{ title: 'New York evening post. volume (New York [N.Y.]) 1920-1934, August 17, 1927, Page 19, Image 19', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030386/1927-08-17/ed-1/seq-19/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030386/1927-08-17/ed-1/seq-19.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030386/1927-08-17/ed-1/seq-19/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83030386/1927-08-17/ed-1/seq-19/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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.. jon. the 1 in· l M. talf. am .. ... lUi Sat. !l.ao Snt. S,L .8.30 2.S0 RIO 11 J'~1!c8lra. ,,' ! MAT. AT3. . &~ • • ,. .. \ .. f ( • \ n\I1/ U. 8 • .paront 0\.\. , and p~ople If he carrl.s 8ucb a project tbrough, I always vote for tbe summer 811111 and bUy my share ot tbe spoUs. OJ. cours. some grown-up person can go Into tho oity and buy a lond of trifles and let the children: t.end tile booths but that 1. not the sort of sale that helt's the children any. It rnther bores time to s\y th\t If'''(lt\wge'' goes alle.d and cleans up the Nordics In tbe fleld. of puglllBm ~ .h~1l not regMd It as ~ny stain on my ·scutcheon. them, They have no personal' Interest I havo a good many aversions.· No- In the things they sell and the money body can meet a lot of people w1thoilt is meaningless to them. I ...... ,\~- them, One of my fl'vo~lte Let them make the thing. 1>hey sell, aversions of the Inferior White man are very welcome. The laney work who considers It a reflection on his' have lots of Ideas ror dolls. You race when a negro beats a white man any kind of doll tor any sort In any contest for IiUPremacy. And nun\ and grown\ps like them as my attitude toward the heavyweight as the chlldren. chal1lplonshlp Is that It belongs to· tb.e Let the girls organize a selling corps mall who can win It, providing he does an, meet dally to I\ake the things tiley so without fouling his opponent. are to sell. Turn out the piece boxes anet bags and start tllem making the wOll.der!1.\l dolls that. brlgb.ten the 110ltleS today. One gorgeou\ Indolent ladY' with fearfully lengthened arms and legs sits In state 0\ tho arm ot a sober divan. Her gay clothes, her care- less strewn arms and legs make 0. bright for us to laugh at. All precious. are rag dolls ot common style bu, with the touch ot originality upon them In color and line. One makes them long and slim or snort and Icrmll,lty or like dumplings with scarce THE modern girl is doing her utmost to try to prove what a foolish I plunder this was on the part of the Almighty and is ~deavoring to the best of her ability to wipe out the sex: line. She has achieved an out- ward triumph to the extent that you can only tpll· a girl and a boy apart at first sight by the fact that the boy has two legs to his trousers while the girl generally has only one. Also, that the girl's trousel' leg is cut off above her knees, while the boy's comes d.own to the ground. But the ideal of every girl is to look as much like a boy as possible. She has a boyish bob. She shaves the back of her neck. She strives to attain a boyish figure. She smokes like a boy and curses like a boy and drinks out of a flask with the boys, and the highest compliment you can .pay her is to say that she plays golf li.ke a man or has a virile style in writing. \Tip me off, mister, whel'e's de g.em department.\ I The Che~sboard -By H, R. Bigelow ._-------- Steiner and I. Kaslldan at New York; Dr, p, G, Keeney of Bellevue. Ry .. and R. M. Ballenger of Kalamazoo, Mich. flipper on them to Indicate Ilanels and feet. All sorte of dolls for all SOl'te of people grown up growing. When you organize such an affair put a sharp time 11mlt upon It, Ohlldren lOBO Interest sooner than grownups. Drive them hard tor ten days, hold the tall' on the day you advertise It, clean up the job and then have the joy of counting the money and talk:ing over th& things that happened remember- Ing ollly thO pleasant things tilat he salel and she told me. Itemember that there must be n group whose busmess It Is to advertise and sell the idea of the snle to the nelghborhoo!'l. Select this g~oup thoughtfully Rlld try to pall' It so two· people' who work well togetller hnve the challee tQ lIo so. Try always to have children go out to cnnva\\ and It used to be thought that what attracted men to women was the essentially feminine qualities..:...that men liked women who were gentle alld sweet in manner, who were rutfly and lacy and fru-fru as to clothes and who had dainty little soft hands. A E. SANTASIERE. frequently a • champion of the Marshall (lhess Club of this city, was not successful in his l\IfortS to annex the State champion- ship this year, but he did play some very flne games In that event. ~g: ilf i(l~ KI2 i~..::r't:i In the premier tournament at Lon- sell by twos. It Is not good to senti dOll J. A. J. Drewltt and W. Winter tied one child by himself. Perhaps thE!! reason of the decline in ll1atrimony is because men have not yet been educated up' to the point wbere they see anything alluring in a gil'l who looks like an understudy of their little brother, nor do they find any particular thrill in holding a big, muscular hand. that has corns on it from playing golf. Indeed, old ideals die hard, especially among men, who are l'eally more conventional than women~ and I often wonder if any man ever popped the'question to a woman in pants. For instance, the game we publish below Is an excellent .example ot ob- taining a win in an ending of Queen versus two Rooks, and worthy pf study from that viewpOint. 71. ll\\p cb IixP 72. Rs:.P l'-UO ch 73k~Rfl~ a ~ctlpr mo\ w~uld mor.ly prolong;' rrRistllnl\'E. Hlllrk \vonld p10)' !i.-Kt6 nnd manillulntl) tho Qu(!('n for the will. {S.} 73.. , , 1'-D7 74. n\\lgb. . . . For it 14. R.-Kt4. P bel'. Q nnu wins by Q ,'ern1$ It~ _ for flrst alld second prizes with 8%- There are always I1ttle rl/ts among 2%. C. Sterk and Dr. A. Seltz tied for employed In organizing and third and fourth prizes with 6\1,-4%. completing Buch a 8ale. Liston and The m.jor open tournament was WOn' listen and apeak only when you ab80- by J. ReJfir of Orecho-Slovakla. while tutely must. Children storm a lot for the flTSt time the title of world's tor the tun of the 8tormlng and what A bigllly lnteTesting gilnt[l from tb~ llOlnt of \lew of both strat~gy anti tnl\t1c8. (B.) woman chess champion was 6eems like a. war may be only a by Mis. Vera Menchllt·s (a for!Xler dXlUllatlc Incident over wIleD, It has Nates of the 'Game of Gez~ Maroczy, tho New York Mall-' pnssed. hattan Chess Clul> professional!) win' Give tll.