South Bend News-Times, Volume 37, Number 61, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 1 March 1920 — Page 7
.MI3imt .Mwn.ii.Vfi. MAKCH 1, I-. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF WOMEN Clubs Circles SOCIETY 'Suffrage Philanthropy
t:;e south bend news-times
Social Calendar
Monday. Mrs. C. A. HI?. 1137 ß. Michigan ft., will b hots t a meeting of the King's Heralds of the Grace M. C church. Tfce current fvnU deportment of the Progress club will hold a meeting at 3:3 o'clock In the club rooms. The Phllathea. claim of the Westminster I'rnhyterSan church will rnet ftt th home of Mrs. Fay Yost. 12 3 Vaar a v. The Tabltha glrli of the Zion Kvangellc! church wi!l meet at the school. Mrs. James W. Taylor, 721 W. Washington av.. will entertain the Wanhlngton club. A meeting of the St. Joseph county W. C. T. U. executives will be held at 2:30 o'clock at the Y. W. C. A. The "A3 You Like If club will hold a meetlntc at the home of Mra. J. II. Julian. JCW4 Woodward av. The reguLar monthly meeting of the Tomplc Aid Sisterhood will be hld at the home of Mrs. S. H. KoshUnd, 911 Lincoln way V. The members of the U. IJ. Chums cias of the United Urethren church will hold a meeting In the church parlors. The standard Hearers of the Trinity M. I-:, church will meet at the home of MUs Dorothy McCague, 750 Diamond a v. The Lincoln Literary club will be ntertalned by Mrs. Fannie Copp, California av. , Tuesday. Mr. D. R. Itowees, 07 N. Main will be hostess at a meeting of the Woman' Guild of the St. Jame's KpUcopal church. A meeting of the Woman's Missionary society of the Indiana ave--1 it (. hristian rl. jrch w.l ? v hl l a' tb homo of Mra. U. (I. Carter. .'." K. Iaytci et .Mis Ituth Kotz, 017 LrJand av., will bo host r.s at a metlngr of the Punco" club. The lat Chief's association of th' I'ythlan Hlsters will meet at the home of Mrs. Floyd O. Jelli.or, :1C II lnd.ana ov. T!u moth's' department ,,f the Progress club will hold itj regular rr .-eting In the club rooms. The Kkb-r Mothers' club will hold n. nie tin;; in the school bu'bilr.;?. The ladles' Aid society of the Tnuity I resbyterlan church 111 meet v. Kb .Mrs. Charles Heckler, S 0 C K. "Wayne f-t. The younp ladles of the Delta Aipha Sundiy skhoI ciuis of the First Brethren church will hull a x.ie"ting. Ml3 Dorothy Davis, 514 K. Colfax iv.. will entertain the tf. O. girls of the Trinity Presbyterian church. The Kp worth League of the German M. T. church will hold Its meetins: at the home of the Misses Lydia, and Katherlae Koch, 1318 S. Fellows St. Mrs. Grant Anderson, 727 South Pend av., will entertain with a 7 o'clock dinner and shower In honor of Miss Frances Fox, whoso marriitge to H. M. Ziegler will take place within the month. Wcxlnowliiy. The Woman's Mlnslonary society of the First Urethren church will hold a meeting. The Franklin Mothers' club will meet In the school building. The Daughters of Israel Aid society win give Ii annual Purin charity t'All at the Oliver hotel. Mrs. E. p. Moore, 325 N. Michigan t.. will entertain the Woman's Literary club at her home. The Lafayette Thimblp will meet nt the home of Jlr Verne Van luen. 1C:9 N. Allen st. The Ayudadora circle will hold a meeting at the home of Mrs. William Wood, 1022 Portage av. The Good Will club will meet at the home of Mrs. Frank Woofter, 413 K. Franklin pi. Mrs. Mary Frick, 110 McKinley will -be hostess at a meeting of the W. C. tfunshlne club. The Wednesday club will meet at
the home of Mrs. It. C. Stephenson, 201 North Shore dr. A debate will be the subject of the program which will be presented at the meeting of the history department of th Progress clu which vrill be held in the club rooms. An all day meeting of the Grandmothers' circle will be held at the home of Mrs. II. C. tfmith. ZZl rf. Scott st. The Ladie.V Aid society of tho German M. K. will be held at the hmoe of Mrs. Franklin Koenigh, 1312 a. Fellows stTho members of the Old Time
Friends club will be entertained at a one o'clock luncheon at the home of Mrs. J. C. Cleis. 114 E. Marion ht. Th current history department of the pouth Bend's Woman's club will hold a meeting in tho -club rooms. Mrs. W. It. .tover. 2-0 W. Navarre ft., will be hostess at a meeting of the Shakespeare circle. Mrs. Kudolph Klbel. 42S W. Navarre sL, will entertain the Pythian tea. Thursday. The Indies' Aid society of the Linden avenue Christian church will meet at the home of Mrs. Enfield Leach, 2210 Kenwood av. The Lemerco club will meet at the home of Miss Jeane Stoops, 923 Franklin pi. The Ladles' Aid of the Gloria dei Swedish Lutheran church will meet in the church parlors. Th' Musicians club will hold a meeting. The Woman's Foreign Missionary society of the First M. 13. ch-irch will hold a meeting in the church parlors. The Sumption Prairie Home Economics club will hold a meeting at the home of Mrs. Osborne Ullery, Gumption prairie rd. The Sewing circle of St. Peter's German EVnngelical church will meet at the church. Mrs. George Remmo, 328 N. Notre Dame av., will be hostess at an all day meeting of the Beehive club. Mrs. Ella Carlton. Division st. rd.. will entertain the Ladles' Aid society of Munson chapel. "An Old Fashioned Girl" party will be held at the home of Miss Florence Itabys. 503 Colfax av., by the members of the Philo Christus club. The Indies' Aid of the Broadway Evangelical church will meet at the home of Mrs. Fred H. Weitzeln, 52 4 E. Dayton st. Mrs. L. Shoemaker, 828 E. Wayne st., will entertain the Rainbow club. The Indies' Aid of the Grace Evangelical church will hold a meeting. The Aurora Bible class of the Trinity Presbyterian church will hold a meeting. The Colfax Mothers' club will meet at the school. The members of the Quartorze club will entertain their huusbands at the home of Mrs. Homer Kobinson. 1061 Itlverylde dr. The Alcott Sewing circle will meet at the home of Mrs. Arthur Studebaker, 1333 Lincoln way W.
ino l-.ureka cluh will hold a meeting at the home of Mrs. Ed. Strickler, 3931 Lincoln way W. The Ladies' Aid of the English Lutheran church will meet at the home of Mrs. Anna Kuntsman. Apt. B.. Ku nth-man flats. Phi Sigma. Sorolty will be held at the home of Mrs. Howard Cranfill, 404 W. LaSalle. The ladles' Aid society of the First Evangelical church will m?et at the home of Mrs. Otto Hartz. 104 3 W. Jefferson blvd. The C. W. R M. of the First Christian church will meet at the home of Mrs. Harry Kellogg, 1114 California av. The Woman's Foreign Missionary of the Grace M. E. church will hold a meeting at the church. Friday. The Friday Friendship club will meet at the home of Mrs. C. S. Fry. 129 Wakawa a v. The Woman's Missionary- of the First Presbyterian church will meet
LATEST FASHION HiM
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Revelations of a Wife Their Second Honeymoon
-BY ADELE GARRISON.
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One of this Reason's most attractlre suits Tor sport wear. In whlta tUk. at the home of Mrs. C. A. Ross, 909 Riverside dr. The Cirrawanna club will meet with Mrs. Charles A. Zosn, 919 E. 7edar st. The Woman's Missionary society of the Conference Memorial United Brethren church will hold a meeting. The Woman's Missionary society of the Westminster Presbyterian church will meet with Mrs. C. C. Beyrer, 71 Harrison av. The Mothers' club will hold a meeting. The Independent club will meet at he home of Mrs. Hiram Penrod, -T17 tMishawaka av. Saturday. The School Men's Wives club ;vill will hold a family party at the chool. The Home Guards of the Firrst M. E. church will meet at the church. The home department of the South Bend Woman's club will hold a meeting. The Willing Workers' club of the 'ion Evangelical church will meet it tht home of Miss Bertha Barch, 122 .S. Francis st.
DETAIN NEPHEW OF FORMER GOVERNOR
14
IHMIII)I -.l.i.
r Vi u Yt u
AT WHEELOCK'S
AT WHEELOCK'S
Attend the "Better Homes" Institute at the High School Admission Free.
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Lighting Fixtures to Harmonize with New Decoration and Beautify the Home. The old-style lighting fixture is a jarring note. With the newest decorations one must have the very newest lighting effects. Our display contains ceiling and wall fixtures in the newest designs and finishes. George H. Wheelock & Company
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By Aio('lated Pres: WASHINGTON', Feb. 29. Capt Julien Calles, a nephew of former Gov. Elias Calles, of Sonora. and an otlirer of the "Mexican army, is being detained at Yuma, Ariz., and. according to reports in the Mexico City newspapers reaching Washing ton today, his detention will caus the Mexican government to mako a trong protest to the United States. Capt. Calles was arrested for alleged conplicity In the abduction of i Mexican named Ybarra from his rnnch in Arizona. Ybarra was accused of a crime in Mexico and was taken across th line and executed.
PRISON WANTS CLERK; POSITION PAYS WELL
I v Assoc I He,; Tress. "MICHIGAN CITY, Ind.. Feb. 2$. "Wanted a clerk for duty at the -täte prison at Michigan City." This is the situation existing at the rrnal institution here, an;nunr d this afternoon following a meeting of the hoard of trustees at hich a vacancy was not filled be--.ius,"cf lack of applications. The Meint position pas Sl.OO a voir, with a house, light and heat furp I shed.
LIQUOR OWNERS MAY MOVE THEIR STOCKS I'v A-. iat.1 1'r'NM1 WASHINGTON", Feb. 28. Liquor ".vr.ers may transfer their stocks -gaily from one dwelling to another nly when there is an actual change f residence and then only under pecial permit according to an anoncement today by the internal (venue bureau, issued to correct mhlished reports that owners of wo or more dwellings might move ;hir stock from one to the other vnbampered.
CARRIED TO SAFETY. When told that the deputy chief b-'.d been caught by the walls. Chief O'Hara rushed into the burning structure followed by a few firemen. They found Fuery pinned down bv dehris. Ordirin; his men out of the building. Crief O'Hara carried tb.' injured man over hi shoulder to .safety, barely reaching the street when a second wall crumbled. There were no workers in thf buliding when the the started, ita200 employes having been on a strike fcr several weeks.
Lucius II. Millar, exalted ruler of the Elks, is confined to his home. 137 S. Scott st.. with the influenza
Cuticiira Soap Clears the Skin and Keeps it Clear
So p. O'rtmrr.t, T'icxx-n. Z&s. Trry wkn ?imt' .
WHAT HAPPENED AS THEY WAITED TO SPRING THE TRAP? My mother-in-law wasted fewwords is 'settling Cousin Agatha's hash." when Lillian had apprised her of the necessity of doing so. "Agatha," she said when that ancient damsel stood visibly trembling before her, "I've stood a good deal from you first and last. Rut now that your snooping around has ended in your finding out something which might do harm, I'm going to take a hand. You march right back with me to Katie's room, and you leave it again only ovr my dead body until Mrs. Underwood gives the word. Now march!" And Agatha, with a martyr-like sniff, meekly marched. "I hate to miss the shindis," my mother-in-law said to Lillian as she prepared to follow her recreant kinswoman, "but I guess I'll be of more use this way." "I take off my best chapeaux to that old lady," Lillian remarked, when she was out of hearing. "And I'm so relieved that she isn't to be in at the final round-up. We'll have enough to do without taking care of non-combatants." "I wonder what Kate will do," I remarked, to hide my sensitive consciousness that a non-combatant was what I would be reckoned. "Go straight to Harry as soon as ho gts a chance," Elllian replied, and there was bitterness in her voice. "Rut Drake has something up his sleeve for Kato, and that reminds me, he wants you to come over there, partly, I imagine, to see him spring it. Drake isn't without a little masculine vanity, I suspect, and not particularly averse to showing off a bit before you. So as I can't leave here, and someone must be there, you'll have to go. I'll keep Allls busy in the kitchen while you slip out the side door. And don't come back until I send William for you."
f the real danger, but I was thankful to be even an onlooker at the drama which was about to be staged. We had managed that Kato should see the Chinese vase brought back to my mother-in-law's room, for it afforded those of us in the house better hiding places. And in those hiding places my father, enfeebled physiccally but a deadly marksman; Allen Drake, with the switch of the electric lights removed find in his hand; Dr. Pettlt, two stocky guards, the most trusted Lillian could get. and Lillian herself waited to spring the trap. "I'll take personal charge of Grace Draper," sho had promised primly. "I'm afraid the rest of you might be a little too chivalrous." It was exactly half-past twelve
when we heard the slight shuffling
upon the stairs which told us that according to the conspirators through a side window concealed by shrubbery, and that Kato was bringing them up the front stairs to the room. In another minute Kato himself, evidently sent ahead, was casting the rays of a flashlight over the room, his face as imperturbable as if he didn't know of the watchers concealed there. Voices From the Dark. "Just what I say," lie assured someone in the doorway. "Two old women with sick girl, way back in house, other missee go home, young misses sleep, I fix houseboy. .Nobody here. All asleep." "By housely I suppose you mean that old ape with the wen on his forehead." Grace Draper's low but clear tones sounded amusedly. "All right. The better for you. And here, I suppose, Is dear little Madgle's treasure house. 'It's a wonder she didn't take to bed with her." "If I might suggest," a low voice, with u hint of authority and more than a hint of Teitonlc ancestry, said ironically, "a Htt!e lesH voice and more work."
! mm j fli l
found my father, Dr. Pctitt and Al
len Drake smoking comfortably In tho library. I barely had a chance to tell them of Kato's discovery of the hidden paper, when the Asiatic's deferential knock was heard at the door. Allen Drake quickly rose and placed himself in such a position that the servant wouldn't see him until he was well within the room. "I like go out little while," Kato bepin, and thirn Allen Drake reached out a slender but sinewy hand, grasped him by the jacket collar and turned Kato around until he faced him. Then was that stolid face contorted with a most terrible fear, fear that I realized had its roots in something beyond ordinary understanding". Mr. Drake held him taut for two or three long minutes, silently gazing at him. "Then he spoke rapidly in a jargon unintelligible to tifi, but which Kato evidently well understood. At the end Mr. Drake asked two or three short. sharp questions, which the Asiatic answered submissively. Then Mr. Drake ed him to the door, took his hand from the other's collar, and deftly, forcibly kicked him into the corridor and closed the door. A Flashlight's Tiny. "He's; our man now. body and soul." he said, a little mocking light of triumph in his eyes, and dusting hi hands with his handkerchief as
if he had touched something un- j clean. "Because of something that! fjg "Bayer" 13 Ofl GenuißS
with me. he believes in his superstitious soul that I am in league with the devil, ar.d can bring down all
sorts of torments upon hir devoted ! head, fo he will obey me implicit- j ly. He hpsgone to his employers row with instructions to bring them here tomorrow night at a half hour j past midnight, and when he comes j
back here I will instruct him Just how- to get them in the house. In
every detail they will dance like pup
Another voice, one that I recog- j
nl7Pfl With .1 tririll of tnrrnr nq Via
I obeyed her without question, and i , , . , . . .. ' . . . ! of the man with tho scarred hand.
jrrowled a guttural assent. "Who planned this whole thing anyway ' Grace Draper retorted defiantly, but I noticed that her voice that her voice was more guarded than before, and that she at once turned her attention to the Chinese vase. I deduced that the owner of the ironical voice held the real reins of the expedition. With quick, deft fingers, showing that she had remembered perfectly Kato's description, she emptied the vase, and taking a magnet similar to mine from her dress, the metal pencil case soon lay with her hand. Rut when she had opened it, and had handed the rice paper It contained to the owner of the ironical voice, whose mifstaehed square face I could see In the light of the flashlight he heWl to the paper, there broke a startled exclamation from him: Schweinhund! Fool! Vat is this? You have ben fooled, and we This is a trap!"
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LOUISVILLK. Ky., Feb. 2R. Madison, the first county to report
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the selection of Jele.Tatea t q the district conventions, instructed for Sen. Warren C Tiarding of Ohio for tho presidential nomination.
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ASPIRIN FOR HEADACHE
Aspirin say Bayer
pets at our bidding." The prophecy came back to me the next night after midnight, when I stood ter.se in the little alcove off my mother-in-law's room, the heavy curtains Fhrouding it in darkness. Lillian had placed me there with the injunction to watch the stairway from the library, although we had recovered the keys and both doors were locked. I knew that it was a subterfuge to pet me out of the way
k Georgette Crepe, 40 inch, in newest spring shades,
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yard $3.75
36 inch Tricolettes in black, navy, brown, Copen and Pekin blue, yard $7.00 36 inch Silk and Cotton Poplins, in black and colors, at yard $1.G0, $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50 The New Spring Woolens
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2 ir.' Ii Mercerized Ori;.iiidit', ; .dutiful linr of figured patterns, at yard 45c AO inrh Plain and Fancy Cotton Veilrs. beautiful line of ncn'.- st snrxnrr patterns At. yard 7C c, $1, $1.25, $1.50 Silk Stripe Tissue 32 inch, in dainty plaids, stripes and checks, yard 75c Tissue Ginghams, 36 inch, in pretty spring plaids and checks, yard 75c New Dress Ginshams for spring, 2 7 inch. M. F. C. brand, best quality in dainty plaids, stripes and plain colors, yard 45 c New Percales, 36 inch, pood quality in light and dark patterns, yard. . . 43c Dress Ginghams. 27 inch, in plaids, stripes and plain colors, yard 35c Apron Ginghams in blue and white checks, yard 29c Mercerized Plisse Crepe in figures and plain colors, 30 inch. at. yard 50c, 69c Curtain Marquisettes and nets, 36 inch, with or without borders, in white cream and ecru, yard 50c
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