Mrs. Fred Brown, of Peoria. 111., who is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Harter. Mrs. W. H. Swaynie, Miss Alice Starr, Mrs. Scott Lewis, Miss Olive Lewis, Miss Edith Lewis, and Mrs. L. C. Schneider have returned from James Lake, where' they spent two

weeks at the Lewis cottage. Miss Mary Luring. South Fourteenth street, will entertain with a towel shower Tuesday evening for Mrs. Louis Weidner, nee Miss Florence Wentz. Miss Cecilia Conniff, North E street, will entertain Tuesday evening for Miss Gertrude and Miss Mary Heidelman, who are leaving soon for residence in California. The affair will be a theatre party. Robert Johnson, North Eleventh street, has gone to Minneapolis. Frederick Dechant, of Middletown, O., is the guest of his mother, Mrs. Minnie E. Dechant,, North Eleventh street. ; Miss Mary Swerer, of Denver, Col., end Mrs. Mary Swerer of Eaton, O. are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Rutherford Jones, South Eighteenth street. Dr. and Mrs." F. W. Krueger and family have returned from a motor trip through the east. Mrs. Howard B! Williams and Mrs. Floyd. Davis have gone to Berrien Springs, Michigan, to visit their aunt Mrs. Monroe Gaar. . Miss Gertrude Eggleston li. visiting in Illinois. Miss Helen McWhlnney Is visiting in Dayton, Ohio. The public is Invited to the lawn fete, to be given Tuesday evening at the Home for the Friendless. The proceeds will be used for the upkeep of the home. Final arrangements have been made

for the annual reunn of the class of

ivu, or tne mgn scnooi, to oe neia at Jackson park, Thursday. Picnic supper will be served after which dancing will be enjoyed. Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Ellis, West Main street, received informally Sunday evening, for the Rev. and Mrs. S. W. Traum, of Meadville, Pa. Former residents of Richmond. Mrs. George Hapner and daughter. Fern, of Cleveland, Ohio, are the guests of Mrs. Earl Smith, south Third street. Mrs. Elizabeth Tullis, of Dennlson,

O ris the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Thoa. W. Johnson, south-west of the city. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Piper, Mrs. John Rigor and grand-daughter of Connersville, motored to Richmond, Monday and were guests of relatives, Mrs. C. W, Corey, south Thirteenth street, has returned home after spending a month with her daughter, Mrs. R. S. Smith of Springfield. O. Miss Harriet and Miss Elizabeth Foulke and Miss Clara Newman, have

returned from Gull lake. The Perseverance Bible class of the First Baptist church will meet at 2:30 p. m., at the home of Mrs. Shelby Lee, National Road, East. Shubert S. Smith, of Kansas City, who has been the guest of his sister, Mrs. E. S. Pickett. North Eighth street, left Sunday with Mrs. Pickett for a visit In Siler City, N. C. Mr. and Mrs. Paxton Martin, South Eighth street, are the parents of a baby daughter, Miriam Maxine, born Aug. 14. The Wide-Awake Bible class of the Second English Lutheran church will give an ice cream social on the church lawn Wednesday evening. The public

is invited. Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Wood, Miss Ada Wood, Miss1 Martha Wood, and Paul Wood have gone to Los Angeles, Calif.,

for an extended visit with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Harley Yontz and daughters, Beatrice, Mildred and Pauline, and Miss Dorothy Johnson, have returned from Chicago, where they spent a week with Mr. and Mrs. Grover Yontz and son Gilbert. Roland Hughes and daughter Helen, of New York, are the guests of Mrs. I. M. Hughes, North Ninth street. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Duning and Mrs. John Niewoehner motored to Detroit last week and will go to Cleveland by boat. Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Quigley had as their guests Sunday, John L. Dunn of Columbus, O., and P. L. Dunn, of Wellville, O. The Tirzah club will not hold its picnic Wednesday afternoon as was planned, but will meet in the club rooms at 2 p. m. The Ben Hur lodge will give a box social and dance Thursday evening.

All members of the club and their

friends are invited. Mr. and Mrs. Will Gerdsen and daughter, Marguerite, of Cincinnati, O., who have been the guests of Fred Brown and family. North Nineteenth

street, for the past week, returned home Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Munson and daughters Leah and Martha Louise left Tuesday morning for Longmont, Colorado to remain indefinitely. The Intermediate department of the Sunday School of the First M. E. church will have a picnic Wednesday evening in Glen Miller park. All members are asked to meet at he pavilion between 5:30 and 6 p. m.

Mrs. Solomon SaysBeing the Confession of Th 8even-Hundreth Wife. By Helen Rowland

(Copyright. 1920. by The Wheeler Syndicate. Inc.) Be glad, my Daughter, rejoice and be glad!

