South Bend News-Times, Volume 37, Number 182, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 30 June 1920 — Page 7
WITDNKSPAY MORNING, JFNT3 .in. if20. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF WOMEN Clubs Circles SOCIETY Suffrage Philanthropy A STRAIGHT TIP By Juanita Hamel Soot C ease
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
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Thf I'rojrrss club Rav? tho Jim number of a i;ri-s of monthly rntertalnrrientK at Halthwln T'Hlay 'venir,?. TTih entertainment was in th- form f a vmrT.t r-cltal and in rlud-i two whlntllnjf by Miss Har.nnh Aufr, a violin solo ty Miss Wild Srhontz, a piano polo by Ml Mauri Wf-bcr. and a group Jane. 'Thf White IUho," by Mb.- Ituth Ma'.ta.s. Klorn'-e 8?rr and Catherine Hahn. Mi kh Jtachifl Davis I layrd the crompanlment. The r.pxt proirram wjll be plvn July 27 at Healthwln. The pupils of ML-a Hazel Harri srave the. last recital of the season. Tudfty evening, at the South Bend conservatory. Thirty-four numbers were presented on tho program. Th Circle of Servic of the First I;aptit church cave a miscellaneous shower for Mrs. Harry Marquis, who is a June hride of last week. Tuesday af terroon. " at the home of Mrs, A. II. Sholly, 1327 Incoln wav. Refreshments wpre rrved to the truest, rosp and lilies foiminar the dr-coratlons. Miss Etta OMnr, 131 K. Pi--ell nt.. was surprised at her home Monday vnlr.tr by a grroup of friends from the Ellsworth store, the occasion bointc hr birthday anniverpary. Dinner was served at 7 o'clock to nine Rueats. including. Miss Ksther Archimheault, Miss Dorothea Harris. Ml.s Mary Huber, Misers Anna and F.lslft NI?ch, Mis:fM Hernfe and Mildred Wirt and Ixittle Werjierhowfkl. Th feninK was spent socially and closed with a marshmailow roast. Mr. an.1 Mrs. C. H. Whltmore. 1134 l'ortaqre av., entertained tht members of the Old Time Friends' club with a 7 o'clock dinner at Thir hom Tufwlav evening. They were assisted by Mr. and Mrs. J. M. fhllla and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cleis. Pink roses and whlto lilies formed the decorations and pink rose centered the table. -fThe Qui Vive club was entertained at the home of Mr. P. Inwood. ZOb Harrison av., Tuesday afternoon. A picnic supper preceded the business meeting. Itter: were read from two a'j.sfnt members. Mrs. C. Klnpshafrr, who is in California, and Mrs. H. Stanley. Sr. Paul. Minn. Mrs. H. Kumpf. lAilick. will be hostess to the clul) July 27. Klpht member of the Needle raft club m-t at the home of Mrs. Charles Umbert. 1915 S. Carrol nt Contests formed the evening's entertainment. Mrs. Bernard Corse Taklnsr first prize. Plans were made for the annual rtcnie to be held at Herrlen Ijike July 14. Tho next rrsrular meeting will be held July The meetinsr of the Indies' Ilible l.i.- of the Trinity M. I, church, which was to have been held Tuesday afternoon at th home of Mrs. ; Atikermnn. SIS Cottage Grove .v.. has been postponed until July Th Ladies' Aid and Woman's Missionary societies of the First Üvanseliral church will hold their monthly business meetlnj? Thursday afternoon at tho home of Mrs. Freluffr. 1008 S. Main st. The W.mlta ?ewlnp circle held a rani party Tuesday afternoon at the Red Men's hall. Twenty-two mem(f rs were present, the next meeting will be held July 13. A wedding of Interest will be that of Mrs. F.tti F. Clauer. Ofi'.' Riverside dr., and David H. Purfdund of Chicago, which will take place Wednesday afternoon at 4 o'clock at the borne" of the bride. Rev. Archibald Mi (iure, pastor of the First Presbyterian church, will read tho service before the members of the immediate families and a few friends. During the ceremony and following Trvin Polk will render a number f solertions on the harp. House decorations will ouvd.t of clusters of pink and yellow snapdragons and other apr ointments, maintaining' the same color soheme. After a northern trip the couple will be at home In South P.end. Sixty-five members of tho Kollar family attended the lxth annual renn ion held Saturday at Pottawatomie rirk. A picnic dinner was served at noon and was followed by a short business seftdon presided over by Josiah Kollar. vice president. The following officers were named for the coming year: James Kollar was selected president; Norman Kollar. vice president; Harry Hoy, treasurer; Minnie King, secretary; J. Gaymon. chairman of the ground committee; Mrs. Wesley Van l'alln. table committee, and Mrs. Marvin Leach, chairman cf the propram committee. The next reunion
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TV TOT every young; man who goes a-courtin?: finds the course a Eut if you love her truly, young man, and if you
I l smooth and easy one to travel. In fact, a chap may find boat be of ood cheer, for Love will give you your tip
himself gTowing faint-hearted so cold and haughty can a tip to thuw you the way to her htart. You know that 'fair maid be. will find a way"-rjes?
