Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 70, 17 January 1909 — Page 5
"THE RICHMOND PAL LADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SUNDAY, JANUARY 17, 1900.
PAGE FIVE.
NEWS OF SOCIETY
TO REACH THE SOCIETY EDITOR, CALL PHONE 1121
SOCIAL CALENDAR FOR WEEK
Monday Mrs. William Romey will be hostess for a meeting of the Magazine club at her home on South Twelfth street. The Tlcknor club meets with Mrs. Frank Land at her home on North Twelfth street. The Dorcas society will meet. Madame Marchesl will be heard In recital at the Gennett theater. Tuesday Mrs. Edward Beatty and daughter Miss Helen will entertain with a reception and musical in the afternoon and evening. Wednesday The Ivy club meets. The marriage of Miss Ella Lemon and Mr. William" Wilson will be celebrated in the afternoon. The Good Cheer club will meet in the afternoon. A meeting of the Music Study club will be held in the morning. The Home Economic Study club meets. Thursday The Happy Hour club meets with Mrs. Brown. The Woman's Relief Corps will meet in the G. A. R. hall. The Helping Hand society will meet In the afternoon. 'Friday Mrs. Charles Kolp's dancing class will meet. The Tourist club will meet. Mr. J., Walter Steinkamp's dancing class meets in the Knights of Columbus hall. Saturday The Buzzers Whist club meets. -Mrs. Joseph Zeller will be hostess for a meeting of the Daughters of the American Revolution at her home on North Thirteenth street The "Gabblers" will meet In the afternoon.
wore a large black picture hat Only a few friends were In attendance. Mr. and Mrs. Shallenberg will reside at 311 West Main street. The young people are well known here. Mr. Shallenberg was a member of the class '06 of the Richmond high school. They have the best wishes of their many friends in this city. J jH Jt
Very few social events of promin
ence were given during the past week. One would suppose that the numerous hostesses would be busy entertaining
now as the lenten season will soon be
at hand. js J Jit Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kirk of North
Eighth street are the guests of friends
and relatives at Springfield, Ohio, to
day.
Mr. Daniel Surface and daughter, Mrs. Jessie Allee have gone to St. Augustine; Florida, where they will
remain until about the first of May.
They have taken apartments in the
Magnolia hotel.
CLUB NOTES
Mrs. Elmer E. Jenks was the charming hostess for a birthday party yesterday 'afternoon at her home. 100 Kinsey Btreet. The function was given to celebrate her little daughters, Lorene Jenk's sixth birthday anniversary. The house was attractively decorated with flowers and ferns. The color scheme red and green being used throughout the various apartments. Children's games with music furnished much pleasure for the little people. During the afternoon Mrs. Jenks served a dainty luncheon. Small favors were given each little guest on departing. The affair was one of the most delightful functions which has been given recently for children. The guests bidden to participate in 'the festivity were Misses Erma Wilson, Marjorie Gault, Marjorie Clark, WHma Kamp, Keene Webb, Evabelle Moore, Hilda May ."Farmer, Emily Parker, Helen Johnson, Virginia Jones, Helen Unthank, Lelah Merrell, Wilhemtna Boggs, Edith Long, Reba Boggs, Marjorie Jones, Grace Trotter- and Ka tacrine Arnett tV.'; . ' . : ' J ' . Mr. and Mrs. John Aufderheide of Indianapolis who have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kaufman of the Wayne Flats, returned to their home today. : j j . A parcel shower was given recently by Miss Sophia and Miss Louise Vogelsong at their home, southwest of the city, In honor of Miss Henrietta Is sen a bride-elect of next week. A number of pretty gifts were showered upon Miss Issen. Games and music were a feature of the evening's amusements. Late in the evening a dainty luncheon was served. Those present were Miss Mayme Lahrman, Miss Eli- - sabeth and Miss Minnie Kaiser. Miss Anna Denzelman, Miss Hannah Dundon, Miss Mayme Smith, Miss Eff ie Galloway, Miss Goldie Stevenson, Miss Anna Rhoe, Miss Eva Geier, Miss May Wise, Ada Drlfmeyer, Miss Mayme Issen, Miss Nora Stiens, Miss Laura Austerman and Miss Elizabeth Vogelsong. Jt o J Mrs. Galen Lamb of East Main street has been entertaining during the past week with a series of delightful bridge companies. It is very probable that Mrs. Lamb will issue invitations for another; affair in a few days. - . J J Mr. John Shallenberg and. Miss Jessie Ballenger daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Ballenger were quietly married last evening at tne home of the Rev. J. O. Campbell on North Sixth Btreet. The bride was becomingly attired in a black tailor made suit. She
The Music Study club will meet
Wednesday morning, January Twen
tieth, in the Starr Piano parlors. All
members are requested to be present, The program promises to be most excellent one. JI Ji JI
Mrs. Dudley Elmer will be hostess for a meeting of the- Buzzers' Whist club Saturday evening, January twen
ty-third at her home on North A
street 3S JC JS
Mrs. Erie Reynolds was hostess for
a meeting of the Saturday evening
whist club yesterday at her home on East Main street. As is the usual custom dinner 'was served to the guests preceding the game. Nearly all
the members were inattendance. Prizes
were awarded. The club meets every
two weeks. J J J
; A meeting of the Ionian society was held yesterday afternoon at Earlham
College. The meetings are usually held Friday evenings, but on account
df the basket ball games which are
nearly all scheduled for the evening it was decided to hold meetings on Saturday evenings. The meeting yester
day was in the nature of a business
session.
