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The Buffalo Sunday Morning News from Buffalo, New York • 5

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1 7, BUFFALO SUNDAY MORNING NEWS: MARCH 26, 1905. meeting for Monday afternoon at 8:30 o'clock. The executive board will meet half an hour earlier. The next regular meeting of Naomi Chapter, 0, E. will be held Tuesday evening, March 28, in the scarlet room, Masonic Naomi Chapter, 0.

E. S. will hold an Enter sale home of Mrs. H. Martin, 414 Richmond avenue, April 14, The Cold Spring Women's Christian 1 Temperance Union a parlor meeting at the of Mrs.

E. L. White, 85 Laurel street, tomorrow afternoon at 8 o'clock. An interesting programme will be presented. Elveda Circle will hold a euchre party at Conley Hall, 650 Main street, Monday afternoon, March 27.

Game at 2:30 o'clock. Circle No. 12, Ladies of A. will give an entertainHayward -Porter ment and dance Friday evening. March 81, at G.

A. R. Hall, Elmwood avenue and Virginia street. Entertainment includes Mrs. Jarley's wax works.

Refreshments will be served. The regular monthly meeting of the Woman's Christian Association will be held Tuesday afternoon, March 28, at 8 o'clock. Directors' meeting at 4 o'clock. GOING ANDCOMING. LATEST VISITORS.

Colonel and Mrs. George H. Selkirk and Mias Selkirk have returned from Nassau and Palm Beach, Fla. Colonel and Mrs. D.

8. Alexander are In Summerville, 8. C. Mr. and Mrs.

Charles W. Pardee, wHo have been traveling south, are now in Washington. Mrs. Frederick H. Stevens has returned from a trip south.

Mrs. George Grenville Merrill of Porter avenue returned yesterday from the her sister, Mrs. George Vanderbilt. South, where she has began the guest of Mrs. Edward J.

Hingston and her daughters, Mrs. Herbert A. Meldrum and Mrs. Clarence Spaulding Sidway, have returned from a fortnight's stay at Atlantic City. Charlotte Becker of North street 13 visiting friends in Wellesley, Mass.

and Mrs. C. Peter Clark of Lexington avenue are in Boston. Gen. and Mrs.

Edgar B. Jewett are spending several weeks at Ormond, Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Risley Tucker are in Southern Florida.

Miss Ida Schwartz of Lancaster, sister of Dr. E. B. Schwartz of Fillmore avenue, is at the Carolina, Pine Hurst, N. for a couple of months' stay.

Miss Aline Moore, who has been spending the last five weeks in Washington, D. has gone to Wilmington, to visit her uncle, Mr. S. C. Biddle.

Mrs. Tracy C. Becker of Highland avenue has returned from Albany. Mr. and Mrs.

Ernest L. Frisbee have gone to Palm Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Robert W.

Pomeroy have gone to Auburn. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Lutz of Ellicott street returned home this morning from a two months' trip to Cuba and Florida.

Mr. and Mrs. George Reimann and son, Hobart, a have returned from a trip to Cuba. Mr. and Mrs.

Harry H. -Photo by Hall. Miss Mary Walker of the English Reading Class, chairman of the picture committee, who has been indefatigable in her efforts to purchase a painting for the Albright Gallery. Mrs. McClure and Miss Walker received with the other members of the picture committee at the reception given at the Library Building on last Monday evening.

3 o'clock. As this is an important meeting with much: business transact, members are asked to attend. Tea will be served by the graduate nurses in the nurses' new home. IN SOCIAL CIRCLES. Week of Many Gay Events---Entertainments Past and to Come---The Latest Engagements and Wedding Announcements---Tales of Travelers---Our Guests---Clubs and Social Organizations.

Mr. and Mrs. C. Lee Abell of Linwood avenue gave a family dinner last evento celebrate their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary. The house was decorated with stiver and with pink roses, The guests were seated at one long table which was laid with thirty covers and set with a very handsome silver servIce.

A mass of pink roses in the center and the silver candelabra was shaded in pink. The favors were silver boxes filled with bonbons. Mrs. Abell wore a handsome costume of white silk, trimmed in Irish point. Mral Edward C.

Hard of Highland avenue gave a small tea yesterday atLernoon, in Furman compliment of to Rochester. her guest, Mrs. Pendennis White, Miss Virginia White and Miss Dorothy White of Delaware avenue sail on the Coronia on April 15th for Europe. They will be accompanied by Mr. and Mrs.

William M. Urquhart of Orange, N. who are the guests of Mre. Alexander G. Kent of North Tonawanda, until they sall.

Mra. White and her daughters will remain abroad until the first of December and on their return Miss Virginia White will made her debut. Their travels will take cethema Into Holland, Turkey, France Italy. August be spent in Switzerland. In Informal Miss tea Elizabeth J.

yesterday Letson afternoon gave an in the rooms of the Natural Science Building. in compliment of Mrs. Francis D. McCarthy of Minneapolis, Minn. A dainty tea table decorated in spring flowers WAS presided by Miss Josephine Lewis and Mrs.

Ransom. Half a hundred old friends dropped in for a cup of tea between four and six o'clock. Mrs. Henry McClellan Wade, the president of the Tuesday Study Club, will give a luncheon of twenty covers at Lafayette Hotel on next Tuesday to the members of the club and few special guests. The class of 1905 of the Buffalo SemInary has issued invitations for two glee club recitals, to be given by the members of the class, under the direction of Mr.

Seth Clark, at the Twentieth Century Club, on the evening of March 31st and May 5th, at half after eight o'clock. Responses to be sent to Seminary Glee Club, Twentleth Century Club. The patronesses are Mrs. John Westervelt Bush, Mrs. John S.

Noyes, Mrs. Horace Reed, Mrs. William D. Ward, Mre. William A.

Douglass, Mrs. Alfred P. Wright, Mrs. William T. Jebb, Mrs.

Henry Ware Sprague, Mrs. Clarence Bryant, Mrs. Arthur, D. Bissell, Mrs. Spencer Kellogg.

Mrs. George Matthews, Mrs. George Wadsworth, Mrs. Charles B. HIll, Mrs.

William B. Hoyt, Mrs. Clarence M. Fenton, Mrs. G.

Barrett Rich, and Mrs. Harry T. Ramsdell. Company 74th Regiment, will hold its annual informal dance in grand the 74th Regiment orchestra, conducted court of the Armory on Friday evening, April 14. The committee have secured a by Sergt.

Bolton. The annual members' meeting of the Island Club at the residence of Dr. De Witt G. Wilcox In West Ferry street on Friday evening, where plans for the coming summer were perfected. The reports of the officers show the club to be in excellent condition, both socially and financially.

Ten new members have joined the club during the last year. The club house will open this year June 1st and remain open until October 1st. The enthusiasm shown by the members present was evidence that the Island Club is even more popular than ever. The many attractions which the club offers makes it an ideal spot for rest and recreation, both to children and parents. The club now has in large swimming the pool, construction where under of a contemplation competent instructor, the ladies and children can be taught to swim.

The "Bird Walks" proved so interesting and instructing last summer that they will be continued this summer: The newly elected officers are: President, Dr. D. G. Wilcox; vice-president, Joseph Kittinger; secretary, John H. Coxhead; treasurer, F.

L. Danforth. The directors are Dr. W. G.

Taylor, F. L. Danforth, Frank D. G. Wilcox, Joseph Kittinger, Sibley, C.

S. Cadwallader, C. E. Wettlaufer, J. H.

Coxhead. A. B. Young, Arthur W. Hickman, S.

S. Kingsley, E. P. Cooper, W. H.

D. Barr, W. H. Deyo and W. A.

Joyce. An evening musicale will be given at the Colonial 509 Lafayette avenue, on Tuesday evening, March 28, at 8:30 followed by dancing. The Alliance Francaise Committee of Buffalo announces a reunion on Thursday, March 30, at 4 o'clock at the 20th Century Club, when Mr. Rene Millet, former minister of France to several foreign courts, will speak before the members, subject "Caractere de l'Isit Incompatible with Modern Science." Non members may obtain tickets for the lecture. Invitations have been issued by the Culinary Allmentary Society for an informal reception to the outgoing officers of the society, and the installation of the new officers in GermanAmerican Hall, on Monday evening, March: 27, at 8:30.

Refreshments, music and dancing will be part of the evening's entertainment. Camera Club Exhibition. The exhibition of pictorial photography now being held by the Buffalo Camera Club in their rooms in the Y. M. C.

A. building is very successful in every way. The pictures are very interesting and show a decided advance on all previous exhibitions. Admission is free and the rooms are open from 2 to 5 from 7 to 10. Invitations have been issued for the Sunshine Society's annual meeting and dinner in the Hengerer tea room, Saturday.

April 1, at 6 o'clock. Mrs. C. H. Funnell will entertain the Monday Card Club at 512 Massachusetts avenue, assisted by Mrs.

L. 0. Meyer. Invitations have been issued by the members of the National Society of New England Women, Colony Two, for "guest day," April 13, at 8 o'clock in the afternoon, at the Women's Union, 86 Delaware avenue, On Wednesday evening, May 17, a fine production of "The Mistletoe Bough" will be given in Lyric Hall for. the benefit of St.

John's Episcopal Church. The story of Genevra will be told in pantomime with musical accompaniment. The opening scene includes the Virginia reel and the minuet, danced in costume. The rehearsal and arrangements are In charge of Mrs. Harry Waterbury, Mrs.

Fred Van Dusen. Miss Anna Woods Ballard and Mrs. Frank H. Bliss. In the afternoon there will be a children's entertainment with a perform- mond avenue, and Mra, 0, J.

Smegles of Front avenue for the past two weeks. Mra. C. F. Pirsche of Chiongo is vialting Mrs.

R. W. McCready of Delaware avenue, Mrs. C. K.

Baker of North Granville la the guest of Mrs. Edward S. Hawley of Irving Place. Mrs. George H.

Woolley of Bidwell Parkway has returned from New York. Mra. George H. Simpson and Miss Hazel Simpson are at St. Charles Hotel, Atlantic City for the.

weeks. Mra. Fred Church Newing of Chicago, 111.. 18 visiting her mother, Mr. Mary Ellis of Roehrer avenue.

Mra. J. C. Spicer of 7th street has returned from a month's stay in New York with Mr. Spicer, previous to his leaving for the South.

Mrs. Charles C. Osterhout Roble avenue is in New York for a fortnight. The Rt. Rev.

William W. Walker and Mrs. Walker have returned from their wedding journey. Mrs. Philip W.

Roth and Mre. Adah Roth French leave town this week for Atlantic City, and Mrs. Egbert Nelson Fairchild, Miss Catherine Fairchild and Miss Helen Kenny, who went South last week, are in Augusta, Ga. Col. S.

Douglas Cornell returned yesterday to the Lenox, from New York. Mrs. W. Andrews of Wanakena, In Adirondacks, is the guest of aunt, Mrs. P.

S. Miller of Rhode Island street, Mra. George W. Bunnell of New York 1s the guest of Mrs. Sheldon T.

Viele of Porter avenue. Miss Hazard of Providence, R. is the guest of Miss Gertrude Norton of Gates Circle, Miss Sarah Furman of Rochester is the guest over Sunday of Mrs. Edward C. Hard of Highland avenue.

Mr. and city, The marriage to take place in July, Mr. and Mre, Albrecht Richter announce the egagement of their daughter, M. Elizabeth, 10 George Turrell of Middleport, Y. Wedding to take place in April.

Mr. and Mre. W. A. Gall of Chenango street announce the marriage of their daughter, Lela, to Mr.

William E. Smith, March 1905. At home at Park House, 744 Main street. No carda, Miss Harriet Cohn, daughter of Mr. and Mra.

Daniel Cohn of Summer street, whose marriage to Mr. Jason Cadwell of Minneapolis takes place on Monday, April 3, WaS the guest of honor at a very pretty luncheon of sixteen covers given on Friday by Mrs. Barney Frank of Richmond avenue, Mr. and Mrs. Henry M.

Crossman of Plymouth avenue announce the enof their daughter, May gagement to Mr. Albin Hunt Huntchings of New York. The wedding will take place in June. Mr. and Mrs.

John J. Winters of North Ashland avenue announce the engagement of their daughter, Isabelle, to Dr. George Harvey, Morgan. The wedding is to take place in September. Petter- Keyes.

The marriage of Dr. Regina Flood Keyes to Dr. Gurdon Potter, son of Admiral Edward E. Potter, U. 8.

took place on Enturday morning, March 18, at the home of the bride, in Allen etreet. The ceremony was performed By the Rev. R. B. Adama of Bethany Presbyterian Church.

Charnock-Kelley. The home of Mr. and Mrs. John Kelly of Fulton street was the scene of a pretty wedding on Wednesday evenIng at 9 o'clock when their daughter, Miss Clara A. Kelley was married to Mr.

George H. Charnock by the Rev. Charles Smith of St. James Episcopal Church. Mr.

Robert Charnock was best -Photo by Hall. Mrs. Harry E. McClure, president of the English-American Reading Class, the Buffalo Women's Club which took the initiative and has been instrumental in placing a painting by Miss Rose Clark in the Albright Art Gallery. Mrs.

McClure has been one of the most enthusiastic supporters of the plan since its inception and with the members of her club is to be Mrs. Clifford Nichols are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Barnard.

Mrs. Frederick Sikes and family of Evangton, who have been visiting Mr. and Mrs. John Gowans of North street, returned home on Friday. Mrs.

E. Shepley of Washington, D. comes this week to be the guest of her daughter, Mrs. Ernest L. Fenwick of Lexington avenue.

Mrs. Richard J. Sherman has returned from a three weeks' stay in New York. Mrs. Charles Locke Gurney has returned from New York.

Mr. and a Mrs. William have returned from a Southern Airfoyce Miss Annie Germain is visiting New York friends. Miss Clara Johnston, Miss Grace Johnston of Park street, and Miss Sarah Moore visiting Mrs. Anderson in Silver Creek.

Miss Geisz of Oak street has returned from Philadelphia and New York. Mr. Charles Richardson of Linwood avenue has returned home after an extended trip through Cuba and the Southern States. Mrs. Alfred G.

Hauenstein and Miss Madeline Hauenstein are in New York, where they will be joined this week by Miss Jessie Storrs Ferris. Miss Margaret Rochester leaves this week for Stockbridge, to be the guest of Mrs. Alexander Sedgwick. Miss Kaherine T. Brown of Philadelphia the guest of Mrs.

Henry Morris Brown of Bidwell Parkway. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence M. Howard have returned from the South and are the guests of Mr.

and Mrs. Edward D. Howard of Linwood avenue for a short time. ENGAGEMENTS AND WEDDING NOTICES. The latest engagement to be announced.

is that of Miss Eleanor Minna Dambmann to Mr. Howard Hamilton Baker, -wedding to take place the latter part of April. Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Strauss of Ashland avenue announce the engagement of their daughter, Lillian.

Rose, to Mr. Adolph of this city. At home Sunday, April 2. No cards. Mr.

and Mrs. S. Berliner announce the engagement of their daughter, Hannah, to Mr. A. Weisenberg of Albany.

The engagement is announced of Dr. Louise Downer of Orchard Park, N. nd Dr. Charles R. Mair of Buffalo, N.

Y. Mr. and Mrs. Beilstein announce the engagement of their daughter, Nellie to Mr. William F.

Riggs of this taken a cottage at Wanakah, for the summer. Mr. And Mrs. George E. Drullard will remove from Linwood avenue to 299 Richmond avenue this spring.

Mr. and Mra, Frederick W. Kendall and children will return to their house in Hamburg early this month. Mr. and Mre.

Alvin Alberger have taken a house at Hamburg for the comink year. Mr. and Mra. John C. Abel will remove to No.

344 Bryant street about April 1st. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Edward Howard left town last evening to make their home in Chicago. Mr.

and Mrs. Seth Clark and children, have been spending the winter in town, will return to East Aurora the first of May. RETURNING FROM SCHOOL AND COLLEGE. Miss Ethel Louise Fenton of Linwood A avenue la home from Vassar College. Others returning on Friday evening from Vassar for the Easter holidays were Miss Lucy White, Miss Harriet Pooley, (Miss Helen Cumpson and Miss Louise Ramadell.

Miss Martha Milinowski returned on Friday to spend Easter with her par-' enta, Capt. and Mra. Milinowski. Miss Todd, a classmate, accompanted Miss (Milinowski. Mr.

Fryer has returned from Lakewood. N. J. Mr. Oliver Elsworth, Mr.

Chandler Blefstein, Mr. George and Mr. Julius D. Park are home from the Hill School for Easter. Mr.

Thomas R. Wheeler is home from a Williams for a few days, the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mra. Charles Be Wheeler of Elmwood avenue. Mr.

Harry Crego of the Lenox 19 home from Lawrenceville School for a vacation. THE CARD AND DANCING CLUBS. farce of "Topsy Turvy," by, the boys of the choir, the direction of Miss Bennett, and the Highland Fling will be danced in costume. The Magazine Club will hold its annual breakfast at the Hengerer Cafe on Tuesday, March 28. Buffals Turn Verein.

The woman's section of the Buffalo Turn Verein will give a kaffee-kraenzchen and euchre party on Tuesday atternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Supper will be served nt 6 o'clock. A special meeting of the section will be held in the evening, when the election of officers will take place. Women's Union. There will be an Important meeting of Buffalo's representative women In Union Hall, 86 Deleware avenue, Tuesday afternoon, March 28, 1905, at 3 o'clock, to consider a project of Interest to all women of the city.

The Scribblers will hold their March meeting tomorrow afternoon at 3:30 o'clock at the Iroquois Hotel. Miss Louise Laney will entertain the members oPen Twentleth Century Club at the next Wednesday morning meeting with evercises and fancy dancing. The Buffalo Society of Mineral Painters will hold Its annual exhibition at the Iroquois Hotel March 28, 29 and 30. On the opening evening, the 28th, there will be a private view, admission by Invitation. On the 29th and 30th, Wednesday and Thursday of this week, the doors are open to the public afternoon and evenIng -and all lovers of art are cordially invited.

No admission fee is required and this is A rare opportunity to see one of the best exhibitions of ceramic art even shown in Buffalo. Mrs. Charles Sumner Dakin, will give her lecture on Dante Gabriel Rossetti on next Friday aternoon at 4:15 o'clock at the Parkside Unitarian Church. "Misunderstood" will be given April April 25 and 26 by the Filedner League of the German Deaconess Home and Hospital, under the directions of Miss Adele Ripont. The cast Includes, Mr.

H. C. Bruce, Mr. John Messersmith, Mr. William Weick, Mr.

Carl Whattler, Mr. J. Benson Stafford, Miss Bertha Whattler, Miss Alice C. Balley, Miss Minnie Buehl and Miss Elsie Watson. A children's matinee in charge of Mrs.

Henry Fisher and Mrs. Adam Federlein will be given in the afternoon. Mrs. George J. Christgau Is general chairman assisted by Mrs.

William Denny. Mr. and Mrs. John Harrison Mills will be at home at their residence 494 Elmwood avenue from 3 to 5:30 o'clock on Thursday. Miss Stevenson of North street will entertain the Ladies' Afternoon Whist Club next Wednesday.

Mrs. William I. Masten of Lancaster avenue has issued Invitations for a card party on next Wednesday, for her daughter, Gladys. The annual meeting and banquet of the Monday Class will be held at the Hotel Lafayette on Monday, March: 27. Business meeting at 3.

Banquet at 6 o'clock. Mrs. Homer E. Dudley will read her paper on Martha Washington at Welcome Hall on next Wednesday, in the Settlement House Buffalo Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution. On Tuesday, March 28, at 3 o'clock, Mrs.

Dudley will read the same paper at the Remington Mission before the Mothers' Club. The paper is a charming character sketch which Mrs. Dudley wrote and read before the Buffalo Chapter last year in the programme of Colonial women. Vermonters' Sugar Party. The Buffalo Society of Vermonters is to hold its 11th annual winter reunion next Friday, March 31st, at the Colonial Club.

Through the courtesy of several who are members of the Colonial Club and also Vermonters, the entire clubhouse with its pool-tables, reception rooms. dance hall, card rooms and other conveniences, will be at the disposal of the society. There will be speeches and music. Including the beautiful Univerof Vermont song, "Lake sung by a quartet of Vermontet's and old fashioned dances ag well as modern ones. "Sugaring-off" will be the event of the evening.

President Noonan has sent to Vermont for the pure maple syrup which will be served hot with biscuits, pickles, doughnuts and other New Engand delicacies. The reception committee includes Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Farnham, Mr.

and Mrs. Hugh McLean, Dr. and Mrs. Walter D. Greene, Rev.

and Mrs. 0. C. Poland of Niagara Falls, Julian J. Washburne of Batavia, Mr.

and Mrs. Allen E. Day, Dr. and Mrs. Dewitt C.

Greene and Mr. and Mrs. William H. Bullard. The committee in charge of dance consists of Louis C.

Dodd, chairman; Edward D. Strickland and T. Green. The officers of the society are: Thomas H. Noonan, John H.

Clogston, vice-president; Rev. Frank S. Fitch, chaplain; Samuel B. Botsford, secretary-treasurer. The society has over 300 members; all Vermonters, however, are invited to this meeting, whether members or not.

Miss Sweeney of Summer street gave a dinner on Wednesday evening, the guests going later to the dog show. Among the Easter entertainments Mrs. George Derrick of Summer street, announces a dance for Thursday evening. April 25, for her young son, Robert. Mrs.

John A. Bell of Livingston will be at home Thursdays. fee. Mr. Charles Van Arnam closed his dancing classes on Friday night with a cotillion.

Wednesday was a full day socially. Mrs. Andrew Langdon of North street gave a dinner in the evening in honor of her guest, Mrs. Mathews of Detroit. Mrs.

Mathews was the honor guest at a luncheon given at the Twentieth Century Club by Mrs. Henry Altman on Wednesday, other ladies having small luncheon parties there being Mrs. Frederick L. A. Cady.

Mrs. Carlton R. Jewett. Mrs. Philip Mark Shannon, Mrs.

(Henry (M. Gerrans, Miss Amelia Stevenson, and Mrs. R. W. McCready, Mrs.

McCready's party being made up in honor of her guest, Mrs. Peltsch of Chicago, Ill. Also on Wednesday evening Miss Amelia B. Stevenson had a small dinner party and Mrs. Charles Townsend entertained the Afternoon Whist Club.

On Wednesday afternoon several of the Twentieth Century Club members played bridge at the club. many of them remaining for a cup of tea or cof- will be given at the Elmwood Studio, corner of Elmwood and Auburn avenues, on Thursday evening, March 31st, by Miss Lelia Olivia Hume and Mrs. Alice Whelpton McLeod. Miss Hume will recite the story of "Paralfal" and Mrs. McLeod will render the music.

(Mrs. Clara E. Thoms announces an evening of folk songs and ballade at the Niagara Hotel, Tuesday evening, (March 28, 1905, at 8:15 o'clock. The programme will be given by Mra. Charles Arthur Spaulding, soprano; Miss W11- helmina Perrine, soprano; (Miss Martha Allene Davis, alto, and (Miss Carrie Tallman, contralto, assisted by Mrs.

M. D. Cook, pianist, The annual meeting of the Women's Investigation Club will be held next Friday afternoon at the Hotel Iroquois, The business meeting, at which the officers will be elected, be followed by a banquet at 6 o'clock. A cotillion will be given by the Unity Club in the parlors of the Church of the Messiah next Tuesday evening. March 28th.

Miss Ada M. Kenyon gave A small Club yesterday. ladies had luncheon at the Twentieth Century luncheon at the Club yesterday, staying for bridge. Mrs. Burton S.

Fletcher's branch of the Sunshine Stitchery gave a luncheon on Wednesday of 22 covers to celebrate her birthday at the home of Mrs. S. C. Rogers in Delavan avenue. Pink white roses decorated the house and the table.

A flower game was played during the afternoon. for which pretty prizes were given. Mrs. Fletcher was presented with some very handsome silver in honor of the occasion, the presentation speech being made by Mrs. F.

N. Fortier. Olmsted of Summer street gave a small tea on Thursday afternoon. On Friday evening Mrs. George K.

Birge of the Circle entertained a small dinner party and Miss Gertrude Norton of Gates Circle entertained at dinner in honor of Miss Hazard. (Miss Walbridge of Oakland Place entertained luncheon parties at the Park Club on Thursday and Friday. Miss Walbridge of New York was the honor guest on Friday. Mrs. C.

M. Howard was the guest of honor at a luncheon and card party. given on Wednesday by Mrs. Edward L. Koons of Linwood avenue.

Mrs. Philip S. Sherwood of Bidwell Parkway gave an informal tea on Wednesday afternoon for Miss Ella Schreiner and her guest, 'Miss Calrice Ried of Cleveland. DATES TO BE REMEMBERED. The General Hospital Alumnae Association will hold its annual meeting on next Thursday afternoon at Mr.

John Rummell interpretative recital of Shakespeare's "Julus Caesar" at Masten High School on Tuesday, March 28, at 2 P. M. The last meeting of the Mission Study Class will be held on Saturday, April 1, in St. Paul's Parish Home, when Mrs. Allan I.

Holloway will speak on "Present Conditions of our Mission Work in All women Interested in the subject are invited. The monthly meeting of the board of managers of Ingleside Home will be held tomorrow afternoon at 3:30 o'clock at the home. An executive meeting will be held at 3 o'clock. Miss Lucretia Hayes, the new student secretary of the Young Women's Christian Association, will address the meeting held in the rooms, 19. West Mohawk street, at 4 o'clock Sunday afternoon.

All women cordially Special music has been arranged for the occasion. A pedro party for the benefit of the J. W. Wilkeson, No. 22, Ladles of the G.

A. will be given at Convention Hall Thursday evening, March 30. Mrs. W. Bowen Moore, president of the board of managers of the Ingleside Home, announces a regular monthly The Riverside Pedro Club was tertained Thuraday by Mrs.

Fahrenschone of Riverside avenue. Favors were won by Mrs. Leonard, Mrs. IrvIna Souter and (Mra. Fahrenschone.

Mrs. Edwards of 17 Morley Place will entertain the club this week. Mra. Mathew Bilger entertained the Happy Circle at her home. 26 Jones street.

on Thursday afternoon. Favors were won by the a (Misses Koeppen, Busch, Kessler and Goepfert. The next hostess is Mrs. Goepfert of 104 Herman street. The final arrangementa have been made for the progressive pedro and enchre party and dance by Edna Rebekah Social Club, at their hall, in the German Insurance Building.

Main and Broadway. Wednesday evening. March 29. Mrs. C.

Albright of Emelle street entertained the Diamond Pedro Club on Monday evening. Favors were won by Mra, C. Albright, Mrs. N. Conner and Miss E.

Boge The next hostess will be Miss Koept of Clare street Mra. Harry Jax of Grant street enter. tained the Cosego Pedro Club last' Thursday evening. Favors were won by Mrs. Jack McCarthy, Mr.

M. Lavin, Mrs. Albert Ellis of Tryon Place will be the next hostess. PULPIT TOPICS. RELIGION.

Religion 1s not A compartment of life on A level with the physical or the mental, but an attitude toward all lite's interest, spirit pervading all lite's work, a finvor abiding in one's whole being. It is, as far as possible, removed from magic, but 1s as subservient to law as any other fact of the universe. -Rev. C. R.

Minard, Bap- tist, Denver, Colo. CONSECRATION. It is not necessary that every young man who is consecrated to God should enter the ministry, nor every young woman become a deaconess or parish visitor. We need more consecrated men in business and professional life. More women who will illuminate the home and social life with the sincere beauty of a holy faith.

-Rev. C. S. Goodall, Methodist, New York City. THE STRENUOUS LIFE.

The gospel of a strenuous life has been preached a good deal in recent rears. It is a good gospel to preach in some places, to some people, and at certain times; but it is not to be preached in season and out of season. Life is certainly too strenuous for some; a little more pressure and they will go either to their grave or a sanitarlum. -Rev. R.

J. Kent, tionalist, Brooklyn, N. Y. A NEW CHURCH. Each age has furnished a new church, but this century had not.

It had not solved the question which con fronts it. We must reach the people. A church is not a church if its congregation only goes to hear a few prayers and listen to a sermon which they have heard time and time again. -Rev. G.

W. Anderson, Methodist, Troy, N. Y. DIVINE CHARACTER. It is not mere knowledge that saves a man, but character; and character modeled after the great pattern, Jesus Christ; and character which He, by spirit and by the new birth from above, will enable a man to build; and a character that is fashioned by doing the will of God.

-Rev. W. P. George, Methodist, Denver, Colo. THE ISSUES OF LIFE.

What we need is length of life, but depth of life; it is not duration, but the taking of the soul out. of time, as All high action of the mind does; it is not mortality, but eternity, What is true in the thought of preparation for eternity is that the issues of life are tremendous and B. F. Mills, Independent, Los Angeles, Cal. TIME.

Time is no respecter of persons. It it buries the common things in ob livion, that shadow of darkness, it does not forget to pluck the spangles from robes of kings, tossing them into the night also. But the time cannot dull the beauty of a great soul. Time cannot quench the flame of a white life. Time cannot stain the snow of a pure F.

F. Shannon, Methodist Brooklyn, N. Y. SEEKING GOD. SEEKING GOD.

We must do our duty and God will via God calls a man, March do the rest. When good gives him a message, and commands him to forward, march, no power on Main earth can hinder his onward march. God wants a deliverer; we need a deliverer. We must be faithful to the charge God had given us. We must go back to the old camping ground.

We must seek the God of our fathera, trust God for His love and saving S. P. Tice, Methodist, New York City. BELIEF. The gift of love is offered: to us on the easiest possible terms.

Jesus Christ is the channel through which this gift of love reaches us. Belief 19 its reception. Belief is more than intellectual assent. The word carries the thought of trust, reliance, dependence. It is the bellet that God is able and willing to do all He offers, and the trusting Him to do -Rev.

W. N. Rankin, Presbyterian, Denver, Colo. TRUTH. The desire of life is to know the truth.

Even the falsifier, and the cheat seek to know that which is true, though they fall to use it. And it is a striking feature of the life today that the old shackles of prejudice and blased conceit have been cast aside, and man, realizing himself as a suncrowned creature, is demanding honesty in thought, courage in utterance and exactness in expression.Rev. T. E. Potterton, Presbyterian, Brooklyn, N.

Y. STANDARDS. The sensualist is coarse and vulgar, The materialist is heavy and clumsy, The selfish is suspicious and narrow. These fail. There must be accord with God's will.

The egotist knows too much to learn; the stubborn are ruled by pride and self; the independent recognize no external authority. There must be service that eases and strengthens the C. F. Selsner, Methodist, Denver, Colo. THE SILENT REALM.

congratulated on achieving success. man and Miss Carter was maid of honThe guests were Mr. Hertell of New York and Mr. Decker of St. a James.

Mr. and Mrs. Charnock left for WashIngton and will be at home after April 1 at 334 Woodlawn avenue. Mr. and Mrs.

John Glover Short of Lancaster avenue announce the engagement of their sister, Miss Nellie Everett. to Mr. Walter Lord Curtiss of Butfalo. FOREIGN TRAVEL. Mr.

and Mrs. Carleton Sprague, Mrs. John Clarke Glenny, Miss Joan Glenny and Mr. Henry W. Sprague sail tomorrow from Spain for home.

The Misses Manchester of North Pearl street will sail on April 1st for the Mediterranean. They will spend the summer in Switzerland. Mr. and Mrs. Ogden P.

Letchworth of Niagara street and Miss Wilson of Philadelphia sailed yesterday for Europe. Mr. and Mrs. George P. Warner were in New York to see the party off.

Mrs. Howard and Mr. Cecil Howard sailed yesterday from New York to join Miss Kathleen Howard in Europe. Mr. Charles M.

Peabody and Mr. John E. Selkirk have taken passage for the Mediterranean trip. LATEST CHANGE OF RESIDENCE. Mr.

and Mrs. John H. Vought will remove from the Markeen to 313 Linwood avenue on May 1. Mrs. Katherine Hamlin Evans and children will remove to the Niagara the first of April.

Mr. and Mrs. Le Grand Robson of Hodge avenue have removed to 270 West Utica street. Mr. and Mrs.

George S. Buck will remove to their new home in Irving Place the first of April. Mr. and Mrs. George Kendall of the Touraine have taken a house on Ferry street near Delaware avenue and will remove there May 1.

Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Macpherson of Highland avenue will leave early in May for Kansas City, where they will reside for several months.

Mr. George, H. Tryon, who has been spending a few days in town, has returned to Hartford, accompaned by the Misses Tryon, who will make their home there. Mr. and Mrs.

Thomas B. Lockwood will remove to 29 Oakland Place the first of May. Mr. and Mrs. George B.

Webster and Mr. and Mrs. Lauros H. Allen have Of all the millions that have gone out from the shores of time no ad thentic word has come back to anxlous ears as to the activities and realizations there. It is the ever-silent realm.

We cannot even in fancy, walk its streets, nor view its varied scenes, nor breathe its invigorating air, nor come into the faintest touch with its experiences. It 1s indeed the all-mysterious realm that holds its secrete locked within its own mysterious bounds and never one escapes -Rev R. McDonald, Baptist, Brooklyn, N. A COMMON DUTY. There is an effort on the part of many people to isolate themselves.

You cannot do it. You cannot bulld al wall around Christ's Church or Brooklyn or the Diocese of Long Island or the United States and say to the rest of the world, Go to the devil! If the religion of the church means anything, my brethren, it means that you and I are one of the family of a common Father, and that to all His children, however far away they be, we owe a common duty. Bishop H. Cl Potter, Episcopalian, New York City. R9.00 Buffalo to New York and Return.

Lehigh Valley Railroad, Friday, 31. Return limit 5 days. Tickets on all trains. For Pullman reset vations and full Information, call 860 street. Both telephones 2670.

Voght of Hudson street have returned from a trip to California. Mrs. Marshall Reid Miss Helen Reid of The Markeen have returned from Atlantic City. Mr. and Mrs.

Spencer Kellogg, Miss Kellogg and Miss Doris Kellogg leave tomorrow for Atlantic City. Miss Louise Kingsley of Linwood avenue has returned from a month's visit at Old Point Comfort. Mrs. David Gray Sutfin has returned from a visit to Nashville, Tenn. Miss Hazel Nimmons of Cleveland arrived on Fiday, to be the guest of Mrs.

Sutfin. Mr. and Mrs. Albert J. Wright and Miss Ruth Graves left on Thursday for Atlantic City.

Miss Anne Loulse Wright, who attends school in New York, joins her parents during the Easter holidays. Mrs. Norman E. Mack and daughters and Mrs. Isaac Taggert left on Wednesday evening for Atlantic City.

Mr. and Mrs. Bronson C. Rumsey and children returned on Monday from Santa Barbara, California. Mrs.

Donald of Boston is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Bernard Bartow of Delaware avenue. Mrs. Fred C. Frink and daughters have been the guests of Mrs.

Frink's mother, Mrs. Charles W. Mann of Rich- ANGER ANGER SEWING even SEWING ringer SEWING Stores MACHINE MACHINE MACHINE IN AT BUFFALO AND VICINITY 1 352 Elk st. NIAGARA FALLS BUFFALO ANGER 1038 Broadway 9 Falls st. 91 Grant st.

SEWING LOCKPORT 1213 Jefferson st. 13 Locust ate 631 Main st. MACHINE Look for the Singer Sign when in need of a Sewing Machine or Supplies. Needles for all makes of Sewing Machines Sewing Machines Rented or Exchanged.

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About The Buffalo Sunday Morning News Archive

Pages Available:
35,852
Years Available:
1874-1915