Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 97, 13 February 1909 — Page 2
PAGE TWO.
THE RICHMOND TAIXADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1909.
WA
o) Inn II D (2
ft (LOG3
c
HL
.Will Lecuwe on THE F
raw
D
1(S
2
9LC DKI DyGS.TOIS--OIIEI
r.Tico Craig Ig the moot noted authority on cooking and tho art off conoral Iiltchon oconomy In tho United Statoo Pittoburg Chroniclc-Telceraph-
Watielto l?Joinidlay (Papers Fop Fpgi?ainrainniea
Vy UVI fe)
L
LOfIG HIGH; PASS EVIDENTLY BEST Coach Vail Should Be Convinced After Witnessing Defeat of Quakers. WABASH WAS A WHIRLWIND
EARLHAM TEAM LAST EVENING WAS SMOTHERED UNDER THE SCORE . OF 51 TO 25. LITTLE GIANTS CLASSY.
Earlham's athletic director said the Vabash-Earlham basket ball game would determine which is the better style of play the long pass or the short and low pats. At the coliseum last evening Wabash defeated Earlham by the score of, 51 to 25. Wabash used the long high pass for the full length of the floor. Coach Vail probably is ready to render his decision today and next season the Quakers may change their style. The short pass is alright against a slow heavy team but It is easy for agile opponents
to break up. The long pass risks possession of the ball, but when It goes true it saves time and effort in taking the ball from one end of the field to the other. Earlham never had a chance to win last evening. She appeared outclassed and the shifts in the lineup availed nothing. It was simply a case where the home team was outclassed. Earlham played hard and In spurts they played all around the visitors but to no avail. Hotchklss Wat Misted. The Quakers were without Hotchkiss who is the best player on the team. " The Little Giants surrounded the Quakers and when all five Earlham men were on the same spot Lambert, the star, of the Wabash team would take the ball the fun length of the floor and a score would always be the result The home team showed keenly the lack of team work , and systematic playing In 'which the Scarlet excelled. During the whole game every man for Wabash was at the right place and for Earlham the men were never In position to receive the ball. Conrad nd Tebbett played a
fast game and Reeee deserves special mention for clever . playing. Swain and Lindley at center were slow and awkward. Wabash Gets the Jump. The first half opened with Wabash taking the lead and keeping it. Earlham started scoring during the latter part of the half but could only reach ten points. Wabash scored 14, The half was interesting and much cheering was done by the students. . In the second naif the Little Giants quickened their pace and there was nothing to it. Stup and Yont guarded
like fiends and it was almost impossible for the Quakers to put the ball past them. Walters and Lambert made shots for the goal the like of which have never before been seen In the city. In the second half Conrad went to center and Bowman of the Scarlets found his match more so than when the two husky centers of the yellow and white were playing this position. Earlham made 15 points this half while the visitors scored 37. Lineup and summary: Wabash Earlham Walters Reese Forward Lambert . . ; ." Conrad, Cornell Swaim, Lindley Forward Bowman, , Conrad Center Yount Hancock Guard Stump . Tebbetts, Furnace Guard Field goals Walters 5, Lambert 6, Bowman 5, Yount 2, Conrad 4, Reese 2. Swaim 2, Cornell. Foul goals Tebbetts 7, Lambert 14, Bowman.
Referee Guedel of Indianapolis. JJmpire Boggs of State Normal. Scorers Beebe and Hargrave. Timekeepers Boggs and Hargrave. Time of halves 20 minutes. Polo at the Coliseum Monday evening. Elvvood vs. Richmond. 1321 LETTER LIST. Ladies' List Mrs. Sarah Dickey, Miss Ethel Smith, Lizzie Sharp. Gentlemen's List Gill Barrett, Harry Bond, Horace C Boyd, A. C Grave, Elmer' Harvey. Frank La Porte, Nick Neager, D. Seerfleld, E. E. William, Howard Willis. John J. Wiley. Drops Harry Willinam. Foreign Fuc?ks Regi. J. A. SPEKENHIER, P. M. "Ton see, said the high browed professor. tne science of chemistry depends on the discovery of certain affinities" "Pardon me," Interrupted Miss Prym. "I trust the conversation can proceed without drifting Into scandaL Washington Star.
THE THEA TER
"EC35D CUSSCC," Oat to
THEATRICAL CALENDAR. GENNETT. Feb. 13 "The Man From Home." Feb. 16. The Thief. Feb. 17 Madam Butterfly. Feb. 18. The Royal Chef. Feb. 19. The Top O' Th' World. NEW PHILLfPS. All Week High Class Vaudeville. "The Man From Home." ' The Man From Home," the play of the century, as It has been termed, comes to the Gennett theater, Saturday matinee and night, Feb. 13. All last year it ran in Chicago where It hung up a new record of 342 performances. It is the joint 'work of the Indiana authors. Booth Tarkington and Harry Leon Wilson, and its producers are that sterling New York firm, Liebler & Co. who hare yet to send on tour , their first poor play, inferior company or incomplete stage production. The Liebler name has become synonymous with guaranteed stage excellence. "Madam Butterfly." Miss Adelaide Norwood, prima donna soprano, who sings the role of "Madam Butterfly" In the production of this name to be seen in this city, Wednesday, Feb. 17, tells of a chance for American girls. Miss Norwood says : ""The American girl is shortly to come into her own." Miss Norwood has been in Europe for the past three years and speaks with authority of conditions there . and also as a prophecy which is of interest. The American girl is going to shine in the big musical circles of the Old World." said Miss Norwood In a personal interview to the representative of this publication. "The copyright on the Wagner music dramas expires shortly and all of the big 'opera directors are arranging to produce Wagner's works exclusively for an Indefinite period.
When they do this, where are they to get their singers? Of course some of them wlll be Germans and other foreigners other than Americans, but Americans have been studying Wagnerian repertoire studiously for the past IS or 20 years. They have made sacrifices to do so. Now they will come fully equipped for the task.
York, or Chicago that the real broiler Is seen. Her services are in such demand that she does not need to travel. She has a city flat, a salary of from $25 to $35 a week and almost constant work. She move from one production to another in the big city, and the towns outside of it are to her mere names. A broiler is a petite, pretty girl, not more than twenty-five years old and not more than five feet three inches high. She knows all the 6tyles of stage dancing and is able instantly to seize an idea of the producing stage manager anl put it into terpsichorean actuality. She knows how to wear her costumes with grace and she knows how to care for them. She will dance half the time of a full performance, nine times a week, change her dress from ten to fifteen times while she is "resting" and do it all with a dashing, smilling appearance of enjoyment which makes her so attractive that she has become the famous institution she is. Since the "Top o th World" which comes to the Gennett on Feb. 19.
KISSING STORY . GIVEN A DENIAL Victim Was Aged Franklin County Man.
"The Thief." "The Thief has been presented In Germany under the title of "Der Dieb," in Russia as "Bopr," in Spain as "El Iadron," in Sweden as "En TJugen," in its oroginal French it was "Le Voleur," and as "The Thief it will be seen at the Gennett theater, Feb 16. That this drama of Henri Bernstein's could achieve success In so many countries is its principal testimonial. That it could run for ten months at the Lyceum theater. New York, is another recommendation of almost equal importance.
The Top O Th World." In the humorous nomenclature of the stage there is no term so expressive as that , which struck and .. was adopted Into the technical dictionary of things theatrical, when some Joker referred to the smalt American dancing girl as the "broiler. Now when one refers to a rtancfng girl as a broiler the term never evokes a smile. The broiler is an tmstitntion. She is - the chief, If not the most Important fea-
The New Phillips. The Japanese boy at the New Phillips this week end who walks on his head up a flight of stairs, will close his engagement this evening. This
act has aroused more discussion in
Che city than any ever seen from a Richmond vaudeville stage. ' The rest
of the troupe is a very good aggregation. ' - - McGreevy and Brown in their talking, singing and dancing act have done much to please this week's audience. ; - , - - : Marie Alba, the woman who has a pleasing way of drawing giggles from a bunch of people, will also leave the theatre to give way to another next
Try Mrs. Austin's buckwheat flour. Makes dandy cakes, with the genuine flavor. Ask your grocer.
