Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 96, 21 May 1908 — Page 5
xixe niCMJiu.iu paIaIaAVI-usi AD SU-TELEGKA3I, THURSDAY, MAY 21. 1903.
PAGE FIVE.
Is ITW eijohe? Hardly'-but your friend, THE GROCER, always smiles, when you smileand he knows what you want. Look very much like this:
SOCIAL To Reach the Society Editor, Call The High School orchestra will give a concert at. the High school hall this evening. Miss Ruth lVltz. piano, and Miss Carolyn Hutton, violin, will be the accompanists. Miss Ruth Harris will be the soloist. The new instruments which have been purchased by Mr. Earhart will be used for the first, time. The concert is expected to be a notable one. The program is as follows: Overture, Frolics of Cupid . .Gruenwald Orchestra. a. On the Holy Mount Dvorak T. Les Sylvains Chamlnade Miss Peltz. a. Angelus Massenet t. Capricious Woodnymphs ....Losey Orchestra. ilazur MIynarski Miss Hutton. "Waltz, The Golden Age Barnard Orchestra. a. Violets Cara Roma b. Springtide V. Becker Miss Harris. Selection, The Merry Widow. .Lehar Orchestra. Bong, Hail to the R. H. S Earhart Audience and Orchestra. J . J A very pretty whis-t party was given last evening by Mrs. William L. King in honor of Miss Katharine MoGrath tf Dayton, Ohio, who is the house guest of Mrs. Timothy Harrington. The game was played at four tables. The rooms were arranged in a charming manner with peonies and ferns. At the conclusion of the game a luncheon in several courses was served. The small tables were beautifully appointed. The guests in addition to Miss McGrath were: Mrs. John .T. Harrington, Junior, Mrs. Timothy Harrington, Mrs. James Fry, Mrs. Alexander Gordon, Mrs. Charles Morris, Mrs. Frank Highlcy. Misses Rosella and Clara L-uken, Misses Alice, Mary and Anna Harrington, Mrs. George Gay, Miss Katherine McKone, Miss May Griffin and Miss Laura Bhatz. J J The ladies of the Reid Memorial church will give a social tomorrow afternoon at the home of Mrs. George Ball, 115 North Sixth street. All the women who are members of the church are invited to attend. aS Mr. Frank Lackey who has been visiting In this city has gone to New York. Miss Ruth Miller and Mrs. Lackey spent Sunday at Culver Military academy the guest of her son Mr. Richard Lackey, who attends school at that place. J 0 The wedding of Miss Leota Wolley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Milton H. "Wolley of Williamsburg and Denver Coggeshall of Fountain City will take place June 3. J J Mrs. Wlckam Corwin is entertaining the members of the Wednesday Afternoon Bridge Whist club this afternoon at her home on North Twelfth street VMrs. Judson Rune of South Fourteenth street left yesterday for Chicago. She was in attendance at the graduating exercises of the Passavant Memorial Hospital training school for nurses, which was held this morning at the Trinity Lutheran church in Chicago. Miss Lucy North Barnett of this city wns among the graduates. She has made her home with Mrs. Rupe for several years. The following clipping from the Indianapolis News will be of local interest: Mrs. Harry Coleman Moore, formerly. Miss Mary Stubbs, observed her first at-home this afternoon at her home, 517 Sutherland avenue. Mrs. Moore was assisted by her mother, Mrs. M. C. Stubbs; by Mr. Moore's mother, Mrs. L. J. Moore; Mrs. C. E. Cottingham. Mrs. C. E. Day, Mrs. H. C. Pitman. Miss May Hair. Miss Helen The Kiblinger Motor Buggy $375.00 and upwards. , A practical, successful, economical, automobile at a small cost. Doublecylinder, air cooled, 10-12 11. P. Solid rubber tires. Will run through deep mud or sand, and will climb steep hills. Write for our Agencv Terms. W. H. KIBLINGER CO., J3ox N. 320. Auburn. Ind.
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NEWS Home Phone 1121. or Bell Phone 21 ta Stubbs and Miss Mary Anne Baker. Mr. and Mrs. Moore will leave this evening for Washington, D. C. J v The Banner Social is being entertained this afternoon by Mrs. George Ferling at her home on South Sixth street. She is being assisted in entertaining by Mesdames. Barnes, Plummer, Hugo, C. Murray and Atkinson. Mrs. J. M. Knodle of East Main street, is visiting friends in Chicago for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Cates and Mr. and Mrs. George Gates have received Invitations for the commencement at Vassar college which will be held, Tuesday. June 9. Their niece Miss Reba Stetson will be among the graduates. It is probable that they will attend the affair. j: Announcement has been made of the engagement, of Miss Clara Scharff daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Scharff to Mr. Edward Kahle. The wedding will take place Tuesday morning, June 9, at St. Andrew's church. Several social affairs will be given next week by the many friends of the Bride elect. A linen shower will be among the social festivities. .S The German club of Earlham college met. yesterday afternoon on the second floor of the library building. The program was very interesting. Mr. Byron Huff, Miss Alice North and Miss Jessie Beeler who will be graduated this year in the French and German departments read their theses. The program was so extended that the election of officers was not held yesterday. A meeting has been arranged for Friday afternoon at which time all business for the past year will ha concluded. v J The Saturday Afternoon Thimble club was entertained yesterday afternoon by Mrs. Walter Dalbey at her home, 820 Main street. The hours were spent at needlework and in social conversation. During the afternoon a luncheon was served. tjt Mr. and Mrs. John J. Harrington. Jr., acted as host and hostess for a dinner party given the early part of the week for Miss McGath. Places were arranged for six. J j Mr. and Mrs. Louis Panblair and little son, of Connersville, were the guests of Mr. Panblair's mother. Mrs. Mary Panblair and Mr. Henry Reasa. j Mrs. Matilda Hamlin of Indianapolis, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Reasa and Mrs. Mary Panblair for a few days. 1 J The members of Miss Ida Barters Sunday school class of the St. Paul's Lutheran church, were entertained last evening by Miss Mamie Bartel of South Eighth street. The hours were spent socially. A hmcneon was served. Once a month one of the members of the class is hostess for a social gathering of the members. The class has a very large membership. t' .4 , The Priscilla Needle club was entertained yesterday afternoon bv j Mrs. Frank Aiken, at her home on North Eighteenth street. About seventeen members and several guests were present. The hours were spent socially and at needlework. The hostess served a very charming two course luncheon. Mrs. Herbert Carman of irjr Ridge street, will entertain the club in two weeks at her home. , .4 Mrs. Mary Bartel led the devotional exercises yesterday at a meeting of the woman's home and foreign missionary society of the St. Paul's Lutheran church. The subject under discussion yesterday was "Philanthropic Missions." and two interesting papers? were read by Mrs. Charles Freeh and Mrs. Tetering. Mrs. Xoss gave a short account of the missionary Pchwertz. ine meeting yesterday is known by i the society as "May Memorial Day." ! After the program a social time fol-' lowed. I . . I The Daughters of the American Rev-, olution will meet Saturday afternoon with Mrs. W. W. Gaar. recent, in her! apartments at the Westtott hotel. ! This meeting will conclude the season for the club. v . ! The Martha Washington society met: yesterday afternoon with Mrs. Jacob' Bayer, at her home. -Jl South Eighth j street. The hours were spent in a so- J j cial manner and at needlework. In the dining room, where a two-course '
luncheon was served, the table was arranged in an effective manner with spring flowers. The club will meet in two weeks with Mrs. Will Lane at her home in Lebanon, Ohio. Mrs. Lane has been a member of this organization for quite a while, but recently moved from the city. It is very probable that the meeting June third will be an all-day affair. The monthly session of St. Ann's society of St. Andrew's church is being held this afternoon. The meetings are held the Thursday after the third Sunday in each month. je j Miss Hazel Thomas went to Cambridge City this morning to visit with Misses Edith Bowman and Ethel Thomas. She will be In attendance at the High school commencement which will be held tomorrow morning. j At the meeting of the Daughters of the American Revolution, which will be held Saturday afternoon with Mrs. W. W. Gaar, election of officers will take place. This will be the last meeting of the club year and all the members are urged to be present. Miss Clara Brown, of Earlham college will give a tea Saturday afternoon from three until five o'clock In honor of the girls of the senior class. J o Jt A social evening was enjoyed by the members of the South Eighth Street church last evening in the church parlors. fO C JO Mrs. August H. Thomas is hostess for a meeting of the Helping Hand society this afternoon at her home, 528 South Ninth street. If (T j? Miss Ina Clawson entertained Professor and Mrs. W. D. Collins at dinner last evening at her home on South Eighth street. The table was arranged in a very pretty manner with spring flowers. Mrs. Collins was formerly Miss Jane Richards and was well known in the club and social life of this city. Mr. Collins was professor of chemistry at Earlham college. He is now' a government chemist. Mr. and Mrs. Collins reside in Washington. Jt kM The usual fortnightly meeting of the Catholic Women Forresters, St. Agnes' Court which meets the first and third Wednesdays of each month, was held last evening in the Assembly hall of St. Andrew's school. The meeting was a purely business session and only matters of importance to the members were brought before the society. Mrs. Benjamin Englebert Is the ranger, of the organization.
