Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 195, 22 May 1909 — Page 5
and shelter tn a single gift eootbxualiy l- muao ub iui LT Td places habitable. New I usa aaiaeavor iwr n ju people of the church and ooflamunity. CesttaJTHE RICHMOND FALLiAlIU3T ASO t'TJC XiEOlSA 3X, SATURDAY, AaAl 3, 1UU9. IAG FIVE. ART EXHIBIT TO BE BETTER THAU EVER TBIS YEAR IS SHOT TO DEATH QUITE SUCCESSfUL Despite Weather the Sale of Beallview Lots Yesterday Pleased. Es1:2:s3tll851 ? NEWS OF SOCIE J BY JEALOUS LOVER TY 5 What Is Doing in Social, Club and Art Circles.
placed where he could serve the people and demonstrate the laws oC science) as applied to sanu life on a
- A prettily appointed dinner company was given Friday evening ' by Miss Ruby Brehm at her home on North Eighth street in honor of Mr. Fay Smalley, of Ohio State University. The parlors were beautifully embellished with Japanese designs. In the .. dining room, cut flowers and ferns were used in decorating. The table was attractively appointed with daisies and ferns. Strands of ribbon were brought from the chandelier and fastened at the four corners of the table. An elaborate dinner in several courses was served to fourteen guests. After dinner, the remainder of the evening was spent socially and with music. Mr. Smalley gave , several selections, followed by numbers rendered by Mr. and Mrs. Henshaw and Miss Opal Norria. The affair was a most enjoyable one, Miss Brehm proving an entertaining hostess. Mr. Harold Myers went to Middletown, Ohio, this morning. He will at,tend a company this evening to be given by the young people of Middlevtown. - j& j& The dance given last evening by Mr. Julian Cates for Mr. Dudley Cates and Mr. Hume of Berkeley, California was a delightful affair. The function was held in the pavilion at Jackson's Park, and was largely attended by the young people of the , city. Piano and drums furnished the dance music.
Miss Margaret Sedgwick who attends school at Wilson College, Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, will spend her summer vacation In this city with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sedgwick. :, J . J Miss Hazel Freeman, who attends school at Chevy Chase in Washington, has come home to spend the summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Perry Freeman of South Twenty-Brat street J ' Jl J The carefully dressed) woman this season will pay particular attention ' to the buttons for her gowns and coats. There are fashions in buttons as there are in everything else and she who has not discovered this fact will find that she is decidedly behind the times. Buttons are extremely popular and. are t used .extensively, for trimmings. - The enameled sets in colors, green, blue, and rose, are again to be used. They will be worn with the lighter weight fabrics and, if taste is shown In their application.-; will Improve greatly any gown which they adorn. Besides these, beautiful gold buttons and burnished and dull oxidized silver onea and molds covered with silk are all employed in variously appropriate waya. jl Jl Jl Mr. and Mrs. Edward Dlngley and daughter. Miss Margaret of Atlantic City are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Dlngley. Jl Jl Jl Miss Marguerite Wilson, Miss Harriet Lyons, Miss Esther Jones and Miss Mary Wilson attended the May party at Hagerstown, Thursday evening. ', . : . J Jl Jl Miss Bertha Gottleide of New York has been visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hill, east of the city, for a few days. She will go. to Indianapolis, Sunday for a short visit. js ji ji : Miss Florence Shute, who attended school during the past year at Bryn Mawr It the guest of her mother, Mrs. Nora L. Shute, 1315 North C street. : ;s " Jl Jl Jl ; A dance will be given Saturday evening. May twenty-ninth, in Gaylor's new auditorium in Greensfork. Music will be famished by Oeisler and Benbow. Dancing will beginjjomptly at eight o'clock. Jl Jl jl A - A beautiful social event for Friday was the reception given by Mrs. Cleveland K. Chase at her pretty home In West Richmond. Mrs. Younger of California and Miss Mary Shlveley were honor guests. Mrs. A. D. Gayle. Mrs. James Morrisson, Mrs. Robert Kelly, Mrs. Charles Shlveley. Mrs. J. E. Cathell and Mrs. Edwin Trueblood assisted in entertaining. The honor guests with the hostess were in the receiving line. The house, was attractively decorated for the occasion. Wake Up That indifferent appetite with Post liri JL uoasoes The crisp, delightful food which tickles the palate and pleases the stomach. "The Taste Lingers" Pooutar pkg 10c; Large Famitv size 15c Sold by Grocers.
Miss Elizabeth ?. Thomas
CLUB NOTES The Olive Branch Bible class will hold Its monthly social and business meeting, with Mr. and Mrs. Adam Bartel at their beautiful new home- on South Sixteenth street. Monday evening. There will be quite an attractive program besides the regular business. The Apollo club will be present to render some selections and Mr. L. F. Pennington, of Earlham will give his oration that won for him the Inter-state contest a few weeks ago at Chicago. Refreshments will be served and quite a large at tendance is expected. The following is the program: Piano duett Miss Florence and MJsa Gertrude Bartel.. Prayer Rev. E. G. Howard. Transaction of Business. Music by Apollo club. Reading Miss Mabel Kuhn. Oration Mrs. L F. Pennington. Apollo club. Jl j j !' The Epworth League and the Sunday school of the Greensfork Methodist church gave a social recently in Kienzle's Hall. This was the crowning social event of the season. Nothing more complete in detail was ever planned in that town. The male members constituted the entertainment committee throughout the entire evening. It was arranged for the amusement of the ladles and they were not allowed to partake in any of the functions. Lunch was served. The program consisted of a beautiful floor drill by sixteen men under the direction of Ed Allen, which was present ed in an excellent manner. An address of welcome by W. W. Neff, a sermon by T. A. Dean, songs by the' quartet, solos, speeches and songs by the entire male members present. J J Jl The Sixth District convention of Women's clubs, win be held Wednesday, May twenty-sixth in Greenfield, Ind. A large number of the club wo men of Wayne county are expected to be in attendance. All literary clubs in this city are urged to send representatives. The affair will be in the nature of .an all day session. It is desired that the local delegation leave on an early car in order to be in time tor the morning meeting. Jt Jl Jt Friday afternoon the Mothers' League of Rlverdaie met at the White water school building for a business session. The program for the coming year was discussed and approved by the members. Officers were elected as follows: President Mrs. George Spaulding. Vice President Mrs. Gertrude Thomas. Secretary Mrs. Alfred Underhill. Treasurer Mrs. J. J. Getz. "Domestic Science" will be the subject for next season's study. Reports for the year were read yesterday and were very satisfactory. Fifty-four dollars and eighteen cents was cleared at the social held May seventh by the league. After the business session a program was given. Miss Karolyn Karl and Miss Clara Getz gave music numbers. A reading was also a feature of the program, being read by Mrs. M. E. Close. The programs will be given to the members at an early date. . Jl Jt J A meeting of the Francis Willard Woman's Christian temperance union was held yesterday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Rachel Hill, South Six teenth street. Mrs. S. W. Traum led the devotional exercises. Papers were read by Mrs. Eves, Mrs. R. R. Hopkins and Mrs. Ruth Anna Hunt. In twe weeks a business meeting will be heli at the home of Mrs. Mary Gorman. ' Jl . The "Day Dodger" 'seniors of Earlham college were entertained last evening by ' the dormitory seniors oi the college. The affair was held in the students parlors. The party was chaperoned by Dr. and Mrs. Coffin. J Jl J At the aid society meeting of the First Presbyterian church yesterday afternoon, it was decided to hold au indoor picnic in two weeks. This will be an all day affair and will mark the close of the season for the organiza tion. - ' An "open night" was celebrated last evening by the freshmen members of the Phoenix society of Earlham col lege. The program was a most unique one. . Miss Pauline White sang two pretty numbers. A theatrical enter tainment, consisting of five scenes and representing the five ages of the freshmen was given by Miss Hutton. A clever little playlet was also given. The characters were represented by Miss Edith Edwards Miss Hazel Stifel, Miss Grace Hadley, Mr; B. Jones. Mr. Homer Furnas, Mr. Robert Saunders, Miss Nancy Fuqua, Wm. Chester Reagan and Mr. Kennard. ,;ji'js -. ': The Mary F. Thomas W. C, T. U. will meet Monday afternoon at twothirty o'clock in' the dome room of the Morrisson-Reeves library. This will be a business meeting. All members are urged to be present CITY IN BRIEF Lou Riff left this morning for Indianapolis in his automobile where he will spend Sunday. Miss Mable Kuhn of Butler College is home for a short visit with her parents.
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MATED MARRY BAD A Daily Proposer to an Aged Woman is in Chicago Jaii Today. AN ALLEGED SWINDLE Chicago, May 22. Failing to- secure a bondsman for 2.o00 Herman Brand an alleged "daily proposer," is a guest today at the county jail. Mrs. Anna Johnson, a grayhaired widow of sixty, told Judge Hume that Brand bad .proposed to her daily for several months and victimized her out of $1,065. "Last November I read an advertise ment in a newspaper in which a man said he wanted a nice wife about 5T years old," Mrs. Johnson testified. answered it, saying I owned two nice houses. The next day he called on me. "He proposed marriage the first day the next, and - nearly every time he called. He said I looked younger than 55 and was pretty." "In January he asked me for money to buy lots with. He got $1,065 from me before March 10. I didn't learn until later that he was already mar ried." BIG GRADUATING CLASS THIS YEAR Garfield School Will Make New Record. Arrangements are being made for the graduation exercises of one of the largest classes in the history of the Garfield school. The class enroll ment totals 85. It is not known as yet whether all will graduate, but Prof, Heironimus feels assured that a very large per cent of them will. The graduation address will be de livered by Rev. H. Robert Smith, of the First Baptist church. ' Other num bers on the program will include both vocal and instrumental selections. The program has not been completed en tirely, however. Where and How to Keap Parasols. The parasol is always a nroblem It Is usually too long to be kent in one's bureau drawer, and If hung in the closet the covering becomes soiled by an accumulation of dust or by rub bing against the dark fabric of gowns or coats . Parasols may be beautifully diSDOscd of to one's Intense satisfaction in long sienaer bags hung in the closet Fine umbrellas may be cared for In the same way. , A parasol bag can be made of some long strip of lining, unbleached muslin or linen that would do for nothing eise. Special prices will be made in all Trimmed and Pattern Hats for the next 10 days. Kiite Mi norv fin 22&24 AMERICAN WOMAN ONE OF THE LEADERS Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt. president of the Woman Suffrage Alliance, who is taking a prominent part in the great Suffrage Congress In session in
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-1 Meeting Held Last Evening by Art Association Shows that Much Progress Has Already Been Made. FINE CANVASSES TO BE ON EXHIBITION In Some of the Departments,
Especially Photography, the Number of Exhibits Is to Be Decreased. Reports made at the meeting of all the committees of the Richmond Art association, last evening, indicated that the exhibit this year, commenc ing June 8, will be the best In the his tory of the local organisation. The exhibit will excel in both diversity and quality of the work displayed. The meeting was well attended and the most important of any held so far this year. Mrs. M. F. Johnston, president of the association, who has seen the Munci-3 exhibit, which includes many pictures which will be exhibited here, reported that the quality was of the very best and sure to please the Richmond citizens. Chairmen Report. The chairman of each of the committees reported the progress of the work being done by their committees. In no instance was a report made which Indicated that the success of the exhibit would not excel those of previous years. In 'some of the departments, espec-C ially in the photography department, an effort will be made to decrease the number of exhibits. More attenti6n to merit will be paid than heretofore. The sculpture exhibit, in charge cf Prof. Chase of Earlham college, will be particularly pleasing. Miss Scuddcr of New York, will exhibit an electric fountain which will probably be placed on the first floor in a most conspicuous place. List of Committees. Wayne county artists will have a better chance to display their canvasses this year than ever before. The middle room on the first floor of the Garfield building will be used entirely for this purpose." The exhibit by lo cal artists promises to be very large. The committees announced last even ing are as follows: Hanging pictures Frank J. Girardin, chairman; Miss Anna