ii
.,,,-i.y Evening. April 25, 1925
THE- EUGENE GUARD
Page Nina
fijjjllSH FASHIONS RELEGATED TO LIMBO OF PAST
t mininlty More Marked Than Ever in Beautiful New Gowns Displayed by New
i
a n-yAr"-' I ii in
1' '
f:: Jf j jf;' . "
3 " -
varda are dressed . . so a to ht
the eye . . . and mtexttlers forth to
a day of sbopiun or infttineeittf. She
seldom soils her heads wuh any kind
of Ttork.
Th.t type of woman U new in America.
She ia a product of thia as of ours.
She tires for pleasure, and leisure.
She has them.
And I know of no eood reason whj
she should be paid for bavins
time.
On the other ha&d, I think sbe
ought to be charged the price of ad
missUm to the Cotter Island of am
usement and fun that she lires in.
This "fiupper wife" belongs to all
classes. She is the wife of the Waii
Street millionaire, and the mate of I
the wall paper hanger as well. She
lives across the street or next door
to all of as. We all know her.
She has no children. She has no
time for children.
"She worker h willing! with her
hands," ssid King Solomon. - many
thousand years ago, Mand her price
is above rubies."
He was talking of a good wife
not a "flapper w.fe." Not the drone
in the human hire.
The price of a good woman truly
is above rubles. No salary could be
gin to pay her for the labor of love
that is her wifehood.
And the other wife doesn't reserve
a salary. What she needs first is a
job.
NEW PARIS DECOLLETTES HELD SOMEWHAT STARTLING
Visit to Fashionable Capes Reveals Gorgeous Gowns With Backs That Are Cut
Low Indeed
- X4
It, Mb a lot of aaiecitveo ia acscnoe incso aieiincuveiy term nine irocKe tor spring and summer,
L.,iH for Patricia Colllnge. actress, by Henri Bendel. Note the complete .absence of boyish lines,
lisDOBUiar last year. m wu is n cmcidia arisen lancia irocK, ine swrt naving lies o? emoroiaer
led chiffon ruffles. The other dress snows the bouffant style, it Is made of white satin.
Br HORTEXSE SAUNDERS "For centuries women have snared to despise obvious attempts to be pto-
(M.A oervice ruer 'u-iutu nuu just sue a a urese. mrrsque nuu preiiy. xei womrn
'EW l'OHK, April 25. Down in Though the lines change the formula make their battle with life much hnr-
her ht?art, beneath her surface is always the snme simple" white with der when they refuse the eo-opprn-
j-ifcpentleDce aDti her serviceable flowers. tion of the very fem'nine frock. It
ttrtt suit, every normal woman cher- "An actress knows the value of has its time and place in our lives."
itta a weakness for rninbow-hued dressing for her parts. She isn't def- The dav of severe effects is pass-
utfeta. cobwebby laces and clothes iuitely the old women or the vamp ngt neudel says.
iHt shriek ot Tenunmity me om r te lugvuue umu sne is id cos-rrlne-vine
vnriety. tuuie.
And the impulse to barter the "This is a valuable lesson for all
a-iDthh- iucomc for one exquisite women to learn. It is much easier to
iseU-pink taffeta is not easily reck- he charming in decorative gowns than
sari with. in n tailleur.
Snch temptations lurked in the 'Take the bouffant gown Miss CoJ-
jsiiioa salon of Henri Bendel when huge splected, of white"tnffeta with
I last visited it. Bendel had just the border of silver lace at the hem
crated a number of frocks for Pa- and the quaint flowers appliqued nt
tricia Collinge, and I wm present to the side with silver ribbons failing
be lew.
"Hero is surh absolute femininity
that no woman could wear it without
subconsciously assuming the wiles of
the Victorian age. Coquetry, too. is
I ritoeas her satisfaction with them,
"Just like a valentine," wns her
Ifjmment on seeing a long wasted
mitl of hand-embroidered georgette,
i:t!i three bouquets of silk flowers
'jiroonded with nn old-fashioned lace written nil over the green taffeta
I fnD.
"Snch a frock would inspire ralen-
I tints ind declarations of undying af-
fwtion from men. Bendel laughed.
frock with the straight waistline and
the ruffles of chiffon embroidered
In Bilver.
"It has become the mode recently
"The more feminine type f woman
is replacing the flapper, and. natur
ally, she must dress for the new
role," he snyu, "Women Fhould never
cease to be decorative, no matter
how efficient they become.
"There ia no time when delicate
tints, soft materials and flower ef
fects are more npmpriate than in the
early spring, when they fit naturally
into natures pageant, lhey are as
potent as April herself in turn'ng the
yoi ns ma n's fanny to one really love
ly, though possibly impractical, -frock.
"For its psychological value." he
concluded. "Ife can never become en
tirrly dull to the woman who owns n
picture frock and wears it nt the
right time. It's n form of prepared
ness that should not be overlooked."
"1
DAILY MENU
MOTHER WRITES BOOK BUT DOES
NOT STOP ROCKING HER BABY
Dorothy Walworth Carman, Successful Novelist, Tells About Her
Dual Activity and Methods
the wind was chilly and the derby
convenient to snatch. When I tip-
- JDEwaKX.
mirrmaaBilmriiriiia
M
gHin time.
"My infant enjoyed the sight
Dorothy Walworth Carman and her young daughter
R- i.
' ,1-'itl KNSE SAUNDERS II run from tak to task
IXKA Service Writer)
U'WI. N. .1.. April 25.-
""p! a exactly
il .IV" bo"k- "D,l oth'" fan
a. if, , ,'" tak, r" o( hy
l"rh, t"?d tnmm"- h,,t
r Mr... t " 1 ""nan ia ine on-
7 rJ.W 1
M ft. (J
' toed into the house my head was so
' full of my book 1 sat down to write
w.thout realizing the derby.
"The poMinao arrived and I took
; his letters solemnly, for my hero
j was in desperate straits. I turned
t down brushes from a brush agent,
j I condoled with the Iceman over tbe
i death of a near relative. And then,
j passing a mirror, 1 saw my ridicu
lous, high-hatted self.
"And so toiling, rejoicing and sor
rowing, the summer passed. 1 fin-
i isbed tiie Inst chapter on a very hot
; day, stopping often to rub baby'a
gnmB or bounce a red ball.
Thus you are doubtless convinced
t hat it isn't the easiest and most
cure-free sort of an existence to com-
bne two such exacting professions,
but the result was decidedly worth
the effort, aud a brilliant future
predicted for tha mother and i
: thor. .
Average Wife Doesn't
Want Salary
And Flapper Wife Doesn't De
serve it, Says Cynthia Grey
Breakfast Stewed rhubarb,:
scrambled eggs with rice, crisp whole
wheat'too.st, milk, coffee.
Luncheon Cream of mushroom
soup, toasted crnckers, apring aalad,
brown bread aud butter mmduiehes,
Spanish cream, walnut crackers, milk,
tea.
1 Hntier Cream of tomato soup,
broiled fish, lemon butter, scalloped
potatoes, buttcnMl string bcan,
French endive, rhubarb frappe, sponge
cuke, milk, coffee.
CKHEAL is planned for break
fast since the scrambled eggs
with rice combined with the whole
wheat toust furnish the jiutricnts
found in a cereal as well as a neces
sary protein.
While a child less than four years
of age should be served cereal for his
breakfast rnlher than the ncrnmbled
0g concoction a child of four years
may eat the breakfast migscMted with
out a cereal being specially prepared
for him.
Cream of Mushroom Soup
One-half pound mushrooms, 4 j
tablespoons butter, 1 teaspoon minced:
otiiou, 4 cups white stock or water, j
1 cup cream, 2 ..tablespoons flour, i
salt and pepper, 2 eggs (yolks).
t'bnti rmixhroimis. Sl-'It threp tnhle- i
spoons of the butter and cook mush-
moms and uniou over a tow fire for
five minutes. A few mushrooms1
should be saved after sauteitig to 1
garnish the soup. Add stock or wn-j
ter to mushrooms and simmer until j
woft. Hub through a sieve. Blend t
remaining butter and flour and stirj
into soup. Kchent to the boiling i
point and add cream and yolks of
eggs slightly beaten. The eggs iiiayt
be omitted. Add salt and pepper lo
taste and reserved mushrooms. Serve
nt once. 1 o not let the soup boil !
after adding the cream and yolks of
eggs.
Spanish Cream , '
One and one-half tablespoons gran
ulated gelatin, 2 cups milk, 2 eggs,
f-j enp sugnr. 4 teaspoon salt, 1
teaspoon vanilla.
Let gelatin stand m four table
spoons cold water for 10 minutes.