· children thIs sort or ex. nln:;r the womeJi's tournament event- It you can. It is rell!t\r~able an event ope9- to women frOm all over how suoh a project natures the pre. the world. adolescent cWld and allOWS the older . The .modern girl has cast all of the old traditional virtues of her se.\: Into the discard. Time was when we boasted of the purity and innocence of a young girl. We made her ignorance of the world 'a merit and we compared her to a lily, or a rose with the dew upon it. And we spok~ of women's tenderness and their sympathy and. their patience and steadfast- ness. QUEEN'S OPENING Klng's Fianchetto Defense T HE Marshall Chess ClUb summer tournamont hItS made a little Til. Note. (B.) are by tbe .dltor. Tbose· progress. Fred Relnfeld is leading with mnrited (:-I.) by tbo wInner. II. STEIXER A. E. ~A:<TASI~nE 5-2. The other scores are: Fish. 3--'-3; Eleven ot the twelve competitor. In th. Lbndon Int~rnatlo!:!\l tournament, t? be held from October 10 to October 1. 1,_J~blto Kt_KB:I Dlaek Stubbs,2·.Jh-:lW •• and Faj'ans, lY.-1¥... 2. IU-RB3 P-KKt3 3. IJ...-D4 n-KI~ 4. p-lm3 The modern young girl prides herself on being hard-boiled and of knowing all there is to tell and a few things more. She is a wise Jane that nobody can take in with any tale of sorrow or suffering and she hasn't a teal' in her whole system. Her heart is just a useful blood pump, not a' fountain overflowing with pity for the woes of the troubled and afflicted. To .,l't'!1I P fl\t' tb& Dlsbop fr<Jm f'.;\chnngCB through the retrPRt at KR2 it nln(\k nttllt\kB nt KR4. In ('lose 2'A.mc& or this nnture the D is best Pl'(!SCfl\ed. (D.) t.: QKt\:Q2 6. P-li.4 7. }lxP 8. ll--D4 II. I'·-D\ f'ut1('s I'-Q:I 1'-1JB4 Pxl~ I\t--n3 1\t-Q2 I'-QR3 S HE has not eliminated love and marriage and home as yet, because they 10. C •• I'P8 11. 1'-Qlt~ are all interestting experiences, and she doesn't want to miss any- Qj[t~~ (~'ilRl mancu\ to p,.,ent p_ thing, but she has made love an e<Cperiment, marriage a temporary expe· 11.. , . 1' .. t.l l2. D-[\:l Q-B2 dient and home a transient hotch where you check out if you don't like la. Q--K2 I'-Ita 14. I\:t-R4 I\.-nz the service or the company. Iii. Q-na Pr(>,\entlng FOl' the modeJ:n girl's philosophy is that we get out oE life only what 111. . • . we grab off and it remains to be seen whether she will get more than those i~: ~=~i,3 Illder women who, perhaps, had more heart than head, who loved greatly, 18B.~;;;;!.3 ~f tb. ,ell,d attaok who had the sacred gift of ~ears and w-no were invincible just through after Kt-R4. {B.l d d 1 - 18.. • . Kt-I{R4 their gentleness an softness an woman IneSS. lB. Q-ll2 Kt-Q5 : I on tbe xt. Wh 20. I'-KK14 The modern girl is exploiting a new code of conduct for women. y If 20. PxKt. hI' and tho . 8hould men have a monopoly on the sowing of wild oats, she asks. What cannot \'aP' captur.. (B.I is the justice in a double standard of morals 1 Why should a girl keep~t ~ei~i) ~~ii·D~ herself pure in order to marry a man who has perhaps a hectic past? If 22. PxKt. Bx1' win. thp Q: Wblt' QB (D.) And so she snaps her fingers in Mrs. Grundy's face and goes on wild ~i: rr\':'Ri kt::<fi~t4 parties and gets drunk and pets and kisses .~very Tom, Dick and H8;rry it: ~~t3 ~=n~4 who takes her to the movies or buys her all Ice cream soda, and she .Jus· Th,8 PaWl! s.r,·\ \' n decol for WI>\ • ... I d th d to conC'enfrnte hh~ 1orc('s Oil. but WhNl be tifies her escapades by saying that men .. ave a ways one at wayan doe. 00 h. I .. too far awny from tl,,, Kin\ that what l 'S sauce for the. goose is sauce fOJ) the gander.. side. flghtlng to .~old Bub •• quell! l~.. 01 mnterlnl nnd position. (B~) ~ And one wonders if men will accept this n~w code, if they will no ~~: ~~2 ih!~~1 longer demand that the girls they marry he no better tha~ they are, and §g: ~R4 ~~~QR ,i women themselves will be happier when they have no longer any ideal 30. It-Q1>tl 1i:R-QI U al. Kt-liI Jil-'BI of chastity aDd modesty to live up to. 32. Kt-B2 IJ...-K.2 33. Kt-Ra Kt-K4 But, at any' r~te, the most interesting thing in this interesting old 34. KtenS,.!' r-n. . I d hi' h' t' t d t Wlth- WbIte gradually ~t#ng tItl:' tlilpeor world of ours is the modern gir an t e t 11ngs s e 18 rymg 0 () a US. hand, Dlack pla,o hi, high truml>-tbo OI\'\lng , DOROTHY D1X. 01 tM Rook flIel' (S.) 3u. l(txKt B\Kt Capyright. 1921. Nett] YOTk Et\ctlf1J-1J Pod, Inc. :1(1;. Kt-B\ B-.-132 :Ii. It-Kt-l' P:tJ:l . ____ ...... __ ...... ______ ..... ____________ -- __ --------...'138. RItx!' 'K-I\:t2 I\ aa. Kt-KtG R-Rl \b 40. K-I(tl <.1-113 41. Q-ltt2 <.IR-QI 42:. Kt-Q' Wbhe II1U~t retura tb~ r,,;n. R-Q7 'ttll./l 1]19 threnl. (s,) 42.. • • lisP 43T;;-;;~lt mo'.. RXl' 10\\ tbe R by Q- Q~, :~~. \t~,. Q~B3; H. It-Kt3, Q- 114 ch'; 45. K-B1 (if 45. Q-D2. It-ItS ob wins the Q or the other R), Q~B5 611. whmlng the Rook. (B.) n .... 44. KtxB 45. Q-B2 ;Against ll11s nnd tbre&te118 to double lS') 4~: it~R . R-RS eb 47. I,,1t . • . If 47. K-Kt2, R-R7 cb win •. (B.) . 41.. . . Q:iQ Now~ folloW8 811 lnfllb:ueth\c pmUng or Ql1'Een The M:llnhattan Ohoss ClUb has 25 this year, are now at hand. They started ... tournament among Its arc as follows: Franlc J, Marshall. \Junior mllaters,\ E. lIerman. I. Horo- Ulllted States; A. Nlmzotfltsch, Den- wltz, I. Kashdan and A. S: P1nkus. In mark; Dr. M. Vidmar, Jugo Slavla; E. Round One, Kashdan defeated Berman D. Bogoljubow, Oermany (Slcl He used and Horowitz won fr9m Pinkus, to compete fC)f Soviet Russia): Sichard 1\'lule play Is scheduled for two Betl, Czecho-Slova.lda; E. Colle, Bel- roundS a week, there will be ample gillm; F. D. Yates. Sir George Thomas, time ~ tlntsh be!,?re the national meet •. V. Buerger. W. Winter and W. A. FaIr- Ing. whlcb Is scheduled to hold Its ses. hurst, all or Engla.nd. No, 12 will be slons under the National Chess Fedorn· either Dr. S. Tartakower of the Ukraine tlon at Kalamazoo, Mich., from August 01' Aklba Ruhlnsteln ot Poland. 25 to Sop~eInher 5. Among tho entries In tbls latter event will be Samuel Reshev,lty. tile fermer \Pollsil Boy Wonder\; Samuel Factor of Chicago; S. Mldtk::owsklo:l: Trellton, N. J.; Kerman GLADYS and the Young Moderns By ALAN DUNN Pf\OBL&l\[ No. 95 Dy S\\M 1,0 Y D lliack, 3 pieces (2) What. American actr.ass, famous for her interpretation of Shake~pear~an roles, was' born ftfty-seve:I\ years ago .. l\l;'rsns two. Rooks. (len~ral1y tbo latter 111~e8 I !:....,.. ...... ,....,..