Day of A Thousand Follies the Day

of Sweetness and Light, and movingpictures, and baseball, and cabarets, and phonographs, and golf, and motorcars! The Day of a Thousand PLAYTHINGS for grown-up "children"! For, behold, every wife possesseth a grown-up "Baby"! Not the kind that feedeth upon porridge but the kind that feedeth upon flattery. Not the kind that howleth throughout the night but the kind that ariseth and howleth at a baseball game. Not the kind that must be nursed through the measles but the kind that requireth to be nursed through biues and grouches and dosed with soothlng-syrup. Not he kind that spattereth the table cloth and shattereth its toys, but the kind that fllleth the house with smoke

and ashes and cigarette stumps, spattereth soap all over the bath-room, and leaveth Its clothes wheresoever it droppeth them. Not he kind that must be sung to sleep but the kind that must be cooed to and diverted and kept AWAKE, after dinner!

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verily, every man is thing of fancies and

Is not looking for salvation, but fori recreation; he is not seeking conversion, but' diversion. "And a little "reformer" Is a deadly thing! Go to! When thou laughest at the prattle of a babe, .and pretendest U Plajr "pat-a-cake", doth it not adore thee? Likewise, when thou laughest at a man's wit and pretendest to enjoy his games, he? shall call thee blessed and praise thine "understanding." For, every man's vision of a perfect mate is not a soul-mate, but a playmate. She weareth not a halo, but a cap and bells! And an Ideal Wife is one that knoweth how to be a Mother to her own husband. Verily, verily, the woman who hold-

eth sway over a man's heart forever is she who keepeth him eternally AMUSED! Selah.

Sugar Prices Take A Flop Down go Richmond prices on sugar! Following a gradual decline from the spring high point of 35 cents a pound, groceries put it 'way down, when they announced Tuesday, five pounds for 87 to 89 cents, or approximately 18 cents a pound. The best previous price here had been 22 cents.

Friendless Home Gives 1

Lawn Fete For Funds A lawn fete including a musical program and light refreshments will be given at the Home, for the Friendless. Tuesday night. Mrs. John Mar

shall and Misses Louise and Agnes Meerhoff will sing, and several piano solos will be given by Mrs. Mariam Weichman. Ice cream and cookies and ice cream cones will be sold at a nominal charge. An official of the board of trustees

of the home said Tuesday that the institutiorr is short of funds and needs ! the generous support of all persons in j order to keep up the good work which 1 it has accomplished for a number of years. It is also the only place in ' Richmond in which old or feeble mind-1 ed women and young homeless child J ren who have been taken from theiri parents by court decree can be cared ' for. She cited a case of a woman with ; six children who had come here to j meet her husband, but failing to find

him had been cared for several days &

at the home without charge. To meet i these emergency cases the home must; beprovided with sufficient finances. In case of rain the program will be: held in the parlor of the home, at , 306 south Tenth street. i

Find Bodies in Coal Mine (By Associated Freest OAKLAND CITY. Ind., Aug. 17. Mystery surrounds the deaths of Cecil

Sharpe and Victor Black, coal xnlnen whose bodies were found on thi railroad near here. Monday morning. The body of one was warm th othei was cold.

FEAR ELLETSVILLE BOY IS LOST IN A CAVE. BDOOMINGTON, Ind., Aug. 17. Fearing that Edward Pietzuth, a resident of Elletsville, Ind., is lost in Owen cave near that town, a searching party today entered the cave in -ai effort to find him. Pietzuth disappeared from his home, Friday.

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UGAR

Fine White Franklin Now Is Your Chance to Get the Best Price in Town at Kroger's

5 25 100

pounds 89c

$4.40 $1 7. 00

Kroger

535 Main St. 3 STORES

S. 8th and N. 8th and

- Pottenger and Schradin Distributors

Yea, verily, Peter Pan a boy, forever!

Therefore, if thou wouldst be a happy wife, I charge thee, when thou weddest, waste" not thy substance upon laces and lingerie, and baking-tins and embroidared linens ; but fill the closets

of thine house with TOYS; with dime novels and with comic magazines, with golf-sticks and phonographs and fox-trot records: with picture puzzles, and ouija boards and tennis-balls and fishing tackle! Seak not to acquire a knowledge of literature, and of business, and of politcs, but to acquire a knowledge of the newest dance-steps, and the latest popular songs, and the favorite moviestars, and the brightest vaudeville jokes. Aspire not to reform thine husband,

neither to "uplist" him, but to EN

TERTAIN him! For behold, when a man weddeth, he

INTERURBAN CAR HITS AUTO, KILLING THREE PORT CLINTON, O., Aug. 17. Three men were killed instantly near here Monday when an automobile in which they were riding to their summer home at Lakeside was struck by a Northwestern Ohio electric car. The victims were Charles Napier, 50; his son, Orris Napier, 17, and his brother-in-law, Roy Benschotter, 40. Napier was an engineer in the employ of the Nickle Plate Railroad Company.

