South Bend News-Times, Volume 30, Number 280, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 30 September 1913 — Page 7
TUTS DAY, SETT. Sf, 1913. SOCIAL AND OTHER INTERESTS OF WOMEN The Ellsworth 'Store The Best at Right Prices The Ellsworth Store mmm mi 4 r tii: SMART AFTERNOON HAT IN VELVET AND LACE. ,5 TV TIT VTTS i -. iT nniL
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES.
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T!if Worth liil. .r.f of tlir mt iim'iti'us anl j-ternatic f-tudy chilin the city, l-un its program for this jfa.n at a hum tinr Monday ew fling in the I'roprs cluh rooms. Tho nins meting was? appropriately ilevotod to li.- usion I tli club'.s I'Hirho unl iurp's-.s. Will Klliott, v. h was ltadt-r for th rv nintc, Trw ry plf a.-iru'ly on th- buhjf t "Whither and Wli.v," Tru: club program is not yrt ut, but It will in. lad"- a varifty of sulj ts this ytr. Th K-nral nubjc-t of "KflUi ri'v' will !; studiul first, thc-n aft-r a tudy n? (!'rnuin folk '! and music. Hoffman's "ti cuml I'.rll" will bt- takrn up. The y ar's ork v. ill clos w ith study of Sir Oliver I'dpc'.s "Immortality.' .Mrs. Alma . Ware lias been elected to memb rhij in the club. Dr. and Mr?. U. r. I)eYos r.ln S. Taylor st., were completely turpriel Monday t-venint; by a company of friends who called to help them celebrate their fourth wedding anniversary. The cuests tilled live tables at pedro at which prizes weie won by Mr:-. DeVos and Martin lUach and Mrs. Geo rue Black and Dr. DeVos. In -'ussin contests the favors went to Mrs. Charles b?cha.upert and John Linhaen. Supper was servel after the Kani'-s atifl the liost and hostess
were presenteri with a remembrance!
oi me occasion. ir. Lnnaen and Mrs. August Salzwedel of Luporte. were anions the quests. I". G. Manning will entertain a few quests at dinner at the Ixin&-ton tea room Thursday evenintr i nhonor of Mrs. Alice Ward, who will leave soon fro New York to live. Mrs. K. G. Kcttrini; entertained for her Sunday evening: at her home, 4uC S. Lafayette
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A pretty wedding uniting Miss Kohene Clark, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Clark and Oliver Howell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Iewis Howell of Olive IJraneh, took place Saturday evening at S o'clock at the home of the bride's brother, 1119 Miami St.. Key. 1). D. Marston officiating. Miss Kessle Clark, sister of the bride, served as bridesmaid and Frank Clark, brother of the bride, as best man. Among the guests were Mr. and Mrs. George Hoig and Mr. and Mrs. I S. Smith of Hillsdale. Mich.. Mr. and Mrs. I. S. Glaxer, 222 South Chapin St., announce the engagement of their daughter, Hertha. to Robert H. Dohn of the Robertson. Miss Gla- : . r has issued invitations for a lunehon to bo given October 12. .Mrs. Frank Konzen of Mishawaka fntertained at a 6 o'clock dinner Sunday evening complimenting1 her sister. Miss odelia Howell, whose marriage to William Ducey' will take place Oct. 1. Tne Tuesday Kridge club held its first meeting for this season Saturday afternoon at the home of Mrs. W. G. Crabill. The next meeting will be Oct. 7 with Mrs. F. II. Carson. 211 Xorlh Shore drive. Invitations were issued Monday for the wedding of Miss Laura Kaufer and Joseph Donahue which will take place Oct. K at St. Patrick's church.
PERSONALS
George I'riehe, 251T West Orange sr.. has returned from four years' service in the marine corps of New Jersey. . Miss M. K. IMrner. 113 i Kimcr st.. left last week for Yellowstone park and other western points to be gone a month. A. M. Hootman, S21 W. Lindsey st., has gone to K.-ndallville, Ind., on a short business trip. Or. and Mrs. c. H. Movers. 710 AV. Washington aw, have closed their cottage at Higman park and returned to
the city. Miss Marjorie Turner. 107 S, iin St.. will return this week three months' vacation at Mich. Mrs. Nicholas Schilling, lol liam st., lias returned from Minn.
Frankfrom a Sturgis. S. Wil-Duluth,
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STmart afternoon hat. the narrow brim of black velvet is a wired frill of white fancy lace, the wire coming only to from the edge to let the frill soft round the edge of the hat. the black velvet round crown is trimmed with a lace bow the two ends and knotted at the bottom.
finished with three inches At the front wired round
lines with a view of Instructing Us employes and the general public in methods of preventing accidents and decreasing fatalities due to carelessness and ignorance, was in South Kend on Monday. H was located at the Lafayette st. crossing. The car was lilled with illustrations. models of machinery used in the operation of the road and numerous instructions against accident.
PLAYERS ENJOY BANQUET Factory Ijcam leaders Arc Cucsts of Outlnc Club.
As a tribute to the factory league
bbaseball champions of last season the
Singer Outing club tendered a banquet to the members of the Singer team, and to all who aided in making the season a success. About 4 0 were present. It was an enjoyable occasion and in the short speeches which followed the feasting, each player was given just credit for his share in the season's victories. At an early hour the banqueters adjourned to the Orpheum theater where they were given a box party.
COMMITTEE IS APPOINTED High School Alumnae Holds Session at School Bulldinrr.
JUNIORS WILL GIVE THEIR PLAY THIS FALL
Firt Meeting Held and a Committee Aiiointed to Select Vehicle For Actors.
The executive committee of the South Hend High School Alumnae association met in the. high school auditorium Monday afternoon. Officers for the association were recently elected as follows: President, W. II. Swintz;. vice president, Mrs. E. B. DaRin; secretary. Miss Ethel Montgomery; treasurer. Dale Staples. The following were appointed by Pres. Swintz to constitute the executive committee: Miss Virginia Tutt, Horace V. Illrdsell, F. A. Miller Miss Sabra Ann Fralick, John Buxby, Dr. Edgar Meyers, Noel Dunbar, Mrs. Ada Sawyer Jones, Miss Frances Harrington, Victor Paxson, Miss Grace Hootman and Miss Dorothy Eldridge.
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
Mis Helen Neuwerth. fill Lindsey st.. will entertain the Philanthea clas of Westminster Presbyterian church Thursday evening The monthly meeting of the (Irnndni"tb rs' elw' will be held Thursday all da at the residence .f Mrs. L. i:. Hood. 1K7 S. irmll st. A deotiial and busim ss meeting of the Ladies" Aid society of the First
Hrethren church will b nesday afternoon in the
The Women's 1
held Wedchurch par-
The junior class of the high school held its first regular meeting Monday night. The committee composed of Lernlce Freeman. Marie Voedisch. Evelyn Fulmer, Robert Snyder. Delhi Martin and Alice Millhouse was appointed to look up a few plays suitable for the class to present for the "Ex" and to report to the class these plays. The plav must be given before Christmas this year, where other years it was held about the time of the spring vacations. Robert Snyder was named solicitor to take charge of the subscriptions in the Interlude contest. Raymond Flanagan, Evelyn Fulmer anil Helen Jackson and Kenton Mosiman were made reporters for the Interlude.
S o( . ia i o't 1
We. in
. race
.li"'i',;i,v a th- ehuri
orejgn Missionary
M. K. church will
ftern-ion at 2:'.U h parlors-.
SAFETY EXHIBIT CAR IN THE CITY MONDAY Lake Shor l"-e orl .Method to Instruct it. r.mploe- ami Patron Again-t Danger.
The
-afcty exhibit
leing sent over New
ar" w inch is York Central
WAS POOR SHOT. FREDERICK. Md., Sept. HO. Dreaming that a robber seized a bag containing SI 00, Harry S. Devilbliss a local merchant, grabbed his revolver in his sleep and tired at the "thief". The bullet pierced his own leg.
MOVIES IN" CHURCH. PASADENA. Calif.. Sept. 30. Motion picture corned its and dramas are to replace the regular Sunday evening sermons at the Fniversalist church here, according to the Rev. Alan R. Tillinghast. pastor.
TOLEDO.
O.. Sept. SO. Thieves
threw a brick through the windmv of . J. Heesen's jewelry store on Summit street Monday and escaped with a tray of gold bracelets, watch chains and other valuables worth $1,000.
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for Ladies
BLACK SUEDE ENGLISH SHOES $3.45 BLACK SUEDE BUTTON, LOW HEEL
9S
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These are two of our best sellers and are shoes which you should see before buying anywhere. Our stock is full of novelties and if these don't please
YOU,
we
have others that will.
Y. W. C. A. CLASSES GET UNDER WAY TODAY With classes in crocheting, current events and gymnasium, the Young Women's Christian association began its activities Tuesday. A "class in crocheting under Mrs. George Byers. met in the afternoon and another will meet this evening. A class In current events will also hold its first meeting this evening at 8 o'clock. The beginners' class In gymnasium will meet at 7 o'clock and the advanced class at eight. Registration In all Is good and indicative of a busy winter for the institution' this year. The regular monthly meeting of the board of directors of the Y. W. C. A. which was to have been held Thursday, has been postponed to Oct. 9.
J. A. M'CULLOUGH TO GO INTO REAL ESTATE FIRM After 21 years in the grocery business, James A. McCullough. member of the city council, has sold out and will enter the real estate business. He will be associated with George "White-nan with offices in the Hobbs building. McCullough has conducted a grocery on S. Michigan st. for many years.
DR. THOMSON'S EYE TALKS (TALK NO. 181.)
Crooked.
In manv cases the first result of wearing compound lenses is a distorted appearance of objects. A door or window may appear wider at the top than at the bottom, or vice versa. A level floor may appear inclined up or down. This Is a perfectly natural result and is to be expected. It is a rcsitive evidence that the glasses are correctly fitted. The eyes have been tiying for so long to adapt themselves to. a defective condition, that normal vision seems strange and unnatural. It only requires perseverance for a few days to entirely overcome the difficulty. Objects gradually take on a natural appearance as the eye becomes accustomed to the new condition. We cannot expect to undo in a moment a defect which has lien growing for years. With a little time and patience, however, there is
no focal defect of the eyes which
c:.nnot be entirely overcome with lenses. DR. H. A. THOMSON
Not Open on Wednesday Afternoons' 301 South Michigan St. Southwest Corner Wayne and MJcli.
i OLD QUESTION
The Story of Five Helpless Men On a Desert Isle on Appeal to Womanhood.
BY LiAUItA KINGSTON'. I was idly turning the pages of a magazine yesterday, whiling away a half hour of waiting with a glance
at a page here Suddenly, from
Ideas which I
over and over.
and a picture there, out the confusion of
was carelessly turning
as one does in mo
ments of abstraction, one struck me full and square, reached my dozins consciousness by the sheer force of its appeal, and lit up my mind with the Illumination of its elemental truth. It was with me, as it so often is with all of us I was dallying with an idea which often must have ruffled the surface of consciousness, but never before had the mysterious forces whose combination makes that mystery, the mind, been in exactly the most favorable condition for its reception and germination. It was the picture of a girl's head which first caught my eye, a face which spoke of thought, of idealism, and of virile, effectual strength. And the picture having detained my eye for a brief moment. I went on to read the words beneath it the advertisement, it seemed of a new book, and there I came upon my illuminating Idea.
The fore-notice of how five men were desert island, how in the world was painted tive colors for them.
came to realize what
the book told wrecked on a their isolation, in fresh, primiand how they
the extent of
women's inuflence had been in their lives, now that they were withdrawn from it and viewed it in perspective. An Old Idea. There is my idea, and I dare say you will thing it a very old. a very stale one. And I agree with you to some extent, but disagree in a vital sense. I have spoken, I have written, as you know, times without number, of the wonderful power which we women hold in our hands to be exercised almost at will over our men-folk. But never before had I viewed this truth in the great blaze of illumination which came to me when imagination set to work on that picture and that paragraph combined. Let me tell you of a little of the mind-picture which came to me in that time. Imagine those Ave men who once had been helpless, little babies, learning their first little lessons of selfcontrol, forbearance, love, and pity at their mothers' knees. Imagine in each ofthose five homes the mother, gracious, lovely in her children's eyes whatever the outside world might think, telling her boys the world-old stories of honor and bravery, with glad hope for their future manhood shining in her eyes. I am speaking now of good mothers, the real makers and moulders of the world but just give a fleeting thought to what those five homes might have been had the mothers used their position of power wrongfully or carelessly. Honor and bravery might- then have had no place In those boyish minds, which would perhaps be occupied with personal gain, with the dominion of brute force over weakness, with the grabbing greed which wants all it sees for its own. As They Should Have IJeen. But we are supposing that those five homes were made lovely by the motherhood which permeated life there, and which guided skilfully and tenderly the tiny threads of existence which were gathered up in her hands. Then there would be the boys' sisters, their very good comrades, no doubt, to be played with, petted, and eased on occasion, but always to be treated with the careful respect which in the man would become chivalry towards womanhood. And as a good mother was at the head of the household, the girls would realize their responsibility towards the boys, and never make the respect with which they were treated an excuse for petty tyrannies. So the -boys would tread the path to young manhood, until love came to them, a dazzling, bewildering vision, bearing amazing gifts in her hand and as the influence of the mothers and sisters had affected them so would be their attitude towards this wonderful new thing which had come into their lives. Think, also of the guidance, unno-.iced, almost imperceptible, which only a mother's hand Is delicate enough to make tolerable at this time. The approval and love of the mother who has influenced all his life must be set, the cornerstone in his new edifice of love, or he will feel something lacking, something amiss. The Guiding: Influence. And so I have sketched for you, necessarily in shadow, iridequatc tones only, the power which the mothers and sisters had over the destinies of those five men, until they came to the dividing line 'between youth and maturity, when the Influence was handed over, a sacred trust, to the chosen women, who might or who might not become their wives, but who were, at the time, the shining stars in the sky of their existence. And then, suddenly, by a capricious turn of fate's wheel, they found themselves severed from all but lingering
of the into shape by the memories
memory. And would not the value fluence which had helped their lives, be measured strpnjrth. the potency of the
when the direct contact was withdrawn? And Is It not here that the value of so much of our influence lies? I must leave my five men here, for it is no part of my purpose to tell you how the power of womanhood re-entered their lives with its transforming touch. I have only sketched in their history for you that it may help you to realize, as it helped me, the enormous Dower, almost terrifying in its possi
bilities, which is wielded by the hand, weak though it may be, of every woman.
ROBKRTSON'S SCHOOL CONTUST GOING BIG. The votes are piling up for the schools. It is a most critical time for oting these days, for no one school has a big lead yet. The teachers who have not received letters of instructions on this big event should call at once and get one at the cashier's desk, third floor, Robertson's. Advt
Novelty Season This is a Novelty Season. And, it's Here You'll See the Very Cream of Correct Fall Styles. Why? Because the
Ellsworth Store Buys Direct
New York
of Fashions.
the "Place Where
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Now for a word or two as to the Fabrics in many Ellsworth Garments they're the Newest Weaves the Weaves that have been brought out This Fall Fabrics Spoken of Most Highly in the Old World Centers of Fashion Duvetyne or Peau de Peche. Also exquisite Velours, Poplins, Plushes and Pile Fabrics. As we have; Already Said so we Say Again we gladly Shout it from the House Tops We're Better Prepared than Ever and that's Saying a Good Deal. Just Recall Last Spring. Then we had the New Correct Styles and we were Clear Ahead Admittedly So. Same Thing this Fall as a Visit in Ready-to-Wear will Clearly Prove. Another Thing it Costs No More to Wear "In Style" Clothes, as we've so often remarked before. Vv'ear Ellsworth Coats, Suits and Ready-to-Wear Generally be "In Style" and Pay No More.
1 -rate
Fall Hals Beautiful Hats here at the Ellsworth Store. Hats you'll like to See. Hats you'll love to Wear. Charming Hats, that's what they are. "Adorable" is a word Much Used by those
who Come to See and Remain
to Buy those who become Satisfied Purchasers. You'll Like Our Moderate Prices that's the rule.
Headquarters For Fall Hats.
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TffC QniCHTBST SPOT iN TOYy
Beech Tree Court will allow $22.50 towards expense of members going to St. Joe, Wednesday, Oct. 1. All additional expense to be paid by those who go. May go on any car during day or evening. Advertisement.
GOOD Diamonds CLAUES
0
1 Ml It
WAY
of Solving the High Cost of Living is Buying KINNEY'S SHOES The Big 98c and $1.98 Shoe Store. 116-122 E Wayne St.
Mouse V Cleaning Should also mean New Clean Silverware A New Mantel Clock. We have the best in Sterling Silver as well as the celebrated 1847 Rogen Bros, silver plate. The only complete line of Seth Thomas Clocks FRANK M AY R& SONS' CO. JEWELERS. 121 W. Waahinirton A v.
EXPOSITION WEEK PROGRAM
Bread Contest Three Beautiful Premiums
Display of the Product of The South Bend Toy Manufacturing Co. TOYS MADE in South Bend
Special Sales arranged for each day. Heavy shipments of New Suits New Coats New Dresses New Waists ' New Skirts New Furs To go on sale Monday at special prices. Bought expressly for Exposition Week selling. We want to convince the crowd that this is the place to purchase women's clothes and have put our best foot foremost.
TT IT T1TTP"7" &
Corner Michigan ard Wayne Sts.
CO
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