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we to TUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1920 < . \ ) ¢ KUESDAY, APRIL 20, 1920 rd ? Carry Your Lunch to Work; Those Fluttering Flappers Saves Money and Tips ; The Demi-Dame Who Is Too Young to Marry and Too” é Another Blow at H. C. of L. FS By Neal R. O' Hara. Make Lunch Box Luncheons the Fashion——Eat Out-of- Poor Little Income ! afte Be Bale, Say sy N ' i cetten Copsriaht, 1920, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Krening World.) =a we Doors Whenever It Is Possible. ; . —__—__——_— Re. OMETHING they didn’t “have in They can keep track ot the plot an@— the hoopekirt era was the flap- Sl that happens behind the six a By Marguerite Dean. & . “Couyright, 1420, ty The Pree Publishing Co, (ihe New York Evening World.) H tbcdieh 1 f: per you see to-day. Up to the “Ors. HEAR IT | Pr the lunch box come in with which to eat an open-air lunch; the AR On a ballroom floor the flap is the overalls! salt air and the view are sure-fire ap- HONK | HAVE oe WE AN Cret Our time Taft slipped from President (© neither handicapped nor shoulder= tT Toa - / On ny. way ! professor and Wilson went vice pound, She has more steps than the A few of the blue-denimed plo- petizets. There is divo space in City £ neers have offered this latest sugges- Hall Park for noonday picnic parties. EXPENSE See lle Versa, the flapper was practically State Capitol and more stamina than unknown, But in the last seven or an army mule. From tiara to toes, ton for beating the profilesrs, and it ht years she’s been busting into she's Terpsichore. She nnmerctaste is an excellent one. For no man of wor man to-day can buy an appetizing, nutritious and CHEAP lunch in the City of New York. Hiver since 1914 the prices of food have been advancing steadily, both in the expensive and the inexpensive For that mattety there is no city or- dinance to stop any one from strolling along the sidewalk eating his noon- day sandwich ‘or orange a la Ben Franklin, who munohed one loaf and carried another under his arm in the days when bread was a really cheap article of food! ingore prominence than a red nose @nd more trouble than a Red agi- tator. All the world’s a stage to-day, and men and horses and titerattire amid bridge.” And she knows New York from the Aquarium at the Battery to the Zoo In the Bronx She may (at least they were ONCH) lunch ‘This is dust the season of the year rooms, The coming of Prohibition in which to start the fashion of EAT IT! You ARE OT INNY CLASS . 1 DON'T ASSOCIATE HOw RE “YOu Sone OME 2 (Xou ure SHRIMP! E ASK YOU—WHICH the flapper is Its ingenue. She is the demi-dame that's too young to be married and to old tg believe in ‘anta Clauss balg ribbons and Lou- isa May Alcott, She runs from sweet sixteen to“ tWinkling twenty, but that’s all she does run from. Fleppers are born not made up, but it doesn’t take jem long to hit the red paint stride Most of ‘em graduate from low: heels to high heels and high necks to low ones be- fore they gradiate from high schoal. They get double meanings a long time before they get double chins, but they still get by with their baby WOULD YOU PREFER? be, rusty on ham and eggs, but she does know life and the nine shades it's colored in. Flapperism is still young, but no more so than the flappers. It has Spread like the flu and it's awful earching. A gal ln a gingham dress bas only to grab off a lavailiere, a jow-neck gown ‘and a lipstick, and right away she's a fluttering flapper. Peary” never diseoveged anything colder than a chiffon frock, but the flappers like ‘em jnst the same. Eve was created too old to be a flapper, but she had flap ideas about clothes and pneumonia, 00 LITTLE TO ete AW WITH HIN! HE IS HR PROFITEER'S BIG INCOME . HES Nor 7 WISH /WAS \ HS BROTHER j LD GreT SOME )FUN OUT OF WHAT'S THE MATTER, No MA , THAT LITTLE INCONE 7 STuct-uP Roy The