Your Grocer Has

Special Rates

All the railroads entering Greenville Cincinnati Northern, Pennsylvania and D. & U., will give special rates the week of Aug. 23 to 27 on account of the Great Darke County Fair. Tickets good returning Saturday, Aug. 28th. Take advantage of these rates and attend the Great Fair. The Ohio Electric will run special cars to and from the ground, also extra cars over their entire road to take care of you. Come! Advertisement.

Zwissler's

$0

10

Bread

'The Large, Economic Loaf With the Good, Old-Fashioned Taste." Zwissler's Bakery 15 South Fifth Street

New Chemical Kills Bed Bugs P. D. Q. P. D. Q. (Pesky Devils Quietus) is the name of a new golden colored chemical

discovery by Dr. Price that actually rids the worst infested house of bedbugs, roaches, fleas, ants and their eggs. They don't have time to kick after you go after them with P. D. Q. A 36c package of P. D. Q. makes a quart of strong bugkiller, and goes farther than a barrel of the old fashioned dangerous dope. P. D. Q. coats and kills their eggs and prevents hatching. FREE a patent spout in every box to enable you to get them in the hard-to-get-at-places, and saves Jolce. P. D. Q. for family use 35c. Special Hospital and Hotel size 2.60 makes 5 gallons, contains 3 spouts your drug-gist can supply you. or sent prepaid to your address either size on receipt of price by the Owl Chemical Co.. Terre Haute, Ind. P. V. Q. is never peddled; A. G. Luken a. Co., Qulgley's Drug Stores and Thistlethwaite' Drug Stores. advertisement.

BUEHLER BROS. Wednesday

SIRLOIN STEAK, lb 28c HAMBURGER, lb 18c PURE LARD, 4 lbs 90c TOMATOES, per can 13c RED BEANS, per can 10c SALMON (tall can ) 20c SAUER KRAUT, 2 cans 25c GREEN BEANS, per caiu. . . . .77. 13c MILK (tall cans) 13c CATSUP . .. 12 He

Furs and Mystery By PALAIS ROYAL A fur bearing animal which runs the muskrat a good second for diversity of service and durability is the Marmot, a little burrowing fellow of northern Europe.

is

on

When alive its color grey blended with yellow

the back and sides and greyish-brown on the balance of the body. Along in the latter part of September it seeks its home in the earth and from then on till spring it is "not in" to visitors. The discovery of the marmot as a fur apparel possibility gave to people of moderate means the opportunity to obtain a handsome, lustrous durable fur. For the fur manufacturer by treatment and dyeing, brought forth the marmot skin so close in resemblance to the mink, even to the extent of producing the brilliancy of the December and Janr.ary caught mink, that detection is difficult except by the experienced handler of furs. It is also used as a substitute for Jap mink. As I have said before, imitation furs when sold as such are honest business transactions which no one deplores, but It Is well to protect yourself against substitution by requesting a written guarantee thaf the article you purchase is just what the ticket attached calls for. At a fur sale in St. Louis not long ago, twenty-six thousand house cat skins were offered. Areyou sure that you would know old Tabby's skin if it were dressed in another color and name? BEWARE OF THE WOLF IN SHEEP'S CLOTHING (To Be Continued) Copyright, 1919

Are the Best Tires fes

for t$ii

e

aril,

Car wsner

EVERYBODY agrees that it is generally desirable for merchan dise to be graded. A good principle that often comes out at the wrong end for the car owner the man with the upkeep on his mind the tire bills to pay He feels that tire economy should be a personal contract with the tire-user. Not a transaction with his car,' whether it be big or small Reasoning tires in human terms instead of trade custom has written this policy for the United States Rubber Company Build all tires to one

standard and let the tire? user choose his own size! When the oldest and largest rubber manufacturing concern in the world focuses all its resources upon one grade, one quality, it makes one client and that is the whole ptiblic. This single ideal is visible in any U S Tire factory, at any U S distributing branch, in any U S dealer's store Seeing that the tire-user gets his economy mileage along with an unlimited guarantee. Policies are harder to make than tires. Probably the deepest reason why U. S. demand keeps always ahead of the number of tires the U. S. makers can supply.

oi if

United States

Jim

Rubber Company

FHty-threm iacmruia

The oldest and largest Rubber Organization in the Worla

Two hundred and thirty-Jive Branches

BUEHEER BROS.

715 MAIN STREET