South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 8, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 8 January 1922 — Page 20
SUNDAY, JANUARY 8. 1922 20 i i , J. ? A I ' fit'; s i' -v V t ! V I -0 .rr 0 SOCIAL SET OPENS ARMS TO MINISTER Hold Children's Interest Through Animal Friends Names Needs of Modern Women She Teaches Teachers i! ii THIRD
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
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Hungarian Count a? Envoy to United States Pleases NewYork Leader?. Ni;w TOH.K. Jan. 7. N'w York's society ft re(fl.,'T,'l atlsfActlon over t'nx anrMr.rnr.t from Buapt that Count Iarzlo z.hr.yl hai Iffn nppointcJ HurK:ir!n minister
to th LnitI Ftaf s and tr.at rus American v.-:f-. fomerly G!n'3 M. Vanerbilt, woul.l hold Fvray In diplematlo Wa5hir.:ton. That rich would th-j c.i!e had rather Lcn The counter F?-r.t much time In Switzerland durlng' th- war. Vith America In the ff,n?ict. Ker American hc'.'ilr.n valued at almost nine rnllllon dcl'.ars wire foIzcI y the al:-n rirT'rty custodian anJ later th countffs started proceedings to ncovr thrm. Sh5 cxnio to this country with hr husband a short WcMilcMl 13 Years Ajo. 'I It r-.'.'ln fh it ur.it '1 r.- viun of a fatnüy titled lhre hundred yfars ago and an American girl who i:ii.rr:t-d iioin hr f it !i- r f r i r than l'j million dollars', recurred 1 ears ago thii month at the Fifth av. homo of w the counters" mother, Mrs. Cornelius Vanderbllt. It wa a brilliant r5emblag-e that drew ambassador.titied foreisrners nr.d th headquarters Ktaff of Amrrlea's foclal s.-t. Although it wJia a mixed marri.n,'" tho count bdti a Catholic a ml the bri'le a merr.b'-r or tho I'rotestarit I-Ipiscopai church th.fi pop'.' trav tha union his apjtolic bhrr.-ir.. The count went down to tho city hall and paid $1 for hi marriige Ucen?o Ju. in anybody r-lso. A few ilay beforu ho ar.d his iancce Ivid signed a contract to share th ir
fortunes. After their marriap-e fiv
millions dolara waa cent from
York and deposited to their account In Budapest. Counter Xotdl I'or Cliarlty. The countes: then waa 21 ycar3 old, a beauty who had rpent m.uc-i of her tlmo In Kuropo studying ylnln? from Jean de Kcrcko. Tho American girl toon took a hand In lludapest's municipal affair. Annoyed by tho rattle of tram cars that ran ly her palace, hho gave J50.CO0 to tho city to have tho tracks removed to a more distant Mrcet, the money Kolr.gr to the poor. In 1911 h was decorated by the Austrian emperor for her works of charity.
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liY IllTH AUKLING. FORT HAYS. Kan.. Jan. 4. If you would Bucc'-ssf ully Jeach children, find what they are most Interested in and u?c that a a medium thiou?h which to hold their attention. That's what Mi?3 Lulu McKee 13 toxins teach' rs at the Kansas- Ftatc
Normal school, she Is asittar.t pro-I feasor of education at the school and
Is known throughout Kan?as aa th one woman who can touch with a Kind magic the hearts of little boys w'ho havtj hardened toward everyone el.e because no one else understood. Tatiffht Kindergarten. Miss McKee uod to be a kindergarten teacher and that experience pava hera firm belief tliat llvir.K pets have more interest for the average child than any other thin?. -This belief." ays Miss McKee, "came about through a Christmas story that I started to tell son;e years ago and never finished. "Our exercises that day had propressed nicely and quietly. I was telling tho story of the Christ Child when Kddle, a little boy who had never teen fond of school discovered that ho had a puppy In the lining of
his coat. "It was a cunning thing black and about elsht inches long. It caught the attention of every child. I
IIASY' I'lUJSSl.VC;. An easy way to take the wrinkles out of a cloth eklrt is to hang it up in th bathroom and turn on the hrl vnt'-r, eb bing the door fo that the rooms fi'.ls with eteam. Allowed tj ren.ain lianging a time the wrinkles disappear. Such treatment i good for crep.- materials to which u hot iron could not be applied.
.MILS. LY1) Kr ilOYT.
CHINESE WIFE IS
SUING FOR WRIT
Y.n:ii kits. If water Fpots appear on your Kloves keep tho gloves on and rub rather vigorously with a cloth whim 1 barely damp. Do not rub hard enough to injure tho kid and do not use? ga?ollr.e.
Fifteen Husbands
1JY" amci: koiii:. SEW YORK, Jan. 7. Seven Cardinal Thoughts for the Modern Woman. I asked Mr. Lydi? Hoyt, th most talked -of woman in New York today, to All that order. Mrs. Hoyt now known to the theater world as Julia Jloyt Is a most modern woman a superlativo w oman. She had everything to mako of her a elf-lndu!gcnt, oclal parasite superlative beauty, superlative social position, wealth yet In her dressing loom fit tho Astor theater, where rho Is appearing with Willam Faversham in "The Squaw Man," she talked with real seriousness and understanding. Her Cardinal Thought.. And she gave n:e the Seven Cardinal Thoughts: 1. "The modern woman must have work and a big Interest of her own regardless of her social position. "Xothlnp In the world counts for happiness like the realization of accomplishment. "Every healthy woman should tcalizp maternity, not merely ns a duty to her marrlaco but to her self-fulfillment. I have had two children, but lost them both. 4. "A mother who brings up a big family of fine children in a personal way ha one of the greates' of careers. Hut a rich womap w ho ha.s
v.aited with my story while the puppy played with the children. Then I suggested that E-Jdie take it home, and he left. "Shortly Eddie and his brother John returned this time with an
oppossum. 'ine 'possum was ex
amined and petted. He hung by hi
tail on a stick. And I didn't tell my
Kory! f.i i i. ,
"Then and there I realized that nothing hhort of the lire department
or a circus parade could get the attention of those children i oic Celestial Indifferent as I was helpless! Hut I had learned! -r-n what would arouse the Interest of j Hill)!))', Millionaire, Eddle-and other children. Leaves Hearth. "Since then I have become worn
fdioulders still ha-j time for other ae-I and more convinced that j-ince in-j HONOLULU, T. II., Jan. 7. Mar-
tlvitiey. terest must be the basis or the! ,,Th mo lern woman by re-' acquisition of knowledge and since! fusinu- tf i-' f ognizt- them is doingthere is no interest for children lik-'
more tf break down artificial social ! inat or living creatures, living crea
barrio iv than any other force today. 0. "You hear a lot about the snohlihness of the 'socially elect' toward the working classes let me t' 11 you the snobbery of the working class toward tho 'socially elect i. just is strong. I know!
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at the
first methodist church N. Main St. TODAY AT 7:30 P. M. SPEAKER: Dr. Warren F. Sheldon of New York Crowds at former University Nights have been well pleased. Dr. Sheldon has a virile present-day message. You will want to hear him.
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MISS LULLT McKEE ant one. of ircn OWN PETS. IN SET: EDIIE AND THE I'lTl'Y THAT OAV K MISS MuKKK IIEn TKACHINO IDEAS.
: d for CS years, mothe r of 14 chll Ii n and now suing for a divorce such is the plight of Mrs. L. Ah
tares should become a part of every ; J.eong, wife of a hading Chinese curieulum. n.-.n haut of this city, whoso fortune "Even children who seen not to i i estimated at cloe to the million barn, who are really -stupid. can ' mark. often be reached through an interest! In h r divorce comp! tint, which in pets." 'amoiiR other thing.--, alleges bitramy . I against Ah Leong, the wife of the
reliant
7. "Social position should not, his earresses. Grooms I advise never j M ory
I1.UIUH..I;) a um. 111 an inuiu ui in i u) cease considering um w ile as a w alth should. Hut the law works , sweetheart. A woman likes to have
both ways, the poor and the rich her husband tell her he loves her! suffer equally In being restricted in 2 years after marriage ns well asr self-expr-s-donV j she did on the day before don't! Mrs. Jloyt. whose beauty over the , forget that. footlights is not een so dazzling as "If Tni' firt?t dose of advice doesn't'
;it closi r mnue. stood, a tall. velt. v" -.-mui mo num me ui-;
prince tells a romantic
of how the sum of $280, with
j which the couple started upon their Mrs: business venture years ago.
h is thrown in that time to a fortune of r.early $1,000,000. Starting with a little procery 'tore, in which tho wife served as
d.divery boy and general roustabout, the couple worked their way through, various enterprises, at ore time failing and being compelled to start anew, with Ah Eeong working iu a ekrlcal capacity. It was durirg this time that a little, money w as mvt-d, which, Invtsted in a small business, grow littlo by littlo until other $iorcf about the city were purchased, investments were made, and the Ah
'out
fter H ays h
Leon? farr.ily found Itself
tlie woods" financially. i At abou: this tin.?, alleges Mr.-; 1 U Ah Leong. the rising merchant be- k an to give thought to other women : f! women who had not become ob! and worn a? 'he had through the L'j
the family fortune. And now after
:;s year.s of It, Mrs. .Ali Leong say
tint she 15 tired of the Dargain and
that she will accept a settlement of half the fr.mil y fortune and custody of tho minors among her 14 children, and go her way a w iser woman Ah Ixong was planning a. vacation in China when the divorce proceedings were instituted. He hs lilcd counter-suit, alleging tli.it he and his pre?e-nt wife wore never L '.tally married.
Tliere was a time, back when woman was hardier than che is today, when biting winds, damp air and siubh underfoot did not so much endanger her health. But this exposure is not necessary now. A simple and safe solution of the problem is to send your family washing to us especially during these days while the weather man is surly. We pick up laundry work Monday, Tuesday Wednesday and Thursday and get every bundle back the same weeltMuhawaka, Nilcs and Buchanan collections made on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. Delivery Saturday. (P TTlTT5(x! 212-210
LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING CO.
Phone M a i n 117
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rquisitedy modeled young woman . perfect lines, clad In a silver crystal geiu n of her own design. "When I was DJ." she said, "I b-'-gan studying for tho stace, but my parents disapproved. I have done amiteur acting always. Then you know recently I wont- into tho movi's but t!i l.'itimate drama i my chosen field. "I am an ardent suffragi?t. T worked hard, speaking frequently for equal sutfragc. I am for everything that helps women toward conMractive self-expression. The stag on' of our greatest mediums of
'vorce court by giving a second ehse
that is they they'll only come to j me." i
CHILI sauci:. Chili sauce has innumerable uses. When you're baking beans if there
happens to bo no salt pork put quite! a quantity of chili sauce over the: beans. If you want to givo roast i L'ravy an unusual taste put some i chill sauce In the pan while It roasts I If you'd give delightful tang to the J cold meat sandwich add chili sauce j to the meat after you have put it j through tho food chopper.
all the material cares lifted from her ' on-: r Ktiven ss.
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Insures Love in Marriage by Cutting 'Obey' From the Vows
I tlor.s as a means of dodging the di
vorce court. He believes most faml!y troubles can be adjusted through the use of a littlo diplomacy. Ills philosophy, tho soundness of which Is proved by his record, la: "In married life tho occasion should never arise when a command, or obedience to one, Is necessary. Hence I omit the wrrd "obey." 'Obe" Unnecessary. "IMmarringe reaches the 'obey' stacre, there's little chanco to save it from wreckage. I always tell every couple that happiness is a Will o' the Wisp. If we chasa it. it Is sure to be just ahead of us. The reni thing is to have happiness without effort. When tt becomes effort it Is seldom attained. "I always use my own married life ns nn example. I'vo been married T yirs and my wife Is still my
Marrying Justice Has Record for "Knots That Hold;" Uses System. m FRESNO. Calif.. Jan. 7, A marital Dab Ruth Is Judge George W. Smith. California's priz "marrying Justice." His nuptial batting average Is 2.964 homo runs out cf 3,014 knot? tied. In other w-ords but 50 divorces have, resulted from 3,014 marrlas he has performed. He gives credit for this to two things: 1 Omits the word "obey" from his ceremonies. Z Keeping In solicitous touch,
Inorar as possible, tvith tho C.02S persons he has Joined Jn wedlock. Act As Mediator.
H operates a pondenc pohool
SLATTING. When the matting begins to look badly soiled, scrub it with hot soapy water and then rinse it thoroughly by drawing it through a bath of cold water or hanging It on the line and brushing it well with cold water. Allow to remain hanging and dry.
ONIONS. Keep onions under water while you peel them and they will not hurt your eyes.
STAINS. Egg stains shoulel be removed with cold water. Hot water will fix them.
' sweetheart. I alwrys aelmonlsh
veritable corrcs- . bi hies to b thoughtful of a husln domestic rela- -u Y rcrv.fmt: to le receptive of
MKS?. iinLHN DRnxLrn
GENEVA. 111.. Jan. 7. Net unlike the sailor who has a "sweetheart in even port" Is the case cf Mrs. Holen Ferguson Dreilei" Except that, according to a federal warrant, her "sweethearts" are husbands; lb of them in all and every er.e a sailor or a soldier. Mr?. Irex!er. 21. 1 held in the county Jail, under JXiQ ball, here while government officials are attempting to find out the whys and wherefores of the continuous wedding march in which they say she played tho part of the wife. Federal authorities maintain that she became a "repeating bride" in order to draw war risk allowances for herself and three-year-old child by her fir-t marriage. In 1817. to Wilfred Taylor, a eoldler. To which Mrs. Drtxler replies: "I loved thm all. I didn't want their money. I was simply crazy about uniform. I believe I lord Number 10 best. He bossed me around. Gosh. I don't remember how rrjny I married." Unless all the husbands Are rounded tip and brought Into court It may be necessary to free the "repeating bride." "And they'll have some Job doing that." faya she. "There Is nothing harder to find than a cldler-hus-han! A. 'tV. O.
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The Twentieth Century way, by letting soft water and billowy suds surge through the fabric. No washboards or heavy soaps are employed by us. Ours is a laundering method that saves clothes. So also is our ironing of the flat work. We give a charming lustre to your linens, not with hot irons, but with special steamheated presses that protect the textiles. Phones: Main 597 and 5R8
Bwies Iaundkvand Cleaning ß
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REDUCTION ON RUGS Linoleum and Linoleum Rugs until we move. All goods must be removed at once I
9x12 Axminster Rugs $40.00 value for $27.50 An unheard of price!
5 !
These Shoes Moved Up From the Main Floor
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111 So. Michigan Street
Women's and Children's
rligJi Shoe
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ID
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joenner
Clearance
Jbloor
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mi son vater laundrt ? Ulc iir-tie stx lavtttc .st. .-r I th rtrvn st d'ioo.
9x12 Tapestrf Rugs $13.98 Everything cut 25c off on every dollar. INDIANA WINDOW
SHADE GO. 226 W. Jefferson Blvd.
At their original prices our models have represented a full measure of value, and have appealed to women who Consider economy as well as style and quality in purchasing footwear. Among these shoes you will find 500 Pair Women's High Shoes
each
$3.4
(formerly $10.00 to $18.50) TOPS: Tops of patent leather and kid, all kid, Russia Calf, and brown kid. HEELS: French heels, Cuban heels. SOLES: Welt and turn soles.
(These shoes were moved up from the first floor and are selling now at a price that makes them almost a gift to you.)
All sizes
tern a l 1 ll(,'v-vJfi'1
Red Cross and Sw.altz-Goodtvin shoes two of our leading makes, as well as other sJioes of quality from n"r main floor. 200 Pair Children's High Shoes $1.00 Pair (formerly $3.50)
Button shoes in black.
$1.65 Pair (formerly $2.50) Lace shoes in black $1.85 Pair (formerly $2.75)
Lace shoes in black $1.95 Pair , (formerly $3.00) Lace shoes in brown $2.95 Pair
(formerly $4.00) Th ese Shoes on Sale Through Januarv
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