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——— PUI A ee t ¢: j i 3 omanda NEM "Donk “WallStreet” Women WhoF ound! Stocks and Bonds Way to Top| By Marguerite Mooers Marshall Coprrisit, 1919, by the jets Publishing Co, (The New York Bvening Wor N no field of achievement nave New York women won such unique dis tinetion as in business and finance For centuries exceptional women Dave shone as musicians, artists, actresses and writer But it Was only after the Civil War that any large number of} women invaded the business office, and for years their positions were distinctly subordinate, with much drudg , ery, poor pay and little responsibility. It is within} the last decade that a group of young women of Wall Street, with brains, ambition and energy, have risen to posts of authority and influence and proved that women are quite as well fitted to make money as to spend it There 1s, for example, Miss Beatrice Carr, manager mens of the statistical department and in charge of financial and mailing work for Fisk & Robinson, at No. 26 Exchange Place. Miss Carr was born an giitiwoman and graduated from the George Watson College for Women in Edinburgh, Scotland, In eight years she rose from . 1S ZABETY o. Zz ®@ $16 a week job as assistant libra-|"I have never known a case,” she rian to her present position, She|once stold me, here a businoss @athers all sorts of valuable statis-| Woman who could be seriously conaid- | ties for investors; in one summer] ered as such violated the trust reponc a; she made analyses of twenty-four|in her. 1 have heard many employers | railroads in the hands of the receivers. | say they preferred women to men in Bhe is frankly enthusiastic about | confidential positions, fonds and financial problems, and| A woman in a job supposed to be Delieves Wall Street holds a great| closed to women is Miss Kathleen future for women, Taylor, one of the Street's cleverest “After the quality of Imagination,” | OPerators She is with Edey, Leslie &| Sloan, Nc exp 70 Broadway, and has an knowledge of financial condi) Her lectures on “Women and have been widely attended: them many women have} been Induced to tackle the problem of; he has said, “I believe that cone tration is the greatest essent cess. Proper dressing is a great asset in the business world, but neither the ‘sloppy’ irl nor the one overdressed Wil) be tolerated in the 1 of suc tions and throug best business y driumpo, By Zoe Beckley Copyright, 1019, by The Prews Uobiehing Co (ihe New York Evengg World.) SAR JUDGE BOETTNER of D Newark, bless his good in tentions, has appealed to the Director of Public Safety for the! creation of a “Vampires’ Gallery,’ By stern public posting of naughty | yes that will not behave, of hair! that ts too golden, of cheeks that) are too pink, the Magistrate hopes to| rid bis town of fiirtie girlies and| make that part of the world safe| for domesticity. The good Judge has even defined for us the vampire.| “A vampire,” says he, “is a woman| who flirts on the street with men, bleaches her hair, camouflages her | face, disguises herself with tlothes| and gives wrong, names, but is un- able to change her eyes or dimples.” | Not bad. But has not His Honor described only the most obvious type of vampire, the crudest exponent of the ancient art of preying? In the card-deck of human emotions where the queen of hearts, the queen of clubs, the queen of spades and the queen of diamonds are forever be- ing shuffled and dealt to men's bands by Fate, does not the sorcer- ess of the curb affect the game the} least? Isn't she the “joker” of the pack? | Does she compare, for instance. in doadliness, with the vampire of hearts—she who is past mistress of the lures of love, spreading them subtly, submergedly, as a fisher his nets? Know a “Vampire” by the “Card” She Plays THE Nias DIAMOND VAMP WORKS FOR RICHES THE CLUB VAMP WORKS FOR REVENGE houses. J believe there ts,a great fu- | Mndling thoir own investments and) Hag the “bleached hair and ‘“ca- ture for the business woman, but ax @ttending to their own nancial) mouflaged cheek" of Judge Boettner's yet she meets much prejudice and sho | #M4irs ‘Market Street vampire one-half the has to be 100 per cent. eMcient to | Another widely known woman oper-' seduction of the demure little vamp @empete with the man only 60 per| ator is Miss Helen Husted, manager!a fellow meets any night at his cent. efficient. An important asset in | of the woman's department of Merrill, chum'a sister's fudge party—with her Rysinens is health.” Lynch & Co, of No. 7 Wall Street. demure brown lacks pinned over her ¢ A graduate of Correll and a charm- | She left the classroom for tho stock|demure pink ears, her peachblow ing young woman, Miss Elizabeth | Market, and her success in building) blush, her veiled eye and her simple Ellsworth Cook is considered one of |UP and bandling a clientele of women | frock with the beguiling blue rib. the “Street's” most successful bond | investors has been pronounced | bons? saleswomen, Her position is technioal- | The highest paid woman in Wall] Is the frank flirtation and the pass ly that of statistician for Hemphill, | Street is said to be Mrs. Helen Kenny) ing “Oh, Boy!" a circumstance in White & Chamberlain, of No. 317/ Holmes. She isa private secretary to!@anger to the “You're so big and Wall Street, but she is much more | C, W. MacQuoid of No. 14 Wall Street,! strong and I'm only poor little ine." |!nm effect upon his strong box. She than that. and one of valuable | She began her business career at the| during the clinging waltz at Mrs.) 2&8 vision. She peers cannily inte Dusiness qualifications ts her ability to | telephone switchboard, where she use| trox’s ball? Ix the sidewalk amirk | Me future, She apportions Giminate friction. She began as a) quired familiarity with the market: patch upon the pearly amile of Mar. | SMens her reiatt She knows th file clerk, after winning high scholas- | through taking quotatio: Bbe isljorie as she drops two lumps into | ae pnb ig Ae fan ahis th He and oratorical honors at Cornell. | suid to have the faculty of intuition! Haroli's tea, cuddies upon the chaise. [ahd sUPPOrtN, She is usually beaut). For several years she was private ac: | inmost highly devel: and her|longue and says, "Now explain what] ieee hae with meer retary to the general manager of the | “hunches” on the turns of the market) all this Fue of Nations moant-| ere ai tienes New York Audit Company, with over] are valued by ber employers YOU know EVerything"? Nay a: anger, t dann ot Afty women working under her, She! Another woman keoily sensitive toldear Judge, you must legislate If you 1 save men sways hes beon Ardent suffragiat, | the ups and dow f the market is! drawing roo, the golf links Wigan han: Ma ciaitat a Gh Ainw ihe SGld and was vice-presiden b>] Miss Hieanor Kerr, manager of thel porch. You must legislate the moon-| my, Abana and outa Keane Woman's Political Ur | ! b, st partment of Wiilllam| Nght and June walks and the lake.|sj,ains., No use putting her in you She hax a firm faith in the honor | Morris in ©, No, 61 Broad- | The p and the motor ride, the Ice! Vampire Gallery, It isn't her and efficiency of the business woman, | way ‘ as a school teacher! rink and the play, The evening gown, | that is guilty, It is her heart, her ‘i and has demonstrated tu the sa hep ’ planes 1 pump, | ambition. Can you photograph them PNK > faction of her employers her cunvic- You must make all men! Then there is the Vampire of (iu! EVEN ING W ORL Di, usehold economy can be| auty, deaf to flattery and|the Woman Scorned—the girl who By § sa > nine eye that droops,| art of love employs cleve ' y Sam Loyd Cc ; , voice which purrs and|terfeits. She s ; g M BI rom ses. st warnings against the| schemes and How the “Bookies”’ Figure onquering IVit. Blanc |: n Hearte; the wir! with | siriken oh e aig ae PTH first atte toa 1 Mon a talent and marriage! weapon. T See hoe je by Hora | Judge, is a woman be posted in : : t Ire, a Ge t ton, Judge, for thel your gallery! Wornt a track 1 ie ile . fb nd he is every-| don't always recognize ma eye n 179 years a A panie She knows ¢ of every | be the gitl who was Ignored for re a . f guides e n Ne who owns a) body prettier. She may be th — | t m t reed by a r, She ean from a side! who was left for somebody charm ; " to turn back. In} glance ai his sleeve A street car) Inger, Or maybe she Kirl feared ; ‘ t | how or 1 for that! for brains and her education and A A . | and othe has } ner mind-of-her vo at, #o 8 ite. ® |from the pattern of ring will mak more stylis eR ; oe Sauasure bu Ueman| that his family has “pad| than hin own wife, perhaps, She wil ies running sour Pa to the | money" and owns @ coat of arms.|joarn to be “distinguished look the “e ; \ ft ard, led by the! she appraises his bank account from| and vamp him with her smartneas “bookie” gave the t odds ju ame + nque f Mont] the hat he sends orchids instead | she may read up on “How to Ie fied? Bla T f w a tT ot v nd } mall use for the Charming,” and suddenly spring her ae ‘ the ascent and all Europe |fellow who doesn't drive an “eight."| newly acquired art. She may—oh, ang with his name, for while Pac-| The Vamp of Diamonds has many| most dangerous of all, Judge—be the ANOWER TO WEIGHING CATS, | oar4's exploit had becn doubted, thes] of the lures of the Heart Vampire, | "t-undersiand you? Heyer weighs § pounds and @ cat| could be.no question of de Saussure’s| But she u them coldly, caloulat-| sort! And when she has drunk her | most numerous. She is the one wh Can vamps, of whatever sort, BE digs untiringly for sucecss as she suppressed? goes along. She uses her smiles ant = Ramember? Judge, an you vet Up er wil d her guiles in the most youp res’ Gallery,” that An innocent ways. Her attacks upon thony k tried to stop men your mind and heart and pocketbook ean Airting with a lovely vamplet! are never obtrusive. In fact YOU who was only an oil painting called Jon't fecl them at all September Morn, But all he accom Perhaps she's your stenographe plished was to m t the success hat pretty blond thing who clatters o¢ three seasons and the basis of the Away so amicably Lisp { artist's fortune every off duty with neat vind > | i She wants to "get alon fi _ hours, the choicest work chert rade nlons pay. First thing you know, you have PPAHE first “martyrs to trade union- promoted her, Her industry « ¥ ism" were thrown into jail at pelled you to. (You didn’t realize it Tolpuddle, Dorsetst:re, England . rsmile!) You giv vra seventy-six years a They were ability demanded (You James and George Lovelace, Thomas rad that cudhing frook @ith th 1, James Hammett, John] white collar and neat cuffs had Stantield and James Bryne. ‘Tho firet anything to do with it.) You paid|three name Wesleyan preach ame so busy you simply HAD t week days and preached the Gospel t don y-of-the-valley per- oF days. Their imprisonment was fume in} was no factor what- due to their attempt to form a untou wens) one agreed with y f faym lat S10 protest agains? shor she “got on" beeauge | Proposed veduetion in ad yalit Bat she even shillings to six 1 Vamp podes, |than $1.50—p week landtords | orous, She uses sex were al.-powerfu Dorsetshire, end | albeit a perfectly logitimate the nspirators” were arrested | hu he very. {stripped, shorn of their hair and vast Mice, in the legislative into gaol, and eventually sentenced to There Are Four Types—Here’s How They Are Identified The DIAMOND “Vamp” Plays for RICHES The CLUB “Vamp” Plays for REVENGE The HEART “Vamp”’ Plays for LOVE The SPADE ‘“‘Vamp”’ Plays for SUCCESS THE HEART VAMP WwoRKS, For LOVE THE SPADE VAMP MORKS FOR SUCCESS disappear, like a genuine ghost-vam- | successful vamp and the most harm- pire in the gray of the dawn She can never be suppressed The Vamp of Spades is perhaps tl After all, does any one really want eadliest of a uxe sh Vamp suppressed? 1 vamps be lobby, on the Suffrage platform, be. /seven years’ imprisonment; “not,” said hind the oharity-collection hat! the Judge, “for anything you have The little Vamp of Spades is done, or as I can prove you intended Female Sex at its most feminine! She|to do, but as an example to others has a bit of all the vamps in her,|A monument at Tolpuddle commemo- Yet she is the least vampish of aij, |rate the the names of the “first martyrs ingly, cunningly, and with devastat- All of triumph she will step bask and @be is the deadliest vamp, the most to trade unioaiam.” THURSDAY MARCH 27, Peter, Peter, Pumpkin Eater, Could Have Kept His Wife an | en HE Had Been the ‘Sympathetic’ Type—the Kind That Listens to Gossip and Troubles and Under- stands the Feminine Nature. —AND— SHE Would Have Put Up With All His Faults, Would Have Clung to Him Forever and Would Even Have Worked to Help Him. By Fay Stevenson 1919 Copyright, 1919, by the Mess Publishing Co, (The New York kvening World.) HY are some men like “Peter, Peter, pumpkin eater—had @ wife and couldn't keep her?” Why do their wives run home to mother at thelr first frown, while other men can lose a fortune, stay for days at the club, and still keep their wives’ first love? In other words, why do some wives stand by their hus. bands through thick and thin, while others will not even allow their husbands to mention the fact that the morn ing cup of coffee has grounds in it without charging them with extreme cruelty? We have all known noble little women, whose hus bands have squandered away large fortunes, to bustle about and open up a boarding house, start a children’s Private school, establish a millinery shop, or in some way help the unfortunate man along. We bave seen the daughters of ministers and splendid men tolerate a is given to excess in | —~——— Seer frown which is to blame either. It is | devoted tenderness. And, much as |that miserable, hard, unsympathetic | We talk over the jealousies of wom-|™#sculine viewpuint, which crushed ankind, many proud women have for- | “!! her love rigbt in the beginning of Biven their husbands more than once | thelr married life when Crevansen, husband who } drinking: in fact, cling to him with there was another woman in| Woman can sometimes forgive the ‘the case. It iw pathetic and often|8tT@w man, the weak man, simply be (quite alarming how much scene wives |°@USe of this tenderness and sweet i* ll forgive and how little other |M¢ss toward life, which binds her to wives will take from the “Peter,| im as a tender vine clings to its j Peter, pumpkin eater” type of man, |PFoP. Sac feely that no matter wha And herein lies the secret. Some|this man has done, she must cling to men may be made of straw, and|him through it all. It ts not easy for weak, and everything under the|her to forget these heart-to-heart sun that they shouldn't be, but | talks. heir sympathy ts bound to they have also the redeeming qual-| ether, intertwined as the roots of |ity of being sympathet Above all,|tWo plants which have grown side by they sre human tender and) Side for years. Her one desire is to kind to women. A wife can really | nein him reach them and they understand the| The average wife leaves her girl- feminine nature, They are just like | hood home and friends and gives and dear old ladies and they will st down | herself entirely to her husband. She and rock and «& expects him to be “in tune” with her. right, symp to be sympathetic, to spend whole id fecl Just the y about things. hetic wa They will let a woman talk about her |evenings rocking and chatting with headache or art centrepiece or re-| her. She expects him, masculine as |covering the parlor suite. ‘They are|he may prefer to appear, to enter able to hear the full description of a| ot neighbor's new gown witho: into some of her feminine topics woman but They a Bi make a od cigar ts a smol comy looking at life. If they should happen to marry a wife who i pulling | Conversation, to look at life througt out @ fresh cigar and glancing fever- | the feminine eye just for a few mo- ishly at the clock: they remember | ments. Aunt Jane wing box and cry real| But this is an impossible task for tears when one reads a letter describ- | some of the best men in the world ing how she !s suffering with a fatal | They mean to be kind, they mean te jditease. They are not coated over|give their wives the best things in with that indescribable hardness call- | life, and so they do perhaps, in @ ed masculinity.” They do not on | woriaiy sense, but they cannot Itt the theory that “a woman is only a jthat ma ne, abrupt, blunt way of | jon of woman broad enough and do not give her that decided im-|to grasp their masculine viewpoint i pression of “remember the difference |to find her sympathy and sentiment in our sexes. I am a man and you |in women friendships, their married are & woman.” life would run on in perfect tranquil But the Peter Pumpkin eater type of lity. But if any unsympathetic, hard ;man 1s so hard and so coated with his| type of man ts unfortunate enough to own masculinity that his wife has lit-|marry a ally feminine, all-wom jtle in common with him. He never|an woman, there is bound to be a ‘sits down with her, nor lets her intojcrash some day. And then when the nis heart. He may be faithful to her, he may be the most perfect man on| earth, but when he dares to complain of the coffee grounds, or when he just crash comes all the worid wonders why some wives are such clinging | vines and will go through thick and thin while poor little Peter Pumpkin frowns the tiniest bit at his wife, she|eater, who seems to be a perfectly is ready to leave him for life. It isn't’ good man, has so much trouble to the coffee grounds and it ifn't the keep a wife Does Your Parasol Match Your Vest? sand and navy blue braid is a striking example of the season's new addition to woman's wardrobe, but still newer is the ides of having your parasol in colore to match the rest, ee braided vest of blue English linen witb scroll design im