South Bend News-Times, Volume 36, Number 186, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 5 July 1919 — Page 5

s.vrmrvvr afthrnoo. .tttv a. mm DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF WOMEN

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

)

Clubs

Circles

SOCIETY

Suffrage

Philanthrophy

A prett and novel out of door wedding took plae at 11:4T o'clock Saturday whn M1m Helene Kiewertffn, daughter of Mrs. Thomas S-ewertson. 128 N. Iifayette blvd . fan ' Richard Kmerson Mum of Ch:rtgo were married at Funnybrook pi. The rorfmony wa performed by Iiikhop John Mnzn Whit on a ru?ti'" bridge beneath an umbrella c;inopy of daisies with a field of daHien as a background. There were no attcnda ntx. Preceding the rcrrtnny MaJ. "Willi, tm T. SiewertH'-n, re -ently returned from Siberia, and Kudolph Ij. "-"lewerlsen of Topcka, Has . both brother of the britle. Kane "I.nvt-'n Own Sweet Sonp" and "The Sweetest Story Ever Told." The bride wore h juit of white dew-kist satin with a large pi ture hat and carried Ophelia ros n. A wedding breakfast was served to 24 guests following which Mr. and Mrs. Mum Wt for Chicago. They will reside in South Bend. Mrs. Muma was formerly principal f.f the. Linden school.

Announcements

The meeting of the Tabitha r.irN; of the Zion Kvangeiica; Ji;fii w,n to have l-en hehl Monday night ; ha been postponed until July 21. j All members of the Eastern Star! lodge and their families w ill enjoy j a picnic at Hudson lake on next; Saturday. July 12. They -"ill spenU the afternoon und evening at thi

Adele Garrison 's New Revelations of a Wife

Their Second Honeymoon

99

lake nd a banket served at o'clock.

lunch wil! be

Personals

Mrs. Robert H. Rush. bo; K. Snmpb st., left Friday for New York City where she will join her bus-

Announcement hay been made

the marriage of Miss Margret "oodhew, daughter of Mr. and Mrn. William lioodhew of FteedsA nie. u Li, and Franklin Ivoenig, ton of Mrs. Anna Koeniir, 125 11. Dayton st.. thi-i city. The ceremony took place at Iteedsville on July 2 in the presence of the immediate families. After a trip in northern Wisconsin Mr. and Mrs. Koeni will be at home in Ileedsville. On Monday members of the. Washington club will motor to the summer home of Mrs. W. U Kizer, so:: W. Washington av.. at Higmtn pat k where a picnic dinner will be enjoyed. The party will include 20 women.

Mi s. Ida Weaver. 1 n X Unn"sey . M., announces the enanonient of ht r daughter, Miss Mildred Kathryn , Weaver, to IJeut. Donald Ward Sjuire, nn of .Mr. and Mrs. W. J.; Squire of Klkhart, Ind. Lieut. Squire recently returned from Franc having been in service two1 ears. The wedding, date has not.

been announced. Miss Joyce T. Miller of Hoc helle, III., formerly of South IJend. and Dewey S. Park of Dixon. 111., were married June 0 at the parsonage of the ;rnce M. f. church Hev. It. I. Heck officiating Mr, and Mrs. Parke will make, their- home in South Hend.

band. Iaeut. Push, who arrived at New York Saturday aboard the leviathan. Partick Oarmody of Junction Fity, Kans . is the guest for a few

j days of Mr. and Mrs. Kdwartl Pheof iun. S13 Lawndale a v. Mr. Carmodv

! j i enroute home after visiting in 1 Washington, D. C. and Ituffalo, IS". Y.

Jay Jackson, who has been in the navy for the past .". months, eight months of which he ypent in lr;.nce, returned to the home of hia parents. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Jackson, P'2 Lincoln way W., Friday, having been honorably discharged lrom service. Mi sm Hertha McUride. 223 S. Tay lor st., is visiting friends in Chicago. Miss Goldia Lipps, the guest of the Misses Klizabeth and Hertha McBride, spent Friday at Michigan City. The Misses Mary and Anna Konzen. Liberty way. returned Friday

1 form an extended trip in the southrn and western states, ; Mrs. Josephine Metayer and children, Karl and Charlotte, returned , to Scott City, Kas., Saturday morniiiK after having pent seveial ; months here with the Konzen fam- ' ily. Liberty way.

GRANT INJUNCTION AGAINST BLACKSTONE THEATER CORPORATION

OBSERVE 80TH BIRTHDAY OF MRS. LUCINDA JONES

In observance) of her SOth bnthday anniversary Mrs. I,ucind. Jones, 70v i:. Miner St.. entertained informally at her summer hoine. Lit

tle Fih lake, ("as on Sunday une 21. eluded frien.U and

Th- uueijts in-

An injunction restraining the Hlackstone theater corporation fron) wrecking the part of the Toepp building occupied by the Floyd L. Punch "-"i--n Co. whs issued aturday morning by Judge C. H. Montgomery, in superior court, following the closiru; of evidence by the attorneys in the cae. The Punch Sign Co., through its attorneys asked for an Injunction to compel the theater company to leave the party wall in its j? esent condition. In rendering his decision Judge

on a case.

countv. Mich., Montgomery based his opinion

recent decision in a New York

relatives from! tlure being no law on the patrieular

South lit nd and a number of friends rs( ling near Little Fish l ike Music

was a feat ute of the da and Jones recei od several gilts.

SPENDS FOURTH HOPPING FREIGHTS. IS FINED S5

point in Indiana. Due to the fact that the Plackstone corporation

Mrs. I owns both the M'-(till ana Tocpp j buildings that rest on the party wall j the decision could not be rendered

! m lull for the Bunch Sitfn Co. Similar cases were cited and read by the

J Judge wherein injunctions were not

lyianttd when two buildings renting . on the ha me wall were owned by dif- ! lerent parties.

Robert Russell, color d. was fined $r and costs before Judge Gilmer in city police court Saturday morninc when he was arraigned on a Char-ie of trespa.-.. It was said

Russell spent the Fourth hopping; fi'ights. He was unabie to pay and Developing and printing was sent to jail for 10 days: ling's.

Porn, to Mr. and Mrs. Renjamin

Cooperruan. oH 1-2 S. inapin si., a

daughter. July 5.

at Schil-

1746

Mrs. Marian White Places Art Collection On Sale

Painting anl etchings by eel-ehrate-1 artists of Kurope and Am rica. now in the private colb-etion of Mrs. Marian A White, formerly of South Pend. wer- place! on xbibiiin and sib1 hy Mrs. Whit' in South Pend Saturday. The works are b'-ing ehibiteI at the Maktelskl Art Shop and Mrs. White will I e present l tven 1 and 12 a. m and 2 and p. rn ti Klve brief lectuies upon the caret rs of the various artists represented. s White has be n a critic and writer upon art and art subjects for the past '.u years and paintings represented have been collided during this bng service "'None of tin paintings Is of lare size." aid Mrs. White, 'but nch is a i;em from th brush of some French. Dutch. Knglish or American artist." Among the exceptional works

in the collection is a water color M:.u Jlfil.iu Van liouten. a famous Dutch artist. There Is

also a Rock

y Hatc A l.ierica Ii m prime

Iiot'tble scenes.

been

mountain scene

Yo.ui. distinguished a who ,jcd in but. who has left, a

collection of western many of which have

together in a

ga thcred

memorial gallery at Colorado L'prings. 'in addition there is a, painting by Ldward Krlz. an American and two b i pupil of Watteau Among the etchings there is one after Cainsbotough's taintt'ig tf the Salisbury catlitilial. and a work by Paul DeLongpre. a French 1 1 her. Mrs. White, who formerly was associated with the Kagle magazine in South Pend. has been loeated in Chicago for the past year. She will soon become associated with the Chicago School of Dramatic Fxpression.

WHAT AN IMVi:i)i;T WINK lIScn.KI rt MADG1L

Had Harry Underwood reconired me? This wan the question that beat against my brnin as I sat. disiruisevl by Lillian Fnderwood's clever finders as a Iitln-American woman in the cafe where Lillian. Katherlne Sonnet and I had come in quest of irac Draper. We had seen her enter tht cafe with Harry UnderWood, had realized that Allen Drake was the .person for whom her restless eyes had been searching, and

had witnessed her dismissal of Harry Fnderwood, evidently in search

of some one who knew Allen Drake

and -ould introduce him to her.

At.d when Harry Underwood had

passed our table I had forgotten to

lower my eyes, and had seen In his

a nasn wnicn l was airaid was that

of recognition.

He had not slackened his' pace,

nor given any other indication that

he saw in me any one save the mid

dle-aged South American woman

my appearance indicated. Wisely

or unwisely, I decided to say nothing to Lillian about mv fears. For

wonder she hadn't noticed my

momentary fright as .his eyes met mine. As 1 stole a swift furtive

glance at her I noticed that her un-

derlip . was caught between her

Lillian's portion, guessed also, that .something more than humlliatior. was stirring her heart. For if Lillian's uspicions wert true and Grace Draper were a secret agent of our county's enemies. 1 was most probable that Harry Un derwood also had become that mos despicable of all things, a traitor t the land of his birth. And Lilllai i was sure, was high in a servic safeguarding our country. It mlgi become her duty to track down th man whose name she boro Nwonder even her brave heu?T faltered at the possibility. It wasn't in Lillian to falter more, than an instant, howevei In an-! other moment, she was herself, andj when Harry Underwood again pass-. ed our table in animated conversu-i

tiua with a man of about his own age, there was not the dicker of an

eyelash on her part, nor, I

TELLS JUDGE IT WAS "HEADACHE MEDICINE," FINE IS SUSPENDED A dose of "headache medicine" might have cost E. Savage, a traveling salesman, Jä and costs in city polite court Saturday nornlng when he was arralgnel before JudKe Gtlmer on a charge f intoxication. .Savage told the jud'e he was :ot guilty but said he would . dead guilty alter he was advised lat his trial w ould have to be set r a later date. According to

is story he had a bad headache

e Fourth and too-k some "pills" at made him dizzy. The line was suspended.

DE A THS

MUS. MA KV CAR1L Mrs. Mary Can died Thursday tr.crning after an illness of 13 weeks. Sht is survived by the following

Hatter J children: Mertie Jamison, of In-

myself, on mine, at his proximity. jdianapolis; Ray Carr, of Logans"I don't know the chap myself," j port; Grace Ho'wman, of Elkhart; I heard Harry Underwood's familiar I Er.ima Dyer, Hertha Johnson and deep tones rumble as he passed us. i Hoy Catr of this city. Funeral "but the little lady'n got an idea that j servic e will be held at the home, he's somebody some friend told her 317 W. Sample st.. at 2 o'clock Satto look up, and nothing will do herjuvdav. P. u rial will be at Itiverview but to meet him." j cemetery. "I shall be most pleased," the' other man at-sured him, and then; SARAH I'AY. they had reached the table and i Mrs. Sarah Fay. 78 years old. died Grace Draper -wus smiling an ac-,t the county infirmary Satuiday

knowUdgment of

cruel grip, and that her! Harry Underwood

teeth in a

eyes were watching the retreating

back of the man for whom she had

done so much, the man who was

till legally her husband. Lillian' HcrMdr Again. I knew that there was no real love

existing in Lillian Underwoods heart for the man she had married

after the Mrst tragic marital experience. She and Harry Underwood had joined their existences in a sort of friendly, comfortaK"!? com

pact to patch up each other's rather! battered lives. Hut while Lillian !

had loyally kept her side of the bargain I knew that Harry Underwood had been anything but a loyal husband. And at last he had brutally and caddishly deserted her. giving

as nis excuse tnai ne couiu not stanu

the presence in their home, or rather in Lillian's for I had a shrewd guess as to whose money gave most support to their establishment of little Marion Morton, Lillian's daughter by her first husband, from whom she had been cruelly separated for years. Hut even though love was absent from Lillian's heart, she had been the faithful wife, the true comrade of the man who had Just passed her, going to do the bidding of the beautiful creature he had brought to the cafe, who had evidently come

the introduction made.

morning at C o'clock, she is survived by her husband. Themas Fay.

Fay was born in Ohio on Oct.

Is 40, and came to South Bend years a?o. She had been at the

1

infirmary 10 years. Fu n e ra 1 a r ra n g e m t n t.s been made.

have not

FUNERALS

l, watching Allen Drake, saw hlmi'Mrs

start imperceptibly, and then into those keen gray eyes there flashed a look which held mirth in it I was very sure. It was only a flash I caught, for the next instant the womanish eyelashes veiled his eye again and he went on with the conversation with his companions. Hut that he knew as well as Grace Dra

per herself the plan she had made ANTHONY FITZ.

to meet him I was sure. Funeral services for Anthony I in rrv Undci-iAocwl'ti I 'vom Pitz, 70 7 Marietta, st., who died

stti. mun.iirori th thin? vprv upII. Thursday morning will be held a

however. I was forced to admit, and bt- Mary's Catholic church at 'J bo did the man Harry Underwood o'clock Monday morning. Rov. Mi had brought to their table. For a J M- Scherer will officiate and bur-fe-ood 10 minutes he apnea ed ab- al will be in Cedat Grove cemetery, sorbed in the conversation of the Mr- Kitz ls survived by his wife, beautiful woman at his side. Then,! Kmma: three daughters, Mrs. Minnie carelessly raising his eyes, he caught j Adelspergcr of Chicago; Mrs. Rose sight of Allen Drake, and his start , W( hutt of Elkhart, and Mrs. Clara of recognition was admirably done, j Woodward of South Bend; a son.

It was but a few moments after

this that Allen Drake was standing beside Grace Draper's table, talking lr. his indolent but attentive man

ner to her, while sne, I could see, , was using all her battery of fem

inine charms in her effort to interest him. I was so absorbed in watching them that I did not realize that I was myself being watched And then I caught Harry Underwood's malicious eyes full upon

August Fitz of Portland. Ore.; four ftep children, Leo Muckenthaler of Detroit, Mich.; Florence, Raymond and Joseph Muckenthaler at home; one brother, John Fit. of Dennis, 0-, and one sister, Mrs. Joseph Frye of Shardon, O.

with him from South America. I me, and saw him drop his left eyeknow what bitter humiliation was lid in an impudent wink.

Dollars and Marriage Tle By wi"ifred Black

WARNS LUMBER THIEF, AND SUSPENDS SENTENCE Tommy Grgelwski was warned by Judge Gilmer in city police court Saturday morning that he must refrain from stealing lumber from local dealers. He was arraigned charged with petit larceny. A fine of $5 and costs and 30 days' visit to the state penal farm was given him, which was suspended on his promise to quit his petty thieving.

HAVE BARTAR SYSTEM LIKE PIONEER DAYS

romp:.

At Wheelock's At Wheelock's New Victor Records I- for July on Sale - I-:-- -&xfx Ridy to bring new entertainM 7;;"-; ment into your home. vrH i- "vvVK .: Stirring band music. .v !"7 -V -jy Lively dance numbers. 3jf Delightful orchestral selec4 J tions. Vv We u'iH gladly play them tor you. Georac H. Wheelock & Company

The little woman I know, and the little man I know, are not getting on well together. Oh. not at all! The reason so they say is that the little woman I know wants to make some money for herself, and the little man 1 know won't let her do it. There ar,e no children at home, and there isn't a thing for the little woman I know to do there. She has a good, competent maid, and all she has to do Is to order the meals and look pretty. Roth of these things are very easy for her, so time hangs rather heavlly on her hands. And she wants an automobile, just a little plain one that she can run herself, so idle can go for picnics in the country, and take hush.tntl out to the golf course and go down to the office after him in the evening. Rut husband can't afford the automobile just yet. The little woman has a chance to do some work for a big establishment dow n town. It's work she does well indeed, and she would be paid .".0i a month for doing it. With $J00 a month put away she can buy a little cheap machine, and even a rug for the machine, too, and she doesn't see why she shouldn't do it. She loves the work, she, understands it and she is needed to b) it.

It. won't take her away from her

husband or from any duty of im

portance for one single minute It

isn't hard, it's easy, and the doesn't see whv she shouldn't do it.

Husband won't argue about it. ami he won't let her argue. He Just says "You shan't."" and that's the end of it as far as he g,ocs. And the little woman I know says it isn't the end of it, as far as she

June

ence.) A system

her i that of nioneer

:;. ( Correspond -of barter akin to

frontier days In

tupendous

she send messengers out after

husband, and promise she'll be good. 1 rr..He but on a mor

if he'll only some back home again ? j hca-e presents itself as the modus I don't know. I can't een guess.L,)PrnHi of the foreicrn trade of-the

The little woman I know

guess, ooerandi of the foreign trade of-the

woman I know Is very 1 T-nitf stHt in Fairone according

modern indeed, and the liU'e. rnani(o foreign trade experts of the she's married is not modern at all. i i-nited States government investi

gating t he trado possibilities In

and you never can tell what's going I. ... x . i .

to oapjicn in a maicn liKe that. j Italy.

x m sorr ior me uttie man Ti "Our ability to establish permaknow. He's a good little man. hon-nent trade relations with the holes,., faithful, ambitious, stubborn, j liferent European nations which conceited, vain ah, that's just it: I have been drained of their resource-

by war depends upon oir willing-

It isn't his care fo his wife that makes him determined to keep Tier at home. I'm afraid it's his vanity. He doesn't want other men to say that he couldn't afford to buy his wife an automobile, so she went out and bought one for herself. And maybe he's right. Peraaps if she bought the automobile for hersejf. she'd buy othei things, and that would mean keeping on in business.

ness to accept a program of barter! in the exchange of commodities." Is, the opinion given the Associated!

Press correspondent by Dr.. Alfred P. Dennis. United States commercial attache, here. "Italy." he adds "needs such raw materials as coal, iron ore. lumber and petroleum products to enable her to start up her industrial pro-

and that would mean no children. ! -i n a v,,.(.in - n n- hr economic

and that would mean dear me, who J convalescence. She cannot to on knows what it would or wouldn't ; borrowing the money to pay for our mean? 'goods. If she is to have them It Is Slu- WI.Hn? i must be through swapping her corn-

goes. ; It s just the beginning. i lust I ho IU-jrinnlns. j s"h"s going down town next Mon-

day and t.tke the job. And if hus-, husband

Perhaps the little man's vanity is j just the last link that is holding him : and his w ife to the old ideal the ! ideal which made the woman thei clinging vine and the man the oak. Somehow- or other that ideal seems to be passing very rapidly, j And w hen you go a bit furtner, and gaze at some of the women : wilful, proud, independent, overbearing you begin really to wonder.' With which do I sympathize in this particular case? I haven't the Ieajt idea. if I were in the little woman's place, I would stay at home and go withou the automobile until my husband could alTord to buy it for n-.c. I think I'd stand a better chance of a good automobile for noe thin g. In my experience it is dangerous thing for a woman to let her

feel that she can take care

modifies for ours.

IU;itHT KILLING OK BIRDS To South Rend Humane society. $5 deward for information that convicts. Home phone 1600, Reil n2T0. 1305-3

Something New About "Huldy's Whistle"

. -

iMRS. ANNE ARCHBOLD MILLER, author of this delicious story. Ins

ously consented to autograph 50 copies of this first edition of her book. "Muidy Whistle" for you! Fifty copies is a mighty small number, considering the demand, we'll admit, so it's first come, first served, with these" autographed edition on sale, at regular price S1.35.

Concerning Huldy Huldy is already iirmly established in the home and hearts !" many. Sales have been thick and fast from the very minute the books made their appearance. They're bound to continue. Why? Because it's the story of a lifetime. Indeed the sweet philosophy and cjuaint "appleca-

n I I ,)v ' ' '-' . -va if f ! ; I

v'; .ä v-v

it's

lions of huldy can never jie. As an antidote for the blue-.

the greatest ever. Huldy's Whistle ' Then there is Whistle himself a regular little fellow who has a lot of unnecessary trouble in his young life just because onie view-

; points were perverted.

Vhistle Folks

unt

a m op. g

Just let Huldy tell you the story of the I..vtl.Old Man." as she's telling it here to the youngsters. It's mingled pathos and humor and one of her famous "applecations."

Mother and dad and (heat

Eloise and Lern Billing are

the possessors of these twisted viewpoints for a while. And Great Uncle Geor., like Whistle, is an unfortunate victim!

Huldy Turns the Trick Huldy sets things right Docs it without even boini; aware of the depth of her teachings. For a person of no education, she is the most highly educated person one could imagine. She's got the system of puttin' glory into good.

Huldy is Lern Billings ideal, but y I aw in a f k -I rt In i a rims f " mAAi

-uritK rliorl i t nrrvrrval Yt 1 nv and XN

....... K " w "

faith can accomplish wonders. And

both are strong in Huldy. Great Uncle George, returned at last from his years of wandering, has his important part in the story, too. He figures a great deal before he ever shows up. He finds things greatly changed from the time that he ran away to escape the family's disapproving eye I He had left only a pitiful, illiterate little not to explain his act, and the family had always referred to him as Horrible Example.

. vv " I 'V. .

if if, mix - x M I , t-f-u - . f - :

human trouble.

AUnt Eloise ha.- ",:! I'd !t reform Whistb that :kcl

Orent 1uty to

ave him from falling into th- f .r.it 3eorge.

She is searching for his far-weil note, n ture, and it is unfortunate, but true, th.it ends in a row.

s ; h ' r e d l - and I ' n- '.e

the .. - i !

7

'ft. Cxj

I

i --w r

Remember the price of Huldy's

Whistle is only . . . .

S51

Whistle wouldn't be if he never got Into

And he's in some now. His A-oe-begone. shamefaced appearance before Huldy is the aftermath of a great fuss with Aunt Hloi.se. which he is confessing to Huldy.

Tan BfUGtT&sr $for in Tqwm

1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 f 11 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II aa 1 1 1 1 1 ! 1 1 f 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 f 1 1 1 f t f 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ! 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

Mass cards at Schilling.

174 5

I and doesn't liko it he knows what he can do.

Husband won t

a'

i

; btTieve th.it when the

a word, but I

little womani

J I know comes from the office she'll j tind the door locked and husband I gone. What will she do then. I womb l ? j (Jo into hysterics. ;;et a ocksmlth to open the door fcr her. -at a perfectly good dinner, and go to bel

of herself. He Kenerally quite willing to let her do it, even when she's a bit tired of the experiment. I'.ut I am not in the place of the little woman, I know, and I am not the s.'tn.e sort of woman, so how can I pretend to Jude her? I wonder how she and the little man I know wi! feci about the whole affair twenty disillusioned, disappointed. cyn;cal. unhapuv year

Notice to Correspondents Ail announcements of msrria"ft-. engagement ar.d society vent. muiivi to The Now-Times must b iicned by the p.irtysend ir.z th-m. A'itn their a.ldret. Th';) signature is insisted upon Tor Dur intormation. Announce.iifi:' of several .-iich events have "jcii sent in thrt never took place, and .-doption of a policy of investigation is therefore necessary. The name of the informant will be withheld from publication, but we must know the source of the news, with other data, if pes, ,b!,. that 'a ill enable us to o:ifirm it. TIIK WUTOHS.

3

Great Variety of Soft Collars HAVE plenty of soft collars with you on your vacation trip or for the office these hot days; all styles here to choose from. For young men we feature new things in very low collars the fashionable style for now 25c, 35c, 50c.

,r w"-Tr V" "? j'jrvnrT---? LIBERTY

f II - H 7i

pon't Siicribcf jour Ikio.1.. We will pa ymi New Vor mark t flatly quotatio. wit'i .v-cmcd intcrr-t t(J date and all duo ttii4n--CA M P , T HÖR N ' Be CO.

10.". x.

1 ( n,i r tini

9 a. im. SrftufiJl)

to 'J

I Sam'l Spiro ck Co.

j Home of Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes, Knox Hats, ! Sampeck Boys' Clothes. jiiiiiiiiiifiitiitiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiittiiiiifiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiirT

MAIN -7.

in . T i:r . l. in.

I)Kr . TUM Na'i'Mi.ii P.aii'w )llcr Hot. I IU I-.

Patronize the ad vertier he h there to serve you.

1

for a perfectly good fietu? Or will j from now