Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 59, 6 January 1909 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY G, 1909.
PAGE FIVE.
NEWS OF
TO REACH THE SOCIETY EDITOR, CALL PHONE 1121
Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph G. Leeds were . host and hostess for a dinner party lt. evening at the Country club house, , given In honor of their house guest, I Miss Susan Brownell of Cincinnati, i Paces were arranged at the table for I
Miss Juliet Swayne, Miss Marie Camp-lgan Ml. Miss Josenhlne Cates. Mr. and
J4rs. Corwin. Mr. and Mrs. Muton Craighead. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Shlveley, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kaufman, Mr. Henry Bulla Mr. Raymond Nicholson, Mr. Erman SmithMr. Charles Morgan I and Mr. Wilbur Hlbberd: Mrs. HIbberd having gone to Chicago for a week's stay. I Today at one o'clock Mrs. Milton I Craia-head entertained with a lunch-1 on at her home on North Eighth I Weet, for Miss Brownell. Miss Juliet Swayne of North Eleventh street will give a dinner com pany at the club house this evening for Mrs. Leeds guest. I Miss Edna Smith was the charming hostess for a card party given last vening at her home, 10 North. 1 teenth street, in honor of her friend,
Mr. Harry Smith, who left today iorishe attends school at Bethany.
Dayton, where he attends SL Marys t 1 .ilf.illir I college. Tne nouse was decorated wun rea ana wnue neaiw. the color scheme red and white being carried out in cne juncneou wnicu I served later in me evening, xuo k'" 1 tuoa rail of thnA tahlftfi. I v "Mii J I Mr. Harry Smith and Mrs. Marguerite (Nolan were awarded the prizes. Those njoying Miss Smith's hospitality were WIhr Ludle Townsend. Miss Irene Mart. Miss Blanche Conley, Miss Mar Wtlon onH Mlu Madera Smith: 11V . . UU ... -j v. tt j Mr. Harrv Smith. Mr. Robert McCar thy, Mr. Benjamin. Sharp, Mr. Herbert Dickinson, Mr. Raymond Steinkamp, nd Mr. Dorsey Nolan. I ..'' 4? '" Mrs. Henry Brokamp who has been Visiting with friends and relatives at 'Muncie, Ind,, attended a New Year's party given by Mr. and Mrs. Henry faeenam of that place. The function was In the nature of a dinner comi fany. - The following clipping is from the Indiananolis Star: , The mariage of Miss Grace Elizabeth Hobbs and George W, Allison, both of Richmond. Ind.. took place at the fcome of the bride's uncle. A. H. NorSyke, on College avenue Saturday afkrnmn .Tn 2. at 5 o'clock. The ceretomnv was Dronounced by the Rev. Kcil McPherson. pastor of Tabernacle Whurrh In the presence of the members Uf the immediate family. a hnrt arrmtnt. of ihc weddlnir anpared in a recent edition of this pa- . v.vvvu.. i Br. A more iun account- received Soday by friends of the young people '(.. -i , I rn Saturday afternoon: January 2. !at 5 o'clock, at the residence of Mr. A. H. Nordyke, 2330 College avenue, flndianapolls. occurred the marriage lof bla niece. Miss Grace Hobbs, and Mr. George Allison, both of this city. The Reverend Neil McPherson, of the Tabernacle Presbyterian church offijClatlng, the beautiful ring ceremony being used. The spacious rooms were 'beautifully decorated with Poinsettla And the CP-tstmas greens. The soft U.l-A M .JJ.J .V. I nQi 01 rawij cuuir nuueu w i .beauty of the ceremony. A family din ner was er.'ed. Mr. and Mrs. Alii on will reside in this city. & ......... i A ttengnuui orwge company was given yesteraay anernoon py Mrs. Bon't Blame Your Stomach When Without Exertion Or Cost You Can Enjoy Meals And Cure Dyspepsia. Don t blame your stomach or your luck when your meals declare war on your system. wnen me siomacn woni ao its work it is because it cannot. v When foul smelling odors come from our stomach, when the head aches na me sourness or mourn every mornins makes you naie your ureaKiasi, when dreams and nightmare assail you, don't give up the fight This is the appeal of nature, and it should be heard. Over-eating, late suppers, poorly chewed food, too rich pastries and un derdone cooking are some of the caus rs of the stomach's ill health. When the stomach is busy, it press or and churns all the liquid matter from food and with its juices dissolves Into liquid form or pulp everything which comes into it. If such food be poisonous it effects the Juices, attacks the stomach, goes Into the blood and weakens the entire system. . Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets will di gest a full meal easily without material assistance from the stomach. They will restock the gastric fluid with all the elements needed. They build P breath, belching, stomach and bowel tmnhla and milcltlv fstor natural rondition One grain of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets will digest 3,000 grains of food in the stomach or in a glass vial without aid of the human digestive apparatus. Th mtthnA of . sttinrt'a nvnonsia Tablets are the methods of Nature. They contain every requisite for the! stomach and digestion. After a meall one of these little tablets when it en -
tera the stomach mingles with thejston at her home on North Tenth Juices, attacks the food and digests ft. I street- "The German Educational
It removes tne iermented and decayed mas, lying stagnant there and eases the stomach at once. It Is wholly a question for you to solve. Your druggist will furnish Stu - art's Dyspepsia Tablets 50c the box, or send us your name and address and we will send you a trial package free, Address F. A. Stuart Co.; 160 Stuart Bids.. Marshall. Mich. '
SOCIETY
George G. Tanner at her home on North Delaware street, when she entertalned sixteen young women. The guests or Honor were lour or me season s aeoutanies me axises xuuioe Hibben, Clare Wilson. Louise MUll and Margaret Eaglesfleld. Mrs I Tanner was assisted during the after noon Dy Mrs, H. j. Miiugan. me prizes for the bridge game were dainty work bags, which bad been made by the hostess. The guests who were asked to meet tne young women were Mrs. William Avery Atkins, the Misses - Dorothy RichardBOn -Madeline auvre, Anne naw, Marie Starr, Jane Mather Ogle, Jiamiy Winter, Martha Foster. Alice Schaf, Agatha Held, Ina Hollweg and Miss Morian of New York, who is visiting at the army post. Indianapolis Star. Miss Olga Shriner has returned to her home in Muncie after a two weeks' visit here. Marjorie Buffkin. who has been spending the holidays with her mother ha3 returned to Topeka, Kansas, where j' ' j The Becond of a eeries of artist re h ivpn this pvpn,n? fln(1 nQt xhursday as has been erroneously anftnH - jc St a mi r iinir.tv, ,v, la the guest of Mrs. James Carr at Springfield, O., will return home Fri day. Miss Jeannette Durno, who appeared in the first recital of a series given by Professor Justin lveroy Harris wm open a series 01 recnais t nursaay eve ning in Muncie. Miss Durno was greeted with much enthusiasm by the music lovers of this city. She doubtless will delight her audience in Muncie. Club Meetings for Today The Good-Cheer club is meeting Cornelius this afternoon with Mrs. Miles, Mrs. Leroy Browne is entertaining the Wednesday Duplicate Whist Club tnis afternoon An open meeting of the Domestic Science Association is being held this aiternoon m me nign scnooi ounaing. The Ivy club meets with Mrs. Shep pard this afternoon Mrs. T. M. Guild is entertaining the missionary society of the Grace M. E cburcn. at Her Home on North Tenth street. v.iuu uumiuS au miportant session for the election of onicers tnis aiternoon at tne home of Mrs.-Millard Warfel on South Tenth street. The Foresters, an organiza Uon of St. Andrew's church, is giving a card party tnis arternoqn. CLUB NOTES The ladies aid society of the First English Lutheran church will meet Thursday afternoon at the church . -r . ... . .... rew worK win De taken up at this time and all members are requested to be present. ijS The ladies' aid Society of the Episcopal church Grace Methodigt will meet Friday afternoon at twothirty o'clock at the church. Import ant business will be transacted at this time and all members are urgent ly requested to be present. J J J The Ionian society of Earlham col lege will hold its first meeting of the new semester, Friday evening, January fifteenth. The program for this meet ing is as follows: "Up the Trail" .... Mr. John Hancock War Against the Bubonic Plague in San Francisco.. Mr. Orville Wright Paper .. .. Mr. Joseph Jones ji ji ji An informal n i,. i evening by the St. Joseph's Benevolent 80ciety of st. Andrew.s school ,n the asgembiy room of the school. The most lmportant feature of the program which was given was an address by the Rev. Timothy Magnien of Indianapolis, bla subject being "Catholic Societies." Father Roell acted in the I"' " r";rL."tZ of the evening followed by a smoker There was a very large attendance. jfc Mr. Justin Leroy Harris is a guest a- amncie today. He is assisting a number of Muncie musicians in making arrangements for a series of recitals which open tomorrow evening. Mi". Harris will return home late this i evening. Mr. Hans Schroeder, who will sing this evening at the recital to be held in the Gennett Theater appeared in i recital last evening at Lafayette, Indiana where he flighted a large aud I j( 1 I The Uniform rank, K. of P. will give !V,dance Wednesday evening. January ' - r - 'P'- An ureueiira wm tne aance mu S1C' The committee in charge is com posed of Mr. Elmer Weisbrod, Mr. Guy Duvall and Mr, A. F. Irton. js j The Aftermath society met yesterJ day afternoon with Mrs. M. F. John i system .was tne subject or a paper j written and read by Miss Edna John json. . Mrs. Noah Hutton read a paper Ion ."Folk-love" After, the program 1 social hour followeji The hostess for j the next meeting has not be announcJed. j - - jt J jt I An evening meeting of the Occult 'Research society will bo held tomor
row evening at the home of Mr. James McNeill, 22 South Thirteenth street
AH members with their guests are invited to attend. The Esther Fay Card club met yes terday afternoon with Mrs. John Mov er at her home on Sheridan street. Point euchre was played at several tables. Mrs. Arthur Hodgin. Mrs. Harry Mills and Mrs. Harmon Wierhake were awarded the prizes. After the game a dainty luncheon was serv ed. Mrs. John Hewitt will entertain the club in two weeks at her home, 602 Sheridan street. Friday evening the Sunday school classes of Mrs. B. F. Wehrly and Mrs. C. A. Pierson will be entertained at the home of the latter, 47 South Eighteenth street. The affair will be in the nature of a social gathering. A short program consisting of music numbers will be a feature. The Ladies Aid society of the East Main Street Friends church will meet tomorrow afternoon at the church J j J Mrs. P. T. McLellan was hostess for an interesting meeting of the Worn an's Foreign Missionary society of the First Christian church yesterday afternoon at her home on South Twelfth street. Twenty-five members were in attendance and also a number of guests. A short business session was held after which the program was giv en. Mrs. Walls lead the discussion on "The Working Basis of the Christian Woman's Board of "-Missions." The society will study a book entitled "Nearer and Further East," for the remainder of the season. The opening paper along this line was given yesterday by Mrs. Burr. She read in part of the religion of Mohamedens. After the program a social hour followed. Light refreshments were served by the hostess. The next meeting of the organization will be held February 2. with Mrs. L. S. Mann, 109 North Ninth street. SCHROEDER RECITAL Mr. Hans Schroeder, the celebrated German grand opera barytone will appear in recital this evening at the
IN THE WOMAN'S WORLD
What They Arc Doing MISS LEACH HONORED. Mikado Presents to Hr a Handsome Gold CupProfessor Abby Leach of Vassar col lege has been honored by the mikado of Japan with a distinction , which comes to few and which has never be fore come to an American woman. It is the custom of the Japanese emperors to present cups of gold or silver or lacquer to those whom they wish Co honor, and to Miss Leach his imperial majesty has sent a golden cup in recognition of her services to the cause OOIiDER CUP PBBSBNTXD TO PROFESSOR ABBT XtSACH OF VASSAR COUJKUC of education. The honor came through Viscount Kaneko, now a member of the emperor's privy council and the , special envoy of Japan to America j during the Russo-Japanese war. - ! The cup is of solid gold, very heavy T and of graceful design. It came wrapped in a double square of Habutal silk, of a kind made only for im-, perial use, whUe the box is of chrys-1 .nthmnm wftoH whlrh Is also dedicated to imperial use. Inside the bowl Is engraved a chrysanthemum, the im perial emblem. Last May Miss Leach was a guest of honor at a dinner given at the Hotel As tor, New York city, by Consul General Mldauno, one of the guests being also Ambassador Takahira. The other guests were persons who had received decorations from the emperor, and