Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 45, Number 246, 25 August 1920 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. RICHMOND, IND, WEDNESDAY, AUG. 25, 1920.
Society
Mrs. Louis Weldner, a recent bride, was the honor guest at a miscellaneous shower Tuesday evening, given by Miss Helen Snodgrass, South Eleventh street. Snapdragons and gladloll were used attractively about the house. A book made up of the picture of each guest with her finest beauty secret was presented to the bride. Music, contests and dancing were enjoyed throughout the evening. Dainty Ices in yellow and white were served to the following guests: Miss Anna Dallas, Miss Irene Bishop, Miss Grace Barton, Miss ,Ruth Weldner, Miss Ruth Wlckemeyer, Miss Doris Puckett. Miss Dorothy Rees, Miss Clara Daub. Miss Gladys Longnecker, Miss Lucille Weller, Miss Rosanna Sullivan of Peru, Ind., Miss Josephine Hiatt, Miss Mary Luring, Miss Ethel Graham, Miss Mary Carman, Miss Wilma Ellibee, Miss Mary Chenoweth, Miss Helen Hazeltine, Mrs. Lowell Johnson, Mrs. Clem Roberts, Mrs. Leslie Sinex and Mrs. JLouis Weldner. Mr. and Mrs. Elgie Wyatt, North Tenth street, entertained the follow
ing guests to dinner Tuesday evening: Mr. and Mrs. Bartley Brown of
Oklahoma City, Mrs. Emma Jenkins, Miss Doris Wyatt, Mrs. Fred Hartman and Miss Rosalind Hartman. Mrs. George Herbst, Pearl street,
will entertain the Jolly Twelve club Thursday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. William Romey and two sons, South Fourteenth street, motored to Chicago Monday. Eben Louck has returned from Canada, where he has been visiting. Mrs. Harry Woodruff and son, Joseph, have gone to Rush county to spend a week. Mr. and Mrs. E. K. Shera have returned from Winona Lake, where they spent a week. Frank E. Baer, of Los Angeles, Cal., Is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Frank "Meyer, Washington Court. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Wentllng and Mr. and Mrs. John E. Brown, of Elyria, O., have returned from a trip through the east. Mr. and Mrs. John E. Taylor have returned from Fish Lake, where they spent two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Ferling, North A street, are entertaining Mrs. Ralph Deem and son, of Dayton, and Mrs. Mier Cohn. of Cincinnati. Mrs. Louis C. Albertson, of Economy, is the guest of Mrs. Jennie Thornburgh, East Main street. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Ackerman aro the parents of a baby daughter, Eugenia Allison, born Tuesday morning. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Bond, Chestnur street, entertained the following quests over the week end: Mrs. Henry Frazler, Mrs. Arthur Yeager and children. Eugene and Dorothy Jane. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bond, of New Paris, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Rack, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Boerner of Chester, and Miss Dorothy Brown, of Greensfork. The Woman's Relief corps will hold a special meeting Thursday afternoon and all members are urged to be present. The Daffodil club will meet Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Harry Sharp, North Twentieth street. Mrs. John Ettera. and Mrs. William Keller spent Tuesday in Boston with Mrs. Carl Kaufman. Miss Letha Chrow and Mrs. S. C. Bevington spent Wednesday in Indianapolis. Mr. and Mrs. William Schultz, of North Second street, have as their guests Mrs. S. W. Smith and daughter, Mabel, of Danville, 111. Mrs. Emma Rich will entertain the Quaker City club Thursday afternoon nt the home of her daughter, Mrs. RjUth Culbertson, Charles street Miss Charlotte Du Bois, of Liberty, who has been the guest of Miss Jane Brookbank, of the Keystone apartments, has returned to her home.
Jealousy, but It would be most unwise to show it. You have not exclusive claim on his time unless you and he are engaged. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a young lady 19 years old and have a girl chum of 20. We are very devoted to each other and are always together. We have many nice friends, but we have
bo many trouDiesome neignoors
around us that when our friends call for us and the neighbors tfear the car Htnn thiv run to their windows or
doors to find out what can be seen.
They are very meddlesome and cause us many unhappy moments. Wk nrn nice resDectable girls and
believe that we are old enough to have
company two or three times a weeK. Please tell us if we should continue to put up with it, or tell them to mind their own business. , VTINY AND PEP. You are looking for trouble. Your neighbors are curious and gossipy like other human beings. They can do you no harm, however, if your conduct is above reproach. Be careful to go with a good class of young men and to do nothing you would not be willing to have your mother see you do. Personally I disapprove of motor rides for young girls and young men unless they are chaperoned. Such rides have been the. cause of many of the present day tragedies. Say nothing to your neighbors. Let them look If it gives them so much pleasure.
The Diary of an Engaged Girl By Phyllis Phillip -v
J
Heart Problems
Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a girl 14 years of age and have been with several fellows. My clium goes with a fellow and has gone with him for tome tJme. He would get a fellow to take me home Just so he could take my chum home. I do not care to go with one fellow one night and another the next night. What can I do to avoid this? SUSIE. At the age of 14 you should not be going places with your girl friend at night. Then you would not be put in such a position. You are too young to go out evenings unless accompanied by an older person. Dear Mrs. Thompson: I am a girl nearly IS years of age, going with a feUow who went with another girl who was a friend of mine until I went with 'him. I have hern going with him nearly two months now and I hear he has been with her two or three times ince I started going with him. Do you think I should quit going With him and let him go with her, or tfo you think T should keep on going with him? He Fays he doesn't care -anything about her and tells me he would rather go with me. BLUE-EYKD BLONDE. Keep on going with him if you want to and do not mention the other girl to him. It may be hard to keep down
Bachelor Girl Sayings By Helen Rowland
(Copyright. 1920. by The Wheeler Syndicate. Inc.) Judging from the way in which the modern divorcee hastens from the court-room to the altar, apparently a burnt child loves the fire. The widow's might in" these effete days, is nearly all expended in trying to appear as sophisticated and worldly-wise as the average debutante. When a woman waxes poetical, she finds so little to rhapsodize about in man that she goes straight to her looking-glass for inspiration, and then writes love-songs to herself. Summer fiction: Those long Tmso - lonesome - without - you, wish - you-were-here, am-thinking-of-you-always" letters that every mail train carries from the city to the waiting wives at the seashore. A woman knows that she must be good all the time; but a man seems to fancy that he can reform between the last dose of medicine and the last breath, and leave a bequest to his cook or his grandmother and get as much credit for it as though he had "worked" his way into heaven instead of Just "paying" it. There are only three things which the scientists can't and the psychics won't even try to explain in this miraculous age death, hay fever and a happy marriage. In a flirtation a woman never knows what a man suspects about her, and a man never even suspects wbat a woman knows about him. Life does not become actually dull to any man until he loses his last ounce of curiosity about women. This is the time of year when only the hardiest flowers and flirtations still survive the turbulent, torrid season. In the Fall a young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of escape.
! What's
XT
s in a iName
(Copyright)
I
(Copyrighted, 1920, by The Wheeler Syndicate, Inc.) Clarissa is purely a literary name in origin, though it enjoys every day usage. With the interesting significance of "rendering famous," it dates back to the old latin adjective"clarus" meaning "bright or clear." St. Clarus was the first bishop of Nantes in Brittany, in A. D. 2S0; another famous Clarus was a hermit near Rouen. The. first feminine of the name was formed in Italy whwere Chiara appeared as the title of a disciple of St. Francis. Clarice was ths next step in the evolution and named the wife of Lorenzo de Medici. This latter was imported to England by ear and spelled by them Clarisse. But when the Great Richard called the heroine of his novel Clarissa, all other forms were abandoned and vClarissa became the reigning favorite oTThe hour. Curiously enough, the name was reimported into France as Clarisse, in imitation of Richard the earlier origin being naively overlooked. Meanwhile Clarrissa flourished in England her greatest vogue occurring during the reign of "preciose" literature. Her popularity here has never been disputed, but she is regarded as a wholesome every-day title and her literary ancestry has almost been forgotten. The diamond Is Clarissa's tallsmanic gem. It will bring her many admirers and a successful marriage, according to an old superstition. Thursday Is her lucky day and 2 her lucky number
GUN CLUB WILL SHOOT ON THURSDAY, SEPT. 16 The regular club shoot of the Quaker City Gun club will bo held at Athletic park Thursday afternoon, The next invitational shoot of the organization will be held on Sept. 13 instead of Sept. 9, as was previously announced.
The High Price of Sugar
G
makes one welcome foods which are rich in natural sweetness.
rape
Nut
s
the ready-cooked cereal requires no added sweetening-, for it contains its own pure grain sugar, developed from wheat and barley by twenty hours' baking. Sprinkle Grape-Nuts over ripe fruit or berries and you'll save sugar.
August 2S Rainy day today, very gloomy, and I feel more than that much more. Mother says if I'd darn some of my stockings when I get these "spells" 'I'd find that I had less time for dark and dreary thoughts, but that's what she would say. No understanding whatsoever of the innermost soul of a gjrl. Some women were not intended to have daughters at all, of this I'm convinced. What they should have are sons, nice,, healthy, unimaginative, and thoroughly conventional sons. However, 1 have nothing to do with the ordering of all this. Matter of tact I am plain homesick yP just that! Never would have believed it possible, and cannot understand same now, for half of the home is with me, and yet well, there's my dad. I do mif-B him most terribly, and I Just feel that ho misses me quite as hard. I know that he has been sending me messages across the sea for the last few days now, and I have been doing the same to him. Had such a scrappy little letter from Jack today that it made the day and my disposition all wrong. I mis? my boy most, most ghastly much. I'm so lonely and homesick for him that for almost nothirg I'd run away from here and jump on the first steamer going home, and just arrive in Los Angeles and say, "Barkis is willin' " and get married there and then. Dear me, I don't see why a girl cannot follow her inclinations in these matters of the heart, especially when she is feeling quite unhappy, and her lover does not know it! Jack explains in his letter that some Mg business was just breaking; meant our whole future maybe; and he could only write a few words to tell me howmuch he loved me, and needed me at moments such as he was going through when he wrote. Well, here I am way over this side of the Atlantic wishing that he were with me at these, my bad moments, and that's all the good it does either of us! I don't give a hang any more about Independence, nor the lonely life of a careerist not a bit; never want to be alone a moment after I am married. There now. That little cat Barbara would give roe the grand ha! ha! if I were to airear from the clouds in Los Angeles,
so It can't bo done. Maybe the Lord will provide. Aunty and I went to tie Xcil for tea this afternoon, and we aid see the best looking men. If I hadn't been feeling so blue about things I should have flirted for ail I was worth that instinct dies hard in the very young! Besides, what's the use of commencing any more affairs of the heart with amy man at all? It all leads to misery, and so many disappointments. Aunt Cecilo looked no end pretty: quite took the shine from me, but 1 didn't care I felt ver old, broken, end sophisticated today. Not so much so now, as at tea time, for I've had a good dinner and been resting all evening, and that does change one's point of view about one's self quite considerably. The music was lovely at the Cecil and we lingered as long as we thought proper over it. Of course the heart of my aunt is beating its gayest and highest and why not? HE is to arrive most any hour now. Woe is me, lhat 1 should have to sit by ar.d just look on, while my own heart fall lower and lower. I'll say it's hard luck. Couldn't even work today, and 1 have been having my best time over here, up to the present, with my pen, pencil and paper! Had a nice long letter from Arline Ludovci yep, she's been having the time of her life honeymooning through Italy and Franco with her new husband, Vinceiizo. Crazy about him, and
gloriously happy in her new life. There you are everyone seems to be happy but me. (Ta be continued.) Everstnan and Goodwin Each Charge Other Struch First Sam Ev ere man filed an action in police court Wednesday charging Joe Goodwin with assault and battery. The altercation, police say, arose over an alleged disregard of a crossing slgral given by Eversman. Goodwin said Eversman struck him with a lantern, and the latter alleges Goodwin struck the first blow. The case will be heard Thursday.
SHOWS NO IMPROVEMENT. TRAER, la., Aug. 25. The condtton of James Wll6on, ex-eecretary ol agriculture, who Is critically 111 at his home here, shows no Improvement, his physicians said. Mr. Wilson is unconscious a part of the time.
LICHTENFEXS A. O'BRIEN H Dry Cleaning and Pressing Q 41 N. 8th St. Phone 2807 M H Watch for the Checkerboard g g Delivery Car naaBDBDUDD
PLAN A BIG PLANT. (By Associated Press) MONTREAL. Autr V,,. tj,.im..
match manufacturing companies, re-l cently amalgamated, have completed! plans for the erection of a $5,000,000 j plant near here, it was announced today, j
SPECIALS at GOODWIN'S Corner S. W. 3rd and Nat'l. Road BIG T FLOUR S1.89 Assorted Cookies, pound . ...32 Damsen Plums, per pound . .10J
VlTAMQN
NOT THE ONLY ONE
There Are Other Richmond People Similarly Situated.
