Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 169, 2 August 1908 — Page 5
TmriiTcromprrirABTtrsi anuicsm; sttxdat, august 2, 190s.
PAGE FIVE.
SOCIAL NEWS
To Reach tne Society Editor, Call Home Phone 1121. or Bell Pboe 21
i . in -kl
ine marriage 01 anas .ami ecu c.
Samuel Thompson, 312 North Eleventh street, to Mr. Robert Hart, will ;take place some time early in Sepitember. The wedding will be a i quiet one, with the family and a few friends attending. J J & The following young people will camp this week at Hiser's Station: iMiss Alida Swain, Miss Viola WickeI meyer, Miss-Ellen Swain, Miss Mujriel'Bartel, Miss Lenora Wickemeyer, Miss Martha -and Miss Frieda Wickemeyeroff Michigan City. Ind. A numfber of towni guests will be entertainted while the young people are In 'camp. j j Miss , Deborah Shute, Miss Alice Laning, Miss Luclle Polglase, Miss Ruth Petz, with several others who 'are camping? near Williamsburg, will entertain several town guests to dinner today. Miss Mary Duvall of Liberty is vlsiitlng in this city for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Dowell King are the . guests of Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Martin 'and Mr. and Mrs. King. Mrs. Dowell King was formerly Miss Angela Freeman of this city.
9 1 Mrs. James Murphy, formerly of , this city and now of Indianapolis, who has been visiting with Mrs. Ira Swisher, has returned home. 8 8 Mrs. A. G. Compton and daughter Blanche are spending the day at Dublin. 3 0 It has been brought as a charge against women that they do not have the same sense of beauty that men possess, simply" because, while looks . form so strong an attraction to the masculine eye, a woman, nine cases out of ten, never takes them into con- , slderation when making her choice of a husband. There seems to be no limit to the ugliness which a man may possess without in any way ruining his chances of obtaining womanly favor, says the New York Evening Sun. Sometimes the wife of the homely man is exceptionally beautiful; indeed, it is the exception, rather than the rule, 1 to see an ugly husband with a plain wife. ; With the man, perhaps, his own
want of beauty makes him value It
more keenly in others, while In the woman's case, as would be natural, her pride is not particularly affected by his lack of what is so mtych a quality of her own. j M Mr. and Mrs. Fred Carr entertained Miss Carolyn Hollingsworth, Mr. Harry Thornburg and Mr. Dean Wes-
cott to dinner last evening at the Country club house. Ji J j Miss Jessie Albert of Dayton, who haa been visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kirk, returned home today. j j j Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ogborn, Mrs. Gertrude Hill, Miss Marguerite Hill, Miss Marjorie Laws of Minneapolis, Mrs. O. K. Fisher, Miss Alice Hill, Mrs. Martha Parry and Mr. Rudolph Hill will picnic at Glen Miller Park Tuesday evening. j j A number, of dances have been given during the past week in the pavilion at Jackson park. One of the most important of these was the one given
Tuesday evening by Mrs. Henry Gennett and Miss Rose Gennett in honor of Mr. Bates of Boston, Mass. The , affair was a most chaining one, about 1 one hundred and fifty guests being in attendance. Monday evening Mr. Clement Cates and Mr. Harry Lontx also gave a ; dance at the park. Friday evening Mr. Norman Cralgwlth a dancing party. Several out-of-town guests attended the function. J J J Mrs. M. H. Corwln gave a dinner .party la3t evening at the Country club house. Places were arranged for :Mr. and Mrs. Howard Campbell and Mr. and Mrs. Wickham Corwin. 4 1 Mr. and Mrs. Dudley Elmer, Mr. S. S. Strattan and Mr. and Mrs. Poundrstone took dinner at the Country club last evening. . . it Several parties and Informal teas
were given last week for visiting guests, among which was a porch party given by Mrs. Nettleton Neff for Mrs. Cowles. Mr3. EX E. Beatty entertained Thursday afternoon with cards for the Misses Boston of Anderson. Mrs. Beatty also gave a. dinner party for her guests the evening of the same day. Miss Mary A. Stubbs will entertain with a dinner party Monday evening August Second. JSJ Several dinner parties will be given today at the Country club house by members for invited guests. J j Dr Leslie Chenoweth and wife have returned from an extended trip to 'various points in Wisconsin. J o J Very few social affairs are being given now as a number of hostesses are spending the warm months at various summer resorts. The bride-to-be, who la contemplating upon the month of August for her wedding month will be delighted when che learns that the bride of this month Is predicted as being amiable and practical. J 0 J . Miss Martha Boyd will leave soon for Toledo and Chicago where she will make an extended visit to relatives and friends. o J j The Happy Hour club will have a so-
SBSSZSSBS28SSSSSS!
