South Bend News-Times, Volume 31, Number 211, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 23 July 1914 — Page 7
TIirr.M.Y, ,111,V 23. 1!I Ellsworth's Ellsworths SOCIAL !!
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
and OTHER INTERESTS of WOMEN
TV i JLJ k - -1 Mr. nr.. I 1 ride of lain this a pi' nif ( court mother f to. Ml L' J li' k S-.f.'. J try. .bTht. Utter daughter, I'Kon a v. .Mr I." Woo.j A at a.. will -IltT-wnii.-; at : 10 o'clock with Imncr on th'ir lawn as a to Mr. Hr-rkenbridgos T'lU.Jo. ). other out of will Mr. and Mrs. ri! of Chhtu'o aifTi Mr. and J . r of iston, Me. ar- th- micts of their Mrs. lilni'T lai--y. JivjMr.-. J. I'. Andi-j.-on, 4 1", Sherman av., entertained the Social Sixteen Aub 'dniia afternoon. Th time was soent socially and dainty refreshments wfrc fc r-d. Ib-sides the members of tiiM club, two ku sts were jr.:U. Mrs. John Mayer, :;2 is. Scott it., w ill r ntf rtain the club three weeks from Tu sday. Tt was decided that the meetings will he held ()n Tueays her after, instead of Wednsdayj. Mr J. Norman Hoffman. 222 pleasant St., Kier Park, was hostess Wednesday afternoon to the Violet cluh. After the regular business meeting, the afternoon uas spent with contents. Favors wer.; awarded Mrs. James Itrown. Mrs. J. Coleman and Mr. Herman llirnard dinner was serv-d at lioste.-s. In two wcks will entertain the club 412 Cashing st. A delicious lock bv the o Mrs. Barnard at her home. The Pythitn Te; lihtfully entertain la die were ded Wednesday all oa ai uif1 collate ri'k at Kau'le lake. of Mrs. Harry YerMost of the. partv of o.i ladies made the trip by automobile, reaching the lake early in the day. The time was spent socially until after the hicken dinner was served at niifin by the hostess. The afternoon was spent with boatirr-r, tishing and other pi nic diversions. Supper was njoej tt the cottage, and the party left about 7 o'clock for South f?e:id. The teas have been discontinued until Svpfmber. The regular meet im,' -of iu. ;,,i,(.s i be held on Thursday evening at the K. of P, hall. Mrs. C. M. Hildebrand. 10.':; Quincy st.. was hostess to the Social Twelve !u'. Wednesday afternoon. Cards wre enjoeNd (iurinir the afternoon. l'aors truing to Mrs. James Scott. Mrs. M. l. Daly and Mrs-. John Ilamy. Mrs. 'barb s Ports was a guest of tlie I lit. Dainty refreshments were served I'.v tiie hostess at the close of the a fternonn. Tin club will meet in two weeks with .Mrs. Geo. Moore. 72'J X. St. Louis st. Mis Coral Stewart. K. South ?t.. will entertain a number of irls from the Kobertson store at a picnic at SprinuLrook park Thursday evening. Personals Paul McNeil is visitim; Mr. lie of I'ortae of Wat.hinpton. D. C. and Mrs. Joseph Ledav. Mrs. C. A. Wayne. IZl S. Michigan st., left Wednesday for Harbor .prirus, Mich., where she will spend several weeks with her brother. Mrs. John Halsiiicr and son, P.eriin. of Watcrtown. S. I)., anil Miss Howie .Macbonald of New Carlisle, who he n the quests of Mr. and erne Van Dusen, 10 I'D Allen st., leturned home. Prof. Marvin P. Pane. 0'J P. ferson blvd.. has b 'en called to have Mrs. have Jef-Chi-ciio on business. Mrs. Alfred Low and daughter. Ceraldine. of Topeka. Kas.. and Miss lrnocne Howe of 'vlalcsburir. 111., are isitinir at the home of Mrs. I). ). Poif. L'i'7 N. Scott st. Miss Louise .'laul of St. Joseph,
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We lose you gain, by our clearing sale on all low cuts. Our prices are unreasonably low, but our Summer slock must be reduced. This is a bona-fide money saver for the whole family. Don't miss it.
f& One lot Lan e s , d t iO kg dies' ijp u m wnite, ent and metal. 800 pairs Ladies' pumps and oxferds. Ladies' Sucd pumps i n grey, brown or c h a m -pagne. Everything Marked Nothing u u
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Little Scotch Singer Plays Double Role Opera Star And Gardener
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Mich., is spending the week end her sister, Mrs. Harry Koehler with 714 12. "Washington a v. Mrs. E. Kckert. CiH Leland a v.. has trone to Bremen to remain a week. Mrs. Geo. Miller of Chicago, who! has been vlsitin- with Mrs. K. IT. Wil-I son, istula av., and other friends here, has returned to her home. Mrs. Dora Wholly of near South Pend has prone to Chlca.no to spend the remainder of the week. V. O. Prownell. 632 N. Main left Tuesday to Join his family southern Michigan, where they visit for a couplo of weeks. St., in will A nnouncemen ts The Overeomers' class of the Conference Memorial United Brethren church will Rive an ice cream social Thursday evening on the lawn at the homo of Mr. and Mrs. 1. D. Shirk, 613 Push st. MARlU.U.i: LICKNSKS. Charles M. Flair, ane :1. anter and decorator, to Cloldie I Wright, as 19. August M. Cortier, jr.. ae 22, merchant, Mishawaka, to Helen Byl, age 18. Mishawaka. Jleginald Williams, age 27, florist, to Pearl Ferris, age 21. ci i r:vixo Always fresh GDIS.-All best kinds, at Coonley's. Advt. 3 C Mens $4.00 gun metal md tan Russia oxfords. Men's serviceable calf and vici oxfords, worth $3.C0. Men's $5.00 shoes and oxfords, all leathers. in Plain Figures Reserved res
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Prance. Mile. Nelly Margrand onora star at r gardener by day. beautiful house an his toric old chateau on the outskirts ofj Paris and she spend? several hours j each dav attending to her flowers ar vegetable. Mil?. Scott as her quaint name. "Nelly Marthy." suggests is Scotch rather than French, and, aside from the opera. Paris has for her. U- at She the is now Opera Menu To Use While Mother Is Resting Breakfast. Berries; rolls; oatmeal; Luncheon. coffee. Sardine toast: bread lettuce; iced coffee. SupiK!. Cold ham and horse potatoes, biscuits', honey and butter; radish, fried and tea. Cook enough oatmeal to serve at breakfast and to -fry for Wednesday's luncheon. T1ISCUITS. Put two cuns of Hour into bowl with one teaspoon of salt, four teaspoons of baking powder and two heaping teaspoons of lard. Chop or mix with knife until all is blended (do not mix with the hands). Make well in center of flour. Add one scant cup of water or milk, mix alt together. It will be a soft dough. Take one-half of the douh out on slightly floured board. Press into shape. Cut and put in greased pan. Use rest of the dough the same way. lo not handle, do not knead, do not roll. Biscuits need to be baked in very quick oven 12 minutes. riui:n Peel and slice toes, drop into minutes. Drain POTATO I IS. two quarts of potacold water for ten and put into skillet, with three tablespoons of bacon dripping. Stir until all slices are slightly coated with dripping. Sprinkle with salt. Turn until potato slices aro golden brown. Cover for ten minutes. Then remove cover until potatoes are done. POX PAPDHS. Pinest line ver brought to the city. Closing out at one-fourth off of wholesale prices at Cconley'. Advt. Factory Girl In Conference N m V ' A Special Ctrrespondence. PHICACO. 111. Misr- Apnes Nestor, who less than ten jears aso was operating a machine in a glove factory, is this week taking a prominent part in one of the most Important industrial conferences held in the I'nited States. The purpose of the conference H to discover "the fundamental causes of dissatisfaction and unrest in industry.' Miss Nestor's associates in the industrial investigation are Mrs. Borden Harriman. Prank P. Walsh, members ((f the federal committee on Industrial relations'. Prof. J. R. Commons and other noted students of industrial conditions.
PA It IS, th.v Scott nicht and She has
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Serve Dainty Teas Outdoors
Arrange Shady Nook On Lawn Where Prettily Appointed Table May Be Set A woman who spent part of last summer visiting her husband's relatives in England, was discovered one morning this spring superintending the planting of hydrangeas and rhododendrons In a semicircle around a tall lilac bush in her suburban lawn. "I'm making a nook for afternoon tea on the lawn." she explained to her interested friends. "One of the most delightful memories of my English visits is the memory of tea hour out of doors. Do you knowhow perfectly delicious tea and hot buttered toast can taste out on the grass, in ernoon ? treat my summer, trees or a low chair, late in the aftWell, I do, and I mean to friends to it every day this Now, I haven't any big tall hedges only this little lawn between the house and the street. But I've happened to note that my big lilac casts a generousshade on the side toward the house when the sun gets low. In this spot of shade 1 am going to have a lowwhite table and some chairs to match. These hydrageas and rhododendrons will shut off the nook from view of passersby in the street, and when fall comes I mean to plant some syringa and forsythia bushes and to start a real English hedge. A wicker muffin or cake stand is an inestimable convenience in serving afternoon tea out of doors. Tiny bis(iiits. piping hot and well buttered, thin slices of bread and jam; small, frosted cakes or doughnuts may be tarried out, three plates at a time on the muffin stand, following the big tray of tea paraphernalia. If this tray is always kept ready, lacking only the fresh jug of cream and fresh pot of tea with accompanying jug of hot water, one maid may serve afternoon tea very quickly and at a moment's notice. Shade Windows With Cretonne One need not have shades of dark green or tan holland in the dainty summer bedroom unless one really prefers, for now there are to be had to order, of course charming window shades made of light chintz, matching all the other window hangings of the room. The well furnished bedroom nowadays usually has two sets of window shades; an outer shade of white or tan holland, matching all the other wondow shades in the house, to give harmony to th house front, and an inner shade of holland in color that harmonizes with the room furnishings or in some instances of very dark green holland. to protect the eyes from early morning light. It is a very simple matter to have these inner shades made of cretonne which is treated to a slight glazing so that the shades will roll easily and maintain its smooth surface over the windowopening. When the summer sun gets high in the sky and opened windows mean an extra amount of fine dust settling on everything indoors, the dainty cretonne hangings and . cushions of the winter season should be replaced with something simpler. One woman who has a charming pink bedroom from October to May finds it a rest and satisfaction to remove every scrap of pink in summer and to substitute green and white. The wall paper, being pale gray with a delicate pink and green floral border, green and white cretonne becomes it as well as pink and white. Bed, dresser and table are draped with green and white cretonne; chairs are cushioned with it. Pink candles are replaced with white ones and over the pink lampshade is snap-buttoned a frill of pinked-at-the-edge green silk, the pink light gleaming through at night. FURY IS FOILED IN ATTACK ON PALACE LONDON, July 23. Eluding guards who had been stationed about Buckingham palace to prevent an attack by suffragets, a lone "fury" attacked the palace and created intense excitement. The woman dashed from the crowd of spectators that had watched the arrival of the political leaders, and darted through the gates and across the court yard to the visitors' entrance. Confronted there by a palace -attache and thrust back, the woman picked up stones and hurled them through the window. ' One fell into the room in which the home rule conference was being held and narrowlv missed the head of Premier Asquith. ' The guards quickly recovered from their astonishment and prevented any further damage. The woman took to her heels, snrieking "votes for women" and "down with the torturers of women." but was captured after a short chase. ADMINISTRATOR I I MIS THXI. Otto W. Klein filed his bond as administrator of the estate of 1. ". Klein with the county clerk Thursday morning. The bond wa.s placed at $.'.000. i. o. . r. Mi:iriTN(;. Account Tri-State I. . . K. meeting at East Chicago, lnd.. July o, 1314. outh Shore lines will make rate of $1.70 round trip going on all trains and returning same day. Ice cream social given by Harry O. Perkins auxiliary No. 1. U. S. W. V.. Friday evening. July 4. at IxiSalle hall. Good music and .dancing. Admission 10c. Come and bring your friends. LOrf ANGELES. CAL. While the police in scores of coast cities were seeking Marguerite Srs and Odessa Stevens, both 11. and Hazel Winter, 20. the trio were found wrapped in a single blanket under the municipal pier, living over again a him play which they had seen.
The Last the Claflin
Wei
had
lave
of big selling and find there are lots of Odds and Ends left from the big sale. We intend to clear everything up by Saturday night. We are also putting in the selling special lots from Claflins that were delayed in shipment. Friday and Saturday are cleanup days in the Receiver 's Sale of The H. B. Claflin Company Stocks.
OUR NEIGHBORS' KIDS
Oren s Disconery of Fate
IiV KLIXOK WOLF. To fall out of a tre.3 and break one's wrist is, after the first pains are over, a moro or less Interesting experience for an 11-year-old by. Having bravely survived the painful ordeal of having the bones get io bravely that mother rails yon, "My great big man," and Daddy pats you on the head and gives you a nickel and several fond aunties and uncles do the same having bravely withstood all this and then to appear among the "fellas' again with your arm tied up in a sling, your face wearing an expression of relined martyrdom, and your free hand unconcernedly rattling the loose change in your pocket, is to achieve an air of distinction which, for a time at least, is the envy of the neighborhood. Of course it wears off after a day or so, when your baseball team plays its "champeen" game without you and the kids go in the swimmln' hole and you sit on the bank. Hut while it lasts it is awfully sweet. Oren Shanafelt has fallen out of a tree and broken his wrist. He has been as brave as brave can be. Yet none of the sweetness of distinction is for him. IW is, on the other hand, an object of solicitous pity among his playmates and of the profoundest self-pity to himself. This Is the reason. Thursday Oren's Sunday school went on a plcnic to Hudson lake. His "bunch" had been planning to make the affair largely a .swimming fest and th plans and the dares and the bet that have been passed around for the last couple of weeks have lent wings to the lagging moments. There was only one thing that bothered Oren. " He didn't have a bathing suit to wear and it was up to him to earn it. It was a pretty serious problem at first but he tinally found its solution. He lives near an ice house and every day big cars roll up to the storehouse door where they are unloaded. Of course the workmen can't help dopping a piece now and then. Sometimes they are pretty hig pieces, too. but of course after they are broken fhey aren't fit to store and accordingly fall prey to the kids of the neighborhood. One day last week Hren joined the "ice gang." He worked quietly and busily, picking up the biggest pieces he could find, established a route for hirmclf and delivered the confiscated pieces at rut rates to his neighbors. Of course he "mixed" sometimes with energetic rivals, but all in nil he came out pretty well, ""livery night saw a couple nickels or a couple dimes dropped into a ecret hafe. By Tuesday night he had acquired nousrh to pay for the upper, and bright and oarly Wednesday morning found him on his vay do v. a town to buy them be
Two Days of Stocks
a weeK or more fore the hard melted away. earned pennies On the way home he met som of "the kids' making talkative progress toward town. "'Come on, Oren!" they called to him. They're givin away kites down here!" So Oren joined the excited group and returned home with a bright red kite in addition to his precious "upper." He stowed the latter away and took the kit1 out to fly. There were numerous others in various stages if progress upward, but, as luck would have it. it was Oren's that lodged in the tree. Oren shinned up after it. Several other boys followed. The limb broke and Oren fell to the ground. He sustained a broken wrist and numerous paint ul if not serious, bruises. Rut that isn't the worst of it. After all those trips to and from the ice house, after all th" quarrels with competitors, after all his tribulations in eompetitive ice dealing and after patiently acquiring his little fund penny by penny, the gang went off to the picnic without him. The neighborhood all day was as quiet as a cemetery in which
George H. Wheelock & Company Table Glassware for Hot Weather Use.
MANY LINES ARE RADICALLY REDUCED FOR THIS SALE OF SUMMER GLASSWARE.
Ktched Goblets. Grecian Key design . . SI. tin mt mi Ktched Sherbet (;las.-e. ;reeian Key design $1.00 jmt ot Ice Tea Glasses, rut. Sl.f0 mt xt Ice Tea Glasses, etched. . .SI.oO set Salad PowN H .V T.'.c ugar and Grcamer . .-Or. :;."c, ro Tumbler Coasters .Oc Iierry Dishes ..o- and T.'m er t
SPECIAI Tall stem thin blown Dessert Glasses, beautifully cut and engraved suitable for serving ices, chilled fruit, berries, etc., $1.00 per set.
George H. Wheelock & Company
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'3 1 More of Those Beautiful Wirthmor Waists at a Dollar Another shipment of those very desirable Wirthmor Waists has just arrived. Four new striking:, pretty, thorouhlv un-lo-the-minute styles. Only a limited quantity of these patterns and impossible to secure more. 1 They won't stay Ionj, so come in soon, tomorrow if possible, and avail yourself of this unusual Waist opportunity. Oren bitterly buried his dead hopes. And worst of all ther i that useless upper staring him in the face, representing the worthies investment of his hard -earned money. Oren has for the first timo come face to face with fate. BRING YOUK WATCH TO A SPECIALIST For years we have been studying" the anatomy of a watch and today we can, cure the most desperate cases. Let your watch spend a tew days in our watch hospital and it will come forth as good as new. CLAUER'S 3-Floor Jewelry Store 1 73 Si VI Ni: SI !()!. Summer Sea-on Ilargaln Now. Washington .4 VI vrniure w. Jr Sucf-os-ors to A. M. Joneq The I"iirnituri; Store Around on Main Street, Grape Jui- G!'i?e . . ",Or. 7."e set "o!':j:al Turnlbrs ....:'.n' per --t Cob'tiial Sherbet Gbies.. ir ..'t Colonial Ire Tea Gla . . .."Of vft Colonial Gob'ets "." 'f M't Colonial Vater pirrhers at -r, 0c. ,",Of, ;r,f. J.VBerry s'.-ts SI. 00 Ic- T'.b and Plato .".Of Hat.dl-d Ice TV a Gl at ... SJ.OO, s-J. .-,, S::.T." -r rt
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