South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 99, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 9 April 1922 — Page 23

SUNDAY. APRIL 9. 1922

THE SOUTH BEND fiEWS -TIMES 23 JS 1 -V' jr w. TT . - A ' K i v . v. v. "A : ; - y i k M V A Aiv' of s-

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KEEPING MODES IN CHINA IS PROBLEM

Women Find Keeping Styles:

of Paris With Oriental

Sofias "Swift and Sure' Divorce Mill Bared

Tail

or

Puzzling.

"'r A.

SHANGHAI, Anril . Th a

r.:rt ha i am. d in Sh ir.;hai. Whllp th rri nS-r.i of th I'r'Ti' h community have ace-ptei th- I'ari; f :.ehlon ri ; r-1 and ar" now warinj?

Ir k:r3 ark!--l-r :rth In contract

to th xtrmly hhort s'irt-s of a f 'a-fI3 av, the American omnn dr In th- air 00 th quJtion. At a lull rpf-ntly at th Ast- h'u' th .-klrT f'n by th vnmMi afr "flfty-Mfty " Thr wertir.y nrr.tiT of bautifu;iy-t;owri'i v o m'-n ufarir.q powns. chie fly Im-;-'iriat!ons from Pari3, which tr.vejt rir-'jurl th"ir ark!.i. And, ln"identft'iy. thre upre Jut ns m.my stunr ir.i?ly-rlre5d wfmn especially th1 yf)'in? matrons and fl.ipper? w ho darted the latest word from jsray 1'ArL and wore their .kirti very, ry short. Word hLi." reached hT from ArrT.-rlca that American women have r'j'ctrd French dictation on th !(M;th of their kirL7. and the ')';i:jrer ?et in Shanghai 1 following t nii lead. l'roMf-m to N Stjll-di. In Shanghai foflowin? the fashions Is a proMem. There are a fc.v very expensive French Fh'j,a where women ran or-iI-t frock-- Occa,iona!Iy a woman arrlv3 from N".v York with several h:r.drrd dollars' worth of frowns .-Mit?, coat. and hat.-:, which dis-

i l.yy arul Un in rooms in the two

''adins; hotels, and some wtrmen are "nt to leading hops In S.m I-'Yan-every season for costumes, but Th Rffat standby of the American "men In Shanghai is the Chinese tailor and the fashion magazine. Iao Hai-?hir.tr. number one tailor, arrives at the houe with his equipment ti?d in a bit; handkerchief, a .smil and a spirit of willingness. You can't help but appreciate his wnilnsncsd, even when he drives you to distraction by ruining your material and "sTuet-zlns" you on the pric of the trlmmincr. "Glood-day, mlssie! You wanchee me?' he asks upon arriving. 'Misie." hoping" for the best, hws this silk-coated man of the Orient a picture of the latest creat.rn from New York er Paria and ak? h'm if he can make the dre. Tak5 Pleasure In Clilnofe. "Can do. mlssie-, can do." he anfwera and proceeds to take her measure, which he writes In Chinese characters in his little book. A woman Is thrown absolutely upon her own sense of dressmaking. She may ask: "Which look more better. L10 Hal-shing:. belt more hirh. belt more low?" "I think o yes. missie."- is the answer. If she knows what she wants and knows how to teil the tailor he can make anything for a very low price, but If she cannot the result will be Impossible. If she has a dress, borrowed from a kindhearted friend who ha Just arrived from the States', for him to cony. th wiplder of the wicked seizors wil! copy It perfectly. Fr. Shanghai women, who have

up.

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7

MRS. HOLL.IS.

GRACE FISHKR HOILI3 A2sD FORMER SEN. HENRY F.

SOFIA. Bulgaria. April S. Sofia has the simplest and swiftest divorce mill In Christiandom. It works where others won't. It remained for former Sen. Henry F.vHollis. U. S. A., to discover It. The enator's a right smart lawyer who used to live In New Hampshire. He parted from his first wife in 1912. Tried to get a New Hampshire divorce. Couldn't. Tried again in Paris. Couldn't. But the enator 1" a sticker. He read international law nlphts and discovered "Soflia's simple, swift and sure divorce works." Result, the fenator la now honeymooning in Venice with his second wife, who was 'Miss Anne White Hobbs. of Concord. N. H. Though his first wife. Mrs. Grace Fisher Mollis of Princeton, N. J., says the divorce la illegal and talks of making trouble if the senator returns with the second Mrs. Hollia to America, the senator has no fears. In Sofia It's easier to Ret a divorce

.Mrrep.ted In training the loal tail-

, .v,. i-t, f cHrt, ,ieair man it 19 in neno. rrooi 01 a sep-

a rhan.ee with Joy

ir as

do not welcome

T? wlM he. davs before thev will re

. frnm th . -r r - U" i r t fflea anil t PCed of

1 T. t It U It) .' - - - ' Krasp the .e mode.

atation is about all that's necessary.

.'Formalities are few and easily di-

j children took care of that, j "Contaminated by contact" what I perfect beings are these who canI not boar contact with ordinary mor-

twenty-one) , tals?

How is any mother to think that htr children are- so much better

a child of mine I than any other mother's children.

CONTAMINATED B) CONTACT

(Continued from pape

in the world! I wouldn't have

ir.d in the .hoc; of either one of J hat sh ear,u,i bear to let the poor T.'in for anything. Would you? i little things go out and play wlth'herM did you learn that it was' out a nurema!d or a private detec-

'akir.ff to cheat at games? Out of a book? r did the little red-headed Mi'-k" from down by the tracks -,;h that into your head the day trird to fool him in a school .line? Who taught you to be kind and. mpathetic ? 1 : 1 you '.earn it In a lecture or did : e ie f.rst dawn upon you when

j stubbed your toe and the threat.! :r. awkward boy you'd always 1

' i"che.i at car.ie ar.d helped you to

s.ire whne vow

: 1 rroucht you s ime ar.d brushed off ynrr

tive at their heels? Who's going to watch those children all through life? Who's goincr to keep them from "contaminating contact." as long as they live? Mother won't have to do It. Any child who L educated olely at home !s likely to be so "(Jueer" that nobody will have anything to do with the poor thing. anyhow, anywhere, for any reason whatsoever. I suprose the mother of Marv and

nuM it down - " , "c ,,C1T "uu

drer-s find

Put, by way of warning to A-rnerl-cans who may think of rushing to Sofia to follow Hollis example, the fare first-class Is about $1,000 each way.

LOVER'S HEART IS A VACUUM Continued from pa," twenty-one more to me than a friend. In fact. I am madly in love with him. "But I do not see how he can care for me except as a pal when his wife is not around. I want to make It clear that he never proposed anything to which a lady could object

but naturally our conversation was, always pretty personal. . lie certain- j ly knows how to put a good deal of j charm into his friendship. j "Hl3 wife has come home. Now j Is it wrong for me to continue to go )

with him evenings as I have been doingr IS IT WRONG? Is it wrong for a girl to take the time a man should give to his wife? Is It wrong for a girl to receive the confidences which a man should make to his wife? Is steallngwrong? One wonders what has become of the old-fashioned moral teaching which formerly wa-s part of a girl's home education. One wonders how come girl manage to grow up escaping the homet grown variety of ethics. This girl excuses to herself too desire to meet the man down town on the ground that she "has no company like other girls." But when did the loneliness of an unattached female become a fane excuse for snitching a husband from his wife and a father from his children? Perhaps If this girl would read her own letter as if It had been written by another, she would not continue to be in doubt as to her future conduct, , .-he will have to help herself. Nobody can save her from herself. Her cure depends upon her courage to face the fact that the man In the case is an egotist who flatters himself that he requires more than one woman to fill the vacuum he calls his heart. "The ego urge constitutes the difference between man and the animals," says one authority. It is. unhappily, an Insatiable urge In some individuals. Criminals are not the only persons possessing an exalted ego. For example, more than one quite fascinating married man Is so selfish that he never perceives what a crime he commits when he flatters a young girl into a love affair which is for her own loss.

Drawings of Child, Age 11 Astound Artists

v w a o

nd

STorrER. A plain pmall circular sheet of soft rubber acts well as a topper for the kitchen sink.

COFFEE HINT. Try a half teaspoon of vanilla m the coffee. It adds to the flavor.

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natural fr her hild -": b' l.eved th i

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a tr' i . , ! 0 ' 1 f-r a

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war; 1. Ar. ri'tie b.rr w

it FfTiOU.-Iy. "T!if-n or.e diy T to'-c .-. r-" wr-k to a fan',v" New Yr'r

nnd a-'sfl him f -r an opirlon. n

for ailvlt"'1 r' a r I irr t )rrT" r .iu a ion "H- said' 'Ktfp b.T away from teachers. T'.n'h hT nothinr. hcr work or:t her own proh'.r :rr. She

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cipal of the pnbMr fchol which th was attend rrc. '.-:s:sted pi her tikirc

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re.-.dy to ?ha r. itur-

drnwinc -ssons. I put 1 vate school. "My Intention is to Rome as ?oon a she devote all her time in ar

ally lean? to the old clas.-'.cal form? nnd I Fhull be !a l if hrr d-de-eopme nt would cont ir. u' that wav."

LOCAL EVENTS OF MUSIC (Continued from pace tn-pr.'v.ni

Iowr. ir. v

:-k.

MARIE KKMITON.

student of GrorT York City. Her experience

X e w

b--en varied.

It th Mi j (,a r."3 x

nv TioiiTiivsE sAUNrnis. (Special to The ws-Tlm.-.) NEW YORK, April 8. The drawings of an H -year-old girl, Marie Kempton. have proved one of the real sensations of the annual exhibition of the Independent Artists at the Waldorf. "Here Ls a child who has the real touch cf genlue," f?ald John Sloan, president of the Independent Artists. "Her work has all the naive loveliness of primitive painters, uncorrupted by modern sophistication. "If she ls kept away from teachers and faddists, and allowed to d-

I Harold means to be

to her children.

n

word about i

r"ver said a

human roul? Humility waÄ that born In or did that clever little mimic

'ta

NEW JEIJiY.

you.! Pdunes jellied with pelatlt. are who I quite an agreeable, change from the

!n the front seat 'how you the

nav to be humble. when she mi-( n-.-k d the way you ht Id your head, a r A srirej a sickly crin. w hich h : sr.i1 wai xartlv 1 i Vi ours. when Terrer praised you for a bit of (":7ina' ere I Tac did om stay after school j and leam a set of rules about when; to talk about what, or did you find' out that there t ere some thlncs never mentioned at ome par- !

t;"unr tlmtv when you f.aid somethlrc acair.st the Irih. in the pres-

f rCe of the 'Ittb- Z'.r nrre a crcn bow In h

usual thine.

DANDERINE Stops Hair Coming Out; Thickens, Beautifies

urn mm

.tat $ :t t in 'i.'. mirirrf'" 'W -'

ij 1 'i min i K..,MivTy

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velop in her own war, there 1? no doubt but she will reach a unique position in American art." Marie ha never had a drawing le.sson. No one haa ever taught her to desipm or to mix colors. ISut ehe knows how. Her development is be-

Mürch Prints Out lii-lilnl Sjxu.s. ' How to Romovr E;iil. 1 The wrman wit-h tendr ck:n d re. id 5 March be-cau-?e U i' likely t rover her fac with ugly frfckle?. No mat-! ter how thick her veil, the c-in and' winds have a strong tendency to j makv her freckle. Fortunately for her pearr. of mlr.d.j

ir.akes it I

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Othlne double strength, pcfsible for even thos mo-

oe Birthday Comes This Month? hot will rxpren! birthday ertinss so delicately and Hins than Flowers in basket or bouquet?

'p t

lb:e to freckles to keep their skin' clear and white. No mater how .tu!born a case of freckles you have, the! double strength Othlne should. r - i mov; them. ; Get an ounce, from your drugs!.3-. and hani.h the freckles. Money back if it fails. Advr.

Very Moderate P

neei

Mirena

Kies

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RED SEALS

C.nriO'S FIRST RELEASE SINCE HIS DEATH 87335 "Cruclflins" 1.25 Z1MIIAL1ST Violin Solo of Mendelsohn' "SrKIN'O SOXG" 5G034 TO.nCANNI'S I.A S CALLA SYMPHONY ORCH. ."Don l'a,ualle OTertur" fi60.aO-eO31 JOHN McCORMACK (l)net with FRITZ KREISLER'S Violin) "The Last Hoar" :Ä7fl IAsC'HA IIE.IFETZ (Olebrated Violin Solo) "D'Ambroslo's Serenade" 66022 HKKEXKATII Tell Me Daisy from "Bingum Tlm" 603'J $l.2.t MISCIIA F.LMAN (Violin Solo "till. Kill' 74732 1.75 FLO.NZALEY STRING QUARTET "Norturue" (Rorodln) 74733 1.75 Also many releases by other famous artists

Dance 75c

18 4 1865

-Wanna Fo Trot 8be Lores Me Fox.,

Clab Royal WMtema'ft , . BenMn'i

who a lwny hair? '

orsret

I

P!i vom bnrriMv oks ani

; 11 return them? Who n!ikn iri"! v 1 "'nessle, th lrrower" and cured you of that trir'K once ir.1 for all? DM you rai1- vour eyehrown 1n cm when the new lirt girl cine to school w;th a cn.impled ribbon n her hair, and did th" by. in the 1 ick seat-1 make pi-ture. ff ou on

th.e hlTkbcard with your no- in

. - rt . i . j No. no. you didn't larn th1 things at home no un!" von had' a whole n of brothers and sisters i ard co-jir. and kin fo'.w. Vnu learned them at -"hocl , where

ie'j were "c o n t a Ti l n a t e d by contact w;th o.hr children."'

.r.d. wh.per. they w re anp"?' the er- bert things ycu If arr. d ; thre. too. i How many lrnj have you .een ?. spoiled, concerted, wilful ?;r! cr' denr.e

km

ore application

at any dru- s;u.--. After

of this deht'.ttful

en Impudent, bully of a bov. tern

r'.tiy changed dv the nrst monthjtonic oU can not find i particle o! In a ?ood bl? school" Idandruf? or a falling hair. Besides. And the teachtr didn't do the ! eve-y hair ?hot nen- hft vigor, crrging either. j brrghtness, more color and abun-i-'he didn't hav to do It the other I dance."

Mil

Lonenome Hoars

Catle Fox Trots... 18868 Venetian Lore Roat Virginia HI ties ....

18866 8 O'clock In Morning Tola Lo Fox Trot Smith's 18873 Ancel Child Fox Trot My Mammy Knows Fox Btnion'i 18865 Never MJnd Fox Trot Hortense Fox Trot.. All Star Trio 18871 In Dlnebird Lanrt 10 Little Finrrrs Renon's

.18867 75c.

"SAT, PERSIA NN A. SAT'

ITe Cot the V'onder Where He AVent and Uhen He' Comln Hack lILt-ES"

Fox Trots Flajed on 2 Pianos

Vocals

18869 There Silrer In Your Hair. Hart Carolina Rollins Stone ... Shaw 45503 I'm an Indian Fannie P.rlce Oh. How I Hate That Fellow, Natluin 66028 Sneet Ir O'Nf 11. . .McCorraack

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Leave Me With a Smile APRIL SHOWERS Harrison The Milton' tw hlcireet onr hits Iswed torether becaue of popular demand. WITH WORDS 9

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um m i i 1 1

i- ,U l Ml ! "1:..

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New Sacred Hymns (All by the Trinity Choir.) 18873 C.od So I)Ted the World Christ, the Lord. I Rlen Today 18860 The Strife Is O'er, the Rattle Won Oar Lord Is Risen From the Dead

1 .! I I I r. .

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