cial meeting Saturday evening, Aug
ust eighth at the home of Mr. and Mrs. James Jordan, north of the city. The women of the club will entertain their families and friends at this time. A program will be arranged for and the affair promises to be quite an enjoyable one. lS Miss Bertha Taylor of South Eighth street will return from Indianapolis some time this week. She has been the guest of Miss Marie Schrimser. Miss Taylor with her present hestess also visited at Chicago recently. Mts. Josie Schafer and son and Mrs. Charles Schafer and son Perry of St. Louis are visiting their parents Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Schafer of South Twelfth stret. tC j4 Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Thomas and
daughter Thelma returned home after spending a week with J. C. Thomas at
Arba. iS
The annual picnic of the county officers and their families will be held
Tuesday afternoon, August Fourth at Glen Miller park. No special program has been arranged for the affair. Boating and outdoor amusements will be features of the occasion. The wives of the officers are requested to bring well filled baskets.
MUSIC i , The musical to be given by Mr. Leroy Lacey Wednesday evening will 'be of interest to a number of musicians in this eft. Mr. Lacey Is a pupil of Prof. Justin Leroy Harris and has appeared in several of the latter's recitals. The function will be given at the Second Presbyterian church. J j A number of the various members of the faculty of the Cincinnati summer school of music are making arrangements for their vacations. The school will close in a few weeks. A larger number of students have attended this year than ever before in the history of the summer school. 3 Eleanor Bain the well known Cincinnati contralto i3 spending a few weeks in New York city. J J J Arrangements are now being made to bring Paderewski to America again next season under the management of Charles A. Ellis of the Boston Symphony orchestra. J J .5 There will be no special musical
program this evening at Reld Memo
rial chnrch. . . The choir of the First Methodist
church under the direction of Prof. Justin Leroy Harris wiH have a special musical program this evening. All are cordially invited to attend.
The Theodore Thomas orchestra has been filling an engagement at Ravinia park, Chicago, during the past week. Mr. Hugo Oik of Cincinnati, acted as concert master during the absence of Leopold Kramer.
love one neighbor as oneself is -to be
capable of large, self-denial, often of self-effacement. Sirs. Browning, in her poem, "My Kate," put the whole thing in a single line "Twas her thinking of others made you think of her." No-one can continue interesting even in the narrow round of the domestic circle, if she does not keep on learning something new from time to time, if she rests on what she learned in the schoolroom and if she lets her weapons rust for want of use. You should aim to be interesting, not merely when you are 15, 18 or 20, but onward through the years.
KIN WASHES HANDS
IN BROTHER'S HANDS
Vows Vengeance on Man Who
Killed the Man.
Tis Every Girls Duty To Be Interesting
By Magaret S&ngster
I once heard the late Charles Dudley Warner, who was a man of much insight, assert that it was every girl's duty to be interesting. "A girl need not be learned." he said, "nor beautiful, nor accomplished, to be a success In society and in life, but she must be interesting. "She may be everything else, may sing, play, paint pictures and speak half a dozen languages, yet if she is not'interesting she will be very much like an enlightened candle. It is the lighted candle that draws attention, not the correctly dull one in the candle stick on the mantel shelf." Girls often ask what the secret is that makes one Interesting and another roll. Why, for instance, should a girl no looks to speak of, a rather plain girl, it may be a little awkward and shy, draw every one to her in a room, while a brilliant friend with every advantage of natural grace, with taste in dress and elegance of manner be passed by unnoticed? I think I may explain the matter by
saying that no one can be Interesting
who is not herself interested in other
people. The first necessity is to care about people, not especially the people of one's own type, but people of all sorts. A charming Southern girl whom I knew very well, and who seemed to draw friends to herself as a magnet draws iron, told me that everybody possessed some interest for her. When she entered a shop, without saying a word- to a weary fclrl who had been standing on her feet since morning, her smile and genuine sympathy expressed by a glance would make the girl forget her fatigue.
Conductors in street cars might be brusque in their manner to other passengers, but they were Invariably po
lite tocher.
Little children ran to her, showing, her their toys, telling her their little joys and sorrows and as for older people and invalids they beamed when
she came la their neighborhood.
Her sympathy was not a pose; If it had been, she wpuld have failed all
along the line. Her tact never allow
ed her to make a mistake, for it was
the tact of sincerity.
I like my fellow creatures," she
said to me. "I like them wherever 1 find them on shipboard, in the rail way cars, in town and in country."
Such liking is usually returned. If you hope to be interesting you must
be interested.
In the next place, the girl who would be interesting must be a good
listener. You may not believe me when I tell you that It is far easier to be a good talker than a good listener. Sydney Smith, writing to a friend about Macauley, who was a man of universal information, but rather given to monopolizing the conversation, observed that there had been an agreeable change in Macauley that day, "flashes of silence." Learn to look at the person who is speaking to you, with an air of complete attention that is not feigned, but is real. Whoever listens will will be spoken of by her acquaintances as an interesting person. In one of Anthony Trollope's stories he introduces a very delightful woman who has every one at her feet. People leave her with the Impression that they have had a perfectly blissful and satisfactory talk, yet Lady Glencora Palliser seldom committed herself by much more than a monosyllable. If you would be interesting, acquire the art of telling a story well. Omit all superfluous detail. Learn to get to
tne point by a staight road, not by wandering all around Robin Hood's barn.
Many little details are entirely
needless when one is relating an in
cident or an adventure, and she who persists in telling every word that was said and describing every circum
stance with minuteness becomes a
bore from whom her friends flv.
If yoa. relate a Jest or an anecdote
be sure that you yourself aoDrectate
tne motive, and do not spoil it by
missing this.
Never attempt to be funny. Unless
yo have the gift of saying clever things by nature you would better re
frain from attempting them.
A good, example of the uninteresting person who always loses her nominative case may be seen in Flora Casby, whose portrait Dickens drew in "Little Dorrlt," and in Jane Austen's inimitable "Pride and Prejudice" her masculine counterpart may be found in the dreary Mr. Collins. If you want a good example of the type of girl who is interesting, and therefore lovable, you will find her in the sparkling Elizabeth Bennett, Jane Austen'B most successful character, and In a book recently published, Joseph Vance," you will discover her again in the bewitching simplicity and unselfish sweetness of Lossie Thrope. Need I say that the egotist is seldom interesting long? To attain to this most desirable quality and to possess It one must live outside of self. This is not so easy as it seems. To
nstevtaff. Axis., Aug. 1. As the re
sult of a gun right at Williams yes
terday, a Mexican deputy sheriff, E. Dominges, was killed and two Mexi
can bystanders wounded. James Dun
can, a colored bartender at the liar
vey house, is under arrest for murder
It is claimed Dominges attempted to
arrest Duncan in a saloon for a previ
ous disturbance. A mob of Mexicans
gathered for the purpose of lynching
Duncan, but he was brought to Flagstaff "before the mob could be organized. The two injured will recover. Duncan is an ex-soldier, who recently returned from the Philippines and has borne a good character. The brother
of the dead man has washed his hands in his brother's blood and vowed vengeance on Duncan for his crime.
Calico Mill Ends 4c
75c Table Linen Mill Ends 50c.
ELEVEN GEESE ARE PLACED UNDER ARREST
Charged With Ruining Cab
bage in Truck Patch.
Pottstown, Pa., Aug. 1. Burgess Hi
ram Coller, to Bhow the populace that
it could not set at defiance his recent
edict that no geese or ducks would be permitted to road the streets, had eleven of the former arrested.
The specific charge was that the
geese with others not yet pulled in
"had ruined 30O head of cabbage in Chester Kepner's truck patch."
PLASTER PORTRAITS. London, Aug. 1. Plaster portraits are the fashionable form of "counterfeit presentment" in London. They are done in the form of miniature busts or bas-reliefs at the low price of halt a guinea ($2.50) apiece. They are modeled by clever artists from the sitter in 45 minutes.
