The evening world. Newspaper, June 2, 1922, Page 33

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)

’ | How Will You Dress ’ For Your Vacation CLOTHES FOR THE MOUNTAINS ' ¥ Last in a Series of ‘Three Articles i aie gins FET LOT REET INT AI IT By Margery Wells. | form opyrtatt, 1008 of mountains—high and low, ear and far, But whatever wr situation, if you plan to spend i your holidays in the hills, you will need a. certain sort of clothes, differing vastly, from those that are necessary, for —tay, — seashore wear, , Suppose, just for instanee, that you are bound for the great i “Northweat, You [will need but a suit and @ pair of lckers for riding and not much elsé, there is no teaing and dining there in the open. There is no for finery. And if, once in a ‘while, you do strike a hotel, you will {ind your trousers just as acceptable at dinner time any fluffy expres- sion of an evening dress. More #0, im fact, for the air is always cold, the atmosphere is one of strictfy “‘rough- Ing it." So don't overburden your- if with baggage, but go prepared to ive im tweeds and woollen blouses and to enjoy yourself on that basis. in the cold, high up mountains a oF @ muslin blouse looks like eo fmuch foolhardiness, ones you have | strick the heights. You wonder why you were senseless enough to cart them along. You wear one once with ® sense of duty, and after that you @ing to whatever warmth you have wen lucky enough to tuck into your NgEage. But for tho nearer mountains you will need things that are not so thick and warm but, nevertheless, of the same general character, Knickers are absolutely essential, for you will t to walk and fish and ride and . and for these pleasures you will need some sort of raiment that will give you the greatest possible free- com of movement, Nothing is bet- ter than a pair of knickers, even if they are of linen or a heavy cotton material, stich as those pictured in ) the illustration on this page. These re durable and at the same time they eo the acme of picturesqueness, ‘Absolutely insuring the fact that you will appear at your best as long as you wear them. You can have a akirt, too, to match the sleeveless coat, But that is only to weac when you are being most rormal and dignified, I think you will find that you oling to the bloom- ers,“or knickers, most assiduously, laying them a with sorrow when it is time to return to town ‘Then you need something warm in the way of an outer wrap. Make /t a coat if you want all the service pos. sible to wring from such a garment, ‘The big sleeves help it to stay tucked into placu much more surely and they make it warmer than a cape is unde: hyany windy circumstances, Sweaters arc mountain necessities, ‘The fact ts, that in the higher alti- tudes ou’ can almost Live in a Glew York Bvening World) by Press Pubtiming Oo. F COURSE, there are all sorts sweater. There is hardly, a moment of the day and never a moment of the evening when the coziness of ' the knitted jaeket is not something to be desired. If you are staying away, for any, length of time, you will need more than one sweater, for one must be thick and'ready, for all sorts of hard wear, while the other must be Ienitted from a thinner variety, of wool and a more delicate color so that it oan be balled into use at night when one naturally leans toward something ® little more dressy, even though it must be kept in the class of sports clothes, ‘ A Jersey, dress will stand you in 00d stead when you go to the moun- You can have it a nice, light, summery color if you wish, but it will always possess that modicum of warmth for which you will be truly, grateful, It may be a white Jersey, this season, and in the mountaine where things do not soil so easily as they do in some other places white is @ lovely thing to wear. White knitted fabric is good, too, for this character of frock and the white flannel suits ers are striped, with hat and scarf to match. CENTRE—A new walking suit having all the smartest pointe. of a made of heavy, unmussable linen. RIGHT—Knitted gape to take the place of a ‘sweater over thin silk dri leave nothing to he desired in the way of actual smartness, not to mention the comfort that they, carry, hidden away tn thelr folds, The knitted cape ts another happy, adjunct to the mountain wardrobe. There is one in the picture. It is made of deep coffee colored woollen weave and its texture is quite loose and informal A cape of this sort is so easily thrown off and on again and it is so simple a thing to carry around with one that*it should make a strong appeal to those who are bound for the mountains and who in- tend to take out thetr time in resting abdut in the leas strenuous attitudes of enjoyment. This kind of cape does for morning, afternoon and evening It takes the place of a sweater and it covers lighter silk frocks not so that they disappear from sight altogether but so that they are supplied with that extra ‘mth and covering which are usually 80 essential, Have a knitted hat or tam if you This will pull about your cars and will go wit! most of your dresses so that You need not worry about what will happen to it under the strese of wind and weather. When you wear a hat at all this is the sort to have And you need a@ scarf, too, that goes with it, both of which are guar- anteed t. ‘old into your baggage in the minim. | amount of space. They shake out wit a look like new, even though they lim w been packed for days under trying circumstances Here aro other things you will need, # of thom more tn demand when you are really roughing it than when you aro visiting the foothills in @ hotel: Stout waterproof boots that lace al. mont to the knees, Shantung or heavy linen emooke. Ring Out, Wild Bells VJune Is Here With Its Sweet ~ Boy Graduates Nceesinsnapaieniely By Neal R. O'Hara Bachelors of Arts Will Scurry Over Landscape to Get Wedded to Soft Jobs,» . Copyright, 1922 (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Oo. T'S a rare day'in June that doesn’t I push some serilor class out in the world. Near-graduates stand on brink of going to work. College prex- jes start rehearsing baccalaureate monologue. ‘College taflors start pressing slow creditors. College wid- ows start folding up wardrobe trunks. College seniors take final exams. in bankruptcy, proceedings. Get ready, for degree of I. O. U. Four years in Latin factory make sweet boy graduates useful for refined toil. World needs workers to-day. College graduates are trained to write Help Wanted ads. Industry, ories out for skilled hands. College one- steppers furnish skilled feet. Com- merce calls for leaders of men. Col- lege turns out squads of cheer leaders. Don't get notion that ‘varsity alum- nus is useless. Nothing is useless but bands on cigars. Campus inmate is a good guy in spite of all delirious Propaganda to contrary. Like shot- gun, he is harmless except when loaded. Has a heart as big as a grape- fruit. Almost any college chap would Soa = Soft necktie of black silk or colors. Woollen stockings: Rubber-soled low shoes for walk- ing. Warm bathrobe. Gingham frock simply made. Slicker and rubber hat for rainy riding and boating. New ¥ Copyright, 1998 INA! 66 RICKOL Ob, Tricko- Mrs, Harvey Beggs of Delh! was calling her little daughter, who was playing in the mud, on Tulip Avenue ‘'Trickoleena!"* That was three times she called. The child was irked “Hey, ma!" she replied. “Once was enough. I ain't triplets.”* “No,~ thank fortur said Mrs, Beggs. “If you were t s I'd be in the bughouse."* “Oh, my dear! Let us be gentle, if T may suggest It!" said Ella- belle Mae Doolittle, the 1) oetess, Was speaking, @he had just been out to the marsh to see pond Hiles were a-bloom, but they were not, The Beggs child dropped a handful of mud and smiled at Miss Doolittle, A Ilttle Negro boy, in ev muddy spot nearby, laughed. 1g barked, There were no cats around Mian Doolittle continued on her way and, reaching her home, retired to her room to write, That night she ap- peared before the Women's Better~ men} League and read a poom. The 2 printed it the next day, leay- Ellabelle Mae Doolittle By Bide a * Evening World) by Press Publishing Co. give you the false teeth out of his mouth. Many, a true heart beats be- neath a frat pin. Many a strong limb stalks beneath white flannel pants. The colleger is human like rest of us. He gets pinched for driving under influence of licker. He gets sum- monsed for parking in front of hy- drant, Even as you and I, Girls may come and girls may go, but they, get him coming and going. Even as you andl. He f for show girls, shop girls, slow girls, swift girls, He doesn't want @ girl that he can trust. He wants one he can borrow from. Even as you afd I, Horn-rimmed boys put rough-house stuff on refined basis. They shoot up restaurants, theatres and cafes, but let chain grocery stores alon ‘They steer motor cars and taxis wild, but don't infringe on mail truck man- slaughter. They beat up cops and shoot roman candles, but don’t bomb tenements for light exercise, The col- legera are not so bad as they're whitewashed. i But June marks end of four-year furlough. Banjo, tennis recquet, pennants and steins come down off walls and slide into hock. College Used turns spigot on annual advice and scene whifters yank campus background away. New alumni face clammy world for first time, along with new June brides, Bducation in back of ‘am. Starvation in front of ‘em. World needs workers, not man- dolin players. White collar jobs appeal to ¢) naked eye, but leave the stomach ean and vold. Bond sellers wear large consignments of white linen, but rarely get & chance to stain shirt- fronts with gravy. Bookkeeper, bank clerk and adding machine chauffeurs go strong on haberdashery and ight on hash. Lesson to be squeezed from employment situation is that you can't have your cake and eat it, too. And colleges turn out too many cake eaters. : Art is Jong. Life is short. Hist fs bunk. And good jobs are pany Merry month of June is here with Sheepskins, spreads and Japanese lanterns. College course is doing fifth-reel fadeout. And one thing Sweet graduate yet must learn js that the only way to grab a living ts from sweat of his high brow, after all. / AM TRAINING HIN NOT TO To-Day in World History Ethelbert, first Christian King ef England, was baptized 1.318" yenrs ago to-day, June 2, 597. Ethelbert wae converted to the new faith by St. Augustine, Apostle of England, appointed by St. Gregory the Great as chief of; the missionaries whom he despatched to England. ——— gp. 8 I DON'T WANT HIM 70 BARK AT THE KENAN Copyright, 1922 THE MEETING. 6c“ H!" gasped Margie, “he's O on his way over to our apartment now,"’ “Who is?" asked. her mother Margie hung up the telephone re- ceiver. “Frank Spafford, His voice sounded weak and queer as if he'd been ill. Oh, momeie, I knew ho'd come. I knew he would and I know he has some excellent excuse for staying away ali this time.” Margie burst into tears of joy and then, not wishIng her nose and eyes to show the effects, began to laugh and to dress for the occasion. ‘Then the bell rang and she opened the door to find herself crushed in the ms of Frank Spafford. ao My dailing,” Le finally whispered, ‘where have you been all this time? Dedrest where did you think I was?" ing out the advertisement of the La Belle Slaughter House to give it space The poem tollows: Children, be kind to your parents, Answer them when cailed, No matter what you're playing at— That makes no difference at all; Drop everything and hurry right home, Be respectful above all things, And you will be so happy some day You will out the pigeon wing My sister's child, Teeney Ricketts, Put a burr in Grandpa's hatr. “I wonder,” sald he, very ang “Wotell’s going on up there, This was reat disobedience— ON, children, please don't disobey; Be sweet as you make your mud-pies And sing “Ta Ra Ra Bum De Aye.” Nothing could have hit the ladies of the league a bigger smash. When the Speaker got to the word ‘bum’ in the last lime thelr apprecigtion bubbled Over and they applauded with great gusto, All were pleased. ( “MARGIE” By Caroline Crawford (New York Evenlng World) by Pres Publishing Co. “I didn't know, I only, hoped for the best,’’ she said, leading him into the living room, “I've been in the hospital, dear,”’ he told her and when she turned white he kissed her and drew her down on the sofa beside him. ‘Don't worry now, it's ail over,’ he sald soothingly, ‘I really wasn't hurt very much at all. But you didn’t know about the fiivver accident did you?” “No. Were you hurt in that miser- able little flivver of yours? Oh, rank, Why didn’t you let me know?" “That's just the point, dear, I couldn't remember anything. Now let's begin from the beginning. 1 was sitting in my boarding house one evening and Maisie cgme to the house and asked to see me. I went 4 in the parlor and she told me that you were very, much in love with me "Oh!" gasped waisie and hid her in his sleeve, but Spafford and Kissed her again. ‘Of course it may not be true," he addew playfully, “tut that te what 1, and then she said I talked cles and I ought to square her eyes and propose to shi in in myself i was rather surprised at this sudden stand of Malisie's and I asked ev if atter all I wasn't the one to know when to propose without being told what to do, Then she went away and I began to worry about you. Margie dear, you know I love you You know | always wanted you to be You are my ideal gir) and we understood all that ng sentimental before the I thou But after Maisie said that to me tu wet into my flivver and over here to propose. About © blocks from here a motor t usted into my buzz wagon was the last I inew until in the hospital.”’ r Margie exclaimed ghtly to his hand. that wasn't ail,'’ continued “While I only had a few on the face and a 1 ankle I e@ouldn’t remember dréss or street number. you Constantly. I sald Mindon #0 much that the o nurse kept whispering ‘Where cs Mareio live?’ ‘What is her But it was all to no avail. e doctors said I suffered a severe ck and It would take several and held on But By Sophie Irene Loeb. Copyright, 1982 (New York Evening World) by Press Publishing Co. I {on you ever stopped to con- sider, Uttle wife, why the other woman has won him Away from you? What have you done? What has she done? What has he done? Things don't Just happen, there is a reason for everything. And if you search deep you will find it. Men don't just say, “I'm going to look f another woman that I will like more than my wifé.” and then proceed to do it Besides, women who win such men away are not all bad women by any manner of means. Many, many of them are good women—as good as you. And mich women deplore, indeed and regret that they are giving you trouble. “Oh, yes, you have the prior right,” you will say, “and a woman of honor will have no friendsiip with the man who has married you.” Yet have you over stopped to think of the clroum stances that led up to the state of affairs of which you 80 bitterly, and which have given you such endless sorrow? How much have you been to blame for the whole matter? And how much, or how little, have you done to hold him fast against any woman? One of the saddest stories In the world was told me by the woman who won him away. The wife in this weeks for me to recover that peculiar twist to my brain.'* “Then? asked Margie “Then one day | remembered my nister's number, The next day I re membered yours and here [ am" He bent down and kissed her as he whispered, ‘And now I have come to ask you to be my wife. I want you Margie, my ideal dream girl Tore than anything else tn the world ‘Tell me, darling, d 1 love me?’ soft voice whispered in you are my Prince Charm- To-Morrow—The Little Church Areund The Corner, stance, although she loved her hus- band dearly, and felt secure in his love, yet was the kind of woman that had little or‘/no interest in the af- fairs of her husband, except they, affected her, ‘The woman who won him away— he met her unexpectedly in a busi- ness transaction—was sympathetic to his work and interested in it, and was glad to talk about it. At first he invited her out to a harmless little luncheon to discuss commercial matters in which they were both interested. Tt was the last thing that I ex- pected,” the woman who won him away told me, “when I realized the true situation—that we both liked each other more than our business relations warranted, “L remember oncé when I said to him that the whole thing was wrong, and that I was taking from her, his soinething—the love—that be- ed to her. answer was, “Hh ‘How can you take from her that which is yours? What you have called out in me bes Jongs to you and to no one else, You inspired there. whatever feeling there It is yours, r you. to T can't help car- It is something beyond And yet she sent him away and refused to see him. And the result is that three people are miserable— Waiting for the inevitabie, The wife continues to nag her hus- band when he does not give her the material things she wants. She does little or nothing to adapt hefwelf to his circumstances. @he has given Uttle and demanded uch—all be- cause she has the legal right. But it does not always turn out this way. Many a man refuses to return to his wife after he has met the ‘woman who has won him away. Aas one man told me; “I could not help noting the contrast between my wife and the other woman. My wife never had tried to please me very much because of her sole proprietor- ship of me. “Ag I look back on it, I loved my wife dearly when I married her, and had she continued to show the same interest in me as the years went by T am confident I would never have sought any one else,"’ And this is the truth about many f® case. it ts the careless attitude that many @ woman has for her husband that causes some one else to come in at the psychological moment and get him awey. and vice versa, What people generally fail to do ts to seek the source of their own short- comings. = Look Your Best this summer. To do so your frocks must bekept freshand new : looking by careful laundering with The thin starch which goes into the fabric and will not stick to the iron, Independent Starch Co., Inc. NEW YORK On A semen canine metpe as m-0 ® ae _ is 3 4 — ag =. etree apn bees

Other pages from this issue: