jljjj VuL. Vlll; MO. 10 SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH FOURTH, 1905. PRICE. FIVE CENTS MERRY MASQUERADERS Disguise Party at Carolina One of Sea son's Most Entertaining Events. Company Which Taxeii Capacity of Muiic Hall Anenile to Witneaii (Cake Walk u Feature. HE disguise or masquer side party at The Caro lina, Saturday evening, was one of the merriest and most picturesque, as well as the most interest ing social events of tho present season, and the company which assembled to witness it taxed the capacity of the music hall to overflowing, many standing dur ing the entire evening. While the a flair was impromptu in its nature, being arranged on short notice, there were nevertheless, a .goodly num ber of participants and a variety of cos t nines, nearly all of which were exceed ingly ellective. Prizes were awarded for the most elaborate, most ludicrous and the best character representation, Mrs. (irace K. Palmer of Mt. Vernon, N. Y.. winning the first, Miss Helen Woodwortli of 1'ochester, N. Y., the second, and Mr. K. II. Dana, of Cambridge the third. Mrs. Palmer's costume was a most elaborate one, her dress being trimmed with a target pistol and target, a tennis racquet and balls, a riding whip and sev eral playing cards. Miss Woodwortli was most ludicrously arrayed, and a long coat worn backwards and the clever arrangement of her hair, made it well-nigh impossible to tell which was the "right side." Mr. Dana as a French maid, was one of the features of the evening and he kept the company in an uproar of laughter most of the time, and willingly let spec tator who wished, and some "who did not, hold the "sweet child" which he car ried. l uiiy as entertaining as Mr. Dana was Mr..l. 1). Foot of Rye, N. Y., the distin guish, ady (presumably of wealth) ulon whom Mr. Dana, as maid, was sup posed to dance attendance. Mr. Foot's gown wj,s 0f green iridescent silk and the -.ixins" were in keeping with the diara.-ter. An,.; 10r costume which attracted more Jiaii fecial attention was worn by Mrs. . . " 11 unlap Sargent of Brooklyn, a vul reproduction of a field scarecrow. 8t-n 1 h t' covered with laths and cor11 alk?; dirty brown corduroy coat, red bandana handkerchief, half concealing the face, and broad-brimmed army hat, combining with the extended left arm, to make a strangely fantastic picture. Mr. Herbert W. Cost of St. Louis, and Mr. Everett B. Lockwood of New York, were arrayed as a dusky beau and swain, blackfaced, liquid tongued and otherwise realistic. Among the many attractive costumes worn by the young women was the "lit tle girl's'1 costume worn by Miss Marie sonating'a'colored lass. Mr. Lelioy W. Johnson, Mr. tT77i. Ward, Jr., Mr. H. Nelson Burroughs, Air. C. E. Kaltenbach, Mr. E. W. Van Duesen, Mr. B. B. Dessenan, Mr. J. R. Wickwire, Mr. William Dunlap Sargent and Master William Anderson were also in costumes more or less ludicrous, sev eral of them impersonating young women. Just before unmasking came a cake walk in which several couples partici pated, Mr. Cost and Mr. Lockwood be- f If I v "-vx fs r?-"? III I . t' ' v!! CLUH CAPTAIN C. L. KECKER, WINNER OUTLOOK TItOPIIY IN TIN WHISTLE CLUB CHAMPIONSHIP. ing declared the winners and receiving the cake, contributed by Mrs. I. B. John son of Spuyten Duyvil, N. Yr., amid great applause. General dancing filled out the evening. Hemphill of 'Pittsburg, cut with short skirt and baby neck and trimmed with blue sash and ribbons. Miss Constant Johnson of Spuyten Duyvil, N. Y., wore a striking Spanish costume, and Mrs. B. de Mossin of New York, an effective costume of pink with hat to match. Mrs. M. B. Byrnes of New York, wore a shirt waist costume and Miss Irene Houghtaling of New York, a ludicrous looking backward conception. Miss Ethel Cheek of East Orange, wore a pretty red and white check gown, imper- Hustle German Tuesday. At a meeting of the Tin Whistles held Monday evening it was decided to hold a rustic German at The Carolina Tuesday evening, March 7th. BECKER WINS PRIEST CUP Scores in Tin Whistles Medal Play Han dicap Were Closely Bunched. T. IB. Cotter and Charle IIanel Carry off Hall Sweepstakes Sev enteen JPIayerit Iland in Card. MM HE Tin Whistles medal play handicap for the II. W. Priest cup, Wednes day afternoon, drew a large field and developed a close contest, C. L. Becker, Boston, (5) winning by a single stroke with a card of 74, net. T. B. Cot ter, Winchester, Mass., (30), was a close second with 75, Charles Hansel, New York, (18), third in 77, the last two win ning the ball sweepstakes held in connec tion with the event. The beauty of the day added much to the pleasure of the tournament. THE SCORES. Out In Gr Hp Net C. L. Becker, Boston, 39 40 79 5 74- T. B. Cotter, Winchester, Mass., 53 52 105 30 75 Charles Hansel, New York, 48 47 95 18 77 G. Lee Knight, Philadelphia, 45 49 94 14 80 G. R. Wallace, Brooklyn, 49 57 106 25 81 W. S. North, Chicago, 45 49 94 12 82 E. N. Wright, Newton Centre, Mass., 45 48 93 10 83 M. B. Byrnes, New York, 50 56 106 22 84 J. D. Foot, Rye.N. Y., 41 46 87 2 85 A. I. Creamer, North Conway, N. H., 47 49 96 10 86 A. G.Warren, Rochester, 57 65 122 35 87 W. C. Freeman, Montclair, N. J., 41 52 93 5 88 E. B. Lockwood, New York, 52 54 106 18 88 F. A.King, Northboro, Mass., 56 54 110 22 88 C. II. Rosenfeld, New York, 53 56 109 20 89 II. W. Ormsbee, Brooklyn, 54 54 108 16 92 J. B. McDonald, New York, 56 53 109 ' 16 93 Those who failed to play or did not hand in ard3 were: Charles E. Harrison, Pawtucket, R. I. ; C. H. Stanley, Cleveland, Ohio; II. S. Gor don, New York; C. A. Lockwood, New York; F. W. Kenyon, New York; John M. Ward, Brook, lyn; Charles J. Seiter, Mt. Vernon. 3 8! 'tt 5! !: ( - 3! 1 'itf IV ,1-,

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view