Newman, Mrs. Elmer Eggenieycr. Mrs. James Morrisson. Miss Carrie Lesh, Miss Al ice G. Locke. Miss Whltridge and Her bert McDIvitt. Arts and crafts Mrs. James Morrisson, chairman; Mrs. Elmer Eggemeyer, Muss Susan Kelsey, Mrs. Fred Dougan, Miss Anna Newman, Miss Caroline B. Price, Mrs. Geo. R, Potter, Miss Katherine Rettig. Miss Bessie Whltridge and Mrs. Jennie M. Yaryan. Manual training Prof. W. Scott Hiser, chairman; Miss Emma Bond, Prof. D. D. Ramsey, Miss Alice Winder, M13S A. Swain, Miss Grace Simpson, Miss Julia Test, Miss Emma Newman, Misj Alvina Steen and Miss Emma Leeson. Local paintings Miss Hettie Elliott, chairman; Miss A. Parsons, Miss Ade laide Huntington. Miss Martha Boyd and Miss Naomi Huber. Decoration department Miss Carrie Lesh, chairman: Miss Sarah Sanderson, j Miss Harriet Thompson. Miss Elizabeth Sands. Miss Clara Newman, Missi Elizabeth Smelser and Miss Anna Schultz. Sale of pictures Ellwood Morris, chairman; M. T. .Nordyke, Herbert McDivitt. Miss Hettie Elliott, Miss Alice G. Locke, Miss Carrie C. Lesh and Mrs. Elmer Eggemeyer. Finance committee Prof. T. A. Mott. j chairman; Herbert McDivitt. Elwood Morris, Miss Eleanor Likens and Rae Robinson. School displays Miss Alice Locke, art supervisor in the schools, chairman; Miss Beulah Locke, Miss Martha Whitacre. Miss Mary Lemon. Miss Alsie French. Miss Ruth Wlckett, Frank Schalk, and Blair Converse. - How's This? w offer On Hur,ara Dollm..- Re ward for any case of Catarrh th cannot b cured r Hall's Catarrh Cnr. We. the unlersJgnod. fcr.ve known FChenev for the last 15 rear, and believe hlflu perfectly honoraM In all business transactions, and financially able to cany out any obligations made by Mi ma- . ... . WRjainc, liinnu c mama, TVbolecale Dr jareUt. Toledo. CI ttbJVb Catarrh Car la taken Inter nally, acting- airecuy npen ine oiooa nd mucou surface of the systez. Testimonials sent free. Price T5c. per bottle. ria oy an uma-a-isrs. Take uau a ramuy fins cor cons a p&tlon. Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Buening of Charleston, S. C, are in the city today visiting friends and relatives while on their way to Grand Rapids. Mrs. John Weesner of Chicago Is In the city today visiting friends and relatives. Special sale on all Pattern and Trimmed Hats for the next 10 days. Klute Millinery Co. 2224 The Grind That Dulls. Tf the scissors crindp kenr Ma hlari In the whetstone unceasingly the scis sors would aeon be useless. The grind that dolls women is not dairy household duties, but never lettln tm on those duties. The housewife who Is knowing keeps herself sharpened with
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- Miss Rosie Cohen, whose picture is here shown, was a pretty New York girl who was shot to death by Men dell Wei n stock whom she had refused to marry. BREAD AND CkKE toK;::3. Well Tested Recipes That Are Net Difficult to Carry Out. To make cream biscuits mix one quart of flour, Are ounces of batter. two teaspoonfuls of baking powder and a little salt lightly together. Add one quart of sweet cream and work very well for several minutes. Roll out as thick as a silver dollar, cook tn a hot oven and serve hot with honey or preserves. Johnny cake. One quart of meal. one pint of warm water and one tea spoonful of salt, kitt meal In a pan and add water and salt. Stir It until It Is light, then place on a new clean board and place nearlj upright before the fire, when brown cut in aqnares. butter nicely and serve hot Hanover Rolls. Sift twice two quarts of flour. .Add four tablespoonfuls of yeast, one tablespoonful of lard or bat ter, one tablespoonful of sugar, one dessertspoonful of salt and a pinch of aoda. Use enough lukewarm water to make the mass soft enough to knead well and put where it will riae. When light, grease the hands and make Into rolls. Let them rise again and bake In hot oven. Wheat Muffins. Two cupfuls of flour, two teaspoonfuls of baking pow der, one tea spoonful of salt two tablespoonfuls of melted butter, two tablespoonfuls of sugar, one cup of milk, one well beaten egg. Bake In muffin tins and serve hot. Allegheny Tea Cake. One pound of butter, one pound of sugar, eight eggs and one, and one-quarter pounds of flour. Rub butter and sugar together and add by degrees the well beaten eggs and the flour. Flavor to taste. Drop with a spoon on well greased tins and bake. Rusk or Sweet Bread. One pint of flour, one pint of white sugar, one teacupful of melted lard, one and onehalf pints of water and two kitchen spoonfuls of yeast. Make Into a batter at night and set in a warm place to rise. The next morning work Into this sponge two beaten eggs and three pints of flour. Set in a warm place to rise again. When light make into pretty shapes, let it rise again and when light bake In quick oven. - Spread on tbe rolls when warm tbe white of an egg and sifted cinnamon. The dough sbould be as soft as yon can make It to work well. Tommy Paw. what is a bookworm? Mr. Flgg A man who loves books. Tommy Then Is a man who love fish a fish worm? WIDOW SILENT SMITH WILL LIVE IN LONDON Mrs. James Henry Smith, wicSr jf the late "Silent Smith," has decided to give up her New York home. She will probably make her home in Lon-
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SOLD FOR FANCY PRICES
More successful than expected was the sale of lots in the Beallview addition yesterday afternoon by the Winchester Realty company, acting for the South Side Improvement association, which organisation expects by such means to raise money to bring factories to the city. The officers of the realty company had not expected to do much business yesterday, owing to the weather. However, a large crowd was attracted to the scene and after the preliminaries, as announced, the sale was begun. Fifteen lots were sold at prices ranging from $lo. to 5. The company expected to do much better today and Monday, providing the weather permitted. There seems to be a general demand for the lots on the part of th-a public The company gave a lot to Mrs. Anna Lindamann yesterday. READ ALOUD EVERY DAY. A StrengthoMina Eaarcisa For Women to Practice. A famous doctor not long ago adrled one of his women patients to read aloud an hour each day for tbe benefit of her lungs. An easy cure, thought the woman. But to her surprise she not only found the exorcise fatiguing, but learned that she road abominably. Not one person In a hundred reads well. The voire Is pitched so high that tbe throat suffers or is so low and mnmbly that listeners art maddened In tbe effort to follow. To read for hours without feeling it throw the voice well forward, so that vibrations strike the upper lip, and pitch It so that there Is no strain either on the throat muscles or on the ear of the listener. There are some persons who read as If In bonds to get through a given number of words In a stated time. Very fast reading Is hard to follow and is particularly deplbrable If one la reading to a convalescent Equally bad Is a dragging style that snakes one lone for a prad. Read qvsrfcly. but enunciate each syllable clearly and distinctly. To read aa if one were practfcl&f elocution Is extremely bad style, remarks a writer. Never aim at expreaslTeness. If you bave a fine sense of tbe text unconsciously the voice takes on tbe correct modulation. Stilted or artificial reading Is not to be tolerated. Learn to read naturally, in a pleasant voice, with special attention to enunciation. It is an art no woman can afford to be without. There are many times when one - must read aloud, without voice, and a conscious ness of being a poor reader does not make It easier. . Another advantage of reading aloud is the sttentlon it calls to pronuncls tlon. Words that one has read silently from youth we often find we have mispronounced only when they are first read In company. Por this reason it Is important that girls and boysvbo trained m reading aloud beyond what they get in school. It Is well to keep a pencil and iad tn hand to jot down any word of whose meaning and pro nunciation one is not certain. VENTILATING SHADE. A Clever Contrivance For Adsnitttoa Air Without Annoyanee. Host of us nowadays know better than to sleep with closed windows sad would as soon think of taking poisonous food as breathe vltisted air. The ancient prejudice against night sir has gone the way of hobgoblins and other old wives tales, so sometimes one is disturbed by the rustling snd waving of shades which fill like sails or try to behave like flags. In consequence one sometimes feels obliged to open 3 y V txos saass vsawbt sows. the lower sasb of a window, which Is not a gocd or safe plan of ventilation. The real