South Bend News-Times, Volume 37, Number 153, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 1 June 1920 — Page 9
Trrsn.w motiving. jrn 1. 1020. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF WOMEN Clubs Circles SOCIETY Suffrage Philanthropy
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TiMES
Th- openlnt; -vnt r( thf ummr fua.Mon wa a brilliant affair staged at the cuntry club Monday afternoon and evening when 82 Culvr cadets Kern thi cu?ts of the club. Afternoon ceremonies onemd with th. rai.;ng of the f'aff from halfmast in accordance with the United states regulations or crcmonbs on Memorial day. arcompanlffl by th playlnt; of patriotic selections by the :t3-plece military u".;!(.t the di rection of Capi. W. J. O'Callahun of th acvlemy. Other events of the afternoon. Included tho bayonet demonstration, boalng bout, rart s and firamc. Prece-dinf: the dreys parade a concert was sriven by the hand members. Closing the military exercises retreat was fired and the Sac wan lowered. In th main dinlnsr room dinner was eerved to more than 4)0 members and quests of the organization, ome of the larger partus entertained Included Mrs. W. K. Morrison with a party of 20. Mra. George Keller with 1 fruests. A. Ii. Krskine. preide;-.t of the club with peven. J. L. Komlg with 110. Mra. George Ktudebaker with a party of fiv, Mrs. Krank "Warner with 12. Tho cadrU were served with a buffet supI'er in the Krlll. Panning occupied the latter part of the evening and was enjoyed by SO couple, the .Mesaick orchestra playing the program.
TWO "COOL DAY" SUMMER FROCKS
In honor ttivf rsary, K. Calvert
amall frlen (lameg and of th afte ter bclnr Vansler, M M15K Opal which whs dec orated s:hmo of fee ted.
of hor sixth birthday anIols Irene Palmer." 122 St.. i-nt ertalncd 1 7 of her ds. Saturday aternoon.
contest wer diversions rnoon. prizes In tho lataw.irdfd to Miss Kuth is Virginia Dyffprt and Hathaway. At luncheon, srcd at a table prettily with flowers. a color pink and white was f-
ii v an Nirm; nrunsii.uv. - Lvn when the wooJd are gay with flowers and we don our pretty summe r frocks we mist f prepared for chants of temperature. As these com- with but llttl" warning. It is always advisable to have at least one pretty wool drt-ss ready for the cool days of tmmriH rtlme. Marked favor is always shown to the tailored model of navy blue cloth, for it is & practical, and. as a ml, a becoming color. The tendency toward coat effects Is Keen in the drcKs at the rlpht. This is fashioned from a navy blue trlcotine with long revers of natural colored ponpee trimmed with ball buttons. The full length s!eees are cuffed In match inpr mode, while a narrow belt of patent leather Is threaded beneath the revers and buckled in th f.-ont The sailor hat of tan straw Is faced with blue and la banded with blark patent leather. The other model is made of navy blue Mlk serpe, but In deference to th desires of youth and fashion it has short uleeves. The turn-back cuffs and flat collar of rose silk have nn aJded decoration of blue buttons. The larpe hat has a flcwer crown of rose-colored popples, and the under brim i faced with rosecolored Keorcrette.
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Tho monthly dancing party of th" Beta Omioron chapter of the I'hi Delta Kappa fraternity held Monday evening In the Rotary room of tho Oliver hotel was In tho nature of a Mayjoliity and was in chars of Carl McCormick. Kaymond Cohn and Martin Slus.s. Fifty couples enjoyed tho dancing for which M lmrich's orchestra, of F.lk hart, played. Hand painted programs wt-ru favors. Miss Iena Rossln. S.'S Marietta ?t., entertained the members of the Rainbow club at her home. Sunday afternoon. names were the principal diversion of the afternoon nnd refreshments were served. Tho tlmo and place of the next meeting will be announced later. At a bridge party given Saturday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Karl Jackson. 200!) Portage av., an
nouncement was made of the engagement nf MLs Helen Jackson and LeRoy Graham, of Aurora, 111. The wedding will take place June 19, Cards were played at five tables, the favor being won by Miss Margaret McIIcnry. .
THE PUBLIC PULSE
Communication for this column may b aigneU anonymously but mutt be accompanied by the name of tii writer to Inure good faith. No rekponslhlllty for ftiCti or 8ntlinuti expresHed will be Assumed. Honest discussion of public questions is lavlted. but with tLe right reserrs.l to eliminate tIcIoub and objectionable matter. Th coluwa it free. Hut, be reasonable.
Freda Tasher, รค bride of this week, was honored at a miscellaneous fhower given. Saturday evening. at the home of Mr. and Mrs. CJeorgo Kupley. A mock wedding afforded rmioh amusement during the evening. e A pre-vacation dance will be given at the Flk's temple. "Wednesday evening. (Tharllti Davis' Collegian orchestra will furnish the music for the affair.
Announcements The meeting of the Musicians club which was announced for Tuesday evening has ben postponed until Thursday when it will meet with Mrs. Isaac Kane Parks. Ill Indiana av., Mishawaka. Mrs. Parks will be assisted by Miss Mary Doolittle. Members of the Past Chief's Association of the Pythian pisters 'xill be entertained Tuesday all dayat the home of Mrs. Louis Berger, 1113 1-ineoln way "tV.
KIXIC'S OF A MONSTMlt. Mishawaka, May 2 7. IMltor News-Tiiues : It speaks well for New York that .mi auction sale there of articles al1 red to have been obtained from the former palace of the former kaiser at Berlin found few buyers, at least few ready to pay much for tilings depending for their value? upon such a monarch. IY.sses.sl.ii
, of ihe relics of a monster would, of (Mis be different if they were of
the nature of war trophies. Then the captor might treasure the roal beer mug or salad fork much a.s one mi;rht a claw shot from a murderous
crocodile. Also a collection of things captured from the beast of Berlin would be .appropriate for exhibition In tho tnake-house of the zoo. but. as for buying thm to adorn a home, that Is differ?tt. To be sure, t1 ere are ho morbid who crave relics even of the lowest criminals. Again there are the few diseased minds, some of them even In this country, that hold Wilhelm as saint. However, the Indications .are that the purchasers were simply of tho type not advanced beyond the stage of holding royalty in awe and so ignorant even of the world war sentiment as to think it would distinguish them to possess some "bought" articles that once belonged to Kaiser Wilhelm. When the new ovners attempt to boast over their new purchases however, their real American neighbors will give them the lesson they need. J. M. K.
j hi mm . ' s- Ji' I J Ml
him. Heil liavo a word or two to say to you. my lady. Don't you think for one minute, that he'll Hand for having this insult put upon the woman he " "Loathes!" I interrupted her, my voice cold, deliberate, although I felt as If my brUn were seething. "Loathes as he would a cobra. You are evidently cherishing the delusion that I know nothing of your history or of your treachery of years ago. Acting upon that delusion you have been extorting sump of money from my father, simply because he loves me so devotedly that ho does not wish me ever to see you, to know that you exist."
HOM12S FOK HALE. We have five strictly modern homes for sale, ready for immediate occupancy. One 6 room hungrJo on Indiana av. One 6 room bungalo on Duball av. One 5 room bungalo on Milton st. One 5 room bungalo on Calvert sL One 5 room bur.jralo on Bowman Ft. If interested call at our otfice. 240 Farmers Trust building and we will show you bungalos, and give you terms and prices. American Home and Investment company. 4S29-June -i
OUCH! CORNS!
LIFT CORNS OFF
Notic the Variation In th Length of the SleeTei.
Personals Mr. and Mrs. Harry Keller, of Laporte, Ind., are visiting Mrs. Keller's sister, Mrs. S. R. Thomas, 419 Main st. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey l;alton, S. Pt. Joseph at., left Saturday for a motor trip through Canada. They will visit Toronto, Montreal. Quebec and on their return trip. Portland. Me., the Whlto Mountains Buffalo and Detroit. Mr. and Mrs. George Davie?, of Chicago, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Neil Robertson, all Riverside drive. Mrs. T. C. Touhey. 1236 Miuml s'... has had as her guests, her sister, Mrs. J. M. Thomas and Miss Edith Henderson, of Detroit. Mich.
