South Bend News-Times, Volume 36, Number 271, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 28 September 1919 — Page 7

SI NDAY, SKITKMnr.Il 2S. If) lf. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF WOMEN

fHE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

Clubs Circles SOCIETY Suffrage . Philanthropy r . I -

'1

f V I

Housewife's Scrapbook

thit h:ivf l. ft ri ir srv l In watf-r Klas- prick th lrr..f rn. nf tho rus twjco with hit pin to pr:vf nt tho hh U from i' fnrr frying val chops makp an in i:nri in ach ( hop and pour Into ir p"ppor and salt, a littW- onion yr.r' and a few drop of Irrnon ji.j' . Th n dip them in the and I r' ad crumbs. L'-ft orr beefsteak ran h rh"ppMl lino and put in pan with a th! spoonful of butter, pf-pprr and .-.ilf. and suflicif nt hoillnp water to r.i"it n it. I'ut it wIkic it will kj in.t whil. you to;ist and butUr hrrad. 5 'l'h n spr:id Ihr niat mixture ov-r !!( ircm and you have a iK-uclous I r' .ikfasL or lunch. Whf n you havo brralol lamb, veal r mutton ohip?, .-"TVe fcallopf.-d pot;ios ami tomato sauc To keep fresh vt'm'rtablcs green .-old .alt to th water in which they .-in- cooked. If the water is very :-:: the color of the vegetable will improved if you add soda to the water. Allow an eighth tcapoonful to twu quarts of watur. T make a puff paste us; equal ..trt.- of floor aiid shorteninp. A plain paste takes 't the weluht of tho flour in shor-nk' and for a. jUky pHHte use three-fourths the v. .-Uht of the ilour in shortening, folvliotf in'the lat ijuarter. Add tw o tabb poonfuls of kero- : erio oil to the wash boiler of water. Itoil the clothes in this and if thoroughly rinseil they will come out beautifully white and there will be no odor from the kerosene. The er? stains can easily bo removed from the silver t-;poons with salt and water. If tho pantry becomes Infrstcd with ants dip a sponge in sweetened water and place it where the ants Kather. They will soon appear on the sponge "trap", which can then I e plunged into hot water. To cloan real lace place It between folds of tissue paper well sprinkled with magnesia. Place thJa between the leaves of a book and place a "eU'ht upon it. Leave it two or three days, then shake out the pow.1 r and the la.e e will be like new. iioMnsrvNs is thi: iwi.Tj WAiumom:. The athletic day has induced the American woman to adopt, to considerable extent, the sports clothes f CnKlish tweed mixtures and Irish frieze, so dear to the heart of her Hritish sister. Topcoat-s of attractive shades of bronxe srecn, with large visible plaids in burnt ur.nifio, are exceptionally smart this f ill. Browns, tans, pray, blue, and other shades of preen, mauve, and raisin color are also bcinp shown in unusual varieties. These topcoats ordinarily have ru'lan shoulders and often are finished vth leather buttons and larpe patch pockets. They are of genuine service for traveling autornobilinfr. or ordinary sports wear. Black and white Inverness capes .no bintr worn this season, beim; tried by black and preen checked tweeds, fray and tan, and diagonal mixtures of browns and tai-.s. wt mis Tin: pirruoGiLi You are very niuch liable to be taken to Hotel Petrograd, the lartfY. V. C. A. Hotels House in I'.iris whether you want to or not if ;m are a woman and arrive alone at a Paris station now-a-days. Small boys rush up, "Want a taxi j mivs? Hotel Petrograd?" and even, the taxi drivers have formed the habit of smillnp suavely when hailed and starting off for rue de Cau mar tin without even asking whether youj ant to reach Hotel I'etrograd or not. Y. V. C. A. workers themselves nho live at other of the Y. A. hotels find themselves whisked off li-fore they have a chance to explain where they want to ro Just as Mrs. Sherman Dean, Altadena. Calif., was recently when she arrived from an in estUatinr trip into Poland. The ehauU'eur insisted that she po to Hotel Petrograd because "everyone Kok. there." And everyone does, for a fact. PACKIN; HINTS. Tn packing1 a wardrobe trunk. If plenty of tissue paper is used in the sleeves of and between the par-T.-.erts. there is little chance of their Jem;, out of shape when the destin.k.i u reached. A safe rule in all ; a- king is to hae everything tightly packed, so one should not be sparing with tissue paper. mock ciinutv imi:. Chop cui' vt large cranberries with 1 cup of seeded raisins; add 2 cups of sugar and 1 cup of boi'lng wat.T. Mix thoroughly and add !.tp,:n f vardlli and two tras.ioov.s of tloi:r. Pake in a plain cr;;st. Six nxuns. hanlwixMl finish, hot water heating, bath, gas, electricity, et-. ii N. St. .!o-aph -t. Irl S;.t eo. Mut an t tiick. AddrcN hervood. Michigan t'it.v. Ind. ;,.,:.. es Advt DANCi:. A Pedmers Hall, (Vt. 1st. at ? n m. 20 cents per couple, 10 cents

Beauty Poses As Eve

ft '

. 's. '?

4

" ' 't

J

iSl.:' h -I' ' VlRGlNlAlEE.

In response to an inquiry from the studio of George Crey P.arnard. American sculptor, asking if any of the youni; women in "The Greenwich Villape I'ollles." a musical comedy now running in New York, had a figure suitable as a model for a statue of I've, the management wrote Mr. Barnard that Miss Virginia Ie's would undoubtedly do. The drsirablltty of Miss Lee, who is one of the several show Kirls who have had experience as artist's models, was Inured out !y Miss Clara Tire, who is connected with the nianuppnipnt in an artistic -aiacitv. Some difficulty was experienced by Miss Tice in making the selection, but she chose Miss Lee. elchtcen years old. who. Miss Tice said, stands more than five feet six inches in her Kve sl'ppers.

Kindergarten Helps for Parents The Story of the Clock By CARRIE S. NEWMAN

"Come, Petty." said Mother, "put away your dolls. It is time for bed." "Oh. mamma." pleaded Petty. "I don't want to po to bed yet. I'm not a bit sleepy." "Put, Petty look at the clock. The hands are pointing; to 7 and you know that is bedtime." "Horrid old clock! I wish they'd all stop and never go again." muttered Petty as she tucked Matilda Jane and Josephine into th carriage in which they slept. "Tick-tock, tick-tock." sounded the dining room clock in the night, and in the quietness its voice seamed to grow louder and louder. "What's the matter?" inquired the kitchen clock from its shelf. "You seem to be angry." "Didn't you hear what Petty said before she went to bed? I think I'll stop and see how she likes it." "Well, if you stop. I'll stop." answered the kitchen clock. The tall grandfather's clock in the hall paused to listen to the conversation. "If they are botlt going to stop, I'll stop too. I am quite tired ticking day and night and would like a rest." Petty opened her eyes. How quiet the house was! Put it was quite liq;ht and must be time to get up. She tiptoed into mother's room Mother was wide awake, but still in bed. "Isn't it time to get u :'."' Petty. asked "I don't know, dear the clocks

have all stopped." Petty dressed and ran downstairs. No breakfast ready. "You see I oidn't know what time it wa. All the clocks hae stopped." explained Hannah. When Petty had rinished her breakfast she put on her hat and ran down the street to call for her little chum. Pearl, to go to kindergarten. "Why. Petty, you are very late." said Pearl's mother. "Pearl has been go tie some time." Hetty hurried down the street. Not a child in sight. No one on the playground. She crept up under the window and listened, then turned and ran home, the tears trickling down her cheeks. "I'm sorry, little daughter." said Mother, "but I had no way of telling the time." "o you thick it's anywhere near 1 o'clock0" asked Potty a few hours later. "You know, I'ncle James phomised me a ride If I came at 1." "You'd better run over and see." said mother. Put alas for poor Petty' She rar. around the corner just in time to pee tn c James disappear in the distance. "Petty. Petty, wake up!" and Petty opened her eyes to Mnd Mother standing by her bedside. She sat up and listened Intently, then threw h r arms around Mother's ne- k. exclaiming. "Oh. I'm so glad it was only a dream!" And before she ate her breakfast

