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WOMANKIND ■ ^ HINTS BY MAY MANTON I .1 A C*i ft *760 Fancy Gefhered Bteasa. 34 to 40 bust. r'ANCT GATHERED BL0D8E «750. WJth Long or Elbow Sleeves, With or Without Lining. The soft full blouse that is cut in one with the sleeves. Is a new and attractive one, that will be much worn throughout the season. Is made with plastron and yoke in one and, consequently. It is especially well adapted to the combination of mate rials that are so much in use. Crepe decline is the material illustrated, and It Is combined with lace and trim med with Persian banding edged with velvet ribbon, but every material that Is thin and soft enough to he made full, will be found appropriate, and the blouse suits the entire gown and the separate waist equally well. Persian silks are extremely fash ionable lu combination with plain ma terial and this blouse made of chiffon cloth to match the color of the suit, with yoke and plastron of Persian silk will be exceedingly smart to wear with the tailored custume. The blouse is made with a fitted lin ing. It consists of the blouse portions that are cut In on© with the sleeves, and of the yoke with the plastron. When long sleeves are used, the lin ings are faced to form deep cuffs. The closing is made invisibly at the back. For the medium sizes will be re quired 2 1-3 yards material 24 or 27. or 1 1-4 yards 44 inches wide, with 1 3-8 yards of allover lace and 2 3-8 yards of banding. The. pattern 6760 is cut in sizes for a This model ?6. and will be mailed to any address by the Fashion Department of this paper on receipt of 10 cents, send an additional two-cent stamp for G-ier postage, which insures a more Afflpt dllvery ) (if In haste. pr The above pattern and other May Manton Patterns described in THE EVENING JOURNAL and all the pat terns made, by th© May Manton Pat tern Company can also be obtained for 10 cents from SMITH-ZOLLINGER CO.. 4th and Market Sis. Paris Patterns / . JjADT-fA WIK^-GORET) SKtHTT. AD Seam* ADowed^ -PkJJf most of tie Skirts this seasoB arr fancy, there is always a demand for the plain model. Stout women generally prefer It to *D others, and for ooostaot wear It ts certainly the best. It may aisr. be i*od as a "drop" under sheer 'materials. I» which case It showid al ways be made o< silk. This model is cut In go ra. uh) If desired may be in ankle knetb. Tb« low«' «dg« mnaaures Hfc yard* TbU i*let may h« made of tweed, oherlet, «orge, broadcloth or any •f the bear 7 matnrtata.acd a trimming et bndd or reveni row« of matching at tb« bottom wouM take away th« otain nswmm The pattern (UO> to cut In efetat sAaea—Z> to X waist. To nmk« tb» medhup star raqulree for «rfl-teogth down •% yod* » torhea wide: -without ap aari down It need« 3% yards M anwBng IB cents to ffae ofl ke of no» Ta ebtaln this pattern or my Ike »tbers heretofore described ._ THE JOURNAL, All out tb« follow ing coupon and Inclose It with M cants in an envelope addressed to Fashion Editor, THE EVEhTNO JOURNAL. Fourth and Bhlplsy Sts, of ta W'flmfngton, Delaware. Ts the Fashion Editor, THE EVENING JOURNAL, Wilmington. Inclosed find «end at Dal U cants, tmt «Nth Pattern Ha, Site- - tute published ... Sêmm m MM , Btraet .. . City . tu» Date of this order ....... v favors puffs AND FISHING President Hall, of Clark Uni versity, Discusses Bar barism of Childhood DENIES ADVOCATING FLIRTING FOR GIRLS REDDING GIRL IS MOST BAFFLING PROBLEM TIh> budding Kiri Is th**. most intri. rate and baffling problem per haps that science has ever at tached. Girls don't like to pnt on blinders and get right doyn to special izlug. Most earefnl watching of the girl by parents should he between the years of eight and ten. More than tire times as many babies die during the first year who are not nursed naturally as those who are so nursed. J Fatherhood Is at a low ebb.— President Hall, of Clark Daher slty. ■■ I WORCESTER. Mass., Sept. 7—Dr. O. Stanley Hall, president of Clark University, scientist and psycholo gist, who gives woman two souls to man's one, has found his Investlga- j tlons into the sphere of femininity fraught with trouble.. He doesn't even like to talk about girls now. Certain reports are trou bling him. One is that he advocates flirting for girls as a safety valve for their emo tions. Another makes him say that the girl of sixteen, with her rats, puffs, pompadours and curls, is a creature absolutely without religion. | A third is that be has written a book : about "The Psychology of Cupid." Clergymen and teachers have, been writing to ask about that, and Dr. Hall says their letters arc not pleas ant reading. "Just see that!" Clark. on his advocacy of flirting, represented as standing for that, have never discussed that subject ser iously or otherwise, as insisting that the girl of sixteen is utterly irreligious. All statistics, my own included, show, on the contrary, that this is the most religious stage off life." - He also protested with vehemence | that he never under any name, bad 1 written a book ou love. I Dr. Hall stands for the girl of six- | teen—rats, puffs, pompadours, and ail | —just as he stands for the boy who plays truant, loves to go out with "the gang," and do other wild things that cityfied parents consider barbaric. Dr. Hall considers them barbaric, too, and. therefore, logical. Some-[ljyjj thing of the caveman is In every boy, fir believes.A The call throve In woods, the lure of the first spring j days to the pool where the fish bite, the savageries, the love of the bonfire, the preference for few clothes, or for I none at all—all are reverberations In the boy's sohl of those old days when man went forth to huni and kill that he might not be hunted and killed. , "City life Is a hothouse life that tends to ripen everything before its time," the doctor said. "Stories and nature, the field, forest, hill, shore, water, flowers. animals, should all be a big part of the life of the hoy." ; But he does not attribute vagaries of the budding girl to the call to the primitive. That Is why she Is the most intricate and baffling problem, perhaps, that science has faced. "Among the insects, birds, and ani male it is the male, that puts on beautiful array when the love season dawns," Dr. Hall said. . "But with | humans it Is the. female. This is the season of bangs, curls, puffs, pompadours, frills, ribbons, possibly rouges and powders, high heels. flaunting hats, sunshades, ornamental purses, bangles, and very long gloves. Plain soup, vegetables, and fish irk her and she presses on to dessert as ♦o the last illuminating chapter of a dull novel. ! exclaimed Dr. He pointed to a long article "I am 1 1 am reported "Pnt It tg at this period that her, duality of self begins to develop a sort of inner shrine soul that, con tains some of the most, primitive in stincts of her sex, while the other self Is a more social, superficial one, which is occupied with the interests of her daily life. "The two lives may be entire strang ers to eaeh other, although the upper self ts more likely never to suspect the existence of the lower. The low^r, for instance, often falls in love long before the upper has any inkling of It. and when it does so a crisis arises. thought soulless, now comes nearer to having two souls than does man." In education, Dr. Hall said, nearly enough attentieffl was paid to the teaching of morals. Ing of courage was especially essen tial. Thus woman, who was once not The teach "Courage can be taught by different methods." he went on. "Stories and pictures of heroes and of great deeds of one's countrymen are effective." Dr. Hall was questioned about the untruths of children springing from Imagination. "When the boy of two or three," be replies, "rushes in with beaming eyes and says he saw a horse with one horn on its bead, a dog as big as a house or that God met him on the lawn and told him not to pick the flowers (and these are real cases) he has discovered for the flrs( time that he can really say .things that have no basis in truth, ment of the conscious birth of the imagination, chausen wonders or tales spun out of pure visual Imagery that make the child first acquainted with the charm of his new found imaginative power, "I know I shouldn't consider that the kind of He to be punished "But back of the whole development of the individual fo-day is a crying need for more fatherhood and more motherhood," Dr. Hall said. This marks the mo This leads to Mun Good Vaudeville. The Garrick upholds its reputation as usual by starting in with a splen did quality of vaudeville—the kind •hat has made it popular with all lasses here at home and made Us twner one of the best known and most $!«*coanfuI ♦h'vjtrjf.al r©-* / £ g gX^\\\\\\\V\\NV\\v\\vySS\\vwyv\\\S^\Stt SS ^S^^^^ G\\\\ys\\\ X A X The question (?) whether or not to join the Robelen piano club / s. y. A a /. A x a xi x X A X X X V. A x Z A A A A A xi A A A A A X X X X Z 'mm A A z x X x X A A A A A X C"'"* 'A 'A g g ■■.AVa B y S & 2 t X x 0 x X 3 X yn i/j |X| t-'l iJRIJ tb©ijj»(l * "* so||f5( ||M J y I / I A / 11 A I y I A I y 11 A 11 y I /, I A I A I î j / I A | y I A I 5 I / I 6 I r I X I / I X X [If Z X A X £ A A X X VA g f -, - g .,v- ■ 3 , X v: x * •M K«MS*îC *1 X m* Nu* x A A \ 'A A X 4M X x x z T The time to start to choose a musical education is now, the time to put music into your home i »now, just as the time to live and love and fight, and carry on every purpose and function of life is now and not tomorrow. A / A A A 2 X X X did not know She was undecided. She <H A lady came in yesterday to buy a piano, whether to buy an old, well-known make or join the Robelen Piano Club . x 2 g X g She was afraid that a good piano could not be sold at the Club price ($257.50). There must be something wrong with it, else it wouldn't be sold at SO low a price. A|| We showed her all the good points about the piano and explained the Club plan the best we could, but still she couldn't see it, and like some other women, she couldn't It wound up by her buying a Knabe. She paid five hundred and hfty dollars for it< 50 dollars cash and 20 dollars a month—though she said that 'thfc ' fetUts of the Club piano (5 dollars cash and a dollar and a quarter a week) would have Suited her much better iust at this time. <][ Notv, we tell this incident because it has a moral; because many more persons may be in the same frame of mind. X x x X be convinced. S X X x x x XI X that that lady could have joined the Robelen this: <]| The moral of this incident is Piano Club and if, as she said, the Club terras best suited her (ust now, she should have done SO, and we will tell you why. <H She would not have to'have taken 3 chance of any kind in joining the Club. / would, within 30 days, have given her C| In the first place, if she had desired it, In the second place, she would have had a whole year to have tried the was not satisfactory she could then have we mor;*y back. CluL fjiano . If the year's trial of the piano gotten the Knabe and had all her Club payments -transferred to the Knabe without the loss of a The Robelen Piano Club plan told in a few brief sentences A I V. IK I 1 single penny. A A (J in other words, according to our written agree ment, she could have joined the Robelen Piano Club; gotten her piano; paid only 5 dollars down and t dollar and 25 cents a week/for a whole year (which she said would have best suited her), and at the end Of the year gotten a Knabe, had her club money transferred to her credit on the Knabe, and then begun her payments of 20 dollars a By doing this, don't you see, she would y y The value of the Robelen Club piano is $350. 2. The price to Rohclen-Xluh members is $257.50. 3. The terms are $5.00.cash when you join, then $1.25 per week for 202 weeks. The piano will he delivered when you join, or later, as 1 A A A ' A A A • 1 . you w'sh. 5. The weekly payments of $1.25 begin when the piano fs delivered. ' \A y A A A 6 Every instrument is guaranteed without reserve—for five years. There arc no "ifs" or "ands" in the guarantee— just a straight-out guarantee as strong as we know how to make it in writing. 7. If, a fier 50 days' trial, the piano is not satisfactory we will give you your money back. 8. If the piano is satisfactory after 30 days' use. the club member has eleven more months in which to satisfy himself as to the character of the piano. If it docs not then prove to be everything that he expects, he has the privilege of exchanging it without one penny's loss for any other .instru ment of equal or greater value that we sell—(and we sell over twenty different representative makes). 9 If a club member dies during the life of his contract we wdl immediately send a receipt in full to Jjis family for the instrument. 10. A beautiful stool to match the piano is included with out extra cost. 11. The piano will be tuned twice without charge. 12. There is positively no interest added. A y y. i . y A A A 1J ^ A r A month. have a whole year of the easiest kind of payments the club plan, had the use of a club piano a whole year for absolutely nothing and a year hence had a brand new Knabe in her home instead of one a year old. A A > X / | I I I I j J | ! y A X A A A on y. A 'a X X A A X X X X X X A <H See the point ? y X X A y A i thinking frame ot CJ[ As we said above, we tell this # story, that there might be others in the same mind. X X a X A ? A X X z X 0 Pifc.no Co r Robelen Wilminpfon, 710 MARKET STREET [ Del. thereof ferbfddea. Uotuthcrmd osa ia whole or in part or colorabl. «uwni » net X tbs Copyright Act of Match 4, 1909, by Martin McCtrrlek and Fobelen Piwio Co. Registered in accordance with a ? 3NW cwvvwvl