Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 75, 29 March 1922 — Page 4

"PAGE FOUR -

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., WEDNESDAY, MAR. 29, 1922.

NEWS

fir

; Mrs. John M. Lontz, ot Westcott j Place, will be hostess for 'one ot the, !most notable springtime functions J when: she entertains- a large party of guests at a luncheon-bridge at the Country club Thursday in honor of Miss Mary Woods, of New York City, who is her guest. Miss Woods was formerly a resident of this city. Mr. and .Mrs." H. F. fritchard announce the engagement of their daughter, Lillian Belle., to-George Zahn, of Dayton, Ohio. The wedding will take place next month." , Harry Ray post of the American legion will be host for one of the large dances of the week when it entertains Thursday evening at 8:30 o'clock in

the I. O. OF. hall. The Melody Entertainers will V play the : order v of

dances. . The committee is composed of N. A. Powell, Horace Parker, B. A.

Ball, Frank McCoy and Clarence

EngleberL ; ,,

Mrs. . Ben C. Bartel. of South Eighteenth street, la , spending a few days In Martinsville, the guest of her

mother.

Mls3 Grace Balzer, ot Chicago, who has been visiting her parents, Mr. and

Mrs. William Balzer, of South Ninth

street, has left on an extended trip

to California.

Mrs.E.; A. Campbell, of West Main street. lias returned from Indianapolis

where she visited friends and attend

ed the National Flower show

The U. B. Hustlers were entertained

informally by Mrs. Watson Faucett and Mrs. Roy Roberts at the home of .the former, 301 North v Nineteenth

iatreet, Tuesday afternoon. The time

was spent In sewing after which the hostess served an Easter luncheon.

Mrs. HIggins was made a member of

jthe club. The guests were: Mrs. Ern

est Hoos, and her niece, Miss Elolse Hutchins, Mrs. Frederick Strong and daughter, Mrs. Mllroy Baird, Mrs. 01lie Harter and daughter, Mrs. Stanley Appleton and daughter, Mrs. Paul Cook, and daughter, Mrs. Charles Gaed and children, Mrs. Tom Phelps, Mrs. Russell Bailey and children, Mrs. Warren Weaver and children, Mrs. Higgin3,' Mrs. 'Harry Woodruff and daughter, Mrs. Claude Yoke, Mrs. Paul Christopher,-Mrs. ; John Richardson and daughter, Mrs. Fred Stevenson, Mrs. Roy Roberta and Mrs. Watson Faucett. Mrs. Stanley Appleton will entertain the club in two weeks at her home, 300 South Fifteenth street. Mrs. Charles Gaede will be the assist

ing hostess.. - . One hundred persons attended the card party and dance given Monday evening at the Ben Hur hall by Faith Star lodge, auxiliary of the B. R. C. of A. Euchre was played at eight tables, the favors going to Mrs. Scully, Mrs. Frank Roberts, Grover Bickel and Tom Dale. Music for the dancing was furnished by the Melody Entertainers. Fifteen Current Events club members attended the informal musicale held Tuesday afternoon at the home

fean

"YOU MAY GET WET, BUT NOT BURNED"

tained Friday evening by Mrs .Loim

Wlesehan, at her . home, 308 South Twelfth street

The Parent-Teachers' association cf

Sevastapol school will meet in the

kindergarten room Thursday afternoon

at 2:30 o'clock. " Miss Florence Williams will talk on the picture contest. Business of importance will be taken

up. All parents are requested to attend.

Mrs. A. J. SchinI will be hostess to ;

the N. O.' B. club Friday afternoon, at

her home, 735 South Seventh street.

The Woman's Missionary society of

Trinity Lutheran church will meet at

2:30 o'clock Friday auernoon in uie basement of the church. All members are urged to come. The Daffodil club will be entertained Thursday afternoon by Mrs. John

Schattell at her home on Nortn Twelfth street.

Mrs. E. H. Harris will be hostess to the Collegiate club Thursday afternoon at her home on South Sixteenth street. Miss Gertrude Bartel will have a paper on "Our Debt to France."

TV.e N. N. C. club will be enter

tained by Miss Freda Lohman Thurs day evening.

' Miss Eva Clevenger will be hostess to the Queen Esther society of Grace

church Wednesday 'evening at. her

home, 24 Randolph street. All members are invited. A special program will be given. Mrs. Frank Davenport will eatertain" the" Neighborly club Thursday afternoon at her home on the National Road east. Mrs. Carl Sperling will be hostess

to the Idle-Whyle club Thursday afternoon at her home on South Thirteenth street. . The Sigma Kappa club will meet with Mrs. Wilson Taggart at her home on South Seventh street Wednesday evening. The Trifollum society will. meet Wednesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Ulrich. Reservations must be made Thursday for the dinner-bridge which is beJng given Friday evening at the Country club for all club members by the March social committee. Euchre and sheephead will be played at the card party which the Red Men are giving in their hall Wednes

day evenin gat 8 oclock. The public 13 invited to attend.

The Tourist club meeting which was

The Line o Type column of the Chicago Tribune today contained a reference to one of Richmond's hotels. It's reproduction follows the original as nearly as possible.: EITHER HERE OR HEREAFTER Dear R. H. L.: At the Arlington hotel in Richmond, Ind., this sign Is on all the stationery and in every room:

INDIANAPOLIS SPEAKER URGES CLUB MEMBERS TO "KNOW NEIGHBORS"

THIS HOTEL IS FULLY EQUIPPED WITH AUTOMATIC SPRINKLERS. STATISTICS SHOW THAT L.OS5S OP LIFE HAS NEVER OCCURRED IN A SPRINKLERKD BUILDING. IN CASE OF FIRE TOU MAY GET WET BUT NOT BURNED.

To me that's- a wonderfully consoling thought. Before I go to sleep I always recite this little prayer inspired by the sign: Now I lay me dimn to sleep. Statistic unnrd my ulnrabrr deep I If I should die I'm not concerned, I may get wet bat I won't set burned. Gadding Gua.

postponed one week and will be held a week later on Friday evening, April 7, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Everett

Lemon on the National Road east. The Athenaea society will be entertained Friday afternoon by Mrs. Herschel Riggin and Mrs. Dempsey Dennis at the home of Mrs. Riggin, 48 South Sixteenth street. "King Cot-

of Mrs. Carrie Hoiaday on rean ... . -

treet. A sketch of the ,Ufc of Carr e, hae d-

that day, each of the three was re

quired to 6crap 40 per cent of its

existing strength. But France was made an exception. Favor was shown to France, and she was not called

upon to scrap anything.

France on November 12 had about 164,000 tons of capital ships. If Ehe had been treated on the same basis

as the other three nations and if she

nad been required to scrap 40 per

cent of her existing strength, she

would have been reduced to about

102,000 tons. In fact she was given

about 17o,000 tons. increased French Navy.

In this respect thfe treatment of France , was unique. France was the only nation permitted to have more ships in the future than she actually had the day the conference opened. What France wants to do now is not to take her standing of Nov. 12 as the basis, but go back to a time when

she had a larger navy relative to the 1 others, or to look forward to a time when she may be able to build a larger navy. . This sort of hypothetical situation and all this sort of . argument about special needs is exactly the kind of thing that was excluded from consideration in the Washington conference. It was realized that if the Washington conference should engage in a debate about hypothetical navies or theoretically adequate navies or special needs it would get nowhere. It wa3 a plain question of stopping competition or of not stopping competition. If it had been decided not to stoD competition, the United States,

to have been held this week with Mr. Great Britain and Japan had and have

and Mrs. E. P. Trueblood has been the resources to build navies many

Circuit Court

Jacobs-Bond was given by Mrs. Louise Voss and a number of her composi

tions were played. Mrs. Pearl Bills 5 gave a biography of John McCormack.

ana sumo oi ms icvuiua v. I on the phonograph. Later old-time selections were sung by the guests, J after which refreshments were eerved. -J Mrs. William Kelton and Mrs. Frank Ayres were club guests. ..Mrs. Walter Bass .was made, president of the Finley Parent-Teachers' association Tuesday afternoon at the annual election of officers. Others : elected were: Mrs. J. G. Dill, vice-i-president; Mrs. Charles Setters, treasurer; Miss Alice Zollman, secretary. TJSxecutive committee members are Mrr Tschaen. principal of the school;

Mrs. Clayton Harris and Mrs. Walter riiass; -; The next meeting of the asso

ciation will be held April 13

Mrs. E. It. Thompson entertained in"formally for members of the Criterion pelub at her home on North Sixth street fTuesday afternoon. Anecdotes on '"Habits of Birds" were given in response to roll call. Mrs. E. O. Ewan j-lmd a paper on the life of John BurToughs, and short stories from Burroughs were told by Mrs. Charles tVortb, Mrs. D. C. Stott, Mrs. Julian Tsmlth and Mrs. R. L. Donaker. Later "refreshments were served by the hostess. Twelve persons were present. The next meeting of the club will be held April 11, at which time Mrs. R. L. Donaker will be the hostess. The Helping Hand society of the Spiritualist Church of Truth will meet Thursday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock in their hall, 15' South Seventh street. Everyone is welcome. ' i The Carnation club will be enter-

Atwood Jenkins on "In Factory." Stereopticons of the pictures of the famous picture contest will be shown at 7:30 o'clock Wednesday evening in the Public Art gallery, supplemented

by a talk by Mrs. iM. F. Johnston. Everyone is invited. The gallery will be

open from 7 until 9 o'clock.

that

FRANCE WILL

(Continued from Page One.)

If France should attempt to raise her quota to 2.50, and if Italy should at

tempt to do the same. Great Britain

undoubtedly would take notice.

The position of Great Britain at the

Washington conference was that she

must nave at least as large a navy as the combined navies of any two

t,uroprqn powers. Cannot Make Case

If France should insist on 2.50 and

Italy should do the same, that would give these two nations combined the

same number of ship3 as Great Britain. Great Britain might concelvabl-j stand for this change, but she certainly would not stand for any more. France cannot make a good case for

.a larger ratio than the Washington

comerence gave ner. The Washington conference treated Franco handsomely. The theory of the Washington conference, and the only possible theory upon which any naval limitation could be arrived at, was to take the actual navies of the world as they existed on Nov. 12, the opening day of the conference. Taking the navies of Great Britain, America and Japan as they stood on

times the size of any navy France could hope to build.

If France had been successful at the

Washington conference in defeating the Hughes plan, or if she should now

destroy the results of the conference

by reservations to the treaties, she

would be hopelessly out distance in

the competitive naval building that

would result.

France, of course, has abundant reason for unpleasant emotions about the

American senate. Many of her pres

ent troubles were caused by the fail

ure of our senate to ratify the league of nations and the treaty of guarantee

which Wilson promised France. Whether the senate was to blame for failing to ratify or whether Wilson was to blame for promising too much has been the subject of endless debate, but whatever the answer, it 13 the same to France. France did not know about the constitutional place of the senate in our treaty making. Now that she has learned it to her pain, she shows some disposition to imitate it. (Copyright, 1922, by the New York Evening Post). a

Knowing one's neighbor, a principle

followed by both the Rotary and Kiwanis clubs, is what leads men toward better things, and is instrumental in

helping persons achieve results, according to Charles M. Neizer of Fort

Wayne, who addressed the Rotary-Ki-wanla Joint session and entertainment

in the K. of P. temple, Tuesday night.

Failure in not knowing your neigh

bor has caused a great amount of trouble and misunderstanding, not only

In your city or any other individual

city, but throughout the world.

In many cities where there are both

Klwanig and Rotary clubs, they do not

work side by side for success. In other

words, they do not know their neigh

bor and are not working hand in hand

as are the two clubs in Richmond.

Prospects are that they will continue

to work together in the future. Chief Entertainer Sid Jerome of Indianapolis was in

troduced to the meeting as a fellow

Rotarlan and proved to be the chief funmaker of the evening. He entertained the men with several parodies

of popular songs and connected sev

eral jokes on to the members of the two clubs. He finished his entertainment with sleight of hand tricks performed with a deck of cards. Attendance prizes were awarded to Kiwanian Frank Strayer and Rotarlan C. B. Beck by Elmer Eggemeyer, who presented them in a very diplomatic manner. Mr. Strayer received a silver pencil and Mr. Beck a bill to pay for the pencil. A parody was eung by Frank Holland concerning the Rotary guests.

It wa3 followed by a duet by Frank Holland and Robert Heun. Attendance Prizes More attendance prizes were presented when Walker Land presented Rotarian Will Reller with a pair of silk hose and Kiwanian Denver Harlan with the bill for them.

Harry Doan presented Will Rendt

with a pure marble hand carved me

morial for his club services. The memo t was donated by Perry Williams. Kiwanian Dr. George B. Hunt

was presented with a bill for the

memorial.

One of the feature stunts of the evening was the balloon bursting contest. Envelopes wijth balloons in them were passed among the men and their names written upon them. They were exchanged among members. The men were told to blow them until they burst. The last one to burst was held by Frank Tilson, and the balloon envelope contained the name of Everard Knollenberg, who was awarded the prize. Outlines Club History The meeting was then turned over to the Kiwanis club and President Ray Mowe gave a brief outline of the principles of the club and its pur

poses. Musical numbers were pre

sented by George Hodge and Frank Funk of the Kiwanis club. The program for the evening was in charge of W. D. Scoble and Will Rendt. Music during the banquet was furnished by Mrs. Morrey's orchestra.

The entertainment was closed with the singing of the parting song, to the

tune of "The End of a Perfect Day

ASKS DIVORCE Opal Ebling asks divorce from Lloyd

Ebling and custody of their three chil

dren in a suit filed Wednesday in circuit court. She alleges cruel and inhuman treatment.

dren have been held at the Home for the Friendless, and a third has been adopted. . Decker, who was out of work when arrested, got a Job before he left the court room. He was employed by an attorney present at the trial.

CHARGES INFIDELITY Infidelity Is charged by Perry Toney

in his suit for divorce from Bertha. Toney. The suit was filed Wednesday.

VtADMAN SEEKS MAN Sheriff Wadman leaves Thursday

for Buffalo, Wyo., where he will take over Clarence Coddington, wanted here for wife and child desertion.

- TRIAL DATE IS SET The suit of Effie Joyner against Hilary Joyner, for divorce, will be tried

April 8.

60 BACK TO SCHOOL, STUDY, WARNS COURT

William Brady, 16 years old, prom

ised to go back to high school and "work hard" after a lecture by Judge Bond in Juvenile court Tuesday.

"Buckle on the harness and try it

again," he was told. "Come to see me in two weeks." You have eight weeks of school yet in which to make good." Incidentally the Judge told William

that the best lesson he ever got In hi3 life was that received when he carried home a tale of being punished in school. "My parents punished me Just four times as hard," said the Judge.

SETS NEW BUTTER RECORD BROOCKVILLE, Ontario, March 29. The Canadian championship for butter in a seven-day test was captured by Echo Sylvia Laura Seniro. 2-year-old Holstein heifer, owned by Wallace D. Wright. She produced 34.26 pounds of butter in seven days, '

E. P. WEIST, M. D. Electrio Light Baths for Rheumatism and Neuritis. Special attention given to treatment of the stomach. Phone 1723.

204 K. of P. Bldg.

wlintmaiita

CARE FOR CHILDREN

MAN ,WIFE TOLD IN DISMISSAL OF SUIT

Laura and John Decker, meeting in

circuit court Wednesday morning for trial of a suit for divorce brought by the wife, changed their minds and asked that they be allowed to dismiss the suit. They plan to return to housekeeping.

Decker had been arrested on a

charge of child desertion and had been in jail. He comes from Milton. Decker was given a strong lecture by Judge Bond before he was allowed to go. "You cannot escape sour liability for the support of these children," he was told. "This case will remain pending against you."

The court admonished the two to

keep their children at home, send them to Sunday school, and to attend

church themselves. Two of the chil-

Unele Ben Says: "I went to a swap social the other night. Everybody was supposed to bring something they didn't need. Most of the women brought their husbands." G. C. Wilcoxen, D. C CHIROPRACTOR Phone 1603 1220 Main St.

H. C. HASEMEIER CO.

Easter Greeting Cards and Folders NOVELTIES for the children; Nut Cups, Favors everything

appropriate, 5c up. Richmond Art Store 829 Main St. Richmond's Art and Gift Shop

SPECIAL

Silk Stripe Shirtin

The value is unequalled at this price ; 32-inch, assorted stripes; a 75c grade, to sell very special .at 50c a yard. Just the thing for men's Shirts and ladies' Blouses.

3 ) yd

THE STORE WITH ONLY ONE PRICE

COMING SUNDAY TO THE RICHMOND Rudolph Valentino

s i I May We Suggest f I BUTTERNUT WAFERS I i I Richmond Baking Co. - 5

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miv IT AT S

EASTER CANDIES and Novelties THE KANDY SHOP 919 Main St

Jfijji"" Phone 2807

EMBLEM RINGS Kiwanis Style Show April 6th and 7th

IVORY SOAP You Know Means Safety as Well as Delightful Cleanliness . Watch Ad Monday, April 3

I 17 5. 7th St. utuHimiiinitiitmHiiintiHiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiHHiiutniiiiiiiiiniiiniiitiniiiiiiiiin

$1

Ladies' or Gents' Suits

For a Good Dry Cleaner Phone 1072 GRAHAM, 532 Main

WE DELIVER

HOME DRESSED MEATS We Deliver Nungesser Bleat Market 337 South 12th Phone 2350

iimni

es

Blackheci

oils

V

IT is well known that pimples and blackheads (acne) and boils are often caused by errors of diet.

Fleischmarm's Yeast is now being recommended for these embarrassing and painful skin troubles because fresh yeast corrects the errors of diet which cause them. The surgeon of one important New York hospital states: "I have used yeast extensively and found it invaluable in curing boils." When 17 cases of pimples (acne) were treated with Fleischmann's Yeast at hospitals in New York and Philadelphia the results were remarkable. Typical of these was the case of a young man who had suffered with pimples for three years. He ate three cakes of Fleischmann's fresh yeast daily before meals. In five weeks the eruption had cleared completely. Today physicians and hospitals are using Fleischmann's fresh yeast as the most efficacious remedy for . pimples and boils.

Fleischmann's

fresh yeast rids you

cm mem

If yon are ever trembled with pimples or boils, begin at once to correct them by eating 2 to 3 cakes of Fleischmann's fresh yeast every day before or between meals.

lc Front Laced

WHAT is more lovely than a youthful figure and more satisfactory than its possession?

That you may have and hold the youthful lines of your figure, your Corset the very foundation of style itself should be chosen with care and skilfully fitted. You should see bur spring selection at

350

If you have never worn a front-laced Corset, may we suggest a trial fitting of the Modart?

RICHMOND'S DAYLIGHT STORE

V

A n n o u n c in g

The Kiwanis

STYLE SHOW Coliseum April 6-7

All that is newest in dress for Spring will be displayed on live models PARK DANCING after the show Show staged under personal direction of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kolp. Benefit of the Boys' Summer Camp.