--_--- _________ ................ _ ...... ______ ............. t- ..... __ J I are stl!'ongerl bat here the WhIte Pnwns tlr'1l t,· . \ aiil! at .. r Ill.eli', next mOl\ one must Who is the present UnIted 'States Secrcta,ry o~ Of the go lmmMlately lost. (ll.) T' ~eas\\\\. . 48, 'R-Q:I Q-~7 ! • • . ., , t501D:. 'ltK~19t;:g~ ~~~r6 (2) How are the nllmes \Talill-ferro \CholtnomI:e)ey \Leicester , ~ \.:Magdalen College\ (at Oxford), pronounced?' 52A.li;;:-K:~. move Wj,lt~ i. What countries were opposed' in the Hundred. y.;ars' War? rOTocabJy lo)!. (·B.) r,2.. • • 1'-n5 In 1Vhat o,pera does tbe famous \mad Bcene\ take place? ~:. if-C: 1'-1\6 Of 1\'h~t leade~ in the steelf~dustry did Ida M, Tarbell j,;or;;;;d ~\t loe'.' t~o h,rn .. tor ono. (g.) -~c'nt biography? 0:.. . f ~ Qxr \' ..... Iii r.~. lC-Kt2 I'-nT. N~e: two of tll& . f:welve labors of Hercules. no. n-Ra I'~R8 bee,Q n7. ItxQ qo..,..DG What ':'eading prohibItion advocate lost an eye in a near riot Xow tlle welLkncst;t of l'-K:J Is \ (B) Great Britain? , today? •• \ .••••...•••.. _ .............. , .•••.••.••. , ............ ~ With what major ieague baseball team does Paul Waner (8) (4:) When did the Sepoy Rebellion ill India 'occur'? ••••••• \ • (6) -1-~e there any fish in theDead Sea'! ................... ~ , (0) From what :Fi:~nch words, meanityll' '~ion'i!· tooth,\ d9,es the name \dandelion' eom~? ..... f • , ............... \ , ........... ..,. 1-_ ...... ones to try out ~idd.n powers, Nothing Is Jmportant to the Chlldrcll. but tbo work Involvec!. That Is most Import- ant; to remember, Cop~rfp1.t, 1937, bu the Bell SlItldlcafc, Ifto. Tomorrow: Sha.rlllg. By FANNY Y. CORY , 0 0 0 O· 0 (7) (8) What number of feet lllake a mile? ............ ,. ,' .•. , •• , ''-~-'' Who IS the only former Vice-President of the United 58: R(tt)-Ql Qx10' '1 . 1'1 bId Wh . ., Oil. It-<IIi\ 1'-1,1·' . The Io.owmg nes egin.a ong,an famous poem. at is It'jtlriO,ugh 60, ItIQJ -1(t2 I·-lttr.! \()f DIan's first· disobedience llnd tbe· fruH of that forbidden tr'ee, .States no,v living?' .................... t •• ~ •• It ••••• , .. ~ f ... .. (9) Is asbe~tos' of mineral or vegetable origin? •• , ••• , ••••••• '. '(10) Today 18 the 141st anniversary of the birth of one of the most famous Ilf American scouts and· pioneers, Whe) . was: he 1. , ............... '·f .'\ f , .... 10\ • ................ , ... . AnS1Ve~1I te> these ·questions appear on' last page) ____ • __ • __ v 61. Jt.-ICDz <.1-112 62. II--QBl ~K4 whose mortal taste--,i 03 It-f)! Q-liH -Still tllreaoolllng Q-K7 If White .I,.uld (9) ,What, in the old'rhyme, is the destiny of Saturday's child? 'uil ('nJ}tur~ tilt' litP. (D.) (10) W'\ t.A 1 1 I I f d ibId W d dt. R(Jl~::-.Qa. l~::.¥il~ . . U.a 'mer can nava vease, e t port . l.1r ng t e WOr ar an (l)l. 1l-1::7 P-ltt6, ha~ never been traced? 61. It-III Q-B\ Who assassinated' PreSident .. McKinley? So that \\hen the Ktl,l- Ji!I flnal1;y tBkeo, 'Q will nol bo attacked. (S.l . Wha~ tw{)c republics occupy the Isllind Ilf Haiti·? 6S, It-QKtl 1'~D4 , . C6P1!riuhl, 1927. liU ». A.vpr.t.,. <6 Ct>. . 60. 1',,1\ oli • • • It 69, n-Q6 clr, ~lllll 70. ~1 cu, Jf.- (Answers on ldt pagG~). Ifa, . etc'. (B.) .' , . This column'S favorite balter, P. B, R., writes 1rom St. Jean de Luz as follows, and to wit: \Good Old Cal. There may be somo thlllgs about him you don·t like. hut you've got to admlt this: When he saY's anything no one cnn pOBslbly have the sUghte~t doubt as to eXMtly what he menM. I , It runs a little deeper than tl111 t. After he has said It he sticks to It. Some tIme ago in these observations I ~olllm.ntecl upon the fact that' no· For a long time my toar has be~n that as I grew older and ·began to dip townr<1 the JlUn8et of me I woul<l grow verbose and garrulOUS. Age seems to be oreeplng upon me; senility· canno~ be f~r away. To a. little group of per· sons Who gathered at my, home on Sunday night I talketl vl'rtually all tl:!e tor ·more than three hours. I might be talking yet, hut at 1:4() O'clock my viSitors decided they'd hail they' could stnnd 1ll1t1 went home. Grandfather HlU'rlson, whom I ha \eo oft~n mentioned nerc. was an ol<ceptlol~ to tb.is rule. In llis younger days 11 .. was a. gte\t talker and remantlch5t. Another dePIOrli.bl~' facool.' In :tlili working plnns or tno SllcCO'Vahzet~t sym!lathli;er~ Is that bcm1;l1r,g. tbA. home.. of jurors hM 1\ ball eJfe<:t; 0\ ' the young. HavIng lived \\n eoxceec!lngly colo!'!ul A man 18 alwnya ,on trial beto~e .. lifo, he was fond of explQltmg it, But jury consisting or tbe women trlelll\!! as he grew \lcler he almost stopped at his wl!e. And In. sllin~l:r mort!, ti>o.b; talking . ~hout It. From ~~ time h() 99 per cent of suoh eases n verl\lct 0.1<' wan sOventy On ~o bls deatb, .If on~ \SuJ1ty sa charged In tb.e indictment'\ ' wanted to Mllr \ story Of whale hunt~ l:l ret\lfne<l. \ log In the .Arotlcs 6t at' prospecting 101' \'. gold In Cnjltornla, or Austrl'lIa, 'h~ ono of an ullnnrrled womi4l.'.f pretty nearly was forced to equip hlm- ~ favorito threats Is tJlIIt she woulM:.Ii Belt with a set ~t burglar's tOOls to IIIlm'r Y the best m.l~ llult ever 1I.ved ... It out of ·the old gentleman. .;.:nd. conscIously or otherwise, ll!ie ~ -- perfectly :,ncere about it, N~ woP#.~ or course th~ro Is· no age rule tor l't1!ally wanta to mal'l'Y the b'ut m.~ ga.rrullty . or' vcrl:lo~eness. Many Me that ever lived. . both garrulous and ver),OIle at 2.. -. - :\ --. ! A woman lOOklt 10l.'\ a mlrro~, a mAl\: What, I orten won<ler, haa become lor a place to alt i1o~, . ;, of the mlld.tone?' The~e 'uRea tn be. '.' ono In nearlY every county .... cem1nl1\ Broadly speaking, <II; IOCI~t ~totm.e .. In every congrcaslonal cllstrlct. .Ats Is; an Individual who trIes to peraun.44 there waa at lealit an annual. If not It tboae who, at consIderable trQublj\'an:~ leml-annu~l- mad dog 5Co.I'O, the dlh- t:::lonse. have acqUlt\ed a lot ot en~ trlQt madstone 'lVa~ in great dema'nd. Joy~blo habits th&'t they ought to' Jiv, Did II dog hlte somebody. the Victim ~hcm up. Latest From Queen- Fashion' $ Coart. Porls-If you have not yet 8IlC-, cumbed to the pajama tor beaob or here is one tor the latter ·use which should tempt you, It I~ a most. ~, , ( ,. ./ .- ..