Miss Leach was then informed that the emperor wished to bestow a similar honor upon ber. Miss Leach was born in Brockton. Mass., and is the daughter of Marcus Leach, a pioneer shoe manufacturer. She was the first student at Radcliffe college, then Harvard annex, but took her degrees of bachelor and master of arts at Vassar, and later she studied at the University of Leipelg. In 1SS9 she became a professor at Vassar. She Is now a member of the fellowship committee of the American school at Athens and vice president of the school and college organization of the middle states and Maryland. She has been president of the Philological association and Is a frequent contributor to philological journals. Can You Spoil? If you think you can. ask somebody to dictate the following jumble to you and see how many mistakes you make! Antinous. a disappointed, desiccated physicist, was peeling potatoes in an embarrassing and harassing way. His Idiosyncrasy aad privilege was to eat mayonnaise and mussels while staring at the Pleiades acd seizins people's tricycles and velocipedes. He was an erring teetotaler and had been on a plcayunejamboree. He rode a palfrey QUALITY City Office,
Gennett theater. He will be assisted
by Hugo Kortschak, the German violinist. The Chicago Examiner says of the noted barytone: Hans Schroeder, with a voiee musical every Instant, delights audiences with a program offered at Music hall. A picturesque figure, standing simply beside the piano, Is Hans Schroeder, the eminent German barytone. He might have stepped bodily out of a popular novel, so closely did he fol low the ideal of a musical at his recital in Music hall j yesterday. very interesting per sonal appearance, with pale face and! flowing hair, and his poetical temperament, just fit the place he has won. ' He has long been an idol in Germany as a lieder singer, and every appearance he makes in America adds laurels to his glories. But Schroeder did not merely look the part, he is It. His pinging of German lieder ia artistic beyond the commonplace. That is an absurd word, but it applies here. His voice is musical every minute. He is a real singer and that is saying a good deal in these days when songs are declaimed, 'bellowed," or interpreted, to the utter neglect of Bel Canto. He has a high range for a barytone, but the lower tones are deep and full and make good his claim to the title. He sings easily and freely throughout the whole voice with delicacy of shading, a sensibility of feeling that betray the dreamy German blood at a glance. He certainly does get at the heart of things and makes them very real to every listener, which is after all the thing In music. Mr. Kortschak has also considerable ability as a violinist. He is a pupil of Seveik. the world famous teacher of Kubelic and others. The Lothringer Zeitung of Germany says of his playing: We have had opportunity to admire many important violinists in Metz during the last years, as Florian Zajic, Hugo Heermann, Pablo de Sarasate. Jaques Thibaut. and it seems that Hugo Kortschak is one of the most interesting and important among them. With a perfect technic which masters everything, he combines an absolute musical sentiment, so that the heart of the listener is affected by his interpretation. Most beautiful offerings were given us by the artist in the vio lin concerto by Goldmark and "The Humoreske," by Dvorak Little Things of Interest. Ktaaicrk fia ramra e- nriaie papier ! macbe bouquet of asters, phlox, mulleln, chrysanthemums, rhododendrons, i fuchsias and nasturtiums. j He wore a sibyl's resplendent tur- j quoise paraphernalia, an ormolu yash- ! mak and astrakhan chaparejos. He drank crystallizable and disagreeable curacao juleps through a sieve. He stole some moneys and bid them under a peddler's mahogany bedstead and mattress. ' Like a fiend in au ecstasy of gayety, I rushed after him into the maelstrom or melee and held him as in a vise. I could not feaae him, however, and he addressed me, with autocracy, in the following Imbecile words, which sounded like a soliloquy or a - superseding paean on an oboe: "You are a ratable luna moth, a salaaming vizier, an equinoctial coryphee and an isosceles daguerreotype." Bookman. The Boro, That Awful Nuiaanco. Did you ever stop to think howr many people 3 on know