South Bend News-Times, Volume 31, Number 283, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 3 October 1914 — Page 7
THE SOUTH HFNn
P O
(Social B,nd Other Interests ff WomeinQ
.New
Return of the Wider Skirt Presaged In Unique Model Need Uniformity In Food Laws
SOCIETY
Miss Wilda Shonts, Miss Bes Arbor and Miss Lillian Martin, violinists, and Miss I felon Guiifoyl pi tnit of .South Bend. Mrs. Violet Shy Park?, violinist, of .Mihhawaka, Miss Wollam. soprano, and Mrs. Dow, pianist of 'o."hpn will participate in tlio third and last of the first concert series given at tho MacIIenry-IriKersoll recital hall in the Bertcllns building. Tho recital will take place Monday afternoon at 4 o'clock and will he repeated in tho oven in t? at &. The. public 13 cordially invitM to attend. Tho program in full will be as follows: Flower Sons.i: Im Hertzens Garten (I Had a
I lower) Novell! Tho Naughty Tulip Salter Miss Wollam. Violin: Ies Farfdets Bmelio Pento Miss Shonts, Tho Years at the Spring1.. Birthday Sonjj . . . . Beach Woodman . . .Gourod . . . Volpe Cavatina (Queen of Sheba) . Mks Wollam. Mazurka Miss Shonts. "Ah! fors e lui' (Traviata) . .Verdi Miss Wollam. Ave Maria Soprano solo, violin solo and obliato, with piano and string quartet accompaniment Bach-Gounod Miss Wollam, soprano. Mrs. Parks, violin (solo and ob.) Mrs. Dow, piano. Miss Shon's, 1st violin. Miss Arbor, 2nd violin. Misa Martin, viola. Mr. Injenjoll, 'cello. At an informal gathering Friday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. James V. Parker, 873 S. Clinton St., announcement was made of the marriage of Miss Edna M. Wolf, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Wolf of Ligonier, to J. V.'. Feldman. Tho wedding took place Sept. 5, in Chiago. Dr. Johnstone Myers, D. D., officiating. The young people have many friends in the city. The mother's department of the Progress club Mill hold its lirst meeting of the year in the club rooms Tuesday afternoon at o'clock. It will be in the nature of a reception and all members of the club are cordially invited to be present as guests of the department. Ten women will give two-minute talks on their interpretation of the word motherhood. Members of the Women's Bible class of the First Church of the Brethren met in regular session Friday evening at the home of Mrs. Daniel Beed,. yi'L Milton av. The assisting hostess was Mrs. W. II. Stanly. Tho program included the following numbers: Devotional exercises, Mrs. J. B. Kelley; Bible study. Miss Cora Wise; harp selections. Miss Mattie Unger; talk, Miss Carrie Uein of the Associated Charities. The society will meet again the lirst Friday of November with Mrs. I. W. Jackson, 1401 Miami bt. Tho Missionary society of the First Presbyterian church met Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. C. II. Myers, 719 W. Washington av. The hostess was assisted by Mrs. J. II. Swygart and Miss Mabel Bartiett. About 150 ladies were present. Devotions were led by Mrs. Dora Staples. A business meeting followed in charge of the president. Mrs. W. Ii. Stover. Mrs. W. O. Williams gave an article on Alaska and Mrs. F. M. Hatch a short talk on the new mission study book. "The Child in the Midst." The afternoon closed with a social hour luring which refreshments were served. Tho society will meet tho first Friday in November with Mrs. Isaiah Miller, 1010 S. Michigan st. The Women's Missionary society of the First Baptist church was entertained Friday evening by the Misses Eleonor and Florence Butzbach. Gol S. St. Joseph st. The program was in charge of Mrs. Carrie Myers and the topic for discussion was "The New America." The afternoon closed with a social time during which light refreshments were served. The next meeting of the society will bo held the first Friday in November at the church. The occasion will be that of "Daughter's Day" and extensive jdans are being made for the celebration. The Philathca class and C. W. B. M. girls of the First Christian and Indiana Avenue Christian churches enjoyed a weiner roast Friday evening at Island park. The girls left the city at 6:;0 and spent the evening at the p. irk. Mrs. J. McCarthey, Sl'S Marietta st.. entertained with a thimble Thursday afternoon. The afternoon was spent informally. The guest favor was awarded Mrs. Thomas Madden. A dainty luncheon was served by the hostess. An informal dancing party for the purpose of organizing a dancing club was held Friday evening at American hall by a group of high school students." The club should it be definitely organize. 1 will gie a series of high school dances during the season. Miss Pearl Mosier was the honor guest Friday evening at a kitchen hhower given by Mrs. Frank HauenMein and Mrs. Albert KlingU r of Elkh t A number of South Bond peopie were guests o. th evening. Miss
