South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 128, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 8 May 1921 — Page 27

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

SrVDAY. MAY . 27

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF WOMEN

DRESS YOUR TOXE" ADVISES ACTRESS

Clubs

Circles

SOCIETY

Suffrage

Philanthropy

Ms

Fashion Adopts Daring Magpie Motif

For Her Intriguing New Evening Gowns

Thf fprinjr spirit of "let's and buy something new or chnr.Ke the way we do our hair." is with us! Thus cno notices. f.iuntrrinc thmuph the shops where ir.odish womc-n ar? trying: on hats ar.l gowns, the-t the fashionable hair is don high.

nmro e la bora

morn wnvr. ard3r -e'M fr :

Flf-fVlA .!! - T:

mre puffel.

I iMint.it fon. V ry rftm yn wn::M fir. 1. w- rr you to di.--ort the thir?. th.it u:i-l:r th m.iss cf iitriuir.ff ar. .1

swirls In a fnur.d itiur.. r.ot so rrrii h ! unlike t!: old 'im!.." I

softness ovrr th fnj-oh id thit I f-ufTin or - i 1

r : t . ; 1 r r or.

Many Sllr.

ri- d ii ! ;j . ::..: aro typ :' -a T'.. v. ; - S v.-r.r-! v. .:..-. !...!;;. t!.v

fashion t .; p- r : ,

r.f my

He hin

'"ndcr portP--och r.

nonio. etood it mn.str: fltoliort Atwood Lorlrnrr hid Jiist h! pped from i rar that was p-ilUn away from the ptrps. His faco was r;tndafl. his mat w.!3 torn, h was hat!. lint ho

was allvr, pre!, white. ;! ndid limped Pli;;htly vh a he r.ur.f ard the taxi. Thon he hrlp-1 from the car fnd cJayp' d rn- ir arms. Morrison wlp'd hi. --s.

lortor who ha 1 broucht Hoi

ordered him to o into lh- housf and to thr-n conKratulatfd me on my husband's scape and dro'.e away. Morrison would r.ot x into th--huu.-o', Imt, he listTt-il t I t-.i".s hurli;,d account of hl- r;I it i n . Hob had brcri .:t!innt(i a?id brui'd.

h id a clew to th cans.? of the fxployion in fh munition plant. One of the Ludif di:?"ovrp-d was that of a man with -yts of different colors. Now Chrj i h i.: told us that she woull recognize anywhere the man who had friMtii'd hr in C'erttls' cellar. He was remarkable because he had one blue and one brown eye! Investition proved that the man

Toe h !MO

a d'-sk home m- in at-'ure

at the me

y injured, of clothes

to the .share.

Hold

Vhr, du- from b. n ath had asked to b- taken

one. Ho hal not n morninn h- wanted to that he was not serinJl needed anotlnr su;t

and then h- would u-o back

wreck of th- tant t do his "Walt fie tributes. Morri.-on!

tii taxi fr os," h- roriclir-Ieil. "No, you don't go back with me, IJob!" said th- oldr man. "Your duty bk'ins rilu witii this little Kirl.:' Ho op; tw-d th' hall door and pushed us Keruly into our bungalow. "In n. ni d world, can't you two fortunate youia,' people have a little sen???" "Well, can't we, dear?" It's time!" l'.ol drew me to the Iuikc chair. "I dont know " I poke as I clipped from his knee. I was affronted by the vision of a tawnyhaired Rirl with h r ead on his breast! I kn?lt by my husband's .Me. "Morrison told me to believe you. What am I to believe?" "That I love you!" I started to run my finprers through Bob's hair, then dropped my hand.

Hcllcve the obvious thins:, my

dear. Something you should have Kues.oed." "Well?"

"Kathenne was minting nr uif jewels in the cellar. She couldn't to there alone. I went with her. Yes. many times!" I sighed. Hob's explanation did not relieve my mind. "Katherine had the secret from jDort Pedro, when she was in Mexico. Ho had from Certei. She knew that the loyal loot came over in the U-boat and was buried some

where in Oerel is' cellar. She

the secret of the alley door and nothing more. She wouldn't let me tell the government officials for fe.ir ho might be ridiculed. If the clew wre fals. Ye, dear, we went there many afternoons! Yes. we discovered the machine Runs. We were -oin-; to pive that little matter away soon. And hat's all there is to the affair, ane. It was her secret. She would not let me tell you. Hut I've learned. Never will I have anthr secret from my little wife!"

"Hob. I want you to promise me

.-omethintf. That is, if you can keep the promise." ' can! I will!" "Promise me not to see Katherine Miller any more about anything!" "I promise. d-ar. Now ask something hard!" He smiled. I sighed. He had made the promise so lightly! It was his man's way! "Now I must pet to work with the rest!" W kissed. "It may be hours before I spp you apain! Don't worry, darling. " I did r.ot see my husband for two days. However, he phoned to me l r. iuentlv. bu: brietlv. The most important news was that he and Morrison thoucht they

killed in the explosion had been employed by the Ixirimer Chemical Co. for only a fw days. Morrison and Hob decided that he had planted a bomb for revenue, and by some mischance had ben dstroyd In his own dath trap. Our next news about the Jewels came by lonp distance to Morrison. Two men had been seized by the federal authorities while goinj? aboard ship for South American. A ba they had fitted tho description of I'.ob'H piece of English luffKRe. All marks had bn removed from It. It contained only a traveler'3 outfit. Hut in the mr.n's possession were several postal receipts. They proved that the gems had been packed inside candied fruits and chocolate

I bonbons and had been mailed to a

p!rl in Huenos Aires. The consignor was the taxi chauffeur who had lucked u up near Certcis' house, the man whom Hob had locked in the closet of our uest room. Morrison had called It an "inside job." This man, in confessing, implicated a red-haired pirl of our town, whose name he did not know. Morrison was to find it! I remembered Katherine's excitement when the closet was found to be empty. I thought a good deal about this hefore Hob came home a pa In. Put I couldn't puesa why she should have let the man out unless it was to fltand in with him. This wan unsatisfactory and vapue.. Hut when he came home. Hob had this to say: "I think the pirl was daffy about the Jewels. While we were huntinp. I sometimes wondered if she was really anxious lo hand them to the povernment. I half fancied she wanted them for herself! Absurd, maybe!" He mused, for a moment, then went on: "Hy Jove! That r.ipht in the car, when Chrys fainted, T told Katherine to keep on eye on the bap! Now I wonder " We had to pive it up. The horror of the explosion was more important to us. Hob turned t me for comfort. He had one grand piece of news which we were never tired of dis-

had cussing.

The Lorimer Chemical Co. would no rebuild its munitions plant. It would devote Itself to constructive manufacturing forever more! Next morning we found that the 8lories about the explosion were subordinated to a mystery in the lake news. A woman, alone In a motor boat, far out In the lake, had hailed a pa--sinj,' steamer in the nipht. It waa approachlnp her, when she wreered suddenly stralpht across the bow. The body was recovered. It had no marks of Identification so ran the wireless but the woman had

The mapp ti de it pood. Milday n ver tires of combinlr.p b'.ack and white and fe-.v are the combinations which so brin out the pood points of skin, ey-s and hair, of the woman with the tall sdim f;puro. as black and white. However, only the tall slim woman can be the maepie of fashion black and white are danperous for the idiort. steut lipure. The linner pow n in black and white, by Jucile, sports a train which is lined and borderrl with black satin. The pdticoat, you'll notice, for the directoire line demands a flimsy bit at lace bt-neath, U of Kilver lace. The bodice is also of that tntripuini? material. Jet is used for .shoulder straps and narrow pirdle. Notice the peacock fan which Miss Helen Kapon waves with oh. sueh an air! The vopue for the hupe tulle bow yruj'll find in the shorter frock which Katheryn Perry of Selznick wears. Yeui'll lind here, too. the h-'un of vary in p krmth.s which Is to be even more popular as the summer proceeds. The panel front Is richly embroidered with Kpyptian colored beads. The tulle band headdress is cominp to the fore fetr dinner and theater wear. The pown if by Wortzman and Mallard.

i There are a l kindr of rnrr.hi nr l t . i. -i

ti,. Mni i. ..-,. 1 .ii..-.:o.si.

luv iiiuic ij it. ii.ims-eru or toe t r r.s Thv nre hrlrf wo-n pvv-.-

lively, but not durinp the d ,v. Thev

S i . S A

!;. f v,.' w . r

riff.e? ftr.i f ri'Iy t !dr rs i: l ! h ippv,

r:-r. :r tp-ry tyro e-i ; . ar. 1 chir-

pompadour you used to wear, but

see what': happened," he "They're In trouble. Find out it is."

Faid, what

DRESS 1 1 AIR HIGH, DECREES FASHION

Entrancing Frock For The Wee Lady

mapniflcent ha'r of an unusual tawny red! Observers could not say whether it w iv a case of accident or suicide. Vn it beshe?" I could not shape my rival's name. I did not need to. The same dread was in my husband's mind. "Hut she never loses her head in emergencies." I insisted, "unless there's a man around to be impressed by her helplessness!"

Hob, repardinp. my remark a in bad taste, shruped his shoulder,. j "Yesterday Katherine caller me j on the phone several times. Z evaded her," he said. "I tried to keep j my promise to you. dear. Finally

sue cm wora mat me arrair was one cf life or death. I talked with her. "Katherine phoned that she had read the confession of the men who mailed the German perns to South America. Jane, you remember that their confusion implicates a woman? Well. Katherine feared that our visits to the cellar had been observed by the plotters. Now that the gems are lost to them forever, Katherine was afraid thit. as part of their revevcre, her nsme would he drapped into the affair!"

"If you can fcrpet your clothes, they are all right if you are conscious of them, they are all wronp." This is the advice little Miss Patricia Colllnpe gives to the woman who would look really well In her clothes. Patricia, now playing- the feminine lead in "Just Suppose," is one of the best dressed women on the stape. "Don't wear a thins just because It is fashionable wear It because you are happy in it," she says. "Now I am most happy vvrarinp thinps with a tinpe of purple in them not pu-ple Itself I never wear purple, but thinps with a purple tone, soft rose and mulberry; mulberry I'm most happy In! Why " that Impish little prin quivered at the corners of her mouth, "if I were a cat I'd purr, you know!" And then Patricia confided that she really believed the secret of a lot of nervousness and had temper amonp women was due simply to selection of colors which did not suit them. "There is a basic color for every woman," she said, "and I think It would pay every one to find out what her color scheme is and then dress It why :f I wear henna. I'm irritable it makes me really ill; I think I should quarrel with myself if I wore a henna elress! In veils, Miss Colllnpe advised the most gossamer for youth anel heavier ones for the older woman, but she warned of the lump at the chin ami the knot at the Kick. "That Is uply!" she said.

sbe afreets m'-use.

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feared more than

she the ex-He

you i for '

my

i French blue and white linen

J.mbined for this entrancing frock for the little lady irui the mode !s really quite like mother'?, you'll notice, with lt:f loops and fUt round neck. The cording at th dc cf the smart small blouse is a new note.

"I think she

that. Hob!" "What, then?" "Hob. I firmly believe that unlocked the loset and released taxi chauffeur!" My husbands astonishment ploded in a prolonged whistle, shook hN head with decision. "Hob. you sill yourself that beliee he wanted the jewels

her own. that she was wild about them hke a child. I think she derided that since she couldn't have

! the entire loot, yhe'd take inv n'ece

i - - - - -. , , . . jshe could pe!. and so she barpained j I wirh the taxi-thief. Hut the scheme) I failed. She orly succeded in set- '

tinp in motion the power which ! caused the bomhlnir of your chemi- : cal plant. j

i.ob i:d not reply. I made point clearer:

"She was terrified she believed you'd discover the truth. Hob!" I "You're crazy, Jar.Ie!" j There was no sense In arguinp. ut to myself I s.tid that Katherine j had been crazy about Hob; that she j would bo dispr.T-ed In hi eyes If her ' nam were connected with the es- j c.ipe from the rloset: also, she nr-r- 1

ceived from Hnb's attitude toward her. his refusal to call on her. that

would ha to give him up to Appirrnüy. he had riven her

..

. woman naa no power to

eaj a man who has decided that.

1 iainenne wa not a, clever girl. She was a be ,uty wih the mind of j i 12-year-old. she was a moron, one ''f the brainier type which has al-

ruled man to his harm.

find out the

Tier

n

sh me.

to

redo

" i wa vs

"Well, ifs easy to

-.ruin. Köm exhumed. 'Ti; call

tip you can t ilk to her. Jane." Daddy am in and interrupted the phono call. "Hob. po over to the Millers- and

R lpM)

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