m Tf VhJfi sew" darw-m WZE BEAUTIES DEMAND ADONIS TALL AND RED HEADS ARE TABOO AS BEAU IDEALS WLY GiJr if f . - r ieenof'if'aiiens Fairest ,' Miss Celiim- - ti& 'V :Afif t iPW'V 'Appreciate 'krGoekingmiUFilled Wallet Is Anether important assent tat , ittle Miss Birmingham Iragely wants ugly one lT(T-i -' , -r--rTi-TTt ,r4f n Tnrmrrtr -ar ifU.JrK&r'iLJN-JL ij.yJJviriiiiuiy e i Jrf 'Noted for Their Pulchritude Give V Symposium en Ktnd of Alan Ihey Jftpnt te Say ' ' Yes ' 9 te and Each Has vmr' Own Particular Kind' hW'' lATldnd of men dp Amerka'a beauties like? h Y,' ' t?-;. hi.. .m Inner abort, fat. lean, scholarly, athletic, masterful. 'D0'ney,,"v " ' ' ' ' ' ' ,f7 .... n p?they. pretest lavender. and old-lace courtships of soft-whispered i'gohtle caresses ? De they yearn for pugnacious, hair-pulling, jJaXelub! caveman stuff? Flhi questions are deuble-barreled; women want te -knew, if only te ue notes, JB yv . .v.-- . -,.... .-. . iChsrmers of the Natien fifty-seven picked charmers gathered at intlc City for its pageant ex beauty, wnue juages concentrated xneir ptien en feminine fascination, the minds of the intercity Aphredites directed f er'an interval te masculine lines. Questions were asked and twin recorded, while the fate of mere man hung in the balance. -Alt for the fat man! Alas for the scholar I Alackaday, wee and jivhele'gamut of mlsery'fer th"e Lord of 'Life who has yaller hair! '.iriveu are fat. scholarly and 'blonde you haven't a chance with the IXiW'i Prfee winners from the north, east, south and west itivnn'm-n Inner and lean but. never mind! Let'thei beauties talk for tj - ---e - --- Mives. ineir upuituiia vijr himj me ntamci, vub uu uue ur fcwu ' ihey" are adamant ' ' , 'M i . . u r of Beauty yueen tHave Geed Appetite Celder America's, most beautiful girl, .according te the Jury irti8t,?"Miss Columbus," Mary- itStrine Campbell. She is only ll years old, and a high-school lute. Her beauty is mature, ishe''nssh't altogether definite Aims' a te what sort of man she il'A Ilk one who likes mv cook- f fib's "said, "because I like te '.iM'lnd I- went te cook in my own HHBf v If-the;' way te a man's heart is aroeghjhls stomach, "Miss Celum- " might. net need half her beauty. dMith her beauty, and cooking te .ihe is irresistible. But she modestly enough seems te Sin mere confidence in her cooking )Hiuui in her geed leeks. "Beauty is mlpkln deep," "beauty wears away titli the years," while cooking, like fliiai and ether strong drink, im- mwti with age. Consequently, Mw Columbus" visualizes her ideal tBOUl'ii one who can he influenced bv jBthesfght of steaming roast perk, ?., huckleberry pies, pipinc-het Usfuits. fe man who is my Ideal must r love his home besides loving me," she declared. "He mustn't be a gad about. He must be willing te plan with me, te. make our home beauti ful; he must admire the goodies I cook for him and besides, he must eat them. "Since I like hemelife, he must make enough money te provide for and maintain a lovely home. He doesn't have te roll in wealth, but he must make enough for us te be able te live en comfortably. "He must be tall and he must be athletic, and he must be a geed chum." Then here is "Miss Buffalo," who is Berth i D. Rent. Here is her epin ien: "I like a tall, slender, dark-eyed and dark-haired man. My ideal is a real man," and the young lady by emphasis pn the word "real" inti mated a bushel of attributes. "He must have strength of char acter I mean he must be fair- minded, he must have a decided will of his own, he must be trustworthy. Detroit" herself. the better," she cried. "I don't want any mera; handsomer woman than' I am te get my man. "Besides, I Ilka xtd-headed men. Seems like I draw red-headed men somehow and I get te like them. My case, you see, Is different than that of most of these beauties. When I waa a liitle girl my Negro mammy leftt me. with no illusions. She said te me, 'Heney, ye' is little and ye' ain't whut ye' call pretty ye' sure is getta work right smart te git along, in dia y'ere world I', And 1 have always remembered" that. I can't afford te be tee -particular." Miss "Sparrow pulls. her words when she talks. Her voice ia. soft with the softness of the Seuth. "Of course,-! like a strong man, an athletic man. Students ,,never amount te much. Besides, it'll take a big man te leek after me, I'm lit tle, but I talk all the time, and I'm ahraya en the jump. "I don't mind much whether a manVrlch or peer. I ceuldnt go up te every man I like and ask him whether he's peer or net Nopej if I like him and marry him, 111 find out Boen enough what he's get salted away?' Miss Sparrow is a business girL She works in the advertising depart ment of the "Jars Chicken Feed Company" the goods save the ma5kl ' "Ye.may net believe that's the name, but it is. I de all the lying for the office. I answer the phone and say in a sweet voice, 'I'm se sorry. Yes, sir, it will be .shipped today without fatt!' -They call me 'one hundred pounds of jazz' in'eur office. t , , Kitty MeUneux Want Man With Seme-Brains "Yeu might add that I like clever men net stupids; ' And that the man's get te run the courtship, 'cause I'd laugh in his face if I had te play the 'demure and tender.' " Kitty Melineux, of piquant face, who is "Miss Philadelphia," wants a man who knows mere than she does. Her reasoning runs this way: Be fore she could fall in love with a man she must first-learn te respect him, and she ceuldnt respect him unless he towered mentally above her. "First, I must respect the man I love," she insists. "He needn't be handsome, provided he is tall and athletic. I prefer dark hair black hair most especially, "Toe, I want a man who can make a little money. It is ridiculous te marry with no prospect of a reason able income. He needn't be wealthy, but he must earn enough money te provide a comfortable home." "Handsome is as handsome does" rnight have been coined by "Miss "Miss Detroit,"! 1 I; j 'V-faafcHaM IrvaliiiiiiiH. FvIv'BaiiiiiiiHI ty' HLiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHFrV'VA lBammmmW4 ftaammrnHp n fiAHBaWaaWaaWaawaawBi i '1 t VlBalmmmmmF3 '4M Hf 's1bW atEl : V SI ".' bM .'' BaV VbwbV I m m f"I Knapp, f NewBBaW Katherine Grant, "Mlsa Les Angeles," has Hareld Lloyd as her ideal ErhZ Hnapp, of j7,?fVyPrs-the "tall mnrf faVfe M91"' . He must have physical strength, and I don't care whether he is a scholar or net, and wealth doesn't matter. "He must, above all things, be willing te give and take that's the secret of happiness in married life." And "Miss Buffalo's" ideal is a sort of blanket ideal, dreamed of by many of these fair maidens. "Treat 'em rough!" may satisfy some, but "Miss Buffaje" prefers the "romantically gentle" type. And it's because one of her requisites is "in telligence," and "hew can a man be intelligent if he isn't polite 7" she asks. Wise Words Add te Charm of "Miss Birmingham" Ellse Sparrow, who is "Miss Bir mingham," from Alabama, did net win a beauty prize from the judges, but she wen all thtlr hearts. She is as individual in her taste for menfelk as she is charming. "I like Wugte the uglier ft.- who is Beth Madsen, wen second prize as the next most beautiful woman in evening gown among the intercity "knockouts." "Personality- mere than leeks is the important thing," said Miss Madsen. "I don't care much whether he is handsome. I want him te be a geed man a man who is steadfast, who is industrious, who is honored by many friends. "I don't wnnt him te be buried up te hlti ears in scholarship either. He's get te knew a few things, but he needn't be an encyclopedia or Webster's Un abridged. I'll be satisfied If be knows enough te keep the beuse going." MIbs Madsen' Is a cbcstuut-.brewn haired, miss with hazel eyes. Her face Ik pure' joy, and she is se like "Miss Celumbuj, who was deemed by the Jury of nrtUts the most beautiful bathing girl In America, that the judges had difficulty in eliminating "Mlea Detroit" from the race. She is supetlatlrdy beautiful, and one might expect her te have' stiff requirements for her best lpved masculine type. But she hadn't. "I don't care much for leeks, though I suppose I am partial te medium (hclglit and dark hair and be need net oe ncn , jui cnuuga oieuey be iuuc wc W' Ai wr-va v$v Wz ?3SVtVS uism r tffl m IS tswtm &hm rJ .'.' tm fitml yB",? mm im. $& WV; mm m wji -n 4 ;"iVvi mmm, tM mite m'fe iXS. 4t ;tfS-. '&t 2?if ?M m mi mm WiW m vm m m m mm VA'i mm don't have te worry is what I ex pect." Table Etiquette Part of Her Requirements "T t.A IrnAW. Aiftini fi lfA IllX v I wiutinr V"U" -V wow ". nnrlr. I'll bn axilla . . . :t ,rr . . .'..-.. . . satisfied witn his scholarship' quaint knife and fork properly. ly ebervcd "MIsb Flerida," who Is Miss Eleaner Legan, of Jacksonville. And It's only a latter-day Venus who could expect ,ns much from her Adenis. If mythology can be In any sen credible, Adenis was net particularly struck by his Venus. He was a diffi cult youth te hnndlc. Strangely enough, "Miss Flerida" seems te have been ue Jtnore fertunate with her twentieth century Adenises.. "Yeu ee.0, I picfer light men, and 1 always get dark ones,"' she said. "It may be because I am dark, and like attracts llke. But I'm partial te light ones, and It's no use," she added, with mock tears in her voice. ( "And no little men for me," she declared. "I like big men. I bate" fat men, and I bate the Rodelph Valentine type, with the glossy, plastered-down hair." Besides that, her ideal must be "well fixed." "He must make a let of money," said Miss Legan, "se (hat we can lire comfortably, and he must be willing te work apd work and work for me." It Is rnthcr remarkable that se few of these prUi Aphredites seem te pre fer n career ever against marriage. It really Isn't no ren.arknble afte'r nil, since, above all things qIse, they are the se-called "womanly" type of woman. One's Impression IS that beauty is Its own reward, In the sense that It definitely swings the Inclination of the one graced with physical charm toward eventual marriage. Seme few, of course, It swings toward the movies, but rarely toward the buslnes world of dollars and sense. There's "Mls Les Angeles," for ex ample a blonde, scintillating chnrmer, te whom dollars and captains of In dustry and ledgers and accounts are "positively hateful." With her "art" Is everything. "My Ideal type," says Miss Kather ine Grant, of Les Angeles, "is none ether thnn Hareld Lloyd. He is the right size, he is dork and he is gay; he hns a sense of humor and he lives for nrt. "Seme day I hope te be in the mov ies. I have been in them just a little bit, but I mean te work harder and harder. And I really have no time te thnk qbeut men.. I think the roost important th(ng In all the world is art. Art Is tee you knew nrt has se many te me art is well, every thing!" One appreciates "Miss Les An geles " point of view. "I don't expect a man te be rich no, net at all. He must be interested In art, llke'I am. Perhaps I ought te say he must hove the philosophy of geed nature. He out htnt te be u 'nut' and all that but he ought te have a decided well, you knew what I mean. Like Hqreld Lloyd something like him and" "Miss Les Angeles" realises that there are many commendable types of men; she would net go se far aa te In sist that her type Is the only supreme type. She owns te a bread tolerance. An Individual point of view is thnt of little "Mss America,". Margaret Gor Ger man', who wen the beauty prize last year, and who was. King Neptune's Queen during the recent pageant. She m i SS-?, . 