Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 87, 12 April 1922 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, 1ND., WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1922

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" The Masonic club will entertain all 1 Master Masons at a dance Thursday evening at the Masonic temple. Kolp's 'orchestra will play the order of dances. The party will commence at 8:30 o'clock. Next week's Easter festivities will Include the annual springtime ball of the Omicron Pi Sigma fraternity, which will be given Wednesday evening, April 19, in the ballroom of the Eagles" club. The Syncopating Five, of St. Petersburg, Fla., will make its first appearance of this season here playing for the dance. Invitations have been Issued for the affair. The springtime dance carnival given recently by pupils of Miss Elizabeth

Kolp will be repeated next week at an evening performance at the Eagles club Friday, April 21. The public is invited to attend. A small admission fee will be asked. v

! day evening at 8 o'clock. A class of

candidates will be taken In, after which lunch will be served. The Woman's Home and Foreign Missionary society of the First English Lutheran church will meet Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock with Mrs. Walter Eggemeyer at her home, 132 South Fourteenth street. An Easter market will be held by the Finley Parent-Teacher association

at the A. M. Weiss furniture store

Saturday, April 15, commencing at 10

Hustlers at an informal thimble party ociock m ine morning. pa, Tuesday afternoon at the home of the!bread' lla', co1?4 salads, baked

M. P-ice, of West

and Mrs. Frank Main street.

Mrs. Stanley Appleton and Mrs.

Charles Gaede entertained the U. B

former on South Fifteenth street. The afternoon was spent informally and later refreshments served by the hostess. Mrs. Thomas Davis was made a member of the club. Among those present were: Mrs. Milroy Balrd, Mrs. S. W. Brlcker, Mrs. Paul Christopher and daughter, Helen, Mrs. Watson Faucett, Mrs. Stanley Appleton and daughter, Jean, Mrs. Charles Gaede and children, Helen and Char

les," Jr., Mrs. Wesley Lasher and son,

Charles, Mrs. H. S. James, Mrs. Boy

Roberts, Mrs. Warren Weaver and

beans and colored Easter eggs will be

on sale.

The Haphazard club will hold an allday meeting Thursday at the home of Mrs. Joseph Dixon on the Abington

road. A good attendance is desired,

The Criterion club will meet Thurs

day all day at the home of Mrs. Ern

est C. Pegg on the Abington roaa.

Two programs will be given. The one for this week will be given in the morning and for the afternoon the

program arranged for the meeting to

A . lecture-recital by Mrs. Edward MacDowell. wife of the late Edward MacDowell, peer of American composers, "will be given under the auspices of the Music department of the Woman's club Thursday afternoon at 2 : SO o'clock in the lecture room of the First English Lutheran church. The meeting will be an open one. The first performance of the Philathean Minstrels given annually by the

Philathea class of the Second Pres

byterian church will be presented

Wednesday evening at 7:30 o'clock

at' the church. The public Is invited

to attend. Another performance will

be given Thursday ' evening. Thirty

gins wm participate. .

Numbered among the loveliest Easter parties given this month was the

Guest night party which Mrs. Ray

mond Smith and Mrs. Frank Hale gave ! at the home of the former, Tuesday evening for the Amistead club. Sweet peas, hyacinths. Jonquils and other spring flowers were combined in the decorations through the rooms. Five hundred and touring were played during the evenine. Favors in five hurdred went to Miss Edna Cooper and Mrs. Robert Ashby and in touring to Mrs. Ralph Kittle and Mrs. Frank Eaton. Later refreshments were served at small tables which were adorned with spring flowers an dappointed in Easter shades of yellow and white. The guests.were: Mrs. Harry McMinn, Miss Marguerite Kesslef, Mrs. Russell McClellan. Mrs. Walter Miller. Miss Dorothy Henning, Mrs. Ralph Kittle, Mrs. Albert Kittle, Mrs. Rex R. Buckley. Mrs. Robert Ashby, Mrs. Ray Kinder, Miss Barbara Brown, Mrs. Oliver Overman, Miss Louise Haner, Mrs. Earl Allen, Miss Edna Cooper, Mrs. Parry Moore, Mrs. Wiggins, Miss Marjorie Pickett, Miss Blanche Carman, Miss Mary Thomas, Miss Helen Ball. Mrs. Roy Plummer, of Columbus, Ohio, Mrs. Frank Eaton, Mrs. Roy Bullerdick Mrs. Hary Baumgartner, Mrs. W. C. Roop, Mrs. Frank Hale and Mrs. Raymond Smith. The Ornis Melas was informally en tertained Tuesday evening by Miss Virginia Livingstone at her home on vnrth rcievpnth street. Cards ami

dancing were enjoyed during the evening, after which a luncheon was served to the guests. Those present were: Miss Helen Haseltine, Miss Gertrude E?r?leston Miss Doris Puckeit, Alis Mildred Whiteley, Miss Birdice ..Norris. Miss Esther Reid, Miss Katherine Binkley, Miss Mary Reinhard, Miss Miriam Jordan .Miss Josephine Hiatt. Miss Helen Bentlage, Miss Wilma Surhoff and Miss Virginia Livingstone. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Williams and daughter and sister of Dayton, Ohio, were in the-city Sunday the guests of Mrs. George Renk, of South Eleventh street. . , . .

Miss Alice Gennett will come Wed-

Tipsdav. evening from Bloommgton,

whpre she is attending Indiana uni

versity to spend the Easter vacation with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gennett, of South Twenty-first street. Among those arriving home this week for the Easter vacation from Indiana' university are: Miss Jane Carpenter to spend the vacation with' her mother, Mrs. Ida Carpenter, of South Sixteenth street; Miss Bonita Monarch daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Monarch, of Glen View; Miss Irene Price, daughtpr of. Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Price, of West Main street: Earl Keisker, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Keisker. of South Sixteenth street; Miss

Elizabeth Tarkelson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Tarkelson, of South Fourteenth street: Miss Elsie Hampton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hampton and Miss Esther Fouts, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. J. M. Fouts. -Roland Cutter is here from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, to spend the Easter vacation., .William Kirkpatrlck, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Kirkpatrick, of North Fourteenth street, and Robert Watt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank N. Watt, of South Fifteenth street, who are students at the Carnegie Institute" of Technology in Pittsburgh, Pa., are here to spend the spring vacation. Robert and John Evans will arrive Wednesday evening from Oxford, O., where they are attending Miami unl- : versity to spend Easter with their par- ' ents, Mr. and Mrs. John Evans, of East ; Main street. Wynne Evans will make a tour with the Miami university Glee club during ; the spring vacation.

; Clem and Ralph Price are home from

; the University of Illinois to spend their spring vacation with their parents, Mr. r 1 1 1

children, Bobby and Juanita, Mrs. J have been held in two weeks will be

presented. No meetings of tne ciud

will be held during the Sunday cam

paign.

A cafeteria Bupper will be served

from 5:30 to 7 o'clock Thursday evening at the Reid Memorial church by

the Ladies Aid society.

Mrs. R. L. Donaer, of 1414 South D street, will be hostess to the Good Cheet class of the M. E. church Thursday afternoon.

Claude Yoke and daughter. Pauline,

Mrs. John Ruhl and daughter, Betty and Mrs. Thomas Davis. The next meeting for the class will be held in

two weeks at the church. It will be on Monday and is to be an all-day sewing meeting. The D. L. K. met nt the home of Miss Juanita Detmer Monday evening. The time was , spent informally after which refreshments were served. Those present . were: Miss Madge Whitesell. Miss Helen Pottenger, Miss Emma Horr, Miss Lydia Haseltine, Miss Merle Thistlethwaite, Miss Ruby Elliott, Miss Eula Krouse, Miss Laura May Burns and Miss Juanita Detmer. The club will be entertained in two

weeks at the home of Miss Laura May Burns in Spring Grove. A class social was held at the home of Mrs. Perry Wilson Monday evening for members of the Esperanza Sunday school class of the West Richmond Friends' church. Twenty-eight

guests attended. Games were played during the evening and a short business meeting held. Later refresh

ments were served by the hostess. The Finley school Parent-Teachers' association will meet Thursday after-

Presentation of the painting by Miss are urged to be Resent

" v ... , l V o 'YS'-iteft ' -

his court had their hair cut off by-thi3

tealous old bishop himself.

History Is full of such amusing

stories of curled hair. The Greeks

shaved their hair and left their mourn

ing locks upon the grave of their be

loved. Curled hair has always been considered beautiful, and only when

carried to extremes has it been

thought a usesless vanity. It 13 curious to notice that in history it . has

been the men and not the women who

have set the fashion for curled hair.

"The Sewing Circle Meets at Mrs. Martin's" will be presented at Reid Memorial church Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock by the Earlham Heights , Dorcas society. A three-act play, "A Girl's Secret," will be presented by Junior Loyal Daughters of the First Christian church Wednesday and Friday evenings of this week at 8:15 o'clock at the church. The Starr Parent-Teachers' association will meet Thursday afternoon at the school, at 3:30 o'cloc. The Hiawatha Social and Literary club will meet at the home of Mrs. Foster Stansbury, 213 North Sixth

street, Friday afternoon. All members

Elmira Kempton which the school won

in the famous pictures contest will be the chief feature of the afternoon. A special program has been arranged for the occasion and all mothers of

the community are urged to be present. Mrs. F. W. Krueger, Mrs. Lang and Mrs. Knollenberg constitute the committee in charge. Following is the musical program which will be given: "Alice Blue Gown,' Jane Knollenberg; "Spring Song" (Hawley), "Lullaby" (Gabriel), Mrs. Krueger, Mrs. Haisley, Mrs. Rae, Mr3. Longnecker; Mildred Nusbaum, accompanist; "There, Little Girl, Don't Cry", (Ward-Stephens), Mrs. Haisley; violin, "Souvenir in D" (Drdla), "To a Wild Rose" (MacDowell) Lloyd Outland; solo, selected, Rhea Crandall; "Swanee River," Foster "The Butterfly," Crosby quartette. The Four Mile Aid society of Kitchell, will hold a bazaar and market Saturday at the American Trust and Savings bank, April, 15, at 9 ociock. The Ladies of the Third M. E. church will hold on Easter Bazaar and

market all-day Saturday, April 15, com

mencing at 10 o'clock in the morning, at Weiss'3 Furniture store. A euchre and sheepshead party will be given at'-the Moose home, Friday evening, April 14, by the men's drill team. The public is invited. A market will be held by the ladles of the Webster M. E. Aid society at the First National bank. Saturday from 9 until 3 o'clock. Home-made bread, cakes, pies, will be on sale as well as dressed chickens and fresh eggs. An illustrated lecture on garden and flowers will be given by E. G. Hill, Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock, at the

New Westville church. The public

is invited. The lecture is given un der the auspices of the W. W. class.

A card party will be given next Mon

day. evening at the Red Men's hall by the Degree of Honor. Sheepshead and

euchre will be played. The public is

invited

The Ladies' Aid of the East Main Street Friends meeting will toet, Thursday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock at

the church.

All members of Moos'eheart legion No. 534 are urged to be present Thurs-

The Helping Hand society of the

Spiritualist Church of Truth will meet

in their hall, 15 South Seventh

street, Thursday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Everyone is welcome.

Curled hair is historically popular.

a covering to protect the scalp from

the weather.

It was a disgrace to be bald in Biblt cal times. The ancients of the East

ern nations wore their hair long, both the men and the women, and had most extravagant fashions in ; curling and

dressing it, and in using sweet smel-i ling pomades. When Caesar entered' Gaul he found both sexes wearing long hair, and when he conquered them he compelled them to shear their locks in token of submission. Being bald himself he probably appreciated the punishment! The ancient Britons were proud of their long, blonde hair. To maket it brighter they used a mixture of lime, tallow and vegetable ash! The greatest disgrace for a woman was to have her hair cut off, the penalty of an unfaithful wife. But long curled hair carried to an extreme seems to mark a period of decadence. There Is a story of a Norman bishop who, in 1104, preached at the Court of Henry I, against the folly and vanity of long curled perfumed locks. He was so eloquent that the king and

M. H.: A girl of 18 years usually

has another five years in which to attain her full development.

F. L. S.: If the hair becomes too

oily before it is time for the regular

shampoo, dust some powdered orris root through the hair and let it remain

for five minutes to absorb ome of the . surplus oil. Remove by shaking the hair out in the wind or fan it out after ; removing the most of it through shak-; tag. j Reader: If your nail3 are too thinyou are in need of a tonic. Have your doctor prescribe for you as your sys-f

be supplied through this tonic. All Inquiries addressed to Mr. Forbes In care of th "Beauty Oiit" department will be answered In the columns in their turn. This requires considerable time, however, oaring t the great number received. So, if a personal or quicker reply is dejired, stamped and self-addressed envelope must re enclosed with the Question. The Editor.

Easter Styles Display Smart New Effects . Our spring Footwear displays are complete, presenting the season' most attractive designs in a variety of distinctive styles.

Beauty Chats By Edna Kent Forbes

A WOMAN'S VANITY As the human race emerged from savagery and became more sensitive

to things that were beautiful the hair! was regarded as something more than i

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

Select Your Easter Hat Now at ; NOLDER'S 39 North Eighth Street

Plate Lunch Served Every Noon for Only 35c THE KANDY SHOP 919 Main St

GIFTS THAT LAST

Sheffield Silver

: CHIROPRACTORS f j ICC. WILCOX EN, D. C. 1 C. H. GROCE, D. C. Sh 1 1220 Main St. Phone 1603 Syf .tfWjiPhone 2S07 . 1 i

She could eat anything without indigestion or sleeplessness For a time she had been troubled with gas after her evening meaLThe distress was most painful after eating potatoes or other starchy foods, of which she was very fond. Then she started taking two cakes of Fleischmacn's Yeast every night between her evening meal and bedtime. She poured about a half cup of boiling hot water over the yeast cakes, stirred them thoroughly, " added a little cold water and drank. She found she could eat anything and sleep splendidly afterward. Thousands of men and women are finding that Fletschmann's Yeast corrects stomach and intestinal troubles. It promotes the flow of bile and pancreatic juice. Appetite is always kept normal and you are protected against indigestion. Add 2 to 3 cakes of Fleischmann's Yeast to your daily diet. You will find that your whole digestive system is greatly benefited. Be sure it's Fleischmann's Yeast the familiar tin -foil package with the yellow label. Place a standing order with your grocer for Fleischmann's Yeast.

Sherwin-Williams FLAT-TONE "The Modern Wall Finish" Flat-Tone is the last word in interior finishing and decorating. It is durable, sanitary, artistic, lending itself readily to the most pleasing combinations, and is truly economical, because the original beauty of the newly decorated wall can be kept ever fresh and attractive, as Flat-Tone can be washed with soap and water. For this reason Flat-Tone costs no more in the long run than an ordinary calcimine or tint, because it will easily outwear several such coats. Flat-Tone can be applied with equal effectiveness to plaster, wall board, metal, wood, brick or cement. Flat-Tone is manufactured in sixteen beautiful colors. Put up in quart, half -gallon and gallon cans. ( A. G. Luken Drug Go. 626-628 Main Street

"Richmond Daylight Store"

Silk Scarfs Charming selection of Silk Scarfs In numerous lovely color combinations with silk fringe, specially priced $2.98 to $5.00

Silk Sweaters Lovely are- the new Silk and Fiber Sweaters In Slip-over and Tuxedo models, very becoming for early spring and summer wear. Splendid! assortment of the newest shades $5.98 to $35.00

Arch Rest Oxfords in black and tan, military heels. A stylish yet comfortable Shoe for the fallen arch. A new shipment just received. Sizes'" com

plete from 3 A's up

$7.50 and ' $8.50

A

One Strap Slippers Two-tone combinations achie two-tone combinations achieve some of the smartest designs in Women's Spring Slippers. These patvamps combined with satin quarters give an effect that pleases immediately. Spanish heels.

$7.50 - and $8.50

One-Strap Buckle Slippers

These beautiful patents flat or high heels are a

popular last. They street 6lipper, yet th

that desired dressiness

$4.50

to

$7.00

- Jt: -. M AT 11 1

jOW Other Low Shoes njfcJ in black or tan at $3.50 to I

$8.50

REMEMBER THE CHILDREN

Shoes that are comfortable, sensible and stylish; priced shoes for school or dress occasions

moderately

$1.50 to $5.00

1 Beckman and Kreimeirer

708 Main St.

r

ess

CiiiimiintmuiHnilniHimiiiHiiirmtimmiHuiiiHiiiimiTniimmmHiniiiiniiiix 1 5 SHOP AT f;

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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 Shopjj(

UMBRELLA!

Rain-Shine Umbrellas Black Umbrellas Colored Umbrellas Children's Umbrellas We have the Largest and Most Complete Stock of Umbrellas in the city, and our prices are right.

ri

43 North Eighth Street

y TODAY S . Our Solicitors Started Making Their Calls to Give $1. to the Homes , .in which they call and find a fresh loaf of our Golden Cream M BREAD Tomorrow we will list those who received a dollar bill. V Order a loaf of Golden Cream Bread at Your Grocers . Tomorrow ' '

may get aSS"s,le purchase

( ( fiBo 1 jJKxfAiVl eac day so you will I , ,

Remember

Wednesday, Th

day and Fnc the days yoi Dollar for tl of a 1 2c loaf

Golden Cream Bread

ANN

The MYSTERY GIRL on Next Saturday Will Give Away

WATCH THE PAPER EACH DAY

O

h 17 South 7th St. I - mnflm'tmmmfrmm'HmmKmwmjmiMH