The star-independent. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1904-1917, April 05, 1915, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
SOCIAL AND PERSONAL NEWS
DANCES WILLFREDOINATE
IN EASTER WEEK GAYETIES
Social Calendar Is Tilled With Enter
tainments, Including Last Cotillion
of Season Next "Friday Night—Miss
Herman Is Hostess This Evening
Tlie week following Easter Sunday
is always one of me gayest socially in
the whole year and even rivals that of
Christinas week, as fewer family affairs
are given alt Easter and there is more
general entertaining done.
Many entertainment, for which cards
were issued at the close of t'he 'Lenten
period, have been arranged. On Satur
day night Miss Ruth Kinzer Pavne en
tertained informally a number of the
younger girls and bovs at the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Prank Payne,
012 North Front street.
To-night l.Vliss Almeda Herman,
daughter of Mr. ami Mrs. .Edwin 8.
Herman, Front and Mac lay streets, will
gh e an dufurmal dance at the Country
Club for members of the younger set.
The Looser orchestra will iplav.
To-morrow nigiht Miss Mary Mitchell
will entertain informally at /her home,
Beaufort Lodge, in compliment to her
house guests.
On Wednesday afternoon 'Mips Mary
Elizabeth Meyers, a debutante of the
season, will l>e guest of honor at a
luncheon , given by Mrs. .1. Austin
Brandt, at tier iionif. (ifl>M North Front
street.
On Wednesday night there will be a
subscription dance at the Harrisburg
Country Club. Miss J'Yances Bailey,
MiSs Emily Bailey. Miss Helen Ham
mond, Miss Maig.'ireUa Fleming and
Albert Sta-ckpole form' the committee
iu charge of the dance. The Updegrove
orchestra will play.
Thursday - evening the regular su'b
scrij tion dance will bo held at the
Colonial Country Club, with the Upde
grove orchestra playing..
On Friday evening the'third and last
cotillion of the season will be held in
Masonic Temple. Many dinner parties
will be held prior to the dance, one of
which will be given 'bv ißishop and Mrs.
.lames Henry "Darlington, at their home,
321 North Front street.
On .Saturday afternoon a "the
dansant" will be given at the Harris
burg Country Cluib by Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis L. Johnson, of Steelton, compli
mentary to their son, Leland Johnson,
and a number of guests of tht> Johnsons.
The Updegrove orchestra will play for
the dancing.
"Recital by Famous Artists
The leading feature for this week is
the .joint recital by Maud Powell, the
distinguished violinist, and Evan Wil
liams, America's greatest concert ten
or. to be given Thursday evening in
the Chestnut street auditorium. Fol
lowing is ttie list of patrons and pa
tronesses:
Mr. and Mrs. Walter F. Randall, the
Rev. and Mrs. Rollin A. Sawyer. Mr.
and Mrs. J. Horace McFarland, Mr. and
Mrs. Frank A. McCarrell, the Rev. and
Mrs. O. H. Bridgman, I)r. and Mrs.
James E. Dickinson, Mr. and Mrs.
George A. Gorgas, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Keet, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Troup, Mr.
and Mrs. Howard C. Fry. the R«*i. and
Mrs. Floyd Appleton, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard H. Wharton, Dr. and Mrs. C.
M. Rhodes, Mr. and Mrs. John Fox
Weiss. Mr. and Mrs. Wally W. Davis,
Miss Sara Lemer, Miss Cora Lee Sny
der, Vance McCormick, Mr. and Mrs. E.
7.. Gross, G. Irwin Beattv, Mrs. Marlin
E. Olmsted, Mr. and Mrs. Charles S.
Troup, Miss McFarland, Mr. and Mrs.
Samuel Wittenmyer, George Sutton, the
Rev. and Mrs. Winfleld S. Herman, Mr.
and Mrs. H. M. Hoke, Mr. and 'Mrs. Wil
liam H. Bennethum, the Rev. and Mrs.
Lewis S. Mudge, Mr. and Mrs. W. K.
Meyers, Mr. and Mrs. Frederic C. Mar
tin, Mr. and Mrs. J. vonßereghy, Miss
Lucia Ford, Miss Randall, Mr. and
Mrs. Edward F. Dunlap, Mr. and Mrs.
Roy G. Cox, Dr. and Mrs. John Oen
slager. Mr. and Mrs. William H. Benne
thum, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Shoaff,
Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Troup, Mr. and Mrs.
Dean M. Hoffman, Miss Olive Jamison,
Miss Rutih Conkling, Newell Albright,
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel C. Todd, Mr. anil
Mrs. L. E. Johnson. Miss Nancy Canan,
Mr. and Mrs. A. N Lupfer, Mr. and
Mrs. W. F. Darby, Mr. and Mrs. B. F.
Burns, Dr. and Mrs. C. E. Rebuck, Miss
Mary E. Beatty, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
F. Harris, Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Sigler,
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Goldsmith, Mr.
and Mrs. S. K. Wilhelm, Mr. and Mrs.
E. G. Rose, Dr. and Mrs. *H. R. Wiener,
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin J. Decevee, Mr.
and Mrs. J. Geiger Ingram, the Rev.
and Mrs. ,T. Fry Bullitt, Mr. and Mrs.
"Buy the Goods—
Not the Package"
Advises Hon. Geo. W. Perkins, Chairman of New
York's Food Committee.
And it's good advice! Select the food that con
tains the greatest nutrition for tlie least money,
whether in ornately colored package or in a plain
carton.
The Grape-Nuts package isn't pretty—no money
is wasted upon ornament but its air-tight and
germ-proof, to protect the food and keep it in per
fect condition.
Grape=Nuts
FOOD
made of selected wheat and malted barley, is de
licious, concentrated, easily digested, and contains,
pound for pound, more nutrition than beef and
costs less.
"There's a Reason" for Grape-Nuts
—sold by Grocers everywhere.
C. M. Sigler, Mr. and Mrs. Frank L.
Bags, Mr. ani Mrs. B. F. Blough, Mr.
and Mra- M. Hi Tate, Mrs. C. S. Dun
bar, Mrs. C. Ross Boas, the Rev. and-
Mrs. Harvey Klaer, Mr. and Mrs. An
son P. Dare, Rabbi and Mrs. C. J.
Freund and Mrs. C. S. Boyer.
SEWING SCHOOLGRADUATES
Interesting Exercises Were Held at the
B. F. Stevens Sewing School
Saturday Afternoon
Interesting and appropriate exercises
j marked the closing of the sewing school
of the ©. F. Stevens Memorial church
Saturday afternoon. The program inr
| eluded stinging, readings, recitations
and an address by the pastor, the Rev.
| Clayton A. Sinucker.
Three members of the school cotn-
I
."4 >: > •
The Messengers
pleted the full graded course and were
graduated, receiving their diplomas
from file superintendent, MTS. J. H.
Kase, and a/'beautifully engraved silver
thimble from Mrs. Beckley, .fudge of
the work. The graduates were Martha
Shartzer, Esther Leeds and Elizalbeth R.
Beam.
Prizes for excellence in attendance
and deportment were awarded to the
h *
following: Misses Grace Stover, Anna
Burnham, Alice Pickel, Mary Carson,
LMarv douse, Julia Shartzer, Dorothy
Slothower, Dorothy Deeds, Helen Oope
lin, Leona Bby, 'Helen 'Murray, Eliza
beth Murray, Dorothy Nebinger,
Frances Ca'ton, Esther Deeds, Florence
Brown, Isabelle Wright, Margaret Hoff
man, Vivian Eves and Grace Johnston.
Following t'hp exercises an egg rolling
contest was held, with .'Mrs. W. E. Weis
hart as .judge Prizes were won iby
'Misses lielen Pierce, Mary Hoppes,
Mary Clouse, Gertrude Adams, Kath
arine H'olbert, Elizabeth Murray, (Mary
IMagaha, Vivian Eves and Margaret
Douglass.
