Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 71, 1 February 1913 — Page 5

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURD A Y.FEBRUABY 1, 1913.

PAGE FIVE.

Social Side of Life Edited by ELIZABETH R. THOMAS Phone 1131 before 11:30 In order to insure publication In the Eventn Edltiea

ALONE. Into a future, hedged about with years, Tears, gray and dull as Winter's cheerless sky, My path leads forth, a long and lonely way, Where shadows He. Into the dim past, with you beside, dear heart, Tn sun shone clear; the roses fresh with bloom, Cefhuug the gateway leading into life, No fear of gloom. The great Unknown its call you answered, love. And left me all alone to struggle on. But when the night has passed and with it cares Ah, then the dawn. Bertha Grace Robie. WOMAN AT HE A BEST. The question at which i?3 woman is at her best is one that will never be settled. It has Rone on from the beginning, and it will go on until the end. It Is ae difficult a question as that of a woman's beauty. Different men have different tastes; and it is well that, they have, else .all wo ild want to marry the same wom in. Ask any man at what age a woman is at her best, and he will name the age, as near as he can guess it, of the woman In whom he chances to be most Interested at that particular minute. So far ae women 1udge, a woman is at her best when she gives them tho most sympathy and the least rivalry. There is no general best age for any woman. It is wholly a question of individuality and individual Judgment. And even the individual judgment changes from time to time. One woman may reach her zeulth of charms at twenty, and ther3aftr steadily decline, into the hopelessly commonplace. Another may grow more attractive each year until forty or in some cases even fifty. Some women fail to "wakeup," as It were, until they are in the thirties. And on the other hand there is many a grl who, until she is twentyflve, gives the greatest promise of charming personality and then declines into a most uninteresting woman. If some man marries her at her best, he Is apt to repent his rashness. It is utterly Impossible for several persons, even regular readers of this paper to agree upon this intricate question. Rach must decide for himself, and is privileged to change him mind as often as he pleases. A woman is at her best to any man when he most admires her, whether she be sixteen or sixty. A woman attains perfection in a man'B eyes cnly when he loves her. The change is not in her but in htm. SOCIAL EVENTS FOR THE WEEKJ Saturday Th Tourist club will meet this evening with Dr. and Mrs. C. S. Bond at their home in North Tenth street. MondayA dance will be given in the Pythian Temple by several young; men of this city. An orchestra will fhrJ nish the dance music. "Guest Day" will be observed In the afternoon by the members of the Magazine club at the home of Mrs. W. W. Glfford in South Twentyflrst street The Ticknor clob will meet with Mrs. Leonard Lemon at her home in South Eleventh street. The members tire Invited to be present. Tuesday A meeting of the Criterion club wfH be held with Mrs. W. O. Wlsajer at ber home in South Seventeenth street. A lunoheon wM be given at the Frist Presbyterian church for Mrs. Bonner. The affair Is arranged for by the Missionary soolety. The meeting of the Tuesday Bridge club which was -to have been held rwlth Mrs. Clement Gates at her apartments In. the Pelham, has been postponed until Friday. airs. P. T. McLellan will be hostess for a meeting of the Progressive Literary society at her home in West Main street. The program will be given as announced in the year book A meeting of the Aftermath society wilt be held In the afternoon. The liostess will be announced later. The Art Study class will meet Tuesday morning instead of Wednesday on account of Ash Wednesday. The meeting will be held in the Art Gallery nt the High. chool and will be calld promptly at nine thirty o'clock. Wednesday A meeting of the Domestto Science association will be held in the afternoon. The hostess will be announced later. An entertainment will be given at the First M. E. church undr the auspites of the Epirorth League. Thursday A meeting of the Woman's Collegiate club will be held In the afternoon. The program will be gtren as announced in the year book. A meeting of the Thursday Bridge club will be held In the afternoon. Prlday Mrs. Omar Murray will be hostess for a meeting of the Friday bridge club. The ladles of the First Methodist church will give a rummage sale in a vacant room in South Seventh street. Tuesday bridge club meets with Mrs. Clement Cates at her apartments in fhe Pelham. MRS. WILTROUT HOSTESS. One of the most beautiful parties ever given by a church organization in this city was the informal thimble party of Friday afternoon on which had for its hostess Mrs. S. C. Wiltrout of North Twelfth street. All It he ladles of the Grace Methodist church were privileged to attend. The guests numbered one hundred. The home was artistically decorated throughout with flowers and ferns. The parlors were arranged with flowers and the greentuar and were especially, attractive.

The hostess was assisted in extending hospitalities by Mrs. A. B. Price, Mrs. Schuh, Mrs. Turner Hadley, Mrs. Philips and Mrs. Meyer. In the dining room the decorations were in pink and green. Sweetpeas were used copiously. A lattice work had been erected in one corner of the dining room covered with sweet yeas and the vines under which was placed the tea table. Mrs. Philips presided at the tea urn. The afternoon was spent socially and with needlework. A musical program was presented during the afternoon. Miss Gladys Wiltrout and Miss Margaret Wiltrout played piano and violin number. Mrs. Warren Lacey played several

pretty instrumental numbers. The pro-1 gram was concluded with several vo- j cal numbers rendered by Mrs. Meyer, j An elegant luncheon was served. Pink ' candles capped with dainty pink ; shades and placed throughout the j house added to the beauty of the decorative motif. PROGRAM SUNDAY. The Kpworth League of First M. E. church has arranged the following program for the devotional meeting, Sunday evening at 6:30 p. m. Leader Miss Ellis Learner Song God will take Care of You. Song The Cross is Not Greater. Prayer. Song I Need Thee Every Hour. Lesson Temptations of Jesus. Piano Solo Miss Lucile Townsend. Vocal Solo Miss Grace Shera. Announcements. Song My Father Knows. Benediction. The public is cordially invited to the service. ENTERTAINED CLASS. The members of the Junior first term, German class, was entertained at the home of Miss Ruth Ferguson in South Fifteenth street. After several musical numbers vocal and instrumental, German games were played. A German lunch was served. Those present were Miss Gladys Barnard, Miss Ellen Dickinson, Miss Camilla Ford, Miss Mable Reynolds, Miss Car oline Rodefeld, Miss Margaret Gentle, Miss Florence Johnson, Miss Ruby Medearis, Miss Lela Longman, Miss Ruth Menke. Miss Bernice Puokett, Mr. Binford Bailey, Mr. Charlee Brown Mr. Clarence Haas, Mr. Robert Gentle, Mr. Earl Schneider. DANCE MONDAY. What promises to be one of the most charming social events of the coming week is the elaborate dancing party to be given Monday evening, February the third in the Pythian Temple by Mr. George Brenelzer, Mr. Emory Hoover, Mr. William Ward, Mr. Walter Steinkamp, and Mr. Clarence Ferling. The Hick's orchestra will furnish the unw muBic i n grana marcn win De, gin at eight thirty o'clock. A large .1 2 m. j I number of invitations have been sent out. MEETING CHANGED. The Art Study class will meet Tuesday morning at nine thirty o'clock in the Art Gallery instead of meeting Wednesday morning. Several members asked that the meeting be changed on account of Ash Wednesday. TO VISIT TRAUM'S. Miss Christina Tinling, formerly of London, England, now of Norfolk, Virginia and who is to talk at the Frret Christian church Sunday after noon at three o'clock, will be enterrtalned by Rev. and Mrs. S. W. Tranm t their home in South Thirteenth street. Miss Tinling will talk at the Grace M. E. church Sunday evening instead of the First M. E. church, as an nounced. DANCE THURSDAY. Thursday evening the members of the Jolly Time Dancing club will give a danoe in the Odd Fellows' hall. The members and friends are privileged to attend. An orchestra will furnish the dance music. The club will give a val entine party, February the thirteenth. WELL ATTENDED. Despite the inclement weather of last evening the Assembly party given in the Odd Fellows hall under the direction of Mrs. Frank Crlchet was well attended. Piano and drums furnished the dance music. Among the dancers were Miss Mary Swigert, Miss Mona Porter, Miss Olive Lewis, Miss Zuttermelster, Miss Pauline Hiatt, Miss Ruth Pennell, Miss Alice Greggerson, Miss Dorothy Land, Miss Gladys Bailey, Miss Elizabeth Bailey, Miss Elanor Seidel, Miss Bertha Walterman. Miss Esther McNeil. Miss Helen Johnson, Miss Ruth Wilson, Miss Edna Ferling, Miss Alice Holly, Miss Arline Barlow, Miss Margaret "VVickemeyer. Miss Amy Horton, Miss MarSpecial No. 2

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MRS. GROVER CLEVELAND AND PROFESSOR T. J. PRESTON. NEW YORK, Jan. 31 It is expected that the wedding of Mrs. Grover Cleveland, widow of the late ex-President, to Professor Thomas J. Proston, will be followed by the announcement that Professor Preston has been given a chair in the faculty of Princeton University. He is at present a member of the faculty of Wells College, but it is generally believed the change will be made because cf Mrs. Cleveland's desire to remain in the home she loves so well at Princeton

jorie Meagen, Miss Hanna Hershey, Miss Margaret Ferguson, Miss Fay Drake, Miss Ethel Pohlman of Tippecanoe City, Miss Irene McGray, Mr. George Weaver, Mr. Chauncey Edgerton, Mr. Wlllard Stevens, Mr. Robert Taylor, Mr. Runyan, Mr. Elmer Sauer, Mr. Edward Williams, Mr. Ralph Kittle, Mr. Harold Meyers, Mr. O. W. Weyman, Mr. Paul Miller. Mr. Earl Konley, Mr. Benton Barlow, Mr. H. F. McMlnn, Mr. Ralph Markle, Mr. Dl L. Mather, Mr. Xenophon King, Mr. Joseph Smithmeyer, Mr. George Breneizer, Mr. Herbert Cotton, Mr. Willard Kemper, Mr. C. McConaha, Mr. James Medlin, Mr. Paul McCarthy, MEETING CHANGED. The Tuesday Bridge club will meet Friday afternoon instead of Tuesday, with Mrs. Clement Cates at her apartments in the Pelham. Members are asked to heed this change in days of meeting. DID NOT MEET. The Missionary society of the Reid Memorial Presbyterian church did not meet yesterday afternoon on account of the sessions of the Laymen's coni vention which were held at the church. ! The meeting was held earlier in the week. SOCIAL EVENTS. The Lenten season is almost here and already persons are beginning to prepare for the extended rest. No doubt affairs in the social world will be "few and far between." This week a retarding of events was noticed and next week only a very few large social events have been scheduled. Among

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the important events for the past week was the Musical Tea given Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. F. W. Krueger in South Seventh street. About one hundred and fifty guests were received during the afternoon. The affair was most enjoyable. Several of the card clubs held their regular meetings inviting in several guests which added to the pleasure of the events. Wednesday evening a recital was given at. the GenneU theater by Miss Jessie Lynde Hopkins and her accompanist, Mrs. Katherine Howard-Ward. Chicago, under the auspices of Miss Jessie Mann. This was one of the musicai successes of th season and was a success not. only musically but socially and financially. Miss Mann Is to be congratulated upon her efforts. The soloist was above the average which made the affair a rare treat. It will long be remembered by persons privileged to attend. Tuesday afternoon Mrs. E. R. Beatty entertained the members of a card club at her home in East Main street. Thursday evening a large dance was given in the Masonic hall by the members of the Eastern Star. The guests numbered about one hundred and fifty. RUMMAGE SALE. The Aid Society of the First M. E. church will hold a rummage sale Friday and Saturday in a room In the Colonial building !q South Seventh street. The public is invited to attend. FOR HER DAUGHTER. Among the many pleasant social events which have been arranged for the coming week is the afternoon party to & CO. Limited DORCH ESTHER, MASS.

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be given Monday by Mrs. Isaac Smith at her home in South Twelfth street, when she takes this means of entertaining in nonor of her little daughter. Miss Mary Elizabeth Smith, who on day celebrates her flfth birthday anniversary. The guests will number twenty.

VISITING HERE. ' and Mrs. T. G. Grill of Union j Mr City. lUUitUA, BIT IUT UrBia Ul m 1 . I f T x- D.V , - f auu ..no. u. . . uand ivi Aajm at their home in Kinsey street. TO BE HOSTESS. Mrs. W. O. Wlssler will be hostess Tuesday afternoon for a meeting of the Criterion club at her home. South Seventeenth street. The members are invited to be present. GUEST DAY. "Guest Day" will be observed Monday afternoon by the members of tho Magazine club when they meet at the home of Mrs. W. W. Gifford in South Twenty-first street. Members will be privileged to invite guests. The affair will be one of the most important events in club circles for the week. DON'T YOU BELIEVE IT. Some say that chronic constipation cannot be cured. Don't you believe it. Chamberlain's Tablets have cured others-why not you? Give them a trial. They cost only a quarter. For sale by all dealers. Brooklyn IrRlT'D'MAriF J 4-r-V- b i B bfi stu Or o n THE DELUGE EFFECT. Genaaia 6:9-22; 7:11-24 Fab. 2. 'For the wage of tin u death; but the gift of God is eternal life, through Jeaus Chriet our Lord." Romans 6:13. 2 CIENTIFIC Bible students find the Bible story of the Deluge corroborated by Geology, Astronomy and History. The old est records of Babylonia tell of the Deluge. But no record compares with the Genesis account or gives a connected history of 165G years from Adam to the Flood. Geology demonstrates that there have been several great deluges. When we ask whence such floods could come. Astronomy points us to Saturn and Jupiter with their "rings," composed of minerals thrown off as gas when the planets were at white beat. These gases cooled and formed various rings. The rotation of the planets on their axes causes these rings to spread out as great envelopes. and gradually to thin at the equator and thicken at the poles, until they collapse, causing deluges. The earth once had similar "rings," precipitated one after another, at long intervals during the Six Great Creative Days. God so timed His Plan that the last of earth's rings was still unbiioken when man was created. But it had spread into a great canopy or veil. There could be neither rain nor storm under such conditions. (Genesis 2:5.) The temperature of the whole earth was equable, the sun's rays acting upon the canopy as upon the white glass of a hot-house. Why the Polar lea? Geology testifies to a Glacial Period, when great icebergs, carried by floods of water, rushed from the poles toward the equator. Scientists have traced great valleys cut by these leabergs during this period. The collapse of the canopy caused a deluge at both poles, a flow of great tidal waves toward the equator and sudden, Intense cold at the poles. The water froze so rapidly that In recent years animals with grass between their teeth have been dug out of solid polar ice. The vertical rays of the sun kept the equatorial atmosphere very hot until the trade winds sprang up. distributing the heat over the earth. The equa-

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torlai waters were also very not. naai the ocean currents set In. Thee, ilk the Gulf Stream, carry the warm eqvaI torial waters toward the polee. These ! processes, goiug on for 4400 years, are gradually thawing out the polar re

gions, and causing Urge numbers of icebergs to break loo from th polar glaciers, and distress mariners. Professor George Frederick Wright has dropped a suggttoa which flt well with the Bible narrative that . . . , I wmmA K oQ 'W'" the place where it was built. As we understand the professor, the geological evidence are that swift currents laden with icebergs and rocks visited ! prts of America Europ and Asia. but seemingly avoided Mt. Ararat, where evidently an eddy formed, for alluvial deposits there are extraordi narlly thick. Th Cautva of th D'ug. Let us Inquire. Why did not Divine J providence precipitate the last ring before man was created? The answer is that God foreknew the rebellion of Satan and permitted the temptation and fall of man solely becau He foresaw bow ultimate good could be accomplished and valuable lesson be given both men and angels. All of Ills dealings are along line of Justice, guided by Love Divine. Before the Flood wickedness had greatly increased, but not merely from human depravity. Some of the angels became disobedient to God. and by their greater intelligence led mankind; Into depths of iniquity. Genesis 6:1-5. The Bible cites many instance where angels have materialized as human beings. This power appear to have been possessed by idgel before the Flood. Some of them married daughters of men and lived as hu man beings. The children of these angels were nu. man beings d i f ferent from Adam's family, We read that they were giants, "men 'AUfitth died: at renown," who filled the earth with violence. Finally God' displeasure blotted them out of existence In the Deluge. God thus manifested His determination to destroy ain. Antediluvian sinners of Adam's race belong to the mass of mankind, with

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wntit! .MfMltH Wtii'O awruqr mm Millennial Reign of righteousness. After chastisement for wilful dlsobedteoe, they may be. If willing, recovered froas sin and death, and attain human perfection at Jesus cost. For the sons of angel by human mothers there i no hope. Their s.fcstenc waa not authorised by God. They were not redeemed. They will hav no awakening. Aa for the fallea angel. I be Bible tells us that for 4400 years they have been restrained -in chain f darkness. until th Judgment ef the Great Day. Jod 6. This subject is too large for satisfactory treat meat here. We will supply free a treatise, on receipt of a postcard request, addretuwd to Brooklyn Tabernacle. Brooklyn. N. T.

FADS AND FASHIONS NEW YORK. Feb. 1. It cannot e'cap. the notice even of th mot canual observer that Oriental color and designs abound In all the newect fabrics rilsplajed in shops at the prevent time. East Indian print are used on both silk and cotton; embroidery in Turkish patterns decorat linger! frocks of cotton crepe; the Moorish arch, a lattice work forming a rounded arch wider at the top than at the bottom. U a novel and populor deign in embroidery. Oriental gauze, hand printed in the heavy rich colors of the Levante. and brocaded in metals, is a charming matt-rial shown for evening wear. Japanese crepe and Japanese ilka of wonderful richnes are both much in evidence, and Oriental sashes and scarfs, whose colors contrast brightly with the duller and darker western materials with which they are used, are seen on everything from evening dresses to bathing suits. j i repe of various Kmc is to be es- ' pccially popular in the coming season or washable dresses and waists. A kind of cotton crepe that probably will be among the most popular la checked with lines in ratine yarns. The crepe, white checked with white, shows a colored border of stiff, small flowers, done in rather coarse and heavy cotton. The border is utilized for the edge of the skirt and for collars, cuffs and other touches on the waist. Special No. 2 Special No. 2

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