Scald milk and slowly add to yolks of
eggs heateu with salt and sugar, t'ook
over hot water until very hot. The
sugar and yolks of eggs will cool ;
the milk, stir in gelatin. Cook, stir-;
ring constantly, until gelatin is dis-
solved and mixture thickens like
boiled custard. Ketmive from heat
and U't cool. Add vanilla and the :
whites of eggs beaten stiff and dry.
Turn into a mold and chill. Serve
with whipped cream.
Walnut Crackers
One-half enp butter, 2-3 cup sugar,
t egg. V teaspoon salt, teaspoon
vanilla, 1 cup chopped English wal
nuts, flour.
Cream butter and slowly beat in
sugnr. Beat In one-half cup flour.
Add egg well beaten and beat mix
ture until smooth. Add enough more
flour to make a very stiff dough. Add
vanilla and snlt and knead In the fine
!y chopped nut meafa. Roll Tery thin
on a slightly floured molding board
and cut two-inrh squares. Bake on
an oiled and floured cookie sheet in
a moderately slow oven for half an
hour.
These little affairs are delicious to
serve with afternoon tea or lemon
ade. 'Copyright, 1025, KEA Service, Inc.)
; SJ s
m mm
new .
By THEHKSA BONNET
XEA Servi Writer)
PAltlS, March 2."). Startlin)!
dcoolletes have bet-n ttet-reed by
1hi fa!ihioD liictatora of 1'aris.
A visit to the fashionable cafes any
oTenins now reveals some jcorgeoua
examph-s of ?owna with the iow cut
bark. The idea, of course, is to dis
play a? much of the back as possible.
The low cut gowns have brought
back jewels and the season is to be
one of the beautiful, soft-tinted
pearls. Specially designed strings to
be worn down the back are new and
chic.
.lean Tatou designed the gown
shown above at tbe left. After cut
ting away tbe back, be draped n slip back is rovarod with a thin black lace
of sold over a gmvn of tbe beautiful creation.
new rosewood shade. The slip is The derollota at th right Ml tailed
starred with tiny gold beads. the. "llolero, a creation by Sandra,
In the renter is shown a charming the Russian designer.
Soma Sample Mew Oeoollettes
V-shnped decollete of Molyneux. The
Girl Should Marry at 25,
Says Cynthia
Hueband Should be Three Yean
Older, Not More or Leas
By CYNTHIA OHEY
'pilE ideal age for a girl to marry ia
lier husband ought to be threo
.rears oldei no more and no less.
A great many people think thnt the
husband ought to be 10 years older
than the woman be marries.
"A woman ages more quickly than
a man," they say In explanation.
This is not true.
Take a look nt a man of 40 and
bis wife of the same age. Nine timea
out of ten tbe man will have just as
uianv wrinkles as bis wife. His hair
will be just aa gray . . . and he may
have a bald spot, besides!
Most women of 40 know that they
are 40. Like Marian, the heroine of
Frank SwinnerUn'a "September
they know that they are "not quite
voting enough to be married hoydens,
Hut the average man of 40 thinks
he Is stiH a young dog. He firmly
believes that young women of 20 or
so are interested in him . . , and ao
they are, perhaps. But not romantl-cnllv.
They may enjoy goinf out to lunch
and dance with him.
Ther may be thrilled by his atten
tions. But depeBd upon it, the nor
mal flapper wants to marry a man
who is not much older tban sne is.
Marriage has been called "a voy
age Into the unknown with tbe no;
hnnwn."
That Is the best description of it
that 1 know.
Two people think that they are go
In to live hannllr together ... be
cause each happens to like the way
tbe other makes love.
Hardly ever do they atop to con
sider whether they have the same
tsstes. tbe same outlook on Hie.
Elbert Hubbard once said that the
safest reason in the world for mar
rying la thia, "I love you because
you love the thlnga that I love.
And that ia the reason why
woman will be much happier with a
ID simultaneously.
two job. which
"i tfcj
P- -r
d'ughtfull. n,t il.
7 t8
t
me hurrying from chair to chair with
my duRtclotb and fairly dashing along
the floor with my mop and doing
housework like a whirling dervish, but
he did not like it to well when I curl
ed quietly in a chair with a pencil.
"So I uwd varinun methods to en
tertain her. One wss a constant
wiggling of my fet an I wrote. Again
if I set her on a newspaper with
toothpaste 1 could he sure of eleven
minutes of freedom. Sometimes I
Ily CYNTHIA GREY
TK hear a great deal today about
wives having a salary. Every now
and then some act reus or feminist
who never did a day's housework
in her life, rises to remark that any
wjfe who doesn't demund wages, is
nothing more &r less than a high
class moron.
And no doubt that is tbe way they
feet about it.
But what about us other women
. . . the plain garden variety of
wife who enjoys getting up a meal
and keeping the moths out of the
clothes closets?
Jjo we really want a salary?
I believe that not one woman In a
hundred would take one from her
husband if he offered it to her.
For one thing, the average wife
has her husband's salary to handle.
She ps;s the bills, and takes what
(the can afford for her luncheons
downtown or her matinees. Some
time she has an aliowanre.
And then, there's another side to
the question. How many women re
ally earn a salary?
"I i
I With tV.. - . 1 !iL ,
Pa -
-'MUIIy COltfti-ln., I.. I. t i i I will, ,
K vmT h!e'' shfl losan- "to! right. Other entertainers were my
r ,ntheri do, that we j best beads, bottles of cotton- and s
I'eter Rabbit.
"When the baby took ber midday
nan in her ran race on the porrh. I
settled myself for an hour's steady j
writing to be interrupted only by
... !(
TV'n.. . " -
r 0,ir l'br from i, -
baby in th
always painfully
rt knn k.. . .
. "r,t s k. . ' prompted me
ljrk Rt time except
? mtJ of it. My well
i . 1m r"'B science
to' was neat. But
For instance there Is tbe "flapper
wife" . . . the woman who won't dn
housework, doesn't know how to do it,
sod intends never to do it, ao long as j
there is a delicstessen or a Martha-j
by-the-dsy in this broad land.
Why should she have a salary?
Her dsys are vscuums of idleness.
She wakes op in the morning, and
says to the world in general, and to
th . man. nostman and umbrella Mf nusnana in psruo.mr. n-rc
mender." , lml Support me.
Wort a Derby ' h lies m bed until she is food
-One cold April day f wor tny : and r-adr" fo get up.
husbaod dprhy hat as 1 wheeled my j Then she dre. herself ss all the
baby to sleep on tbe porch because j flapper wive who atroll the bonla-
man who Is nearly her own nge than
with one who is older or younger.
The things that a young marrying
flapper loves are nsuaily dancing and
having a good tlma . . . "jacring
around, painting th town.
What chnnce has sha of being
hannv with a man whose idea of
pleasant evening a to sit at home
with a good detective story and a pipe
for company? ISona at all.
The chances are thnt she will ha
bored to death in ft few years . . ,
a few months And anotner marriage
will go on the rocks;
Jlua is not true jo ad cases. Oc
casionally there Is a happr marriage
where there is a great utfferenca in
ages. But and this is important-
where this Is so, tbe husband veuatty
has a great deal of money.
Tha Toung wife has probably mar
ried for money, and not for leva.
In such a case. And baring got what
she wanted, aha la more or less con-
Uuied.
The moat powerful instinct la tha
world is tha "mothering" instinct. To
a woman, ber husband 1s nsunlly a big.
wayward boy to o "tended, nursed
and mended."
But if ha ia a coed many Man
older than herself, aha will not fl
much like mothering him- She is
much mora likely to feet Itka his
daughter than his second mother.
And tha fact that tha mlddle-agea
husband may think thnt h doesn't
look a day older than 80f doesn't
change her attitude at all.
It may be true, fimt a man ia
only as old as ha feels." Ha may feel
aa young at a tennis-playing bun
buster, hut ha looks his ago, avary
minuta of it. W all do.
Ago la aa hard to conceal aa a
broken heart or freckles.
Cynthia Grey Says:
By CYNTHIA QRRT
44fKFJP aa young aa yoo can aa
long as you can. That k the
only beauty aseret worth knowing.
This pearl of wisdom ia a French
proverb
And it ia tha secret et tha charm
for which tha French women aro
justly famous.
Tha woman of Franca ara not bean
tiful women, aa a whole. Their fea-
tu-r are too big, fur one thing. And
their caipiexiotta re toe aaUow.
Hut their "pvp" . . , the vitality
that h-U'U a apjrkle to their eye
sad a pru.ginMi to their waifc give
tim an attraction beyond mere
heauty.
1 sat in the hunga of a Uner jb-mid-oecaa
one Sunday afternoon re
cently watching ta women arouad
me, Hume f them were American,
some were iii.gjis. and a few wr
ij'renrh. The Knglish women wert!
wry st aid and tliKtiititl, tiie Ameri
cana talked in a iaay ort of way.
Kut the French waiu were aiiv-1
They vhatlfrcd and iauhtdu Th y
wei-e eurtto;ii;lj interextd in every
thing nrmind ibein. They taiked not
lily null tii eir tiuiKiiea, but w.th t.-'.w
sparkling eyes ami their csprehsiva
iiuiiua und ihuuidera.
raU itcriiisank was like that. Fur
years and years we people of Anient
wMit to the theater to see her
Mnst of us didn't understand a wmd
tliat she ni4. It was her vititiiiy
. . . . htr 'pep that drew us!
That same thing true of sumo .f
movia actresses today.
UUri;i Swausou is uot good looking.
But shes filled with a liveliness tout
comes, tingting, to her audincc from
the black and whit a screen.
Then there is tha etwe of Constant
Taimadge
They a.y that Constasca la th
most popular giri in ail America. Tbt-y
say aha has more beaus than any
other aix girls trout Harlem to Holly
wood!
"But don't biamo it on my looks,
Consumes said tha other day. - JS'o
hody ever tella ma my hair la Ilka
spun gold, or my ayea liks aiara.
kiVt:ryUnly 1 knw, though, aa cotua
to ma privately and asked. 'Ys goda,
whsra did you gat all your pep?4 M
And where do yon suppose aha gta
all bar pep?
From naing it up, aha aajaf
Tot pep is like the factUry of a
oar. It generates Itself. And tha
mora you use up, tha mora you have.
"Everything I do, I do with ail my
might and main" Constance goea oa
: to sny, I keep on the go every min
ute."
And she do. When she's not eat
ing la tha osovis, ahe'a driving r
dancing, or fencing, or awimming or
going to ptrtiee.
ihe raring beuty aasmt a chaaca
with tha peppy girl," aaya Constance.
A man lika to go around with a giri
Wii. tuts a good time every minute
aha1 with him , . a giri who knows
huw to talk and how tu iaughl A girl
who's alive to tha ends of her finger
nailal" 1
And ana ia right!
Women who .stl tfcm inset Mff that
they're too tir4 to do thia or do that,
aoon ttse all their popularity. For
they're not interesting,
Tha moat heaatifui woman of the
eighteenth century wee Madame Re
camier. The cleverest woman of that
time wits Madame de Eta el.
(I always hare Iteoamier ait near
ma in a room," Madam de Stael once
told Napoleon, "for as aoon aa begin
to -talk, nobody looks at her again
during the evening. She has beauty
. ... hut 1 have rltalHyr
And vitality . . . that gift of th
goda , , , , U nothing but pepl Cul
tivato it!
Our Chockers
. Are Selling Fast
Wo have replenished our window slock of
theao wonderful values as fust as they have
been sold.
Get Your Choker at Once
Better buy two or three different colors now
as this special sale positively ends
NEXT MONDAY EVENING
Every choker in the window whether one,
two or three strands, whether worth $1."j0 or
tip to $4, no matter what the color 1b, can he
bought up to Monday evening for
S1.25
Special Sale Closes Monday Evening
Cream colored and white chokers in one, two and three
strands are tha best aellert.
Eegfular Prices After Monday
LUCKEY'S
. Jewelry Store
W. W BRISTOW
tfrvmvnf ELECTRIC
r-i i '- - ' , , , i i i r 1 1 1 in i
WW
aV ft KSPT YOUfT) '
- J0VEN MEAT
IJeovIn $jM!S
ANo'ory. adpf
inner Cooked
While You Were Out
THE delays and worries ol getting
bock home in time to prepare an ev
nlng meal are unknown to the woman
who tises a Ilotpoint Super-Antomatio
Electric Range.
She siciply puts the uncooked oieal la tbe
oven oariy in the day sets the Electric
Timer and tbe Heat Control. During her
absence the heat turns ON at the pre
scribed time. The entire cooking pro
ceeds at the correct, predetermined ovea
temperature. When she returns, a hot
meal is ready to put on the table.
There are many other advantages in
Super Automatic
ELECTRIC RANGES
So much that you want to know about
why not visit our display. We show a
complete array g styies and every one
insures you the clean, cool, drudgeless
eiectric cookery you have always
wanted to enjoy. Come in let us teil
you all Iftout it.
H. W, White Electric Co.
' 878 Willamette, Phone 254
SI
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