The school was organized several
years ago 'by 'Miss ©esse Ma lone, who
left the city at the end of 'tihe first
year, to reside .in the South. IMiss Ma
lone attended the exercises Saturday
afternoon.
Kohr-Myers Wedding
Miss Xora Leßose Myers, of Roy
alton, and Ralph Kohr, First L/ock,
Pa., were married Saturday morning
at the parsonage of the First Baptist
church, Hagerstown, Md., by the Rev.
E. K. Thomas, pastor of the church.
Birth Announcement
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Schlaver,
638 Kelker street, announce the birth
of a daughter, Mary Elizabeth Schlay
er, Thursday, April 1. Mrs. Sublayer
was Miss Mary Sullivan prior to her
marriage.
HARRISBURG STAR-INDEPENDENT, MONDAY EVENING, APRIL 5, 1915.
News of Persons
Who Come and Go
frank Harvey, of Philadelphia, is
visiting Harold Toland, 192>2 Green
street.
Mrs. C. G. Smith, who has been
wintering in Day ton a, 11a., has return
ed to her home, 2019 North Second
street.
Mrs. Guy S. Vogt, 1826 Green
street, has' returned from a month's
visit in Baltimore, Washington and
Emmitsburg, Md.
Miss Marie Vogt, 182 6 Green
street, has returned from a three
months' visit with relatives in A'ltoona
and Pittsburgh.
Mrs. Charles C. Getter and Mis*
Marie Getter, 1921 Market street,
are spending a week in New York
City.
Karl Barley, of Middletown, is the
guest
Mrs. Ralph Barley, Jr., 1-319 Swata
rae street.
Miss .Hilda Floisher, 212|2 Derry
street, spent Easter in Wellsboro.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas T. Cook, of
Baltimore, are the guests of the
former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mer
vine;-A. Cook, 14'2'8 Walnut street.
Mr. and Mrs. George Swavely,
Green and Herr streets, and Mr. and
Mre. T, J. Winters, 1j2'31 North Sixth
street, motored to Hogestown yester
day.
Mrs. W. J. Fa'bian, of Erie, who ifc
the guest of Miss Gertrude Reel, 410
Crescent street, left yesterday for her
home. . .". .
Mrs. (Dallas Wolf, 1436 Bcrryhill
street, has returned from Shippens
burg, where she was called to attend
the funeral of a relative.
Mrs. Samuel G. Hepford, 2>043
North Fourth street, has returned from
Philadelphia.
George W. Armpreister, 60'2 Briggs
street, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Stroh, in Washington, D. C.
Miss Julyann Wierman, 2io'2/3 Penn
street,, spent Easter with her aunt,
Miss, Julyann Kinter, at Dauphin.
Mrs. Jacob McCorfcle, 2035 Pena
street,, has returned from Lancaster.
Miss Rhea Koser, Miss Rath Koser
and Martha Koser, of York,
were the week-end guests of Miss Mar
garet Folk, 2039 Penn street.
Miss Mary Whitney, of Philadel
phia, is the guest of Miss Helen
Mauk, 15'2'1 North Third street.
Mrs. C. R. Dunlap, of York, spent
several days last week with her
daughter, Mrs. George Emig, 1«'14
North Second street.
Mrs. J. Percy Koons, 2043 Penn
street, is spending a weeik in Ship
pensburg.
Mr. and Mrs. John Wierman and
daughter, Miss Miriam Wierman, of
Jefferson street, spent the week-end
in Newport.
Dr. A. J. Poffenbenger, Dr. Joseph
Poffen'berger and Miss Mary Umberg
er, of Smnbury, motored to the city
Saturday. They were the guests of
Miss Emma Reel, 2038 North Second
street.
Miss Olive Himes, of Shippensburg
Normal School, returned after a visit
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Himes, t2<041 Penn street.
J. C. Ewing, 26 North Eighteenth
street, left to-day for Pittsburgh.
Mrs. Hartville Wall and daughters,
Miss Martha Wall and Miss Helen
Wall, 23 North Fifteenth street, are in
Philadelphia.
Mr. .and Mrs. Karl BTehm and son,
Wayne, 2'5 North Fifteenth street,
are guests of Mrs. Collins, at Ben
dersville.
Mrs. Jacob Shoemaker and grand
daughter, Miss Dorothy Campbell, are
spending several days in Millersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Orth, 1825
Zarker street, are (guests of relatives
in Danville.
Mis. T. Crook, I'2'o 7 Chestnut
street, and Mrs. Paul Gfrunden, 2i2
North Fifteenth street, have returned
from Philadelphia.
Dr. and Mrs. John A. Sherger, 1809
North Sixth street, are staying at At
lantic City.
Miss Helen B. Walzer, of the Drex
el Institute, is the guest of her moth
er, Mrs. J. W. Walzer, 1803 North
feeeond street.
Miss Caroline Patton, 2228 North
Second street, is in Philadelphia.
Mrs. H. Keesey, of Lancaster, is the
guest of her daughter, Mrs. Charles
Froehlich, 1111 Market street.
Mr. ami Mrs. F. W. Green and chil
dren, Miss Mary Green, Miss Anna
Green and Frederick Green, 623 South
Seventeenth street, are home from
Wilkes-Barre, where they were guests of
Mrs. Green's mother, Mrs. Featherston.
Mrs. Elizabeth Delaney, of Royalton
is tihe guest of her daughter, Mrs. C. T.'
Seitz, 335 Boyd street.
Miss Mary McDerniott, 356 South
Thirteenth street, has returned from
New Freedom, where she was the guest
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Mc-
Dermott.
Miss Bertha Shaup, of Jersey Shore,
is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Allen Mil
ler, 1403 Berryhill street. "
Mrs. George W. Miller, 609 Briggs
street, 'bas returned from a trin to
Philadelphia.
Miss Adaline Emeriek will return to
Frederick, Md„ to-morrow after a visit
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Morris
Emeriek, 35 Evergreen street.
Miss Jennie M. Horting, 506 Beily
street, is spending a week in Newport.
Miss Helen Wilson, 934 North Sec
ond street, returned to-day to Swartfc
more after spending Easter with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harris B. Wilson.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank M. Bellman,
204 1 Penn street, are visiting in Phila
delphia.
Mrs. O. E. Huber and daughter, Mil
dred, of Philadelphia, are guests at tihe
home of the former's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. James Peunell, 1525 North Sixth
street.
Miss Anna Myers, of Philadelphia,
has returned., home after a visit with
Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Bellman, 2041 Penn
street.
Mr. and Airs, Latimer Willis, of
Brooklyn, are guests of the Misses Brat
ten, 308 North street. Mr. and Mrs.
Willis have returned to make this city
their future home.
Miss Mue Hope, 1614 Market street,
is home from Atlantic City.
Miss Leah Tipton, of Baltimore, is
the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Howe,
145 Sylvan Terrace.
Miss Edith MoMorrig, of Bryn Mawr,
is spending a week with her mother,
HOW TO BE SLIM
Winifred Grace Forreat. j
If you are too fat and want to!
•reduce your weight 15 or 20 pounds,]
don t starve and weaken your eys-J
tern, or think you must always bej
laughed at on account of your fat.J
but go to W. H. Kennedy, or any J
other good drug-gist, and get a boxJ
of Oil of Koreln capsules, take one]
after each meal and one before re-J
tiring at night. J
Weigh yourself once a week anilj
note what a pleasant and reliable
method this Is for removing super
fluous fat from any part of the body.
It rosts little, 18 absolutely harm
less and I am eure a week's trial
should convince anyone that It Is
unnecessary to be burdened with
even a single pound of unsightly
fat.
Mrs. John McMorris, 636 Emerald
street.
Joseph Delaney, of Freeport, 111., is
the guest of his sister, Mrs. C. H. Seitz,
325 Bpyd street.
Mrs. Douglas Mueller, of New York,
is the guest of Mrs. Harry Mueller, 629
Briggs street. —•
Paul McGovern has returned to
Reading after spending several days
with Mrs. W. B. Cunningham, 310 Hum
mel street.
Miss Rose Bowrs and Miss Ruth
Bowers, 1540 Derry street, are home
from Philadelphia. - «
Mrs. Walter Hanlen, of Reading, is
visiting her sister, Mrs. Harry Mueller,
629 Briggs street.
Mrs. Rosa Van Horn, 603 Boas
street, is visiting in Reading for sever
al days.
Miss Emma Stouffer has gone to her
home in York after a visit with Miss
Sylvia Beidel in Steelton.
Mrs. McMorris and daughters, Miss
Jessie and Miss Edith, 636 Emerald
street, are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dress
ier at Cove Allen.
Gerald Morgan, of Easton, is the
guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. F.
B. Morgan, 1726 State street.
Mrs. Guy H. Davies and daughter,
of Carlisle,' are the guests of Mrs. N.
I. Hench, 101'5 North Front street.
Miss Helen Wallace, 214 Pine
street, is spending several days in
Philadelphia.
MHs Helen James, of Albany, is the
guest of Miss Martha Fleming, Front
and Forster streets.
Miss Mary Robinson, Mrs. William
E. Wright, Miss Anne McCormick and
Miss Martha O. Qeiler, left to-day for
Atlantic City.
Charles 'Hickok, of Cleveland, is
spending the Easter season with his
mother, Mrs. W. O. Hickok, 508 North
Second street.
D.r. and Mrs. Charles Rebuck and
son, Lawrence, 41>2 North Third street,
are the guests of friends in New Yort*
City.
Charles K. Boas, 115 State street,
spent Easter at Mauch Chunk.
Miss Janet Kassen, 1115 Wallace
street, and Miss Esther Kirk, 26 North
Tenth street, have returned from a
visit to friends at Newport.
Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Shenk, 271
Hamilton street, spent yesterday in
Columbia.
Miss Opal Prowell, 1618 Hunter
street, and Mies Esther Peifer, 4 North
Ninth street, are the guests of Miss
Viola Lowery, at Mont Alto.
Miss Ruth Eaken, of Springtown,
who spent the.past week with Miss
Gertrude Reel, llfl Crescent street,
left yesterday for a visit to Erie.
Gerald Moyer, of Baltimore, is
the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
J. W. Moyer, 408 Crescent street.
Mrs. Clara Troup, of Washington,
D. C., is the guest of Mrs. Mary
Huston, 60'7 Reily street.
Mrs. William T. Parks, 1342 North
Sixth street, is visiting in Fairmont,
Maryland.
Miss Glen Stewart, of Spruce Creek,
arrived to-day to be the guest of Mr.
and Mrs. W. W. Stewart, 1604 State
street.
CICILIAN CLUB DANCE
Masquerade Carnival Will Be Held
On Thursday Night—Many
Handsome Prizes
The Cicilian Club will hold a Mer
chant's Mask Carnival at Winterdale
hall Thursday evening, April 8. All
the old dances will be featured and a
■number of old time dancers will be
present to show the modern dancers
just what dancing was twenty or twen
ty-five years ago.
Members of the committee will
award prizes to the dancers wearing
costumes giving the best representa
tion of a merchant's business, and
prizes for the best dancing will also
be given.
The club held a dance similar to this
one twenty years ago, and the same
old square dances, two steps, schot
tiches, polkas, etc., with the old time
caller of dancee will be featured.
Prizes \will 'be given by the follow
ing firms: "Harrisburg Telagraph,"
4*2-piece dinner set; The Hub, navy
blue jersey; Shearer Mfg. Co., ladies'
union suit; E. M. Bible, panjama suit;
a fried, silver cigarette case; C. W.
