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| BEAUTY OF A WOMAN’S FACE, REMEMBERED—NOT POSED— INSPIRATION FOR ANGELS Artist Who Paints Them Finds None on Fifth Avenue or Stage "That Is Why, Says Donald B. Taunton, Angels of Art, While of Neuter Gender, Have Faces of Fem- inine Regularity and Soft, Beautiful Hair. By Fay Stevenson, ’ Uoprriait, L001, dy the Less Publishing Go, (The New York Rrening Worldy bd ie does an artist who designs.and paints angels for cathedral windows get his inspiration?” That is the question I put to Donald B, Taunton, the oele- Prated Pnglish artist, who has designed many saints, angels and Biblical for British cathedrals, — i can eially the famous Southwark UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA SE- ad Gloucester Cathedra This ray aruuntons first vis's LECTS NEW YORK GIRL AS America, and when 1 popped my PAGEANT SOLO DANCER. ly American and probably t- Qatter-of-tact question about angels $4 inspiration, I saw the typiculy tish disposition of “My word, isn't abrupt” pass over his face. Then, $6 we both sat down in the Park Ave- fue Hotel, where Mr. Taunton is w@taying, he adjust feweed suit and wit lied: “Well, I do not get inspiration Grom Fifth Avenue belies, Broadway hows or (he London music hal Reis with, an artist who pain ical chara: ' does n ed mm Bt all, There is nothing about the beauty of an 1 which corresponas €o the type of beauty a cover design ‘or magazine sketch must represent And then, you know, an ‘gels of th “So they are, bu wet that,” 1 gasped. “Women may be Artist Taunton, Women! Lb @nd Michael “But a fn such long 1 his loose-fitting avhalf smile re le are all men 1 hado’t thought continued @o many fem tine, “Of cou neuter Ke ISS NINA WEEDEN OLIVER, uline. F fents purity and a New York girl, has been s lr that | Wee rele he lected as a solo dancer in a Buch wreaths of eoft, beauti,.il he Greek pageant, to be given by the “But where docs the modern artist University of Virginia in the McIntire et his inspir | persisied. “if, Grecian Amphitheatre at Charlottes- for instance, an artist’ who paints ville, Va. The occasion is the centen- angels should see a woman with nial celebration which will begin June beautiful, regular features nd a 1, and Miss Oliver's selection for a fender, appealing face, wouldn't solo role will make her the most im- ‘him? have r t ‘ lied many ‘Distorical works, allowed my imag- Mnation to dwell upon what Heayen may be, but if I do see a face which “Yon, what an artist eeos, and even fs appeniing T have, at times, tried to the modern interpretation’ of _ life, convention it into the ‘angel BY ROY L.MSCARDELL - make an imp m upon him? The portant figure of 500 dancers, does play a certain part in the life ‘type! 192, by tt mext time he thought o an angel —_— o paints Biblical “Angels are not all beautiful A Neiya ‘wouldn't that face appear before ontinued Mr. nton, Even Pres Publishing Oo, Fyeung World.) ‘A : peepee: HIS is really a ble break baggage Mal to. wore: Geonle. fast,” said Mrs, Jarr plain- ange! must have an appealing tively; “this steak has been @ convention to a crisp, and the potatoes artists easy and the coffee 1s fla etudy the old lew ar ; Keen to the period < Nas vt weak to Gertrude “eanch as possible about id Mr. Jarr, “It's a “and yet if those same whould see a beautiful face, whether it belon or child, it might 9 later be conventinnaliz sfor the sta Mr. Tau typically Eng’ w “Dash it a 1 paint shame to spojl good victuals this ‘Tell hor!’ echoed Mrs. Jarr. “Why 1y a word to servants pack up and at's so," sald Mr. Jarr it's so,” remarked Mrs. Jarr. “You have to be so respectful them, too, while they are uot a bit respectful to you. You have to ay, ‘Please do this’ and ‘Please do st that,’ but they are rude and sullen. Je might be tempted onc great while to work ina n terpretation of beauty,” he “but to do it successfully h peer ae =CHORE ALN GB ISIS AA: Br yet ident Harding alludes to fn London I was asked to g ¥ himself as a ‘servant of the people, opinion of a Madonna, but people who are servants must admit the face was Se ee eee Sin tame. wads “Maybe it's the fault of the mis- “put 1 frankly 1 concluded tresses," said Mr, Jarr incautiously. Mr. T. ‘that “After some thousands of years the servant problem is worse than ever, In houschold affairs you women make it a question of caste, and those who scrye are made to feel a certain ncial inferiority; hence the kind of people shun T may while Unger in face whic t not Sense of 80 autiful dc eet ARCA UE What do you want me to do?” ntien. @sked Mr Jarr Sit down at the piano and piay duets with G te have her frie t us and give em the best room You are going from one extreme to the other,” replied Mr. Jarr. "Do- . ee Oe tenet aver © Work could be made a matter eoia Naat the 8 irely wage relation, with no elé ican 1 have @ noul, wae’ of social Inferlority iu it, I Oh, so you think!” said Mrs, Jarr. “Well, how would you do it?” ‘ 4 fl Just ae they do it at the apart- GOING DOWN! nent hotels,” replied Mr. Jarr, “The rag ‘eat 