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WOMAN OF TO-DAY

DANCING AND DRESS *

(Special to "The Evening Post")

AUCKLAND, This Day. "Woman: Her Dress and Her Dances," was the subject of an address by Father M'Grath at the Sacred Heart Church, Ponsonby, during the mission for women conducted by the Marist Fathers. "It is the flask, not the bar, that menaces society to-day,".he said. The preacher said that he, desired to avoid the generalisations and too frequent pessimism with which the subject was often treated. His wjs a sincere effort to apportion the blame in an involved social problem, and to give the principles on which a solution should be attempted.

"The words of St. Paul's warning, 'Let your modesty be known to all men, the Lord is nigh,' could be translated to mean, It pays to advertise,'" said Father MacGrath. Dealing with the question of dress, what he meant by that was it paid every self-respecting girl who planned a useful and a wholesome life to advertise her adherence to Divine ideals as a protection against the rakes who to-day were plotting her ruin.' Modes of dress could be attractive, but shofSd make the right appeal. Clothes were to protect as well as to please; they were part of virtue's armour. Many girls by their indecently attractive dress were simply advertising themselves "for sale," and they would go to the lowest bidder. Speaking of dancing, Father MacGrath said he would not attempt to define what dances were indecent. It was largely a matter for the individual. Love of notice and the passion for pleasure found expression in unbecoming and sensual dances and in excessive indulgence in the perfectly lawful pastime of dancing, but certain dances unquestionably played up to the sex impulses, and were an occasion of sin and a direct challenge to the virtue o£ young people. "There are to be found girls so hardened to pleasure that I believe they would jazz on their mother's grave," Father MacGrath added. He was speaking of what he declared as the irony of girls jazzing to such airs as "Pal of My Cradle Days," and yet giving less and less consideration to their mothers. "It is true a girl's best friend is still" her mother," Father MacGrath continued. "Is it not inhuman and callous that she should heed the siren voice of a good spender—spendthrift even—of virtue against a mother's warning?" Those young people who ventured no more information about their movements than that they were going "out" as a rule spoke only half a truth. "Down and out" covered the case better, for a girl was on the downward grade when home was regarded only as a cheap boardinghouse and maternal interest was resented as interference. ...... The preacher condemned' smoking and drinking because they were cheapening women. The fascinations of the practices are a fruitful source of ruin, and men who encouraged women in these practices were no friends to womanhood and no asset to society.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19270315.2.124

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXIII, Issue 62, 15 March 1927, Page 13

Word Count
490

WOMAN OF TO-DAY Evening Post, Volume CXIII, Issue 62, 15 March 1927, Page 13

WOMAN OF TO-DAY Evening Post, Volume CXIII, Issue 62, 15 March 1927, Page 13