South Bend News-Times, Volume 37, Number 201, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 19 July 1920 — Page 7

flOVDAY MORMNCi, JITY 19. lOIrt DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF WOMEN

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

Clubs

Circles

SOCIETY

Suffrage

Philanthrophy

Social Calendar' HONEYMOON DAYS

Motvlay Tlfraber; of tho Thalia rsorcrity will hold a t-hort business moctinj; Monday evening at th hom of Mit Holdman. ÜZZ K. Indiana a. Th Standard Hearers of thr Trinity M. E. church will meet with th Mifjvf Dorothy and Gail Jorus, Harrison av. A r'cnlc w:!l be he'.d at Howard rar' by th munbsn of tho Ladies' auxiliary of th National Association of Letter Carrier. The regular mectmar "f th Au'f n V.. U. C. No. 11, will l).. hold In the old court houo. The Vour.tr Wnmn's Imo Missionary society. The Que n Father circle and the Horn Guards of th Grace M. K. church will entertain with a picnic ai th Four Mile Hrid ge. Mr. J. C. nr. ar.de, i ; j; Washington a v., will be ho?t to tho Ui'li'-.' vl society of the iunnMdo Presbyterian church. V"!n'da v Th ra:tnt VivV. C. T. U. will h'l I a mrrtln? in th- nature ; a picnic to re held at rottawatomio park, or If the day K unpleasant : i the homo of Mrs. J. H. Ii anier. 1 .' L r. c -1 n V a y , w -1 . A pi'-r. ic- outing will he held by Th- n','vmt"-r.s of the V. C .un.-hinf 1 h ' I f ! don laU . Members of the Indies' Hible cla.s i m-- i,h U-.KhU will ni'et in 'h- fhur h annex. Mi.-. William MH.t-nKtch. 1 1 r I. I'alvert t . will h..;.s f the I'ly.-nmith Needle cla.-s. The h'nowflnke clwl will entertain with a picnic outing. Th- ruinu.il picnic r.f th Wanil.i Hirsjr elicit- will ! hel l at St. .!.- ph. Mih. A buln-ss r.T'ftiiifr will I.e held by Thf- iJw )n circle at the W. '. V. hall. -Mrs Vand rhnff, ;lv s. "-h t . will entertain members of the I nd pendent cdub. Th Jolly Nim- riuh will rn-et with Mrs. Celiu i;url'".. I ort.iL;.- av. A bridj-'c party vi!l h. hld at thi South Html Country elut. 'I htirtlay Mrmhors of the Zion Kvanireh.-,J (hiirch will rnmt Thur-.lay ;tftrnouu in the parish school. Th- T'Vin nt, ..,.'.vin' -ir-l will hold ;i rntin-,' at th hum.' .f Mrs. Harry Vanrh rbei M S.vth t

I liver Park. Mrs. Kva Peed, ldr.1 N. Wilb.ir . will entertain th memdu rs ,t ?h F-.ee Hivo club Tiiiiixlui, an all day metinir. Pontine business will bo transacted at n mctiriK f th Woman's auxiliary of the American lion tu bn held at Jieyler hall. Hurek.i club men: brs will tt cnrtair.ed by Mr?. Iknry Mrtrti.n, SM .". r.ind.-ey st.

Th I.i1iff' Aid -c-ciety of th Jlori.s r--i nrdUh Lntbr.n phinrh i

will t:.t-rt Thursda afurnoon in the hiin Ii parlors. Mrs. Charles Puss Mill rntrrb-in

'I'" Woman"? le:t;u t.f th- First! M ihodi-t church at hf r Mimnicr h !.) at Diamond bkc. I brl(l;i 1 Th Woman's union of th First ' r.ar-ti-T rhurrh will -ntrtaia witlti a picnic at Pottawatomie park. ' A party will b.- i;ien by members ff tho Moonlight club at tin. Imnn- ; Mr. and Mrs. Walter I. Urauns- i dorf. 221 St. Peter st. j The regular meeting: of the Wa- : pita Sewing1 circk will Km h -'A with I Mrs. Alta P:els, teS ' n n-- 1 a nia J j Saturday The Friendship Hiblt elays of the i .'...11 "f l 1 I

' j i .vicnun cnnrrn w in noil a tin-. Sunday Mr. Hays, Lincoln wa W. rd.. ill be hesi,-s to a supper honoring tlx- m nil rs of t)i(- ,nli s' Aid scitv of the liwruth Memorial t h ." ch. Union for Child Health Formed

Bu Juanita Hamel i Lo Cho Women

are Financiers

I

THERE is so much of happiness bound up in leaves is all the "talk" they need to express their love hearts that yearn for each other knowing full Hearts too full for utterance eye that flash mesmeasure of gladness when they are together ' ?apes of devotion lips that are mo?t eloquent when that the whisper of the breezes cossipinc with the silent these are the glory of their honeymoon.

iiv .iHAvrrrri: i.ovijov Thc Council for Coordinating Chi.'! Health activitirfj has tcntly i-.-n formed at Watihlnictim. I i -pite of Us rather involvnl ar.'l li-nthy titl. its object siraplificatiin. It w.mi. to coordinate th

w .;; of the various national child, health activities s'i that much of the! orient duplication and interference j of T.c ncthitj with anotliir may be: M-ninatcd. i It i belied that under th dir rrtion of hi cer.ral body the bui- , of promotisiir the health of ' ihildren cati forward ns never before, all the etfk rt and monev

now wasted in vain repetition goinv' to extend the work. Most cf the grtat national child health activities already are members of the council, including the Ked Cr.-y, American Child HyTiene. National Child Labor and Public Health, and it is hoped that all other national associations of the kind may b added as soon as the movement is tairly under way. .T'.ist as unified control and a v.ellueiihed program, mutyally ur.cH-r-hSficJ. v rt necessary to th' successful conduct of the war, so pome such central organization for mapping t the werk is -s;ntial if :iny activity of many branches is to be- successfully and (conomicallv citrriol on. The idta may wdl be applieti to liK id as w ell as national health ar.d welfare work.

Personals

Revelations of a Wife My Heart and My Husband BY ADELE GARRISON

Alonjr buy highways of octin travel, land links between Japan and Formosa, not far from China's coastwise routes, yet visited by oly two or three white persons a year such are the L,oo Choo (Luchu or Ityukyu Islands. "Loo Choo is a land full of the indescribable charm and mystery of pathos of a vanishing race," writes Hoy Chapman Andrews to the National Geographic hociety. "Put. although it has been 40 years since there sounded th death knell of thii little kingdom, Loo Choo is not yet Japan. The traveler realizes this before he lands. The pine-clothed. tomb-dotted hills which form the background of the cities of Naha and Shuri have an unfamiliar look and the pretty tiled roofs of the diminutive houses. Jut visible over the surrounding gary ptone walls, give fascinating hints of what may be found beyond their lacquered gateways. On their entire 900 square miles of land only one whit man, an American missionary, is resident. llousht Red Lacquer. "With our money changed we began to look about to upend it, for Loo Choo is the home of tho red lacquor famous throughout the world. Much of it is exported, and the finest of the boxes, bowls, trays, tables, etc., which are in daily use in Japan and China and sold to tourists throughout the Orient, come from the little city of Naha, or Shuri, its neighbor across the hills. The lacquer ware, when first made is a dull brown, but really rirst-clais pieces Improve with age and soon change to a beautiful vermillion, becoming brighter and clearer the longer they are used. "When we came to buy lacquer we were greatly surprised to rind that bargaining had no place in Loo Choo. Without exception, the first price asked for an article was the one for which it was sold. Never in the Orient had we met with a .similar condition. Conduct All Ilusincss. "It was interesting to tlnd. also, that the women of Loo Choo conduct all business and have charge of everything pertaining to money with th single exception of spending it. The market, where in the morning trading for vegetables and fruit is carried on, roembles a suffrage meet carried on. resembles a suffrage meeting place, for among the crowded mass of humanity not a man is to be seen. "The straight backs and erect carriage of the Loo Choo women are due to the custom of carrying everything upon their heads. No matter v. hat the object, be it large or small, it is perched upon their thick, black hair, and oT they walk in the most nonchalant manner, apparently paying not the slightest attention to keeping the object in place. "The most striking thing about Naha and Shuri are the high stone walls which surround the houses. These walls are generally covered by a small banyan tree, called the goja maru, growing like a great vine and sending out numberless roots which sometimes reach a hundred

feet from the original stem. "These alo serve as a hiding place for a snake, a kind of adder, six or seven feet long, which is the curse of the Islands. Their bite is generally fatal in a few hours, and many people are killed by them ea'h year."

Henry 1 Pimm, Way F.. is spending Indianapolis.

1J21 Mnc!n the summer in

Thousands were used to

land. They wer road rollt rs and till up holes.

of German repair roads

helmets in Eng-

rollt w t re

d out flat also used

by to

At Wheelock's At Wheelock's Incense and Incense Burners An extensive display of these attractive novelty articles. iY Japanese Idol Burner 50c Fiji Mountain Burner 75c Metal Burners $1.00 and $2.00 Hindu Boy $2.00 and $2.50 iS Incense Set Burner and Incense packed together in gift box, 65c and $1.00 Shobido Cube Incense from Japan 10c per box Stick Incense two styles 15c, 25c per box Cone Incense in boxes Orange, Cherry Blossom and Violet 25c per box Garden of Eiden Incense in cubes ÄfK

nt 33r hnx AT7H R ä

vynemai renummi; 'rCv'X fcUd

7 rrr.;v7.

Other styles up 24VrS to si.oo

See this display Main Floor. George H. Wheelock & Company

For a moment as I gazed upon the blank sheet of paper which Dicky had seen fit to enclose in the envelope he had given his mother for me I "saw red' in primitive feminine fashion and could have shrieked my anger and humiliation at the trick my husband had played upon mo. Then, I remembered that the keen eyes of my mother-in-law were fixedly watching me. I controlled my wrath with an effort of will power that cost me more than I realized and laughed lightly as I crumpled the paper in my hand. "Poor Dicky," I said carelesslv. "I

J wonder if nothing will ever cure him

; of being absent-minded. T suppose I he is carrying the note to me around ! in his pocket under the impression It is a sheet of blank paper, while j he has put no writing at all into ' this envelope." "Do I look like 9 fool?" was my j mother-in-la ws response- to this contribution of mine. "You'd better I own up the whole thin?. Richard i simply handed me that note in order j to pull the wool over my eyes. Hut," i grimly, "he never has been able to j do it yet. and I'm not quite in my ! dotage, although you and he prob- ; ably think I am. No. you've had a disgraceful row and I don't wonder that Richard tried to get out of it hv r rrt rnrllnr "nr ThoH nrVi a ruVi

of orders he couldn't get home toi"11-1

! sleep for a month said a lot of ; them had come in yesterday and that j he had told you about them." J bless my stars for my mother- : in-law's garulity. She had given me j my cue. If Dickey had betrayed j no inkling of our disagreement I assuredly would not be the one to

1 aneer at him I could not heln a i l"0

J twitching of my lip as I rememI bered how often the crude phrase j was upon his lips. I "He did speak of the orders." I affirmed unwinkingly, alvintf my ; conscience with the remembrance ' that upon our meter ride home he j had said his work was picking up most encouragingly. "And you are i utterly mistaken, mother, in your

theory that Dicky and I have had any disagreement over Alice Holcombe." "Well, if It wasn't she it was somethir.,r else," she asserted stubbornly. "1 know the earmarks of a row when 1 e them, but, of course, if you make up your mind not to say anything, why. I suppost- you'll be as mulfsh as you generally are. Now, never mind standing on one foot in your hurry to get away. 1 want to hear all about what happened today. I feel it in ray bones that omethir.g rrirhty unpleasant i goirz to develop from that woman's death." "Your premonition justified thi ticie," I said stiffly. ir. Stock-

bridge was arrested this afternoon upon suspicion of having killed his wife." "You don't tell me"' she exclaimed, her face and eyes alight with the enthusiastic interest with which she invariably greets a. mystery. Dicky more than once has remarked irreverently that "the old dear ought to have been a sob sister on a yellow journal, she has such an eye for people weltering in their gore," and the ludicrous phrasing came back to me as I saw the querulous lines fade out of her face, leaving it purposeful, animated. I saw with a little thrill of relief that she had forgotten all about the affairs, peaceful or quarrelsome, of Dickey and me. and resolved to gratify her appetite for thrills to the utmost of my ability. To this end I drew a chair near hers and sitting down told her as much of Milly Stockbrldge's story as I dared without betraying how intimate was my knowledge of the tragedy and the events leading up to it. then related Alice Holcombes account of the eoroner'8 inquest. I tried to make my friend's connection with the affair as sketchy as possible; thought I had succeeded until after I had finished and my mother-in-law had relaxed somewhat from the breathless attention

which she had followed my

-".cry, bhe said caustically:

"If that red-headed friend of yours doenr.'t look out she'll find herself held as an accessory or whatever they call it. She teems to be making an 13-carat idiot of herself. For my part 1 wouldn't put it past her to havf slipped something into the other woman's tea at that. Whal'a

matter?"

I knew my face must have betrayed the inexplicable feeling which had recurred to mr at the " oinonplace phrase, "the other woman' tea," which my mother-in-law had used. Why ?hould 1 be haunted at every turn by the memory of Milly Stockbridge's hand reaching out greedily for the packets of tea which I had offered her at the school .live? H i . t n i i could 1 confide my psychic horror

A search fcr 10 cages of rum buried 150 years ago by Indian.- is being made at The Pas. Manitoba. The rum was taken from a French trading party and a great-grandson of a member of the tribe recently revealed the Information.

The fruit of a certain Ceylon tree grom with an indentation in its side as if it had been bitten by a, person. The fruit is orange r"d but poisonous The species ha? Keen named

Useful Chinese Stool It was a tiny little bedroom in an apartment, but it really was surprisirg how much space there was in it, after all. Although the room contained a single brass bed, a chiffonier, a generous-sied dressing table, a bedside table and a square closet built into one corner of the room, it was not crowded in the least. Its occupant was even heard to remark, "I can turn around two or three times like a dog before I go to bed, and not bump into anything." The only mirror, however, was the one over the dressing table and to utre that, of course, one had to sit down. t a chair was needed. There did not seem to be one to spare anywhere in the apartment and as the bort of chair which the owner of the room wanted to go with that pretty mahogany table would cost more money than she eared to put Into such a piece of furriture at that time, she looked about for something else. One member of the family proposed covering a box and using that with a nice little cretonne cover on top, but that idea did not appeal; no makeshift was wanted, bat, rather, something that would "be lasting and satisfactory. Then the inspiration came. Just when It was needed. Why not get one of those Chinese wicker stools, which could be pushed right in under the dressing table when not in use? Uptown, in an oriental shop, the stool waa found, exactly the right thing lor the place It was to occupy. It was small and round, so light that it could easily be carried about unywhere In the apartment, yet strongly enough built to be durable. It fitted right into the room, as though it had been Included In the original plan, cost much less than a chair or mahogany bench. and proved both attractive and useful In almost every other room In tho apartment, at various times.

K'OMEiX TO ESTABLISH OFFICES AT COLUMBUS COLUMBL'S. O.. July 15. Fol

lowing Gov. Cox's promise of support yesterday, leaders of the national woman's party announced tonight that they have established headquarters here to seek additional help from the members of the democratic national committee, who will meet here next Tuesday, in obtaining rati.nce.tion by the Tennessee legislature of the federal woman suffrage amendment. Miss Anita Pollitzer, national legislative secretary Is In charge of a committee of women who will interview every member cf the demoocratie committee during their stay here. Later next week, It was announced, a committee will visit Marlon to Interview members of the republican national committee when they arrive there to confer with Sn.

Store Hours: 9:00 a. m. to 6:00 p. m. Saturday to 9:30 p. m.

AN

ew

Silk

This store closes Wednesdays at Ayt)'4 12:30 p. m. during July and August. , j '

ressS t-l

Make Yours From Ellsworth's Silks now selling at very moderate prices. The charm and beauty of these silks will make vou want a new

dress jmmediately you see them.

;gr Note Prices See Windows Come In

News of special prices given here: 33-inch imported natural Pongee, $1.50 values, 95c 40-inch fancy Georgettes, worth up to $4.00 a yard, only $1.59. The former $2.50 Crepe de Chines marked down to $1.69.

cv

C3M

Tricolettes and Minonettes

Th ese much desired fabrics that sold for $5.95 to $7.50 in all shades of the different colors, prices down to $2.95 a yard. Ivory white Khaki Kool specially priced at only $3.50 a yard.

Crepe Meteors come in the following shades: Flesh, pink, plum. Burgundy. Also these colors: Ivory white, African brown and black. These high grade silks sold for $5.50 before prices came down. Their

makers took sharp losses; the gain is your at $3.95 per yard. We have left a small lot of $4.50 value fancy Foulards marked with a "good-bye" price, $1.95.

Big Bargains In Silk Remnants

Store hours 8:30 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. Saturdays during the months of July and August 6:00 p. m. Our store open ali day Wednesdays.

MSL

ÖHMBIY

114 South MicM&an Street, Ncsx WiHrtea Avco.

Yar

Go

oos a

Big Red

ucuo

Clearance of Wash Fabrics The materials embrace a big variety of the soft, sheer, filmy kinds for trie prettiest summer frocks to the sturdy, practical ginghams for children's wear a splendid range of patterns in delicate and decided colorings at prices that mean real savings. Chiffonette Organdie, worth 50c, Sale price, yard 37c Middy Beach Cloth, 36-inch; regular 69c value, yard 47c SOFT SHEER VOILES Big Reductions 59c Voiles, Sale price 43c 75c Voiles, Sale price 53c $1.00 Voiles, Sale price . . . 75c $1.50 Voiles, Sale price $1.15 July Clearance of LACES AND EMBROIDERIES One lot of Embroidery Banding, 3 inches wide; values up to 49c. Sale price, yard 10c

July Clearance Sale of Silks

Liberty Satins, 40-inch, in colors; regular $5.50 values. Sale price, per yard $4.00 Tub Silk Shirting, 32 inch; regular $3.50 value, yard $2.89 One lot of Silks, different kinds and colors; regular $2.00 values. Sale price, yard . . .$1.35

1 ! f A

Silk and Wool

Poplin, 40 inch; $2.00 and $2.50 value. Sale price, yard $1.19 Georgette Crepe, 40 inch; values up to $3.50 yard $2.25 Children's Dress Plaids, 36 inch; $1.25, $1.50 value, yard 95c

(Hill Oixn August 10th) GOLDEN EAGLE INN Over l'OS-210 South Michigan St Chine? and American Dishes Dost Scrviw Dancing and Music

CARS WASHED AT Auto Market JerTeron at Lafayette Blvd.

Notice to all Grocers and Fruit Dealers On and after Monday. July l?th. I will do busir.t.-s on a strictly cash ha!s. making krlrlly ctsh prices to all. I. U. lirTZBACH.

Mabel Hawkins Produ--r cf Distinctive Uni-rlo and Srh-ntific oi .--ctiuiT. nor, j. m. s. iud. M.un sir,

Try XEK'S-TIMFS " W JL

RED STAR nimioiT VAitn: on. ntovh Works l.fce :"is A cr-mpl'-te stri.-'K or. htr.-i. WAitvru r,no. 2 'JO smith Mi lii.m si.