The following officers to serve for
the ensuing year were elected: William W. LIndley President.
Harold C. Chapman Vice President.
John W. Perkins Secretary.
Harold Trumble Corresponding
Secretary. ,? Lester. Haworth -Marshall. Harold Winslow Critic. " Payne Comstock Vice Critic.
The literary committee is composed oofoo Mr. Leslie Manning, Mr. Charles
Fauquhar and Mr. Homer Morris.
MUSIC
The following article from the Mu
sical Courier concerning Madame
Marches! the celebrated opera singer,
who will be heard in recital at the Gennett theater Monday evening, is as
follows:
After an absence pf several years from American, Blanche Marchesl, the daughter of Mathilda Marchesl, the celebrated teacher of voice, returned
to America, opening her season at St
Paul January 1 and giving her second recital at the Studebaker theater on
January 3. There is no gain-saying
the fact that Madame Marches! is an
artist of extraordinary power, an ar
tistic interpreter of great authority,
and the value that she puts Into a song demonstrates at once extraordin
ary character which, In the usual
song delivery, is not vouchsafed to us The more profound the musical know
ledge, the higher the appreciation in
her case, because it is the true lover of musicvwho Instinctively seeks for the subtleties of the art, who finds
In her Interpretation the gratification
which the non-lover of music misses because of his lack of appreciation of the art Her best-numbers at her Chicago' recital, were Sigurd Lie's "Softfooted Snow," Reynaldo Halm's
"SI mes vers," Debussy's "Mandoline' and Gounod's "Serenade." The St
IFEl Dollar Bottle Gitalin
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W. F. FEEGER, EXPERT WATCH MAKER AND JEWELER. PHONE 2174. ( 1027 MAIN
Paul press commented as follows on
Madame Marchesl:
"Blanche Marches!, the eminent
French song interpreter, graced the program as soloist and quite took the
house by storm. Hers is the sort of singing which makes a house demand more, involuntarily, so contagious is her - joy In the doing. Her presence
had all the charm and grace that one
must have to have earned the reputa
tion that she has In the artistic world.
Her voice Is a full soprano; her tone production Is delightfully easy, but it
is rather more as an Interpreter of
songs than as a vocalist that she shines. Pioneer Press.
Madame Marchesi's reception was
splendidly enthusiastic and as the singer was Quite as gracious as the audience was cordial, the original program was almost doubled with encores. St Paul News.
The singing of Blanche Marches! demonstrates the existence of a truth
after which genius Is always search
ing that the more infallible the art of the singer the more nearly does It come to being the art of the poet or the painter. When she sang the aria
from "per Freischutz" recently
in the Symphony Orchestra's con
cert at the Auditorium, she pro
duced effects that were hardly to be
accounted for by vocal technics
Where the singer with a great voice
gives lucid exposition of the manner of her achievement, Madame Marches! shrouds her methods in mystery and thereby makes her singing tenfold more impressive. Without a great vocal gift, she is still a great singer, but she would doubtless have been quite as great had she chosen some other artistic medium. St. Paul Dispatch.
GRAPEFRUIT IS
HMIDED FOULKE BY MARIOli PAPER (Continued From Page Three.)
WOMAN SPEAKER WAS NOTSECURED But Women Will Have Option Meeting by Themselves Despite Trouble.
MEN ALSO TO OBSERVE
MAYOR BRENNAN OF XENIA, WILL DELIVER ADDRESS AT GENNETT INTEREST IN MEETINGS INDICATES LARGE CROWDS.
Inability to secure a woman speaker, although several were communicated with, led the county local option organization to select Rev.' E. G. Howard, pastor of the First English Lutheran church to deliver the address at the woman's meeting at Reid Memorial church this afternoon. The Woman's County Local Option league which will have charge of future meetings to be held for women' only regrets very much that one of their own eex could not be secured to deliver the address. Mayor Brennan of Xenia, O., will speak at the public meeting for men only at the Gennett theater. Both meetings will no doubt be largely attended. ... A very interesting program was prepared by the Woman's Option league at its meeting yesterday afternoon at the residence of Mrs. R. E. Haughton, South Tenth street. Little other business except arranging for today's meeting was taken up. However, an addition to the list of vice presidents was made, Mrs. O. E. Allison being selected as a representative of St. Paul's Episcopal church. The program for this afternoon's meeting at Reid Memorial church is as follows: Opening exercises 2:30, with singing of the doxology. Invocation, Miss Jane Colborn. Hymn. Reading of Scripture Lesson, Mrs. S. W. Traum. Prayer, Mrs. R. E. Haughton. Solo, Miss Clara Myrick. Address, Rev. E. G. Howard. Hymn. Prayer, Mrs. McCurdy.
COMPANY WAS READY
Interurban Employes Prepared to Care for Themselves Against "Suit Casers." USUAL SATURDAY CROWD
. Cambridge City, Ind., Jan. 16 The Interurban company expected to make trouble when the celebrated suit case gang from New Castle left for home tonight, if there were any attempt on the part of its members to be looking for a scrap. The car crew had more than it could handle a week ago, but was prepared for the Henry county men tonight. When the car left here, everything appeared very orderly, although there was the usual number of suit cases and besides, there was a plenty in the pockets. - For several weeks it has been the custom of a number of : New Castle men to come to Cambridge City, Saturday afternoon. They always bring suit cases and store away in them before leaving town, a bountiful supply of Intoxicants. It is claimed that some of the visitors have their suit cases petitioned like & box used for shipping eggs and the contents are stored away so there is no danger of breakage.
It seems that bluff King Henry VHI. was the first person who wore a collar In any way resembling those of the present day. An old historian writes of the monarch as the first English king that wore a band around bis neck aad that very plain asd an loch or two la depth,
equally as disagreeable. Having received the letter he hands It out to the press, and thereby gets his name In the headlines of the newspapers. He wears proudly the title of official tattle-tale to the present administration. He has also been listed by the president as one of three or four men in
Indiana whose honesty has been definitely determined, the others, we believe being Lucius B. Swift, George Ade, Booth Tarklngton and Jake Dunn we are not so sure about Jake being on the list, which was furnished
to the president by the Abou Ben Ad-
hem of the string the Hon. William
Dudley Foulke. About all of the Indiana unemploy
ed have been engaged since November 3 writing articles for the Indianapolis papers, explaining how it hap
pened. Up to last week. Mr. Foulke was too busy to put forth the last word on the subject, but President Roosevelt being engaged with his Christmas tree and Mr. Taft having gone South and not requiring, for the
time being, the aid of the Foulke Intellect in planning the work of his administration, the sage of Richmond hands down to the Hoosiers the real ex cathedra pronouncement on the situation. The persons whom the Republican party in the last few years have chosen for leadership without consulting Mr. Foulke are a bum lot, in no way to be compared with him in the matter of intellect and character. The party, in fact, has not been living up to Mr. Foulke. It has allowed him to tower over It like an airship above the bottom of a gas well, and has not even striven to rise gradually to his plane. Although Mr. Foulke does not say as much we presume that the same thing has been true of the party in the State of Michigan, Ohio, Illinois, North Dakota, Maine, Connecticut, West Virginia, New York, etc., where in the election of November 3, the Republican State candidates fell further behind the national ticket than did the head of the Republican State ticket in Indiana. However In these other States, so much is not to be said in deprecation. They did. not have Foulke. to live up to. Here we had, and deliberately refused to do it, in some cases even placing corrupt persons at the head of things, persons whom -Mr. Foulke ventures to state he will name if any one should so much as slap him on the wrist. We are told by Mr. Foulke that In the last campaign a "gentleman of great ability and influence" this can only be Mr, Foulke himself offered to make speeches for the party, and that he was only offered one speaking apointment and at this place it was stipulated that he was to speak on local isues. It must be remembered that in Indiana the consent of the spoken-to must be secured before a speaker can be assigned. If any community in Indiana had called for Mr. Foulke. which it didn't, no would have been assigned to speak. As for his story about the speaker stipulating what a speaker was to talk about, if we were too mention it at all, we would be compelled to characterize it by the abbreviated and uncomely name. Of course it is no fault of Mr. Foulke's that it doesn't happen to be so it is only evidence of the turpitude of the ignoramuses who don't know an orator even when he admits his eloquence. Mr. Foulke is displeased with Mr. Crumpacker, although the Tenth district congressman is one of the few statesmen who was deemed righteous enough to speak during the last campaign in Mr. Foulke's own town, where there are a number of republicans who are so much .better than other folks that they couldn't stand for. tainted oratory. He says that Judge Crumpacker was re-elected by a greatly reduced plurality. It isn't Mr. Foulke's fault that this, too, happens to be un-
TTTHIE-. HOOSIER
Mere's a M2gMy SaHe ofi Trfimrainraecl Hafls all a IBifij Saving
07 ($ h O OlUJ and E-J 3 $8 Hats For aBBBBSBBBSS-BSBSBS--BBB-BSBSaaBSBMB-a4 SBH
We have about 300 Fine Hats, ranging in price from S6, $7 to $8 each, and we have made the reduction very forceful in order to close them out at once.
