Richmond Palladium (Daily), 1 March 1906 — Page 2
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TinS UOMTIITO PALLADtJM THTJESDAY. 1IAHCH 1. 1903:.I
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THEATRE O. 8. rfUA 1A1T, M" "nd Slanafler. Matinee daily '3 p. mi -JSvenings 8:15 , p. m. , . .WEEK OF FEBRUARY 26. A UIS3 GRAYCE MILLER. -Overture. 3 j .! ;: I V . B. OTTO WEAVER. , iITahd Balancer. ; 0 BRYANT, h SA BlackfaceACbmed fetch Artists. D. THE L' Corned E-0AL Illustrated A P.-HARRI30N In tpeirVriginal comedy, The Old Mtidtn Rube." " G.Tinf PHILOSCOPE. "Though the Matrimonial Agency,'; and "A Pleasure Trip.' -special ladies' icnd children's matinee' daily, 5 cents, except on Monday, when erth lady will be given a box of bon-bous, and on Wednesday a. handsome sonvenir, , Candy to children on Saturday matinee. " nn m Ulr. C JEMEKJEKOlIE AT THE THURSDAY EVE1IIIIG I A JCVCECIVIITH s FROI.7 ENGLAND L Joromo has- mo do -oil England laugh. Now he Is Invading America. V'H6 needs no introduction v .... 1 r Who has not road "IDLE THOUGHTS! OF AN IDLE FELLOW"? ," Li Plat open Wednesday morning at thevWestcott Pharmacy. ' - t .-V . ff.'V . ' TX PboltlVO r . w t JsaufeUy 1 Gives tlle It cleanses, Steals away vo Tlead quid stores the FEVER Taste and Sfllelb -Full size 50ct.. at Drat? gists or by mail ; Trial Size 10 cts. by mail. . Ely Brothers, 50 "Warren Street. It ew York. ; Dsink RioTd A Export Bear. It looks good, it taste good and it is good. - ' - ' " -r : Call up the . brewery and order ft OftSe aont to your. home. ' ' ' A Bear like Richmond Export Beer Sa refreshing and delicious, f THE fJIIICK BREVIIIG 00. f.-VjNcw Phone 4a A hpalty raaft is a cto in hia own Tt; a(abeaJthy xaaa is a,nftepP7 'fftn flurdpok Iood ; EHttra bmilda .np . aoond hel(i-r:eop , you Palladium want ad pay.
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s 9 f 1 MADELEINE LUCETTE RYLEY,
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i As Madeleine Lucette. Mrs. Ryley began her career as an actress.' Having the literary gift, she drifted Into play writing, at which she has been a star, of . the first magnitude. "Mice and Men.' "Christopher, Jr.." "The American Cltt sen" and "A Coat of Many Colors" are among her best known productions. Mrs. Ryley started her career In America, but now lives in London: She la very domestic and Is fond of bicycling.
GEfJNETT BACK TO VAUDEVILLE MANAGER SWISHER.- ARRANGING FOR A GOOD BILL FOR NEXT WEEK. OTHER THINGS ARE COMING Show Managers -Say Richmond One of the Best Towns in the Middle West. Is Patrons of the Gennett will be pre- i
sented with an excellent ; vaudeville ' talents. One may say talents adbill for next week, as a change from visedly, for indeed Mr. Van der the - periodical perfomances which Stucken is a most versatile man a.
have occupied the attention of Man-
ager Swisher for the past two weeks, directs with matchless skill the singVaudeville is far too 1 popular an ing of choral -bodies, and is a conamusement to allow to be keDt in the summate orchestral conductor, be-
background, thinks the manager, and ;-l he has been booking engagements with several prominent artists. In the following week, commencing Monday, March 12, the minstrel troupe of Donnely and Hatfield will show here. This is said to be one of the best minstrel shows on the road and will be sure to please the patrons.' The 1 ' big" production of the week will be Cyril Scott in "The Prince Chap." This is a comic opera just completing its New York engagement and it starts this week on a tour of the, larger cities. Richmond has been included in the list and will get a chance to see ' Scott, who made "Floradora" famous, two or three i jcaio cavr On St. Patrick's Day March 17, the old time favorite,' "A Hot Old Time,. " will be presented. ' This is (QBOof the sledge hammer varieties of Jfiheatneal productions; but has ' al ways drawn large crowds, in this city. The past two weeks have bewn profitable "ones "for -both' "Manager Swisher and the theatre-iaroers. "Littie Johhn Jones" and "Babes in Toyland" have: both played to packed houses and the minor Trodnetions drew well. A hisrh cla?s of shows is beginning to' visit Richmond and 1 are Deing wen received. : Managers of productions that Kivcshown hero this winteT rn".mnfn Richmond the best sho 'om-" itc size in the middle wect. The Popularity of VaderJle. - There - is no indication popularity of vandevil! wane and night after ?v of large Size witness -sented at the New Ph1' striking example of h -demand v is ' for amTf -if provided witb sotm:.' worth while, the peov'. tv Ve r1.- - r. -
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'7 J SUCCESSFUL WOWAN PLAYtheir money to see it. This , week's program at the New Phillips is very ! pleasing and appreciation of this fact is being demonstrated. Bryant and ' Saville continue to create no end of merriment in their blackface comedy role, in which line they would be hard to exeel. The Lynns and Harrison Brothers also have pleasing comedy offerings, and with Otto Weaver, hand balancer, the illustrated songs and motion pictures certainly furnish ten cents worth of entertainment for the most exacting. Matinee attendance this week has been quite good. Since the excellence of an orchestra depends to a great extent upon the conductor, the personality of Mr. Frank Van der Stucken, the eminent conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, which will give a concert in the Coliseum at Richmond on the night of March 13, will be of interest to the many who are planning to attend. Mr..Van der Stucken is a man yet in the early prime of life, and besides being a man of fire and ambition, is bursting full of musical musician, scholar and litterateur. ie 1 1 sides being a composer of the highest rank. Mr. Van der Stucken has one of the most distinct and attractive personalities in American musical life. As a drill master he is a won derful disciplinarian; he puts his whole soul into the rehearsal and rightly expects every man in his orchestra to do the same. And he who dotes on slip-shod rehearsals and thinks that any kind' of a "scratch performance" is good enough for the "dear, raw American public," has no place under Mr. Van der, Stucken 's baton. Mr. Van der Stucken is par ticularly successful in interpreting the most advanced moderns, and indeed this may be said to be his forte. In interpreting the works of Franz Liszt, Mr. Van der Stucken seems to shine with over-powering glory, and in fact, those who have not heard him do the Rhapsodies or the Symphonic Poems of Liszt do not realize what is in them. The chief trait 'of ; Mf Van der StueVen's interpretation of '."Sic for. the orchestra, is, passion nd vivacity. nonce 'be is equaly good in the worls of the Belgian and y' French composers T"Or or jo?TAT IS DEAD. tc-7i, T I'ebrnary 28. he-!! i"!"y''?.' Vere of the Bityrj. -.Jordan, cf Ft. Scott, "ITS 1 Kl' Mr." Jotda:. rnwrly lived in f ii - jrtv tiftTT-Miss Marv : K' .h-ghtti. .0? Lhe late.Wil I .. ( o:a . Arvinsi Revr;cU3, - uL'v t-rs, wife of E. B. Rayi.oids, die! Satur?)ay niirht ws s!i da'Jr'r ' of the " Rev, '"T-':---'-; f'.---"..nd.l2,- ar:.! Ie.v-s a"-hus- - r - - ' - - r ' t.rnl ' Clvde Cnre8 itch Oint
Tk Word n Man I'mc anil th WorJ. He SlieUt Euiyloy. Haw mauy vrords are p-s.sibIe?'Start-ing from tbe four an J r.rour.v al;ih:i-
Detic sounds, i4lwvcviiv.-u.i.itcj comblhations at Vo:X-' i,7t1.7nCw.733,3G).O0O. Lut niany QftUve.coy- ,. nations wor.Id bo iU!i)roii5u:R-i?r.L'le ovoi. In Welsh. Iu Chinese every ny liable ( a separate wprtl." Does nian"sstbc-k of words rov? r!: b er or poorer witb time? M. lioncx):: foresees an ever higher hiteectttalxlc' tiny- for the r::ce iu the future. --"Out fathers." he s:.ys. ''did not kuow. tli thousaudtb part, of uur vocabulary which is very copious." Ccrti niy tLNew Dictionary is a much larger v.-orl , than Johnson's, and we doubt rot t:ia: primitive man talked les.s tliun an .l P. does, though even he had his pal;; ' vers and congresses. But If any on: were to take down the talk of an aver age modern undergraduate or society" girl we doubt if it would be found to contain more than 2Z0 vocables, where an educated Elizabethan or Caroline would have employed several thousand, Nothing is more striking In the old prose writers than the rich variety and Imaginative picturesqueness of their language. Not only are we lacking In concrete Imagination and ashamed to go afield out of the beaten track of speech, but phrases which were "when first devised forcible and strong have through long currency lost their edgey Three-fourths of the expressions we use have ceased to be effective metaphor and become conventional and lifeless.London Saturday. Review. f, ALCOHOL IN BREAD. Emsrfc to Gl-re Omm A bo at Four PlatM ' " oi WliUliy Year. 'Tou consume four pints' of whisky . year," said the amateur chemist. Now, don't be angry or shocked.'; I know that you're a strict teetotaler. but Just the same I know that you've absorbed that much alcohol. IIowj Well, shrply by eating bread. "It has long been known that the fer mentation of bread caused the forma tion of alcohol, but it was supposed that It passed from the dough during the process of baking. Several scien tists have proved that,, bread, when ready for eating, contains an average of .800 per cent of alcohol to the loaf. You must remember ; that In many countries strong liquors are brewed fronvbread. Kvass, the mild Russian beer, is brewed from brown bread. "Now, If you eat 400 loaves of bread evary year you must perforce have as similated twenty ounces of alcohol, which equals four pints of rye whisky. "In .ten years," concluded the ama teur chemist impressively, "you have eaten 4,000 loaves of bread, and In that number of loaves is about 200 ounces of alcohol, or the equivalent to nineteen quarts of whisky. Think of the saturnalia you have been on for the last ten years, and you never knew enough to complain of a big head in the morning." New York Press. Mri, Pepya Temper. "Being at supper my wire dm say something that caused me to oppose her in. She used the word devil, which vexed me, and, among other things, I said I would not have her to use that word, upon which she took me up most scornfully, which, before Ashwell and the rest of the world, I know not now adays how to check, as I would here tofore, for less than that would have made me strike her. So that I fear without great discretion I shall go near to lose, too, my command over her, and nothing do it more than giving her this occasion of dancing and other pleas ures," whereby her mind Is taken up from her - business . and " finds other sweets besides pleasing Of me. and so makes her that she begins not at all to take pleasure In me or study to please me as heretofore." Dia.y of Samuel Pepys. The Dosr'a Kenmel. A dog's keunel should . always be placed facing south, so that the animal may have the light and heat, of the sun at all seasons of the year. Without plenty of sunlight a dog will not keep in health. Straw or pine shavings form the best bedding for-a dog's kennel and are much superior to hay or sawdust, which is often used. Great care should be taken to see that the bedding Is always dry and that It Is chanced at least once a 'week. In the hot wawtfcer bedding is not required at all, the dog preferring to lie on the uncovered floor of his kenneL Home Chat -. . : is ., .IfothJMK L.Ike Tmet. , A correspondent . sends an anecdote of a man In a midland town.' A friend of his was lying ill, and he' went to aee him to cheer him up. "Yon look uncom mon bad, Joe," he said. 'Tea,? aald the aufferer. "Made you will." fctqoired the consoler, "because I aaoald ? If were Tour" There- was an awkward pause, during which the visitor left. A moment la tar he returned. .1 say, Joe, he observed, yocra Is awkward stairs to get a coQa down. Goodby, Joe, goodby." London Globe. A Perfect Ladr. "Raise your chin Just a little," said the photographer. - . "This Is as high as I choose to raise It" was. the austere response of Mrs. Vick-Senn. 'If the effect la not t3 your liking you can lower your macbineVj Chicago Tribune rr - ifrfce'-Flrat TMar.- ' ? Betty-BolIand Is engaged? Well rm sorry? for r tho man. tSh-doesm't know the first ttmg about keeping house. Bessie Oh, yes. she does. Bet tyI'd like to know what BeaslewThe first thing is to get a man to keep house for.
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,. URl JAMES BROWN There are- two 'Mrs.; Jame Brown
.thot Mr. Potter is a polygamULt The forme Mrs. Potter Is the famous actress and has been divorced., Mrs, Potter the second waa formerly Miss May Handy df Bichmmd. . It was recently reported in the papers that Mrs. Potter the
actress had offered to relinquish the stage for $230,000. THREE HUNDRED CONVERTED. New Castle, Ind., Feb. 2. Three hundred i conversions is the fruit of he big revival service which has been in: progress- at the Methodist chpxch herb, during te last two weeks. Evangelist C. Fenwick Reed's ser mons have been productive of much good. In a single evening service 100' persons professed religion.,; Mr Reed will close his meetings tonight, when he -will deliver a special lecture. His main , topics have, been . dancing and dishonesty, ' which he bitterly condemns. NEW CHURCH AT AMBOY. Peru. Ind., Feb. 23. The -Metho-
dists at Amboy, fouteeri miles south T r , ' , , of Peru, dedicated their new $15,000 ' Lafaye"6' Ind" TTTh church Sundav free of debt. Thef.re T ?Z i2 " 0. Rev. Chesteen W. Smith of the Meth-MQhe nr0 Ied hst of the Indiana State odist church of Peru, delivered the ; S5fIdie Hme. For several years aa:; c;. M after the home was instituted tne
held in the morning, afJSoon And last nhi. Andiifllt't'Pr.lflrplv U tended KindYpq HawAJwirjEcia AN AUTOMATIC BASEBALL
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POTTER THE SECOND. Potters, although It most not be Imagined use of the name she is known by on the SUCCESSFUL BAPTIST REVIVAL Campbellsburg, Ind., Feb.; 28. One of the , largest revivals . ever known in this place has just been , closed by Evangelist R. R.; Bulgin, of Terra Haute.; Last Friday, twenty-one persons were baptized in the presence of 800 people in eleven minutes. In all, fifty-one persons were added to the church, -forty-three being by bapWOMTITI OTTTNTnLrRT!!?. f wr. tTF.tr me ? Pominatea, : but f m the list nxcuo, v Vwu yca, ion women nave steadily increased in numbers, till now they outnumber the impression1 that , within a few years impression tha within a few years fully five hundred .women will be sheltered within its walls. : PITCHER HAS BEEN INVENTED. ttmirrreux 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 Z and Afternoon. Saturday Evedng. and Sat; morning
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