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The Hutchinson News from Hutchinson, Kansas • Page 8

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Hutchinson, Kansas
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8
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PAGE EIGHT. SocietyE THE HUTCHINSON NEWS. SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 17. 192? Itemi tor tbls department must be In by in 00 a.

Call Teleohone 4400 and ask tor Society Mr. and Mrs. J. C. McNaughten will entertain at dinner at the Rorabaugh Wiley Tea Hoora this evening complimenting Mrs.

Albort Teed of Houston, Texas, who la vlaltlng her parents. Mr. and Mrs. R. Slavens.

Gnrdon flowers will form the center piece of the din- tier table. After dinner the guests will play bridge at the McNaughten home, 109 Hyde Park Drive. The guest Hat will be as follows: Messrs William Carer Hanry Peffues C. Hall Walter Ultch Judfl Bftimm ''1. H.

BMwell E. Besrdsley Ralph Ycunf Black Uerbsrt Wscronsr Porry Welch Mrs. Joseph Hollowell entertained the members of the Double Seven Club at her home, 1126 Ave. east yesterday afternoon. Tho prizes for the contests were won by Mrs.

Ross Metcalf aud Mrs. P. .1. Craig. Mrs.

Frank Craig was voted Into the club as a uew member. The guests of the afternoon were Mrs. J. Washburn and Mrs. C.

C. Crlspen. The next meeting of the club will be lu two weeks at the home of Mrs. Lee H.irick, 708 Fifth Ave. west.

Miss Myrtle McMurry presented a number of her piano pupils in a recital at her home, 114 Ninth West, tbls afternoon. Tho mothers of the pupils were the Invited guests. She was assisted by William Francis Plnnell, who gave a reading. The children who appeared on the program were: Mae Dean Pools Dorothy Bryant Helen McMurry Francis Hlrth Wllma Evans Lloyd KoelllnR Orfi ''t Kvana Oscar Day Uulh Bryant Oien McMurry The Friendship Circle met yesterday at the home of Mrs. Benjamin Reed In South Hutchinson.

After the business meeting the afternoon was spent with games, contests and needle work. One new member was taken Into the club. The guests of rhe afternoon were Mrs. S. J.

Rockier and Mrs. Merle Skinner. The next meeting will be Oct. 5 at the home of Mrs. Harry Davis, in South Hutchinson.

Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Saylor entertained very Informally at dinner last evening In honor of Miss Mar- jorle Carey who left today to go to Boulder, to attend school this year.

There were six additional gussls. Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Hettinger entertained the members of their bridge club at their home, 113 Crescent last evening. There were no additional guests.

Women Are Listed As Speakers For National Safety Council AMERICAN MEN DRESS BApLY British Give Credit to U. S. But Rap Male Attire. Dr. bernlco Neuberger of Cleveland, O.

(left) ana Mrs. Bertna Winter Mahoney of Erie, Pa, (right) will tell the National Safety Council how to make homes safe against accidents. Chicago home maker Her subject is "Home Safety as and a professional woman will tell; the Home Maker Sees It." PERSONALS OF (SOCIETY, Miss Laura Yaggy and Mr. Kd- ward Yaggy will leave Sunday ror the east, where Mr. Yaggy will, al- lend school and Miss Yaggy will visit for several weeks.

They will stop In Lawrence, where MISB Yaggy will visit Miss Lois Strait at the PI Delta Phi house and Mr. Yaggy will be the guest of Mr, Burnham Humphreys at the Beta Thela Pi house. They will next Etop in Kansas City, where they will visit their grandparents, Mr. and Horner Reed. After sev- oral days in Kansas City they will go to Chicago to be the guests ot Mr.

and Mrs. Kersey Coates Reed. Mr. Yaggy will then go to Nov Haven, where he will attend school this year at Yale University. Miss Yaggy will visit other points In the east before returning to Kansas City, where she will meet her mother, Mrs.

E. B. Yaggy. They will visit Mrs. Yaggy'3 parents, Mr.

and Mrs. Homer Reed before returning home. Mrs. E. H.

Yaggy of Chapter BY, Hutchinson, and Mrs. J. C. Newman Of Wichita, will be official musicians at the National P. E.

O. convention in Oklahoma City, Oct. 4. i and 6. Mrs.

E. J. Qrovier, Mrs. Yaggy and Mrs. Newman will motor to Oklahoma City.

-v The following Hutchinson Ro- tarlans motored to Sterling last evening to attend the regular Rotary meeting there: Mr. C. H. Humphreys, Mr. B.

K. Yaggy, Mr. Arthur Mann, Mr. B. E.

Mltchner, Mr. B. S. Berry and Mr. J.

E. Nlles. Miss Marjorle Carey left today to go to Boulder, where she will attend'echoo! at the University of Colorado this year. Carey In a member of Kappa Kappa Qamma Hororlty tliero. J- Mr.

and Mrs. C. R. Gregory and children, Cloyd Jr. and Edward, arrived last evening from Barnsdall, to visit Mrs.

Gregory'a mother, Mrs. H. E. Hill. Mr.

and Mrs. H. D. Haten, who have Wilting In Wyoming, Iowa, Mioblgan, South Dakota and Canada, tor the past month will arrive home Sunday. Mlsa Atal Ferguson will leave next week to go to Chicago, 111., wbere she will attend HChool at Northwestern University this year, Mrs.

Corrlne Jander and daugh tar Ida Louise, of Palest Inc. Texas, aref visiting Mr. and Mrs. A. P.

Jander of North Perehlng. Mrs. J. A. Mann of Qrainola.

If tha bouse guest of daughter, Mrs, W. Mi Potter and Mr, Detter. Mrs. B. F.

Farmer of Medicine Lodge la visiting at tho home of, G. W. MulllM, 1806 North Orchard. Mr. and Ray ot North Platte, are vlfltiDi Mr.

and Mr. and Mm- and Uwl. will RMt the National Safety Council at its annual meeting in Chicago Sept. 26, 30, how women may help In preventing accidents. Mrs.

Bertha Winter Mahoney of Erie. will outline the house, wife's hazards and tell how safety may bo obtained in the kitchen. Dr. Bernice Neuborger of Cleveland will talk on "Developing a Community Program for Home Safety." Mrs. A.

H. Reeve, president of the National Congress of Parent- Teachers Associations, will be another speaker. London, Sept. girls look a "great deal amart- er" lhan English girls, but American men are hadly dressed according to the conclusion ot 30 belonging to the staff ot a London department store who have returned to London after a tour ot 10,000 miles to America and back. Compared with English girls.

American girls havo, tha visitors said: Better figures, nicer legs and teet, shorter skirts, more and better fitting frocks, as much confidence and assurance at 14 as English girls have at 20. The English girls tound that their American cousins "spend most of their money on clothes, and they wear mony more frocks than we do. Miss America studies 'fit' far more than our girls, and this makes her look a great deal smarter. Her feet are beautifully shod and In this respect they beat us easily." But as for American men, "Our men. at any rate, beat the Americans hollow.

They are terribly dressed end their tailoring Is disgusting. The only thing to be said is that It Is comfortable and clean. We wanted to put pins In the men all the way down. There was no fit about them at We went to a dnnca at a country club, and, to our horror, the men took off their coats and danced In their shirtsleeves. We were so startled that we nearly walked out." Hollywood 's Venus Has Large Income Teaching Bridge Chicago, Sept.

futile search for brought Mrs. to be the guests of Mr. Sponsler's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A.

L. Spongier. I SOCIAL CHAT. The Hutchinson Music club will sponsor the Atwnter Kent voice contest for Hutchinson and vicinity. Tho executive committee Is composed of Mrs.

J. A. Myers, Mrs. T. E.

Foster, Mrs. Earl Bressler, Mrs. XV. R. Yerkes, Mrs.

Bert Mltchener and Miss Esther Woleott. Mrs. Myers has the application cards tor entry in the contest. The Atwater Kent Radio corporation Is offering $17,600 and tuition In Atnerloan conservatories In the effort to search out the sweat voiced untrained singers of the country. The contestants will sing before the local committee and then will go before the state contest, probably at Wichita, to this they will pay their own expenses.

The boy and girl who win at the state meeting will go then to Dallas, Texas for the district and tho winners at this to the national con. test at New York city, expenses to these two later contests will be borne by the radio corporation. The prizes nra well worth striving after: First (prizes to both male and female voices) 5,000 cash and two years tuition in an American conservatory; second place, $2,000 cash and a year's conservatory: third $500 cash and fourth, $350 "Kansas Is said to have more sweet slngerB than any state In the union," said Mrs. J. A.

Myers today. "We want a fine representation from this part of the state and the application blanks can be secured from me at any time. Wil-1 Ham Allen White ot Emporia, Is state chairman. Not only Hutchinson singers but those of the towns around where they will be contests will bo heard here about two weeks before the state Pledges were announced last evening ut the Kansas State Agricultural college and the students from Hutchinson who accepted "bids" were: Kappa Kappa Gamma, Mlsa Anna Alford; Omega Tail Hpsilon, Roland Howell; Delta Tau Delta, Eugene Livingston and Elmo Young: Sigiua Alpha Epsilou. Alviu Hosteller.

Pledges from tha district were: Alpha Xi Delta, Miss Ciretch- en O'Connor, John; Chi Omega, Miss Wiida Clina; Kappa Delta, Miss Flora Deal, Great Bend, tllss Opal Hammer, Ellsworth and Miss Madge Marteney, Haven; Phi Omega PI, Mlsa Thelmo Nell, St. John and Miss Alva Smith, Fellsburg; Beta Thetl Pi, Marvin Cher- lial, Lyons; Charles Ounu, Great Bend; Kappa Sigma, Jerry Wilton, Ashland; Sigma Alpha Epsllon, Clayton Feugh, Hoisington; Phi Sigma Kappa, Edward Mullen, Great Bend, William Russell, Victor Cavln and George Hamrdla, all ot La Crosse; Sigma Nu, Ben H. Olds, Great Bend; Delta, Tau Delta, Kunneth Kltch, Great Bend, and John Merritt of Haven. Social Ca.enriai Monday The Hutchinson Dramatic club will meet at the home of Mr. Harold McKinney, 21 Eighth Ave.

west. Tuesday, Miss Freda Harmon and Miss Opal Day will entertain at the later's home. 700 West 20th Street, in honor of Ruth Meece. The O. G.

T. Club will meet at the home ot Mrs. A. R. Ashby, 616 Seventh Ave.

west. --Thursday. The Twin Cenary meet at the home of Sovereign, 618 Eighth Ave. west Friday Miss Winona MUler will entertain as a courtesy to Ruth Meece, whose marriage to Mr. Clarence Ringler will take place Sept.

29. Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hoskard of Woodward, will entertain at the home of Mrs.

Haskard's mother Mrs. H. J. Hettinger, as a courtesy to Mr. and Mrs.

Harold Athy, Virginia Tubbs. (AP) A gold In Alaska Virginia Tubbs and her husband to Chicago 12 years ago. Six years later, widowed and inexperienced in business, she turned to bridge as her only means of support. Today Mrs. Tubbs earns more han $1,000 a teaching Chicago's gold coast residents how to play bridge.

She had ALICE ADAIR. Hollywood, a 1. (AP) Fashions in goddesses, as well as garments, change with the years. Alice Adair, the Paul's Valley, brunette who was chosen from among all of the extra girls lu Hollywood to be Venus, the goddess of love and beauty, in a satiric screen version ot tha life of Helen of Troy. Is 5 teet 6 inches tall, weighs 114 pounds and has tho boyish figure so much admired in screen heroines.

Although Alice's academic training Included no course In Homer or any Instruction In Greek and Roman mythology, she did study danc- lug in Dallas, Tex. She danced on the stage here for a year before appearing In dance of several motlojj pictures. WINFIELD B0Y8 IN A CEMENT MIXING CONTEST Rev. Henry Talks to Labor Unions A. E.

Henry, pastor ot tha Trinity MethodUt church, to a packed audience at an open muting of tbe Central Labor union, at Labor bill, lUt night. Revertnd Henry told of the fundamental of labor and brought out tha tact that praperty abould never be paramount to human He explained Interest In the laboring class and told how they could cooperate in many of their principles. told how men could agree on certain and yet be honest In their Following Reverend talk there was a short musical program aud then C. E. local labor leader, made a ihort talk taking up the subject of convict lanor.

He pointed out the Injustice ot convict labor competing with tree labor and told of the wholesale practice of using convict labor In community and the effect It had on the ot labor and business. Ice cream and lemonade was served to those present at the close ot the meeting. Do not Choott to Run 9 Coolidge Waa Not Wawtaf Stacy Adams thorn Whan Proparlr Fitted They Are Rcktful and'Even Comfortable to Ran itv Black and Brown Kid, $14.00 Black and Brown Calf, $13.50 North Main 21 North Mam learned the game during the long 0ne 0 tne 4 club contest evenings In their Isolated Alaskan I lh sUte falr wll ba a cement mU home. Her mastery of.cards now jtlt Th wintield club Mrs. will Ray MRS MARY T.

USHER DIES AT HOME OF DAUGHTER. causes leading men bridge to commend her as 'the only woman 'who knows anything about bridge." Tbe first'few years she taught for 60 cents an hour and often had to take long, cross city street car tides in order to obtain pujplls. Now her lowest price is 10 dollars a lesson and she never lacks lux- urous transportation, either in her own car or In the automobiles of her "students." Teaching bridge, she says, is much like educating a child. It requires infinite patience, and an ability to refrain from belittling the efforts ot those who are learning. i high school boys, Frank Parsons.

Boyd Walte and Garland Johnson students in the vocational agriculture class at Wintield, will arrive tomorrow to participate In this con. test. In this contest, which will be staged Tuesday, the will mix their own concrete, select the proportions, and make concrete fence posts. HAVEN POSTOFFICE HAD 8MALL BUSINESS THEN. Paneled Stepin Mrs.

Mary T. Usher, SI, died thin morning at 6:05 at a local hospital following an illness of some months. No funeral arrangements have been made awaiting the arrival of a Mrs. Usher was a native of Philadelphia, but had lived the latter part of her life in Topeka. Kor the past three years she has been in Hutchinson with her daughter, Mrs.

R. G. Brooks, 610 East Sherman street. She was a member df the Episcopal church all ot Her life. Surviving her are three children, Mrs.

Brooks and two eons, William Usher and Walter Usher, of Topeka and six grandchildren. Postmaeter Glltnore, of Haven, found the tlrst postmaster 's account book used about half a century ago In that postoffice. It Bhows a sharp contrast between the business done then, and that of today. The total receipts for the three months from.Dec. 1S78 to March 1879 amounted to 520.S0.

Caleb Cupps was the postmaster. "The stamp sales today average more In one day than they ware In a month, forty years ago," said the postmaster. Money to loan on City, Farm Property. See D. A.

601 1st Natl. Bldg. Read News-Herald Classified Ads. We carry a complau line of Misery's guaranteed and Barn Paint, Varnlahea, Auto Paint and Enajiuis. Llnaead Oil, Turpantlna and Brushes.

C. W. CHRISTOPHER "Beat for Leas" 6o. Main Chans FRIENDS VIEW BODY OF IOA U. KAUFFMAN.

The body ot Ida L. Kautt- man ot Garden City, who died at La Junta, waa taken off the train and remained In state at the Frteun Funeral today to allow to view it. funeral party will leave tonight for Garden City, where burial will take place. Miss Kautfman daughter of C. J.

Kautfman of Garden City, who Is accompanying the remains. She Is survived by her father, mother and a totter brother. She was born at McPherson twenty, three ago. Building New Church LaCrosse, Sept. Work started on erection of a new Federated church here, to cost $26,000.

first unit, to be occupied a Sunday school room, being built by A. J. Routliton and F. O. INSURANCE INVESTMENTS REAL ESTATE LOANS Bert Mitchner, Mgr.

512 Bldg. Felt and Velour HATS Cleaned and Blocked We havt received out new DiocKi ror tan ana winter ntt Send your hate In tha work is done right. anorms Out-of-town work HUTCHINSON HAT WORKS 23 N. Main Phone 1011 Office Furniture Office- DMIU. Tables, Chairs, Saiaa, Lattar FUaa.

Everything and Anything la office you want at price to pay." Hutchinson Office Supply and PrtnOno Co. Youu and your friends are cordially invited to attend Free Christian Science Lecture Under the Auspices of First Church of Christ, Scientist Hutchinson, Kansas By Salem Andrew Hart, C. S. Of Cleveland, 6hio Member of The Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. at the MIDLAND THEATRE Sunday Afternoon, September 18, 1927, at O'clock FINNEY COUNTY BOYS AND GIRLS AT THE FAIR.

Panela of lace and (lath goor- Qetu with ribbon edged fashion at A delegation of eleven and girls from the 4-H clubs of nnney county have exhibits at the state fair. County Agent Glen M. Heed, and Bob Ackley, club leader are in charge of the group. Baking exhibits have been entered by Mary Merrill, Margaret Merrill. Bvalyn Hendriclt, Catherine Torman, Helen Morrill, Pearl Hendrick, Bobblo Craig, Rllen Divine and Kathern Belle Forest.

Carl Walker and Randolph HendricK have entered exhibits of yellow milo. Margaret Merrill and Ellen vine will give a home economics demonstration at the STEVBN8 COUNTY HAS NOVft COUNTY DISPLAY AT FAIR. W. R. llotklnion la here from Hugoton, with a display of Stevens county products at tbe fair.

One feature of the Stevens county exhibit is miniature of the R. A. Paden farm, near Hugoton, showing the buildings, yard, etc with of the crops In each Held. The farm residence is finished with kellastone. using different varieties of sorghum for the stonework.

FELLSBURG RANCHMAN DIED WHILE ON EA6TERN TRIP. Fellsburg, Kan. family of Austin B. Jennings, 43, ranchman, and banker hero, has received word that he was found dead on tho floor of his apartment in a hotel at Syracuse, N. yesterday.

He had gone to New York elate to settle the estate of a He was prominent in affairs here and a director of the bank here. Visit Dairy H. IJ Qlbson. county agent ot Cherokee coTlnty. from Columbus, and dairy judging team visited a number of Reno county dairy today practicing (sir Judging contests.

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About The Hutchinson News Archive

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