outdoor homemade lunch. No waiters’ tips, slow service or bio EXPENSE WITH THE CAR. feces. There's as much difference The flapper at elghtgen ts practi- ‘f between’ a flapper and a vamp as cally harmless, but she’s got a large x there is between an Easter egg and future looming before her. With all | a hard-boiled one. . her girlish eurves, #he grows up te drove the last @ail in the coffin of good, cheap food. Downtown Mou- quin’s and many aiother favorite re- sort for the noon meal have been swept aside by the progress of arid- ity, In those few restaurants which remain a man now pays $2 for the sort of meal he used to buy for $1. In the so-called popular price places food has gone up at least 100 per cent, portions are smaller and the nickel is practically useless as a coin of barter, The stenographer and the office boy are just as much ex- ploited by the lunch room profiteers as are their employers in their more luxurious cafes, Then why shouldn't we go back to uncooked food. Pretty nice, eh? ‘ HURT YOu Pe KICKED AIM iN lunch~box luncheons, In coh weather nobody wants to eat outdoors, and most persons feel the need of some sort of hot food in the middle of the day. But from now till autumn sandwiches, jhomemade cake and fruit are an ideal meal at noon. The lunch ox not only saves money, including tips—even the pa- tron of the chain lunch rooms feels that his or her self-respect requires the bestowal of a dime or nickel tip! The lunch box saves time—how much time will be realized only by the business man or woman who has waited wearily from half to three- quarters of an hour in order to ob- tain grudgipg and inaccurate service THAT. BIG UiNEon ES 3 yeRut don't Gv@Hook “tue fact that to-day’s Easter egg can be to-mor- row's breakfast with only # little alteration. Twenty years ago the flappers thought fairy tales were Big Stuff. Cinderella stood out as the last word in literature, and Jack and the Beanstalk was packed with thrills. ‘To-day the juvenile smart set has different tdeas, Little Red Riding Hood {8 little read, but Elinor Glyn hits on all eight éylinders, To-day the flappers pass up the circus to take in the ta latest bedroom farces. be an angle In some eternal tHangle, The dames that gét too much’ atten- tion on the blushing aide of twenty very often get coo Little alimony on the wrinkled side of thirty. Flow- ever, eternal triangles are spleier for a boarding schoo! Beatrice to think about than plane geometry. But what happens after flapper- hood can’t scare a dame that's stud- fed Robert. W. Chambers. A jane that isn't a flapper before she’s a bride ain’t ever a bride! Flap and the world flaps with you, flop and you flop alone. “ K the good old custom of carrying our Me rea during the noon rush. — - a aS lunch from home in a neat box or y shouldn't Wall Street start “- Pl ft th A even a paper bag? Some wise young the fashion of eating luncheon out of ea or e orse : By BD "le ot, ‘ ~ hunch boxes?— of “lamb” Wann Gown town G8 i Baws ih on Boowiae Ua peti piety ae arn By Sophie Irene Loeb. Coprrlaht, 1920, ty The Presa Publishing Co. (The New toh Sehalvs erie. § tain big ‘business buildings, such as ee rite 9! ay Why shouldn't Copyright, 1920, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York Evening World.) Copyright, 1920, by The Prove Publishing Co. (Tho New York Evening World. AYOR CYRUS PPRKINS latter was roundly cheered. The in- that of the New York Telephone J: P. Morgan or E. H. Gary ench READER writes me as follows: trouble to him, In the summer, the ¢¢J WONDDR if we will go anyg flancees must go into mourning and WALKER has prohibfted the cident has get Ihe whole fiom ne Company, there is furnished hot tea ¢oMe downtown with his little lunch “to-day I saw a poor horse hot asphalt and the mad hurry, times where this summer?” remarked Ve true to thelr memory, and mourn- ein at overall by wom- .rhere la much