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The Hutchinson News from Hutchinson, Kansas • 5

Location:
Hutchinson, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

OCTOBER 2, 1912. ur TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1912. TEN NEWS. PAGE VIVN The GREAT CASH SALE Cutting Prices. Raising Money.

Sacrificing Merchandise to the Limit $30,000 WORTH OF FALL GOODS All going at prices that brings the cash. Why Wait? Why Look? Why not buy while the opportunity is here? This Is a Sale Such as You Seldom See LOOK -This is the Boston Store Sale Lasts Fourth Day The -But TEN Daysove- Me of nable funts DO OCIETY A rose, a ring. a scented note, A four leafed clover--little thingsAnd yet these trifles dearer are Than treasure of a hundred kings. WHO KNOWS? course you can guess it is Millie Lee, For gloating o'er this litle hoard, Each word and look comes back to me: Euch smile, each jest, each trusting glance Returns--then shadowlike they flee. And so I thank my fortune kind For all the memories and the rose, And still I wonder dare to hope That she'll return sometime--who knows? -Shirley Dean Nevin.

Social Events for Wednesday. Mrs. H. W. Dice will entertain the members of the Ladies' Art club at their first meeting of this season.

Mrs. H. L. Scales and Mrs. O.

R. Welch will be the joint hostess for the initial meeting of the Chapter P. E. O. of this season.

The Philomath club will hold a reception at the home of Mrs. K. Mayo Lewis at her home, 527 Seventh Ave211e East. The nuptials of Miss Lucile Wood and Mr. Walter Jones will be read at two in the afternoon at the home of the bride on First Avenue East.

Mrs. S. Copenhaver will entertain the members Excelsior Study club at her home on Eighth Avenue East. Mrs. Clinton Ryker entertained yesterday at her home on Avenue east, honoring the sixth birthday of her son.

Harold. Childish games were prayed during the hours between four and six after which a delicious supper was served to the little folks. The birthday cake with the six lighted candles upon it was a pretty feature of the lunch. The guests were Carmelita Sweet, Marceline Porter, Margaret Farley, Lucile Schall, Grace Schall, Thelma Randle, Olive Foree, Grace Foree, Esther I schorn, Margaret MontFrances Coe, Melvin Mcgomery, Truman Ryker, William gomery. Elmon Young, Arthur Stone, Wayne Stone, Ralph Roher, Paul Murphy, Ralph Murphy and Dudley Richardson.

The Upper Alton paper bad a very pretty account of the wedding of Miss Mae White, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. White of this city, to Mr.

Henry Smith of Hickman, Ky. twenty marriage oceurred September at the home of Mr. Smith's cousins, Mr. and Mrs. John Meyer, of Upper Alton, and the ring ceremony of the Baptist was read Rev.

R. M. H. Day. churchy White wore a blue tailored suit with hat and gloves to match.

A wedding supper was served at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Vaffier. Mr. and Mrs.

Smith will be at home to their friends after October fifteenth at Hickman, Ky. Mrs. N. B. Sawyer and Miss Florence Updegraff will leave today for Chicago where they will visit a short time going from there to Ann Arbor Michigan, where they will attend the marriage of a nephew of Mrs.

Sawyer's. After a short visit there they will return to Chicago and go from there to Rock Island, where Mr. Sawyer will meet them and some time will be spent there visiting. Mr. and Mrs.

Norval Kline have issued invitations to a number of their friends for a seven o'clock dinner Friday evening at their home on Eighth Avenue East, honoring Miss Mildred Asher, a November bride. The invitations are, "Mr. and Mrs. Norval Kline would like to have you come and dine on October first at seven 50 won't please reply to them, Now this you, honor a bride-to-be, of bring a gift to help complete, the pretty home on Fourteenth street." Mrs. W.

A. Wells entertained at dinner last evening at her home on Sixth avenue west, honoring Miss Susie Wainner whose marriage to Mr. Vernon Peachey will occur tomorrow evening. At seven o'clock the following guests were served dinner by Mrs. Wells, Miss Susie Wainner, Miss Louise Wainner, Miss Edna Maxwell, Miss Bertha Daenzer, Miss Sadie Kessler, and Mrs.

E. C. Thornhill. Following the dinner the Kings Daughters of the Methodist church surprised Miss Wainner by a miscellaneous shower. The remainder of the vening was spent in a social time.

The guests of the evening wre Mrs. J. C. O. Morse, Mrs.

G. B. Scanland, Mrs. G. W.

Rundle, Edward Crocker, Mrs. C. Hipple, Mrs. T. P.

Thompson, Mrs. H. C. Gallup, Mrs. J.

Bryan, Miss Minnie McVey, Miss Ada Johnson, Miss Mabel Eby, Miss Vela Stauffer, Anna Buxton, Miss Cora Buxton, Miss Lelia Duffin, Miss Bess Lauer, Mis Stevens, and Mis Ruth Whipple. Mrs. W. B. Straub, wino has been visiting here for a short time from her home in Quincy, as the guest of Mrs.

H. Straub and Miss Hazel Straub on Ninth avenue west, has returned to her home. Mr. and Mrs. J.

A. Welch, who have been spending several months touring California and the other coast states, left for Los Angeles, today and will arrive here the latter part of the week. Mr: and Mrs. J. A.

Purviance oL Seventh avenue west returned this morning from a two months' visit with their daughter, Mrs. Welch, in Montana. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Durand who have been visiting at the country home of Mr.

and Mrs. C. A. Durand, will leave today for their home in Los Angeles, Cal. The place of meeting for the Excelsior Study club has been changed from Mrs.

Copenhaver's home to Mrs. H. W. Loughton on Seventh avenue east. C.

C. Hutchinson of Abilene, who has been visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. A.

Stauffer on Fifth Avenue West, has returned to his home. Miss Josephine Igou, who has been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. T.

Igou on Sixth Avenue east, has returned her home in Red Cloud, Neb. Miss Bertha Parker, Miss Margaret Parker and Mrs. Josephine Dickson and little son have moved to Twelfth avenue east. Mr. and Mrs.

John Henderson will leave the twentieth of tais month an extended visit in Bellefontaine, and Springfield, Ill. Mr. Clifford J. Palmer left yesterday for Kansas City, where he will begin his senior year in the Kansas City Dental college. Mr.

Charles Le Valley will leave Monday for Los Angeles, where he will remain this winter attending school there. Mrs. C. H. Barnhart left yesterday for Wichita, where she will remain this week with friends.

The Saxon club of young men give another of their popular and joyable dances at Stevens Pond this evening. The opening of the school of vocal music which Mrs. G. L. McLane will conduct this winter was the informal party given last evening at the studio on North Main for the pupils of Mrs.

McLane. Several games were a part of the diversion for the evening during which time Mrs. McLane sang several very pretty songs for her pupils in her charming which is delicious lunch was mannered to the ever present. Later in the evening a delicious lunch was served to the guests. Mr.

and Mrs. Isaac Curtis Mann, of Orlando, announce the marriage of their niece, Miss Corinne Isabel Cone to Mr. Martin Whitehour Fergusson which took place on Wednesday, September twenty-fifth. Mr. and Mrs.

Fergusson will be at home to their friends in Birmingham, Ala. Mrs. Fergusson was formerly the musical instructor in the city schools here Mrs. Frank Gore, of Cheyenne, will arrive tomorrow afternoon, and Miss Elva Parrott of this city will join Mrs. Gore here, and they will go to Kansas City, and Chicago, where they will spend several weeks visiting with friends.

Mrs. Gore will stop here enroute home for a visit with friends before returning to her home. Mrs. C. N.

Booth, who has been spending four months in the British Isles and the Isle of Mann, visiting with relatives and friends there, has returned home. Mrs. Booth arrived in New York the seventh of September and spent a month visiting with friends and relatives in New York, Ohio, and Missouri. A wedding which will take place tomorrow at Sweet Springs, in which a great deal of interest is taken by Hutchinson people will be that of Miss Dorothy Simrall to Mr. Frank Bangs.

Mr. Bangs and his bride will come to this city and make their home, arriving here next Friday. Mr. W. E.

Burns joined his wife, Mrs. W. E. Burns who has been spending a few weeks here and together they will remain until the winter months when they will probably go to California or Florida for the colder months. Mrs.

H. B. Newman and Miss Winifred Newman will leave in a short time for Belleview, 0., and other points in Ohio where they will spend a few weeks. Miss Jean Pettigrew, who has been to here for a year with Miss Arta Jones, will leave next week for her home in Flat Rock, Ind. Mr.

and Mrs. Henry Wilson will 226 leave next week for Los Angeles, where they will make their future home. for Mr. Claude Adams has returned 0., from a short visit with friends in Pittsburg and other Pennsylvania citles. Dr.

W. Monroe Jones and Mr. Harry Williams left this morning for Kansas City, Mo. in Dr. Jones' machine.

Miss Arta Jones has returned from Oklahoma City where she has been spending a week visiting with friends. Mr. and Mrs. J. F.

Burt of Greensburg were the guests yesterday of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. White at their home.

The D. of J. club will meet tomorwill row afternoon with Mrs. B. F.

Rexroad en- lat her home on Avenue east, A GREAT MUSICAL TREAT BY FARNESTOCK AND OTHERS It Is to Be At the First Christian Church, South Hutchinson, Thursday Night. The music committee of the South Hutchinson Christian church, which is in charge of Prof. Fahenstock of Hutchinson will give a rare treat to the music loving public. They will give a strong, effective concert, consisting of some of the most popular, high class selections known to the music loving world. After the concert the ladies of the church will serve an oyster supper in their pleasing manner, so familiar to all, and a 25c ticket pays for both concert and supper." Can you beat it?" Come and see what we are doing.

A GOOD STORY. One of the new books is by a Kansas woman, Miss Effie Graham, and it is well worth while. "The Passin'On-Party" is a story of an old colored couple who had established themselves in the good graces of the community and had made for themselves a home, built of a of old furniture, pieces of and cast off ornamixture, ments. "Aunt June" and Unk Jerry" were standbys in the help line and their list of friends comprised all classes and colors. Aunt June fell sick and the physician found that her mind was worrying over a "passin'.

on -party," her name for a "reception," where the hostess receives the guests and passes them on to the refreshments and then to good byes. Many a time she had officiated in the kitchen at fashionable receptions, and her heart yearned for such an event in her own life. Several of her boy and girl friends among the white folks decided that Aunt June should have her wish. They arranged the house, sent Unk Jerry to the chicken house for the day, and issued a general invitation to the friends to attend the reception. The guests came, the negro laborer, the fashionable society leader, the mayor of the city all kinds of others.

Each was "received" by Aunt June, and the quaint philosophy and digs at frailties of the guests, with which she greeted them, make the story a laugh and a lesson. The party also brought together a boy and girl who had suffered from a misunderstanding, and this bit of romance adds to the zest of the book. The passin'-on party was the last as well as the great event in Aunt June's life. Miss Graham has penetrated human nature with a skillful but kindly hand and her characters are clear and cleverly drawn, as this story is delightfully told. McClurg of Chicago, are the publishers of the book, which is on sale at the book stores or can be ordered from McClurg's for the price, $1.00 and 5 cents postage.

BABIES' WELFARE IN FIGURES. Fewer Deaths and More Registrations at Milk Stations. New Bables Welfare Association reports that there were 313 deaths of babies under one year of age last week, one. less than the week before and eleven less than in the corresponding week of last year. In Manhattan there were 188 deaths, aS against 162 in the corresponding week of last year.

In diarrhoeal diseases there were 131 deaths in the whole city, a drop of nine since the preceding week. There is now a record of 587 fewer deaths of bables under one year than there were last year at this time.ere are over 17,000 babies registered at the milk stations. Despite the cooler weather and the consequent tendency of the mothers to stop coming to the stations there have so far been very few losses in registration. The Babies Aid Association, which is running a milk station at 526 125th street, will hold a meeting this afternoon for reorganization on er lines. It is proposed to take in the infant welfare organizations both in Harlem and The Bronx.

The association hopes to open a new station in The Bronx and another new one in Harlem this York Sun. Library Books. The A. A. Drug company have a library of good books at their north end drug store.

Fine reading for long winter evenings. How you get them and full particulars is given in their regular ad on the last page of this paper. Look it up. It will interest all lovers of good books. Dressmaking.

The art of designing a fancy dress from any pattern is taught as well as the actual making at same time for lowest terms at The Queen City College of Tailoring, No. N. Main. 80-6t Dance Tonight. Woodman hall.

Big crowd. You know. All respectable persons invited. MUSICAL PROGRAM. To Be Given by Lamborn's Orchestra at the Grand Opening This Evening.

"Robert E. Lee," two step, (Muir). "I'm Dreaming of the Girl I Love," waltz, (Green). "The Stilt Dance," Humoresque, (Keith). Selection, "The Heart Breakers," (Orlob Gideon.) "Pleasing Rag," two step, (O'Connor).

"Purfume of the Violet," waltz, (Rolfe), "Red Rose Rag," two step, (Wenrich). Overture, "Poet and Peasant," (Suppe) "When I Get You Alone Tonight," two step, (Fischer). "Cotton Cloth," Humoresque, (Hildreth). Selection, "Doctor De Luxe," (Hoschna). "Good Mr.

Moon," two step, (VonTilzer). "I'd Love to Live in Loveland," waltz, (Williams.) "When Your In Town," two step, (Berlin). "Ghost Dance," descriptive, (Salisbury). PECULIARITIES OF PAIN. Its Location is Often Far From the Seat of the Trouble.

Pain sometimes behaves in a curious fashion. There was a soldier in London, after the Boer war, who complained of excruciating neuralgic pains in his right foot. This very much amused his friends, WILL PLAY LEADING ROLE IN DRAMA DEALING WITH DOMESTIC RELATIONS Miss Emily Miss Emily Stevens, who has successes, is to play the leading role "The Point of View," a -act the spotlight. pons ipon essthe WEDNESDA rest ring SPECIALS ha an We place on sale tomorrow res (Wednesday) Felts at a great per cut. These are new shaped but we have placed them on lie sale for Wednesday only at these prices, thus giving our customers a cut price when they need these hats.

Felts that sold for $2, $1.00 Felts that sold for Felts that sold for $3.50 and $4.00. Fancy Feathers from 50c up CROOKS MILLINERY 2304J 9 N. Main for he had lost his right leg. The explanation was that the pain happened to be in the trunks of those nerves which had sent branches to the foot. Sometimes a patient comes to a doctor complaining of a pain in the knee, and doctor he is tells greatly him that surprised the site when of the affection is not the knee but the hip.

We are all familiar with the pain der from the shoulder blade which comes! an affected liver. The stomach too, can produce pain in many parts of the body. A disordered stomach will give us pain as far away as the head, and when one gets a cramp in his toe it is often due to the acidity of the stomach. Swallow a pinch of soda and the cramp will disappear. An aching tooth will produce neuralgic pains in the face and very often a violent pain at the back of the head is due to the faraway kidneys, which themselves may suffer no pain at the Tit-Bits.

UT Protecting Treasury Against Burglars Washington- Any burglar the temerity to visit the Treasury of the United States wil risk fusillade from modern firearms. Sherman Allen, acting Secretary of the Treasury, has ordered from the Secretary of War titty of the latest type of revolvers with which to arm the watchmen of Uncle Sam's millions. Their old revolvers will be discarded. With steel ribbed vaults, a delicate system of burglar alarms, which in case of trouble would summons half the police in Washington: armed watchmen, and the soldiers of the regular army at Fort Meyer, Va. only a couple of miles away, Mr.

Allen believes that the Government's wealth is safe from York Sun. Chicken Pie Supper. The ladies of the Universalist church will serve a chicken pie supper. at the home of Mr. and Mrs.

H. P. Hartman, 321 First avenue west or Friday evening, October 4th. 1-ti Dance Tonight. Woodman hall.

Big crowd. You kn The Secret of Southern Beaut A dazzling complexion, made kept soft, smooth and clear by harmless beautifierWilson's Freckle Cree It will positively remove freckles, let tan. su burn and clear the skin, or give your money back. Try It, Hedges Adams Stevens. starred in "'The Boss" and other recent in the new Brady production, drama in which domestio relations hold.

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About The Hutchinson News Archive

Pages Available:
193,108
Years Available:
1872-1973