Are You a Good Housekeeper? Most good housekeepers know how to select meats, vegetables and groceries, but when it comes to laundry soap, they take any kind just so it is cheap. A good housekeeper will take a soap between her thumb and forefinger, if the cake is soft she casts it aside. Easy Task soap is the favorite with most housekeepers, its purity makes it as hard as marble, yet the slightest rubbing produces soft creamy lather, just try a cake next wash day. KILLED IN AN INSTANT Maryland Eccentric Wishes Lord Would Strike Him With Lightning. HAS A PECULIAR MANIA. Cumberland, Md., May 21. George Martin, living near Hancock, 50 miles east of here, was killed by lightning while sitting under an apple tree. When the storm came up. two companions remarked about the danger from lightning and went into the house near by. Martin said he would stay where he was, and wished the Lord would strike him with lightning. In a few minutes a bolt shattered the tree, killing Martin instantly. He was about 33 years of age and was an eccentric character. Sometimes he indulged in religious work and was a local preacher. He had a mania for buying old horses and buggies at sales and could be seen on the roads most any time driving in a queer rig. Like chystals fair of morning dew, Your complexion now can be, If you take this good advice: Drink Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. A. G. Luken & Co. BAYARD GRAY IS SERIOUSLY ILL Word Has Been Received Here. Word has been received of the serious illness of Bayard Gray, brother of the late Pierre Gray at Winchester, Ind. Mr. Gray was stricken with apoplexy Tuesday noon in the law office of his cousin. Edward Jaqua. at Winchester. He was on his way to Indianapolis from Pittsburg, where he had been examining designs for a masoleum to be erected at Union City. Ind.. by the Isaac P. Gray estate. He was taken to the home of another cousin. Mrs. Andrew Stakebake. where he is now receiving medical attention. His condition is critical It is to be presumed that shipping subsidies have benefited European nations or they would not continue paying them. England pays some .;. x.annually. France and Germany about $5.k.a00 each and Japan pavs
HELEN FREE WOMAN Court Annuls Miss Maloney's Marriage to Arthur H. Osborn.
A ROMANTIC CAREER. New York, May 21. Justice McCall, in the Supreme Court, signed an interlocutory decree of annulment of the marriage of Helen Maloney. the wealthy Philadelphia girl, to Arthur I-L Osborn, the broker. The young woman, whose marital entanglements have brought her widespread notoriety, is now in Philadelohla, at the home of her father, Martin Maloney. the Standard Oil magnate and Papal Marquis, and nothing regarding her plans has been made public. Miss Maloney was married to Osborn. a Princeton student, and now a broker in this city, in Mamaroneck on December :, i:"fi, and she has maintained all along that immediately after the ceremony she returned to her father's house and considered the matter as a joke. At Dinard in France, she met Samuel Clarkson. an Englishman, and there was an almost instant attachment between them. Then there was an elopement to Montreal and a trip to Europe. They visited Paris and London, and Martin Maloney and another daughter, Mrs. Carberry Ritchie, went over posthaste to find them. There were stormy interviews and the young woman again fled, this time taking refuge in a convent in Perugia, Italy. From this institution she was taken by her father. They returned home last December. In an interview later Miss Maloney said that she wished to blot both Osborn and the Englishman Clarkson, from her life. PERSONAL. If any person suspects that their kidneys are deranged they should take Foley's Kidney Remedy at once and not risk having Bright's disease or diabetes. Delay gives the disease a stronger foothold and you should not delay taking Foley's Kidney Remedy. A. G. Luken & Co. DEAN HAS RESIGNED Dr. Henry Jameson Steps Down and Out of Indiana Medical College. IS DONE FOR A PURPOSE. Indianapolis, Ind., May 21. Dr. Henry Jameson, for several years Dean of the Indiana Medical college, the Purdue University Medical college, which was recently consolidated with the Indiana University school, has tendered his resignation to take effect soon. Dr. Jameson is said to have opposed the consolidation of the Indiana Medical College with Indiana University, but he declared that he had not resigned in a spirit of pique, but because he felt it was up to him and other members of his faculty to step down and out and permit President Bryan of Indiana university, free to appoint whomever he pleased. The annual commencement exercises of the school were held yesterday at Bloomington. Seventy-four students received diplomas. FEED ON POND LILIES. Moose Art Exceedingly Fond of These Pretty Flowers. At first thought it would appear Impossible that such large, gaunt denizens of the forest as moose could in any way be interested In flowers. They are, however, exceedingly fond of all kinds of water lilies. Few people know that these flowers grow from thick snake-like root stocks which are so firmly attached to the bottom that the strongest man cannot loosen them. It is from these firmly moored root stocks that the much admired leaves and flowers strive toward the light. A well kawn naturalistwho studied the habits of the animate in northern Minnesota, where moose are more numerous than in any other part of the world, often found two or three big bulls engaged in gathering their morning meal on the lake bottom. The great beasts would slowly stalk about in three or four feet of water, and often their heads would be under water for half a minute at a time, so that their backs would look like bowlders Just protruding from the stream; then a pair of magnificent antlers would come up, and the water would be shaken out of the big ears with a flapping noise that could be beard for a quarter of a mile, and then the big, long muzzle would be leisurely chewing a dripping mouthful of water lily leaves and other plants gathered from the bottom. So intent were the huge animals on gathering flowers that several times the naturalist could row up close enough to secure a good photograph before they splashed noisily back to the shore and disappeared in the black spruce. When the moose find a good lily pond they continue feeding la it until the plants are almost exterminated. Minneapolis Journal. i A new method by which the audience at a theater can show its approval or disapproval of a play without disturbing the performance is being introduc- ! ed by the Italian dramatist Traversi. Before leaving the theater every per- , ton is to drop a ticket into one of three boxes marked "good," "indiffer- ! u" a&d "had,'
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1 THE 1 Difficult the First Year Only. "Look here, old chappie." said a young man about town to a youthful benedict of his acquaintance, "I'm going to be married, and for the life of me I don't know what to rail my mother-in-law. Can't say 'mother-in-raw," ou know, and 'mother' would be too deucedly ridiculous. What did you do?" "Almost forgot. Think I mostly said 'say,' the first year." "Tes, and afterward?" "Oh, then it was easy. We both called her grandmamma." THE QUIET LIFE. Happy the man whose wish and car A few paternal acres bound. Content to breathe his native air In his own ground. Whose herds with milk, whose fields with bread. Whose flocks supply him with attire. "Whose trees In summer yield him shadei In winter, fire. Blest who can unconcernedly find Hours, days and years slide soft away In health of body, peace of mind. Quiet by day, Sound sleep by night, study and ease Together mixed, sweet recreation And innocence, which most does please With meditation. Thus let me live unseen, unknown. Thus, unlamented. let me die. Steal from the world, and not a stone Tell where I lie. Pope. His Last Request. Pat w-as in the habit of going home drunk and beating his wife. Finally Biddy lost patience anfl appealed to the priest. Tat," said the priest, "if you ever get drunk again I'll turn you into a rat. If I don't see you. I'll know about it Just the same, and into a rat you go. Now, you mind that." The next evening Tat came home worse drunk than ever, kicked in the door, and his wife dodged behind the table to defend herself. "Don't be afraid, darllnt," says Tat as he steadied himself before dropping Into a chair. "I'm not going to bate ye. I won't lay the weight of me finger on ye. I want ye to be kind to me tonight, darlint, and to remember the days when we was sweethearts and when ye loved me. You know his riverince said if I got dhrunk again he'd turn me into a rat. lie didn't see me. but he knows I'm dhrunk, and this night into a rat I go. But I want ye to lie kind to me, darlint, and watch me, and when ye see me gertia' little and the hair growin' out on me and me whiskers gettln' long, if ye ever loved me. darlint, for God's sake keep yer eye on the cat." Ladies Home ,Tou:-nal.