4V .$' - :- 9 X sX& lW, m f't'prr. m wSA ltty Meli neux wants in telllgent mate ,V?,sfZ 1T., J 'A.'tC,VlL l-'A Wt.-'. ,&.. .Sfe." m? BBfe? w' fi-VK" . -i, . .'K &miii yr. v 'efM &cti 'it-,r VVx- .', U;wnv ??, mt &! u 1H if te&5te$$ "7" WAT .' . Yj. it.T. $$Mi mi Afv5s'-y e V.-ie . v . j. , i! ; :'Ji5fc.' v'tfC wfir . . r... '.. v m?M ' V : r fA fj:V' Mi hMsevW r-K'K i'M V i,'. ?.'?:: U--'t iVf: W&&& y" V1"! JW. 'K , 'VO ls:'ZV, &.j 'SiVii .?$'?" s, -s& WJi &: yji Xs?kj 'rt ?-?! ;:3& f.".t:,f:4"Kt isM : L &; mm s'it' A''i vv-, i-,Ki j;S' tf.r iffy.: isi wmt t'' i' K V- .P .'"y "fr'V vv.,u ' , iekMf.Mtvjyw '!ij- '' uy; v:zMi!'J :! ntr ... -4 .''C'W-'H-i'-M 7?? ?fy'' x y ' ri' snj Ji . t 'U &&i Y3 :K 2 tAi,f;r. &' -i &?M?$mwx' .." )& ?S?9tri i' V5Sf i T ''A 'ii-M !' i& :k. tfi rAWi m- Vjf3 jv hVM Si Wrl !-K '.' tliJifi? ?j''i ; '". ' .CJU" A'sY?Wli ..S V- ?yf i Wy-"-fji- h& r A is , 'rr: '-A'v:k?v -Ji '',- -'. "0- 4fi V-H .'!' r--ji sVfi i$&?Z J "fit? m t'VJVA .'.' )' r"i l&i?-37V,J ."it A JVi. ,'. ' t? ':? : BaHHKBBalBif3aBii?PSBaHBat BaaaBaHlBBaBaWBHPlfflRW BmBaBaBaBaBaBaBsiBliiBal HVPAUBK'T'A s vmP cfVaaVKeawBawswitv. fHfS ,i. & t ,KX ,. . '; - 'J--: y'' y'uit.' ,f,'U v .,' X-i ! r&?;i m Ttm haa Urn ln1lt whit wblskerS. Miss German is se small herself that aha couldn't possibly run te six -footers se for as men go. She like them 'me dlum size," and she likes them dark, tee. . ' And In the matter of caveman vs. tae "romantic, gentle" kind of love well, she hasn't reached that point where she cares a whoop either one way or the i ether. It's a little different with "MlM Macen," of Georgia. She Is Frances Gtirr, with an nllurlnz Southern drawl. "Oh, I like the big, brave man who can make me tee the line," cried she. "I don't like little, weak ones. And be must have enough money te give me a beautiful home." "Mlsa Seattle," Evelyn Atkinson, of statuesque marble-white splendor, brings her choice down te a matter of cooking again. "Ne, I don't expect my ideal man te cat what I cook, but be must be the kind of man who can intelligently ad mire what I cook. And there Is n world of meaning In what I say. A man who can admire feed, without caring te eat It and admire intelligently and earn estly Is a man with supreme tact. And that's the kind of man I want. "Miss Portland," Virginia Edwards, who brought from the City of Reses a breath of the jovial and .hearty West, likes men just a little plump. And she seems te be the only beauty who gees that far. Red-headed Men De J Net Have First Call One wonders why Is It nil these yeunaj exquisites visualize dark men. In It that black hair suggests Inherent strength of physique and of will? Is it that blend men are "deceitful. a Sally in our alley has a habit of say ing? The problem Is tee deep. The young ladles themselves can't explain it with anything else but an explosive "because!" which, after all, may be the best of reasons. "Mlsa Portland," true te type. like the dark man, with the dark eyebrows and a head full of dark brown or black hair. There are two professional beauties' the jury of artists at Atlantic City especially admired. They are Dorethy Knapp, an eighteen -yenr-eld artist model, originally from Chicago, and Pauline Virginia Dakla. a 'TaBsing Shew" girl, from Terth Ambey. Thest two maidens received awards In the professional class, which Included, models, actresses of the silver screen and actresses of the stage. "The man who can give me n sweet home In the country, with n let of trees and shrubbery nreund it and some green