South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 22, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 22 January 1922 — Page 21

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SIWDAY. JANUARY 22. 1922 THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES 21 4F ' i"'

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PRINCESS 'BETTY' DEFIES THE COURT

Veils to Enhance Your Beautv

r a ii r i - JuM'ph's (nui(lIaulitcr Ki-fu-cs to Give l I (liiililron to Law.

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harlly rr.oro than a of V:r.T N-;--ta'lt. V : n r. ! - i " h : " r of t:.-" !'tt" ::.p"rcr of . ;r- tr I ! y fjnra- : . 1" :, y n r p;:x ril -r !. 'in'!, I'rlr.co . W.:. ': h-(5ra- tz. - -; V"ir.fl3Ch1 ! :. :!; think s.io . ) . ',r.r., i s eJ. In I a hril.it of . :r ii f1.- r a dor ' :!; a V'-ral

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Th v h-iv onth--. but rhiMr'-n yars old; ; I'riiiro Prir.' .

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XHW YOi:K. Jan. 21. Tlmo -wai famer thing", little more than a wef

nhen vc-il.- wore simply v-iLs plain, with a delicate tracery of fignire? in

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tl J meshed thin?. with a very r'a:niy , the border, la gathored about lh?!that ony xmolflclal v ; , fined duty, which they went j:boi : crown and falls gracefully irregru-! abroad of what was sale

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rathor severely.

Hut tho modern veil:

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The Ponch veil takes to a wide

Irquare mch, which enlarges the

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A tiling of romance, charm, jmyfrry! fvos smiling below the brim of a A hit of Lire FklllfuHy woven, ' faclnatlncr hat. Flat over the ; killf ully drapvl to enhance charm . crown, long: at the rides ar.d ripand'nuotly 5i:tr.e5t hauti-.-i ha!fplin gracefully at the back the concealed! j lovely, he.-'.vy silken pattern woven Tho Maria (;i:y veil, above, a kos- ; into tha squarco li given play.

her arm. Then there was a famll.v scen. at which there van only one rllent v.irn"ss, the dead rren. ant. Iit in tho house Francis Joseph had been provident enough to plant a servant faahful to him ar.d he promptly got Vienna on the telephone. Ljiilcror Slapped the Prince. Wakened from sleep, Tranci Joseph immediately ordered his imperial railway train, ar.d, in what mut have been a very weary condition, made the fatst time between Vienna and Prague that has ever"beeo known. lie was prudent enough not to dash right Into the railway station, but halted the train outside the city on the main line, went into town by automobile and burst in on the family quarrel before morning. Th emperor was 7 3 and had never been known a3 an easy-goin? man. Ho stood his subject. Prince Otto, before him and slapped hi face so hard the rrince was ashamed to show his swollen cheeks for a week. During this strange onslaught poor Otto had to stand at attention before his emperor and commander with his finger tips on tho stripes of his trousers. The emperor squared the family of the dead servant and cleared from Prague before breakfast. Was a Spicy Divorce Case. From that day on there has been nothing more than a semblance of matrimony in this royal family. Princess Elizabeth, as the archduchess was called after her marriage, went to the Adriatic to live and until the war ended remained there most of the time. She was very popular in naval circles and when her hus

band decided after tho revolution to get the divorce ho had not dared to ask for earlier, ho summoned scores of witnesses against her. The Vienna court which tried the ca.se was a holdover from tho old

regimo and held secret sessions o

ersions got

aid behind the

closed doors, but the granddaughter ; JJULL

of old Francis Joseph let nothing go undisputed.

Doll Stvles Change Too!

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DOROTHY .MAY ROTIHYELL AND HER ANC1FXT AXD MODEHN

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Your mt Iaht eUU. liultd it 1:7 ud te well.

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uoikitien of ioncr Neustadt, who , two months. were "again' the government" on j Young Prince Ctto had hardly any issue, has gone on living in hf r : . , . , . . . , ... , . , . . . 4 . taken a good lock at Prague before little fjchloss just as if the Austrian" courts had never hsued any order, j ho MarIa Zeclerova. the pret-

At one tifne the rourt felt that It ; tlest soubrette on the stage In that

city of pretty girls. Shot Her Husband's Sweetheart. Just when his wife became aware of his interest in tho soubrette is not recorded, even in the gossip annals of I rague, but one night, after having announced that she was going to the country, she camo down from her apartment with a revolver

I in her hand, and when the old ser

vant who was on the lookot ! to give warning of sueh a visitation tried to prevent her passing he shot him dead, and, breaking In tho door winged little Maria Zieglerova as she wont out of the window; Prinee Otto seized the revolver before Elizabeth could take better aim. and Maria sped through the ancient streets of Prague with only a flesh wound in

Ttrrxrf! fills Ivc-w. scicntltLs -rvc-ry mi ytwtly now ra tiive . ptiroM., trim Hu'nr'u

Amazicrj Scientific Discovery Of Yitainines Quickly Duilds Up Thin, ScrauTiy Flonrcs No Drags Or Tlclinrj Necessary Quick Relief For Tirti Wora-Oct People. .VITA3ITNT.S tho mysterious Ecbstnrc found in certain foods-, aro novr 3s-rrt!t by tho bvst scicntifia miruLs in tha country, to primuirily r-pcr.-i:.'e for buiULn firm flesh r.nd rrr-viurir.iT vior and vitality. Iack of vitnmmei? in the daily diet cnuiHH rarvou.-rv.s los of wvight and vitality, heaiachts end many of the dcfiui:cy ci. rj, ruch as akin eruptions, crr.acLition, rickets, scurvy ad

Quick Relief

No Drngs or Dfetlng ITnt whn Alexander Vitamine ar r." te1 to t.c vi;-, the results are imizir.,r lr. their r ;;idtty. Within a few days r.n er.v!itfi, MTa-.rny ftarur begina to rour.w out t-ony a-ng-l. and uifly I.ollowjf diA;'par. Your weight quickly bovrr.'!i Mi..t it huld be acvord-l-.?r t. your l!rht. Tb flabby. uyle t:i,--uiv vrbi !i are now a handicap K;cr.." firm lit V, and muscle rich, r ! bl.M.l is rrod joed ta?ks now .axiv.:r.t are quickly don bC4UM t.' 10. : yoti rat i eonverted In the j roper channels cf energy.

Gained 33 j Founds In 4 Days. "I j. r! S C T.rt f dir I V I ru-m Lr n iUjt I :. .Wir..W '.--M.r:..ra .trJ" XZJ

Gains S Pounds Quickly. "Alai-i. V'.truiL ha. tPiiwafil BT wlx r"-"' r"T for ruy rnmvxU)0. I ra S V V UXlzt trjarx. for Ce? tm rirvl t 1 t v.t wicil po w'.Cil rr. r . n.l 1 f! tri! w.'Jil- I r-i to-t. I f: tjri-. s.x ::-.- - U V:'-tjUj. ai4 ( t'" n. ,'" ' t I " 5 rro.-r tlj.

Generous Sample FREE

ixt 1 rt -7 to b .i I nobility. Doth w " v ..i ta ctr &noia In tcarir.g r.r.d

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j , ,r y j w:a jn nurope. they did

5ome couple.

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r. L i; :' V : .1 rot on k crt. n-jr U r -t i t'.r "f '"fkL! i 'atr. V?r:y i ,1 r- T :n -o -.! : t ucL-y - L r-i ; ; if : v .-. 1 :.i k- 1 jva 1-4 att., Lo I ::FXA?inU LABORATORIES looi G.it'Tay Stitbin. Kann C ity, Mo. I

must maintain its dignity by sending functionaries to bring back the children but the workmen in the factories drew a cordon about the princess's house and drove the functionaries off. The princess added lnteresr. to tho occasion by sending word to Vienna that she would lay her degwhip across the face of any court olflcial who dared to come around. The court took this as a challenge and adopted the old imperial and revolutionary custom of swooping down in the middle of the night. But the Communist workmen knew all about that trick and had a red guard

hand. Since then the court evidently has decided that any atmosphere the princess created would . have to be good enough for her chil- . dren. j Had n Stormy Career. J Pack of this ex-Imperial domestic I situation is a story which has never : been printed before in detail. It is ' hardly less dramatic than the story j of tho princess's father. Archdüke j Rudolph, Frar.oL-- Joseph's only son. . tho mj'stery of whoso tragic death ' has never bpen completely told. Princess Elizabeth once opened fire lth a revolver, and It took nil the power of Francis Joseph to keep her from being tried for murde". Tor that matter, her whole life hns been stormy and she has proed on i s. vcral occasions that she was not a

granddaughter of King Leopold of Belgium for nothing. Even her aunt. Princess Louise of Coburg, whose freedom from conventionality was the talk of European courts a generation ago, had no less respect for what other people might think than nad Elizabeth. But, somehow. Elizabeth had hid great success In escaping the public prints. When the Archduchess Elizabeth was a young girl in Vienna, she ftfl in love with Ctto von WindischIraetz, who was engaged to and i:i love with another young aristocratic Austrian woman. Being in love

i with the other lady, young Prince Otto did not fall in love with ArchI duchess Elizabeth, and, as far a i any one knows, he has never cherj :hed a very warm affection for her. i though lie married her a short timo

later. Choso II im As Partner. She saw him first at a court ball, where, according to imperial custom, it was her privilege to choose her partners. Habitually imperial young worwa never invite the same man to danco with them more than one in n evening, but Elizabeth Invited Frir.ce Otto throve times. Indeed she showed such a fancy for him that his

( fiancee went home, leaving hr ' young man in a terrible sta'e oi : mind, though in nowhere neu.r such a state of mir d as that of tho next j week's when he discovered a lovcj passion la the young archduchess, j which, to say ths least, was cmbarj rasV.rg for a betrothed young man. But that was net the worst. Th archduchess went to her gra::dfather, old Francis Joseph, and !;M ! him she war.tkd Prince Otto for h-r

the emperor, to'.. I

j about it, ar.d. to make him eligible. I ww elevated slightly in rank to ! Fuerst (prir.ee". to make him the j eual in rank of his elder brother, j who alone had the right to that titU. Otto Si-Iel an Actress. i , Scandal, as well a- history has no

time for broken hearts, so the f;rst trr.ee ty in the life of " Fuhrst" Ofto is buried somewhere in old lavender, tut every one agreed tliat the- newly cr.caced. royal couple were perfect specimens of the real old Austrian

tall, slender, nobb with cultivated man

ner of the most haughty aristocracy

take a har.d-

Francis Joseph installed them in a (astlo at Prague, a place si redolent of historic scandal he ought to hav

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; id any illusion as in th

ties of domestic tranquillity. If he did have any they wer1 shattered in

Jap "Picture" Brides Arrive to Find Mates HONOLULU. T. II., Jan. 21. Fourteen thousand six hundred am! eighty-six Japanese "picturo brlc'as" havo entered the territory of Hawaii during the decade, of 1910-1020. according to official figuxcH just made public by the local immigration authorities. Thia means that 14.000 new Japanese families have been set up in tho islands during the 10-year period, an average of 1,400 new families each year. Japanese families averago about five children each, which m-eam: that the Japanese brides arriving during the past 10 years represent the potential nucleus of an additional increa-se to the Japanese population of 1910 of about 95.000. Immigration authorities state that the number of new "picturo brides arriving In Hawaii remains almost constant, the arrivals for 1921 nov approaching the average of 1.400.

OMAHA. Neb.. Jan. 21. Dinah, the "Pip Van Winkle" of the doll world, has had a terrible hock. Anl all because little MLsj Dorothy May Rothwell introduced her to Betty Jane, also from the kingdom of rcg and china. It was like this: Blick Dinah is ICO years old.

fappe-r doll. My goodness! Betty's hair was bobbed. Her skirts were kneelength! Her stockings were rolled! Anyway, Dinah haa gone b;ck into hiding for another year. If now-a-dty dolls aro still

Grandma Rothwell owns her and i mimicking real folks In dress at

lets her como out to see little granddaughter Dorothy for Just one weekeach year. For grandma prizes Dinah highly her mother made Dinah. On her last visit to Dorothy's arms, the eld rag doll ehartd the placo with Betty Jane, a modern

Dinah's next visit, f-.e a year hence?

what will she

I.INOLITU.ALS. Linoleum should not be washed w'th water often. Water rots the surface and makes places for microbes to settle.

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Olil) NirVVSIWPEIlS. Old newspapers are the best medium for cleaning a greasy stove.

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THE WHY OF

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By Dr. J. T. Holmes, D. D. S.

INESTIMABLE good must come from the dissemination of knowledge about teeth and the care they must have, for all of us have teeth and most of us rjave tooth troubles. The stimulation of propaganda to spread such knowledge becomes the duty of every physician and dentist who realizes the responsibility that goes with knowledge of dental facts. Many dentists nevertheless hesitate to talk plainly to the public of professional technical things. We, however, at the risk of being considered unethical, are doing our utmost to forward Health Dentistry by

word of mouth propaganda and even more successfully by advertising, because advertising reaches folks by the thousands while we can talk with only a few. My reward for my principles of practice has been all that tone could wish for. My Patients enjoy relief from tooth troubles and in' many instances their lives have been prolonged for years by removing faulty dental work and infection that was slowly poisoning the system and breaking down their general health. I make no claim for the discovery or invention of anything. Many progressive dentists believe in the same methods and practice in the same manner as I do. The Dental and Medical professions as a whole approve and advocate these advanced methods, but only the more thoroughly progressive and energetic members are making use of the latest proven knowledge in dentistry. It is my ambition to advance with the science of dentistry. Whatever is new and good, whatever has been proved beyond a doubt by our great teachers and research men for making the teeth and body healthy and 100 efficient, I will use for tKe benefit of my patients. Dr. J. T. Holmes, D. D. S. THE BEST THERE IS IN DENTISTRY AT A PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD TO PAY

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FOR GROCERS

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101 S. Michigan St. Over Central Drug LOOK FOR OUR SIGN

REFRIGERATORS yör ALL PURPOSES Announcement A salesroom for the display and sale of McCray refrigerators has been opened at 409 South Michigan street in South Bend. More than 30 years devotion to every detail of refrigeration problems has developed the McCray refrigerator of today, a product of such high quality that it has come to be regarded as standard wherever there is need for a refrigerator. There arc styles and sizes of the McCray for all Purposes, m residences, grocery stores, markets, restaurants, hotels, hospitals and institutions. The McCray patented cooling system forces a constant circulation of cold, dry air through every compartment, thus assuring thorough refrigeration. McCray materials and construction insure lasting service. You are invited to inspect the complete line of refrigerators in this new McCray salesroom. No obligation to buy; we'll be glad to explain the superior points of the McCray.

McCrav Refrigerator Co.

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409 S. Michigan St.

Lincoln 1678

The Beloved Disciple Tonight at 7:30 The FIRST METHODIST CHURCH N. Main St Rev. Guy Black of the Board of Evangelism. Methodist Episcopal church, will preach. VOCAL DUET C. J. Jordan and C M. Pearson

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South Michigan Street

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Extra low-priced markings on these very much reduced items call for your very particular attention as they are exceptional offerings in limited lots selected for immediate clearance.

Wool Blankets Special $7.95 All wool blankets, size 66x 80, in dainty pink, blue and tan plaids, excellent quality. Extreme value. Children's Sweaters $5.95 value, $2.39 Children's all wool Coat Sweaters in plain colors. Women's Outing Wear Values to $2.95, at $1.45 omen's outing flannel gowns and pajamas in plain white and pink and blue stripes. A big value. Part Wool Blankets Very Special $3.75 Beautiful white wool blankets with pink and blue stripes Soisette bound, excellent quality. Unusual value. Long Cloth Special 19c Good quality 36 inch long cloth. A special value.

Hard water Castile Special, 6 bars 33c Kirk's Cocoa hardwater Castile soap. An excellent soap and a big value. Laundry Soap Special, bar 5c P and G, Naptha and Velvet Soap, now selling at a much lower price. Women's Pajamas Big Value, $1.19 Women's outing flannel pa1 i i

jamas, l piece, in pmK and

blue stripes, with sleeves.

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Union Suits Unusual Value, $1.95 Men's wool union suits slightly imperfect. Special for Monday only.

Children's Hoso Special, Pair 10c Child ren's black ribbed cotton hose, formerly 1 5c value. Men's Night Shirts Monday Special 95c Men's outing flannel night shirts in dainty colored 6tripcs. An unusual valueMen's Union Suits Monday Special $2.45 Men's wool union suit lightly imperfect. A wonder value for Monday. Baby Flannel $1.50 Value, yard $1.29 32-inch embroiderd baby flannel. A ?pecial value. Dress Skirts Values to $15, at $5.00 One lot of dress skirts in navy, black and a few plaids A big value. Dress Aprons $2.50 Value at $1.79 Fancy dress aprons in light patterns. Window Shades Complete 50c 36-inch water color window shades, dark green. Cotton Blankets Monday Special $1.75 Extra quality full size cotton blankets in white, tan and grey, with colored borders. Comforters Monday Only $2.19 Good quality comforters in floral patterns with tilkoline covering big value. Table Oil Cloth Special 23c 45-inch table oil cloth in dark patterns.

January Clearance Sale of Cotton Batts On Sale Monday 6 ounce Batts 5c 8 ounce Batts 12c 8 ounce Batts, No. 2 extra quaity 15c 10 ounce Batts, No. 3 extra quality . . 20c 10 ounce Batts, No. 4 extra quality 25c 12 ounce Batts, best white cotton 30c 3 lb. Cotton Batts, size 72x90, at 59c 3 lb. Cotton Batts, size 72x90, at 75c 3 lb. Stitched Batts, 72x90, at 95c 3 lb. Wool Processed Batts, 72x90, at . $1.50 Final Reductions All Women's Ready-to-Wear Garments are now marked at less than 50c on the dollar. If you are interested in any article of wearing apparel now is a most opportune time to make selections.

Try Hews-Times

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