remedy Is to have a ventilating blind, which to easily managed by detaching tbe exlstta? shade from its roller and adding a width of oarse canvas cr still more open maferlaL" so that when the shade is quite lowered It presents a very porous surface to the open top of the window, enough to check direct draft, but not enough to exclude free passage of air or to set up a noisy wind pressure. Of course when the shade is in normal use this part H I ri'i'r. hut . csa soon be brrwi-r" .' -- .; -r --. - Dobso - ..r triggers, the oxpert accountant. They say that be Is going eraxy. ';, - Jobson What appears to be the trouble? - v. ' : '; Dobson He's bees trying to straight
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en out Ids wife's KitiThnlJ
THE DEMAND FOR WATCHES never diminishes; providing, of course that they are of modern design and a standard make. Our present stock to noticeable tor splendid and UNUSUAL VALUES. If you contemplate purchasing any thing in the Jewelry line, now Is tho time to buy. and this Is the place. 0. E. DICKINSON. Diamonds Mounted. Watch Repairing
THE TELEPHONE FIEE3. Wo AH Know Her, the Perse n. Hello: That you? Tea. I thought I'd call you up. It's Jst out. Oh. I should say tt ta. No; tVm real warm, Whatchdoln? Tow axel Where am IT At tho bank." So were several other women at tho bank. They had stage ed la to oak deposits or send drafts and had gone lata the women's room to wait foe friends or use the telephone. One woman wss waiting to telephone boms that she couldn't get out In time for lunch. Another wanted to maks an appointment with a dress ins hi r. A third wanted to telephone out to Bridget that It looked like rata and would she please shut tho bedroom windows and also giro tho children ft cooky apiece when they came home from school and not to let them play outside the yard, an of which was business, too. from some points of view. They wore all brief, ears reliev ing, ttoso saving aissssgsa. tho sort of nsssongos tor which phones were supplied. But there sat that creature "ugh-huhing and intubating" while n half doxen women waited for that one minute at tot telephone) that would make the rest of tho day go smoothly. And. by tbe war. taw young parson at tho phono bad walked ta at tho front door and made her way straight to that room. When at length aha had used the telephones and tbe mirrors aa long as she wished site letiaced her steps, found her way back to tbe front as fast as her feet could carry and in an probability she hod leoa tho sign on tho reeetvlsg window. Still she waa In no way deterred from using tho special primegea which the bank bad provided for its patrons. Perhaps this Is too fine a point of honor to be grasped by tho feminise mind. , Priwssss a Toothpick Queen, Tho crown princess of Sovmaalf, who before her marriage was Princess Marie of Edinburgh, expects to manufacture 25.000.000 toothpicks this year. She is the owner and active manager of a toothpick factory near Bucharest. The workers are tenants on tho estate of her husband, and she takes a personal interest In sll of them. 'She established the factory four years ago. and It la one of tho largest and most profitable In Europe. Toothpicks from tho crown princess factory go Into sll European countries and sre to bo found in New York hotels la Individual paper wrappers. . Tbe crown princess Is planning to manufacture quill pens, many of which sre used In Germany and Russia. It Is said It is becoming tbe fashion for society women all over Europe to use quills for writing, and It la expected American women will not bo slow in taking up tho fad. This movement is in lino with tho revive! of tbe fashions of our mothers, and the crown princess, with her usual business acumen, sses s chance for profit In putting num pens, on the market. , PALLADIUM WANT ADS. PAY. A DAINTY GIRL'S DRESS. - Thin is a ery pretty design for i little girTs dress to be worn with guimpr. - The ma"nel U Mne mnA fee ing are cut for the neck, lower edge S skrt aad ssteies 6f Mriprd green any white. Other trimmings are asede wit btock braid. - This pattern is cat in four tfiea. 4 I . 0 snd 10 years. Size reqnires 9S yards of SC herb material. Pries of pal tern 418 Is 10 cents. ; No. It, . ' . Kanrs . Address Sue ..... PD oi
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