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, Mappy,
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l(i.X - ' ' by TA n coNTi:i si:. A late imported model presaging the coming of the wider skirt. Fnderskirt of black velvet slashed at inMosier will be married Oct. 16, to E. F. Burger. With Miss Mamie Ileintzelman who will be married Oct. 7 to Frank Solt of Lyons, Neb., she will be honored with a dinner Monday evening at the Oliver hotel at which Mrs. John Whitmer and Mrs. Harry Weiss will be hostesses. Announcements Section 10 of the Indies' Aid society of Grace M. F. church will meet and entertain with a thimble Monday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Albert Pabst. 14 09 S. Main st. The Young Women's Foreign Missionary society of Grace M. K. church will meet Monday evening at 7::.0 o'clock. Miss Nellie Inwood will bo the assisting hostess. ! The Foreign Missionary society of the First M. K. church will meet Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Fred Keller, t09 Portage a v. The subject of the study will be "Our Missions in Boino". The meeting of the Women's Missionary society of the Westminster Presbyterian church to have been held Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. B. S. Thompson. Forest av., has been postponed for one week. The meeting of the Brotherhood of the First Evangelical church to have been held Friday evening has been postponed until next Friday when it will be held at the home of Albert Bosheck, 12S Ohio st. The executive committee of the W. C. T. V. will meet .Monday afternoon at -:H0 o'clock at the V. V. C. A. building. PERSONALS J. (). McLund of Spokane, Wash., is spending a few days at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Taggart, 209 E. Bronson st. Mrs. M. Kreuger, who has bem visiting with Mrs. S. En gel. 126 I-:. Bronson st.. returned to her home in Michigan City Saturday. Harry Berkheiser of Sacksville. Pa., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Berkeiser, 1014 laPicrre st.. and Mr. and Mrs. James Berkheiser, S. Cidumbia st. T. C. Mvers of Elkhart is the g-'-fst of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Myers, 72G S. Fellows st., for several d;cys. Mrs. Mary Ward, who has been suffering for the past eight weeks from a nervous breakdown, is improving. The following young ladies will leave today for Terre Haite to enter the sta'"- normal: Antoinette Seniortier, Bernadine Good, Esther Bupe, I
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Serviceable
will buv here. SHOE CO.
O .' i"--' 1 .;V: tervals of three inches. Skirt of white taffeta contrasts charmingly with the little coat of black velvet collared with ermine. Buth Snyder, Marcella Mitchell, Bernice Bennett, Helen Alward, Lela Young and Lula Young. Dr. II. II. Calvert, 111 S. Michigan st., is spending a tvjw days in Chicago. He is registered at the Groat Northern. Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Calvert. 1245 W. Washington av., have returned from Klinger lake where they enjoyed an outing. Dr. Alvin Martin was a guest of his sister, Marie C. Martin, N. Lafay ette st., Thursday. He will sail shortly from Montreal for London, Eng. Miss Alice Fern Cilery, $21 dishing St., leaves today for Crockett, Texas, to resume her duties as director of domestic science at Mary Allen seminary. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Nickel, 117 S. William st., after an absence of seven months, have returned home from Wisconsin. Mr. and Mrs. Sanford B. Bugee and son have returned from their summer sojourn at Lake Nagawicka. Wis. STRAPS MAKE COAT LOOK LIKE A CAPE Tile distinctive thing about this cos tume is the arrangement of tho straps which give the effect of a cape, though the garment is really a coat. Gabardine, the material which seems to have entirely supplanted serge in the favor of fashionable women is used to develop this model. It will be noticed that thr skirt is wide though not of the extreme four-yard width
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Pure Food Lists Only Partial and Therefore Misrepresentations.
