South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 266, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 23 September 1921 — Page 7

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FRIDAY' MORNING, SEPTEMBER 23. 1921 THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

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YOUR HEALTH )

Sv. p'--" '.s w:vh thfir har.is a fVcn t!rr'.' t!iy an 1 er this acr. r.: r. they're rlc.m. They hit l.ke the folk who h'.irkn the

-i f ..3. It Is rTin'.T.daMf, t'ike prüf in c.n

f course, to hands. Ilut

v.-rhir.-r th- hm I or.'y the b:?inr.!r.: r ? r'n1.!!:-- rne.s tho faceiinl nl' til r cfthe iody are froc,u"ntly scrubl A, th're cannot b frood health. I haven't a word to fay about the Uf d a litt!' roup and a decent Amount of puro powd r. Iat I do blve that if the stuf: had never loen invented there wouli be an Incrfn.' (I incentive to live th sort cf life whleh givs natural slow an J coloring. Assuming that It Is permissible to employ thr-so. cosmrti-s during the Cay, I am here to . hat any frirl who goes to bed without thoroughly cleansing h--r s:In and removing vt ry vj.s'Ji') of taint an l powder, Is not clean. To to healthy ar.d to insure ions life, ecry nan, woman and child rnurt take a cnn body to a clean bed In a clean room, with clean air to breathe.

No body is clf.in whew nostrils

are filled with dun and whoso finger nails aro lined with dirt. Our outer rirmer.t.s pick up filth and frerrns. Cullvate the habit of cleaning your body of a'.l impurities before 3011 siy your prayers. Per-h-p th'?; is what the Good Book means: '(.'le in hands and a ruro heart, O

God, thou wilt not despise:" Outside cleanllr.er in't sufficient. You must be clean inside. There is an unfailing Index of your internal cleanliness. "The ton?ue i tho mirror of tho stomach." Your tongue will tell whether you are abusing or neglecting your digestive organs. If the bowel is filled with fermentin? waste. If you are overeating rich food and chocolates, your tongue will ho coated. Of course, you can scrape th-s coatIn? off your tongue, and, If ycu prize a clean breath you should do this every day. No toilet Is complete until the teeth have been scrubbed and the tongue scraped. But removing tho debris from tho tongue- doesn't remove the cause for Its accumulation. The bowels must be kept active, and. to this end, there must be the right kind of eating. Tou cannot have perfect digestion and function unles you learn the relative values cf foods. To avoid body odors and to have your skin sweet and clean, elimination from tho bowels and kidneys mut be tinlnterrupted. Lot3 of pure water should be taken dally. Some persons forget tho Internal cleansing qualities of water. Elimination is promoted by drinking water in abundance. The health of a community can be estimated by the per capita consumption of water. When the water department complains of the frightful wasto of water the health department Is Joyful over tho low death rate.

HER PROBLEMS

a.

By Annette Bradshaw

WiiR THE BRIDE'S FIRST HOUSEWORK IS JOYOUSLY HINDERED.

Nothing changes more slowly than tho wedding customs of a peoplo with lcr.g yean of superstitious beliefs behind them. It Is believable that great as have been the changes in Ilussia even In agricultural Ituf-sla during recent year, the wedding observances of the

in'oujiks remain a? they have been

through counties: gcneraUons.

Chief among tho wedding guests Is tho marriage agent. Shu arranges tho lnarriago. keeps tier eye on the engagement ceremonies which are long and Intricate and follows the haipy pair from the home of tho bride to tho bridegroom's village and house. There are eeveral purely Russian reasons for this caro. She wants to bo suro her fee will be forthcoming, she 1 eager to pose as tho successful arranger of marriage It's pood advertising and sho als- wishes to have her full share of every feast Incident to the wedding. Many and Interesting as are the various teps which load up to tho departure of the bride and groom for their own home, they are not nearly so exciting : s is tt.o welcome a popular moujik gets fom his fellow villagers. Tho youths of tho village run out and grt-et tht appearance of tho bridal party with ?ho-uts and the Hrlng of puns. Tlien they accompany the bridal group down the Mtrcet, whoo houses are decoratrd with evergrcci.s and ilag?, and perhaps undrr a triumphal arch which tho villagers have erected in the Ir honor. "NVhen th- various little custom that hedge about the cntranco of a neT'ly married couplo Into thtlr homo nro over an 1 the celebrations of tho f.rKt day hav. pajsod, the pccOnd daj' becomes n veritable tcs't of the bride, llor rntier.ee, her pol.e and her hou.-lu opln ability are all taxed to tho utmost. All KoriH of tricks aro played on her as fho takes up her housewifely duties for tho first time in her new

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BRAND MODERNIST ART AS DEGENERATE

Greenwich Village is Waking Up Say Culture Disgraced by Exhibit. NTTV7 TO Tlx. 5VPL 22 Greenwich T.'.age Is rubbing its eyes. Also tho little Latin quarter over on the "left be.nk" of tho East Hirer that Is to eay the artistic colony on Brooklyn Heights is also pinching Itself to make 6ure it's awake. They have 2 11 been set by the cars. The artistic tanctum sanctorum of

New York the Metropolitan Museum of Art has been denounced as a hotbed of Bolshevism. Printed circulars denouncing as "degenerate and pathological"' the exhibition of modernistic are now on view at the Metropolitan have been going through the mail to a selected list of connoisseurs. Addressed by type writer, and without return addresses, the pamphlets bear the printed signature. "A Committee of Citizens and Supporters of the Museum." Condemning the exhibiton as "entirely unworthy of the Museum," the "committee" characterizes in detail the pictures it deems offensive. "Vulgar In subject," "corrupt in drawing," "childish in conception" are tho labels allixed to one group. "Simply pathological in conception, drawing-, perspective and color," is another characterization. According to the circular the Metropolitan is being mado the tool of art dealers who want to "unload this rubbish on the public." The trouble with modernism in general, and the Metropolitan's exhibition in 1 articular, according 0 the pamphlet, is a combination or Bolshevism, commercialism and Just plain insanity. Deification Of fRlincsa. "The world-wide Bolshevik propaganda," declares the brochure, "aims

to overthrow and c.my all eV.stlr.s social 5vstms, including that of th" arts. ThJs modernistic d' er rat" cult Is simply the IkIshevik philosophy applied in art. The triumph rf Bolshevism, therefore, means the destruction of the present aesthetic system, the transportation of all aesthetic values and the deification of uglinc5. The rhilosophy of Bolshevism a-i applies to ail chr-.nels of human action Is tho po-p! of mental importance. Iler.ce the Bolsheviks would epen the pates of the temple of art to the mentally lime, halt ar.d Min i of the human rac.

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:!ar declirs that

sec on I frre back rf the mr'

mov:v.rnt in art i sreei. Th" V.V1 propicsr.da c f thl movemen. it de, lire??, wa.i organized ry Kjr"pcan art d- alers who had f.cc !r

the Anerican mirket witli French and Dutch pt boilers But the rfi". cult of modernism, the circular drei ir--. Icrin with a small group cf neurotic comaniacs in Par:. wh style 1 th--!vc worsltIrpe-3 f,f Sit.Tr. th r, 1 rf r::r..

' The third moving force

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miotic art Is a well-known form of

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Announcing Our Early FALL

H

OWING

Aim

of Capes Scarfs Chokers

Made up of the choicest pelts and at prices so amazingly low that Milady cannot afford to be without one of our fine fur pieces to go with her suit or dress.

Jni

REEMBLATT

Furs Exclusively

232 S. Michigan St.

WHEN THE FUR FAD HITS THE CEDAR CHEST

BETTY-4 just wonder if I can't make a fur coat like yours out of Grandma's old squirrel coat and Grandpa's skunk cap. They ought to give that plaid effect, shouldn't they?

Tbry Clock Her Way. home,. As she starts to go to the tablo the guests bar her way. She takes a broom and sweeps her passage clear to tho table. Th relatives throw coins on tho floor, and three the bride picks up and hides for fear the others will take them. And so it goes until the relatives raise a cry' that tho bride is badly trained. Then tho marriage agent is seized and carried out of doors with the bridegroom. Tho bridegroom is first soundly whipped for his bride's lack of skill. Then tho marriage agent is punished for her fault. But the bridegroom steps In and buys her ransom before tho punishment goes too far. At last, with shouts of laucrhter, the "bride is praised to the skies as a model of the household virtues, and tho young couplo 'settle down, drawing long breaths of relief, for they are alono at la.st.

MOM

tt a Yrmur Tjri idc

By WATIDA BARTON

alo the various . carvers and game .h.-drs various sharpener.? come with iVv knives But the most complicated silver, and that which often is confusing to the uninitiated, is that coming under the head of serving pieces. Cugar eifters, tongs and spoons, teabaU spcons, sandwich tongs, petits fours servers and pastry servers are

most apt 1o bo used at afternoon eas, occasionally flanked by caddy spoons, cream servers, lemon picks or forks and olive forks or poons. Sunday night tea will introduce cheese scoops, cold meat forks, pastry servers, potato chip servers, salad forks or spoons, tomato servers and several other implements more or less useful. Dinner, of course, brings forth the

greatest number of service pieces for

each course. Some are not essential to the simple table where one spoon mlffht be used for more than one purposo without straining the conventions seriously, but at formal tables they arc always present, or accounted for. Silversmiths are always busy executing orders for odd pieces to mako up for losses in various ways.

W. L. Douglas Say,

Snappy brogue Shoes and Oxfords made of fine Scotch grain with brass eyelets, at $8.

Blackstone Blk. and Mishawaka

now to ii;cim: what is cohnECT IN MOD URN iSlLYLin. T2iough wo may not be bujdng new sliver firU warts rr service pieces, Wo lik to keep up with that which 1 b?Ir.g used on. modern tables of good taste. For our grooving children's al;o we Mr.no t afford to fall behind in the race. YW should remembor th.it they are visit In c in modem hi-:n s. porh.ij-s buying wedding presents for friends, and It is

advisable for them to learn of the new thin .Ts at c-v.i .

Kvp". In home- where old silver !i

the prldo and pro-id po.-ssion f thi owr.cm, m-v!-rn thinir-? will creep In, f specially among the service pieces, though they m iy be mide to ord-r to h irjr.orii with the treasured Tattem. t v .i r 5hnt ho all of one pat

tern to be correct. Tho dinner forks are not quite so large as in former years, thoutrh they are quite as heavy, and tha knives to match havo a new point of valuo in non-ruftlng blades. The gamo forks, or tea forks, have their strel tines platexi. There are dinner, entree, fish, frame, pastry, salad, ramekin, ice cream, fruit and oyster forks. liebster picks, nut picks, wee asparagus t-nprs and silver corn holders are also used. Tho selection of spoons includes the table, tea, soup, bouillon, de?sert. afternoon tea, ice tea, sorbet, grapefruit, salt cgz, coffee, orange and rhocolato varieties. These are all shaped to eult their uses. Knives Include dinner, game, fish.

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''-.,- rt a ' butter

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They Drop Slowly but surely As prices gradually fall, you are going to have more money than before. If you continue to spend the entire difference between higher and lower prices, will you be any better off? Take advantage of this present-day opportunity to save part of the money you have been spending. ?lake regular deposits in a Savings Account at this bank, where

money deposited before the 1 Oth day of October draws 4 intercut from the beginning of that month. SEÜVICE - STABILITY

: 3 rtx VrWttltQ N ATI ON A L nrj J rxn rrr? Iii ILrliuaü;'ij)TDüsiÄSVviNCs MMijh&

JEf rCRSCN ULV D. NEXT TO POST OPflCC "The Bank Ahead"

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They Call Them

ETTY McROY MATS

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We have received a fresh shipment of these smart styles in headwear. They are noted along the Avenue for their distinction; and it would be difficult to estimate how much they enhance Milady's charm. Drop in and See Them!

THE

DEFREES

W not only talk value here at the Frances Shop we think it and work for it constantly.

117 South Michigan St. Correct Apparel for Women

Eah v a 1 n must have etyle. Each style must have value, elso neither is complete.

Values Truly Astonishing

Autumn Suits $29.15, $39.75 $49.75 Others up to $175 New individual suits that are strikingly original in appearance. Suits of Tricotine, Duvet de Laine, Velours, Ylama Cloth and the other seasonable materials lavishly enhanced with fur and other trimmings.

Style With the utmost discriminatjon icerc these Frances Shop garments selected that ice might present tJus very newest. QualityTailoring, designing end fabrus must be of the very best to-coma up to the high standard of Frances STiop quality. Pricing With style and quality gssutvo tfu) price remains to determine value our prices on fall apparel crc t'cry low.

Autumn Frocks $25 $39.75 $49.75 Others up to $150 Charming street and afternoon dresses aa well as evening and dinner gowns for tho fall and winter social season. We feature a special showing of black, and of course there are navy and midnight blues, browns and taupes.

Handsome Coats and Wraps

$25

$35

$49.75

others Up to S250

Such fabrics as Orlando. Gerona. Duvetyn, Evora. Veldyne. Marvella and Velours. Collars and trimmings of Moleskin, Beaver and Persian Lamb. The styles embrace belted and loose, straightline and flaring efiects. In short, every material, every style and every trimming is to be found here.

Newer Skirts 8.75 $12.75 $18.75 Serges, Prunella Plaids and Stripes, Tricotines and Velours you will find them all in modes that are sure to please.

Fall Blouses S5.75 $8.75 $12.75 Prettier than ever arc the new fall blouses in colors to match or to contrast with the fall suits. The materials Georgette, Crepe de Chine, Silk Broadcloths and others.

The Frances Shop

The Frances Shop -

MILLINERY 131 Main St Next Tews-Times

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