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SCRAP Sixpence Tco Much. An Irishman who had jumped into the water to save a man from drown ing on receiving a sixpence from the rescued man looked first at the sixpence and then at the man, saying, "lie jabbers, I am overpaid for that Job." Sisters In Moderation. Tommy is a lonely little hoy who has no brothers or sisters. He is very fond of three little girls named Ethel, Maud and May. One evening his mother was listening to him say his prayers, and she was rather surprised to hear him add to his petitlous, "Iear I,ord, please send me an Ethel, a Maud and a May." After he had finished his mother tried to explain to him that they were too poor to have a large family like that. Tommy listened attentively and then without a word flopixd down on his knees again and offered up this supplementary petition: "Dear Iird. mother says we can't afford an Ethel and a Maud and a May, so don't send 'em in a bunch. Just send us an Ethel, and when w can afford the rest I'll let you know." Llppincott's. By Way of Deduction. A detective had been put on an anonymous letter case. The recipient of the letter said to him: "The thing consisted of but one short page, and yet there were eleven words spelled wrong." "Then the criminal," said the detective promptly, "was either a typewriter or a sign painter. Is there a business directory handy?" The Teacher's Joke. In a school in Springfield, Mass., the lady teacher had occasion to punish one of the little boys for using profane language. There being a knothole in the floor, she conceived the Idea to make him think he had got to stand near by with a pair of tongs and watch until he caught a rat that should come up from below. Stationing him, she gave him strict Injunctions to remain until he accomplished the feat, calculating, of course, after he had stood there a eonple of hours to send him to his seat. Two minutes after he fastened the tougs to a genuine lire fellow of the rat kind, with enormous whiskers and tail, and. holding him or, exclaimed, "By jings,' I've caught him!" The teacher fainted. Ergotisms. Father, son, grandson, your broker begs you to buy or sell this or that stock; erco be malv?s his eights and ouar'.ers .Thf iier jon a in or lr.-.
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See Our Hose Window 9th and Main STORE Cor. 9th and Main. BOOK I Without t:yiug "io make enemies yon are universally hated; ergo you mu have some merit. You have a very devoted friend in Blank; ergo you have borrowed nothing of each other and asked each othec no favors. There are two kinds of silent meurthose who have nothing to say and a It audthoseh"ohavTug" uiuchTo rkf, say it not; ergo if you would appear dangerous. In? dumb. Men show their greatest weaknesses in their letters; ergo have your correspondence edited by a secretary. When a man speaks ot you lebiud 'your back as a fol. It means that you have disagreed with him ou some point at issue; ergo if you want his good opinion agree with his, but stick to your own. When you give a man advice, let It be an encouragement of his own Inclination; ergo when your advice is sought first find out what the seeker wants to do, then Agree with him; if he succeeds, you get no credit; If he falls, he must bear at least a part of the blame. A man Isolated may be an arrant knave, but in the crowd be appears honorable; ergo If you don't want your sins to Le found out keep In the procession. Men deliberately do things they are ashamed of and then are ashamed to mention them; ergo never do what you want to do, but the opposite New York Press. A Sickly Lot. "I see by the paper." observed a young woman to a companion on an elevated train In New York one morning, "that Mr. Blank, the octogenarian, is dead. What on earth Is an octogenarian anyhow?" "I don't know. I'm sure." was the reply, "but there's one thing certain, they're a sickly lot of people. You never hear of one unless he is dying." Llppincott's. Easy Enough. A noted mathematician stopped at a hotel Jn a small town. There were a number of drummers on band. There was also a meeting of some medical men -jit the place, who used the hotel as headquarters. One of the doctors told the mathematician that some of the M. D.'s had concluded to kidnap him and take out bis brains to learn how It was be was so good in mathematics, lie was asked by them what he was coin to do about It. lie replied. "Why. I shall simply go on without brains just as you doctors are do-
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