Newspaper Page Text
A Barge number of Riclh= mond’s Society Matrons were invited to !have tea with Mrs. R. B. Sannip= son on Tuesday evening. Mrs. O. C. Deans gave sl Card Party for Miss Bertha Deans. R. B. Sampson Tea. Mrs. R. B. Sampson was hostess at tea on January 7th in honor of her sister, Mrs. Cassie Nelson-Trot man and Mesdames Delia Dabney Wiley, Clara Hare-Brown and Lessie Clarke. The home was decorated with ferns. Rose color candles were used on the tea table. Misses Geor gia Sampson and Irma Williams poured tea. « Among the guests were Mesdames Cassie Nelson-Trotman, Lelia Dab ney-W'iley, Clara Hare-Brown, Lessie Clarke, Annie Gordon, Rose Walton, Leander Oliver, Marie Eason, Maggie Wells, Blanche Burke, Bessie Jordan, Antoinette Fergusson, Mat Green, Raphael Harris, Essie Ramsey, Hazel Westray, Louise Brown, Mamie Al len, Eloise Shelton, Janie Hayes, Clara Jackson, Henrietta Forrester, Mary Eggleston, Lucy Jefferson, Lil lie Perter Smith, Kate G. Colson, Annie West, Lelia Tennant, Maylon Taylor, Nannie Gilpin, Rebecca Pey ton, Armeta Willis, Alice H. Harris, Drucilla Gilpin, Gussie Thornton, J. C. Collins and Gussie Powell-Scott. Mrs. Deans Entertains. Miss Bertha Deans, of Montgom ery, W. Va., was entertained by her sister, Mrs. D. C. Deans, Jr., at a card party on Friday afternoon. The coler scheme was of green and white. Mrs. Deans’ guests included Mesdames Ross Reese-Knox, Emily Chambers, Nellie Robinson, Lucy Hayes, Omega Brown, Louise Brown, Ethel Walker, Mildred Pettis, Marie Jones, Inez Robinson, Ora Newman, Mary B. Price, Janie Scott, Mattie Hayes, Mamie White, Lucretia Jor dan, Rosa Galvin, Mattie Green. Ruth Tinsley, Louvenia Banks, Lelia Wiley, Cassie Trotman, Lelia Ten nant, and Misses Beatrice Nelson and Ida Booker. The guest prize was given Miss Bertha Deans; Mrs. Lucreatia Jordan won the first prize, and Mrs. Lelia Wiley received the booby. FntrrtJMB* a* -"v -***»• Aiid mj. . j. 4 T,',b*r1 o' 01 >b«U lea .w.s ou ounday M»noe L. Briggs, of New York, N. i.; Helen Hudson, of Flint, Mich., and Dr. and Mrs. E. S. Roane, Dr. and Mrs. G. A. Galvin, Miss Nellie Barrett, William Brockington and Harry Swann. H«iten at Party. Mrs. Lelia A. Wynn, of 211 East Baker Street, entertained a few friends last week at a party in honor of Mrs. Lena Williams, of Mt. Kisco, N. Y. Mrs. Williams was the guest of Mrs. John Flemming, of North Fifth Street. Ho*t«n to Ritsio WTmt Club. MIbb Eunice Cunningham, of De catuf Street, was hostess to the Ritaie Whist Club on January 3rd. •Her guests included the members of the club and Misses Sarah Lewis and Ethel Jones. Entertain* CJab. On January 7th Miss Estelle D. Ward gave a whist party at her resi dence on North Eighth Street. The color scheme was pink and white. Pink roses and white carnations were arranged in the small vases and in the larger branches of pine. Her guests included the members of the Tuesday Evening 500 Club. They were Meedames Fannie Bradford, Wilhemina Anderson, Mattie Paige, Juanita Peterson, who won the first priap; Carrie Mitchell, Peachy Poin dexter, who was giwu the booby, and MisB Susie Jenkins. Other guests were Mesdames Jew ette Greer, Ethel Drummond, Bessie Jackson, Eunice Foster, Alice Bow ser, Lelia Jackson, winner of the g*best prize; Essie Ramsey, Hattie ■ Mallory, J. B. Earley, Nellie Robin ' son, Elenora Ward, and Misses Ber 1 tha Thornton, Elsie Graves, Ruth \ Dean, Ethel Ransome, Ida Frye, Roy I Howard and Gertrude Chambers. Club Meets. The Treble Clef and Book Lovers Club meet on Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. D. C. Deans, J ., of North Sixth Street. The members of this club are Mesdames J. B. Simpson, W. H. Hughes, Mrs. Allen, Mrs. Roper, Mrs. R. W. Lo gan and Mrs. James T. Carter. The Sun Kiss Yo-Yo Club enter tained its friends at a New Year’s ! Eve social at the home of its treas | urer, Mrs. Josephine Robinson, 700 Denny Street. The affair was very gala and the happy-go-lucky spirit prevailed until 1 ah-hem. The club ! has made remarkable progress un der the presidency of Mrs. Irene Burroughs, devoting its time to lit erary. art and social activities. Other officfers of the club include Mrs. Anna Deane, vice-president; Miss Maggie Jones, secretary; Mrs. I Louise Baker, assistant secretary, and Mrs. Grace Hill, chaplain. I Fulton’s most popular younger set was represented at the club’s affair. ’ Among those present were Messrs. Dorsey E. Lewis, Luther Burroughs,! i Ernest Craddock, Miss Morice John son, Mr. Oscar Morris, Mr. Louis H. Taylor, Jr., Miss Edna Cross, Mr. j George Booker, Mr. and Mrs. David L. Foster, Mr. and Mrs. Benj. Sloan, Mr. Robert Friend, Mrs. Lily Roy ster, Mr. and Mrs. Eldridge Townes, 1 Miss Edith James, Miss Evelyn Has sell, Mr. Augustus Gresham, Mr. Au brey P. Robinson and Mr. Edward Hill. I Visits Durham. Thomas Leo Walker, of Church Hill, spent the Yuletide in Durham, N. C., attending the conclave of the Kappa Alpha Ps? Fraternity. i J Visited Here. Mrs. Irma Williams, of New York, was the week-end guest of Mrs. J. B. Willis, of West Duval Street. Misses Ercelle and Louise Byrd, of Central Point, Va., were the guests of Mrs. Ruth Meade, of North Sixth Street. 1 Mrs. Bessie Sampson Clark, of Jersey City, is in the city, the guest of her «.unt, Mrs. E. C. Eldridge, 722 North Fourth Street. Return* Here. Mrs. James Shields, a student at Virginia Union University, has re turned after ndin^ the past week Ut Tv^nu ^fv, r? C. » . Returns Gloucester. » Miss Alma Clayton, of Wood Street, has returned after spending the past week here visiting her par ents. Returns to Laurinburg. Miss Dorothy L. Wells has return-; ed to Laurinburg, N. C., after having spent a brief time here with her par ents, Mr. and MJrs. C. H. Wells, of ■ North Fifth Street. Visited Here. William H. Jones, of Coatsville, Pa., spent the week-end here. Mr.1 Jones waa formerly of Lynchburg, I Va. ! Mrs. Regina Downes, of Atlantic City, accompanied by her daughter, Miss May Downes, were the guests of Mrs. Mary Graves, of 508 West Leigh Street, over the Yuletide sea-‘ son. Mrs. Downes left Wednesday for Atlantic City. Her daughter is remaining indefinitely. Returns to Michigan. Grant Reynolds and W. Lawrence Colden, who visited Norfolk during the holiday season, witnessed the Union-Seminary basketball game here Friday. They have returned to resume their studies in Michigan, j Visited Here. Clem Wortham and Van Buren Luke, who are students at Lincoln University, spent a few days here. Visited Dr. and Mrs. W. J. Pettis. Guon Tate, who is a student at the Wicker School of Fine Arts in Detroit, spent a few days here as. the guest of his brother and sister,! I Dr. and Mrs. W. J. Pettis, of East* Miss Rose StmMly Polka Dot Diress M5§§ Marjorie Sirens Clay Street. Returns to Faison, N. C. Miss Rosebud Cooper left Sunday for Faison, N. C., after spending the past week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Cooper, of North Fourth Street. Returns to North Carolina. Wesley Carter and Joseph Pervall have returned to North Carolina. Visiting Here. Mrs. Lelia Wiley is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Dab* ney, of North First Street. Mrs. Cassie Nelson-Trotman, of Newark, N. J., is the guest of her sister, Mrs. R. B. Sampson, of 803 North Fourth Street. Mrs. E. C. Elridge, of North Fourth Street, has as her guest her sister, Mrs. Lessie Clarke, of Jersey City, N. J. Mrs. Caesar Jones, of Philadelphia, is the guest of her mother, Mrs. Georgia Freedland, of Chamberlayne Avenue. Mrs. Jones was formerly Miss Mamie Freedland, of this city. Mrs. Clara Hare-Brown, of Balti more, Md., is spending sometime here as the guest of Mrs. Annie Gordo.1, of East Leigh Street. Returns to North Carolina. Miss Mildred Wilkins, of Monrc \ N. C., spent last week here as t. 2 guest of Miss Thelma Winston, <. : Church Hill. Miss Wilkins is fo. raerly of this city and Petersburg, Va. Returns to School. i Raymond E. Clarke, of the Un:-' versity of Pittsburg, and Arthur Gardner, who is matriculating «t Howard University in the school physical education, left Richmc.... F - ’ey sfte-noon for school. Miss Inti; Meal, daughter of K.r. Henry Neal, and a teacher in the schools of Buckingham county, vis ited here during the holidays. Mr. Berry L. Christian, of Eattc n, N. J., spent a few days here visit::.? friends. He had been to Petersbu: g,; Va., to enter his daughter, Miss An toinette Christian, in the State Col lege. PERSONAL INTELLIGENCE Dramatic Soprano. Marguerite Avery* dramatic so prano, will appear in a recital r.: Second Baptist Church on Thursday, January 23rd, at 8:16 o’clock P. 1<* Tickets 26, 36 and 60 cents. Visit* Pittsburgh. Miss Ethel Ramsey Harris, who is doing graduate work in sociology at Western Reserve University, Cleve land, Ohio, spent the Yuletide sea son in Pittsburgh, Pa., attending the convention of the Delta Theta Sig ma Sorority. Miss Harris was the house guest of Miss Theresa Moon. Improving. Miss Elizabeth A. Cook is improv ing. She is now with her aunt, Mrs. Scott, of 312 East Leigh Street. Sick. Mrs. Maria Jackson, of 626 North Fifth Street. Mrs. Edith Hairston, of West Mar shall Street. Miss M. Sydney Mayo, of 203 West Clay Street. j> Miss Faith Elizabeth Morris, of North Fifth Street, is out. Mr. Henry Neal is out and at his post of duty with A. D. Price, Jr., after four weeks’ illness at his resi dence, 605 North Second Street. Mrs. Elnora Jones is quite sick at her residence, 108 East Leigh Street. Mrs. Charles S. Morris, of 724 North Fifth Street, was painfully injured in an automobile accident recently. Mrs. Morris wa3 return ing to Richmond from New York. Mrs. A. Hudson Lewis has return ed to her home in Mt. Vernon, Ohio, after spending the Yuletide season at the home of her son and daugh ter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. James I. Hudson, of North Fifth Street. A New Tune* Ry Albert 7 : Reid wifiom n ' 6V. ) I ■v,o uevis, CROP ^ MARKETING PROGRAM Lv 7V< actual iEnttmi (jvlOMI! (lay, g** r-.tn the Patent Office in War' ‘ .g'or. and gg look at the applications that have been made Lr patents on perpetual-motion machines. You will see some very ingenious devices. For instance, a machine to be run by the pov. c" r' gravity —iron balls dropping down a chute and turning a .• heel. The inventor of that machine provided for everything. He even added a brake to stop the machine, in c.n. it should run so fast as to become unmanageable. He forgot only one thing—that it requires jur' as much energy to lift the balls up against gravity as th-y develop Ly falling down. > In England, bet^veer 1617 and 1903, more than v\.. Hundred separate applications for patents were mucE q:. ^ -petual motion machines. They stand—this unending procession—rr r — yiificent monument to the unchangeableness of human or‘* A testimony to man’s unquenchable bel.-.t vntt s-mehow, somewhere, it is possible in this world to get sc.-.t-uxing for nothing. Every man who goes downtown tc bu.unc s i * the morn ing should pass a perpetual-motion machine :u.J . j reminded of its lesson. There is one great law that runs through all life. Many men have discovered it; Emerson named it the Law of Com pensatiou. Everywhere d;at law is operative. In pky.ivi, action and reaction are equal. In electricity, if the nor.;! o. a mag* net attracts, the south end repels. When I started in business I tired 1o ho some1.' ’ .it ’worried by the good fortune of the wicked. T saw men \»..o worked one naif as hard as I and were paid twice as much money. I saw other men lift themselves into the good graces of the boss on the golden wings of golf and funny stories. But I have seen the Law of Compensation get in too much deadly work ever to concern myself any more about anybody else's success. I have ser"! rr -l fellows who thought they were perfectly secure bec-u c .hey .'died the boss by his first name, be fi~ed by the r*!nic boss. v. ,.o called them by their first name when he d; ’ And he1, e r-m men grew very rich—and I km’ that t! ere arc u.-my \:uy> in which the Law of Compensa.iua can Wv.;k when a man nab the ambition to become very rich. It can make him oay in health. It can turn his Lome into a counting-room. It can make iiis children snobs and hypo crites. It can destroy In’s joy in simple things. Another gentleman discovered the Law C •* " w4’on even before Kmerson. He stated it in th"? b • Be -1 reived: G^d is not necked: far v.....j a man sov.. X that shall he also re«p. ' Clearance S r le Pianos, Plajer-Pi os, Radios Small Weekly Payments1 Here are Four Best Bargains: SnAW PLAYER $185 Pay Ji Weekly or $5 Monthly BABY GRAND $308 tJ9ed But in Good Condition | 4K Very Reasonable Terms” Good USED RADIO $59 Pay $i Weekly or $5 Monthly Nice Upright Piano f98 Pay $4 Monthly. srmmmTT'. rcKWWf: * * x Jas. Cowan Co. Inc. 18 W. BROAD 8TRFE T RICHMOND VIRGINIA. ir* ^ <r r r •—«—r • * & & » © - © & > • • » ^ ® • < ; men and women desiring employment • in Philadelphia; New York* Pittsburgh or * Home Work and Business Opportunities NATIONAL ENTERPRISING SCHOOL Address Post Office Box 1697 Richmond, Va, 'tWKN DINTY * * \ iSLjj < l i i- /?■ r4 •* S5C3- A •- A;.'* UKt * Cow -HA* \_.v 3^ ■• o i !. Qr uw*».4 : ’i ,*• I k » PiNKy PWKY AIA16CE5/ . ^ Sue c -lATE'I L. -i' lEa &K_ATE.3 rv ' : rjNEvy WhTEETO fJO'. ^ChE? j :--N SHE CRiEP c*=T 'EM P'V " HE BR- •