Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 328, 3 October 1909 — Page 5

THE KICmiOXD l'ALIiAmU3I A.ND SUX-TI2UEGltA31, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1909.

PAGE FIVE. Something Doing Every Minute During the Fall Festival Week EDITED BY ELIZABETH R. THOMAS. PHONE 1121

FALL FESTIVAL WEEK. The week, will be a gay one socially on account of the Fall Festival to Iks 5 held In this city Wednesday, Thursday nd Friday of this week. Already the city presents a beautiful appearance, with its attractive decorations In yellow and white. Perhaps the most enJoyuble affairs for the "fairer sex" will be the editors' banquet and the grand ball to be held in the Coliseum. The former on Thursday evening and the latter on Friday evening. Governor Thomas R. Marshall, with his wife, will be among the honor guests at the banquet, which Is to be served at six-thirty. The Coliseum will be elaborately decorated by an out-of-town decorator. AH club women of the city and, in fact, women not associated with any social organization are cordially invited to attend the function. Mr. Perry J. Freeman will act as toastmaster. The address of welcome will be given by Hon. William Dudley Foulke. This will be responded to by speeches delivered by Governor Thornas R. Marshall and Mr. A. M. Willoughby of Greensburg. Hon. J. O. Barnard, of New Castle, will also give an address. Smittie's band of Cincinnati, will furnish music during the various intermissions. Friday evening immediatel after the fantastic parade, the ball will be held. Dancing will begin at nine-thirty o'clock. An orchestra will furnish the dance music. The affair is under the auspices of the Entre Nous club. The public is most cordially invited to attend. Dance programs may be secured for fifty cents a couple.

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TEST-STUDY. A pretty wedding was celebrated last evening at the home of Mr. and Mr?. C. E. Newman, 21 North Sixteenth street. The bride was their niece, Miss Francis Study, of Williamsburg, and the groom Mr. Walter Test, son of

Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Test. In the parIci, where the ceremony was performed at seven-thlrtyo'clock, by Professor Elbert Russell of Earlham college. White was used in decoration, blossoms and ferns being attractively arranged about the room. The bride wore a beautiful white lingerie gown, handsomely trimmed. She was attended by Mrs. Arthur Test, of Akron, Ohio. Mr. Arthur Test attended the groom. Little Misses Esther and Elizabeth Miller of Cleveland, Ohio, were the flower girls. Tbir dresses were dainty summer frocks. Between fifty and sixty guests were in attendance. An elegant dinner was served .after the ceremony. Yellow and white was the decorative motif utilized in the dining room. " Mr. and Mrs. Test left for an Eastern trip. The bride"s goiu? away gown was a gray tailored suit. She wore a large picture hat. Upon their return they will be at home to their friends, south of the city. The numerous friends and acquaintances of the young people extend most hearty congratulations. The out of town guests were: Mr. and Mrs. Miller of Cleveland, Ohio, Miss Elizabeth Doan of Fort Wayne, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Test of Akron, Ohio; Misse3 Esther and Elizabeth Miller of Cleveland, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Denver Coggeshall, of Fountain City, Ind., Miss Ethel Wooly of Williamsburg, and Miss Emma Shellenbeck, of Dayton, Ohio. 4 WILL GIVE RECITALS. Two benefit recital will be given In

this city, October eleventh and twelfth by Mr. John F. Howard cf Boston, for the Margaret Smith Home. The affairs will be held in the St. Paul's Episcopal parish house. Monday evening, Mr. : Howard will present Shakespeare's jjuliua Caesar, while the following j evening Hamlet will be interpreted. Mr. Howard comes well recommended, having appeared in a number of the large cities. No doubt a large num

ber of persons will attend the recitals. The programs will be presented at eight-fifteen o'clock. Ji Jfi J MRS. SPEKENHIER ENTERTAINS. Mrs. J. A. Spekenhier was hostess the latter part of the week for a

charming bridge company given in

'honor of Mrs. Will Fosler of Omaha,

Nebraska. The house was attractively decorated for the occasion. Bridge whist was played at three tables. Mrs. Fosler was presented with the favor. At the close of the game a luncheon was served. The guests were Miss Constance Fosler, Mrs. O. G. Murray, Mrs. Harlan Simmons. Mrs. Earl Mann, Mrs. Florence Early of Fort Wayne, Ind., Mrs. Charles Newlin, Mrs. Arthur Burr, Mrs. George Schultz, Mrs. Charles Morris, Mrs. Joseph Stevenson, and Mrs. Frank Spekenbier. J? IS IN THE CITY. Mr. E. Mervin Etliott, who has been in Toronto, Canada, for the past fourteen months is at home with his parents Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Elliott of South Tenth street. j j j WILL COME THIS WEEK. Miss Edna PafaUin of Connersville,

Ind., will come this week to be the guest of Mrs. Rudolph G. Leeds.

58 ty WILL BE IN'THE CITY.

Mr. Edward Taylor of Indianapolis,

Ind., will be in the city Monday and Tuesday of this week. All persons to desire to secure tickets for the artists recitals are asked to communicate with him at this time as the subscription list must be completed by Octo

ber twelfth. DUNING-BLICKWEDEL. The wedding of Miss Hilda Mary Blickwedel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Adolph W. Blickwedel and Mr. Walter E. Duning will be celebrated Thursday

evening October seventh at six o'clock in St John's Lutheran church. J S S EARLHAM RECEPTION. The students of Earlham college held' a reception Saturday evening in the student's parlor at Earlham college. The affair was given by the members of the Y. M. C. A. and the Y. W. C. A. of the college. About three hundred persons attended. Music numbers and bbort speeches were the features of the evening. Refreshments were served. & CELEBRATE ANNIVERSARY. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Rice celebrated their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary the latter part of the week at their apartment in the Wayne Flats. The affair was in the nature of a dinner. Chrysanthemums and ferns were used in appointing the table. J .4 IS IN CINCINNATI. Mrs. Warren Lacey is spending a few days with relatives in Cincinnati, having been called there by the illness of her mother. js j j WOODWORTH-MOTT. Miss Ruth Mott, daughter of Superintendent and Mrs. T. A. Mott and Mr. Walter Woodworth will be married Wednesday evening, October sixth at seven-thirty o'clock at her home 118 North Eleventh street. This will be one of the most important social events of the week. J J J

CLUB NOTES

IONIAN SOCIETY. At the meeting of the Ionian Literary society of Earlham college Friday evening the following officers were elected: President. H. P. Comstock; vice president, Vincent D. Nicholson; secretary, Harold Trimble; marshal, Herbert Tebbetts; critic, Daniel Beebe; vice critic. Homer L. Morris. The members to fill vacancies on the staff of the Earlhamite, the college

publication, include Philip Furnas and D. Hawkins, personal and local; Ed

gar Fisher, alumin and Lawrence

Mills, exchange. jS STANDARD BEARERS. A meeting of the Standard Bearers

society of Grace Methodist church

was held Saturday afternoon at the

parsonage. The early nart of the

i meeting was in th nature of a busi

ness session. Officers as follows were elected to serve ths year: President Miss Edna Canan. Vice President Miss Charlotte

James.

Recording Secretary Miss Iona Lamb. Corresponding Secretary Miss Al

va Shelley. 4

Treasurer Miss Grace Saunders. Mite Box Secretary Miss Lottie Canan. After the business hour a oroirram

on "Italy" was given. "Crandon

Home" was read by Miss OiarWto

James, followed by one, "A Heroine of Italy," presented by Miss Lottie Canan. A Social hour followed. Light refreshments were Eerved. Meetinrs are

held the first Saturday in the month.

J & jt

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SEANEY & BROWN'S,

Hardware Store Main St.

Following is the program of the son

service to be given Sunday evenins lv

the choir of the First M. EX church: "

Organ Prelude

Prelude No. 2.... Bach Andante C Silas Mrs. L. C. King. "Holy Spirit Come" Martin Miss Hulda Kenley, Mr. Leroy Lacey and Choir. "Still. Still with Thee". .Mendelssohn Mr. Howard W. Kirnsey. "The Day is Past and Over" C. Marks Mr. Lambert, Miss Kenley and Choir. "Out of the Depths" Rogers Mrs. Ray Longnecker.

Offertory "Spring Song" Shelley'

Mrs. King. "Thy Kingdom of Love" Evans Mrs. Gormon and Mr. Lacey. "Coronation" . . ,Arr. by H. W. Kinsey Mr. Kinsey. "List the Cherubic Hosts" Gaul Mr. Lacey and Ladies' Chorus. Postlude "Scherzo" Shelley Mrs. Grace Gormon, director. Mrs. L. C. King, organist, js jtt

Johanna Gadski will arrive on the ! steamship Kronprinzessin Cecilie due

October 5. The prima donna will fill

a series of concert engagements prior ' to her season at the Metropolitan Od-

era House, her first appearance being in Chicago, October lo, at Orchestra Hall Musical Courier. J J J .