0 unbermaid and lnundress The New York reting W defined hours of work, KAR GIRLS—It is wiser and the relations are nply those haven't half the trouble of women who employ three.” “Do [ emp! thr 2" aske M Your time is valuable too. “But tee tt so ees that Many 1 hes come from ct you to have three, Ser- nk without a chart vants want servants to wait on them, driftir wi thas. & As for regular hours, YOU keep reg- of con ular hours and then maybe I can keep night at lock at 9 kK and i girl, Who wants her eve- t lerself, to stand for jt? won't do it, and 1 don’t blame e burned steak feeling that A servany Ip your bow than to let one man monopolize your time with- women w out some understanding. mon understanding and Mr. Jarr ate th owards. Sic s ALFA ©MIT and drank the poo! gaplgitiy was lucky In the house at all (The New York Krening ee SSS Soin nnce cs (LAM A LAW ABIDING CITIZEN TS A LONG LONG. * BY NEAL B. CHARA + The Only Thing an Actor Can Save in the Summer Is Daylight--That’s the Trouble With the Merry - Merry Show Biz, Nothing Permanent but the Loafing. Commrtett, 1921, by the Prone Publahitng Co. (The New Tork Rrenine Wort) IN thousand actora are loafing on Broadway, but with so many hams among ‘em there ia little danger that they'll starve, One of the beauties of Thespian life is that you can loaf all summer without going on strike. You can even loaf for longer periods and get the same results. The lay-off season for the actors is complete. They not only lay off work. They lay off food and other such conveniences. And yet they like it. Any grease paint strut- ter would rather have his Times Square and starve than his three squares out on the tank town trail. It's so funny it's delirious. Patrick Henry asked for lib- erty or death, The actors get twice as much as Patrick Henry asked for. They get liberty and a chance of starving to death all rolled ap In one neat and concise little packet. You conldn't ask for more withont getting less, We leave it to Einstein, The difference between amateur and professional actors is this, and ft clears up a much mooted question: An amateur rehearses six weeks for a single performance and gets no pay. A professional rehearses six weeks for two weeks’ performances and gets no pay. That explains in “MANY AN IDOL THAT LIVES A nutshell why many good amateur oN TWO-FISTED APPLAUSE performers can afford to remain DINES OFF ONE-ARM LUNCHES amateurs. IN THE SUMMER.” 5 r a stomach, The one great troub try and get it-every week, That Sas elke Et Ix the trouble with the me oe ee seri abew hts “Nottilhe parinas oak act em ahd eat st too. nent but the loafing. The only ne Bay tint “wrote the calendar sure gave the actor an awful part. thing an actor chn pave In (he ee i eine they play summer is daylight, We starves ict meals ae ears on mhile the tlckot cealper recnprre siows tn tne summer they do ates at Atlantic City getting omer tetwixt and bet@eon, And ready for another season, tha iteery aint confined to lee A footlighter has one sweet life. jorform: The animal acts suffer Laugh and the audience laughs with gomething flerce, Don't even eet a you. Loaf and you can’t raise & chance to bite the hand that's feed- loan, Curtain speeches in Dubwoe, ing tom, One guy gave his troupe Ia., butter no bread in @ Broadway of trained seals a can of sardines to automat. But press clippings will jast ‘om through the summer—and help you buy buckwheats if you sell ye did. They finally died of ex- ‘em to the junkman at 40 cents peF haustion trying to open the can. hundred pounds. The problem would be solved for An actor with a tendency to acrobats if they could eat the turn- get hungry has as much chance. overs that they make. But somer- as a pair of lace curtains near = saults are not very filling -they're a freight yard. No chance. sure to roll off your knife And Many an {dol that lives on two- the acrobats aren't all. It's Just a fisted npplause dines off one- chorus gal’s luck to loaf in the arm lunches in the sammer. summer when she can't trade the We need no statistics to prove pearls in her necklace for the it, True, Broadway is f oysters they opened to look for the actors’ Mecen, Bot yon can’t pearls, Beautify Your Face by Having Your Bad Teeth Treated IBRHAPS it sounds rather para- a been estab- t, by treating WH + SOPHIE: by the Press Publi Is FATE? RENE Lore - (Tae New York Kvwning World) HE poncered long at the open page that told how Fate rules all, Ard she believed and talked about it overmuch. How this great ruler of destiny Points ‘he way, and none may say him nay, or defy him, Else their doom, So all ker acts she took to be the will of Pate, the Master, And resigned herself t her sister with laughing, blue e¢. dat Fate, and sa AT ture originally intended them to be Tho protruding upper lip, completely lished that a dent decayed or aching teeth, can beautify We have it over the signa- tures of Drs. lustre eye and jackadaisical ex are all readily amenable to are even more fmpossib’ and medical fields respectively, who written a book on Health,” which