South Bend News-Times, Volume 37, Number 354, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 19 December 1920 — Page 44
12
rxD.Y, ii:ci:Mm:i: to, 1020. rHE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
PAPERS IN BERLIN SHOW LOW PRIGES
'Herman Mark Decrease-: Steadilv Clothing Prices Show Surpri-in Drop. ' TV.f II.r!::i j).i;crs it J; lz from f 1 i cci.l c-r.y f f,r.t r e iverj Ly M. l.iert t'c S I'!, rirf cramrr.M with i-ti v rtl ' . ;;ur.?M 'lotlr. nil merh 'ir. at irnni-r. r ! net i on Tir "rr.it rk" 3:im ; deer as .1 Irs v.i'.u" th it f;vcry ..''. --.-iM.- art'. Is aiv rtl' l .it wL.it t " -tr.s en th' f-'irf-ic' nn an norrr.'ius pri"'. I'r--!''i:s tr ih.? v.Mr th rr.arl: wmh "ali:i .it firo.xlir. tt 'y -" Arr. ririn r -r.e- lut at tr.- iir'Sr.t ra.'- r,f x -h-inK" it N r.ot W'-rtli rr.or" thin r.o r,-r.i. C".f)lhr.c; v ry in-x-T'-r. ' 'f!.ii:y vh--:j r rn j 1 rl ? ' f-fli!i!'H. A i n i I f.r r.r.e j. r.s.in ' t a firt rla.---! Lo: ; a r'.ifh s : or. mark- an-I fr U.-- Kirr." .'irif'ijr.t of m n ' an .tf rrr.,,'''n riwn I nflvf-rt!v--''l at J,N -r cn ' f th l' adlr.' II rlin 'Jrnrtinont
.tnr1. Th1 frock i ' Ascribed as a T:.'.rn afternoon pown In black, lur?ar..!y. I hi nr frrcn, of heavy iwality ?ilk. wooi r-mbroidr-ry an-1 fr;r.'-, accordion pleated, 355 marks uhi h at tho jr-or.t rat' of exli.'inp, m fear:? J3.D". "Winter exits aro prir;I from SI. IT up to S-.-ü. rf wool, plush and aric'i!" rr:at r ria! VoIen pportir.z riMh'-s in ail th; latest iylrq ar.l -u'.or.s ar-- quoted at $-.73 an 3 SIir I'llcf-s Tow. Sh. which could ho bought fivp years -uro for If.1 than a tenth as much as thv aro nnv selling for, ar" ad'.f-rtisd at Still'. 3 shoe More at th- following prir: Ialy's laci hr- for winter war $1.90, men's havy laro Hhor-.s at $2.25. S2. ZZ an! 52. f,". Ividy'.H oxfords, from $1.-5 t' $1.05. Children's sho'-s from 7o t) f4c and oxfords nt 5 and 75c. lady's k;d phofs with colored tors run at about $2. 5. Herrmann fJcrson'p, a laro d-rartra-'nt Mtor-. advrrtlso "A Iii? Sil" a, extraordinary Ch'-ap Prices" il-i'-ry fur women arif - frftm Ic to the lattt r are d s. ril'd as ! !r.u' pur wool. Men and women's handkerchiefs s.-ll for t hrc o and ffMir c nts a i-i-". flerym's quote th ir most p" rrsiv" wir.t r coats at $0.75. Twe'. je!i fir 11c, linen
ENGLISH HOCKEY TEAM WHICH DEFEATED AMERICANS
4 -t
Give Her this Box of Goodies! ocolates themselves may not be unusual, but these unusual chocolates will make the gift
seem so.
Deliciously blended Rarely flavored These sweets appeal to the most exacting taste. The supreme quality, the neat packing and refined elegance proclaim them the peer of all fancy box chocolates. The MELROSE 115 Lincoln Way East Phone Mishawaka 1106
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The English women's hockey team i9 shown priof to its defeating the Americans at Rkh mond. The team is composed of exceptionally good players. The American team was defeated m ' . . ,i l i mt. a ii.. i a . n a r .
u?e oat 01 LX gamea wnicu mey piayea. J-xie ecorc oi iue game waa iü w u in layer gi im
English.
tai'iM nai)kins for 12o and bed spreads with pillow cases for $1.50
j and sheets for $ 1.U0 j Cord v lvet is worth C4c a yard, duchess satin, 8Sc, crcpo do chine, j 75c ami georgette crepe 7 tc. If It were not for tho enormous
uuiy cnargeii by the Unite. 1 States customs it would 1. possible for American merchants to go to Germany and buy their stocks with American money at ridiculously lowprices and brint; them to this country where they could be sold and about luo percent profit made.
ITALIANS QUICKLY REBUILD REGIONS WAR DEVASTATED
j Ambassador Johnson Lauds
Progress 20 Percent Restored.
VISIT
TEMPLIN
j r- rr- J ' I f s .i' 4
MUSIC HOUSE
MISHAWAKA 124 Lincoln Wav East We are showing e erv s t v l e of the famous and rery popular BRUNSWICK and BRUNSWICK RECORDS
THE "BRUNSWICK" PLAYS ALL RECORDS SOLD ON EASY PAYMENTS
TEMPLIN'S PRICES ARE THE LOWEST ON PIANOS AND PLAYERS
mm ':!(
We will take your old piano as part payment on a new instrument. BIG STOCK OF PLAYER ROLLS WILBUR TEMPLIN MUSIC HOUSE P. B. LYNCH, Mcrr.
124 Lincoln Wav E.
Mishawaka
KM.Mi:, Dec. IS. Robert Underwood Johnson, American ambassador, who has returned from a visit to th Fiave, Isonzo and Asiaffo sectors of the Italian war front, including much of the devastated region, declare that the Italians are progressing well In their etYorts to make thes-e vrar areas again fit for habitation. "I doubt whether any other region of the v.ar would make a better showing of recur eration." said Mr. Johnson to correspondent.
"In April I taw the devastated regions of Kranco from Chateau Thierry to Khcim. an awful sight which may be commended to those who are willing to take the risk of another great war. Fave for a few barracks und isolated pieces of repair little had bren done to rebuild. '20 Percent Restored. "Today in tho midst of eiual devastation, there is hardly a town in Italy in which 2 0 percent of the houses have not been renewed or it-paired for occupancy, and the proportion ijj usually from 50 to ij percent. The refugees, most of them still liin in the government barracks, are hanl at work. New houses on handsome Italian model are going up every week. The second story may have been destroyed, but If the tirit has walls it is rooted and made habitable for the time. '"Tho courage and r )ureef ulness of war time was not greater than is that of peace, and both call for the admiration of the world. This needs to be accentuated because Italy has had so much to contend with, first in lh failure of this year's crops of wheat and corn; next, from the cloudbursts- and Hoods; and. third, from th' disturbing industrial condiiions. Fortunately, the season has been good for building and every man in Friule svems to have become a carpentT or mason. Still, this region, with ail the aid to reconstruction that the government em give, face a winter of hardship and i- vere cold. Trieste Industrious. "The people of. Trieste are not only brave and industrious, but gentle and courteous, and like most Italians, they respond to treatment. Wo saw no evidence of current violence, which. indeed 1.-? not directed against travelr rs, but either Industrial or political, and is local. The machinery for silk and cotton manufacture was all carried off by the Ausiriar.s. .Most cf the inhabitants have had to be.-rin at the bottom, but they are us-d to the conflict of nature, and with fairly normal conditions, and a good harvest or twe, the icgion will be well restored. I xi u Is Taking of lVxlora, Ambassador Johnson compared the Italian battleneld on the Carso, with the fields of famous battles of the American Civil war. and declared that nothing at Gettysburg or Moody Angle was more difficult than the asiult by which the Italian? won Poison, the precipice. Too feet high which commanded (loriza and with it that Important town. "The devil's den on the union left at Gettysburg N not to be mentioned with thee "Had Lands" that form ro stivr. a defence of Truste." he added. '.'.et it not b forgotten that the Italians held a frvnt of 4 20 miles, that they lost half a million kill-d and a, million nnd a half wounded and that they be!i a million T.d a half of Austria ns fro-m reinforcing the western line."
Maeterlink's First Wife Wh o h ispired th ei i L ost Him Still Holds Him Most Dear
NFYV YOIIIC. Dec. IS. What secrets stir behind the green-gold eyes of Georgette Le IUanc? What could not tho first wife of Maurice Maeterlinck, his early aid and inspiration, tell of their mari:age and subsequent parting if she would? Hut Mme. I-o Mane, as she is known to th France that loves her. now on a visit to Saw York, is living quietly in an uptown apartment, at peace with tho world and with herself apparently, although she has known the bitterest experiences that may come to a woman to love, to ir spire, to marry a man of genius, to guard and tend his divine lire till it Uamed around the world, and then to los-o him to another! Georgette L,o IJlanc would tell you she has not lost Maeterlinck; that between them lives a deep affection which nothing can ever destroy. And she would smile with amused tolerance if you were to suggest that she is great of heart to forgive ami to love, when the girl she befriended and made her guest at the Abbaye de St. Wandrille .forgot about duty and smbfgltd away the lovu of Maeterlinck. Women Illg-lleartrtl. "Hi? hearted no." said Mmo. Le P.'.ane. "All women hive large hiarts when they are tried." She had entered quietly, and you first became aware of her by one faint breath of the heady scent sne were. Then a lithe, graceful woman, a mass of yellow curls poised over I iquatit features, her gown the color of her hair, sank back into a dark divan. All about her hang gold and silver spangled laces, cloud-blue and crimson filmy stuffs she has added t th harmonious livlr.e: room of the apartment that has been loaned to her. It seemed like a setting for an ancient priestess, .an oracle and we ited for the words of wisdom. Vontli Not Answer. "One being doesn't always Futfice in a lifetime." she said. "It is not always a cae of a man looking to a outiger woman for love. Youth is "not the answer M the riddle. Jt may be any one of many qualities that attra ts. "Charge is the great attraction, the greatest stimulant. Change' is necessary. "It is an error of the poets to talk of eternal love man is reborn with every new love. Love each time buoys him up, renews his vitality. To take the proffered love is man's obligation." Most .amazing of women, to t'eft ml, to uphold ideas which have taken away from her what she held bar! For years so close a spiritual and Intellectual bond held Maeterlinck to Georgette Le Diane that her thoughts expressed In letters supplemented those which he had been about to v.-rito to her in their rare so pa rations. It is believed that the attachment
which resulted finally in the marriage of Maeterlinck and Itenee Dahon is one less intellectual in character. During the rehearsal of "The Blue Mrd." in which Mmo. Do Blanc played tho iart of Light the. Belgian poet stood in tho wings and suddenly said to his wife: "Who is that pretty little girl with tho silver tassel cn her cap "
It was Itenee Dahon, the protge of Georgette; and the same pretty little girl is Maeterlinck's present wife. "Surely Mme. Le Blanc herself must have been much admired throughout her career upon tho stago in France and as the wife of the poet. But she did not leave her hufband for .1 change?" I asked. "Ah no; naturally not. I loved him. I could never see another," she said. "So woman need be vain if sho has has received many declarations of love. It may only mean that f-he lias travelled more than other women. "It is the essential quality of a woman to attract men, and the province of man to try to possefs whatever he admires, but it is also woman's prerogative to refuse! "An American woman. Jane r.urr," Mme. Lo Mane was told, "has written a book which has startled London. In it she declares that love lasts but eight years." J)(Ks Mio Know?" A .burst of gay laughter followed this. "How droll how does that lady know eh?" asked Georgette. "Love may Last a day or a lifetime. As for marriage, that is a necessary institution, like religion and politics. "Like the horses that walk in the shafts to protect them, people walk in matrimony. It is tho basis and the strength of society. "But certain persons of creative mind are not in that, category and do not follow tho rules. 'In a held of wheat some s-talks shoot up above the rest. They are then more exposed, of course. "U ut it is predestined that some must grow taller and be exposed. "I give to every one the same prinelph if it does not work cut In every case that is the business of the person himself." I wis curious to know what Mme. Le Blanc would predict for the future of her former husband now that he is far from her inspiration. Not Fatal to Part. "Can a man of genius, whose career has been aided by a woman, continue to succeed after he leaves her'.'1' she was asked. Her long eyes nearly closed, her reer has been aided by a woman, merit. "There is no law; it is not fatal to part. In some cases yes. but let me tell you about Goethe. You may i omemner reading that for ten ye&rs Frau van Stein, a great woman, In-
Co.
The "man who can grin over a :'.at tire probably does not complain wlnn the steak Is a lit too well
o o o o o o o o o o o
o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
214-216 South Main St. Mishawaka Prompt Attention Given All Calls. Day and Night Service. Residence Phone, Mishawaka 1851 Office Phone, Mishawaka 112
ppired him to great thing?. At the end of that time they separated. Tie went to Italy. Und r the Ivitin inhuence his work mellowed and grew. "But she had moulded him in the beginning. She had planted the fued. It blosson-.ed late. To her we enn attribute the spiritual fecundity (f tho soil from which grew his masterpieces." The play. "Aglavaine and S lysette," concerning an "ideal" triangle in which two women love the husband of one and love each other, and are both b a by the man in the case, came under discussion. Not Iibk That v.as written when I first knew Maeterlinck," said his first wife. "And I believe that a 'perfect triangle is not an impossible situation. But all thr-e in the triangle must bo on an equal plane, morally anil intellectually. If one is not oi the same plane it cannot be upheld in a line way."
In Ma terlinck's own angle meant separation woman who loved him self-s icriric'. Who was
was not on the "equal plane.
ally and intellectually V" Surely not Georgette Le Blanc, who will permit no word of eriticisnn gain st her former husband and present "good friend." nor against
life the trifrom the enough for it then that
mor-
Former Mishawaka Bandsman Gets Important Promotion
Band leader Frank J. Welter, a former Ishawakan, who a mili
tary band authority of nation-wide-
ar.t promotion in army musical circle. has been placed in charge of a new army music school to be stationed at tho Columbus barracks, Columbu. O.. which re
cording to an announcement madej by Adjutant Gtnral Harris, will!
soon become tho
77. center
the United St.it.- army. j So great lias been the call fort
army trained bandsmen In civil life throughout, the Ur.it'd States that
the woman who now bears his name. " I have had mmy dkheultles," says Mme. Le Mane, "and I sometimes think it is because I was born under tb siirn of Mars. tb- God ol War. Still. I always conn- out victorious. "Hecon.-MIiatio.n with Maeterlinck that Implies unfriendliness row and we are the best of fri nds."
tho wax d ;v-.rt m at announce thai W . . 4 . . ; - t
i.iu ii ui Uni. governing in niistmer.t of muici ;r.s have bn rnodli'.-d t i aUS; i f the r.ee l of men for the various rrRlmr r.tr,! lands. Ibiaaft- r a man may enlist to study music who has v. - musical training. Th army will teach him the ir.-strument to which ho Is best adapted, rr which hmny desire. Be.Tults who yearn learn march mtisie or ; izz will I s nt to the seventh recruit derot band, Columbu barracks. Band Leader Weber. lit.' cf tk
- - - - - v. . . . . .... 44' ... been put in full chart;.' rf
srhord and will be
: FS!te
bv f. -jr
instructors. Preparations are bir.i
.IS'
made to train 2'
army. Th-re will t e
T"'-d. brass nr.d pereusbm ii.sTUmcnts. and the ir.vtrr,. .o;, i;: harmony and h;c.h r mio for th' who wish I:. M a who qulif can
aiterwards attend tb.- armv sr.ol
fir hard If :i.l..rc u-'ni, Ii tV. - . '
one of the kind in the Unite. 1 State.
Mr. Weber 1.- a br!h r d' August
I Weber. 227 Mill urn
M:-b.avak.t.
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GOOD THINGS for the
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CHRISTMAS DINNER Our Happy Part in the Feast of Feasts The delightful gifts, the cheery voices, happy greetings anc that most delicious of feasts the Christmas Dinner all go to make a Merry Christmas. And it is pleasant for us to know that our store, so filled with all the necessary delicacies of the Christmas table, will do its share toward spreading Yuletide Joy and Gladness.
PLUM PUDDING FRUIT CAKE MINCE MEAT
NUTS. RAISINS, FIGS. ETC. IMPORTED CHEESE FRESH FRUITS FOR CHRISTMAS
THE ROSS RESTAURANT
Mishawaka
t 1
The Christmas Store
Pyrex Transparent Oven Dishes
WHAT MORE APPROPRIATE AND USEFUL GIFT COULD YOU GIVE YOUR WIFE?
3 r3
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CHRISTT'IAS
Pyrex Saves Fuel, Food and Labor
It saves about ono-half tho fuel usually required, heausr? it ahvorhs nearly all the oven heat and bakes food quickly. It saves food in many ways. Meats, vegetables, rtr, et when cooked in Pyrex, retain their natural color and flavor to such a deprree that economy may be practiced in buying the less expensive kinds and yet have delicious food. Most foods usually cooked on top of the stove can bo better prepared in the ovenIt saves labor. It is always free from rrer.se and odors, for nothing can penetrate the hard, smooth hurface. You can wash it as easily a
vour china and silver.
. i i
r Kvery practical shape and size for baking is
m made in I'YREX. It is ready for immediate use and never discolors, rusts, crazes or chips. PYREX MAKES AIT IDEAL PRESENT Is Guaranteed not to break from oven us. Can be removed from the coldest refrigerator to the hottest stove without injury.
urn iw
sim
roaiter to roit that
Chrittm turkey would maWe an acceptable fc.ft-
Como In and look eve eur complete Christmas stock
Santa's. Headquarter Mishawaka.
s i n
L Barnard & Son
LEADING HARDWARE MERCHANTS
118-120 Lincoln Way East
I done. ...
