Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

Arizona Daily Star from Tucson, Arizona • Page 13

Location:
Tucson, Arizona
Issue Date:
Page:
13
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

omiTr' flrks lyk.VM(T KNOW Vtfc BOWWOW vol: lxvt 166 Tucson. ARlfzohlAT SlTNbAY lRfflTTGTTuEY ii7 i920 init vi-mjsi 'ounttt lira FEME WILL aMETO Mud TURBANS FOR FALL Turban. will "b7worn extensively this fall, it by Itlee Duvetyn for wear, panne end duvetyn for th afternoon, and combination of atin and mallne for even ng wear will b. th. popular Dark color, will predominate Larger hat.

will much trlch trimming, pillrl curl4d of glycerin, feather, will trim hats of duxetyn, velvet or silk. ECO mWM ns TO WMiI A Wr HURT fG0WK rlfe By JACK CARBERRY, N. E. A. Staff Corre.pondent.

San Antonio, July 10. "There will be peace In Mexico when women win the right to vote." These are the parting words of Senora Huerta. who has Just left the United States to Join her husband, President Adolfo tie la Huerta. and take up her duties as "first lady of Mexico," Senora Huerta chatted for torn time about Mexican although protested all th. time that wa.

a "home woman" and did not take part In Mexican politic. Women Better Fitted To Rule "You see," she smiled, "I have two little hoys to rare for and they keep me very, very busy. They do not Rive me much time to be a suffrage worker, "But I believe women should be allowed to vote, and I am sure there will be peace In Mexico when they get the ballot. "More than that, I believe that women are better fitted to rule than men are. "Women rule the home and that is one government one institution that has survived all time.

"Women do rule there, too, even though men sometimes think otherwise. No More Trouble After That "Some day Mexican women will apply that same power of theirs to the nation. Then we will have no more revolutions no more trouble." She smiled. "But why should I talk so, I know nothing of polities Adios! Sencrlta Julia Carranza, daughter of the ai.as.lnated Pre.ident Carrania and a refugee In San Antonio, happened to he at the railway when Senora Huerta left. Their eye.

met a. they passed, but there wa. no recognition; neither woman knew who the other wuuwuuuuvx W1LU WAVlo I replacing 59,000.000 tempornry government bonds with permanent coupon bonds. The job was hegun last August and probably will be completed by April of 19:11. The bureau prints all of the blank checks used by the government, certificates and drafts, the number of pieces of this miscellaneous nature totalling 31,000 sheets a year.

Miss Eckets, genial In manner, thorough in the performance of duty, and modest in the exploitation of her own accomplishments, has been an employe of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing for 2.1 consecutive years, 12 of which she has been Identified with tho Division of Orders. She is a native of Washington, IX and began her business career at. the bottom of the ladder a printer's fedtsO Wr. jj 1 1 "Conscience Will Guide" Fair II I Bather, at Chicago Beach Washington, July 10. Undo Sam prints 40,000,000 postage stamps a day, 50,000 sheets of internal revenue stamps, 600,000 sheets of notes (inluding United States notes, Federal Reserve and national bank notes), apd a miscellaneous assortment of fovernment checks, draftB and certificates.

The magniitude of the daily task obviously involves system, and the responsibility of executing these multiple orders is "entrusted to a woman Miss Irfiura Eckels, who is superintendent of the Division of Orders, U. S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Aside from its regular daily assignments of supplying postage and Internal revenue stamps and government bonds, the Bureau of Engraving and Printing is engaged in the mammoth undertaking of Red Cross nursing activities there; Linda K. Meirs of Boston, who went to France with the American lied Cross but 'Was transferred to the Army Nurse Corps and served under fire, later went with the American Red Cross Commission to Rumania and was decorated by the Rumanian government; Mary E.

Gladwin of New York Citq, who sailed on the Red Cross ship, September, 19M, as supervisor of a unit assigned to Serbian service, remaining five years; Helen Scott Hay of Washington, D. chief nurse of the American Red Cross Commission for Europe, who began her war service in 1914; Florence Meniam Johnson of New York City, director of the. Department of Nursing of the Atlantic Division of American Red Cross; Alma E. Foerster of Chicago, who sailed for BY HELEN RING ROBINSON vn. Swilreilc.inl.

July 10. --It wm seventy yarfl uiiil inor am tUnt group Ameiicaiv women mot in little Now York village of Seneca Falls, and proclaimed "A Charter of the Jllshts of The right to vote." "The right of an education." "The right of a married woman to' own the dress she stood in mid other goods, too." I wring as it eoounded buck in 1848. practically every demand of that Senoca Kalis Woman's Charter has been written into the lsws of the United States, or will tomorrow. Hut (hero are still countries where women are merely doormats. Another Charter Just a few days ago another gathering of women drew up another "Charter the Rights of Women." The memhers of the Eighth Congress of the International Woman Suffrage Al-lilanse met tin Geneva, Switserland.

The company included, not Americana only, hut women from countries of which those pioneers of 1548 never read in their jiMixraphlea from Latvia and Czechoslovakia and the Ukraine, as well as from Kngland and China nd South Amerrlc and France and Turkey. This was the charter they adopted: I. That the suffrage be granted to women and their equal status with nu ll upon legislative and administrative bodies, both national and International he recognized. II. That women, equally with men, slxiull have the protection of the law ngainst slavery, such as still exists in some parts of eastern Europe, Asia and Africa.

III. That a marrlert women hould huve full personal and civil rights, including the right to the. us, ami disposal of her own earnings and liroperty, and that she uhould not bo under the tutelage of her husband. IV. That the married mother should have the same rights over her children as the father.

V. That a married woman should have the same rights to retain or change her nationality as a man. VI. Tht all opportunities of education, general, professional and technical, should be open to both sexes. VII.

That women should have the same opportunity as men for training for and for entering industries, pro- fi-sslons, civil service' and all admin- imratlve and judicial position. VIII. That women should rerMvn the same pay as men for the work. IX. That no special regulations for' women's work, different from the filiations for men, shnnM he Imposed contrary -to the wishes of the, working women themselves, that any laws coricrnlng women as mothers should be so framed as not to handicap them in economic position, and that all future labor regulation should tend towards equality for men and women.

X. That a higher moral standard, wiual for men and women, should be recognized, that the traffic in women should be suppressed, and the regulation of vice and all laws and practices differentiating against women or any class of women in this mattor should be abolished. XI. That the children of widows, it left without provision, should havs the right to maintenance ythe state, such maintenance to be paid to mother as guardian. XII.

That a child born out of wedlock should have the same right maintenance and education from t.ic father during the period of df pendency as a legitimate child, and that an unmarried mother during the r-o- EVERY MAN YEARNS is In time the and for her the the will son, of to the her ter, go of and mer to in 11, 3 MISS EDNA 01. NX of X. MPyr visiUug friends at Flagstaff und later the summer will make, a trip to the Grand Cunyon. She will return to Tucson in September. MRS.

J. RAND of 829 N. Seventh avenue was among the Tusconans leaving Friday afternoon for a visit of some at Mt. Lemmon. Mrs.

K-ind will be guest of Air. and Mrs. s. I Kingan Mrs. Oeorge Hilzinger at their handsome new mountain cottage.

JIRS. WEBSTER H. LAND of the La Apartments left during the week I.os Angeles, where she will join parents, Judge and Mrs. J. ji.

Campbell, who ave been on the coast first of June. Mr. Ijuio wilt coast shortly. MRS. BEN.

C. IIIU, I Sainrdaj afternoon for l.os Angeles. She plans to remain on the costs through August and be joined later by Mr. Hill. Mil.

AND MRS. J. V. BREWER, winter visitors nil of last season in Tucson, have returned from their former home in Fort Worth, Texas, 11411! will local permanently in this city. MRS.

ALBERT MONTGOMERY and Edwin, left Friday for Meridian where they will visit the. pirents Mr. Mongoniery. Ijtte ttiey expect spend some time in Montgomery. former home of Mrs.

Montgomery and family, where they will visit rela tives and friends. MR.S. E. C. DIEi'IliCH was ainum: Tucsonans leaving Saturday for Los An geles.

Mrs. Diettricli will vsit her' Mrs. J. Knox Corbett there and will north so San FrancVeo liter In the summer. Mtt.

F. II. HTREFOltD and sons, Rockwell, Jack and Teddy Hereford, all this city, have joined Mrs. Hertford daughter who have ben the coast since the end of May at the Hotel Vir- ginia. Long Beach, ui'-cr in tne sum-j the Herefords exncit to spenl tome weelm in Colorado.

MISS SUE STEI'HENSdjj and sister, both of whom are well known in Tucson, spent Friday in the city enroute to Mt. where they will become members of the summer colony. They expect remain several weks on the mountain. PROF. HOWARD A.

HUBBARD of the University of Arizona, Is ill at his home the University apartments, suffering from typhoid fever. He is believed to have passed th ecrlnis. riod when she is incapacitated should also have the right of hein maintained by the father of the child. Common Agreement This program adopted by the Eighth Congress of the International Suffrage Alliance at Geneva. Switzerland.

June 1920. is plainly a meting place for the common mind of women. Far more radical sections were proposed and voted down. Hut on these twelve propositions there was practical agreement among women of thiriy-one counti ies. mm IX) PLAY THE PIANO Washington, July 10.

"Great and exceptional devotion" to the sick and wounded in peace and war." Without this distinguishing service no nurse can be awarded the Florence Nightingale medal, the highest decoration of the nursing world, created in 1912. The American Red Cross has been notified that this boner -beetew cd by the International Committee of the Red Cross, Geneva, upon six American nurses. Since only one nurse of any nation may receive this medal annually this means that the six women just honored represent America's nursing roll of honor since the outbreak of the World War in 1914. The medal was given to forty-one nurses of various nations at this first awarding of it since its authorization. The American nurses are: Martha M.

Russell of Boulder, who was appointed first representative of the American Red Cross Nursing Ser vice in France in July, 1917, to organize service in Russia on tho Red Cross relief ship In 1914. remaining In Europe tthoughout the war. MRS. WALTER Accompanied by Mrs. Alice Teasttale anil Mrs.

M. Harvey, has gone to Mt, Lemmon for a stay of several weks. They will occupy one' of the Summerhaveii cottages. MRS. JULIUS KRUTTSCIINITT, JR and children have gone to Salt I-ake city, called there by the illness of Mr.

Krutt-schnitt, who is in a Salt Lake hospital, suffering from typhoid fever. In these times, between tacks' and tax, the poor tire Is sUre to get stuck no matter what happens. American BY HAL M. COCHRAN Ah! What are the wild wave, saying? Here Is why they moan and sigh: William Burkhardt of Chicago, Who's a bathing censor guy. Wisely dodged all complications When, to damsels, he replied: "As to bathing dear ladies, "Let your conscience be your guide." (jtw em.

awT When your daughter queries, "Mother, May I dash out for a dip?" You will doubtless tell her "surely," And then envy her the trip. But fair daughter, In the water, There's a chance that you'll be eyed, you do as Burkhardt bids and 'Let your conscience be your guide." List, ye maidens, fair and forty, not worry lose no sleep; 'Cause your suit, ned not be sporty When you dip within the deep. Your own Judgment can rule and If, in secret, you have tried One-piece tu Its and you are bashful "Let your conscience be your guide." DhJerPiodirfioni I I lu NUlTOMlT V. BY OJUNA BARNES New York, July 10. Everyone who comes to New York wants to spend one evening in "the heart'' of Grenwich Village, and hordes of hunters swoop down upon Sheridan Htpmre nightly to search for that mythical place, They attack tV funny, queer-painted tea rooms and end the night even by KoiiiK to Romany; and yet they fflaaihy review the jaunt, that they didn't find the place they sought.

But this is because they didn't find Christine's. And where Is Christine's? No one knows, excepting those few who have lived on and about the, square long enough to have followed a tall, red- haired woman up Fourth street and into a little dojr on Macdougal street. This tall, red-haired woman is Christine she hails from Norway, or perhaps some place colder and harder to forget and here Christine lives, cooks, loves and passes away her days. For Her Friends It wasn't because Christine wanted money that she started in the business she started in the business because she had friends who needed fedlng. the downcast, the outcast, th esocially undone, the bum, the poet, the painter, the young girl from home all these Christine knew and she knew what it was to suffer and hunger.

Then Christine's began. Little tables, painted red, blue, yellow, dotted the room Glen Coleman and John Sloan, famous attests, bung their paintings on the wall. Charles Demuth brought his famous illustrations of Henry James "Turn the Screw" first to Christine; Gene O'Neill dreamed of "Beyond the Horizon" sitting listening to her talk of the small past and the great Bohemia Mean. And, asking her what she thinks the meaning of Bohemia really is, Christine smiles her broad smile and says: "If. a place where you go when you feel youth coming on you in old age, and a place you leave when you -I feel age coming on you In youth you go there when you don't need it, and you leave it when you do.

It's home without the chains; It's a retreat with all door, open it', a friend who ha. no an enemy who ha. no teth a great happl-ne without joy, and a with, pain it', a place," she "where you con be turning to the wall and neone minding what the writing may be en it." Hunting for And downstairs, beneath Christine's, the "Provincetown Players" rang up the curtain on "Aria de Capo," by Edna Jlillay. and on Susan Glaspell's "Bere nice, and on Qeorge cram ooKe ana Wilbur Daniel Steele and upstairs Christine turned the fowl twice upon the spit and told a story of one lovely sum mer night when she was younger to a very young girl who did not know whether she wanted to paint or to draw or jnst to be loved and taken care of. And down In the street hundreds from the Bronx and from the horse and cattle fairs of the west wandered by staring at I niimhpra on houses that miffht mean something and looking for a light or a sign perhaps or a girl's laugh that would lead the mto Bohemia, and never one of them turned tn at the right door, because only a few, a very few, who really cored, had followed the tall, red-haired Norwegian into tho little hallway that goes up into Bohemia.

ANNOUNCEMENTS OF the marriage of Dr. D. N. Shulman of this city to Miss Bessie Bransky of Baltimore have been received in Tucson. The event occurred July I In Baltimore, the former home of the groom.

It is understood that Dr. Shulman, who occupies an enviable posi tion in the local medical fraternity, will If It's A Good Idea To buy a new piece oi furniture- every now and then it keeps' the home looking new. and up-to-date. Few families can expect to furnish the home anew very often, but any one can keep it always looking well furnished and in keeping with the taste of the day by replacing the most worn-out articles one or two at a time. Why not take an inventory of Your home furnishings and lay your plans this year for the replacing of those things which have outlived their usefulness? Yon can always get the best in furniture at the very lowest prices here.

AT SOME TIME To be able to sit down at an instrument and produce music, if only to please himself. It can be done if vou own a CLARENDON PLAYER PIANO PRICE $825. Full value allowed for your old piano in trade, balance in convenient monthly payments. Call any time-see, hear and play this wondereful instrument. We close Saturdays at 1 P.

M. during July and August. Page Furniture Company Sole Distributors of Star Oil Stoves and Arctic Refrigerators 41-47 North Sixth Avenue Red Phone 155 bring his bride to Tucson to reside about September 1..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About Arizona Daily Star Archive

Pages Available:
2,187,790
Years Available:
1879-2024