May 24. Tditftr News-Times: Milk is one of the most important articles in the dletry of man. It should be the only food given the Infant until the appearance of the teeth and freely thereafter with other selected foods. Being easily contaminated, quickly deteriorated and often the carrier of disease, the utmost care must be exercised to make and keep this important article of food fit and safe for human consumption. A rart treat awaits the people of South Iiend at th Chamber of Commerce next "Wednesday evening. May 26th, when Dr. J. K. Gibson, of Indianapolis, head of animal industry of the state, will talk, under the ausplcos of health and sanitation committee of tho Chamber of Commerce, on the purity of milk. All producers, dealers and handlers of milk, the medical profession and nurses and all interested in good milk are requested by the Board of Health to attend this meeting. Mothers and housekeepers are especially Invited to be present. There will be no admislson fee charged and It is earnestly hoped that the auditorium of the Chamber of Commerce will be filled to Its capacity on this occasion. E. G. I'REVEKML'TH, M. D. Secretary Board of Health.
At Wheelock's
At Wheelock'j
The new Victor Records for June are on sale today.
These records are the latest additions to the great Victor Library of Music, We will gladly play any that you wish to hear. Victor Products Exclusively. George H. Wheelock & Company
Revelations of a Wife My Heart and My Husband BY ADELE GARRISON
For a brief, tense interval I thought the woman I was confronting would swoon. As she saw me rush from the , alcove nt her slurring reference to my dead mother, she half-started from her chair, the color drained from her face, and she threw one arm in front of her eyes as if to shut out the sight of me. It was not physical fear which actuated her. I knew that she was no coward. It was rather a flash of terrified superstition a weakness often found, inconsistently enough, in women of her type caused by the marvellous resemblance I am said to bear to my dead mother. "Don't, Meg!" her stiff lips muttered, and the diminutive name struck a chord in my memory silent since childhood. With the fondness of a gill child for coining names for herself, I announced one day to my mother that I wished her to call herself and me, her namesake, by th "little name Meg" instead of the "big name, Margaret." For a long time the picture of my mother's face, suddenly turned ashen at my question, remained in my childish memory, then gradually faded, because neither of us ever had referred to tho incident again. But at tho woman sputtered exclamation my mother's face flashed before me as plainly as if her living self stood In the room, her voice, shaken, roughened to raucousness from Its usual soft accents, sounded In my ears as It had done on that long gone day. "Never that name, child! Never let it cro.ss your lips!" "Why?" I asked with childish inquisitivenesi. She stooped, took my face between her hands and spoke with a sort of cold intensity that made me shiver. "Because the rerson I loathe most in the world used lo call me 'Meg' when we were girls together," she said. "She killed my happiness. She Is the worst woman in the world. If.you ever allow yourself to use that name, even when you are grown, I shall know it if I am twenty years dead." I do not think she realized that sho was speaking to a child, or, indeed. Just what she was saying, so carried away was she by the hateful memory that shook her. In another moment she causht my shrinking childish figure to her, and I felt her tears upon my face. "Forgive me. little daughter," she said, "and forget that mother spoke this way. Only never let me hear that name, again." And here, after so many years. Fate had hroueht me face to face with the woman my mother had so hated. The loathing was not all on the
part of my mother. HatrcU had spoken in every inflection of the woman's voice when she had uttered the words which had brought mo tempestuously from my hiding place behind the alcove curtain. It was a hatred, I surmised, which must have had its foundation before my mother's marriage in secret Jealousy over the man who had wooeel and won my mother, a hatred which must have been cleverly concealed for the early years of my mother's married life, which had com; to poisonous flowering in the theft of my fatb 've, and which still lived on i- iost aw ful form, rancor ag; dead. Her superstitious ,v lasted but the few seconds v.iu.-h framed tho pictures of the pa5t flashing in kaleidoscopic succession through my brain. With a perceptible squaring of her shoulders to meet the new situation she took her arm from before her face and looked at me, steadily, sneerlngly. "Ah. we come now to the real occupant of the woodrilo!" she said. "Hope you've enjoyed your stay behind the curtn'ns, my dear. How pleased your father will be when he learns of your sneaking into my apartment in thi manner! And don't you ever forget that I'll tell
m it s2 y
Doesn't hurt a bit to lift any corn right off with fingers
i inj
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Furnas Ice Cream bring3 hack those memories very strongly. It tastes eo awful good that we find ourselves liking it as well as we used to like it years ago. Makes kids of us again resurrects that sweet tooth that ive thought we had lost Have it on your table every day Ask your dealer for it. (Successor to Farmers Dairy Co.)
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