The Apollo .Club, of Boston, announc

es its

held Novemi will be given by

in past seas

the season concert to be I

Iphony Hall Wednesday,

when Madame Gadski soloist. The programs

fine male organization

s have been of excellent

character and one of the annual treats ; so the list of works to be given and' the assisting artists are anticipated, j JS J J The choir of the First Christian church under the direction of Mr. Robert Wilson and with Mrs. Wilson as organist, will present a cantata entitled ! "The Eternal City," Sunday evening at

the church. The public is most cordially invited to attend. Tina Lerner, who will be beard here

this season, has been engaged for two of the symphony concerts for young people this coming season, the first in Brooklyn, February twenty-sixth, and

the second in New York March fifth. These engagements follow close on the selection of Miss Lerner as one of the principal soloists at the Worchester Festival, which opened October first. j& Roy J. Harding broke the world's record at Richmond, Ind., on September 22, for continuous piano playing in a contest that lasted thirty-six hours thirty-six minutes and seven seconds, which beats the previous best time by four minutes and three seconds. The New York Sun reports the magnificent achievement and reassures an anxious musical world by adding: "Harding was almost a wreck when the test ended, but it is believed he will not suffer permanent ill effects." Musical Courier.

Much interest is being manifested in the series of recitals to be given this fall and early winter under the auspices of Mr. Edward Taylor of Indianapolis. Wednesday evening, October twentieth Madame Gadski is to appear in recital at the Coliseum. The following concerning her is of interest: At her song recital at the Academy of Music Monday afternoon, Mme. Johanna Gadski will sing the same program in which she scored such success in Carnegie Hall. New York, last Sunday. The metropolitan critics are agreed that never in her career has the prima donna appeared to such advantage, the following excerpt, from the New York Times being typical of the notices received: "Mme. Gadski's voice sounded rich and beautiful, and showed many of the finer qualities that have endeared her to lovers of good singing in thi3 city. It had power, luscious beauty of quality and dramatic color, and there i3 an especial and individual beauty in it in softer passages of sustained

tone which she manages with exceed-!

ing skill. In addition to her beautiful voice she has a sane and sincere feeling for music, and what she accomplishes is felt to be the result of painstaking and careful effort. Her singing is that of the sincere artist." Jt . Mr. David Bispham has been secured to sing here some time In early December. The career of David Bispham. the well known baritone, shows what Indefatigable work and a faith in self can accomplish. Several well known masters sought to dissuade the singer from entering a professional career, but nevertheless he went doggedly ahead, working, practicing, until the sought-for end was accomplished. Today no American singer has scored greater artistic success. & J J Tina Lerner, the young pianist whose

appearance January 19 promises to be one of the interesting events of the musical season, is of Russian birth, her home being Odessa, where she studied with Rudolph Heim, a pupil of Mosl cheles. Both her parents were musical, her father being a well known critic. At the age of ten, Tina entered the conservatory of the Philharmonic at Moscow, as a pupil of Professor Louis Pabst. completing the nine years' course in five years, and graduating with highest honors. She was awarded the "Oold Medal," for that institution, a rare distinction.

10 INVITE JURISTS

Judges of the appellate and supreme courts of the state will be included In the honoT guests of the Fall Festival Association next Thursday. Judge Daniel Comstock, of this city, who Is a member of the appellate bench, has informed the executive committee that he will invite the jurists to be present. Judge Comstock expects at least five or six of the number to accept the invitation and possibly the entire number cf judges. Those who attend will be accorded every privilege and

honor and will be included in the honor guests at the press banquet, to be given that evening. It is probable that some of the number will be called upon by toastmaster P. J. Freeman to respond to an informal toast.

The executive committee of the Fall Festival has received a request from the officials of the Richmond Musicians' union to meet with the executive

committee this morning; at 9 o'clock. Considerable mystery surrounds the meeting, as the officials of the union will not state for what purpose the meeting is called. One of the anion men stated last evening that the meeting had no connection with the Fall Festival.'

1

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These are the genuine ostrich plumes, rich and beautiful enough to make fine hats.

Special Prices

This week we will place on sale cur entire stock of Ostrich feathers. This is your chance. See Window display for beautiful plumes.

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