indignation ‘and coffee to accompany the “basket POX Under his arm? It would be a break his leg and wait very Without number, bring untimely deaths Me jarr “No T don't mean the (26: and capectilly mourning for ; ft { ; pie bard young women to wear. costs more ef in Dell, whether they dom them picnics” of the employees, As the prosper thrift which would set the patiently, oh, so patiently, an hour Not only this, but the high cost of Poor house,” he added. “Everything than any other kind of clothes. And to cut the high cost of living or for Hote to Be Comfy days grow warmer other young OY MEINE ee would only bring nd @ half for his owner to come und space gives him very little room for 1s #0 dear that one can get in debt you cun't make it aver inte anything other reasons, He has taken ls women will be seen in sociable twos Is lunch from Bushwick Avenue tie have him shot comfort or air, so crowded ure the just as well at @ summer renort as Git, and you can’ dye liek Omy stand as the result of an incident And Sa ve Co t S84 threse on the benches of the oben Propcsed fashion! would become & "A man, ong of Stalls Of the Least, whet he Analy tries staying home.” Waste, and the whole suminer spoiled that occurred In Hugus Hall Friday 8 chudehyaste at Sector divest 004 ragge—all the eating places would at least @ hundred, nue taking it main On. inaPnaree ta “I hear the milkmen get fifty-five for everybody. For, of course & night when a meeting hud been OF C li Broadway and at Fulton Street and fyujer sn out of business or cut down 4 negro, patted sorely tried—the creature which for dollars a week,” said Mre. Jarr, “I foolish and romantic young girl wont caiieg by the Good Citizens’ Club to Linen 0 ars Broadway, eating their sandwiches é Br cata Haas and stood with centuries has been man's best friend, syppose the milkmen will all go to at the most eligible young man ” or of prices. in- y s Let's get after those fellows while ; i that may come along whea her mind discuas the lowering of pi from paper boxes and breathing the We're gunning for the clothes profl- him most of the [ut for the work of the horse, tiv summer resorts this year, and if they jg ali. melancholy wbout the hefole cidentally, the Mayor reversed him- itt alr teers. The lunch box was g00d enough lime, 40 1 ves many comforts that you and I enjoy qo 1 hope they'll find the milk young aviator she 1s mourning for.’ i “fh ton, but he soft, sunlit air. Be the Bova kod Fuld the ecu te tte marked to a wome to-day would not be ours. : An) ’ Well, where 18. thé best. place 10 self on the overall question, bu For those further downtown, Bat- iittie red school house, ‘Thon iga't tt an near me liow Surely each owes him something. Watered!” take a’ Marrlageable. younc girl?’ did it after he scented a acheme on Park is a charming place in good enough for YOU? beautiful this Andt something each may perforin “We don't need to go anywhere this ayked Mr. Jarr. “Not that we have a the part of the Anti-Walker Demo- kindness to the just as he passes by. If some crucl summer, If that's what you mean,” marriagoabl poor suffering ani- person is abusing a horse, take it upon gaid Mr. Jam, “Aa for meeting the like to know n ° ee nen ane CAS AM oy O° collkinan, 1 used to mbet him often, 2h, a long steanghip voya al Seowi@ maneiese: = mont and said. ; vall of a stray cat or & Year or #0 ago”-—— “Why, do they suffer? I thought a drink of wat -r ‘And then Mr, Jarr became strangely By Martwerite Moosr Manlnalll they had’ no feelings! ; ing to eat. Yc Copyright, 1920, by The Press Publising Co, (The New York Evening World) “My tears were beginning to fall, co or at least st ter oung girl, but 1d just cratw to injure him in his race for ox. Terelection one, Mayor Walker was called on to Bermuda. Besides, the speak soon after tho Chairthan rapped n wi going to Bermuda and for order, silent, When he used to meet the Cuba Jaya ure not of the milkman was at a time when there am glad to have this oppor- ventured Mr. Jarr, “I would tunity to condemn the high cost of Median . 1 could not answer her. But would jee that some one in 5 ; and ¢ ¥ course, a widow MAY be a victim, but more often she makes one. you in your own Way write a few lines @uthority has taken charg: was alcoholic drink and all sorte of g @ rather of rumantic sort. everything,” he began. “Clothing is Misery loves company, and it is the unhappily married who yearn making it plain thai the dumb animal You can only grow in the measure of Wickedness, But now everybody ts Hut” he added, | with a ia away too high J suggest that to marry off others, The happy co : are do or? which you give—of yourself, f y law food ook in his eyes, “overyhody nye * } y Ppy couple keop their fingers does suffer y reformed by law and Leading @ 600d ee ne eee tolinnt. everybody wear overalls until the crossed and know that miracles happen only once. Is ther rson with feell so dead that he does not know or ca his is the one way to bs ng human. It should be in to grow. jife, if not a better one. jothes comes down,” tis ful—and have been since the first of cost of jcourag: Often a woman gives but half an ear to her husband’s conversation be- 1 » the -kind of young men one th r” a | e pe eechle . childre y sn we yeu How about the women?” asked a cuuso she is 80 busy thinking about the things he dosn't tell her Sie paln of @ apecchiegy crea 1h. children oe meets these days at resorts are not ~~ Bey corer rig tia And now Kansas City joins Philadelphia in putting the lid on the sub-deb e is something to be said about y 7 y the Kind that make good husbands,” “Let them Wear overalls fue Pretty soon the poor child will have no personal liberty at all h less woman who stood by in THE EVENING WORLD said Mrs. Jarr, after a moment's re- 0 You the Mayor. "I tithe they would look “) é aver Sailavec sian I decline (ie 5 morbid curiosity, and in the belief that 1, 7 : “4 ie Pt ea fine in such gurb,” My women friends never believed me when I declined dove parties because tho horse with ihe proken ioe tetra OUIJA EDITOR ASKS ‘ection. “Of course, as 1 have no “Open the doors, boys,” sang out I was lunching with my husband,” said ‘a devoted wife. “So now L pain ‘ 4 csughter of marriagable age: Kmow? the man tell them I'm lunching with some one else's huyband—and ‘they quite >There $s something als saldin © What have daughters of u mar © "The doorw at the side of the room tand!’” Th i omething also to be ald in What iN be th t or Ais approval of the negro who g corn d bid sda yy sual Naweable age got todo with It?" asked conics, s050, by the pre Poblisning co Petre) cow open and in my ren bachelors must pay a 10 per cent. tax, but they probably figure fort to the miserable animal until hi ae aiter, she. "Reformen Mr, Jarr, thinking this a safer topic (nus New York Bwoieg Word.) eee Naga be ek , progvenica ; to t \ ; We New York Kevnla ’ head of the procession wa worth tt es suffering was end exe wae out the white than milkmen past or present 1. What do Chinamen use instead of ker, the Mayor's wife, wh All the Presidential candidates sare dics me doubtiess went home, an¢ ights, the curse of the red | “Well, young men that have vaca- 4 knife and fork when eating? fat. As she waddled the wooing the vote of Woman-but Defere he went to bed he reflect tipped cigarette, and the blue tions these days are generally e: adie ti bball yeh in aisle the men all lauehed she's Boing to Use her late yeu nix activities of the day; und 1 kaow Maninaatatent i : 2, In what organ of the body is hy- Mayor Walker was shocked right {o piek for herself that nothing gave him as much saus- waxed and go to the summer resorts , B ¢roehloric acid found “Lieuie,” he said sternly, “Ko home VAR Everybody: Most of the Who says Prohibition doesn’t »ronibit SOS La NICHE