Ushed by G@. P. “Teeth and has just been Putnam's Sons. they are to whe other words, is the child inclined.” If pus ts allowed to e spongy growth of effect is likely to be s¢ By going to the as the tooth is ben id, “There is only one Maker of man. He guides and counsels but leaves one free to make fate as he wills,” An old man came to woo in this A disciple of Mammon, who had nau, Hect and furm pimply eruptions on your fac yuse of lovely women, it else to offer but material n in eruptions: skin lotions or beauty salves? Are your eyes shadowed from lack Is your mouth drawn and puckered from sleepless The blue-eyed one laughed at And said, “Go thy way, Decembe I wil choose a man both brave With a great love, e’en th see life through the As was intended.” But the believer of Fate c: And took to herself the totter the love of luxury And she could no k supplemented sisting of morning and is one foot in the grave, evening mouth may not wed with May. cared up and the skin beautifier Have you boils or carbuncles? Have you a protruding upper jaw and unduly prominent teeth and a re- treating chin? All these disfigurements that often from decayed or crooked teeth be cured if treated in time, is the Promise of these two doctors. “Children, and young folks up tot age of twenty-five, metrical features, or mi facia) deformity, 4 ! 1 fects of negl youthful len vous disorders, ep i- nd even coi bped front poor teeth strang teeth lies ® with the diet “Ah, Fate, you tion lies principally : . Mpa tate } shou'd have torn you to pieces For you are but a f I could have acted You think you come first and But you are only a Result, an afte You are but the Answer to my ne from my vision, you filmy And let me make my own You are but a fluttering Shadow; PAPA PLPLPLPL LPL PLP LPP LPL Jazzy Symptoms Trouble Si S jazz a disease? Str Charles ¢ Fo, and gave ors, “brought about by r Charles and to keep Aflen thinks his ideas on the subject in an address before the first National Furnish Convention in London recently. ish furniture, which has is becoming " he declared public really buy jazz clothing, % wall papers and all kinds of I don't think T strongly urge mothers to with 'd refined sugar A —o a in of refined sugar from their T e eze reasures of Georgia Fall olsheviki FTPR a turbulent three years, during which time it had sixteen mobilizations of troops and fouricen wars, all to pro tect its frontiers, of Georgia has succumb 8 of Moscow and h and depend able substitute f existence of fre To keep the teeth absolutely clean, will last long, and some dental flos ® used understandinicly materials of unharmonious color crude design—things deserving of the dark cellar than light of day skirts of those materials will not be long; the human form is bet ter to look upon than these mon- Of all the States which have away from I nd then brush laterally of a dangerow dentist rogulacky, always democratic and remarkably ravislied Geld for the eotdiers, Earned $50,000 é Vedi In Hall Room to Make More HEIN James B. Dike, tobacco king, was earning $59,000 a yea and rapidly becoming known as the leader in the industry, he lived tp a hall bedroom and ate his three meals a day from the counter of a dreary Bowery restaurant. When questioned as to why he did this Mr. Duk Jit was in part 80 that he could save every dollar and mut it back into the business and partly because the grinding poverty of his youth had not been forgotten When he was a boy his father, wh had lost everything in the Civil War reed to take a Job as a farm nd on @ farm thirty miles from Durham, N.C. James and his three small brothers lived with their father in a shanty that permitted storm and cold to enter from all sides, and the four had to sleep on a single husk tiek to kee warm. Their f 1 often con sisted ¢ little more than @ handful of parched corn It was years after the war that the first ray of sunshine me Some of the fariners that owed young Duke's father money from before the war be gan to pay Nim jn tobacco, This wa the start of the company that became in time of the greatest corpora. tions the world has ever known, 'A Bachelor’s Notebook Comrrtatt, 1921, by the Press Publishing Co, (Tho New York Evening World My new housekeeper got angry for wags his t nost off Don as he time this m g. sald I } give him a good # iN : ; Va 1 time is here Must vever knew what I w to ent— aos hodeowebase carer i she never 1 gue ) rkfast i find ¢ t time vu. I ate pancakes and sausages She ng take bf » that we greatest of greediness on ; and scolded becau ere sie few of them. And then on Ca morning, when the fire was ind a whole bowl f I'd soold ‘ause she did | buttere In't say a word in reply for that was the way I lost the other Rought Fido a new r nit, a zaie and a chain a game of ¢ on It would be better to be mar- because then L gould argue Th has been th evks now since I sent that fi swillt gana letter will auely ~ SUPERFLUOUSHAIR to the tw 1 use. An inter 1 gealed envelope Upon re. sia, 107 ¢ uy m neat market and get him a He can't talk or write but be always ed ee se: