Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 104, 2 May 1922 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1922.
t An informal lnncehon party followed by bridge In the afternoon was given at the Country club, Tuesday for the membership. The tables were ornamented with tall French baskets of lilacs and other spring blossoms. Covers were laid for 64 guests. Among those attending were: Mrs. William 'Allen Moore, of Indianapolis, Mrs. Williams, of Cleveland, O., Miss Eleanor Seidel, Mrs. Robert E. Huen, Mrs. Juliet Shirk, Mrs. Harry Lontz. Mrs. Omer O. Murray, Mrs. Earl H. Mann, Mrs. Clarence Gennett, Mrs. Ray K. Shiveley, Mrs. Rudolph G. Leeds, Mrs. W. P. Robinson, Mrs. P. S. Twigs, Mrs. A. J. Harwood, Mrs. Walter H.
Bates, Mrs. Charles Land, Mrs. Walter
J. Engle, Mrs. Walter Timmerman, JWrs. Wilson Magaw, Mrs. Paul Miller,
Mrs. John M. Crawford. Mrs. Horatio K. Land, Mrs. Harry Bockhoff, Miss $Iaxine Murray, Miss Olive Lewis, Mrs. Phillip Robbins, Mrs. Robert ;Land. Mrs. Robert Study, Mrs. Walter t Davis, Mrs. Sarah Gilbert, Mrs. W. T. Scoble, Mrs. W. O. Crawford, Mrs. L. G. Reynolds, Mrs. Ida Carpenter, iMrs. Frank Druitt, Mrs. Joseph Conner, Mrs. Paul Comstock, Mrs. Julian ates, Mrs. Dudley N. Elmer, Mr3. Albert D. Gayle, Mrs. Yale R. ShiveJy, Mrs. Raymond B. Nicholson, Mrs. rwalter G. Butler, Mrs. Houston Marlatt, Mrs. Fred Bethard, Mrs. Walter 2VIcWhinney,-Mrs. Phillip Land, Mrs. Byram Robbins, Miss Robbins and lrs. Newell Todd. Mrs. Harry Bockhoff. of South Twenty-second street, and her daughter. Phylis, have returned from Florida., where they have been spending Ihe winter season. Mr. Bockhoff with Jiis mother will return by motor Jater. I Word has been received here of the Jnarriage of Misar Ruth Vivian Motley Jo Benjamin Tullidge Hill, of thi3 l ity, which took place1 Saturday, April 29, at Atlanta, Georgia. After a trip Jhrough the east Mr. and Mrs. Hill ."will come to Richmond for residence. $Irs. Hill formerly resided in Richmond, coming here from Newcastle where she was a graduate of the high "school and a member of the Theta lhapter of the Psi Iota Xi sorority. 43ince the outbreak of the war she Jias been engaged in Red Cross service. She was stationed at Fort Ogelihorpe and Fort McPherson, Ga., for tome time and for the past year has 2een serving as assistant director of military relief of the southern division, American Red Cross, with headquarters in Atlanta. Mr. Hill is prominent in business circles of this city. He is secretary of the F. and N. Lawn Mower company, a member of the feeebe Glove company ever since its establishment in this city, and is also actively associated with other large manufacturing concerns of the city. J Mrs. W. O. Nearon entertained informally with a shower Monday afternoon at her home, 2020 North E street, Jn honor of her daughter, Mrs. Ernest Beach, nee Treva Nearon, whose mar
riage took place Easter Sunday. ReJfreshments were served to the following guests: Mrs. C. Wellbaum, Mrs. George Harper, Mrs. W. O." Near- j on. Mrs. C. G. Beam, Mrs. Edna Cowles, Mrs. Jennie Males, Mrs. S. S. Mumbower, Mrs. Maude Parker, Mrs. Everett Ben-nett, Mrs. J. W. Morris, Mrs. F. R. Elliott, Mrs. F. F. Elliott, Mrs. Charles Lehman, Mrs. L. H. Foseenkemper. Mrs. C. P. Trusler, Mrs. Jesse E. Clark and Mrs. Wllhelmina Klingebiel. i Mrs. Edward V. Williams and two daughters, Suzanne and Patricia, who Jiave been visiting in Chicago with
Mrs. Williams's 6ister, will return home the end of the week. Miss Lillie Heckman. of Minneapolis, Minn., is the guest of friends In this city. Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Mills, of West Main street, left Tuesday to attend the "at home" celebration at Purdue university, where their son, Edward Mills, is a student. W. H. Keisker has returned from
Blnominrton. where he spent tho
week-end with his son, Earl Keisker,
who is a student at Indiana univer
McWhlnney, Harold Goodenough, John' Barnhardt, Omer Monger. Members of the Semper Phi Delaa were entertained at the home of Miss Opal Skinner on the Arba pike, north of Richmond, Monday evening. Danc
ing and refreshments featured the evening. Those present were: Mary Way, Edith Hollingsworth, Hazel Fulle, Lucile and Dorothy Shurley, Glenna Crome, Anna Bostick, Marie Schutte, Blanche Carman and Opal Skinner. Another party is planned for 7 o'clock Thursday evening, when
the club will start from the home of Miss Mary Way, 46 South Twelfth street, and go on a hike. A kid party will be held at the home of Marie
Schutte near the hospital, next Mon
day evening.
Mrs. A .W. Gregg and her daughter, Miss Hazel Gregg, were hostesses to
the Progressive Literary club Mon
day afternoon.x Eighteen members
sionary society of the First Baptist
church which was to have been held
Wednesday afternoon, has been post
poned Indefinitely.
The Ladles' Aid society of St. Paul's Lutheran church will hold its regular monthly meeting Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock in the chapel of the church. All members are urged to be present.
APPROPRIATIONS
slty. He went to attend the fathers responded to roll call with "Sugges
week entertainments given by the Pni ; tions for the Betterment of Rich-
Kappa Psi fraternity, of which his son is a member. The gala occasion of the spring season took place Monday evening when Alpha Sigma chapter of the Beta Phi
Sigma fraternity entertamea wun lis annual springtime ball at the I. O. O. F. hall. The Jordan orchestra, of Louisville, Ky., playing the order of dances, scored a success that has been unprecedented this season. Clever and difficult featB were " combined with marvelous music by the players, each being a skilled player with his Instrument. The ballroom was banked with ferns and spring blossoms and adorned with festoons and trellises of smilaa. interspersed with lilac and. dogwood blossoms. Among those who attended the dance were: Mr. and Mr. J. Brandon Griffis, Mr. and Mrs. Cedric Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Land, Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Elmer, Miss Margaret Jones, Miss Gertrude Mathewson. Miss Pauline Marshall, Mies Elizabeth Bates, Miss Vandine, Miss Rosamond Border, Miss Stella Knode, Miss Dorothy Rees, Miss Marguerite Cox, Miss Conda Haworth, Miss Mary Lahrman, Miss Marjorie Gennett, Miss Marie Foulker. Miss Doris Groan, Miss Ruth Huffman, Mise Esther Coyle, Miss Elizabeth Pettlbone. Miss Alice Starr, Miss Grace Eggemeyer, Miss Louise Roberts, Miss Thelma ,Ingerman. Miss Catherine Daub, Miss Clara Daub, Miss Grace Crowe, Miss Dorothy Coyle, Miss Bernice Adams of Chicago, Miss Ruth Crowe, Miss Helen Pitts, Miss Catherine Binkley, Miss Treva Dafler, Miss Reba Bogge, Miss Ruth Wickemeyer, Miss Gladys Williams, Miss Elizabeth Marshall, Miss Olive Lewis, Miss Eleanor Seidel, Mrs. Juliet Shirk, Miss Emelyn Land, Miss Marguerite Clemmer, Miss Mary Chen-
oweth, Miss Tressa Crebb, Mi6s Brown, Miss Mary Pittman, Miss Janet Seeker, Miss Vivian Harding, Mi6S Lucile Cates, Miss Miller, Miss Vivian Monger, Henry Beck, Russell Allen, Elmer Bescher, Homer Meyers, Julian Smith, George Tarkelson, C. H. Hall, Jess Halberstadt, Seldon Phillipps, Roland Englebert, Jack Miller, James Rees, Frank Bescher, Dr. Herbert Thompson,Lewis Davis, Ronald Cox, Luther Lemon,, Ketfer Calkins, William Delk, Wayne Stoler, Carl Amick, Stanley Smith, Herbert Shouse, Robert Rees, Everett Phillips, Harlan Hill, V. D. McKee, Roy Dalbey, Leonard Mendenhall, William Thornburg, Rich
ard Brehm, Harry Thomas, Matt Mercurio, R. V. Strickler, Ray Weisbrod, Frank Crowe, Robert Leslie, Robert Quigg Carl Maag, Frederick. Cates, Herbert Groce. Whltney"TVIcGuIre
Chester Sharpe, Henry Horn, Kenneth !
Toler, Ralph Kitchell, William Dunn, Forest Gartside, Guy Means, Walter
mond. "Resources and Transportation of the Philippines" was the subject of an interesting paper read by
Mrs. A. E. Schuh. Mrs. W. L. Misener
read a paper on "Women of Today
and Tomorrow," substituting for Mrs. A. H. Backus, who was out of town.
Mrs. Karl Wolfe lead a discussion on "Our Club's Duty to Our City." Mrs. Harris, Mrs. Kramer, Mrs. Ellis, and Mrs. Robison took part in the discussion. Mrs. R. W. Stoakes sang two numbers, accompanied by Miss Gertrude Kirkpatrick. Mrs. George Reid and Mrs. Lyman Lyboult were visitors.
She could eatanything without indigestion or sleeplessness For a time she had been troubled with gu after her evening meaLThe - distress wad most painful after eat-ing-potatoesor other starchy foods, of which shewas very fond. ' Thenshe started' taking two cakes of Fleischmann's Yeast every night between her evening meal and bedtime. She poured about a half cap 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 Fleischmann'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 groc er for Fleischmann's Yeast.
The Woman's Aid society of the First Presbyterian church will meet Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock
in the church parlors. A full attend
ance Is desired. New officers of the
society will act as hostesses.- ,
The Woman's Missionary societv of
the First Christian church has postponed until next Monday afternoon the meeting it was to have held Wednesday of this week. Daughters of America will meet at 8 o'clock Wednesday evening in Campfield hall for their regular meeting. A card party will be given at St Mary's church by the senior division of the I. C. S. Tuesday evening. Five hundred, sheephead and euchre will be played. The Quiet Stitchers will be entertained by Mrs. Fred Hartman and Mrs. Alice Roberts at the home of the former north of the city Wednesday afternoon. Miss Anna Fetta will be hostess to the Neighborly club Wednesday afternoon at her home on the Backmeyer road.. Miss Marie Wrede will entertain for the Wedoso club Wednesday evening at her home on Randolph street. The Sigma Kappa club will be entertained Wednesday evening by Miss Meta Weyman. Denver Brown camp, No. 20. and the Ladies' Auxiliary, United SpanishAmerican War veterans will , meet Wednesday evening at 7:30 o'clock at the court house. All members are invited to be present. St. Joseph Commandery, No. 172, Knights of St. John, are giving a card party in the Lyceum rooms Thursday evening, beginning at 7:45 o'clock promptly. Euchre and Bheephead will be played. The public is cordially invited. The committee in charge consists of E. G. Balling, G. A. Wessel, P. C. Cox, R. W. Dehner and- H. A. Maurer.
The meeting of the Ladies' Mis-
(Contlnued from Page One.) become cogs in the government ma
chinery the only consideration that
will get them is money, as much as they can get In private business."
Representative Wood cites the shipnine board as an illustration. It is a
business conducted by the government and not purely official temporary at best. Men cannot be enticed fnvm nrivatft hiisinpRR to take temDOr-
ary government positions by the lure of social standing. A lawyer who is making in his practice in his home town $10,000 a pear, Mr. Wood points out, cannot afford to come to Washington to take a job with the shipping board for a salary which is not considerably more than the Income from his practice, because he will soon find himself out of a job in Washington, his former clients will have been at
tracted elsewhere, and his practice
broken up.
The country is familiar with the re
ports of gigantic losses the govern
ment sustained during the war, and the long continued economic waste in the administration of the several government establishments, but it is not so well known that those losses and extravagances were due for the most
part to inefficiency of executives.
Wants Action
Rep. Wood is opposed to the ap
pointment of any new commission to make an investigation of the federal
establishment because it would mean
a dragging along of the survey, disturbance of the work in the departments and bureaus and a great ex
pense. He believes that work can be conducted more satisfactorily by the
appropriations committee because it already has given partial considera
tion to the undertaking.
One feature of the proposed reform
will be the elimination of inconsist
encies in salaries that are now being paid. These inconsistencies are a detriment to the entire service. Rep. Wood points out. He also mentions the fact-that there are a very large number of men doing valuable work for the government at relatively low salaries and whose services are not appreciated by the public because the public is not brought in contact with the work they are doing. As an example of what he proposes, Rep. Wood has Just Introduced a resolution to increase the salaries of the civil service commissioners from $5,000 to $7,500 a year. He explains that the present salaries of those officials were fixed years ago when the purchasing power of the dollar was
twice what it is today. But more important to his mind is the fact that other commissions have since been created, the services of the members of which not being half as important but who are receiving considerably larger salaries than the civil service
commissioners.
CHIROPRACTORS d
G. C. WILCOXEN, D. C. C. H. GROCE, D. C. 1220 Main 8 1 Phone 1603
See Our Windows a3 they represent the values that are now obtainable in new
" r
PHOTOS
722 MAIN ST RICHMOND: IHtt
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in our store. More than 500 new patterns to choose from at prices lower than you'll find elsewhere.
WEISS Furniture Store
505-513 Main St
Bracelet Watches
"
"Richmond's Daylight Store"
The Hosettes The Modish Ready-Rolled Silk Hosiery The three-quarters length Silk Hosette. is gaining in popularity as the season grows toward the warmer days. This smart hose may be had in black, mode, castor and grey, in plain and stripe effects, all with turn-down tops. A wonderful hose at
$225 Pair
Girl Found In Stupor Unbalanced, Is Belief (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, May 2. Mildred Preston, 19 years old. bobbed haired and attractive, who was found sitting in an automobile in a garage in Flushing yesterday morning, is mentally unbalanced and will be placed under observation, according to physicians who examined her. Led to a weird vigy at St. Michael's cemetery. Flushing, by "spirit voices," the young girl insists that she was employed by Harold Van-
derbilt as a maid, although Mr. Vanderbilt and his butler declare that no one answering her description has been among the Vanderbilt servants. She has ben treated for nervousness brought on by sleepless nights and an incidental love affair, according to her examiners, and told -detectives that she started out on Sunday by trolley for the cemetery, but when she found the gates locked lost all memory of her
further movements until aroused from her stupor in the back seat of a motor car in Carey's garage. She said she had a brother in Sandusky, Ohio, and has lived with her father at 349 Fourth street, Portsmouth, Ohio, until last June.
BASEBALL POOL TICKETS ALLOWED IN TERRE HAUTE TERRE HAUTE, May 2. Baseball pool tickets may be sold in cigar stores and soft drink places in Terre Haute "as long as the matter Is carried along in a fair and square manner," Chief of Police Jack Smock declared recently.
710 Main. Phone 1830
Barefoot Sandals PRICES 98c to $1.98 Won't rip; solid leather. MISSES' PATENT 1-STRAP SLIPPERS, with rubber heels; sizes 9 to 11, at $1.98 0 OK sizes 12 to 2 at tPrf.O
When Twenty Miles an Hour was "Burning Up the Road" T N the old automobile days when the touring cars opened at the back and the "self-starter" was in Dad's good right art the principal accessories used to be'a large horn, a pump and a spare tire. But now when there are dozens of makes of scores of different pieces of motor equipment, with new ones coming into favor all the time furnishing your car with the best and most necessary accessories is a different matter. You'll find a helpful and suggestive guide in the list of little ads under "Auto Accessories" in the Classified columns. These dealers carry the newest and most reliable stock and their prices are unusually reasonable. Turn to Classification 13 today!
The Prices Are F. 0. B.-
"u m. i d
in the Automobile Columns. (Capyrlght, 1922. by Basil L. Smith)
The
RIGHT FOOD
Makes a Great Difference in your health, wealth and happiness. if you eat right, you feel right; if you feel right, you L work right.
w
w
Golden Cream
M
Bread N. X WILL HELP YOU
m L. ilni, -'.. ,.r '"m 'J5j """ ""' " mum mi iiri- ........ -.,--t -.-dl
When you bread say Cream.
Loaf made in
Richmond
HAVE A LOOK!
Remember, Opp. Court House Fourth and Main
HAVE A LOOK!
t ,000,000 ROLLS
i X
v n fi
(SETTS
' Bed and Living
Room
3!c
b rr r rrti i
With Border, Zy2a yd.
TEE
Moire Ceilings
PER ROLL Sold with oi without sidewall or border.
f ? PER f O
? i roll mHr 1
PARLOR
PER ROLL .,
See the Latest!
With Border 3c yd.
OATMEALS
9c
PER ROLL Sold with oi
without border
WMiwauaii j .Ji..iiuii
EZSSki
FREE SAMPLE BOOK MAILED FREE Write or Telephone 50 Actual Designs and Colorings Richmond Phone 1090 'Richmond Headquarters
THE WALL PAPER KING 401-403 MAIN STREET
Open Every Evening Until 6 P. M. Saturday Evening Until 8:30 P. M.
Opposite Court House
Opposite Court House
Indianapolis, Ind. Headquarters 210-212 N. Delaware St.
HEADQUARTERS 7 CITIES: Cincinnati, Ov Dayton, O. Covington, Ky. Hamilton, O LoulsviHo, Ky. Richmond, Ind. Indianapolis, Ind.
fef f Dayton, 0. Uf VC"S. Headquarters IB
0