35c Table Linen Mill Ends 29c
Monday Big Pay Sale MM Ends Tabic Linens and Towels
Sale Mill Encfc Come Monday Sure.
A BIG DAY MONDAY SALE MILL ENDS
A Big Day Monday Sale Mill Ends.
The Low Priced Busy Store
Big Towel Mill End Price 5c
Teddy Bear Flannelette Mill End Price 4Jc.
Extra Heavy Towel Mill End Price 10c
i
THE PEOPLE'S STORE
Moore & Ogborn Insurance, Bonds and Loans, Real Estate and Rentals. Both phones Bell 53R. Hon-re T589. Room 16 I. O. O. F. Bldg.
FOR RENT 335 S. W. 3RD. SIX ROOM HOUSE. ELECTRIC LIGHT, BOTH KINDS WATER. See T. W. Hadley, Phone 2292.
The Hub Of The Body. The organ around which all the other organs rcvolre, and neon which they ar largely dependant lor their welfare, ia the atomch. When the functions of the stomach become impaired, the bowels and Mvar also become deranged. To ewe a disease of the stomach, Hvei or bowels get a 50 cent or $1 bottle of Dr. Cald veil's Syrup Pepsin at your druggist's. It i he promptest relief for constipation and dyr ,epsia ever cempounded.
Phocbe: There's nothing like bread made from Gold Medal Flour. Debobah.
music:
PAUL E. WILSON ; Adams Drug Store
We Mean To Keep It Up That is, advertising, until you give us at least a small trial order for our high grade coal. We don't propose to stop talking about the merits of our product until ever.y family and every merchant in this town has tested our coal. We believe In its advantages and the great value it offers. Try now and get your coal at a low price. H. C. BULLERDICK ZL SON 529 South 5th Street Phone 1235
LOANS. RENT J
W. H. Bradbury & Son Rooms 1 and 3, W:cat: 3)k
INSURANGE.REAL ESTATE I
SEE OUR SPRING LINE of GO-CARTS ...at. HASSENBUSCrTS
Special Prices on Our Display Stand Every Day. Backed Up With Four per cent Cash Coupons. PETER JOHNSON CO. MAIN ST.
verybody Talk hauttauqua
..Mechanics, Hear Frank Dixon's
The Man Against the Mass
CHAUTAU QUA
99
THE SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH
GRAND BARBECUE
TUESDAY, AUGUST 4tli, 1908 To Be Held in Athletic Park An All Day Program. All Are Cordially Invited. REV. W. W. RUSSELL. Manager.
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UilliU.UU
iwira
Mori.
peoaii
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SALE each and every day to unload our black and tan oxfords, all new, this spring and summer styles.
r.
LOOK OVER THESE SPECIALS
PRICES MEN'S OXFORDS. Men's $5.00 Oxfords, all colors $3.95 Men's $4.00 Oxfords, patent colt or tan $3.25 Men's $3.50 Oxfords, patent colt or tan $2.95 Men's $2.50 Oxfords, patent colt or gun metal - $2.30 Hanan's $6.00 Oxfords $4.95 Children's Oxford3 and Boys' Oxford3 at great reduction. EXTRA SPECIALS ON LADIES' OXFORDS. Foster's $4.00 Oxfords, patf colt or tan $3.25 Gulliam, Kokenze, Cross and Bolten's $3.00 Oxfords, dainty low patterns, button or lace, Including tans and all the new cuts and shades ..$2.95
PRICES TWO EXTRA SPECIALS IN LADIES' TAN OXFORDS. The Merry Widow style, tan. Russian calf with Suede top and short vamp and tip, also plain toe, button, $3.00 grade, this week $1.98 One lot. Pat. Colt Oxfords, $2.00 grade now $1,75 AH $3.00 Oxfords In paL colt and tan at $2.64 Choice of any Ladies', Misses' or Children's White Canvas Shoes or Slippers. $1.00 $3.00 grade, per pair f... 49c
Closed Every Evening Except Saturday. Large Sales, Small Profits, Our Motto. Shoes that Fit WeU, GeneraUy Wear Well. We Guarantee a Perfect Fltx
CHARLES EI. FELTMAN 724 IVIA.IN STREET