mendewland, 1 en mv eligible list," smiled Miss Dakla. ''That's what I want and ray ideal doesn't have te be handsome." "I like business men snappy, ge-xet-lt business man, who Is a man of coolness and resource. And he really ought te have a let of money, for then we can take occasional trips te the city when the country life gets a little tire some new nnd then. i "He ought te be" nnd the cbnrmere never vary "tall, and dark, and he must have gobs of gobs of personality. bnt I mean Is, he must leek like an interesting man even before he opens his mouth. He must be a man of th world a man who has seen things, and can take care of himself and me!" Miss Knapp's ideal need net nrcee sarllly be rich. But he must be nthletje, he mu e,t go in for all the sports the strenuous sports, like football, pole and the rest. Ne tiddlcdy-wlnk lounge-lizard for Miss Knapp. "And he must have Intelligence. He must knew geed books, and he must hnve an appreciation for the richer things In life painting, music, sculp ture, I don't own te any tired business man for my ideal." The Cynic who lives next deer sayst "After all of your list of beauties, none will fare se well as 'Miss Bir mingham.' She's looking for her ugly man, nnd she'll probably get him. There are mere of 'em In the world." it 3; '..'j! ( t. .' .. v fc. i mw-::r ". V ' .?; . r'iii :l $'.& :? '.- ' S frf -K nj; JM, Mary Campbell, 'Queen of Beauty,' wants hungry man m "'atSBS'; fXzM iiv ?&fc I? lA.w yitj ' M i&r - -. & O. k y&wi8 u -1 '4". i ti-- M& KM i "fit's V !&. I W.;V, w iJ'V C-Ai. ftLvjis, mzi m Wt m xyj&a2 V'.a fcl! ms t X$A & W&&1 f'm '.'!? Wj? 'tikX - snv, MV TATi. S&eh'X. Ui'fujt, y'w,';'w rAr -w'jrs fit' ts ' a m .ft WJ w . -V:.v. vf ?'i. i m. S!tAt! .'W ?..&? r.v ?! Mf. rJ-Nsss M iT.W MU4 Wj .. vx WC it.) s VOV," ;?AWt. Kis iMriWS ScA, ;rV-4 I tv?J-..'sJ. j ."S'J '',. tJu: "rfar?i , 3sa wT -T t'. riiK.K-1 ittVttXlJMii s ... s.s- . r: j i. f V-"Os"" Wis K Men don't interest Margaret German, "Miss America" of 1922 V- ..W 4W ft1 v-. m$M ? s : j;: 4JK?? $m L.t.i. ?. J' 1M. fif 7 iS i2 .e;-. ,W my-h ,'V av v:?i :ffif' '" Ellse Sparrow, "Miss BlrmlnBhaln,,, willing te accept an "ugly beau" Beth Madsen; "Miss Detroit," Jan wan. AM .11 a J 1. , -.e tut u aiiu uars reminds one of Mnry Plckferd, with her long curls nnd her droll and cut whim sics. During the pngcant she carried " s ma'l swagger stick and when bhe sat en the throne of the Old Gentleman pt the Sea she tucked her legs under Her ami smiled cezlly at her many and admiring subjects. This Sage of Seventeen Scorns the Sterner Sex "I think." and she blurted It out bravely, "that men are ever-rated, don't you?" And she naturally left little te be saiu. one is seventeen years old and very candid. "I have .never been In love, and I ." . "!Sn . enli' Indifferently well. I think Father Nenttee Is an old dear. All of which certainly leads this sum mary of ideals te nowhere In particular, the young ladles nil are ruther facetious about their Ideals, with the exception of one, nnd she is the prize beauty who appeared in n non-Puritanical abbre viated bathing suit of ermine In the bathers' revue. She Is quite, sincere In her vlmialllz. tien. She la three and a half years old and can afford te be Isnccre, when Ada II. Hendersen, of Philadelphia, was asked about her ideal man, thta little winner In the children's sectlea of the pageant said without equivocate tlen or hesitatien: ' "The man I like best of all la aw own pnpal" T ,' Se there!1 'At .least, ifala una Ui .... n l iii .. . -:?. rr BL(Maiu iiuw ' person' sac is ta about, and findslm passing (alrfcJ ,1 , sS mm ' JJ 'i'l 1 ; fia xii m m mi M i w ;m m M A'.: SjV.j jm rf - 'li&'$ii i'A ii malt! !tf JAjjK. ir,' MaJ ,.,', it.ivVvlt,ir.,f ,. I ut . ij i A ttj.,