There are impure foods which have ' not the slightest relation to the public i health at all, and here in general are to be found those foods excluded from pure food lists and pure food exhibits. A a a matter of fact, the pure food list j can answer for but one thing and for ; that only, if it have adequate laboratory facilities and skilled chemical investigation of the foods submitted to them. It can say what a baking powder contains if its staff is equal to quantitative analyses of that character. It cannot truthfully claim to an alyze a product which no chemist can analyze, as u repeaieuiy nas done. Not long ago one of the women most interested in promulgating the doctrine of sanity in food matters wrote to a man, who is known as a peer in knowledge of foods from the grocer's standpoint, as to the importance which should be attached to a pure food list. His reply was: "No greater relative importance should be attached to it than would be given to any partial list of the great number of pure and high standard foods that are sold by all good grocers. Because an article is not listed therein, it does not mean that it compares unfavorably in any respect with those that are. And in many classifications the articles are not leaders in this line, meaning that there are more prominent brands of absolute purity and high standard unlisted." In other words, from such a list just as from such a food exhibit, the unfortunate inference is drawn that all other goods of like kind not there are not good, not pure, and this is not so. Such a list cannot be economic and it is certainly unjust. The two great impediments to the prosrrr.c:.; 0f the public health campaign in so far as the food supply is concerned are the passive ignorance of the consumer, and the active misrepresentation of the right facts by those who pose as public benefactors. The remedy here lies partly in the education of the consumer in an actual knowledge of the composition and value of foods, and what is done ' to ioousiuiis in tne process ot manufacture. Then the public could not 1 be induced to believe that what is , harmless in New York is harmful In inaiana. w nat injures people in Michigan, North Dakota and Wyoming cannot injure them elsewhere. What is most needed is not so much more legislation as more uniformity in it, and a knowledge, sanity and wisdom displayed on both sides, by both producer and consumer. Helen Louise Johnson, in October Pictorial Review. TO ARRANGE PLANS FOR JUNIOR DEPARTMENT lioard of Control of Y. M. to Meet Wednesday Ak for Boy Somt Candidates. The junior department of the Y. M. C. A. is busy getting started on its fall work. A special meeting of the board of control has been called for next Wednesday evening, at which time plans will be made for some special features of the work among the boys. The members of the junior department go on a hike to Pinhook at 11:'.0 o'clock this morning, taking their dinners with them. The Boy Scouts are to hold a meeting Tuesday evening to organize for the wintei. :md to choose a new leader. A special hour for those wishing to take the efficiency tests has been set for Monday, from ',):ZQ o'clock until 4 for athletic events, and from 4 o'clock until 4::'.0 for the aquatic events. The medal for these events is on display at the junior department desk. TO HOLD JOINT SERVICES Mcmlers of Two Associations to .Meet at Y. W. Sunday. The members of the Y. M. and Y. W. C. A. are planning to hold a joint service at the Y. W. C. A. building Sunday afternoon followed by a sacred concert. This event is the first of a series of monthly meetings of this kind. J. Quincy Ames is to have charge of the first meeting, and Bev. Charles A. Becker is to give the principal address. The musical program will be given by Thoriale Bierne. violinist. Max Miranda, pianist, and Harry Jellison. vocalist. Mr. Jellison and Mr. Miranda are local artists of considerable talent, and Mr. Bierne is the famous Swedish violinist direct from the Stockholm opera. A fine urogram of sacred music has been arranged for them. SENIORS ELECT OFFICERS Mark L. Duncan of ThU City Made N ice Pir-ddont. Mark B. Duncan, i 0 Portage a v.. was elected vice president of the senior class at Notre Dame yesterday. Other officers elected were. Bobert B. Boach d Muscatine, la., president; Albert A. Kuhle of Salem. S. I .. secittary; Joseph S. Piiska of Chicago, treasurer: Baymond J. Kichenlaub of Ohio, sergeant at arms. The senior lawyers elected the following as their officers for the coming year at a similar meeting held vesterday: Buprt Mills, New Jersey, president; Charles Fincgan, Idaho, vice president: Balph Bathrop, Wisconsin, secretary: Brnest lijoie, Michigan, treasurer. AXXoiNci:.Mi:vr. Harriet Mesick has returned to South Bend and has reorganized the "Messick Lyric" orchestra, and would be pleased to hear from her old friends, also to meet new ones, who desire music for dance or other social functions. Miss Messick won a reputation of merit in pat seasons in South B-nd and is row in position to furnish better music than ever before from the fact that the years absent from South Bend were years of broad experience in all musical lines. Thos desiring music may secure the orchestra by calling Bell 'phone .'ITrJS. r addressing Miss Messiek. in care of . Cu.rffi Advt,
SUITS
DRESSES
COATS WAISTS
By Fast Express, Straight from their New York makers, come Ellsworth Wearable.
This season the Ellsworth Store maintains the pace it set long ago continues ready with the New when it's New. Here are Suits just out of their New York boxes suits that are fresh from the makers suits that are emphatically new in design suits of materials now most favored suits in the beautiful colors so good this Fall. Here are New Dresses and Here are New Coats Dresses well worth a visit just to see and coats that bear all the markings of Autumn. And Blouses these, too, need be seen a collection so decidedly new and so distinctly original cannot adequately be described. Indeed there is no deviation from the program this season Fashion Clothes direct from their makers.
Fine slwming of Children'? Clothes at low prices. RECITAL GIVEN BY FACULTY MEMBERS Plctsing Program is Presented in Y. M. Ixbby by Coiiscrvatory Toachers. The concert given by the members of the faculty of the South Bend conservatory of Music in the Y. M. C. A. lobby Friday evening pleased a lar audience of members ar.d friends the association. This is the fir.t of a tertainments which are series oi ento be given this winter. The program was: En Courante (Runing)... Scherzando Max Miranda. Bomance Serenade , presented . . Godard Beecher Svendson . Pierne Frank K. Kentlrie. Under Bright Skies Whelpley Miss Tillie Karsten. Four Indian Songs "From Wigwam to Tepee" Cadman Milton B. Griffith. "A Matrimonial Experiment".... Thos. Dixon, jr. Miss Jane E. White. Three Songs Without Words.... Mendelssohn Spinning Song. Spring Song Hunting Song. Miss Dora Prize Song from Hershenow. "Meistersinger" Wagner Mlynarskl Kencrie. Storch Maaurka Frank E, Night Witchery Seein' Things at Night Parks Linden Male Quartet. V. K. C. BISTIUST COXYKXTIOX'. The 2 4th annual convention of District No. department of Indiana. Woman's Belief corps, will be held in Auten Post hall, the old court house, this city, on Oct. 14. A large attendance is expected. Delegates from Iviporte, Michigan City, Hammond, Bremen. Plymouth and other towns In the district wilt be present. Thr visiting corps will bo entertained by Auten W. B. C. No. 1 . All corps members are cordially invited to attend. By order of District President. Advt. BIUTHS. to Mr. and Mrs. Yern Parker, Davton st.. a son, Sept. 29. to Mr. and Mrs. Albert WillB. F. D. No. 8, a daughter. I .orn IL'18 E. Born movski. Seft. Z) NOTICF OT AI.MINIrKATION. Notice is hereby iriven. that the unlerMcrei h"s b--u iipptdnted by th 'b-rk ef t!ie rireult urt of St. Joseph County, State of Iii'lbniu. Adndnist r:it'r of the e-t.ite f l"rMl M. Ilnrn, late of St. Joseph r..iiiity. d- -eji.el. Sidd estate is suppose. 1 to be s.jlvent. OTTO II. 1IAYN. Art!iunistrat.r. BAN PYbi:, Atty. for INtate. Oet. 2. lH. i . t ."'.-lo-tT. Ttve Whit Ilcrajo ot Bfodem Homo FumJshrr S06 to 310 So. Mlcli. S. L H. ORVIS Director Iaily Asistact. l'JO West Odfav A v. Homo .2f7. Pell 207.
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Deposits made before October lltk, draw interest from October 1st at 4'. Any amount may be checked out at any time. Interest paid on all money left for full period. Citizens' BanI; &. Trust Co.
BEAUTIFUL BUD VASES A fine selection in Bock-Crystal and Kngraved. All Sizes. CLAUER'S. r VZi STYLC WOMEN Complete Stock of Victrolas and Victor Records. Wc Snl ReoortU on Approval. George H. Wheelock & Co.
Suits, Dresses. Coats and Waists are direct "ork New Wearables Everv l)av.
Wearables Every Iay. r The Sundour the Rug Beautiful for sleeping Rooms and Bath Rooms. Beautiful color effects and distinctively unusual designs. Sundour means sunfast Sundour Rugs are registered unfadeable. Well worth seeing and well worth having Sundour Rugs are low in price, at Ellsworth's. SPOT if TGTSn White enamel. Size 13 in. wide, 20 in. high and 5 in. deep. Three glass shelves and the door is fitted with French plate mirror, 10 x 14 jinches. in:ri:ci i i: i:vbk.b i i. ; .rriiiu li:milit-ip to any t n !- ou are rrtaiu that jour toj rjruht ! trr(V-t, juu hiilil l-t if -iriilnr fjr at onrp. l lU-l prt tarlr tna t Jut what niv,l t kIp Mi nrm ni t rrot itl hi tuti an-1 luriKF hi ho! arrf H. LEMONTREE uth itfud'o I-4-Mlinr optouirtrUt mJ !.nuf a t urltiK Optit ian. tUhi(au Mrrrt. Home pll.nif e""t. llrll phone "MT iin.l frum 'j t I (:: a in. t Appoiuilu.nl
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