Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 31, Number 363, 27 February 1907 — Page 5

Page Five. BIG ATTENDANCE FROM THIS Cin Local Teachers Will Go to c-nuth Bend for Association Meeting in April. MOTHERHOOD limey er

The Richmond Palladium, Wednesday, February 27, 1907.

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Social and Personal Mention

At the meeting of the Tuesday club last evening, at the Morrisson-Reeves library, Prof. Will Earhart read an exceedingly Interesting and meritorious paper on "The Art of Beethoven." The paper was not a biographical sketch, but told of the meaning of the various works of the great composer. Following the paper, a spirited discussion was entered into by various members Miss Laura Gaston and Mrs. Ada It. Uernhardt, being the leaders. A meeting of the flower committee Dt the Aftermath Literary society, was held last evening '-with the chairman of the committee, Mrs. Harry Dalbey. The nature of the work for next year, the kinds of flowers which will be distributed, to the school children, and various other matters of business came up for consideration. It was decided to hold an exhibit next fall, as was held last year. Miss Katherine Houser entertained a number of littlo folks, who are members of a club, at her home on North D street last evening. Games aud music were provided for the amusement of the guests and a luncheon was served. The club meets every to weeks. 4. 4. A very pleasant meeting of the Spring Grove Sewing Circle was held yesterday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Leander "Woodard In Spring Grove. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. Isaac Woodard. Social pleasantries and needlework made the afternoon pass in an enjoyable manner. A luncheon was served. The next meeting will be In two weeks. tomorrow afternoon Mrs. Charles Shideler will entertain the Cotorie Thimble club at her home 0:1 South Twelfth street. The hostess will give a reading, while the other members will be occupied with needlework. Mrs. Harry Chase will be nostess for a meeting of the Wednesday Card club this afternoon at her homo on North A street. Euchre will played at three tables and a luncheon will be served, adding to the enjoyment of the occasion. the Modern Prisc'.lla Club will hold Its regular meeting this afte.-n;cn. the hostess being Mrs. William Wickett, a1, her home-In Fairview. The following interesting program will be given at the meeting of the A thenaea Literary society Friday afternoon, for which Mrs. Samuel Dickinson will be hostess at her home on Kast Main street: Irrigation the Re

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These are some of the many

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demption of the Desert" Mrs. Olive Allison; "The Government Dam in Idaho" Mrs. E. B. McDivitt; "Has the New England Farmer kept Pace with His Western Brother?" Mrs. Nancy Moorman. Part V of the serial story will be read by Mrs. Eliza Wilson. Mrs. Clark D. Kanouse will entertain the West Side Dozen ciub tomorrow afternoon at her home on Kirsey street. The members will spend tho afternoon socially and with needlework. A luncheon is .ilway a pleasant feature at these meetings. 4 4. 4 Mrs. Almh Isenhowr will entertain the members of the Banner Social club this afternoon at her home on North Second street. The meeting will be as usual, with needlework and a luncheon as enjoyable features, The election of officers will take place at the annual meeting oT the Ladles Aid society Friday afternoon at the First Presbyterian church. The annual reports will also be given and it is hoped there will be a full attendance. 1 4 4 A meeting of the Mary F. Thomas j W. C. T. U. was held yesterday after-1 noon with the president, Mrs. Martha ' Little on North Eighth street. Only j the. regular business was transacted. I The next meeting will be in two weeks. 1 4 4 4 Cards have been received by a number of Richmond people announcing the engagement of Mr. Kyde Wilson and Miss Fredicka Faulkner, of Connersville. The wedding will take place during the early summer at the home of Miss Faulkner in Conners ville. ' The Mother's league of the First district will hold a general meeting on Thursday evening, February 2S, at 7:30 in Finley school hall. There will be addresses given by Mr. Chas. Brown and others and special music will be an enjoyable feature. 4- 4- 4 This evening at eight thirty o'clock the wedding of Miss Alberta, Maty Mahan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Pearson, of Indianapolis, and Mr. Alcheas P. Walker of Rushville, will take place at the First Baptist church, at Indianapolis. Miss Mahan is well known to Richmond people and among the outof-town guests at the wedding will be Mrs. Ira Swishar of this city. 4A hot biscuit supper will be given ! this evening at the Second Presbyterian church, the menu, also I

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bargains at. including beef loaf, baked beans, salad, escalloped potatoes, gelatine and cake. In the evening Dr. Charles S. Bond will deliver a lecture on "Tuberculosis," it being the regular meeting of the Anti-Tuberculosis Society. The lecture will be illustrated with stereopticon views and will be free.' The public is cordially invited to attend and the residents of the east end of the city are especially Invited. 4 4 The Brotherhood of St. Paul of First M. E. church will hold an open meeting this evening at the church and all members of the other Brotherhoods of the city are invited to be present. Rev. Wade will deliver an address on the question of child libor in the factories and mills of the country. The address will be illustrated by stereoptlcon views collected from various parts of the United States. Secretary Brown of the Y. M. C. A. will also speak on his experience in factories. 4, 4. 4, A social was given Monday evening by the Ladies Aid society of Chester, the guests including the members and their families. Refreshments were served and a social time made the evening pass pleasantly. 4. 4. 4. A meeting of the History Club will be held this afternoon at the Morrison-Reeves library at 2:30 o'clock. The papers wil be given by Mrs. Jobn Miller and Miss Ada Hadley, who will select their own subjects. 4 4" Mrs. J. M. Knodle and Mrs. Samuel Gaar were the readers for the meeting of the Magazine club yesterday afternoon, the hostes3 being Mrs. Harry Land, at her home on North Thirteenth street. Magazine articles touching on subjects of general Inter est were read. Guests of the club were Mrs. Sidney Caldwalader of Philadelphia, with Mrs. Harrington Barnes and Mrs. Oliver Gaar. Next j Monday Mrs. W. 11. Romey will be the hostess, at her home on Soutlx Twelfth street. Mrs. J. H. Kinsey will be the reader. 4 4"The Fugue and Canon" was the subject studied at the meeting of the Musical Study club yesterday morning, held in the club rooms at the corner of Tenth and Main streets. The program was in charge of Mrs. C. B. Hunt, which fact alone was enough to Insure the members that it would be both exceedingly interesting and instructive. Mrs. Hunt read a paper on "The Fugue anil Canon," giving il-

lUMiawuns a? sue reaa me paper, tier j nere one tram enspatcner is emdescription of the two phases of mus- ployed in the daytime only twelve ic showed that she was fully in touch J hours is the maximum. with her subject and familiar with It I in every way, and it showed also that i Use artificial gas tor ITgat and heat, she had , given much care, study and 10-tf

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Richmond research to it. The paper dealt principally with the Fugue. The .first number on the program was a piano quartet, given by the following: Mrs. Hunt, Mis3 Ruth Peltz, Miss Marguerite Hasemeier and Miss Elvira Vorhees. Following this Miss Anna Ross gave two illustrations of the Canon on the piano. The third number was a vocal quartet, composed of Mrs. Will Earhart, Mrs. Fred Bartel, Mrs. F. W. Krueger and Mrs. Otto Krone. A sextette composed of the four named above with Mrs. Charles S. Neal and Mrs. Elmer A. Gorman also rendered a very pleasing number. Other illustrations of the Fugue movement were two piano numbers given by Miss Virginia Clements. The program ended with a duet given by Mrs. Hunt and Miss Ross, which was a fitting climax to the program, it being one of the finest piano duets ever heard by the members of the club. In two weeks the club will meet again and the program will consist of a study of the Scandinavian school, with Miss Ross and Mrs. Jesse S. Reeves In charge of the program. It was decided this morning that a con- i cert would be given by the club for ; the beneat 01 Edward McDowell, a well known composer, who has lost his mind. Arrangements have not been perfected, however. 4. 4. 4. Mrs. Anna Heitbrink will be the hostess for a meeting of the Hanpy Hour circle this afternoon at her home on North Twentieth street. As is customary the members will spend the afternoon with needlework, followed by a luncheon. 4. 4. 4. A pleasant social event of yesterday was a ninformal thimble party, which was given by Mrs. Henry C. Heiger, at her home on South Fifteenth street, in boaor of Miss Ida Haner, of Indianapolis. The guests ineluded the members of a former Sun- , day school class of Mrs. HIeger's of j St. Paul s Lutheran church, of which Miss Haner was a member. A contest was held, for which a prize was awarded and a luncheon In two courses was served. The guests included Mrs. Jno. Marshall. Mrs. Anna Bennett. Mrs. Walter Hawekctte, Mrs. John Knott, Mrs. Edward Hasemeier, Mrs. Ida Kemper and Miss Elizabeth Drifmeyer. Relief for Operators. Jefferson City. Mo., Feb. 26 Tha Senate passed the Bradley bill providing for an eight-hour day for telegraphers who handle train orders.

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NORTHERN INDIANA CITY GETS HONOR OF ENTERTAINING PEDAGOGUES FOR THE THIRD TIME. Richmond teachers have now begun to look forward to the annual meeting of the Northern Indiana Teachers Association, to which they belong, at South Bend. Practically all the lo cal teachers and many of the other . teachers in Wayne county will attend. A dispatch from South Bend says of the meeting: South Bend will take on several de grees of culture and refinement dur ing the first week in April, when about 4,000 teachers come to this city to attend the silver jubilee or the Northern Indiana Teachers Associa I tion. This organization includes the teachers of Indianapolis and all in the , State north of the capital. The dates are April 4, 5 aud 6. The several sectional meetings, of which there are eight, will.be held in the Auditorium, the high school and nearby churches r rlday afternoon, : April 5. The sessions of the general association will be held in the Auditorium, while the Auditorium Annex will be used for the enrollment and the assignment of teachers, and as a meeting and resting place for members of the association. The Oliver .Hotel will be the headquarters of the convention. Weil-Known Educators to Lecture. Prof. George H. Vincent, of the University of Chicago, will lecture Thursday evening, April 14. Superintendent J. M. Greenwood, of Kansas City, Mo., and Prof. W. II. Mace, of Syracuse University, Syracuse, N. Y.. will appear before the convention Friday morning, April 5. The Rev. Hugh Black, of Edinburgh, Scotland, who is on a lecture tour in this country, will be the speaker Friday evening, April 5. Prof. C. F. Hodge, of Clark University, Worcester, Mass., will address the convention Saturday morning, April 6., Superintendent Greenwood and Professor Hodge and Maco will deliver addresses before the high school grade, country and village BChool sections, respectively, on Friday afternoon. Ample entertainment will be provided for all who attend the meeting. Arrangements are being made for visits to the various big manufacturing establishments In South Bend. Automobile rides and other pleasures will be arranged for. The merchants will have chairs and rest rooms for the :. visitors and the University of Notre ! Dame and St Mary's Academy, two of the largest Catholic institutions of learning in the country, will throw open their doors to the visitors. Hotel accommodations will not exceed $2 a day, American plan, where two or more occupy the samo room. . In private homes board and lodging will be $1 a day; lodging and breakfast 75 cents, or lodging alone 50 cents a day. The South Bend public schools will be in session Thursday, April 4, so as to allow the visitors to inspect the methods employed. Tha committee on entertainment will be ready to make assignments after March 17. Third Visit to South Bend. The coming convention will make the third visit of the teachers of the association to South Bend within a few years. The finest homes in South Bend will be thrown open for the entertainment of those of the visitors who can not receive accommodations at the local hotels. Fully 2.000 teachers will be housed in private families. The teaching force of this city recently gave liberally to assist lrefraying the expenses of the convention. The South Bend Business Men's Association, which asked for the 1007 meeting, is taking a deep interest in the convention and is raising a fund to assist In defraying the expenses of the gathering. If there is a surplus in the treasury at the close of the convention, it will be turned over to the different schools to be used in buying additional pictures for the various rooms or beautifying them In other ways. SUCCESSFUL REVIVAL ' IS BROUGHT TO CLOSE Hagerstown. Ind., Feb. 26. The protracted meeting which has been going on for two weeks at the Christian church, came to a close Sunday night after a very successful and inspiring session. A number of persona professed conversion and several joined church. This was a union meeting in which the Presbyterian and Christian churches joined, with Rev. McQueen, a Presbyterian evangelist, ia charge. Sunday night Rev. Gard, a noted minister in the Disciples church, was present and most eloquently and forcibly exhorted the people to turn from sin. His remarks made a deey impression on the audience, which had already been aroused by the appeals of Rev. McQueen. After the close of the service there : wss aa informal leave latiasr of tho s evangelist, who has won for himself a high place in the esteem of the Hagersiewn people. - I Rev. McQueen goes from her? to his : home at Versailles, Ind., and later will j hold a revival at Lawrenceburg, Ind. j Senator Kirkman Returns, j The Improved condition cf Mrs. Roscoe E. Kirkman. who ha? besa 111 for several days, has permitted the return to Indianapolis cf Senator Kirkman to resnme his work in the state senate. - ,

MRS. DANIEL Unquestionably preparation for healthy maternity is accomplished by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound more successfully than by any other medicine, because It gives tone and strength to the entire feminine organum and renders it perfectly normal. A woman in good physical condition transmits to her children the blessings of a good constitution. Read what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound did for Mrs. Sullivan, 589 E. 7th Street, Flatbush, N Y. "vThat a blessing Lydia E. Pinkbam'n Vegetable Compound is to motherhood. I tend you a picture, of my three months' old baby and myself, and the photo shows the (splendid condition of our health. That I am so well and the baby so healthy and happy ia entirely due to your excellent remedy Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. I took it for five months before baby came and it brought me an easy confinement and kept me strong, whereas I was weak and in perfectly miserable health all the tlino when my first three children were born. ' Mrs. Geo. Walters of Woodlawn, 111., also writes: "I feel it my duty to tell of the pood Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound . has done me and to recommend it to all expec PERSONAL MENTION. .Harry Lontz has returned to Exeter Military Academy, after spending some days here, the guest of his parents. He was called home on account of the illness of his grandmother. Mrs. John M. Lontz has returned from Hagerstown. where she went on account of tho illness of Mrs. Margaret Lontzi Mr. and Mrs. J. Homer Hart have returned from a visit in Eaton. Mrs. James Larrimore of Topeka, Kan., is visiting In the city. Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Swayne are spending a few days in Chicago. Miss Nellie Cameron has returned to Hamilton, Ohio, after visiting here for several days. Mrs. Joseph Williams has returned from Muncie, where she has been the guest of friends. Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Hoeffer have returned home after visiting at Middletown, Ind. Mrs. W. H. Montgomery has returned to her home at Columbus, Ohio, after visiting here for several days. John Barlow of Eaton spent yesterday In the city. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Morrow are visiting friends in Cincinnati. Miss Anna Nicholson of Ft. Wayne is visiting In the city. J. H. Agnew, of Tipton, Ind., was in the city today, the guest of friends. P. J. Phillips, of New Castle, was In the city Monday on business. Miss Mamie Williams spent Monday with friends at Muncie. Two Cases Dismissed. Two cases were dismissed yesterday from the civil docket of tho Circuit court. They were the Ward Brothers Company of Indianaitolis, against Sheriff Linus Meredith for attaching the proierty of the William Somerville drug store of Hagerstown, which the plaintiffs In the case maintained was owned by it. The second case was The John W. Grubbs Company against the William Somerville drug store on account. ' $1.00 Br .rigs This Cabinet to Yoo Our Molto: Live and L-t Live. The Kalamazoo Kitchen Cabinat is the best on the market for the money. Direct from factory to the user for monthly payments of one dollar. Call Home phone 967 or address M. H. MULHOLLAND, 52 S. Sth St. Richmond, Intl. Price $16.00.

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tant mothers to imire a healthy ehQd and easy birth. I had lost three children and was discouragoi when a friend advised me to try Lydia K. rink)utmVcgetaMe Com ound. I did so and it not ouly kept m well and strong but I bare as healthy m child as you will find anywhere. 1 hop other disi-ouraged women mar read this letter and take Lydia E. Pinkhama Vegetable Compound and be benefited byit as I have been. " Women khould remember that for more than thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has been without rival In sustaining woman's health and -curing all those painful ailments peculiar to her sex. lta record shows that it has cured almost every form of female complaint, organic troubles, inflammation and ulceration, falling and displacement! and consequent spinal weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the feriod of child-birth and change of ife. It cures backache and all thote bearing down aensations. If there is anything about your case you do not understand write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mass., for advice. It is absolutely free. Thousands of women have done so aodL have received help. Ul The o ILitcHcn Cabinet A Pantry-Cupboard-Table Combined. The Hooslcr Cabinet Is a practical Cabinet. The articles used most frequently in preparing a meal are grouped around the work table where they can be reached with the least effort. The flour is put in at the top and every bit comes out through a sifter at the bottom none Is wasted or becomes musty by remaining in the corners. Besides there is tho dust proof sugar bin which works on the name priuciplo tho air tight splco cans. A Hoosier Cabinet saves one half the time and labor it Raves unnecessary steps reduce waste and gives you more time out of the kitchen all for little money. It Is made of solid oak the only wood that will not warp and spit in tho heat of tho kitchen. THE 'OSIER CoCTTlsiitrt, tvm, Ij BooaWr Mr(. C. Furniture - Bedding - Pictures MAIN ST. ..NEW OFFICE.. RICHMOND PRINTING GO, Haa moved ttvm Mntb and Mala to 1024 Main St. , The BEST JOB PRINTING at Reasonable Prices. DICK WARPEL Both Phones: New, 1531; Old, 412. PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY. u j sts. i Sth and North A 1 m. Evenings, 7 to 8. extraction without i ?

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