Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 281, 25 November 1922 — Page 6
PAGE EIGHT
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, INT).. SATURDAY, NOV. 25, 1922.
SOCIETY I
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lontz are en
tertaining with a dinner party Saturday evening at the Country club. The table is to hold baskets of yellow and orange chrysanthemums tied with bows of tulle and will be illuminated by yellow and green candles in crystal holders. Complimenting Mrs. Harry Holmes, of Oberlin, Ohio. Mrs. Ray K. Shiveley entertained informally with several covers at luncheon Friday afternoon at hr residence on South Fifteenth street r One of the loveliest parties of the month took place Friday afternoon when Mrs. Voyle Martindale, of Cambridge City, and Mrs. Howard Hunt entertained with a luncheon-bridge at the residence of the latter on. South Nineteenth street. Chrysanthemums arranged In tall baskets were placed through the reception rooms and formed the table decorations. Favors in bridge went to Mrs. Roy Dennis, Mrs. Frank McCurdy, Mrs. August Hafner and Miss Mabel Hasemeier The guests included: Mrs. Walker
iLand, Mrs. Carl Meyers, Mrs. George Rohe. Mrs. Emmett Bartel, Mies Haley
Jiaroia, Mrs. Myron Crane, Mrs. RayJmond Mather, Mrs. Fred Bayer, Mrs. i-Arthur Curme, Mrs. Everett Ackerman.
i Mrs. Dan Hess, Mrs. Will Jenkins,
iMrs. Herbert Keck. Mrs. August Hafner, Mrs. Harry Bockhoff. Mrs. Harold
iStaab, Mrs. Frank McCurdy, Mrs. !Mary Bertsch, of Cambridge City, Mrs. 'A. J. Harwood. Mrs. John M. CrawIford, Mrs. Roland Nusbaum. Miss Stella Knode, Mise Olive Lewis, Mrs. iRoy Dennis, Mrs. Clem Kehlenbrink, jMrs. Fred J. Bartel, Mrs. Will D. ScoIble, Mrs. Omar Whelan, Mrs. Walter iReed, Mrs. Ernest HUL Miss Mabel .Hasemeier. Miss Constance Bell, Miss I Hilda Kidder, Mrs. E. J. Dykeman, IMrs. Carl Roop, Mrs. Clark O'Byrne. IMrs. Ben C. Bartel, Mrs. Thomas Short, Miss Gertrude Bartel, Miss !Ruth Peltz. Miss Alice Knollenberg. fend Miss Mary Peltz. Mrs. Emil Marfnace and her two children, Patricia and Frank, left Satttrday for New York city, for permanent residence. Mr. Marinace. who left sometime ago, will join them In ?ew York. The Rev. and Mrs. A. H. Backus are entertaining over Thanksgiving the Rev. Mr. Backus' brother, J. Harvey Backus and family, of Andover, N. Y. Air. Backus la editor of the Andover News. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel E. Smith and Dr. and Mrs. Rogers Smith and son, Roger, Jr., will be the guests of Dr. and Mrs. S. E. Smith of Easthaven, over .Thanksgiving. Mrs. Samuel Smith and Mrs. Rogers Smith will come next Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Mills, of South Tenth street, who have been Epending several weeks in Chicago will return home Wednesday. . Mrs. George Barnes, of North Eleventh street, is spending two weeks at Yardley, Pa., with Mr. and Mrs. Edward Yarrington Barnes. Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Robinson, of Na
tional avenue, are at Cambridge, Mass., visiting their son, Charles K. Robinson, who is attending Harvard university this winter. Dr. and Mrs. S. E. Smith and Dr. and Mrs. F. Ross motored to Dayton, Ohio, Friday evening to attend the performance of "Dulcy" at the Victory theatre. An afternoon muslcale was given at the residence of Mis. Lewis C. King on South Twenty-first street when the Athenaea society observed Its Guest day. Pompom chrysanthemums were used effectively to decorate the rooms for the occasion. Nearly 80 persons gathered for the affair. The program, which was arranged by Mrs. King, was given in two parts. The first part opened with a poein read by Mrs. Nelle Barnard, followed
by a duo, "Morning" and "Evening" (Chaminade) with Mrs. L. C King at the first piano and Miss Mary Carman playing the second piano; Mrs. Fred
Bartel, sang a solo; Miss Neva Bowman and Miss Helen Rethmeyer, accompanied by Miss Mary Carman, played the arrangement for two violins of "Herdsman's Dream" (Lavitski); Miss Louise Taylor, of BirmInKham, Ala., a student at Earlham college, sang "Spring's Awakening" (Sanderson) and "Rain" (Curran); Miss Mary Louise Matthews, a pupil
of Mrs. King, rendered a MacOoweil group composed of "From an Indian IxwJge," "Scottish Tone Poem" and "Autumn." A cantata. "The Lady of Shalott." from Tennyson's poem, with a musical setting by Bendell. was given as the second part of the program. Mrs. F. W. Krueger and Mrs. D. E. Dennis sang the solo parts. The cantata is written in four parts. Those who sang were: Mrs. F. W. Krueger and Mrs. Dennis, first sopranos; Miss
Haley Harold and Mrs. L. C. King, second sopranos ; Mrs. W. C. Hibberd and Mrs. W. J. Smith, contralto; Miss Bowman and Miss Rethmeyer played the violin and Miss Carman the piano accompaniment: Tea was served to the sruests following the musicale. Mrs. King was assisted by Mrs. W. H. Quigg. Mrs. E. E. Lebo. Miss Sarah Evans, Mrs. S. Edgar Bond, and Mrs. Herschel Rlggln. Miss Alice Moorman and Mrs. Riggin poured tea. The out-of-town guets were: Mrs. Walter Garver, of Springfield, Ohio; Mrs. Frank Brown, of Chicago; Miss Sarah Nicholson, of Boston, Mass., and Mrs. William Longstreth. of New Paris, Ohio. Members of the club who were present Included: Mrs. Rufus Allen, Mrs. Nelle Barnard. Mrs. S. Edgar Bond, Mrs. Jesse Bond. Mrs. William A. Bond, Mrs. Melissa E. Coffin. Mrs. N. S. Cox, Mrs. Walter Dalbey. Mrs. Dempsey Dennis, Miss Mary Evans,
Miss Sarah Evans. Mrs. Albert Gil
mer. Mrs. Howard Gluys. Mrs. Effie A. Hall, Mrs. N. C. Helronimus. Mrs. W. J. Hiatt, Mrs. Foster Hoeffer, Mrs. Allen D. Hole, Mrs. Lee C. Hoover",
Miss Anna Horn, Mrs. Garwood Iredell. Mrs. Atwood Jenkins. Mrs. John
H. Johnson, Mrs. W. N. Johnson. Mrs
L. C. King, Mrs. Joseph W. Kinsey,
Mrs. E. E. Lebo. Mrs. Edwin Menden-; hall, Mrs F. C. Nicholson, Miss Alice ! Moorman, Miss Nancy Moorman, Mrs. William Quigg, Mrs. Robert Randall, Mrs. Ehle Reynolds. Mrs. W. J. Smith, Mrs. Sarah Stetson. Mrs. Elizabe'th Toms, Mrs. William Wickett, Miss Mary Cadwallader, Mrs. Walter Doan, Mrs. Aloneo Gardner, Mrs. E. Gurnev Hill, Mise Margaret Wickett, Mrs. Louis Jones, Mrs. Phillip Schneider. A market will be held by the Webster M. E. Aid society Wednesday, Nov. 29. at the First National bank. Dressed chickens, home-baked, and cooked goods will be on sale. The Mary Hill W. C. T. U. will meet with Mrs. W. S. Hendricks at her home, 235 South Eleventh street, Friday afternoon, Dec. 1. The Webster M. E. Aid society will meet with Mrs. Charles Rothmel at her home in Webster, Dec. 1. Mrs. Lizzie Bescher will be hostess to the Current Events club Tuesday afternoon. Responses will be on Thanksgiving. Two papers will be given, one by Mre. Pearl Bills on "Lake Dwellers," the other by Mrs. Jessie Orr on "'Radium." Mrs. Leonora Beach will give "Some saying3 we ought to know." The Trifolium society will meet Tuesday evening, Nov. 28. with Miss
Gertrude Bartel at her home on South
Sixteenth street. Ernest Renk will
have charge of the music. Mise Elizabeth Krueger will have a paper on "Indiana Educational History." The social committee for the occasion is composed of Mrs. Gus Hafner, Raymond Fossenkemper, Mrs. F. W. Krueger, Mrs. Lloyd E. Harter, Mrs. George Eggemeyer and Everard B. Knollenberg. . The Tourist club will be enl riained at the residence of Mrs. David Worth Dennis on West Main street, Friday evening, Dec. 1. She will be assisted by Mrs. Florence Lodwick, Miss Laura Gaston and Miss Ada Woodward. The program Is to include a paper on "Tibet" by Mrs. H. R. Robinson followed by discussion which Thomas B. Jenkins will lead. Donation week for the Margaret Smith Home for Aged Women is to be held from Nov. 25 to Dec. 2. Contributions of vegetables, fruit, canned goods, and money will be received. Persons wishing to contribute something may bring it to the home or order something from the grocery which will be sent direct to the home from there. Every, housewife is urged to remember the home at some time next week when ordering her groceries. A box of canned fruits, vegetables, juices and jellies are being assembled to send to the Indiana State Soldiers'