Poulton, ladies' umbrella; Doutrich,
traveling bag; a friemd, pipe; The Or
phcum, pair of tickets; Star-Independ
ent, traveling bag; "Harrisburg Tele
graph," Japan umbrella; Shearer
Mfg. Co., ladies' Union suit; "The
Patriot," electrical alarm clock; a
friend, pipe; A. B. Tack, wall paper
for room; Victoria, 1 50 admission
tickets.
BIC ZEIHBO DANCE TO-NIGHT
Six Hundred Persons Expected to At
tend Annual Easter Affair—The
Ladles' Will Wear White Fezes
The Easter Dance of the Zembo
Temple of the Mystic Shrine in the
Chestnut street auditorium this even
ing will be one of the biggest Masonic
social evanta of the spring season.
Three hundred couples arc expected
to attend.
The halls have been beautifully
decorated in national colors. In the
Large auditorium dancing will start
at 9 o'clock after an hour's entertain
ment in which songe and readings will
be (given. At 9.3'0 the caterer will
start serving dinner in the banquet
hall. Small tables have been arrang
ed to take care of little groups of
friends. A nurober of small tables'
The Store That Does Things
The store tjiat serves you best is the store that deserves vour patronage. And
1 serving you best lies in providing those qualities which are absolutely reliable at
the lowest prices. Confidence is the chain which binds this store to the provident
housewife of Harrisburg, and there is not one single weak link in it.
Experience has taught you that every offering we make can be implicitv relied
upon. You are SURE OF YOUR MONEY'S WORTH —and a LITTLE BIT
MORE whenever it is possible.
The Burns Store Is the Safe Store
v
CREDIT is not a privilege extended to a few here but is an
accommodation open to everybody who wants it. Just say
"charge it"—and that is all you have to do.
These Values Will Make a Sales Record
tWe are showing a com- A continuous post Brass
plete line of Velocipedes, r> , ,
i Express Wagons, Tri- filling rods 111
| C £SXT, 2 c,eS an<i H °' jby Horae3 ' hcad an<l foot, belt qual-
I is maiie of Jieed with roii and ai«o Our prices mean a saving
around the roed QQ to VOU. °* l^CqUer,
° _ ' ' A Velocipede frame
Folding Go-Carts, nicely fin- *1 OS Q 1 O C/l
$5.00 to $20.00 ished, *V™ V'A \
Now is the time to buy a (edar I
Cedar Chest natural J* can be easiiy convert- U
finish, 34 inches lono- S a J T c °™ fortable bed - A big value in a Library Table.
1« J??" A ma^, of « olld «* and up- It's finished in American quartered
lo inches CP7 Gfi bolstered with brown imitation oak, and is designed on correct mis-
' use $29.00 r;j;r% h " ™ ra : y . $6.75
HB flS Pi This comfortable Couch oak frame,
Bfl w p| /V; sanitary construction, If\ G?f\
mH p H and comfortable, *■ " •O\J
'M59c Uncle Hiram's Polish
A necessity if you want to clean houso properly.
A comfortable Stool or Seat—made of solid {nn ' >e ~set' on furniture or floor, and
oak. and upholstered with brown imitation l )er Bottle. ' T
leather. A K ood $l.O.- value. W£ AGENTS
BURNS & COMPANY
28-30-32 S. Second St.
will be placed on the stage in the
auditorium so that the members who
do not oare to dance may play cards.
All of the ladies will receive pound
boxes of Easter chocolates, a present
from Zembo Temple, with Kaster
greetings. In honor of the occasion the
ladies will all wear white fezes while
the men will wear the customary red
ones.
S. P. C. fI.CONCERT WILL
BE MIMING AFFAIR
Program of Old Songs. Stately Old
fashioned Dances and Pretty Chor
uses Will Be Given This Evening
at Old Folks' Convention
Society is especially interested in the
Old Folks' Concert which will be held
this evening in the auditorium of Tech
nical High school. The entertainment,
which will be given under the auspices
of the S. P. C. A., will be similar to
the one given two years ago, but on a
more elaborate scale. Prominent men j
and women of the citj and the most
attractive debutantes will render a pro
gram of old-fashioned songs and dances,
while, a well-trained chorus of sixty or
more voices will sing bits of songs our
mothers and grandmothers used to sing.
Saturday night the final rehearsal
was held and the work of the soloists,
dancers and members of the chorus was
perfect, t'he only thing lacking being
the oostumes. But the concert is pri
marily a musical affair, and, while the
costumes will be most elaborate and
very 'beautiful, they can be of little im
portance when the solo work has t>een
entrusted to the most able vocalists of
the city.
Daughters of 181 a to Meet
An interesting program will bo
given at the meeting of the Daughters
of 18'li2, which will bo held at the
home of Mrs. C. W. Lynch, 2HI State
street, Thursday afternoon, April 8.
Mrs. Mabel Cronise Jones, the regent,
will preside, and will give "Current
Events" as the principal address of
the afternoon.
Miss Catherine Heicher will sing
several solos and Mrs. James Bnrr
Mersereaw, ohapter historian will
make a report. Chapter dues are pay
able at this meeting.
An announcement of what will be
done at the national meeting wil>l be
held the last week of the month in
'New York City, will be made.
CLAIMED BY THREE CITIES
Alice Nielsen, Grand Opera Singer, Is
Really Southern Girl
Alico Neilsen, the famous grand
opera singer, who with Rudolph Oanz,
"the pianist with a message," will
appear in concert at the Chestnut
street auditorium on Monday evening,
April 12, is not only one of the most
wonderful songsters in the world hut
a very beautiful woman as well.
Three different cities have claimed
Miss Neilsen as their own and in dis
cussing this Miss Neilsen remarks:
"When 1 am asked that question I
feel a good deal like the girl who was
asked where she was born who replied
'No place in particular; father's a
Methodist minister.' "
The truth of the matter is that
Miss Neilsen was born in Nashville,
Teun., and is a Southern girl in every
way. Pond of outdoor life, bright and
vivacious, and with a charm that only
the Southland can give to her fairest
daughters. At an early age her parents
moved to Kansas City and Miss Neil
sen was educated there, Ujtor she
moved to San Francisco where her op
| eratie debut was made. This gives
each of these cities a strong claim upon
her. Her father was Danish and her
mother Irish.
Miss Neilsen is the only singer who
has accomplished the supposed impos
sibility of going from the lightest of
light opera to the greatest roles in
grand operp. The last few years she has
added to this a remarkable artistry in
song and recital work and her con
certs rarely fail to call for return dates.
—Adv._*
I Dr. B. S. BEHNEY, I
DENTIST, |g|
has moved to M
330 N. SECOND STREET ■
DR. JOHN F. CULP
has moved his offices to the
Park Apartments
410 North Third Street
*■
IT PAYS TO USE STAR
INDEPENDENT WANT ADS.
/
J. Harry Stroup
Insurance Agent
1617 North Second St
Buy Next Winter's
Coal Supply Now
Coal is cheaper now. In
fact coal is at its lowest level
of the year.
The new price schedule
went into effect April 1.
Save a ton on many
kinds of Kelley Coal.
Order now and have your
bins tilled before house
cleaning.
H. M. KELLEY
1 N. Third Street
Tenth and State Streets
STEAMSHIPS
IB E RMU D A
These ChurmlaK Inland* Are NOT*
•t Their Best
S. S. "bERMUDIAN"
hold* the record—4o hours—U the
newest and only twin-screw steam
•hip sailing to Bermuda, and the
only one landing ;>usaengers at tbe
dock at Hamilton without transfer
by tender.
Hound Trip with meals « IE iml
and »tateroom berth ♦ *•' up
For lull particulars apply to A. C.
OLTKHUHIIXiIO * C 0., Agents Use*
bee t>. S. Co., 1.M., ail Itroudivajr, Ktn
Ysrk) P. LOIlMli lIIUHEL, iU3 Ma*,
ket St., Usritabui, f«. or «iy Tie*,
et A«ot.
II -