bore you? They drain your personality. They never know when they have stayed long euuKn ana iaiKea ons enougn. Now- the reat Question is. How far should we let them go? They bore 1UW "ur yersoumu,, auu iney zeeu uv" "ur rrauurtes. uu w w re without just knowing why. remarks aQ exchange. f cours there re different kinds of res. For instance, there is the bore with the hobby. He Is really the most harmless kind, for be just keeps on hammering on the same old thing, and he says so much that we can be thinking our own thoughts and what he is saying is not important enough to interrupt. About the simplest way to get rid of him is to send him on to some one else. But the worst kind of a bore is the one who has no particular object. He Just likes to bask in the sunshine of your society, to listen to you talk on a variety of subjects and to take up the best hours of yonr working day. If any one has a real remedy for this bore, one that is tried and true, for humanity's sake let us have It. Turkish Paste the Latest. The college girl's chafing dish is responsible for many startling decoctions. The latest debutante in this line is Turkish paste, greenish In color and very toothsome. The following is the recipe given for thts dainty by one college girl: Dissolve three tablespoon fu!s of grauuiait-u geiaan ia a cuprui ox con, water. Meanwhile let two cupfuls of granulated sugar dissolve "in half a cupful of cold water. When both are ready, heat the sugar and water to the boiling point and add the gelatin;' the latter should be thoroughly 8ottened and the water all absorbed. Cook ' twenty minutes after the boiling be- J gins. Then turn out the blaze of the lamp or remove the dish from the stove and add a couple of tablespoon - ful8 of lemon juice and four table - spoonfuls of creme de mentbe. Stir 15 enough green coloring to make a deli - cate.tiai. lke-hi. nhans of JLfap-kiud
One ton coal given to tne. poor with every 40 tons sold. . 922 Main St Phone 1633 Yard Office, Cor. 2nd Chestnut Sts
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IU1 nn n COR. K1DKI
These guns cost the build, every one of
been discarded and a noivor modol pun has taken their place. So this malioc it possible for you to own a Q25 SprinQfiold Rifle for $1.98, complete.
The Ho
boiiglit at toe confectioner's. ' Turn the mixture into unbuttered pans and when cold euough cut into squares. Ioosen the paste with the point of a knife and gently pull It from the pan. Roll the squares in confectioner's sugar. Domestic In' Her Tastes. Mary Roberts Rinebart, who is in the limelight just now on account of the success of her mystery novel, "The Circular Staircase," is the least sensational and the most domestic of women. She Just sits at home and digs. She has tenacity, cheerfulness and a sense of humor, also a devoted husband and three small boys. When she began to write, she used to read ber stories aloud to ber husband, a young physician and a lawyer, gathered for a weekly bridge game in her Pittsburg home, and they would stand on their chairs and talk at the top of their voices so that she could not possibly be heard. She had Aer moment of triumph when the first check came and was passed around in dumfounded silence. Mrs. Rinebart was mighty haughty. i Just Keep Busy. r3oes your head ache? Sample the laugh cure. Are the children obstreperous? Don't mope over j-our sorry lot, but charm them with a smile. Does the future seem a coal black wall? See what kind of a wedge a day of cheerfulness can make. Gladness never comes with time to think about your troubles, so get busy. The full life Is rarely the somber life. Get grateful for your mercies. You may think it takes a magnifying glass to find them, but the eye is sharpened by the looking. If you hsve no other cause for gladness. If your friends are not what they should be, if fortune frowns and things generally seem "rank," just be glad you are alive! To Enlarge Windows. A very good way to make windows appear larger than they really are is to secure strips of wood about two inches wide and of a length to extend f-Ix or eight inches beyond the edges of the sash frames, instead of using the ordinary poles as wide as the win dow. Lace curtains falling only to the window sill may be hung on small brass rods set Inside frames and long curtains of semiopaone goods tacked on a strip in plaits, leaving open a space of one foot in the center. A valance across the top completes the . arrangement. ; A Bride's Problem. . The most important business a bride has .to aceis the., cjiojce .pf fc?r new