Home at Lafayette by the Women's Relief corps. Anyone wishing to contribute to the box is asked to leave their donation at the trustee's office. The L. T. L. will meet at the home of Catherine Chrisman, 33 North Twelfth street, Sunday afternoon at 3 o'clock. The Daughters of America and Juniors will meet in the Colonial annex Friday evenipg at 7 o'clock to attend Thanksgiving servioes at the United Brethren church in a body. All Juniors and their families are especially invited. The Ornls Melas Club will meet
Tuesday evening with Miss Virginia Livingstone at her home, 301 North Eleventh street. All members are asked to be present. The Magazine club will meet Mon
day afternoon with Mrs. Charles Dru-
Itt at her home on South Fifteenth street.
Tickets for "To Have and To Hold" the move featuring Betty Compson and Bert Lytell, which the Daughters
of the American Revolution are bring
ing to the W ashington theatre for the
week of Dec. 17 are to be distributed to members of the chapter on Monday and will go on sale immediately, it is
announced. Miss Georgia Cole is chair
man in charge of the undertaking.
Other members of the committee are
Mrs. Fred J. Girty, Mrs. E. B. Gros-
venor, Mrs. John F. Hornaday and Mrs Clara Dougan Scott
A bazaar is to be held at the Red
Men's hall Dec. 9 all day and in the evening by the Science Church of Spiritualists. Luncheon will be served to the public at noon and in the evening. A special entertainment is planned for the evening and music will be furnished by the Harris orchestra. The Woman's Aid of the First Presbyterian church is holding its annual bazaar, Dec. 8. A noon luncheon will be served. Booths in which all va
rieties of articles will be sold will be arranged through the parlors. The affair will be open to the public. The Christmas bazaar of the First M. E. church will be held the afternoon and evening of Dec. 7 at the church. Fancy work, baked, cooked, and canned goods will be sold in the booths. A chicken dinner will be servd in the evening. The public is invited. An illustrated lecture on the Oberammergau "Passion Play" will be given Dec. 4 at the First Presbyterian church by Mrs. Melville F. Johnston under the auspices of the Woman's Missionary society. Pictures of the play and of Oberammergau which Mrs. Johnston collected last summer when she attended the performance will be used in her talk. A dance will be given Saturday evening at the Eagles' hall with music by Miller's orchestra. The public is Invited. Eden Rebekah lodge No. 30, will meet Saturday evening at 7:30 o'clock at the I. O. O. F. hall. . All members of Maumee council No. 4, D. of P., who know themselves to be
members of the degree, staff and all wishing to become members are requestioned to meet at the Red Men's
hall Monday evening at 7 o clock.
Veterans' night - will be - observed
Monday evening by William P. Ben
ton camp. No. 28. Indiana division. Sons of Veterans, U. S. A. in the G. A. R. hall at the court house in honor of the Sol Meredith post G. A. R. The occasion is also to commemorate the anniversary of Lincoln's delivery of his famous Gettysburg address. A
special program has been arranged.
The Rev. Ross W. Stoakes will speak.
The meeting will commence at 7 o -
clock.
The Happy Hour club will hold a Thanksgiving dance Tuesday evening at the L O. O. F. hall. The Evan Smith orchestra will play the program
of dances. Several features are plan
ned and a live duck is to be the favor in one contest A hard-time dance is planned by the club for December. A Thanksgiving dance will be given Wednesday evening for the Young People's Dancing club at the I. O. O.
F. hall. The Evan. Smith orchestra
will play. A number of features are planned for the occasion.
Knights of Pythias are giving a Thanksgiving evening Nov. 30. at the K. of P.f temple. The affair i3 to be
invitational.
A leading social event of the next week is to be the Thanksgiving mas-
auerade dance which will be given
at the Country club Friday evening,
Dec. 1. for members and their out-of-
town guests. Everyone is to be masked and a number of features are planned. An orchestra of several pieces will
plav. The November committee is
in charge of the affair. Parker's Popular Players, of Colum
bus. Ohio.' one of the leading dance
aggregations hailing from the Buckeye
state, is to play for the dance tne
Omicron PI Sigma fraternity will give
in the ballroom of the I. O. O. F. hall
Friday evening, Dec. 1. It will be the
orchestra's first appearance here and because of its reputation as a crack orchestra , a large crowd is expected at the dance. Robert Rees is chairman of the committee arranging the affair. Other members are William Roberts and Don Cutler. Two other -dancers are to be given by the fraternity before the New Year. . All members are urged to be present to attend the old time social which is to be given by Loyal chapter No. 49 O. E. S. Saturday evening at . the Masonic temple. Miss Mabel Melissa Emerick. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Emerick, of Boyer street, and Dallas Creech, of Eaton, Ohio, son of Elijah Creech,
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were married Saturday morning. The wedding took place at the parsonage of the U. B. church, the Rev. IL S. James officiating. Mr. and Mrs.
Creech left immediately on a wedding trip east after which they will reside in this xity.
Mr. ind Mrs. Perry J. Moss, of
North Thirteenth street, are entertaining at dinner for a number of relatives. Saturday at their new home.
A cafeteria supper will be served at
St Mary's Community, house Tuesday evening from 5 to 8 o'clock by the
Confraternity of St Mary's church.
Everyone Is invited to attend.
The Show Me club will meet with
Mrs. E. R. Thompson at her home on
East Main street Tuesday afternoon at
2 o clock. -
The Hibberd Parent-Teacher asso
ciation will hold a meeting Tuesday evening to which a special invitation is being extended to the, fathers. Perry Wilson, Boys' secretary of the Y. M. C. A., la to be the chief speaker. He will talk on the child in the
school, the home, and socially. A 100
per cent attendance is urged for the
meeting. -Celebrating their 40th weddine an
niversary Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Jones will hold open house at their home, Hawthorne Farm, Centerville, on Thanksgiving day from 2 to 5 o'clock in the afternoon and 7 to 10 o'clock in the evening. Chief amocg the holiday events is the dance the Ornis Melas club will give Dec. 25 in the Eagles' club ball room. The Howard Mollencup orches tra, of Defiance, Ohio, will play the or-
ler of dances. Invitations are to be issued shortly , for the event. Miss Josephine Hiatt is chairman for the
affair and Miss Helen Hazeltine, Miss Gertrude Williams. Miss Birdice Norris. Miss Katherine Binkley and Miss Doris Puckett compose her committee. Roes Reynolds and his Palais Gar den dance orchestra will play a dance engagement here Tuesday evening,
aov. zs, under the auspices of Messrs.
Simmons, O'Brien and Gruenewald. Several hundred invitations have been issued for the affair. The orchestra comes highly recommended. The dance will be held at the Eagles' club The balcony will be open to spectators . Over 100 aoiis are to be entered In a doll sale the Parent-Teacher association of Garfield school will hold Saturday, Dec. 2, at the Starr Piano store for the benefit of the Riley Hospital for Crippled children. A doll factory has been opened at the school by some of the girls who are making and dressing some of the dills. Mothers of the association are dressing others. Post ers are being made in the art classes which will be placed in store windows next week. Dolls of all description are to be on display baby dolls, girl and boy dolls.-little and big ones, as well as character dolls.
The Women's Foreign Missionary
society of the Third M. E. church will observe its annual Thanksgiving eerv Ices Wednesday, Nov. 29.
a dinner party Fry ay evening at nor home, 115 South Fifteenth street. R4 and white carnations were effectively
used to decorate the table. The eve- f j. ning was spent informally. Among
the guests were: Mrs. Joe Myer. or. Chester, Mrs. Richard Cutter, Mrs. Mary Van Schlrack. Mrs. Richard, Brown, of Webster. Mrs. Roy Settles, Mrs. John Nelson, Mrs. Leslie Nelson.' Mrs. George Parkinson. Mrs. Beverly Snyder, Mrs. George Snyder and Mrs. Harry Snyder. The Whyle club was entertained by Mrs. Walter Pohlenz. at her home on South Tenth street Thursday afternoon. The time was spent in sewing, (Please Turn to Page Ten).
Mrs. Harry Snyder entertained with I wMwwwwwrwi .
CHIROPRACTORS
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