The evening world. Newspaper, April 15, 1920, Page 21

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T PRIL 15, 1920 Got Your Spring Overalls Or Your Gingham Apron ? Everybody toHave’em Soon +] * < Overall Clubs Making Humble Garments Popular—Tag Clothing Profiteers at Same Time. | By Marguerite Dean. ee Copyright, 1820, by The Pres Publishing Co. (The New York Evening World.) iP ASHION NOTE: Have you bought your spring overalls yet? Have you bought your gingham apron? Everybody's doing it | | We may expect to see John D. Rockefeller jr—who, with his father, | 5 always has been a thrift crusader—entering his offices at No. 26 Broadway, 4 dressed up in @ brown denim overall costume and ready for the job ot, i. cutting coupons. | i Mrs, Vincent Astor wore a gingham apron many c time when she worked at frying eggs and such like chores in the Y. M. C. A. canteens. | Why shouldn't she lend her sanction to the latest movement to out the cost | of living which is threatening to spread all over the country? One of the first overall clubs was started in Birmingham, Ala, where more than 1,000 men—including five Judges, the President of the City Com- mission and alt the members—have signed the pledge tc wear overalls until the prices of other clothing come down. And there is a movement on foot to Start a Gingham Ciub for women and girls. The price quoted there for overalls is from $2 to $4 in separate pieces, and from $5 tc $6 for union overalls. Incidentally, New York can beat those prices. A certain 34th Street store was selling men's brown denim piece overalls yesterday at $3.49 1 women’s blue denim farmerette overalls at $1.49, The shops have all- | enveloping gingham bungalow aprons | ranging in price from $1 to $2.50. Of course, an increased demand will mean | an increased price—so you'd better get YOURS while the getting 1s good! Besides Birmingham seven other towns up to dute have taken to over- alls, In Tampa, Fla, there is an over- all club of 700 members, including the eading business men. In Marinette, Wis, high school boys recently or- eanized an overall parade. Three over- | all clubs and one apron club, with a total membership of 1,400, have been | formed at Roanoke, Va. Every student member of the Uni- versity of South Carolina has pledged O©WrER NATIONAL | Mrs. Vincent Astor in Gingham Dress | | Worn in Canteen Work. | himself to wear overalls until the price | of other clothes goes down, and there | is a flourishing overall club in Green- ville in the same State. The Chairman jof the Georgia Fair Price Committee | | has “ called to the overalls" citizens of Auanta, ang in Richmond, Va. 1,500 |men have joined the “Old Clothes and | Overalls Club.” | | dn short, one might say that it’s all | | ov t the overalls! And don't ter- |get that an overalled husband never | |looks so well as when he is accora- panied by a gingham-aproned wife! | To come near home, Yale boys at| the Sheffield Scientific School have} rted an “old clothes club," and the | le News suggests, as correct attire, | and trousers of a dif- | 1, army shoes or bed- | room slippers and lasi year's hat." “‘No Two Brains Look Alike; | Are as Different as Faces’’| — Prof, Spitzka. By Fay Steverigon. figsural pattern, the correlations . a x,| With bodily and mental powers of ow York wren Word) = °“| various kinds and degrees, hereby y declare y wish that at my ~ d ars Dr. Josepn : hada ee, | death my brain shall be intrusted | Simms, who was connected with) {4}. my ban. | John D. Rockefeller Jr. Wearing Miner's Overalls. Spit or to the the medical department of New| curator of the B York University, and a friend of Dar-| Coluinbia Unive win, Spencer and Huxley, made an| °f New Yonk, for s > mae and for preservation, as a whole unusual will leaving his brain to] or in part. as may be thoughtbest science at is death, Last Sunday| I earnestly hope that my near rel. Dr. Simms died at| “tives by blood or marriage may os interpose no obj tion. L ask at the pire Ho | them to notify the proper person tel and this re- promptly of my h f possible, markable will has) Ven, of its near been put into effect. Dr. Edward An- thony Spitzka, who} 5 has studied. the], “Ja there @ very mirked difference | between the brain of a Ma who has) face ar naey the brain of a man who h worked with his handa and one wh. noted men and was] has done brain work all his life?" 1 an intimate friend “ Dr. Boltska at lus office “Just as much difference as th ot Dr. Simms, has | iy between their hands,” declared Lr removed his brain and is to make a] Spitzka. nene, hand of the working | He it. ' Man is all knotted and big veined and | Chongugly SAN0Y St Ot dlapoaal of | tee beMin Of tie mental ronnie ater | Legal authority for a, | ered with a greut complexity of fis- | ho body was granted by