South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 13, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 13 January 1922 — Page 7

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES think cf giving up the compan ahout th! other p'.rl? Ii IT TT YT Detty L: Y, my dear. It perfectly pc-r.h! thAt he may lore Have You Got a Movie Face? Get Out Rule and "Roll Your Ownl" Advice to Girls hlp of V i a youm? mn In the Diary of a Fashion Model a that he will turn to your gU r.d for companionship, but 1 y ANNIE LAURIE I'.ar Anide Liur.e: I am a jrlrl of 17. and have a .r friend of that ase. I love thii giri very much. A few months a?o wc wer at a dance, and met a ycur. man of IS. We hoth lov- him vor;, much, hut It seem1, he like mrt hot. think you woula be -wis tclyoi and yet talk a itrat ahcut By GRACE THORNCLIFFE d i so. Lov and friendship cannot :. ff-r'-ed, and if he wished hL.- c o m -panlor.Ph'.p !n prefererco to youro he would .sc.- It. without ar.y scheming u:i yu.;r part. lie probably like you both, and will continue to be a good the other frirl, wl iher 1 readly no rroon '.rhy he shruM rot. a- he probably ptlli look upon her a a fr'.er.d. However, ther are better, more iriterstintt subject to talk Mil: IHWUIIUiS AN IM .M ALLY rii iji:i:ki'ast xat. I'm clvjn? . Sunday morn!n t about than pernor. alitb hap you cm Intro rr.or worth-whl! ir.-) f atlon. ar.i pr.reakfaiit party at th apartment. I am g-olnp with him now. hut when f frier. I po out cf town he oes with her, i 'Lv u you both, and you will be .t to try to "mar-ape things l V Iii, 1 .JWU I t. J IH" he thA ru'j-t of hon rr," annrijn"''! Pam. Saturdiy. as w wero 8!!M?!r.:r Into our street c.oths after a 1 us;. day of modeling. "W--11, I wouvlrt refuse such an I think if I were not goir.cr with him fin way wouhl ker-p steady company with j her. I love this younir man veryi-fr A: Iaurie: Annie Tjiuric ill wrlcnnw letter' of Inquiry on mlOe-r-t cf feminine IntcrrM from jounc women rrn-dcr of this imiT anl 111 reply to them In thro cwrlnmns. I tr- to Mil much and he nvs he love.- me.! I am a girl of IT. and have been What wculd you do? I voir, My parents do not object to my i a -to. poir.z wih your.? nur.. i year: invitation. with a youn? mar. 13 yrara ol il" wvz.i with a cirl for three b-..re he went with me, an1 ui why li the honcr le-

FRIDAY MORNING. JANUARY 13. 1922

i t

y ... " " 1 1 '. 1 " 1',---, f Lr" V J it i i- - N,' V'. , Ar.,f.

in ?r thrust upon m?" I aked. "We'vr share J such hectic lunches toth-r so rr.ar.y t!mi d u r i r. these I a.t huy weks that I think you deserve a very lazy an j leisurely 1 reakfast on Fun day." said the svmjathetlc I'am. .llppln? hr arm u!out m. " I V f-i ls, I hive a new breikfas: rent I mut chr!stn." .he JacjhffJ. with a little fhake i f her 4 r ' 1 1 4 .

Would you stop Kilns' with thL- : every ti: io he lie lie talks about Ijiurlc hotiM nMrtni to lirr. con ynur.tr nan? I m:i frier. i!?, but : a v e lots of vour.u ; thisi he loves me betin carr of this ofTicr. she hasn't mary. ' ter than any frirl he ever went with. LKN'A. j 1- it rlsht for him to talk about her? You are ceneroas. Denn. ! If he loved me would h talk 5 perrfnt Reduction Sa!-. rLENA i

"I can't

, he pomr'thir. as possible," I

comri'te with that, be-

cau?o I shall have to wear a dres

down thre, ?ut it wl! .'i P3ft ar.i becoming

returned. I coulln't sunpr .- an exclamation f d.-lUht as Pa::, r:.ef sr." at the door 8m n day. "You alorab'.e creatur:" I cried. "H's the h.vliest thi::r in the world. Whr till you g"t It?" "Do you really like " she ak'd.

d-llghtedl. "r.au"- I m re-pun- i

?-i h 1 - for the wh'! thmg. I made it mys-lf." "You don't mean yu embrold-

red these lov-ly yo'.

1. examining the ar against the

stars?"

p' i n t 1

round of

?ndT.

had

Kray t iff: a.

then.."

o r, e

you think thi- lb

th r:

- h h a r

"I.very ei. "Dt mu- a'

in-1 . "It makes a perf-f t frame for your 1 1 vly skin an! hair," I a-sured her. "The de'licat" lb's'.i sh'tde r.v s just thte rikht tint t the gray of the rnb." "I cho th (!'-'..h lining for the turnhack collar and ruffs iieause I thoufs'ht l wT.t with the neu

tral L-rav." I'ain answered

MSI pi SM ! Will ! teffk

I

" i "i ? x v" -i v; V i -i-v .. " v':.- i . .fsr-

1

TIdSTINC. AN" APPLICANT FOR r.i:ix)v. niciiiT to iiinT, miixsc or nosh

Ni:W YOUK, Jan. 12. Have you a movie face? Y'ou can rtell by applying some of the tests male by movie directors.

1 Thej know that certain facial pro- ! r'0rti'jns are nees.-i'irj' if an actress is to "show up" well In the film, soy the current ls.-.-ue of Popular i Sdenco Monthly.

tiii: Movrns. riTKnnnwssiiow mix ri:ing ikasuiied. iiinc; tiii: distaxci: nhTWu:. i:yi;s, mcasuiung lcngtii

Here are the teats: XOSE Must not protrude mer than three-fourths of an inch from the face. Measure yours! MOUTH When smiling: or Mush-

CIIIN Distance from point of chin to base of nose must equal distance from tip of nose to point between the eyebrows. Lines on both sides of your chin must form an ob-

ing. it must never be more than one- tu?e arvrie when viewed from direct-

fifth larger than when in repose. EYCS Distance between 'em must be exactly equal to one eye.

ly in front. Do you pi ?w? job:

Then apply for a

"r,!l11- t'-HGnM Stars Kmhrohler the Skirt of;

This Gray TufTt-ta lln akfast Coat.

! very desirablo quality." answered ' Pa.Ti. "It can bo slipped on in a ' hurry over almost anything'." j "Film j negligees df require r.oro care and time in cho sing' the propj er undergarments t go with them," ' I agreed.

And vou have no idea now use

WINIFRED BLACK

"That ilefj.lv rolled collar line llful and adaptable this is. aside from

aid. t.

f cdiar

very raoeful." I to pet the fan f

"I think this typ.

beromimr t th- avera- jorsn than the mwr u-u:tl ruflled neckline when the materi i'. is of the stiff -tr variety," cornriicr.ted Pam. "ThN taffeta is wonderfully soft and smooth." I o! s -rved hoLlinfr an end of the tb' !dt between my fingers.

"es. and

sN-ppinT back ! beintr pretty." Pam commented. "I i

Iran slin it on at a moment's notice I chJ.Mlii1 1,oa"t'- ! . " .i i - - I tr. 0 tired she looked is more ( pep. the duor for the mail or for I . i ' . . . . . . i tired.

ir

o; niuenes-

1 . . 1 : A A 1 l A. A I - A k '

any oi iritse iiiu iruerrupiiuiis mat

come while I'm dressinc." 'Wailles!" I Interrupted, sniffing the air.

"Y'ou poor, starving child, come In

here and let's forpret clothes till we're fed," she laughed, leading me to the most attractive of breakfast fable.

Angels ever bright and fair. Take, oh, take me to your care. Sweet and ssweet and poienant sweet, It was, the refrain from the old song. S'ho playe-l it othe violin, thj little, little, pirl, with her big. r ig eye.--, and the look of fatigue that

somehow overshadowed her lovely

so very, very

I

YOUR HEALTH )

You feel cold chills up your spine, you have an lrrcstlble inclination to snt'tz', your -yes water, your ln-ad aches you have a cold. What should you do about it? If you would attack a cold with the same visor you would pneumonia or smallpox, there would be much less sorrow and suffering in this world. When a cold comes on take your hat and go home at once. Don't try to fight off the cold. That may seem heroic, but it is a foolish risk to your own health, and a menace to your fellows Y'our etftciency wrll suffer anyhow, and you may ppend das In bed as a result of your fool

hardy attempts to shake off a cold, j Go home. ?i a pitcher of hot lemonade aivi f the bathtub with j

hot water. Get info the tub. and while, there sip slowly several glasses of the hot drink. As the water in the tub cools, run in more hot water, keeping the temperature as hich as you can stand. Stay in the tub half an hour. Then dry off with a rough towel and go to bed bt twt n blankets sith a hotwater-bot'b' at your feet. Y'ou will sweat like a football player, and that is the intention. Stay between the blankets for an hour or so, taking more hot l-mon-adt. until you have r.l-d your sweat. Then rub o:f with a roush towel and rub yourself with alcohol or cool water. This will "close you? pores," so to speak. Then go back to bed. between dry sheets this time. You will fall asleep, and in a f w hours will awaken fr !i as a ti.iiy. and nine time.-; out of It' free from all the symptoms of a cold. llemain in bed until the nei n.orning. reading between nap-; if your sleep ;s not continuous. You will be able to :: to work, will be fre; of the cold, and will no Ions'r be a m naee to those you love, as well a- those with whom you work. Put the fact that you had a cold i a sicn of sumtthir.g wrong Discover what it is at once. If you are constipated, overcome the Immediate effects by a dese of castor oil and the ultima!'.- causes by correcting your diet and habits. Stop your overworking, master the caus of jour worry, ventilate your workplace, avoid dust and smoke, cut down on your tobacco, and increase your hours for recreation and sleep. Overeating and under-exer-cL-dng. over-lndulger.co and undersleeping are the great factors responsible for most colds. j Just as tobacco smoko I a r.aal irritant for men, so are certain face powders nasal irritants for a lot of women. Mar. cases of so-called colds among women are due to poisoning wdth sachet or face powder. If you are s;:bje.t to colds, if you take cold on th" slightest provocation, you should seek out the cansand remove it. There must be something fundamentally wrong- if i have repeated colds. Wisdom d.mands that yo-.: find out why. To avoid co hi, wash your har. !s before touching food. On your n--

' . your of your r. Do a ' '.v. r. o ' be. YOU - ry. 'nd , of your ,

ai title- on "Colds." Tomorrow ho tells What Vou Ought to Do About C .Ms That Hang on.

tired

I couldn't bear to see her so

shut my eyes ami listened, and almost as the music ros" and fell. I

! could hear the rustling of angel

wings. How can her mother bear it, I wonder, flto see her grow so pale and so thin ? Site doesn't seem to notice it at all. "A Hani Taskmaster." "Gwendolyn will be a great artist, some day," said the mother to those of us who heard the child play. "She has already much technique and she practices seven hours a clay. Ch. I see to that: Art is a hard taskmaster.

"And soul did you ever see a child so young with such soul Isn't it marvelous?" And it is as she says, marvelous, and it is also cruel and hard, and I cannot bear to think of it. No childish hours of childish play no gay. light-hearted laughter, no foolish mischief, nothing that she can look back to and remember but "practice, practice, practice" and then an hour or so In a crowded, overheated room, flowers, flattery poor little thing! Poor, pitiful, lonely, overworked little girl ! When I looked at you the other day I wanted to snatch you In my arms and carry you away to a little brown house with a green roof that I know. It stands on a round hill in the

Far Country. j it all the practicing In the midst of an orchard, it i fuss and feathers!

cess Goldylocks and her lover who was turned Into a swan by the wicked fairy. And there's a well with a bucket, and you can look down Into the water and see there your own face, and you ran lind nuts in the woods oh, yes, there are woods, deep ones, so green in summer and so cool and there's a little laughing stream that romps in and out of the forest like a playful child. And there's a dog. a curly, whirly dog, with white teeth and a roguish eye and a most ridiculous stump of a tail that he's always wagging. -' And there's a gray cat, also, and kittens, and there's a fireplace where

you can build a fire and roast apples;

and popcorn Dear me, you little decp-ryed ge

; nius how I'd love to take you there! land give you a chance really to 1 , live! Y'ou're so alon, so lonely, so;

removed from all the others of your kind and age. How you must hate ;

and all the

grows like something springing from

j the ground itself. And there is peace

and sunshine and lots of time, and plenty of story books, and there's a hay mound where you could go and eat apples and read about the Prin-

Ar.c !s, ever bright and fair, Take, oh, take me to your care. Not that song not that! if you were mine. It would make my heart ache, and I could not bear it.

tQTCu

W77,,yW

turn from work wash your hands and the inner cles nostrils with eoap and w this thoroughly and im at. matter how tired you mov wiU have yourself nr: '!: aid greatly to th- : complexion t-y ti:!- . -u--.

This is tin

rcr.'i.

, Dr. (Ap"OIaml'

:wn sa. Ver. 334-tf

.V

The beautiful artist was murderer! rn her studio. Read the thr.'Il'rg detective story which ; Jsabcl Ostrander has written for' The NoYi-Times. "The Step cn the Stairs" begins Monday, Jan. 16. Adv.

Cösct

Pvercoat

For

f uieem

Dollar

For Saturday only we are offering about eighty oyercoats that were originally marked to sell at

prices ranging $2d.üü, $30.00, GJ D and $35.00, for

The assortment includes all sizes from 34 to 50 Patterns, fabrics and styles are all good. Sweater Special About two hundred sweater jackets in gray, maroon, and blues; sizes mostly 34, 36 and 38; regu

lar prices $5.00. Saturday only ,

2.00

Dep

A fine assortment of odds and ends in boys' knicker suits; fabrics guaranteed; prices origin

ally as high as $20.00. About dO blue seme suits in this lot. Saturday only

Boys' $10.00 and S12.Ü0 mackinaws, flj Saturday only 4

p0

ABLE

OTIi

The Best Men's Store since '84 107-109 South Michigan Street 108 West Washington Ave

i

Mxtmit

117 South Michigan St Correct Apparel for Women

(Q

Just in from New and priced at

York

The charm of these new arrivals lies not only in their style and quality, but in their very reasonable prices, as well. The newest modes from America s great fashion center are represented in these plain and fur-trimmed coats.

Bolivia -Marvclla

Rivola U " ond or a

low

Dr

Panvelainn Silh Duvetyn To!

SO. 75

It came in a Special Shipment Yesterday

13-

.75

43

.75

Wondrous values are to be found in greater profusion than ever now that we have received more new frocks. Every new style feature is here in beaded, embroidered and lace-trimmed effects.

Tricot inc Poirct Twill

Canton Crepe Duvctwi

Georgette Crepe Back Satin

Your choice of EVENING GOWNS - at - 33 1-3 OFF Dainty, individual gowns for evening wear may now be had at onethird off. Charming creations in the most wanted materials.

Our entire stock of ATTRACTIVE SUITS at -- HALF AND LESS Suits that will be very appropriate for Spring wear are to be found among these garments. Every desirable style, shade and fabric.

GEORGETTE BLOUSES 25 OFF PETTICOATS AND PETTIBOCKERS ' $3.95 $5 $7.75

NEWEST SKIRTS

OFF

SWEATERS AND SCARFS

20

1 0 OFF

iSeic 1922 Spring Dresses Arriving Daily. Wc invite you to sec this advance showing.

The

Frances

Shop

The Frances Shop