ASPIRIN
Name "Bayer" on Genuine
Can there be any stronger proof offered than the evidence of Richmond residents? After you have read the following, quietly answer the question. William Cooper, 414 South Eleventh street, Richmond, gave the following statement: "My back was weak and lame and ached a great deal. I have used Doan's Kidney Pills when these spells have become severe and have never failed to get relief in a short time. I believe Doan's will help any kidney sufferer if used -right and I advise anyone who has this trouble to get Doan's Kidney Pills at Thistlethwaite's Drug Store." OVER TWO YEARS LATER, Mr. Cooper added: "I know that Doan's Kidney Pills will do good work when the kidneys are out of order. They never fail to help me when my kidneys give me the least trouble." Price COc, at all dealers. Don't pimply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mr. Cooper had. Foster-Milburn Co.. Mfrs., Buffalo. N. Y.
"Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" Is genu- j Ine Aspirin proved Bafe by millions i and prescribed by physicians for over ; twenty years. Accept only an un-; broken "Bayer package" which con-' tains proper directions to relieve j Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neu-( ralgia. Rheumatism, Colds and Pain. ; Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost few ; cents. Druggists also sell larger j "Bayer packages." Aspirin is trade mark Bayer Manufacture Monoacetic-;
MEN!
See the New Light Weight Felt Hats for Fall LICHTENFELS In the Westcott
acidester ment.
of Salicylicacid. Advertise-!
Use Chestnut Coke for Baseburners. Call 0. D. BULLERDICK 529 S. 5th Phone 1235
Sanitary Tuft less Mattress
1
WEISS FURNITURE STORE 505-13 Main St,
32 v
'arl CYoim
8x.iothst
0
SAFETY RAZOR BLADES Resharpened: Gillette, 35c per doz. Single Edge, 25c per doz. Duplex. 50c per dczen. Hollow Ground ("Star) 50c each. Satisfaction guaranteed. Leave or mail care Richmond Typewriter Exchange, 17 N. 7th St.
njLM
Tailored in Richmond
The PERIDOT
and SARDONYX i are the birthstones for August. We have a good selection of both
Dr. J. A. Thomson Dentist Murray Theater Building Hours; 9-12, 1-5, 7-8; Sunday 9-12 Phone 2930
ANTI-TRUST The good all around ready mixed paint, all colors and white. $3.30 Per Gallon Why pay more? OLD RELIABLE PAINT Co. 10-12 S. 7th St., H. C. Shaw, Mgr.
PETRO-PINE OINTMENT The Old Reliable For Man and Beast For Cuts, Wounds, Harness Galls, Scratches, Mange, Cracked Heels-and all Skin and Hoof Diseases of Animals. Price: 2 oz., 25c; 4 oz., 50c; 8 oz., $1.00. For Sale by A. G. Luken Co., Quigtey Drug Store, 8th and Main; Yes and Now Drug Co., Richmond Typewriter Exchange.
HOWARD A. MOORE, Tailor Dry Cleaning and Pressing Altering, repairing and relining of Ladles' and Men's garments a specialty Our pressing is all done by hand work, delivered promptly and guaranteed. 921 J2 Main St. Over Bartel & Rone's
8-
FLOWERS Consult us on the matter of Funeral Flowers and Flowers for all occasions. THE WAYNE FLOWER SHOP Phone 2614 1031 Main St.
MASHME
YER
"WHERE ALL THE CARS STOP"
August
GAIN
Sale
25 to 33 1-3 Percent Off On All Wanted Merchandise
$1.19
New Fall Silks $3.00 Crepe De Chine, 40 Inches QQ wide, all silk and every wanted 2)X!0 shade, including white, cream, light blue, flesh, pink, nile, mals, tan, hello, taupe, egg plant, brown, copen, French blue, navy and black, this sale, $1.98. $3.00 Georgette Crepe, 40 inches (J- QQ wide, double thread, all silk and tD-L0 every shade in stock including white, cream, flesh, pink, light blue, mals, nile, tan, bisque helio, taupe, eggplant, brown, copen, navy and black; this sa'.e, $1.S8.
$1.50 Silk Poplins, yard wide, not all colors, but all the staple
colors, including black. Silk Tricolette. black only, all- tfQ QQ silk; sold earlier in the season DO0 at $8.00 a yard. August Sale price, $3.98. $1.9S Silk Faile, exceptionally JTQ heavy cloth and a very brilliant 5J07 finish; all colors to select from. $3.50 Taffeta Silk, yard . wide, (Jrt OA all-silk, chiffon finish and the kind that wears, all colors, Including the wanted navy blue. There Is no better than this at $2.29. $5.00 Meteor Crepe, 44 Inches (JQ QQ wide, all silk, very heavy weight I)0c0 for dresses, this quality has sold fnr $6.00 a yard until this sale. However. r price was always $5.00; now on sale at $3.98. $3.00 Silk Shirting, all silk J- QQ broadcloth shirting for men's tDJL70 shirts and ladies' shirtwaists, beautiful patterns in shirting stripes, sale price, $1.98. Flesh Silk JerseV. all silk, 36 (T- QQ Inches wide, washable. The early Dx70 season price of this cloth was $4.00 a yard. August Sale price, $1.98. $3.50 Satin Messaline, yard (T- QQ wide, all silk, extra heavy for DJLc0 dresses and skirts, a cloth certainly impossible to buy today at our sale price, $1.98.
School Hose For Boys
65c quality, all sizes 6'2 to
ll1. 4, good and heavy, second
quality of one of the famous brands that sells at 65c pair.
39c
School Dress Ginghams 55c Ginghams, extra fine quality QQ Dress Ginghams for school wear. OiC Beautiful new fall style in all colors, 39c. 75c French Ginghams, fine thread rQ Gingham that you have seen for OtC more than this price; wonderful color combinations, in plaids and checks. 59c. 85c Paris Plaid 'Ginghams, exclusive fQ designs for handsome fall and win- OiC ter dresses of the better" kind; guaranteed values, 69c. $1.25 French Tissue Ginghams, Qfr double width and the best quality ODC made; price up until now $1.25; our sale price, 85c.
At Half Price Silk Dresses Serge Dresses Fall Coats Separate Skirts Broken Lines Almost Given Away
$35.00 Dresses.. 817.50 $25.00 Dresses.. 12. 50 $19.75 Dresses.. 9.95 $15.00 Dresses.. 7.50 $12.95 Dresses.. 6.50
$35.00 $25.00 $19.75 $17.95 $15.00
Coats. Coats. Coats. Coats. Coats.
S17.50 812.50 S 9.95 S 8.95 8 7.50
Dress Skirts Just About Nothing An absolute house-cleaning: of all odd skirts. This includes white wash skirts, silk skirts and wool skirts.
Hosiery Bargains 65c Ladies' Silk Boot Hose, size 9 only and black the only color, sale price I9 9Sc Silk Boot Hose, black only, but all sizes, at 59 $1.25 Ladies, Silk Hose, black and all colors except brown OSc4 $2.50 Ladles4 Silk Hose, full fashioned, all colors 81.98 59c Boys' Heavy Ribbed Hose for school wear; all sizes up to 11; sale price ?9 75c Fine Ribbed Hose, full mercerized, for girls and misses 50
Dress Aprons, $1.59 for a real $2.00 Dress Apron. All sizes and three very attractive styles In light or dark colors. Aug. Sale price, $1.59
Curtain Goods
Ecru Curtain
self color border, yard
wide, regular 40c quality; August Sale price, 29c.
Goods, OD
Cream or White Cur- nfi tain Goods, yard wide, &uC special for this sale, a regular 40c quality, 29c.
White Outing Flannel 29c The kind you have to pay 40c for, some places 45c is the price. An early purchase, long before the advances, enables us to make this low price.
Domestics Hope Bleached Muslin 32c Full pieces, no remnants, and genuine Hope. Every piece properly branded, a yard, 32c. Outing Flannel, Extra Heavy 29c Another case just arrived for this sale of that heavy white outing. 4 Light Colored Percales 29c. Best quality, but in light colors only. Navy blue Percales, 39c; China blue Percales, 39c; grey Percales, 39c. If we had to buy these today the prices would have to be 50c a yard.
i
i i iivio i ini i
SEED
We have bought a carload of Pine Tree brand Timothy Seed, guaranteed 99 1 -2 pure seed with a germination test of 95 This seed will arrive in Richmond, on or about August the 28th. The price off of car will be $5.5 1 per bushel, sacks extra. Leave your order at one of our elevators Boston, Witts, Kitchel or Fountain City, or call 2549 Richmond and give your order. Do not wait, car is going like hot cakes. Take advantage of our low price by our buying in large quantities.
Farmer's National Grain Ass'n, Inc.
J