Dr, Simms’s} sural ‘patterns. . | widow without the slightest hesitancy! ‘Of course the brain shrinks with | old age just as the rest of the body," | 1 her part. he continued, “but the fissural pat. | “Dr, Simms and 1 were ‘both inter-| terns that indicate the thought waves | ih the welfare and advanse-| tell their own story. Although Dr. | ba Simms was almost eighty-seven I ment of aclence,” thin sweet faced Ut-| roved enat his brain was almost as ue widow told me without the slight-| jarge as that of a man of thirty | est mist in her eyes. ‘We both felt| years old, when the brain is supposed that in death it was only the apirit | to, h its normal growth,” idering all the many individuul that counted, while on earth "hel rnoughts we have, I, should think our| brain might be of grea: use to sclen-| brains would have as much personality | i te. So we made the will.” and distinctiveness as our faces,” 1 ; ‘ bay said to Dr. gpitzka, | ‘And then Mrs, Simms showed me a | “#4! . Spitz { n Phey do,” exclaimed the doctor. “Ns| copy of her husband's unusual Will léwo brains are alike any more than | | © which read: fwo fuces, We have what T call the| seph Simms, M. D., of New |‘physieznomy of the brain.’ After 1) y 5 100e N. ¥,, recognizing the | ave made a careful study of a brain . ‘ork City, » re I do not need to label it. I do the =~ need of studying the brains of | tabelling for those who come after ine, © educated and orderly pervona {but 1 wm ws (well aequainted with the ‘ n those of the ignorant, rains J study and they have such pad ppaevte ny A perrgel ge- | marked Siavural patterns that 1 would recognize them amo! thousan if \ermine the welgbt, form and | other braing” s hted, Bulg. ius RAE OH Yh a THURSDAY, APRIL 16 ae High Cost of Looking |Beauty Is Skin Deep and Skinned Properly in a Good Looks Garage. [yr ar ee ee j aT Er EER TILE 4 Tediadicte a By Neal R. O’ Hara. Can You Beat It! —sxe™=ets. By Maurice Ketten |)... rear nren Semen saas eee — aa _ beauty parlors certainly lay, it on| brows with a pencil or subtracts | thick. ‘Today a Jane's face may not ifn caf tare | look like her fortune, but it's sure to out the total price, Many a 44 cost like one. The Nigh cost of look-| stream-line brows have cost hermore ing has mounted like color to the| than her underslung roadster. cheeks. The curling iron, the twees-| beauty doctors feel that picking eye” | ers and the electric needle are pain-| brows should pay as well as pick! “ ful enough, but the cash register| Winners at the race track. The a scares up the deepest groan. Gifference is that the besaty doctors © A jane that can bave a wrinkle| can’t lose, * removed and pay the price without} The electric needle treatment is, eaftering # relapse of crows feet is|another branch of ‘parlor piracy, HIS VyPewRITER GIRL SAYS HE CAN HARDLY WAIT UNTIL TIME To OME HOME PERFECT HUSBAND! IF | AM NOT AT HONE WHEN HE COMES HE/ MTIAKES AN AWFaL Fuss ” ‘The Beauty Parlor Adde Eyebrows With a Pencil or Gubtracts Them With’ a Pair of Tweezers. certainly careless with her bankroll.) Electric needle work now costs nd) ~ An operation in a beauty parlor is}more than an electric coupe—it’s worse on the pocketbook than &/one of the modern improvements of touch of appendicitis. In appen-|the skin game. It eradicates a few dicitis they remove the appendix | spots from the cuticle and five-spots and not the contents of your pocket-/from the bankroll. The electrig” book. needle manoeuvre differs from the , Britannia rules the waves, except] electric chair in that everything is the marcel variety. The Marcel|all over when the current passes’ Wave Trust rules thet. If a wren| through the chair. In the needle, | wants her hair to go up and down/ treatment it isn’t all over till you've’ i she finds out she's got to come) suffered the shock of the bill and across, The pirates of old never| paid it. Trying either treatment once’) held up folks on the waves the way | is plenty. * ‘the marcel workers do it now. The} And there are lots of other wrin- beauty parlor pirates have no three-| kles in the beauty business that will = mile or three-dollar limit. They put| never be eradicated. The French . a crimp in a baby doll’s tresses first, and then put a crimp in the roll she carries, They don’t even warn their victims to keep the robbery under their hat. You have only to look at the price Nst to know all the customers get the scalp treatment whether they want it or not. Removing freckles , costs a little less than removing a Yes, girls, beauty is skin deep the landslide from the Panama Canal,| world over and skinned properly in and moles can be punched out for ®/ a good-looks garage. You can’t look: price that will hardly cover the| like @ million dollars today without’ month's rent. There's only one thing} spending half that much—which has. you can say for the beauty joints—|atways been the ease. Helen of they'll remove your hat without ex-/ Troy's beauty eaused a war and cost tra charge. anempire, And We'll bet Venus, with Removing the eyebrows makes all ber beauty, had to hook her arnia: ae pretty soft picking for the Jesse} to enhance her face value, Ellabelle Mae Doolittle Ooprright, 1910, by the Press Pultidhing On (The New Yous Brenkig Waste). ot ee oo ae ne rere SIX SHARP. HERE HE (S WE WERE SUST SAYING NICE THINGS ‘Fables forthe Fair| The Jarr Family | By Marguerite Mooers Marshall | By Roy L. McCardell. Copyright, 1920, by The Pree Publishing Co, (The New York, Breaing World.) | Coprtaht, 1920, by The Prom Publishing Co. (The New York Brening World.) HIS is a tale of true love— 66XJOU'D think vogetables at least | have sufficient clothes to cover our | And “New” love—in New York's one and only Village. ve would be cheaper, now that Peres an Baa ‘cont’ dhe, on the Dorothy was an expert on oocupational disease, |x ; spring is bere at lank” oid foot WAY cen OF to ee i could cote tre rey “g Bits” and other |Mrs. Jarr. “But nothing is cheaper.|catch whoever it was stealing my TAD D)NaLe FENY SUOEND, Bust 4012 DCRR LENO SO: HEIDE BLUR 8 Oh, dear, the bills, the bills, the bi wash," said the now humbled mili- “Well, we can't keep chickens in a|‘#0t lady in confusion, ae she A Lover’s Mistake, a Poem With a Point, and Cupid Receives Another Jolt. stand~bys of the station news stands, The two of them were married and lived in @ studio and a kitchenette clutched her dressing gown at the flat or raise our own pork, but wel opened throat and looked down Somewhere near the centre—it has no heart—of the Village. Venlgtt start a verstable garden de'\ ibe eget pds Now it is the tragic truth |the roof," Mr. Jarr suggested. “I've|Mering some more confused excuses ‘That, In utter defiance of all the fetterless, unbridled Village poets, | heard of dwellers in these big flat |%%¢ beat a retreat—awed by the eu- a be you devil! Let me; They seem to act like mules, ; alone!” Taking ws for poor little mice. > (Whom W, B. Yeats admilted the other night he never had time to | houses who have done that. Yes, and Perla ine nalts cuiea Co from the The words cut through the i“ oh read), | raised chickens on the roof, too!” back yard, “Hey, youse! Git off the | «till night alr like @ knife. They came! wy sisters child, Teeney Ricketts," And despite the cigarette-smoking Village pagans, | “Yes, and if the neighbors didn't|Toof! You'll break the solder and ae? from the front porch of the Peter P. ever going to have time to worry about! )—— complain the Board of Health would,” | *t#rt that tin to give way, and !t will (Whom no god leak!” Doolittle home in Deihi. Mrs, Cutley Was chased dy our old rooster. I She had stolen away his corn— Dorothy and d were a duet, not a trio or a quartet. remarked Mrs. Jarr, “And if no one] Mr. and Mrs, Jarr atapped hastily | Boggs and her husband were passing. What a ttle Bi ‘They were honestly in love with each other, although they were married | COMplained the landlord would charge| off the tin rouf to the boards by the| «14's Ellie’a yolce,” said Mra. Boggs. ws ‘gags | TO each Gtk | You more rent for the space you used | “inshaft. en With that she rushea into the yard|7™f getting back to male flirte— i on the roof than the vegetables would | ingylie Sadhoen Weenie naty O20 | oa fell up the steps onte the poroh, One of them tried to embrace Such things will happen among the most unregulated Radicals! | “ ladylike bachelor boarder from _ his | aD q en eae eee ae tricnae tala peli me | be worth to you. No, we'll be lucky if} room window in the top flat. Then| “What's wrong, Ellie?” asked Mra|He found he wae far too pert, But st Won't Lest,” all thelr friends told them, sioomy relish, the landlord permits us to sit up on|he ran to the back window of the| noggs, as abe lay on her stomach. And I have dismissed him fo “Marriage kills love—fine, free, passionate love! — the roof on hot nights this summer!” | ft and called down indignantly to “ to " came The cold hand of legal compulsion crushes the little flowers of the | “Let's go up on the roof and look | the Janitor, “This fool tried to hag ma ‘With the final word a hush fall beasts” |things over,” suggested Mr, Jarr, Were 6 young man at a back | the reply. over the audience, Those preset i i “Perhaps we could get the other ten. | om window of the abutting apart- t that. P. Silas Pettibone, the Delhi| realize that Mr. 0 And more barbaric yawp to that effect, ants to form @ summer roof garden| ments, thinking the Jarre were flat |.” ine Mr. Pettibone, to wi In all this green earth, covered with white woolly sheep, : ; rob {club with us—take up a phonograph | house thieves making a getaway |omsorialist, agp hars of oe Pe ae and dance and everything whea the| Vr the roof, opened fire on them |the Doolittle Newfoun Gog. hot weather come: with an air gun. “I did not, neither,” he said, And the fair poctess was supposed to Nobody 18 so afraid of public opinion—HIS public opinion—as your engaged, has lost out. Miss Dodlict) ruby-red Radical backs up and takes @ seat. All ts quit ‘The day came when Lioyd took little Dorothy in his arma and said to | “Yes, | haven't been on the roof for} Why move when you can pay rent? ia @ second he was gone, until she blows her nose and thé: her, | ages, and it's such a nice, breezy day;| Yes, but can you? . cae aemns tha Gai ‘The indi “Dear, this can't GO ON!" And she answered half-sobbingly, Jet us go up and look around,” sald SS ee “I know-ryou won't love me any more, unlem we get a d-d-divorce” | MER IO te oe ang Tr. 5 ‘ ‘The next scene takes us to Hugus So it was arranged, quite according to Hoyle. | were sitting ona coming watching no | THE EVENING WORLD | utat, dcar readers. We see the Wo- ‘The Village Freudians congratulated Dorothy and Lioyd for their |feecy clouds float across the blue OUIJA EDITOR ASKS | 23 Betterment League in session splendid frankness and fineness,” April sky when suddenly a bitter, with Promptreas Pertle in the chair, When they dined together at the Green Tadpole Tearoom. | suspicious voice was heard to ask: enly the door opens and in comes The night before the decree was made final. Who's that hiding behind the ebim- oe nace ttle, the noted poet-| Gold in paying quantities ts b “What,” said the Village, with subtle naughtiness, “is a divorce—be- | ney? Come out of there lane obtained from heaps of rubbish joa Rh pe | “We are not hiding, behind the eas of Delhi, She looks sore, maa’ moat Nate, at . ohimney,” said Mra, Jarr, coldly, as 1 in awe. two samp u However, in the dopthe of its Freudian mub-consciousnons, even the | onal nod cut trom: the “chatee ot Pees Re * Miss | Which were used to extract gold Village felt a alight shock the chimney, “We are tenants in this vostrum gone When the divorced pair put the decree in the top bureau drawer, +| Rouse.” f Doolittle and next we see her skim- The-if 1 may copvey delicately the situation—communistie bureau “Huh! I thought it was some one ming @ poem off a roll of manuscript drawer—— | stealing the wash,” replied the voice TRY THIS ON ry b) “ YOouR she holds in her left hand looks And 4 new honeymoon began! | “And maybe it is. I lost three waists Teevoreeinice wi gmea! Now wait’s salauteerain ) SOU be shocked! |**Syou ‘need "not worry en our ao ‘| “Road it!” yella a member out tn the The Village doesn't yet know the Guilty Secret, but, the very day that | count,” retorted Mrs, Jarr. “We have | ae decree nisi became absolute, | | centre of the room, Miss Doolitde holds up one hand. | all the old duds we need.” | Lioyd and Dorothy slid out of town to a Connecticut Gretna Green “I dare say,” replied the voice, “I And were married all over again! ne’ see you wearing anything “silence!” They had New England ancestors, und you can't get away from your | ls As es Bilenoe follows. And then the fair ancestors—— AD on the owner Oo! © yore’ | Some of the answers to yesterday’s| girl, dressed in pecan cloth, That's what, sheepishly, they told each other; | Bove into view from behind the Inden girl, goat. question “What are some of the re- wash lines, It was a very stout lady the Government's campaign | timed in Mittle shivers, reads the But, deep down in them, they knew that two who love sults o lo Hits t least militant as- 7 WANT to be bound by every iaw and custom and bab.t they can scare | Soot. Bho was kather aitthe attinng [te reduce the cost of living? following poem: Op! for the time and place in slippera| Ellen McK. Brooklyn—"One of the It's the nature of the beast! |without stockings, an. old scanty | foremost results that I've seen is that | 4® ™an shall have ever hug me So this p Romantics, these exponents of the union Mbre, | dressing gown, open at the throat,|my delicatessen storekeeper has Unless I tell him to, air of Bolshevi: These old turtle-dove: awks’ clo vee and with no surface indications of| bought three apartment houses and $90 ab Rey trary sau el ry en amet SL REY: any surplusage of garments beneath | ruiped the rent in all of them.” i wae S6t 50 iiaing 8 egy ax And are STLLUL in love with each other—— jit, J. X Hy Bronx—% find that hat would Proving it can be done! adeno ant Bet, sive, yourself any | whiskey te Rotting scorcer end euch | Men arq really euch darn fools, 1 , as to our apparel, ." re-Imore expensive wase (01 course WE always knew that!) marked Mrs, Toe Telly. “At least we ago.” They don't treat us girls nice,

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