IY1AKE THE TEST
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SIXTH AND HAIR
(ol (o Co) ' "
BUYS ONE OF THE
United StatooQ18 to thorn, but thoy havo
melius Cna 'lie maw'ng ofa Social Circle which is to last herself and bei husband through a lifetime. When the newly married couple are settled into their home people begin to call AU sorts and kinds of people flock round the honeymooners. The bride has the responsibility of choosing which are to be friends and which mere acquaintances. A Quickly Made Centerpiece. A centerpiece that can be made with little or no trouble is a circle of linen with a border of two or three inch cluny lace gathered round the edge. The thread of the lace is drawn, and it is put on just full enough ao that it lies perfectly fiat without ruffling. A little in from the edge is worked a monogram in satin stitch. This is heavily padded and is embroidered in a fine mercerized cotton. 8alad Dressing. The ideal salad dressing Is made with lemon juice and the finest olive oil. the lemon juice being far more wholesome than vinegar, which Is 'extremely bad for many stomachs. One-fourth lemon juice to three partf of the oil makes a dressing that most people like, while others who care lest for oil like it half and half. Often one sees a woman with dark brown rings below the eyes, also mottled over the face and frequently npoe the forehead. This is due to Intestina? trouble of a serious nature, and only a reliable physician should prescribe for such when medicinal aid is needed "I met a curious trio of sisters coming home on the steamer," said the man just back from London. "Their names were Rose, Blanche and Violet. I wonder why their parents did not call them patriotically Red, White and Blue." When material is to be cut awa under lace, use a piece of pasteboard four Inches long, rounded at one end and cut wide enough to slip along be tween the lace and material. This wilt make the work easier and safer. Easy to buy, easy to try, the best, wholesome, appetizing breakfast is Mrs.- Austin's famous pancakes. Ladies' Muslin Garment Sale begins on Friday see notice in tomorrow's paper. Knollenberg's Store. Germany has now rive commercial high schools at Leipsic, Aix, Cologne, Frankfurt and Berlin.
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J Vii U U
Y
Mm Let the reader keep his eyes open as he walks .about -London, and he will see on every side of him the brokeu soldiers of this Innumerable army. The old journalist, the old clerk, the old actor, the old shopman, the old nondescripts of those odd and multifarious employments whost very names are unknown to most of us there they go. penslonless, comfortless and homeless, living on the gratuities of their children, abd seeking in chance employments to earn a casuol slxpense for their hunger. The common lodginghouses, the misehable garrets in court and alley, and the cheap bedrooms in small suburban streets are always full of London's shabby people. A method of bluing small steel goods by dipping is to melt saltpetre tn an Iron pot .then immerse the previously polished and cleaned articles until sufficiently blued. The goods should then be removed and cooled in petroleum and afterward dried out in saw dust. " INDIAN. MAGIC WONDER-WORKER Shungopavi will introduce his new and original Illusion. "The Mystic Arrow." A large target is placed at one side of the stage with the lady assistant standing directly ih front of same. Shungopavi shoots the arrow, apparently through the body of bis assistant, into the garget. The arrow carries with it yards of bright colored ribbon. This illusion. w!:ile realistic, is not in any way objectionable or distasteful. Shungopavi will also introduce his success of the past season. The Vanishing Indian." Y. M. C. A.-Earlham entertainment course. Col iseum, Friday. Jan. S. Admission 23a. No let up on the Bargain Cloak Sale. Knollenberg's Store. MITUS ICC WDLSON Phoae 2974 Adams Drag Store t MISS MABEL HUDN Teacher ; ELOCUTION the art of so s. lata st. nbc IMS. QUANTITY Phone 31C5
