Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 263, 9 September 1912 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PA1LADIU3I AM) SUX-TELEGRA3I. MONDAY . SEPTEMBER 9, 1912.
PAGE FIVE.
Social Side of Life Fdited by ELIZABETH R. THOMAS Phone 1121 before 11:30 In order to insure publication in the Evening Edition
NOBODY KNOW8; BUT MOTHER Nobody knows of the work it makes To keep the home together; Nobody knows of the steps it takes. Nobody knows but mother. Nobody listens to childish woes, Which kisses only Bmother; Nobody's pained by naughty blows Nobody only mother. Nobody knows of the sleepless care Bestowed on baby brother; Nobody knows of the tender prayer, Nobody only mother. Nobody knows of the lessons taught Of loving one another; Nobody knows of the patience sought, Nobody only mother. Nobody knows of the anxious fears Lest darlings may not weather The storm of life in after years. Nobody knows but mother. Nobody kneels at the throne above To thank the heavenly Father For that sweet gift a mother's love; Nobody can but mother. Fireside. TO BRING BAND HERE. The entire musical profession, as officially represented by t.ie Richmond Musical Union, has . united in bringing to Richmond, one, or rather two of the great musical attractions of the coming season, these being Innes' Internationally famous band of fifty-five players and Mme. Van Loon, the celebrated Dutch soprano who will be heard here, jointly, in a Festival concert to be given at the Coliseum on the night of Friday, October fourth. The Innes Band proposition at first seemed Impossible but a long drawn out correspondence and a personal interview with Mr. Innes himself resulted in concessions on both sides which have made it possible to announce the engagement. Under normal conditions such a Festival as this would have demanded an. admission price of $1.50 to $2.00, but the musical union, having in view the musical Interests of Richmond insisted on a popular price and it is uader those conditions the Festival will be given. The prices will be fifty, thirty-five and twenty-five cents. The Innes Band is celebrated for having an unusual Instrumentation, but its unique position at the hHd oi the traveling musical organizations of the country is largely the result of the original methods of Innes himself. Innes is an Englishman by birth and as a boy belonged to the Band of the First Life Guards of London. In the early eighties, Pat Gilmore, who then was the representative Bandmaster of America, heard young Innes play and at once engaged him to come to America as the musical feature of the famed Gilmore Band. Inness' successes as the soloist with Gilmore. and later, under the management of the late Major Pond, soon placed him in a position of great prominence and he was able to organize a band of his own. This he did in 1837 since whi h time the Innes Band has been one of the big traveling bands of America. Then came the revolutionary changes in instrumentation which Innes had been studying for years, and which gave his organisation a novolty and refinement which distinguished it as the something different which wins success in all lines, be it music or the making of an aeroplane. As the result fame and fortune have come to Innes and his band today Is concededly one of the really great bands of the world. In addition to the fifty-fire players of the band. Mm. Van Loon, the celebrated Dutch prima donna, will be heard. Mme. Van Loon is one of. the prominent singers of the day. Possessed of a voice of sensational quality a pure dramatio soprano of unusual brilliancy and range she has advanoed with such rapidity as can only be compared to that of our owu Mary-Garden. Both of these young staffers have achieved their distmcttantln the operatic field. But Mme. Van Loon is, in addition, a concert singer of rare ability as her great success In recital, and In lieder singing attests. She will be heard here In a group of songs of which the best known is Augusta Holmes' "Eternelle Idole," and Massenet's great Aria, "II Est Doux." TO LOS ANGELES. Miss Lulu Moorman, who has been spending the summer with her parents, 'Mr. and Mrs. Levi Moorman in their home west of the city, has returned to Los Angeles to resume her duties as teachein the public schools there. RETURNED TO FT. WAYNE. Miss Anna Newman has returned to Ft. Wayne where she is head of the art department in the high school, aft- . er a several weeks' visit with her fata, er, Mr. .Theodore Newman. TO ENTERTAIN. Mrs. J. K. Deem of Richmond avenuee, will entertain this evening lnforinally complimentary to Miss Brumbaugh of Chicago, and Mrs. M. i Hardlngham and son, Master Meryn of Arcadia, Indiana. The Hardinghams are former residents of this city. Rev. Hardingham was pastor of the Firth Street Methodist church at one time. Their former f Heads will be glad to greet them again. HAY RIDE TUESDAY. The members of the Epworth League of the First Methodist church will , give a hayride Tuesday evening to the Davenport home south of the city. The young people are asked to meet at the church at seven-fifteen
o'clock. The friends of the society with the members are invited to attend.
ARE HERE. Mr. and Mrs. William Carmen of Los Angeles, California, are visiting friends and kinspeople here. TO CHICAGO. Mias Nora Holthouse has gone to Chicago for a two weeks' vacation with Miss Edna Martin. ACCEPTED POSITION. Darrell Thomas of Class '12, R. H. S. has accepted a position as a clerk in one of the offices of the Pennsylvania Railroad company. MEETS TUESDAY. The Woman's Home Missionary Society of Grace church will meet on Tuesday afternoon, Sept. tenth, at three o'clock. The meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Horace Kramer, 1402 Main street. Members are urged to attend. PICNIC PARTY. Miss Don Fuller entertained yesterday with a delightful picnic party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Krick, east of the city. All came with well filled baskets and at noon a bountiful dinner was, served picnic fashion. Mr. Lee Schokney of Union City, Ind., was a guest. The following composed the party: Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Krick, Mrs. David Wasson, Mrs. Jenkins and Mr. Wm. Clark, the Misses Ruth Wilson, Inez Krick, Blanche Addleman, Bess Fuller, Orpah Hough, Edna Pelton, Fanny Meyer, Vera Comer and Don Fuller. Messrs. Holston Thome, Howard Weist, Walter Shute, Earl Rush, Walter Smith. Leo Lahmann, Earl Brohman, William Jenkins, Marion McCleery, Orba Alexander, Walter McKee, Owen Webb, Wm. Meyer, Oscar Fuller, Forest Beach, Lester Comer, Clayton Dickey and Olen Beach. SOCIETY TO BE RENEWED. The advent of September means the return of the tourists, the pleasureseeker and health seeker, in fact all those who are afflicted with resortitis. The social world will be quite gay within the next few weeks. Informal lunchepns, bridge parties and dinners will be features. Dances will no doubt be arranged for as the young people always enjoy affairs of this kind. There are several important weddings scheduled for the month. TO PURDUE. Mr. Russell Parrlsh, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Parrish, 221 North Twen tieth street, left this morning for Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind., where he will enter upon his third year. FOR KANSAS CITY. Mr. W. E. Mutchner, chief engineer of the T. H. I. and E. left Sunday for Kansas City, Missouri, where he will spend ten days. He is a delegate of the local N. A. S. E. number thirteen. HAS RETURNED. Mr. Hubert Hanna has returned to Bloomington, Ind., after a visit with relatives here. Mr. Hanna. in company with Mr. Paul Fisher of Richmond has just returned from a motor trip to Lake Dawasee, where they attended a house-party of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Newcastle Courier. TO CINCINNATI. Mr. Silas Horn left this morning for the University of Cincinnati where he will attend school this year. AT TOLEDO. Miss Eva Worl of South Fourteenth street, is in Toledo, Ohio, attending a house party given by Miss Katherine Graves. DANCE THI8 MONTH. This evening Mr. "Walter .Steinkamp and Mr. Clarence Ferllng will issue invitations for a dancing party to be given Monday evening, September the twentythird in the pavilion at Jacksen Park. Piano and drums will furnish the dance music. The affair promises to be most enjoyable. BU8INE83 MEETING.' The monthly business meeting of the East End Aid Society of tb B"lrt Christian church will be held Tuesday afternoon at two thirty o'clock with Mrs. Omar Whltnack at herhome 317 South Thirteenth street. All members are urged to be present. TQ TERRE HAUTE. Mr. and Mrs. Sharkey and children returned yesterday to their home in Terre Haute after a several weeks' visit here. MEETS TONIGHT. The Young People's Mission Circle of the First Christian church will meet this evening with Miss Mable Mansf eld at her home in South Sixteenth street. Two returned missionaries will be present a this time and give interesting talks. A good attendance of the membership is desired. DINNER THIS EVENING. Mr. and Mrs. William Dudley Foulke will give a dinner this evening at the Country club. Covers will be laid for twelve guests. MEETS TUESDAY. A meeting of the Tuesday Bridge club will be held Tuesday aftersoon of this week with Miss Margaret Sedgwick at ner pretty home in West Richmond. The members are invited to tw present. A GUEST HERE. Mr. Robert Thornhnrah f V. liUUUUg ton. West Virginia, is here the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Thornburgh for a few days. ABOUT ARTICLES. This column is frequently .favored with contributions and they are very
Will Fight Leaves Her Penniless
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MRS. LILLIAN TURBULL. BOSTON, Sept. 9. After spending her fortune Jn her fight to have her daughter, Beatrice Turbull, share in the $25,000,000 estate of the famous E. J. "Lucky" Baldwin, of Los Angeles, Mrs. Lillian Ashley Turbull, of Brookline, Mass., who has declared herself bankrupt announces that she will resume teaching beauty culture in an effort to retrieve her losses and free herself from present difficulties. Mrs. Baldwin became known all over the country during the remarkable court contest in California, in which she claimed she was Baldwin's common-law wife, and that the famous horseman was the father of her daughter, Beatrice.
welcome. It is the desire of the editor of these columns to be in toucli with the social activities of all the readers. Contributions, however are- not always clear in their statements. It very frequently happens that the day
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Every box contains twenty packages Each package contains live sticks all full of the refreshing, breath purifying mint leaf juice. A single stick benefits much the habit benefits more
Look for the spear
or date of these affairs is not given and the narrator often forgets to tell where the function was held Often times it is impossible to make reports of articles received and then complaints are registered by those preNOT The flavor
sent wondering why their article was not published. When you prepare an article for the society editor, read it over and see that you have told her all the things you wish said in the newspaper article. This kindness will be appreciated by the social editor.
TAKEN NEW RESIDENCE. Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Gifford and family have removed from North Thirteenth street to the residence recently vacated by Mr. and Mrs. Will Earhart. Rev. and Mrs. Thomas J. Graham and family who have been living in North Twentythird street have taken up a residence in the Gifford home. MEETS WEDNESDAY. The Women's Missionary Society of the First English Lutheran church will meet at the home of Mrs. R. VanZant in North Tenth street on Wednesday at two thirty o'clock. The election of officers will be held and other important business will be transacted. All members urged to be present. HAS RETURNED. Mrs. John Feltman has returned from a visit with Mr. and Mrs. David Feltman in Richmond and with Mrs. Charles Muth in Dayton, Ohio. FAMILY REUNION. The annual reunion of the Helms family will be held Saturday, September the fourteenth in Jackson park. All relatives and members of the family are most cordially invited to attend. ARE AT WABASH. Mr. and Mr. Charles Heinbaugh, of Sheridan street. Richmond. Indiana, are at Wabash, spending a few days the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Jones, of Maple street. AU8TIN REUNION. The annual reunion of the Austins was held in Glen Miller park Thursday, September 5th. Relatives from fifteen different towns were present, and a large crowd was in attendance At the noon hour a bountiful dinner was served which all heartily enjoyed. The afternoon was spent socially, talking over olden times and recalling days gone by. Later in the day a picture as taken of the four generations and also groups of the crowd according to their ages. A committee was then appointed to arrange for the next meeting to be held in Glen Miller park, September twelfth, 1913. Committee Alfert Smyth, President; Ella Austin, Secretary. History of th Sardine. The sardine has been honored with a history, the writer being no less a personage than a member of the Societe Academique of Nantes. The sardine In the early days was brought In In small boats. Then came a police ordinance In 1738 in the Interest of the poorer classes against the monopolist. Owing to the police ordinance the sardine was a source of livelihood to the Bretons. Joseph Cillin, whose name Is still revered In Nantes, first prepared the fish with olL His venture was a great success, and be had many imitators. In 1S33 there was something like a crisis In the sardine industry. Millet, who was the chief curer, bad his factory indicted as a nuisance, but the difficulty was overcome by removing it from the center of the town to the shore. Although the fame of the sardine was firmly established. It was only in 1855 that It received Its apotheosis. Then It was shown In the Paris exhibition. London Globe. YET BUT
HE'S BUYING IT
BY THE BOX !
It costs less that way. Every stick preserves teeth sharpens appetite aids digestion removes overeaten feelings.
lasts
MR. LARSH GAVE BIRTHDAY DINNER
Lafe Larsh of the sixty-ninth Indiana Volunteer Infantry Regiment, gave a dinner Friday evening at his home, 127 South 13th street, being the sixty-eighth anniversary of his birth, his daughter, Bertha, was hostess for the occasion. The comrade did enJoy the evening's pleasures. The following named comrades were present: Jas. S. Bolander. Allen Coggshall, R. A. Newman, Allen W. Grave. Lewis K. Harris, Geo. L. Irwin, Alon-j xo Marshall, J. Frank Mackey, Thad C Personett, Marion J. Roberts and Wm. L. Thomas. The sixty-ninth regimental association will hold its 27th annual reunion in this city. Wednesday, September 25th, at the south court room at the court house. The 19th of August Just past was the fiftieth anniversary of the muster Into the United States service in the year 1862. They are expecting as tbelr guests Burgess Brown of Indianapolis, one of ! the survivors of the Indianapolis Glee ! club, who used to attend all of the loj cal reunions. He will give readings land songs; Col. W. S. Durbln, late of the 161st Regiment of Spanish American war veterans, who was also a civil l war veteran, and Comrade Watts, of Winchester. Indiana, a member of the eighty-fourth Indiana. Hew to Clsan Whit Shots. Already white shoes are being worn outdoors, and If the wearer has been on the street very long she has a pair of very badly soiled shoes when she at last reaches home. Sometimes on happens to be out of the ready made preparation and here nre a few things one may use on a pinch: French chalk Is good and win often remove the spots when It Is used as soon the shoe are removed. ! Pipe clay made into soft past with water and applied as a paint, left until dry and then brushed off will clean spots. If you bare a tree for the shoes fit them on ttat tree an wash with a soap suds cbntainlng a tablespoonfur of ammonia to each quart. Wash with a brush and rinse with clean water and place In the sun to dry. For white suede or kid shoes try gasoline. How to Kop Butter Cool. A convenient and ensy way to keep butter cool Is by applying the principle of cooling by evaporation as used in the wet bulb of the wet and dry bulb hygrometer. The butter is placed In a closed receptable (butter dish with lid), and after this has been placed In a soup plate containing water a wet cloth is put over th dish with Its ends In the water. Evaporation goes on at the surface of the cloth, and more water is supplied to the cloth from the plat below. This keeps the cloth and dish Inside at a few degrees below the atmospheric temperature, and by this means butter can be kept firm In the hottest days. ' . How to Car For Books. Never drop them upon the floor. Never turn leaves with your thumb. Never lean or rest upon an open book. Never turn down the corners of leaves. Never touch a book with soiled or damp hands. Place the large book upon a table before opening It. Never use a pencil, tablet or anything else that is bulky for a bookmark. SOON
A Shocking Bad Hat. Harry Melton In his "mats on Hats gives th origin of a nc popular ay. lug in England. "What a shocking b9 hatr A Mr. Franks, th parttaoMari tary commissioner who first draw at tention to th employment of wwner and children In mine, went canvai lag for his friend Mr. Wilson, th r4 form candidate for Soutbwark. wm was a hat manufacturer. To each eleon tor he remarked: "Dear me, what m
shocking bad hat you have there! Pra1 permit m to send you another." ThU little rus got talked about and be cam a common Joke at th hustingf and then traveled through th mtrop oils until it was tn every street boja1 mouth. Lav. Lava may b blown Into opaqu boM ties of gossamer lightness, and thi harder sort makes a beautiful greewi glass of half the weight and doubl th strength of ordinary glass. But it U not always th same. Every vol can pour out Its own special brand of molten mixture, disagreeable to walk! on. but sometimes yielding preclou product, a pumice stone. Lava, llkal all things, decomposes under the toucM of time, as the fertile plains of Sicily! testify. SIGHT NOW is the time to have your watches repaired. Especially is this true of school watches. Work done quickly, scientifically and at a reasonable price. " RATLIFF The Jeweler 12 NORTH NINTH 8T. PIANO TUNING D. E. ROBERTS 15 Tears Practical Experienc. Formerly with th Stein way House at Indianapolis. PHONE 3M4 Bran $1.30 per 100 lb. Middlings $1.40 per 100 lb. Cetton Seed Meal 11.20 nr loft lh Oil Meal 12 OA nr Iftrt Ih P Washburn's Best Flour 25 lbs 70 100 lbs $2.75 i j. n. mm 162-64 Ft. Wayne Avenue Phone 2662. Ask Your Grocer for Clover Leaf Creamery Butter Put up in strictly sanitary Cartons. JUST TELL US The AMOUNT of money and the TIME yon want to use the asm and we will make you RATES that can not be anything but satisfactory to you. We loan from $3.00 to $100.00 ou furniture, pianos, teams, wagons, etc, without removal, giving you both the ns of th money and security. Tour payments can b? made In small weekly, bimonthly or monthly installments to suit your income. Call at our office, writ or phon If In need of money. THE STATE WYESTKEUT & LOAN C0UPANT Room 40, Cetonial Bldo, Phon 2560. Richmond, Ind.
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