Petty crept whispered: names. I'll over to the clock and 'I'm sorry I called you never do it again." Pumpkin Pie By Silas Rcid The poet who sang "the melancholy days have come, the saddest of the year," meaning thereby that autumn had arrived in the offing with winter only hull down on the horizon and coming along at a .10-knot clip, must have had his mind on an empty coal bin. That, it must be admitted, would be enough to give anybody the blues. Put why look on the gloomy side? There are a lot of things about the fall season that mifeht be worseConsider, for the sake of illustration, our old standby of late September and early October, the luscious pumpkin pie. No, no. Mr. Hallroom. we do not refer to that thin, anemic, discouraged looking monstrosity peddled out over lunch counters at 10 cents per cut. Pefore the war the price was live cents, and dear at that. This variety of the venerable and venerated New Pngland dish is the black sheep of an old ami honorable family, dating back, we understand, to Maytlower days in the vicinity of Plymouth rock. Unlike some families of lontr lineage it has not run to seed, but keeps right on improving with each generation. nly the kind that hans around lunch bars and restaurants has deteriorated. Pumpkin pie comes each autumn like a long lest friend of our early youth. H is at once a reminder of boyhood days and sunlit summer seasons, and a solace for the hardships of winter to come. Brown of complexion, sturdy as to size and alluring as to general aspect, tho pumpkin pie that mother used to make (does still for that matter) was a thing of beauty and a joy forever for its flavor is a continuous delight that lingers lovingly about th tongue on the bare thought of its sweet succulence. Melancholy days, indeed! There "ain't no such thing" for the fellow with a full quarter-size slab of oldtime pumpkin pie before himTry NEWS-TIMES Want Ads. CALL 2131 VOW Better Transfer Service Trunk and Parcel Delivery Cltv Hauling of all Kind Motor Express and Freight Transport To Nearby Towns INTER-CITY TRANSFER COMPANY 200-201 1!. JrfrVixm llhil.

Keep This Closet Shelf Empty

If ever you have moved and. in these days of rapid changes, who has not you will understand. 'f all difficult duties, that of entering an old attic, packed with the treasures and cast-off belongincs of several generations, is one of th most appalling, particularly if you are moving from a spacious country home into a cramped and practically closetless apartment. Then it is that you vow never again to save anything which you are not perfectly certain to need in the immediate future, never again to come under the hondacro of things. When starting on a journey of length, have you ever felt a wonder-j ful sense of buoyancy at the thought) of all your necessities stowed within ) the narrow limits of your small heap! of luggace? After all. you reflect at! Mich a time, your actual needs arej few enough. Why do you thought-j bssly accumulate-, accumulate until your possessions literally stifle you ? j Are there many more all-prevading feelings of content than that which) follows immediately upon the clear-j ing out of your desk or closet orj glove box? The writer once" knew! a woman who, with horror, diseov-j ered herself to be the owner of .17 : pairs of white gloves, short and lor.g. most of them tit only to be converted into pen-wipers. The one rem-) edy for a case like this is to be bold, to enter upon a regular campaign; of sorting your accumulation of odds; and ends, then so to act .is to forestall any need for such an tinpleay-j ant labor ever to pr repeated. ! It is not sinii'ly that your love of neatness demands it. either. It is far more. Your idea of economy and of the general fitness of things! insists that there be no hoarding, ' no stoppage of tho circuit of use fulness of vour possessions. Today there1' are thousands in the smaller1, war-stricken countries of Purope, crying out for iniiumc raide liitb Illings which, to you living in com-; fort and plenty, seem of so slight I importance as only to warrant bein, lodged in some dark corner, there i to tfts.i about in dust and wasteful-! ncss. Whatever yod Mtv 'inishoil, with, no matter how unimportant,; should be sent on to some one else. into a place where it will fill a nerd; or else, if it is past all service, it should be thrown away. Never should it be allowed to join a inndoscript company of other c.ist-o'fs on the closet shelf. The habit of! dealing promptly with one thing at a time, and of seeing and undertak-! ing through to the finish, is an inaluable one to cultivate. The subject is trite. Kvery one is familiar with the exhortation not to save old letters and old clothes. Psually our sense of self-protection suffices to see our letters safely burned; but, to many of us. there is a great lure connected with the saving of old clothes, clothes with a history. There's the quaint, stiffflowered satin in which one's greataunt attended a white house inaugural ball, one's mother's wedding gown, as well as others which perhaps boast of having appeared at certain important family events. It seems innocent enough to pack these away In cedar chests, from which our grandchildren may draw them, amidst wondering surprise. Put their pleasure would be fleeting, at best. How i"'teu it ha pi tens that these grandchildren are unresponsive, or else that the old cedar chests havo necessarily been done away with long before their time. How much wiser to destroy even beautiful things with memories, before their worth is passed or there Is any possibility of lack of appreciation on the part of persons into whose hands they may fall. The whole matter comes down to this. In the world o fhe twentieth : century, when everything moves so fast and things of such mighty import crowd our heels, we have no time or thought to give to useless details. Details should be made to serve; they should not be allowed to master our better, wisdom or to hamper or choke our freedom of thought or act. In order that this may be so, it is absolutely ss-ntial to clear away every tiling as we go. Wrij'0 a n.i m:$ - trerff mn hi'jh. low Purhft neck .irtih ortntSvf aleev, Ic-net e-r ankU length. Ertrntnt r lull er et nut tinmen. For bi'it$ and ehildrtn too.

Q 4

J W

The less we are weighed down by

unneef-ssary possessions, the- better' progress can we make, whatever our; held of labor. Our daily thoughts' and acts sicnify growth. We change our habits, our occupations, our likes and dislikes, our thoughts; or. If we do not. something is wrong. In all progress, that which is outgrown must bo discarded, in order to give space to something bigger.: It may be that we outgrow our clothes, our books or pictures, our commonplace daily tools; very well, throw them out or dispose of them wherever they can do some one good. Put never put them away on a back shelf, thinking that they may be wanted sometime, for they never will. Pitch them away. Have just thof things which are required to satisfy your needs, no more. Then your changing thought and progress will be unhindered bv mere things. Y. M. C. A. SCOUT TROOP ON LONG HIKE FRIDAY The boy scout troop of the Y. M. C. A. took a hike Friday night, 'caving the association building at 6:20 o'clock and returning at 9:4" o'clock. The first and second class cooking tests were passed by Evert Pntcrline, and "William Davis, the second class test by Ludwig Blake. .Icorge Fnterline, James Thomson and Everett Michael,, and the first class test by Herbert Smith and Arthur Hollister. Other scouts who took the hike were Millhurn Sirtln. Julius P.eyer. Albert Campbell. h . - ry Christman and Fred Mainer. A rcgu'ar si-out meeting was held following the tests. Chester H. Greene, boy scout field eommi.-sinner for this district, addn ssed the members of the boys' v. oi k oommitiee of the Y. M. C. A. at a meeting held at the association i building Saturday afternoon. nnn irrii home vnn sali:. Puy any automobile on our monthly payment plan. Itide while you ;ire paying. Northwestern Finance 'o.. ll'i Citizens' bank bbbg. Tele;.!umo Lincoln 126.". .122 4-tf. Cbmpfexion Smooth and velvety at the retal9 of a rose is the complexion elded by Nadice Face Powder This delicate b?autifier Imparts an .Indefinable charm a charm which lingers In the memory. The smooth texture cf Inadine adheres until washed cff. It prevents sunburn or the return cf discolorations. Its coolness Is refreshing, and it cannot harm the tenderest cicin. Nadine Face Powder beautifies millions of complexions today. Why not Pink Brunitt While yours r Fold tn Green fioxf Only. At leading toiiet counter. If thfj havn't tf, by mail 90c. NATIONAL TOILET COMPANY. Paris. Teno. For sale in South I'-end by Central Drug Sture and ether toi' t e. nmt. ts : in Mishawaka by 1P1 Cross I'haraia -v. PROTECT yourself n.nint the cold! Wear Meroile" or "Harvard Mills underwear. You'll revel in warmth, comfort and absolute freedom of motion! Every garment is cut by hand of the fmet quality fabrics and will keel its shape through countless wahiiis. Perfect in every detail, from the smooth patent F'atlock seam to the non-btretchable buttonholes. "Merode" and 4 'Harvard Mills (Hand-finished) Underwear 99 For sale in the leading shop?, in cotton, merino ani silk mixtures, at attracthe prices. Winship. Boit Co., Wakefield. Ms. - j

ßmmm

V 1 Vf

ft'-

1 ri'vl ?w

lEnd rrT3 s-m l0f ililflJuX 29' i t Sept. ALU THAT 30 jf

! inn JJj i UB HUI y J

You fathers and mothers who will Vc wanting to out tit the family witl all Shoes can do so at a real substantial saving during our two-day clear :nce. Our Fall trade has been so extremely heaw this vear that we find man nes that are already broken in sizes, and in order to make room for tin rge shipments that are arriving almost daily we intend to move these a 'ice. These lines consist of only new Fall stock in snappy, stylish aiu spendable footwear. Compare the low prices, read the descriptions an e the shoes, then judge for yourself. But don't wait too long tor the sup :y is limited in these broken lines and this clearance lasts only two days, londay and Tuesday. To avoid disappointment

ft MM s r R,?v V

Vc. if rvs

Women's Black Kid Lace Shoes ith Black Cloth Tops and High 'Ritz" Heels. Plain toes and long-

vamps. rrr: UZZ

AT-

I i II II. V I 7

11 tf I

0

Women's or Growing Girls' Gun Metal Lace English Shoes, some with leather and some with Cloth Tops. Military Heels and stitched tips.

8.98

Misses' Tan Calf Lace Shoes with

Cloth Tops. Misses' Gun Metal Shoes with Cloth Tops.

G

2.69

S i Mm and Men's Gun Metal Leather English Shoes. Goodyear welted soles. $3.4 Men's Dark Tan Vici Straight Last Lace Shoes, Goodyear welted soles. Men's Gun Metal Leather Blucher Lace Shoes, made on the Munson last. Every KINNEY SHOE Must Please

$3.98

S4.9S

1 MgM

furs wn- air ip.arannßi

r J TT

aondi TU ES PAY 1

Will EVlean a ReaS Saving on

Your New Fall Shoe

SEiop Early

Women's All Gray k'id Lace Shoes with High Heels and slender vamps.

Women's Dark Brovn Kid Lace Shoes with Cloth Tops and High Louis Heels and slender vamps. Women's Patent Leather Lace Shoes, with Black Cloth Tops, High Loci3 Heels and slender vamps. 4,39 Women's Gun Metal Leather Lace Shoes with Black Cloth Tops, high Louis Heels and slender vamps. Women's or Growing Girls' Brown Calf English Walking Shoes, with Cloth Tops and Military Heels.

9

S3.48

Misses' Gun Metal Leather Button Shoes, Dull Kid Tops.

One lot Lace Shoes leather soles. 9

Boys' Tan Shoes, good heavy uppers and soles that will withstand hard wear.

Leather Lace Will Find

Boys

i . v "-r w I f. , , tv mMvh )m

CVALULS THAT ()

s it 0 Q0 1 m e -1 in m Children's Brown Calf J with Cloth Tops. Solid! m Men's Tan Work Shoes, made on the regulation Army last, Goodyear welted soles. Boys' Tan Elkskin Scout Shoes. Good for school wear. ' $2.29 and $2.48 Boys Tan Army i v Shoes. The proper last for growing fert. Q Your Means Our Success

0

p 1 ... 1 I 1

S2.39

9

Bargains Here

3

.01 S)-2X. i

str lady.