are in this
a straight
line "Love
will be held the third Saturday in June, 1121, at Stmlebaker park. The second nnnual reunion of tlv Innis family was held Sunday at the homo of Dr. and Mrs. Hammond Imus. south of Rremen. At noon a picnic dinner was .served t; guests following which a business s sslon was held and election of officers took place wi:h the follywin results: Delbert Imus of Rir Park was chosen president; Elmer Smith. Premen, vite president; Alice Carl of Canton, O., secretary und treasurer; Kdna Gill. Amanda Imus and Cora Smith, program e-rnnniittee; Charles Smith, Ernest Imus and Klva Carl, committee on ariani; - tneuts. It was derided that the next reunion would be held with Albert Smith. IJremen. June 2, 1921. Th.so prtsc-nt Sunday included Mrs. Charles Carl and throe sons. Miss Hlva Carl and Mr. and Mrs. eVcil Carl of Canton. 0.. Mr. and .Mrs. Gushaw of Irfayctte. Ind.. Delbert Platts. North Liberty. John Platts and family of ('.alien. Mich.. D. lbe rt Imus. River Park, Krnest Imus, Mr. and Mr. Kdward Karl and Mr. and Mrs. Welcome Imus and daughters of Mishawaka. Albert Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Roof. Mr. and Mrs. Ab.i (Jill, Mrs. Mina Swartz and sons and Frank Imus and daughter, all of Bremen. Two hundred members of the Men's league of the (Jraoe M. K. chureh entertained their families with the annual basket picnic Monday evening at Pottawatomie park. Following the supper the time was spent with competitive sports and games. A larp:e attendance f present at the weekly dancing pi.rty of the South Bend Country club which was held at the club house Monday evening. Messlck's orchestra furnished the music for the program of dances. Members of the Wesley society of the German M. K. church entertained their friends at an open meeting of the society held Monday evening at the parsonage. 311 W. Wayne st. Dr. Arthur Breslich spoke on the subject "Present Day Conditions in the Light of the Scripture." Refreshments were served at tho close of the evening to 3 5 guests. An
nouncement of the will !' made later.
next meeting
Miss Mildred Lightner. elaughter of Mrs. eleur-Ke Lamb, is 20 S. Main St., and Charles M. Yenler. son of Mrs. Grace Slone. 122; S. Rush st., w er quietly married Monday evening at S o'clock at the heune of the I ride's mother. Rev. C. W. Rench. of the First Urethren church ofliciating. The bride- wort- a i-'own of r'ark blur- satin and corsa.ue of white roses. Mr. and Mrs. Voder will b- at home to friends after July 4 at l?n S. Main st. As a Lohipllrncnt to Miss Mari' Grander, whose marriave will take place' this week. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Cratr-rer. SO!) S. Rush st.. entertained with a fiimily dinner at their home Sunday, plaas were laid for nine gu ests.
Revelations of a Wife My Heart and My Husband BY ADELE GARRISON
pr.oiK-,
Personals
At Wheelock's
At VVheelock's
Cottage Dinner Sets
For the summer home. Sets for serving six people may be had in a number of attractive patterns at low prices.
Composition 6 Dinner Platts 6 Tea Cups and Saucers 6 Bread and Butter Plates 6 -Fruit Saucers 1 Vegetable Dish I Meat Platter These sets priced at $5.45, $6.45, $7.95, $10.85. George H. Wheelock & Company
Mit.-: Esther Dean Crawford of! i Spokane, Wash., is the house gur-t
of Mrs. Isabel Grieper, 1031 Cleveland a v.. prior to her departure for the Philippine islands. Miss Manila Cudworth of Chicago will arrive Thursday to be Mrs. Gnegtr's guest for a week. Mr. and Mrs. M. I-:. Collmer, 12:'.S Meade St., have returned from a motor trip to Cleveland, Ohio. Mrs. Hichard Klbel. 605 Portage av., returned Monday from a visit with relatives at Council Bluffs, la., and Kansas City, Mo. John liertle and family, 222 N. Francis st., will leave soon for a motor trip through Wisconsin. Miss Mabel Rimuf of Kankakee, 111., is the guest of Mrs. II. O. Spencer, 2 3) S. Francis st. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. lleckiuan and Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Williams of Lafayette, Ind., are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Stewart, 30S W. Colfax av. Kverctt Van Derbeek of Chicago has been the guest for several days of his mother. Mrs. Bertha Van Derbeck. 134 S. Laurel st. Mrs. Charles H. Townsend of Ios Angeles, e'alif.. is visiting her mother. Mr?-. Margaret Ream, 1522 S. Michigan st.
Kitchen Economies
now to maki: somi: del idol's CONTRIItl TIONS TO PICNIC LUNCHEONS. II re are a few suggestions for the picnic basket. They make it po.vibjo to prepare many things in advance, and so the housekeeper can put up tho picnic meal on the eventful day with comparatively little last-minute effort. Saiuluich I Illings. Ham and olive chopped fine, slightly moistened to a paste with maye'nnaise. Left-over cold chicken and blanched almonds chop; cd line and moiMened with a little cream or white sauce. Cream cheese and peai ut butter mixed together, slightly .salted. Mixed chopptd nuts and chopped olives with mayonnaise dressing. Laked beans mashed with chili sauce .end mayonnaise or boiled dressing. 11. iked sardine sprinkled with lemon juice. Chopped cold mutton seasoned with mint sauce. Cream cheese f.n.l mashed bananas. Hard-boiled, sliced eg. sliced tomato and mayonnaise. 'Lettuce and peanut butter. Salad lUid Vegetables. Chopped cucumber?, seasoned with onion juice and mayonnaise. Chopped apples on lettuce leaves. Sliced radish and diced tomatoes. Sliced cold beets and watercress. Cold slaw and mayonnaise. Shredded cabbage, chopped cucumbers and diced tomatoes. Ie-?-ortH. Raw fruit is the best dessert for a. yicnic. Especially during tho sea-
It's a queer thing about that te
Alice Holcombe s.:id re-
i tive ly, unconsciously answering my mental query as explicitly as it' I had actually clothe-el it in words. 'Tin eont was pulled away from the- base as if some oi.e had janked it from its connection. Kenneth thinhs Milly might have grasped as it as she iill -it is right near the spot but, of courre, nobody really knows how , it huiipentd." "Put that seems a most plausible solution," J said eagerly, determined to stifle (lie almost certain knowledge I had that the telephone e-ord in Kenneth Stoekbridge's home hail not been jerkr d out by his wife's struggles, but earlier whin something siniste'r. threatening. h a d preeaiptorily stopped her abusive language. " les, it does," she returned inditTruently, and I saw that the incident of the telephone disconnection was but a ninor detail to her, that her brain and heart were full of some- othr phase f the tragedy she was retailing to me. In another moment, she had ghen aiteted voice to her fears. 'Hut the thing that frightens m1 most of all is Kenneth's command to you and me- to ke-ep away from him." she said, eying, me with an oddly furitive air, as if she wished to watch my reception ef her statement. "Suppose you tell me just what he said," I answered quietly. "He only spoke to me once tho whole evening," she returned obediently, and then he seized an epportunity when the others were- so engaged that there wui no one within possible hearing. " 'Alice,' he said, and hi-: voice was so mournfully sedemn that it chilled n I must tell you something quickly, and jou must promiM to obey me blindly, for I haven't time, even if I could, to tell ou the reason for my request. Neither you nor Mrs. Graham must come to see me or try to communicate with me In any. manner until I give you leave. I shall not return
to school for a lew days' he hesitated so oddly when lie said that 'and you must cairy em the work Jointly as best ou can. I will transmit any messages for you through the- school board. Now, understand. I want you both tei go to the home of Milly's parents, send flowers and do anything von
can to show jour respect for her. Hut 1 must be tirfsofj with both of yon for a liir..e. Tell Mrs. (Jraham te keep those record'? f mine until J send an accreditee! messenger lor them. She will undrstand what I mean.' lo you?" She hadn't meant to ask me tho question; it had. burst from her inadvertently, and I could se-o that vhe was uncomnioiisly harboring a feeling of jealous resentment beeause of the fact that Kenneth Stoekbridge had entrusted me with papers of which she knew nothing. "Oh. surely!" I returneel carelessly. "We were discussing the work of my clas.-es s-ome weeks ago, and be was kind e-nou;h to lenei me a number of papers he had compile. 1 concerning those particular branches. You know how methodical he is about those thlnps. I suppose ho wished to send me a re-minder to take care of them, or else feared I might inadvertently return them at this time when for his own reasons he doesn't wish to see us." As I saw my friend's face unconsciously brighten at my carefully concocted excuse I said to myself grimly that J was fast becoming a champion falsler. Rut there see-mod to be no edher course open to me. I couldn't break faith with my imhappy principal Ust this woman whom he loved so elevotedly guess Ihr seere't which he had kept from her for so many weary' years. I wish I knew the meaning of it all," she said drearily after a moment's pause. "I I am so afraid but I mustn't think of that. Cut one thing is certain. Milly mcst have left some message about us, done something In her crazy jealousy, or he wouldn't have sent us this caution. What do you think."
