South Bend News-Times, Volume 30, Number 294, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 14 October 1913 — Page 4

THE SUUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES. The Dingbat Familj It's All Off Copyright, 1.13, International News Service. -J S TCO, BAt. RML3ARBIA' GAVE. AlvAV "THfc SfcCRr Ttfyr WHY, AGLICUS 'Mb I HA'.'E bEODEB)y HUBAt!.BA ' TcMC&HClU K W UEfct ALL To oiv5 C.E MOTHER. A BiTH-DV That A5 LOKO AS " fc.HUBARBA ycvti birth-dav isatt ir ?r ) Anr To (Siifp voii1 v. SPOILT All CUft SURPRISE ( p titxVcu vjcud acl a;ot Give XtE. 5urpRie. Patv T) I DGAJY WAMT tlTMEft.. But VEUC VVE'ftB TO GIVE To Theirs Just PA - x The Same J5TEAS)

TUFSDAY, OCTOnnit II, 1913.

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Polly and Her Pals

Copyright, 1013, International News Serrico.

Pa Has Our Sympathy

1 L41D OLTT VfeR. B4LL OViERCoT

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HEr.e Five dollars

vtfoT- Beem Tucked l4V iu ME

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Kpfiiira Mystery Stoky ofRdvYok 'P 5 'WILL IRWIN

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rally tho carwith a

(Continuoil from Momlaj.

"That's funny. You saw me when I was narrr wi!f liking him than 3 over was brfor ir aftor. Ho was a dear. You couldn't holp boini umusoil ami llatterotl y him but nothing

"Why rlidn't you like, him what held you baek V" I U tsy-Harhara pulled uvr riasro for another lin nt

jerk this time, but slowly and softly. At the amo languid paeo. she reilm(l ;5trikin the keys. "Do you (all this business?" she sked but very w akly. Tommy North laid a hand upon hers, stilling the keys; under her tinkers. "HeisN -l'.pr''ara. this is business. 1 was talking partnership. I didn't mean that kind. You know oh. blaras I meant why did I braeo up

It was bo-

you thor'. that's

lo work

-tu I lo'.'t

anvhow '.'

and o cause

outi" lictsy-Ilarb ira, lier hand still helpless letwoen tlie kes and his greater hand, raisod her fate. If she had shone before with lirht. sh shone now with the litrht of many angels. The sluon and glitter of her hair, the tire of her eyes, the sparkle of her littlo tptth behind her parted lips all the glory which makes stars and systems anil beasts and the generations of men Illuminated and transformed ret.y-liarbara. An instant so. and that lii;ht faded. The eliin lit;ht shone again. And "Tommy North." she said, "are you proposing to me riht in business hours? Jot baek to your sat! Your answer will be transmitted to you in business form." Ttiere was hope and .yet wonderment In Tommy's face as lie obeyed. IVtsyJ?arbara tweaked the sheets from the roller, inserted a new pasje, and began

fast for her. Sin

to type vcrv last tor her. She tmish-

td. She was suffused with color as she drew out the pag- and laid it on Tommy's desk. He turned to read; and I!etsy-Ik:rbara's hand brushed his

CheeK

ever so lightly.

mil Thomas V North; dear sir; Your pro p"sitii: is accepted and I trvist tha t ttie ep.culg

diip will bo long a.ln prospcryurs sincerdly lllizabeth I-;ine.

forms must be malnln this solemn and awful

partner: t u s

" Hasim s tained -n

inunidit," sa: 1 lu t.-y-Itarbara.

"Will, there's one thing about being a high cop that's worth while." remarked Martin Mel-e, "you ertainly do yvl suell attention in a lobster palace." Inspector Mold', in his dinner coat and his diamond.--, sat in th-' preferred ccroer farthest irum the music- lti-

salie, reigning opposite in two thousand dollars' worth of diamonds, eight hundred dollars worth of clothes, three hundred dollars' worth of massage, and a hundred dollars' worth of hair-dressing and hat, followed with smiling eyes a wave of agitation which ran from waiter to waiter until it broke at the door, in a spray of Italian-Swiss-French festures, against the head waiter and majordomo. The lady with Inspector MeGoe, the lady whom he brought regularly so an ex

cited waiter-captain explained to his

chief had complained of a tained clam. It was frightful, terrific, the head waiter replied. Some one must

suffer. Inspector McGee might never come again. Some morning after

hours the bar would be raided! Mache! Accidente! When McGee had condescended to

accept apologies, he resumed to Rosalie: "I don't even have to pay for my New Year's eve table reservations. That's w hat it is being a ccp'" Kosalie dropped her pink riht hand on her pinker left one, and fell to playing with a diamond solitaire that dimmed for size and luster all her other jewels. Her dimples thre e back an answering flash. "Knjoy it while you can. Marty," she said. "It won't be long." Kven yet. Inspector McGee reflected. 1( salie Le Grange h id surprises for him. He did not realize, for he was no seer of the future, that she would be giving him just such surprises all his life long. "What's new with you this time?" he inquired, smiling indulgently. "Nothin' with me' replied Rosalie, "only I'm breakin' the news to you. Inspector is as high up as a policeman can get. Your days on the force are numbered, Martin McGee. An I haven't made up my mind yet," she added, dimpling now not on the diamonds, but on him, "whether to make you democratic boss of the state senate, or just leader of Tammany hall!" That day was raw November, with a wet sticky suggestion of rain in the air. From the colonial piazza where Constance stood, waiting, the grounds rolled away cold and naked to the great double gate. A cluster of bare elms hid the farther reaches of the walk from her view. He who was coming would approach unobserved until he was almost upon her. In the whirl and perturbation of her spirit, she found herself thankful for that. Whatever happened, it would come suddenly. (To bo continued.)

An "acre-foot" of water, a term commonly used In irrigation, is 4T.,r0'J cubic feet, or the amount needed to caver an acre one foot.

GETTING THOSE WRINKLES OUT OF THE FACE

0 ;': v5Jx n AS SHE THINKS SHE IS &m0M0Mm AS OV l00$mkk TRUTH SHOWS HER. ..

If your mirror tells you that you are thin enough to look well in the winter modes you can congratulate yourself and ask it some other questions. It !s very probable that you will find some little wrinkles about your eyes and perhaps one or two between your eyes if you have been out doors much this summer. It is almost impossible to look the sun in the face or even to look into its bright rays while playing tennis or other outdoor games without squinting up the eyes. I have seen girls this fall whose skin about the eyes were full of little lines of white, as if they were put on with a paint brush, because they had wrinkled It up when they were outdoors. These little lines are rather fascinating when the rest of one's face Is tanned brown. But now. of course, you want to get these wrinkles out. You must understand that it Is much easier to get wrinkles in your face than to take them out, just as it is easier for one to acquire a bad habit than to break one. The first thing to do is to give your face a steam bath. This is accomplished by pouring very hot water into a deep kettle and bending your face over it with a Turkish towel or any other heavy material thrown over both your head and the kettle. After your face is thoroughly steamed wipe it carefully and rub it well with a good cold cream. I have given the formula for one so often that It seems useless to do It again."' Now begins the massage: Take the first and second lingers of your left hand and very lightly stretch

the skin about the corner cf your eye until it is smooth, then rub very gently between with the forelinger of your right hand. The idea you must have in your mind while doing this is that you are smoothing out a precious bit of a very thin gold leaf the kind you have seen at your dentists. After you have smoothed the corners of both eyes very lightly, begin at the corners next the nose and draw the two first fingers of your hands across your eyelids. Then start with a little more strength at the bridge of your nose and rub over your eyebrows towar dthe temples, back on tne cneek bone, up the side of the nose to the bridge again.

Rub the wrinkles between the eyes across. Of course, you have to use. cold cream to make these movements easy. Now if you have a little time smooth out the wrinkles about your eyes and put over them a bit of court plaster, also over the ones between your eyes. Lie down and put a cloth wet with cold water over your eyes and keep perfectly stiH for a half hour thinking of nothing if possible. Don't think because this is a good thing that you must do it every day twice a week is sufficient, and remember that you can smile as well a.s frown without making wrinkles in your face. Consult your mirror on this subject.

MUST PASS MONEY BILL BEFORE QUITTING

Son. Lewis Takes Raj) at "Invisible" Hoard of Control Tor Attempting to Force Recess. WASHINGTON, Oct. 14. Debate in the senate Monday made it quite plain that there is to be no adjournment or recess of congress until the currency reform bill is disposed of. Democrats prepared to object to having any other general legislation set for consideration during the first two months of the regular session, beginning Dec. 1, on tne ground that the legislative calendar must be kept clear for currency. Sen. Lewis, democrat whip, voiced

the sentiment of the majority leaders against any adjournment or recess.

, "The invisible boar of control i which objects to domination of the

finances of the country being placet in the hands of a visible board." Sen. Lewis said, "has been at work endeavoring to show that it could coerce this government. Into declin-

1 ing to act' on this legislation. The

question is now whether we shall allow the gentlemen to bully the senate into a recess." Senators Hoke Smith, Reed and others objected to setting any other legislation for consideration before February, Son. Smith blocking a plan to fix Jan. 9 to 29 as the time for taking up a woman suffrage constitution il amendment. Sen. Borah and othr republicans insisted that the senate should either attend to business or recess, and Sen. As hurst.

WANT CHILDREN TO SELL RED CROSS STAMPS

OHIO CONGRESSMAN TO ADDRESS TEACHERS

Anti-Tubcrcu!ois League Frepaiin to Fnlist Aid of Pupils During Coining Campaign.

Miss Veva Harrison, secretary of the Anti-Tuberculosis league in .South Rend, will go to Indianapolis Thursday to attend a meeting to be hold there Friday for the purpose of organizing a stale seeretarit s' association. The membership will be made up of the h-amie secretaries throughout Indiana. Miss Harrison will appear on the program for a Lrief talk on the work of the league in St. Joseph county. Dr. Rishop of 'h eland, ., president of the National Association for the Prevention of Tuberculosis, will attend the meeting and assist in the organization. It is planned this year to enlist the school children throughout Indiana in the sale of the Red Cross stamps for the work of the league. A plan will be worked out by Charles W. Grvathoiise, the state su ' terintenden t of se-ho-. i.s for the placing of the stamps in i he public schools to be sold by the thildren. It is expected that the

Hon. S. 1). Fos Principal Sjeakcr Rc'ore County Association .Meeting State Normal .Man Coming.

Hon. S. D. Ft ss, member of congress from Ohio, will be the principle speaker at a meeting of the St. Joseph County Teachers' association to b" held in the grammar school Oct. M and Nov. 1. S. I . Rettger of tho stat normal school at Torre Haute will als address the teachers. Dr. Fess has taken a prominent part in the educational and political life of ( hio. He w as formerly president of Anlioch college, an institution founded by Horace Mann. Fess was a member of the constitutional convention a:id was later elected to ooimn ss for bio. which oilice h. nov hobls. All of the teachers in the county schools are expected to attend the sessions.

lb ,f si, nips in Indian

will amount

The local

dipose of S'),-

to -l.oOa.t. oo this year, league is planning to

Or; in South Rend. A new der-i-;n has been adopted for the i-tamp this year. It will lie oblong in shape with a picture of Satita Claus. and his reindeers in th center. At each side will be a small red cross. Miss Porterfield, in charge of the tuberculosis camp at Pottawatomie park, will go to Indianapolis Tuesday where she will read a paper on the preventive work of the b-atrue before the convention of the State Nurses' association.

NEWS-TIMES. FASHION HINT.

WILL THEY WANT EMMY WHEN SHE LANDS? Mrs. Pankliur.-t May Come Coder Class of Undesirable Allen: Protests Are Kcccicd.

WASHINGTON, Oct. 14. When! Mrs. Emelin Pankhurst, the militant! British suffraget, arrives on the liner j La Provence this week, probably Fri- j

day, she will be detained at the. Rili.s island immigration station, according to present plans, until a special board of inquiry can determine whether shecomes within the clas of aliens excluded from the United States. Officials here say no protest aain.-t Mrs. Pankhurst's admission have been received from the society opposed to woman suffrage or from any of its members on behalf of the organization. A record of Mrs. Pankhurt's activities, ber arrests and imprisonment.-.

has been furnished to the authoritie s I ut New York. Upon that and upon a : hearing, the immigration authorities J will decide if any suffrage leaders j acts have been such as to debar her : from the United States. j

Temocrat. protested against the policy of recessing for three days at a time during the consideration of the currency bill by the committee.

ii ii Mfiik': 1 1

OTon A !)-t attractRc lein. 11dio' lloii-e pre-". Cray striped se. rs'. k.-r with facings of white e.:;ed with bias b.ir.ds of ray, was u-ed to develop this neat mod. 1. It is equally suitabb for i: in.; ham. percale, u-alatea arid other wash fabrics, and may al.- be lir.ishcd in S'Ti;r or oashmer.-. The pattern is cut in six sizs: 4.. and 42 inches bust m as are. It requires .". -L' yard-- of 4 4 inch material for a .':. inch siz-. A pattern of this illustration rv.aii. J to any address on re-vipi of lee la silver er fctitXiiiiji.