Mr. SUmpurse Are you sore yon can be contented In a cottage? Adored One Tea. so long as the lor lasts. Mr. S. fwho ha ma n tort wt.
fore WeiL perhaps, after an, we had
Connersvllle, Ind., Feb. 13. The
story that went the rounds of the press
to the effect David Hawkins, aged
eighty, of Duckcreek, Franklin county.
has never been kissed, is denied. Of course it was denied by a woman. The woman who is seventy-eight tells of a
quilting bee on Hawkins' eighteenth
birthday. There were nineteen girls present and every one kissed the bashful Dave. She does not tell If that incident was the reasons for Hawkins' aversion in future years to the caress
of a woman.
and DYSPEPSIA, TTmAmmJLm AnX Tt&ln In Ttft f tfat
stomach, belcUnjrof gasand bitter fluid, i'liuMknnii all fhM. hum imMertmm
tion, or dyspepsia." Then, if you will take a little Kodol, you will know just why it is for Indigestion and dyspepsia. TV.. 4a a.TI v Vt Vmm vtT tA iMmnO
good Kodol is try it, yourself, whea
you neea u. xoa cannot nuu hj mistake in taking- a little Kodol whenever your stomach goes wrong. Our Guarantee gSZFTt
yoe are sot benefited th dnoM win at , com retara roar money. Don't WMf; any i Crocrist win sea yea Kodol on these terms, i The dollar bottle eontsiaa af& time sa eroeh j as the SOe bottle. Kodol is prepared tn the j laboratories of E. C. Be Wit.-. CeUucago.
Haruy G. Sommers, Lessee and Manager. Phone 1683. ' Saturday, Feb. 13, Mctlncc cd KIl Liebler 4. Co's Supreme Production of that epic of Indiana, played by the only company en tour in this success of the century. THE MAN FROM HOME By Booth Tarkington and Harry Leon Wileon, and as given 342 times In Chicago, and the season's triumph In New York. Matinee Prices, 25c, 50c, 75c, $1.00. Night Prices, 25c, 60c, 76c, $14)0, $140. Seats on sale at box office.
illtl0 TifiSOPg
Harry C. Scmmm J??LJ?&' 1CS3'i Tuesday Evening, Fc?ery 10 A Gocd Play for Lovers and Sweethearts, Hoebands and Wives to See. Charles Frohman Presents the Great Dramatic Sensation TMIE TMIIEIF By Henri Bernstein, as plsyed for Ten Monthe at the Lyceum Theater, New York. "Every Lover of the Drama Should Oo and Sea The Thief " (Wm. Winter In the New York Tribune.) Seats an sale at box office after 10 a. m. Prices, 25c, 50c, 75c, $1X0, $140.
Phillips Theatre.
VAUDEVILLE. Week End Feb. 11 Entire change of pragram Monday Thursday "Rata Tkz& Kswslty Aer . 7 CCfzr Da Aeb.
.10 casts to aH parts of
(Kendo 1mm .... ... Horry C. Sommers, Letse and Mgr. Phamm iCOS.
Wednesday Evening, Feb. 17 The Event of Ike Seccon! The management beg to announce the extraordinary engagement this city shortly of the Famous English Opera Co.
In
FatetlB
I Two W
A Grand Opera in three Acts by Giacomo Puccini, from the novel and play by John Luther Long and David . Belasce. The great cast includes: Mies Adelaide Norwood, Miss Louie Collier. Mies . Myrtle Thornburg, Mies Ellen ' James, Mr. Ottley Cranston, Mr. Arthur Psan, Mr. Henry Taylor. Mr. Thee. J. Conkey, Mr. Chaa. C Locke. Karl Grossman. Musical Director.
Company, 75 people. Orchestra, SI
turned. Magnificently Staged. First time In prices. Curtain, 8:15 sharp. Carriages, 10: W Sale opens Monday morning at box office E3C 7&c $1X. $1 tucx . ;
at
A. U.
i
LftrodacUoa. Tk l snTr-ody tat New
