South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 328, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 24 November 1922 — Page 7
FRIDAY MORNING. NOVEMBER 24. 1922
THE SOUTH BEND NEVS-TIME3
o
PARIS CRITICISES THE AMERICAN KISS Ak Why Our Women Hunger for KiM s k Monotonous in Technique.
can
cr.dure Uurcpean criticism of our fpcrh. cur manners, our clrJien. nrchllrctur-. mu;:o, dr. nci r. nnd th way vr f;i.r.' nur rrn-y; but can w b nr to have them point the f.n- ! H'nrn at our ktircr? Isn't a nation' ki-sini; ntlt to be treated with th- 'N-hcate r"erve ac-
corJI to its r'-hl'-in" rir.siaii critics ar"
lyi
ru le
Yale's Initial Attack on Harvard
tbir-.- about the A:r.rican k'.s. Not that any American kiss'-r have been hf 5t .u d upon them, a.4 far as appears from tho evidence, bot th.y Judire American klsln? habits frcm the kissing they tee in American movies. He rior-sn't understand ?uch ki.a. Ho. rir.i! thf-m prvooatlvo of tr.nul
nd dirjrut. Ar A, a-urr..:r.j; that American movis faithfully rellc-ct j
-vmrican lire, n aKir. wny our w.-jjurn should !iur.i,-"r fur kiar t(. bar harou!y abrupt, r'o monotonous in technique and s- idiotically lor.s drawn out. IJut do. they- Vara the movie x1:h faithfully retlect American ovulatory habit ? ..Tin f-w persons who did permit thm''I t-s to be persuaded to disru.'s the ki.-:. ir.pr question stipulated very earnestly that their names OfshcuH not be print-.!, declaring' that thy would flit- of .shame If they were cud flf posinir .13 authorities or islr.jr. Or." very inte Uir.t and w ell preserved widow, an accomplished woman of tli? world, vhese lips still present the rr-y Cupid's bow to: which they were famou-i as a debutante and a your.fr m.ttron in more than one capital. 9aid: "American k!-"dn Is more reckless that it ud to be, but It doesn't ff'J to t'.i'.1 lengths they p;o to in the cir. e m a . I can t 1 1 you the history of that tir-x rr.e and interminable kis.. Thrnovies stole it from the stape. an3 the stae adopted It after Its introduction by Olira Nethersole, In ft. ftorm of protest and scandal, when phe appeared here in a dramatic version cf 'Carmen' over a quarter of A century a;?o. Only In tho Netherrole kis the lady performed the active role and climbid tierishly over her leading man. "Hut It's a jrreat mistake for the I'rmch to imagine that those. kl?sep are characteristics of American life, liven in the petting parties that have lecome 5uch a usuil thlrjr In flapper circles they don't kb like wild beasts. Dut I suppose It'll take th movie directors years to find out that they can fret alonff without the stop watch kiss-. Just as it took them years to find out that they could disperse with a chaso of automobile."
This Is how the Ta!o band xrtll C- V'-''i1 fj, V:
day to blare dcf.ar.ee at the liar
vard Invaders. Old Eli'a musiciar.3 sLct T" thy will win. and Harvard's band will jrlve them "II." Both the Tale Eulldo? nnd John Harvard hare been Tell-clawed by the Trinceton Tlg?r but despite their "wounds Tale can atill glare at the. Crimson and play "Another Little Job fcr tho Undertaker" while th3 Crimson band retorts vrlth "Harvard "Was a College YiTrsn Talc IVas Eut a Tup."
CD.
o
IA1LI1IRDS JOAr 7iV
p or
LH I f v ' J . ' : ft sw 1 w. r v w
of amethyst. Heavy odors were in
t lie air. A little beyond the terrace the leaves of a flowering vine moved
where the footmen of the Trincess
; 1 Melvtllp Davis son Post i9aa NSA Service, lnc
THU WOMAN ON Tin: TKIUtACi:. IVln Hero Twlny Tho Ftrange woman in the invalid chair has been talking angrily with her companion when M. .lONQL'ELLK. greatest of French detectives, entered the beautiful Italian terrace. 7 he woman Introduced her companion as MARTIN DILL.ARD. an American. Tho American greeted tho caller ungraciously. Jonquello explained that he had come to Inquire why tho house in Paris, owned by Dlllard and to which the woman had a key. burned to the ground. Gon on With tho Story. CHAPTER II.
Tho American broke in. voico was no Iongrer restrained, don't see what you've got to
with It." he said. Monsieur Jonquelle did not at once reply. Ho looked at his cigaret as though It were somehow unsatisfactory; puffed it a moment until the tip glowed; then he tossed it over the edgo of tho terrace into the bushes. Almost Immediately Jhe bu.hes parted and two persons came up onto
His "I do
highest of all artistic production. I shall name them to you; Monsieur Whiatler, the American; Monsieur Helleu of Pari?, and Wagenheim of Munich." b'he moved a triflo In the chair Then she vent on. "The misfortune of producing a masterpiece in oil or in water-color is that one copy only of this masterpiece exL-ts, and if by any misfortune it is destroyed, every adequate evidence of ibs beauty has disappeared forever. This is the unfortunate feature attached to the work of all the great masters. "Put it is a misfortune that does not attend the etchings of Monsieur Whistler, Monsieur Melleu, and Herr Wagenheim. The beautiful face of the lovely Americans preserved by the etchings of Monsieur Helleu can be reproduced in any number. That beauty does not depend upon the jeopardy of a single picture." Her voice seemed to advance, but not with the .stimulus of any emo tion. "It ! not commonly known," she said, thut an extreme skill Is required to obtain in the prints all the beauties of these etchings. The prints are commonly made by persons hav-
tho terrace. They were footmen iniing only the usual workman's skill, a rather conspicuous foreign livery. "Hut it was always realized by the They paid no attention to cither J masters of this art that the extreme Monsieur Jonquelle or the Amerl- and delicate beauties of their etch-
CAvOrOtJS. Mich.. Nov. 2 3. (Special.) Jolly llttlo Jallblrda locked in a cell. They all rot drunk and there wa a discovery of what might be called tho only original Jail Jag in captivity. A few wecka ago Joe Mendoka, an Indian, who Inherited the wood craft and thirst of h'.M forefathers, was arrested hero with borze on his hip and und?r his l e't. II was put into a cell with f i v others. An empty applo butter jsr gave him the idea. The Job alloted him of peeling potaties made it possible. Spuds, prunes and an ear of corn, the. bark of a dogwood tre to give It bite, and the earthenware Jar filled its wicked mission In Jail. They tapped it Wednesday night. Ellas Wymarr. agM turnkey, father of the sheriff said they had gono "cuckoo" but the kroner nlefactory organs of the sheriff hlms-?lf detected the unmi-t ikble. An npple bulter Jar which stood in tho corner wss almost empty, but the prisoners were Just the contrary. Th Jail Jag had been discovered. "Uy its odor shall ye know it" Quotes the sheriff.
can. They addressed themselves with
apologetic difüdenco to the woman In tho chair. They explained that a parrot belonging to the Princess Kitzenof, who occupied the great villa above, had escaped and was concealed somewhere In tho thick shrubbery of
madame's garden. Would they be'
ings could be produced only by an adequate skill, by a skill almost equal to their own, in the printing of the picture. This t-kill constitutes the peculiar genius of Monsieur Dillard a skill whieb he has s;triren to perfect, and which he has finally brought to the highest excellence. "He labored in thr house in the
i Kitzenzot searched a? noiselessly as I ghosts .'or the lost parrot. The shaj dowy figures of the two footmen I were outlined to the woman in the
chair, and perhaps to Monsieur Jonquelle, but they were not visible to the American. He sat like a tense figure in some organic medium, grim, rigid; always in that immobility which seemed to await the next word before It flashed into violent life; a3 though madame's . words were the delicate Implement of a vivisectionist moving about a nerve which it never touched, but which it constantly menaced. "It was the simplest accident," the woman repeated in her placid voice. "The original etchings of an immortal like one of the three which I have already named are priceless they cannot be replaced. "Out of the fear that the house might be entered, after the reproductions had been made, these orisinals were placed under some rubbish in tho basement of the house. "This basement had not been entered for a long time, and when these originals were concealed there, care was taken not to disturb the appearance which this room presented of not having been opened for an incredible age. "It was low, with an earth floor. Tho ceiling was of wooden beams dried out and beginning to decay and as inflammable as tinder. The whole of this ceiling was hung with cobwebs, laced over them, hanging like veils in shreds. "On the night of the disa-ter, before leaving the house, I went into this basement to make sure that the originals stored there remained as we had placed them. It was late, and I took a candie. This was a fatal indiscretion. "When I arose from an examination of the place where the etchings were concealed. , the flam of the candle came in contact with the hanging ppider-welxs, and Immediately the whole celling flashed into flame. In an Instant it seemed to me the entire ceiling of tho room
I had barely time to
permitted to search for It? The I 1'auboursr St. Oermain for a lor.
woman In th chair moved her bead; time and with an incredible natlenee ' was on tire
slowly in assent. Then she dis- until he became the superior of any."? before the room was a fur-
missed them with a gesture. They man living, and the house, as I have ! "act
went down off the terrace and to-1 said, was literally packed with the ward the rear of the villa In their; most beautiful ar.d most valuable re-
MAYOR SHANK WRECKS PLANS OF GOVERNOR f"N I.VDIAN'Al'obls'. Ind.. Nov. 2;?
Mavor Iew Shank
gave
Gov.
Mc-
search, and the woman In the chair addressed the American. "You must believe," she said, "that Monsieur Jonquello is an old acquaintance and that this explanation is not to be denied him. Neither are you to be denied It. You came here for it precisely as ho has come for it. , You have followed me here, trailing out my flight, as he has followed. The two of you arrived nearly on tho moment, and I shall be pleased to include the two of you In my explanation. You were demanding it as Monsieur Jonquelle arrived with some heat. If I correctly remember." The American replied in his abrupt manner:
"I don't understand this thing." he j said. "Put I do want to know how j this house happened to burn while i was absent. You are the only person who had a kev to it. and you must
productions of th;- character in the world. This accumulated treasure represented the incredible fortune which was before Monsieur Dillard and myself. "It was on the n'ht that he had gone to Bordeaux in order to make some arrangement for the removal of
the treasure that the unfortunate fire Lä
occurred that "wiped out our fortune in an hour, leaving monsieur penni- ; les and myself with but the ruin of another illusion. And it happened monsieur, in th simplest fashion." Theie was absolute silence on the terrace before the villa. The vaguely t blue sea seemed to underlie a world,
Tho final installment of "The Wo
man n the Tvrrnv" will appear in our next isue.
LOOK!!
3
Cray the bfrd Thursciiy. snanK.havo i,urnod jt or you would not i knocked the povornor's plans for a , hn-e run away and h!d yourself 1
fcler.il-rate-cro ire- cmpi mvn. , no,v what's tho story?" bureau n: a corked hat find afko.l ' The wman had a bit of delicate
lace in her finer?. She put it up
the rr.tvTnor to nvvo state furniture out of the city hall "a.s early Rf4 pcvible." It all harpcrel when Thomas A.
a moment do her lips. Then she spoke, addressing her two guests. Her voice was slow, serene, and de-
Hiley. member of the .ae Indus-; tn rhed. like one who speaks without
trial board, wort over to tho city ; interns!, without emotion, and withh.all ar.d ordered two women out of,rnt any concern for effect. It was the ro'm whieh the bureau was to nk o a voice from a mechanical anhave occupied. The women had j rdiancr. having intelligence, but no been appoint-! as employes of the will to feel.
brire'V.i by Shank. Rib v slid h- and Oov
orb! h ir.d'.e the appointments.
"I'm r:'nn:r pT-g to -nr.:: next lhr"e y the mo.yor si!
I "I have been attached to Monsieur i McCray , Pillard." she sa'.d. "Thre w as a
fortune before us. an immense, in-' credible fortune. The anticipation of j
g !h s place and I'm
ue running it f-"r th?,i bound me to him. ar.d so the burn-
ar.d one month."
Roomer, F unlimited. Is
ing of this house must have been an
The lure of a fortune is
Vim?
USE THE
rvopp or call at offV. KitlitT method gfts you prompt srrvW wlt?i lowest rate, easy rnvmonf. n. rem minion. :p l:i'er.'t in a.lvatio?. ;.m.nev la t'.mo of adwrslty. üben'
rem-tvrtl privilv-'e. Lo.u.i rrom ?: :,. J.?om. M 1 7 4i. STATE LGAK CO. lt iMi-dn-d IV'.V S?itt- 3. Mm liui't 11 iiik III it k: . ;3l . M i lii--iM. Upon tt
Y P.KY1I.I. e Fire !'..
; r
accident.
the only influence that does not loosen as one advances Into life. In a tt-.-r!.l n-Vi(ri nr.e"rtk- fVOr TllOtion
l'nhurt 1)V Expcricnce'üU. Therefore Monsieur Dillard
b.i' Nov. 2. I had a right to feel that he could trust '.net was called to1 me since my interest in this fortune
tm I'apicn. w.iero was identical witn nis own.
She paused and seemed to addrt? Monsieur Jonquelle directly. "You will be concerned, monsieur, about the mvstery of this fortune.
b c.h::,i:. uch as are used forIt was r.o dream and depended up.n -i.'.TiT'g burn.t g in th place j r.o uncertain hazard of change. Mon-
s :ti " ibiwrt
! t:i" r n
n .
ir,.li r v.-a? fee T!i- volu tb.e 1 ck-
b- I.
: pouring" from r teer firemen broke 1 di r. hn ling a
;ir. e form tl lc-
HARD COAL nnd POCAHONTAS Prompt Delivery Call M a i n 255 7
nil
I pe-s.i Mil
j I ill i U I b t
i
roomer v:i worse- f'T the
arr
-d
out. r.T.e ; s'eur Dillard Is an artist
i r a cc : d e r. I
'Aith a
an arti-i
genius for turr.ing art to sv
practical u'
There have been great-
I.l!ard in
O
TM-rnr r AtTVIWn VHTTTTTs er artists than Mons.eur
rnr.Lr.Mi.u;w ;fTvr rroducti.n. but not in methods by ARK I'OuNl) IN MirSh which art can be made to serve a
:. Four- practical purpose; that is to s ty can
FOLFMPFS. . Nov.
,e i:?: r.Uea ) I'UW.K, ii'nin i i re maue 10 iroviUL" .1 i'iiuw-. u ith.e ("!:k welfare depart-j the life-work of Monsieur P. Hard no:
tern feel w.ir!.- ft
n.er.t. m:s-turn-d to night rild
strip mire a- Turtle i'reek. Ta. this department, he has no superior I':rect-r Maciyt.il. of the welfare, in any country. The house in the department, -barged the- beys were ' ?iubourg St. Germain was in fact
.g f..r months, were r , to produce art. but to bring the
Ohio today following a I artistic skill of the masters of art
( n
t ne
Penz
brothers: to his
practical purposes. And. in
lured fr,
r.i
th.e
for fteb'c'a storeroom.
It was. at the t
ie os
r.!nded youths ar.d forced to work In
e :r.ln
1.
lirilT IN ( HASH. NOItKoLK. Va . Nov. 22. (Py
S.) Several i-rsor.s minor injuries tc'.ay !n a
Utwtn a )vit b.bo'ind .-i be.- rd Air I!ne pifcer.ger train ar.d a north bound engine r.ear Hagoud. N. C, acrordlnar to report
Its destruction ty f.re. literally packed with masterpieces beautiful works of art of an incredible value." She did not move tlv position of her body in the chair. Put she a .rain
receive J I vaguely touched her lip? with the ci'.l-icn j handkerchief in her fingers, a bit cf
filmy bare. "Monsieur." she said, "there hive been in the world throe men who are euprcjne In what. Is perhaps the.
The
a J I i TO AND FROM bottMand Florida ALL YEAR THROUGH TRAIN Via Cincinnati and the L. & N. R. R.
t;,dnc (Ilclnninc November 1?) s::i I M. I.v (blrato II M. I t f ort n A. M. I. Cincinnati S:.V I. M. Ar thnta t:4 A. M. Ar I.rkonTiÜ
Rrturolnr Ar. ?:i5 A. M. Ar. 6: IS A. M. Ar. 9:15 I. M. I.t. 7:?.- A. M. Lr. :20 V. 31.
Mon.b ?. M rt!ne'hi- A stiirIa3 . W cdnesday, Frblay L Monday?. C .mrm nlrc I -nit-r I Ith ( hieato ?lrepfr will eprrated thronch to M. ltrrturx. urrUlnif t. IVtrrburir 7:00 P. M. Comparlmcnt and Drawing-Room Sleeping Cars. Observation-Club Car, Dining Car and Coaches Kri;rti for ff er .ition? are Intitrd and may be ftd(lr?ed to any Ticket AKnt if t!i- lVnnloinii trni. or tn . K. HUrhley. I)ivliun l'ausrr Atrnt. UM south r!U trct. Chicago, or M. I", llunlntanir. I.i-In I".o-.riict r Affrnt, tirund Kjpitl. Mich.
K
Pennsylvania System
P.
See Our Windozv Display
J1
twatt
117 South Michigan St Correct Apparel for Women
for Saturday
See Our Windozo Display
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V ' ' V , i , tJ : " b. V I r I I ' t. I I . ; t-j t ti i
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: U rjpS A i Vi
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Materials
Styles
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The Frances Shop
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SQ.95
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The Frances Shop