son when .ho watery fruits are available they should be used abundantly for their wholesomcness. not to speak of the minimum effort which such foods leave to the overburdened packer of the picnic basket. A w hole melon is about as delightful and cooling . a dessert as could be selected. Sometimes raw fruits are not easy to carry, or are inconvenient in final service. Pineapple, berries and r.ther easily crusheel fruits that are on hand cannot always be handled safely. In that case they may be most gracefully erved in the shape of spread on very thin slices of bread, sandwich fashion. Shre-dded pineapple with sweet mayonnaise-, sliced or.m;eshed bananas, thinly sliced pineapple i lac d between slices of sweet apple and halved strawberries and sliced bananas all are good "spreads." To savo the nuisance of carrying
sugr and lemons and othr para
phernalia for making a cold drink, it's a comfortable plan to prepare the essence ef the drink at home assuming, of course, that fresh water available at the picnic place. To carry a bottle of fruit syrup with which to flavor a drlr.k is more convenient than to carry the various articles to make it and run the risk of spilling the incrraients durin transforation.
Two Killed and Eleven Injured as House Falls
RLTPALO. N. Y., June 23. Two persons are dead. 11 Injured and 12 missing as the result of the collapse of a lodging houso here today. An explosion of gas on the second Moor ef the four-story structure is believed to have caused the accident. All but one wall ami a small part of the roof fell. Nearby buildings were badly damaged by falling debris. Little hop is held out for those still buried in the ruins.
axnoi'nctimitnt: Reginning next Wednesday, July 7, Th- Rllsworth Store will close at 1 2 : T. 0 o'clock Wedne-day afternoons during the month of July and August. TIU-: ELIVORVH STORE .. 2 3 3-20 Advt.
tfeai'.'aiy tie Complexion
IN TEN DAYS Kadinola CREAM Tie Useqaaled Beiotifier Uf i arid EnJor$J ' Dy Thoumnda Guaranteed to remove tan, freckles, pimple, livcr-j pots, etc. Extreme cues 20 days.
Rids pcrcs and ti?u of impurities. Leaves the skia clear, sift, healthy. At leading toilet counters. If they haven't it, by mail, o sizes, COc. and 51.20. National Tolle-t Co.. Inris. Trnn. Sold by Central Drug1 Store. South Ber.d; lied Cm? Ph&rrnacy. MIsh uwuka. ar.i others.
Sale of Women's Low Shoes Sale Starts Tomorrow Morning at 9 o'Clock Exclusive Welt and Turn, Bench Made Shoes.
$10.00 to $12.50 Low Shoes at Ö?l
$12.50 to $16.50 Low Shoes at
S6.25
See Big Ad on Page 13
Another Bis Silk
Also Starts Tomorrow Morning;
Sale
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40-inch Crepe de Chines and printed Georgettes, $1.69 yd. One lot of plain and fancy Silks including 40-inch Foulards, values to $4.50, sale price, $2.00. 36-inch extra quality of navy blue Chiffon Taffetas, $4.00 values, sale price, $2.50.
La3t week while in New York we bought thousands of yards of fine silks from manufacturers and jobbers at big reductions. On sale tomorrow. 2000 yards Tricoiettes, Sylvanettes, plain and fancy, all shades, $5.95 to $7.50 values, $2.95. 40-inch Sport Silks, values to $7.50, at $2.95. Mallinson's white Khaki-Kool, $4.50 values, sale price, $3.50. 40-inch Sport Silks and Sport Satins, $7.50 values, $3.95 yd. 33-inch Imported Natural Pongee, $1.50 values, 95c yd. 33-inch beautiful Tub Shirtings, values to $5.00 yd. Sale prices, $1.95, $2.50 and 40-inch plain Georgette Crepe, 40 shades
to choose from, $3.95 values. $2.95 yd. 40-inch Crepe Meteor, $5.00 values, $2.95. $3.50 36-inch Chiffon Taffeta. $1.95. 40-inch Satin Charmeuse, all evening shades and colors for street wear. $5.00 values, $3.95.
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Up to July the lOtli This bank will pay interest at 4 on all savings deposits made up to and including July 10th. v That is if you start a savings account on any of the first ten days in July, your account will draw interest dating from July 1st. It's a good time now to start a savings account and it takes but one dollar or more if you wish to open such an account. Member of the Federal ReMrve.
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AMERICAN TTRUST CO
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