A little out of season to advertise ladies' millinery? Yes, but just the same the Hoosler is going to make this next week Millinery week. These hats are wondrously beautiful. Our Millinery Department has no competition along the lines of true millinery merchandise, for we stop at nothing to provide the most fashionable in this line.. These hats then, are just such as will win the approval of every woman who appreciates style and good taste. Come Monday and all next week.
the Hoosier Store CORNER SIXTH AND MAIN STREETS
true; he merely hasn't had time to look it up. The conclusion of the whole matter is as we understand it, that the thing
for the republican party in Indiana to do is to apply for a receiver, and let i Mr. Foulke be the receiver. Mr. Foulke realizes that if he ever has anything to , say in Indiana politics back home it; will be by some such designation. He j
thinks it would be a good thing if the administration would say to all Hoosier republicans who apply at the pie counter: "Back, varlets, my old chum.
Wlliam Dudley Foulke has told me '
what a wretched lot you are. Get. ye hence and lead a chastened life, reaa Foulke's complete works as proper penance for your cussedness, and if, perchance you can come back here with a certificate of character from Foulke a few years henco I may take some chances on you." To speak frankly, the principal trouble with the republican party in Indian is the disloyalty of factlonalists of the Foulko stripe. What they can not rule an they can rule nothing, they set out to destroy. Fodlke himself was against the republican ctate ticket until directed to get into line hy the appointing power. His newspaper at Richmond gave the lie to his affected support of the ticket by fighting it. As for Foulke and bis kind, such men could be nominated or elected to anything. They -would die by the sword of factionalism which they long have
used in their own behalf. Suggestions of party rehabilation come with poor grace from thoso whose envy, hatred and treason have brought about the defeat of the party. The republicans of Indiana would support Mr. Foulke for court fool for the next admlnlstratration or consul-general to the Sicily islands. This fills np tho measure of Mr. Foulke's expectations at the hands of Indiana republicans who have him accurately sized up. If he can do better by continuing to play White House sycophant, well and good, but he should unload his advice In Washington, where it may attract respectful attention, rather than In Indiana, where it will excite nothing but contempt and derision.
In the reign of Edward IIL there were eminent clothiers and woolen weavers whose family name was Blanket. They were the first persons who manufactured that comfortable material which has ever since been called by their name and which was then used for peasants clothing.
The Higher Study of Singing vocal classes In Richmond will observe vacation during holidays. Will bo resumed Monday, Jan. 11, 1909. Studio: tasUaUMfholls. 17 ENortfe street.
tstsarsr Aat
PIMM Xf7
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If Yocr Watch Dcs the Habit
off stops tn J. brmS it to as. We will pet it in first-class order and guarantee it, O.E.DicIiincon
DIAIaOHDS nOUHTED
PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY.
Eoinniey's E W (BIT 11 Dfl fi Oil J 1 Rentiers
In this Big Store is included in this Pre-Inventory CILJEAMArVCE SALE 2 Especially deep are the cuts in the prices of Odd Pieces and Broken Lots. Such as Chairs and Divans, from Parlor and Library Suits, Extension Tables, Buffets and China Closets, Dressers, Chiffoniers and Beds, Toilet Tables, Rockers. v
BLANKETS Our entire stock of Wools and Cottons at reductions of from 10 to 40 per cent
STOVES All our Heating Stoves, from the cheapest to the highest priced at immense reductions. .
Buy Now at
PreJnvenIcry &I2.
YOU'LL SAVE HONEY 01 FUBHITUBE, CABPETS, STOVES, DEDDING.