HOSEA an ta See ret ieee (eeeche of 8 Brom what country wae Kamr 81) DiReet i ei end led " : pid Wah a y n h hat he stopped on. the > 4 | eye Ai aaa i rs, Wa grinne led th woar and tear’ of thie world >for eVery one unable or unwilling highway, wd apent 1 iethe ot his cin TRY THIS ON SRY Sosag men camping out in Canude or °orm frst obtained women about the om while che men ‘ ‘o pay a dollar for a highba PT Ae ODN , young men catnping out in Canada ory \. qt fe ; . Re AL TOR HE to bay a dat Orrive d nun of wolnco and wmpatny. SX YOUR hat river wae called “The lnughad'sioudiy,, “Wien. 1 ; man tells lies to make money; a in the ay that a dumb animal somewhere, and the camping out Father of Waters” by the Indians” aches the de v went When you are tired you have Leen = Woman tells lies to take it—a can une young man seldom makes a good 5 Whut disease Ix nometiines caused the Mayor mopp. Woman tel his brow asting either your time or your , Tem him! Be he man, this ts th ' me There's nov, a hurry to spirit upon which th husband,” \ future fabric of forgive an ne ean wiways Wh nt of oth amedody, proba give emny P ean wi humanity must be built, if it would u + b Gort hee bow that ta" ventured: |, ¢ h » You have been do that when one ean't do anytaing remain trong Mick hae itera (haus litte. elie to en yugh to ¢ something @ c i Ol ' ie erhoo ‘oad al je of ¥ pol! tic € on, wasting: your generosity or your him, Itt y 18 Jo som) r rhood of Railroad Trainmen f my poi'tical enem you are broke you hay am i } Id enough to be en- . fj : ‘ The fat man takes his cue fro op. for one's self, or perform a task t was 9 8. What Jewish King conrulted the wiker up to this, shouted time, for time is money. Ort, Hrowiink, Who Wretee Ana y {4 bolind to bring a return, But to Some of the answers to recent replied Mra, Jarr, “I'd no Witch of Endor? Mayor To-day in manufacturing just aa Choose never to stoop,” sacrifice something of one's self, and questions: Bh her 0 6 suramer aniert ze Whe created the churacter of Mr . 1 1” ag ¢ as | & = o take e trouble 1 passer-by to om mi “J @ ce A ou ooley ? f i wie much attention is paid to waste as . be ‘nee y Mb we n in hour dames J, MoK. Milford, Mase- parties young men than I would 10. W hat is the salary of a ¢ net 1s Constable Pelee Brown in the io production and so it should be may be @ public charge in the poor. misery—ah, truly, no greater } My oulja said: “The profiteors won't ng her near where there citicer vo r wht ? ay burn IV's wn outra at coast of South America “Why—becnu actically no ratncati the man in the rea Ne Br SY CUISA f with you and your dally affairs. house before he leaves this world, 4” than thi Het pon for thelr autos ee ts youn girlecan aust ou ee aaa a3 It is all well enough to spend your If there is soiuething wrong with era W eng bo fever er aa ® Prune A Whe kW has (ool Ie used to xeparte th ‘ ils camping ol ie a & ot party . Yalk Yemoc t me iin useful mont and it is you today—tind out where there too bumy d Autos die campers ating of © Sable when sullgiony Pigg OR ihe ) fli ight to be generous, However’ lias been waste, ‘Then stop d Pine Mean racine eae wed 1. Wilbn, She Weave UlNGRe wae : ° 1 ’ Thom: # BH. Union Hill hea’ an aviation feid, there a 1, chopsticks) 2, stomach: % Peypt: knocked down four times. He we man who seemingly gets praise Yours truly, " winter, the slippery vives a ight! It's the only way of young girls fall desperately in love 4, Mississippi; 5, cancer; 6, West coast; eceded in subduing his tan, howeve for “abaring the shirt on Mis baal ALFALIA 8MITIL ments, especially in the congested putting something over the profi- with the wviators, and aviators geuer- 7, Lee; 8 Saul; 9 Dunne; 10, $12,000; by promising him ten cigur coupon traffic, are an everlasting source of teers! ally fall and get killed, and their 1), Chicago; 12, marline spike. As the man dragged Brown out the ‘ t