South Bend News-Times, Volume 31, Number 322, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 11 November 1914 — Page 7

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THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES vi:ii:si.y. Novi:ini:i: n. 1911 o toenail amct Jum IT mem Corset Fittin

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Interests

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SOCIETY . Jl

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'; contests were awarded to H. J. i

, rtsel and A. Milllmuse while the 1 (.iior ust was preurnte.l with a ( ,,, -I- bou'Mjet of red and white i ( Supper w as rerved h" iu eriing in the .lining mot" where tb" table wis appointed in red artl w aiii . the centerpiei e being a U,v moinitl uf red and white roses.

Mrs. Martha K. HillifT. 110 4 S. ?liv-iiiiran t.. entertained the south Action of the Women's league of tlx- ! ;t M. 1'. church Tuesday afternoon. ' !:e ;s,isting hostesses Were Mrs. J. f. S...P. Mrs. l-'rank Tollm'r. Mrs. ic !-irrem:in. rs. Charles W. , 'lick. Mrs. Sarah Spe!n- r. .Miss I'.elle

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Society to Have a "Cotton Ball

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Forget tfTa?ts,, and J3e Useful

Dorothy Dix Says Girls Must Come Down Off Their High Korse to Be Success.

miis. t. surrr.nx tatlkk. Xi:W YOrUv. To assist southerners who are in distress, women prominent in society are working for the success of the Cotton Hall, to be given at the Waldorf Astoria on Thursday, Nov. ll'. Prominent among the interested hostesses is Mrs. T. Suffern Tailor, who has suggested that all women who attend the ball should wear gowns made of cotton. The hallroom will lie decorated -to represent a southern cotton Held.

Announcements

"he afternoon was devoted to a '..um-

,ss :p - ting and a reneral social time .v- which refreshments were . . i ;. ti. Mote than 1 ladies were ... , ill . . . tlr.p

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The Crandmother;; circle will hold an all-day meeting Thursday at the home of Mrs. J. H. Loshbaugh, 501 Fellows st. Mrs. Sarah Wolf, 222 Pennsylvania av., will entertain the Ladies' Aid society of the First Church of the Brethren all day Thursday. The Music department of the Progress club will meet Thursday afternoon at 4 o'clock. The program will include a paper by Mrs. Ryell T. Miller on "I3ach as Singer, Violinist, Organist. Teacher", and a discussion of "His Passion Music" by Miss Mabel P.artlett, who will also have charge of the music. The Old Time Friends' club will meet Thursday afternoon with Mrs. J. M. Chillas, 511 S. St. Joseph st. A necktie social will be held at the Sumption prairie M. K. church Saturday evening, Nov. 14.

nv nouoTiiv nix. This is a time of peculiar upheaval in the feminine world. Up to now the average American girl has expected to stay at home until she was mar.ied and then go to a home of her own. And she could fairly safely count on getting married. In the last few yeirs, however, this comfortable program of life has been altered. The high ci'st of living has made it impossible for the man in ordinary circumstances to support u family of girls in comfort. The girls themselves have heard so much about the parasitic woman that they hae become ashamed of hanging like a millstone around a poor old father's neck. Also the chances of catching a husband are greatly diminished, and young women of presentable appearance are no longer certain, as they formerly were, of getting married. All of these conditions have turned the thoughts of girls toward self support. This is well. There is no more reason why an intelligent and ablebodied young woman should be dependent on somebody else for her living than there is why a man should be. Put it takes a Ion? time to rid ourselves of the .superstitions of the past, and one of the most persistent of these hoodoos is that when a woman works she must always do some ladylike kind of work that is, something artistic or literary and that is genteel just as it was considered In the past more refined and elegant for a woman to do plain useful sewing. For this reason at least 90 per cent of the girls who want to work want to go on the stage, or to recite, or do parlor entertaining, or write, or paint. Also they want to do these things in a dilettante manner and receive larsre rewards for their labor. They overlook that fact that to succeed In tne tine arts as well as in common occupations you have to slave like a dray horse, and that there are absolutely no short cuts or quick roads to success. Iiehlnd every star on the stage and every well known writer there lies an apprenticeship that lias been served in toil and sweat and blood. Work Is tlio Keystone. Now, of course, if a girl has the divino fire, and has given unmistakable signs of a genius for acting or painting, or writing, she does well to choose the calling to which her talent dedicates her. Put there is no such thing as a girl making herself into a Maudo Adams because she would like to be on the stage, or into an Ellen Glasgow because she would be pleased to see her name in print. Nature settled that qestlon for her once and for all before she was born, and all the work of the world will never take the place of, talent. It's as foolish for an ungifted girl to think that she can make herself a

writer or an actress as it would be for a short, stubby woman to think

! she could make herself into a tall.

willowy goddess. It. simply can't be done. You don't p'-o every man trying to

Even Suit Has Basque Effect

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i PERSONALS

The regular meeting of the Young lVojh-s Fible fl.i.-s of the southi astern part of the city was held Tuesday evening at the home of Miss Mary F.iro. E. Calvert st. The attendance. as large.' on Thursday evening, Nov. U. tha class will be entertained i.v Harvey Kelley, IUl' E. Hainey a v.. w ho w ill be host for the three succeeding Weeks. Mis. GeorM Myler. 515 Allen st.. a as hostess to the Tuesda circle Tuesday afternoon. Th. time was l-assed very pler.sar.tly with needlework followed by a : cial hot.r during which the hostes - r cd a dainty

luncheon.

The circie v. ill meet 1 e

Mis. Fred F.ter. 5 17 E. Eron-on st., entertained the PiamanJ iYdr" club iv liFasantlv Tmsdiv aftir-

i.oon. Faors at caids were awardel Mrs. J. Holland and Mrs. F.arnhart. j Luncheon was served to the guest -jj

late in the afternoon. The club will meet Nov. L' 1 with .Vis. .lake 1 onker,

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Carroll st.

Mrs. John C. Pa.-on av.d Mrs. Victor E. Paxson hae issued inCUations for an at homt to be g:eti on Wednesday. Nov. IV from ?, until 5 o'clock at the home of Mrs. John C. Paxson, 216 S. I-afayetto t.

i laniv i iiiin y of M.n tinsville, lnd. is visiting .with Mr. and Mrs. II. S. McXeff, 21 Portage av. Mrs. M. Jones of Franklin. Intl., is in the city because of the serious illness of her daughter. Mrs. McKcethrii. at Epworth hospital. Mr. and Mrs. s'tucckel of Coshocton. ., are guests of relatives in the city. Mrs. S. W. Eaer 51S Carroll st., id spending a few days in Wakarusa. Ind. Mrs. J. W. Ehinehart. 521 Carroll st., is in Elkhart for a few days. Mrs. J. W. Pushman of Toledo. ()., is visiting with her aunt. Mrs. E. II. Lewis, 52; S. Carroll st. Mr. ami Mrs. George M. Crane of Indianapolis are visiting with Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Hutz. 5u5 S. Carroll st., and with Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Hays. 515 Carroll st. Thev will remain a week. Mr. and Mrs.' I. W. Holmes of Climax. Mich., and Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Hunt of Pattle Creek, Mich., who have been visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mfatl. 4'. Marietta st.. left Montlav for their homes. Montain S. Tain. JO'. Colfax a v.. left Tuesday for Manitowoc. Wis., on busi. iitss. ile will return Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Shoemaker have departed for a visit of several days to Eigonier and Columbia City. Mrs. William F. Quails. 41S N. St. Eouis st.. have returned from a visit in Greensburc, Indianapolis and St. Eouis, Mo.

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SEH1E

The shoe you speak of to your friends the shoe you love to put on the shoe you will buy again that is the shoe you et here. It is titled by salesmen who make a study of their jobs. They take an interest in your foot comfort. Our bier line of styles insures a tit for every foot cs that comes into this store.

WE CAN FIT YOU.

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BY LA KACONTEUSE. Suit of dark blue broadcloth, pleated skirt and tunic. Seml-rttted body to coat, with wide belt giving basque efXect. High collar and trimming of wivet with large buttons of broadcloth.

be an actor, or writer, or doctor, or lawyer. If you did you would see among men as wholesale starvation and failure as you do among women. Men realize that they have trot to be grocers and butchers, bakers and candle-stick makers, and that whilv we can do without the fine arts on a pinch we have got to have the common necessities, and that the purveyors of them are the ones that make the money. C'lioosc .Something Useful. So I entreat the ycung women who are contemplating going to .work to support themselves to choose something useful to do. something practical to do. Do the work that lies closest to you so well that somebody will not only be willing but anxious to pay you for doing it. There's never

j any dearth of a market for a superexcellent quality of goods, and this 'applies to labor more than to anything else. The world is fiooded with

amateurs, but there are never enough experts in any line to go around. Many a girl who fails as an actress could make a fortune raising chickens if she put half as much study on the temperament of a hen as she does on the psychology of Lady Macbeth. Many a girl who paints dauby pictures that she can't sell for 1' apiece would have women breaking their necks to pay her $75. for hats. Many a girl who is starving along trying to write pot boilers could be riding in her own automobile if she had worked as hard at the art of keeping boarders as she does at trying to learn how to write. Do something practical and useful, girls. The world has always got to be fed and clothed, and washed and cleaned, and have its sox darned, and its bills kept, and as long as you minister to the world's comfort ym can always get paid for it. Don't be misled by the glamour about any kind of work. The only fancy brand on work is the dollar mark. And the way to get that is to do something that people really ner?d.

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Moving

Pictures

Free Call at the EllswortJt Store for Tickets

Special After Breakfast Ivlatinee

for Ladies Only

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RIVER PARK

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The Ladies Aid society of the First church of the Erethren will hold an all day meeting Thursday at the home of Mrs. Sarah Wolf, 22 Pennsylvania av. Mrs. Elizabeth Flewellen and William P.rown of Lafayette, Mrs. Ellen Pierce of Kouts, Ind., and Miss Forten of Chicago, who were here to at-

! tend the funeral of Mrs. Edltha Jane

Drullinger, have returned. Mrs. W. E. Potter and son. Lester, of Dowagiac, Mich., are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Cuth'.ert, 22 02 Mishawaka a v. The Uiver Park Independent club will meet Thursday afternoon with Mrs. Eenjamin Triplet. H. X. .strausner, Goshen, was in Itiver Park Tuesday transacting business. Mr. and Mrs. Chancy Faust of Nineteenth, st., have been railed to Hillsdale, Mich., by the critical illness of Mrs. Faust's father. Mrs. Joseph Van Vactor and Mrs. Stephenson of Plymouth, Intl., have returned after a visit with Mr. and Mrs. William Einard of Mishawaka av. The Pible class of the M. E. church will meet Friday evening with Mr. and -Mrs. p.rown, S. Seventh st. Miss Maude Green of Eleventh St., was removed to St. Joseph hospital, Mishawaka, yesterday, where she will submit to an operation". Mr. and Mrs. James Hooker of Wakarusa, Ind., have returned after a visit with Mr. and Mrs. E. J. nickel. Sixteenth st. Clarence Cuthbert has returned from Eau Claire, Mich., where he visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Uiehard Cuthbert. The lecture and moving picture entertainment on the "Holy Land and the Life of Christ", given at the Methodist Episcopal church Tuesday night, by C. A. Rcthford, of Terre Haute, was very entertaining and pleasing to the large audience. Mrs. William Hutchinson of Poughkeepsie, X. Y., who has been visit ng her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lambert of 912 Emerson av.,, for the past two weeks will return Friday. Mrr E. J. Brooks of the Jefferson road entertained a number of young people in honor of her daughter Irene's birthday anniversary. The afternoon was spent with games and music. Miss Louise Kuhl won the prize in the contest. After the games a birthday luncheon was served by Mrs. Prcoks.

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AT THE

Qroheum Theater FRIDAY MORNING AT 10, 10:30, 11, 11:30 and 12 O'clock.

lie-in planning now to attend this after-breakfast matinee. The film shown has one of the cleverest stories produced by The Hssanav Film Co. of Chicago. The title is "How Marjorie Won a Career." The story was written by a feature writer for the Essanay Company and part of the film shows an interior of their studio. The part that will interest you most, however, is the actual fitting of

GOSSARD Corsets on Living Figures

You can -ee just how many different types are transformed into beautiful ligures through the correct lining of a Gossard Corset. Every figure type ihown in the lilm can be correctly fitted at this store" Complimentary tickets are being issued by us and you can obtain as many as you like for yourself and your" friends by calling at our corset department. The demand for seats will be heavy and even though we have engaged the Orpheum theater for the entire morning, we advise that you get your tickets as soon as possible.

7MB BMGHTCST SPOT tN TOWS

OLDKST conn DIES. PATTLE OEEEK, Mich., Nov. 11. Mrs. Mary C. Mead of Prooklyn, X. V., "oldest eed", is dead in a local sanitarium, aged 92. Four years ago when Mrs. Mead was SS. she entered a New York school and began the study of Greek.

COON EE Y COFGU & CltOUP HALSAM is best. Helieves always. Pleasant to take. Ixixative, works off a cold. Checks fever, 2oc & -"0c at Coonkys. Advt.

George II. Wheelock & Company

November "of

Dinnerware

How You Can Remove Every Trace of Hair

MORE ELECTION EXPENSE ACCOUNTS ARE FILED

Among the various expense accounts i

riled Wednesday with the county clerk were those of L. P. Hardy and Joseph V. Wypiszynski, the former spending $.j0y.l9 as the progressive candidate for the office of oountv commissoner and the latter spending $149.4." to secure his election as justice of the peace of Portage township. LOTFS EYE PALM. Hcothes and strengthens the eyes. Clears the sight, Safe always. ZOc at Coonleys. Advt. MAKKIA C. I : LI CI : SI'S. A marriage license wa granted Wednesday to Kay Pashteal, 2, farmer, and Libbie Story, 22.

(Toilet Talks) A stiff pasV made with some powdered delatone and water and spread on a hairy surface about 2 minutes will, when removed, take every trace of hair with it. The skin should then ho washed to free it from the remaining delatone. No harm can result from this treatment, but he sure it is delatone you get and you will not be disappointed.

"FURNACES" Overhauled and put In IlrM class condition by mechanics. Ascni for Hero furnace. J. X. FRANK

404 X. Scott St.

Home Phone 13," 6

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Many of our patterns have been sharply reduced now is the time to supply your Thanksgiving table

needs. Domestic Porcelain set of 100 pieces is illustrated a new pattern on a new shape. Special at $18.00. An English Porcelain 100-piecc set in or.il spray decoration; $15.00 values; at special, $9.95. A conventional gren border English Porcelain 100-piecc set; $15.00 value; at special, $1350. A 100-piece grey decorated set

f-i with geld tracing and lines best

rjgft English porcelain; $17.75 value; at o sifinn

Visit our enlarged dinnerware sections on the second flooreasily accessible by electric elevator. George H. Wheelock & Company

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. Expert Marcel Waving, Comfort Shop, Thursday. Adv. Calendars ana advertising1 novelties. II. A. Pershing's, 203 E. Wayne st. Advt.

UOMU: OUTFITTING STORE For Thrifty Buyer

E'-pert Marcel Waving. Comfort Shop. Thursday. Adv. :

How to Peel Off a Weatherbeaten Face

It's Time to clean your house. See our new patterns and get our prices. I. W. Lower Decorating Co.

It's really a imnle matter to renovate a f.oe .il"-.l ! flirt. vinl cr mM. Ordinary icre-ilizeil wax, twi lik cold cream, will transform th worst uld -u.i-;i 'ii i!it one of snowy litii' ami vrlwty s. ftnt-. It literally peels iff the outer veil of airfare skin, but s gently, gradually, tilery's no discomfort. Th w.rniMit skin c -mes off. not la patches. It lit evenly. In tiny partible, le.iviut: no evidence uf tlie treatment. The younger, healthier uadr-skln forming the new complexion is me ef captivating loveliness. One ounc; of ir.erollzed wax, to he had at any drug store. Is enough to remove any coare. chapped, pimple, freckled, faded c-itlo, utin. Annlv Lefnr rMrir

was hie z It eff moral a ff. Maay skins wrtcklc enilj tvUSl erer.r nfH iit h'AWi An !.-! lor. t m-rir

u-rr.over, because it thtens tte jkin and 1 strergthens relaxed mus:'.o5. Is a v ash ; l tU:. made ;o follows. Towdered sao-j lite. 1 or., dissolved In witcb hazel. o;seiialf pint. This sixes immediate results.

Zi STYLE SHOP Zi W0Mfl

CHICHESTER S PILLS

rp. tmaA vtdk Blu Kit

fttnitwvt u Cut. s'tt. Atwr suustM SCI D BY DRUiuiSTS OIRmiE??

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The Famous Convert of the Chicago Pacific Garden Mission. Himself the best known City Mission Worker in America todav. Will sneak at the High School Auditorium Monday Evening, Nov. 16th, "CITY RESCUE MISSIONS AND THEIR WORK." HEAR HIM TELL: How drunkards are reclaimed. How fallen men and women are transformed. How the children of the poor are taught the Bible. "Mel" Trotter is a personal friend of such men as Hilly Sunday, J. Wilbur Chapman, Gipsy Smith and Harry Monroe. Do not fail to hear him. Admission Free. Brin your Billy Sunday Song Books.

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EMM

Successor to Wllhelm's 1LCADY - TO - WEAR FOII Spcdal VaJvvers Snit.-s At to $23.00

NOW Ii the Time to Selcvt Your SOUTTI nrND WATCH roi; ciiiust?ia5. CLAUER'S.