The evening world. Newspaper, April 14, 1919, Page 18

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

MONDAY, The Seven Ages Of Woman NO. VI.-THE SILVER AGE Every Woman Isa Queen in Her Silver Age, Which May Begin at Fifty and End at Immortality She Wears a Silver Crown of Honor, Wisdom an Gray Hair—Don’t Put the Silver Age on the Shelf With the Silver Loving-Cups —Put It to Use, By Marguerite Mooers Marshall APRIL 14, 1919 6PRing! SING! win cling! Sring! Swing?! The New York Evening Wor take Copyright, 101%, by the Press Publishing Co 4 OULD the most sporting insurance {nsuring any crown in the world to-day, truly royal gentleman Albert of Belgium? hance ou Hiadem of thut company even the I doubt it. Yet there is a crown around which no revolution will ever ride on when we sink The water would ] rage, for it has adorned makers of revolution It is come right through A d the fello whats a the only crown that is “made in America.” Washington rockin the boat were Captin Angus wore it, Lincoln would have worn it but for the bitterest says perhaps hell make of us sleep late \ tragedy in our history; on the brows of almost all great or somethin fello told t e rat methin, A fel i rafts ; Americans this crown has been impressed, It is tt over the en As far as I ¢ silver crown of honor, wisdom and gray har, and it can see if a fello is Iu » they fling one of 1 makes every woman a queen in her Silver Age. on his bean, I'm { Father Time sets this circlet on gold, brown or a ! auburn locks, and the coronation usually is scheduled 1 a for the decade beginning the second half century of 4 f Q ‘ Kav: woman's life. She may put off the ceremony, of course; ‘ the world is divided between the persons who go to the dentist apd the } persons who put off going. Personally, I never could see wherein the latter gain. ‘The dentist and Father | ? Time wii! ys get you In the end, It is waste because her wis ‘ and it is cowards who die (or dye) | her tempered and seasoned com- | ' many times before their deaths. her practical experience i For other women the Silver Age! uncommon value to th ; may begin at’ fifty and end at im- | neration, And there is no mortality. There surely comes an| cruelty more cutting than that wh . hour, however long deferred, when a) in every word ar n 1ys to an old ; glance into the mirror shows the tell- | woman of character and intellig j tale silver, when to a proposed taxk| “You no longer count." > or festivity one says tiredly for the 1 know a wonderful woman who at } Bret time, “Let somebody younger] seventy-five 1 iading shou keen be, er for a family elght and manag f “For note, when evening shuts, | ing moti three OE } A certain moment cuts course i sk TMbwaA Th do teed ‘ The deed off, calls the glory from the} physical work—aithough th | gray; plaint an admirir houseworker | | A whisper from the West fhaken Of her je agent eh | q Bhoota—'Add this to the rest, — | he kit Seige | t J into the kitchen, vt keep her . | Take it and try its worth: here dies | i, ear } 8 | | sitting down.” But she plans ail the ! Posveptnent | meals and does the ordering, bringing TE ae ae Bo it is written in the world’s! the household budget down to an ex- BRENT GOILER noblest, most inspiring poem of old! ts vorainardy aman oun decpite te ; : age, Robert Browning's “Rabbi Ben| jcaving cout of living, She monda th * Ezra” I wish everybody past his ot| ciigren'y. clothes, *: POP SEAS ADS | her fiftieth birthday would read this | joy's Latin. tesson. conntenct ee | poem at least once a year with its ee ; ethdelebaiade ‘clown costume” for the younyer exultant call to fellowship— Gree cana cone 3 “Grow old along with me! eins eet OW) Arranges DINGY | Pas bat i 96t e be hee Ee ne small daughter of the| The last of life, for which the first| ) BSA Cane one I was made"— knows she is the keystone in the do mestle arch, | ‘ t its fine ‘imperiousness— With it all, at | erefore 1 summon age P vi ieee ae adaadeants AM aia LA| : H abheshors reads widely, main ; tains an intelligent interest in world To grant youth's heritage!” Bieblants \AMeE swale eu : 4, takes 4 walk several time } ‘The glv.ous thing about the Sil- | a week d never gets too tired ta i 5 ver Age of woman ts that it is indeed | busy to give the commutit 5 ' the legetce of youth, inheritor household the Kindlleat wmites’ of y ? of all the experie of past years. eeting and goodby, She : Hy Woman in the Silver Age is the heir soa torallitholchdareetin ct: | of all tho ages of woman; woman in neighborhood, even If the m in the} 1 aa jthe Bilver Age hus a wisdom triply! mothers of their own. She nee | ; oy ae eompounded of the tessons life taussht | merely grown old eracefuller owe vet ‘ the ehild, the maid and the matron. | grown old glorious ee : ! The woman no longer young knows wy ay ; au rf men, and her knowledge 1s are, Knowledge abeotute : 5 not a jot by the chivalry one t Subject to no dispute ee ! show her or tho contempt another From fools that crowded youtn,| type loudly expresses, She unde nor let thee feet alone.” | me 100 3 stands women, and her friendliness | Serer nity, wisdom—these are | re ey ! need not be tempered by the shadow | the races of the Silver Age | ay i Of business competition which even| Why should any woman fear it? | > ||! cL, Ati i : | now comes between younger women, | —————————-——_— ° . Aaa : Bimitii A: J t She has a delightfully tender com \ bap ! iy . : \ yo | ep al tpalaalada ve Weeds in the Mai riage Garden | A Silver Lung and a Fu { f proverbial. “Young, all lay in dis- They Sprin F Li 4 3 \ 7, - t The Have BE eas vant unica — g From Little Secds Carelessly ropped by an Unguarded ' Hoth Presents From the Governmen ited hei The Silver Age assuredly Is the 4 ue, and Choke the Blossoms of Happiness and Content Made Robert Hill of the Fifth Unies nits, : r et wisdom. The age of phy B . peu Marines the ‘Happiest Man in the Country. lh ; tivity it is not—but is ph y Fay Stev enson things that toonicd largest her| iP oe I tivity so important and valuable a Gaon yabhs 4408: ker the esos sGblluiag Gas Fete ire Yost P nd, and 1 HILL of the 5th Murine Corp U. 8. claims to be the happiest i thing?) A grasshopper half an inch HE resi, vital aues per wlbntestonst ceive bat Y that 1 man in the country, ‘The Government has presented Hill with & i 2 real, vital questions of rriage take care 1 . p } h when | \ RS Mita eliipeattaaih ete ett ee BH f marr take care of themselves, It is|tion was not y , e- | silver lung and a first Neutenancy. ‘The first was a necessity. HW H enter into competition with a grass | puerto: Dally Cilaga ant cate all the trouble, It isn’t the big/ ping and th i of hier husband | iy of the “handful of marines" who with the help of God routed t 1 ‘ hopper? hectare etme pit tumble over; it is the Little uid hie a EAL ee anter | mans at Belleau Wood and Soissons, At the latter place Hill was bad! That, of course, is what some mcd i 4 ey A ES LBA t them, Lapel HOUR IRS | scr d, and as a climax one of his \ 1 era old ladies scem to be doing. In he big things couples say to each other have their] e ou) j tthe liungs got shot away, It was then akly) he has Joe’ od forward sal- stead of taking a nap, they take to Welght and are understood; but the little, snippy. |" 1 ye » are "that the young marine upheld the to being mustered out of the @ MABLE TO BILL Teieckiuy “They fetine to éree C nyide-up-on-the-moment things they say are |‘) 9n\s 4 f po. SPlendid traditions of his branch of | vice a 1 veteran, But the | p W cae thelr part, and as a consequence, an tho ones that hurt, Those little words, which flash| ye one ) Court of DO the wervice, As he fell he saw his | silver lung bas done the trie A y eres el old indy of t juaintance up like lightning, may become rooted in the heart] hes ut ; non-sup nding offlear shot down. HII) Rew experiment Ih surgery, Of says, th clothes any- as new seeds {n ® spring garden, The sower may|.ou.., 4 eee 1 and half blind, man al rn its funvions fa | ee veer Oty a ane Baye (ORIEL VOaT TERRE TLE: Gaia ce ie i $ evawt back and drag his jand HL 1 ‘ in 1919 we wou t , they cod ground and Aidgi erior to safety, enough ty , Wardrob ps, bor € w w the medal | ; “ogi t x} t H vile a‘ ‘ for his new rank, b ag fe 4 shawls and ' Sometimes a dainty bunch of take it liw und wn country, the French War] ernment skipped ut grades | t eee aid by ee i ern OW He ie ale a , sa and th mn of Honor, Of{and now, as at Lieutenar 0 Fil - oy of the sting of those iitered t is very proud, But up to| Robert Will be attached to the : 0 ye n haste, or @ three-layer chocolate cake, made by } Pace «Of W Keven AMEN=l tHe Just we aoe eet uP to | Recruiting Burean in this city F tons try : for the moment; but who knows when the husband or wife may’| : Mitac 1. hig mp maring, Hilt | eee ee eae, Gocurt to distinguished 1 ~ skinned Lea ' i | . Ws no oth ve, and w con-| visitors at the Aeronautical Exhir- | 4 ae eed A 2 word Ww know at fe Pee eh y dow 1 na And yet, 4 “ nh the Marine H al in|t ROBERT HILL USMC he ‘ v ma Worn will wither and the cake be eaten,| m for tame, thar sho] cen 1 fader cae patente iemiorlantaamasaniinestteiaiacitiemimtt free : : , 4 « Du ven : ipa diver Lp ade f0F| ry ead iee ae Shaiati-ane (Coe ae bur shion Makes Miladi a ird of Fine Feather eee \ ere e r nk ie and fe i shy , aa where we x ee i nd for-| viciou \ ys many] ¢ ining dleueree (ous HIS. year the feathers that)take the place of the clusters of ar-) Bunches of eather were| 04 Bag, Sberisbet, aden dur Rectan ta y ’ y which she aD Tees biogm in ring, tra-lat—|tificial flowers or fruit formerly] sewed on the flour 0 th ot en, and never r . : : he w not t le all their vita 1 ther astead of For the} pinned at one side of the F lice to set|the sash and at the " j pare» woman “ a ‘ te e . “ 1 } quar er which {t the { very nartest on P t off. Tips three or four different |—almost like a bust You is done wit } ‘ jie ho day the] box 1, tr for afternoon, eve street | colors are sether, and the result |shoulder-strap perched fea Ma “ — nie PAA fax Go, to plea usbands Pity t nor an’ cordon a {Bins I to be hoped that os-| On capes the feathers take the] Cocks’ plum also on ig A : rf ¢ t pleased. And he] da hit ( riches will not yleld to the prevail-| place of tur worn dui winter, They |Some sm. I an fre n _ i Facts Worth Knowing Bue ealine tha tee gre [SAN Hiale surprise supper for her Te ynrest andl goon strike, for Hot{are shaped into huge, hish collars that [of the plumes of tho ostrich. IF LAMB AND LION FIGHT For ; We cAvsslanin tail nation a new ° Heatley, ew WiciOn ; p oe i. ‘ Ww frame delightfully pretty faces, stand- | ae ? MER SAYS "GOOD NIGHT.” OE ee goad one ig f pposite ster iu DS 1 ‘uch wides|ing out like an Hlizabethan ruft, One| Pormer Cannibals Now 1 @t apy ang! | procur Then 1 ne a Rea hg Uyem > i " Ar t 1 ad deman We such cape, worn b; blonde, wag ot red U ” A alae ee, ’ ing for al interest nous Boe the Mubper ts Maeo makeran a tivo garni pink chiffon, lincd with a goft Eat Up” the Movies ; ‘The German village « porn has | chene 1 bak i K 45 “ pectencer whe wives 1 : ands wnt) dure fur evening go They are|old blue, bordered w.h a feather EW ZBALAND Maor native \ », eee aiid coon tel arairk Sunt ee 200 i n ed Te web inet ‘ ee eee u a border for decolletage, and] fring. and with a hig collar of the N Javancao and the tannibala of | S tae ; Taeat4 000 yeore old. Sige eecaas Feet | pared fond has lowe: always seri t Ins ite 4 uh urled flues 1 nove! fragile, fluttering ostrich flues the South Sea Islands have de 0 12” ae . 8 2 ltable—putting a few ya : uve had @ simpler fare} do all the ’ 1 plan 3 and tein rt irt drape Small} The evening frocks literally are|y<' ped a ravenous i ppetite fo We " « ' uchés}and a wife who is not quit wtual work to bring it aw 1 P : ren prop ibmeninmandinmens hes nednaibldn.hereelt, And then thero ls the ker |n a quit Aa ear a PDR de Be @ad punches of ostrich tps are placed| sprouting wings, One such dress, in| American movie stars. f metime & sented. tor y | “touchy,’ sil to grasp. the Aa ' . eae enon men ¥ fae Monel azih t eam op hot|in the latch and the hour she gas| If this same little wito had lett] things we mag and id thas tha sista 1! ie oe ee te 1 aise |e amass a57p window th Fer. wae yelp a, -etite, however, doesn’t And the aD. ce eounted on all day hus arrived. . uae tet nings we Say and do count most—| nd Bhe bunches of tips are used in|constrr ted of soft yellow silk, the}grave blood, They want them on the, ,," 0! then.” said the propriet ™ bate 3 k y undone some of the big things, the| they sve their fondest hopes shattered, | another novel arrangement, They skirt aud bodice gra-efully draped. hscreen, fete a protect: Gl i 7M 4 . icle-Telegraph, “Signs of Spring” in Our Apartments a Even the City Cave Dweller Feels the Season’s Gentle Urge svete aH > | 4 Series of Letters to “Dere Mable” From “Bill,” the Re ib ing His Adventures in the Army 2RE MABLE D Somebodys rockin the boat, Its been rollin methia awful all mornin, Theres always some fool like that crowd. I aint said nothin, but me and An, ie, the skotch fello, is watchin When we a you bet well give him whats wi While we was we covered somethin awful, All t th officers ‘ BY LIEUT, EDWARD STRE Of the 27th (N. ¥.) Di Mlustrated by Corpt. G. William Bre

Other pages from this issue: