The evening world. Newspaper, October 12, 1911, Page 3

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“SEPARATED” PAIR | LIVING RIGHT ON i: Decree She Got, but Says Hubby Knows It. EXPECTS HIM TO QUIT. But She They Had Breakfast Together With _j Their Six Children, Isn't Sure, as Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Gordon, who be- came legally separated by decree of Supreme Court Justice Blackmar yester- day, did not mutually discuss their ered state in thelr home, No. 27 Hi avenue, East New York, to-day. The six children, ranging from elght to twenty-one years, knew all about the lecree, for when their mother came ome las: night she said, triumphantly: “Well, I got it, children, and now I'm free and your father had better behave.” A little while later Joseph Gordon ©ame home to supper, His wife Ger- trude had never discussed her intention to get a separation from him on the grounds of cruelty and 11l-treatment, She had gone al and done it, and no word passed between them on the eudject, course Gordon knew of the suit, for rs had been served on him. {fe had ign no defense red the papers and put in and he had continued to get and sleep under the same Mrs. Gordon and their six his meals wot with eatldren HE KNEW OF SEPARATION BUT NOT FROM HER. “It is not true,’ sald Mrs. Gordon to- UNDER SAME ROOF Mrs. Gordon Hasn't Mentioned | Know Fro Creed of Mrs, Houghton, Whose New Book Is Positively Reactionary : Me. missive wife, you NIXOLA GREELEY SMITH “A Venture in Id | Mrs. Houghton’s novel, which will and positively reactionary, even in sight.” Mrs. Houghton’s heroine meets her fate on an ocean liner. proposes at a dance before the voyage is over, which outlines the author's belief {n destiny. letter “ ‘Haven't I told you that I never ox- to do the commonplace thing tn lady who has taken up an archaic pen to teach the new generation how to think. | And behold a daughter of the gods, and incidentally | THE FX EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1911, This Authoress Believes in Love at First Sight; Woman Man’s Interior; New Woman Intolerable I Believe That Men and Women Oiten| m Their First Meeting That| They Are Destined for Each Other. I Think That if the Women of To-Day| “ Were More Feminine There Would) Not Be Nearly So Many Struggling} for a Living. The New Woman, With Her Scorn of | Things Domestic, Is Intolerable to} 11 Women Would Acknowledge Men as the Natural Breadwinners and Cease Competing With Them, There Would’ Be More Happy Homes. | BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. | When a woman writes that her {deal of femininity ie “A clinging though cultivated vine;” when she con-| feeses that she believes that woman “was created ex-| preasly for and {s inferior to man,” that the Bible says so; and when she avows an en- thusiastic faith in the old-fashioned adoring and sub-| adding naively| picture as the author some dear old of Kentucky, approaches and you meet the author of; entity” in the person of Mrs. Lucile! C. Houghton, a beautiful young woman tn the twenties. | be published next week, ts absolutely | its declared belief in “love at first) The man There is a love scene; The girl tells her story in a to be the clinging though cuiti- vated vine, day, “that my husband and I have been on frienaly ms all along. We av “fa a in love’ headlong. I place no n's dignity In the home has suf- hardly spok ther for months, t'ust in sudden attachments. Ideal love fered from the co fon with women; | Rehbh: he must be based on mental appreciation his word 1s no longer authority {n some Aippariand he “ents It tn’all “land positive congeniality, and {t takes homes—tt 1s usually the mother who al Weekes te he time to be certain of these essentials; | monishes or speaks the final wo | Batak hitaasle in tle Das a counterfelt 1s easily passed and de- only a contributor to the Income, n che| BRIA Goch invthe toner celves cleverly. But {f I have met my sole provider. de gets his breakfast in the morning | {ate T dare not quarrel with the three MORE “CLINGING WOMEN? | he goes to work without saying a word “The real reason 1 didn't tell him anything about my separation decree last night wae that I was rather afratd to. in the a I wasn't sure but he might go up I didn't want any scene children, After he had his r went out, A little later 1 went out to sce friends. While Joseph was out he learned that I had got my Aecree, but when he cathe home and turned in on his couch he didn't say anything about tt “This morning we had breakfast to- gether, but neither of us spoke. He ent out right breakfast and 1] don't know where he is. It is a h day and he will probably amuse hi self in his own way “of ¢ we can't go on like this much lor finishes a h wil to one of th wetting | vot fn my ¢ taken the n HIS CALM, UNUSUAL, MAY BE OMINOUS, “He hasn't always dced, on man ealm to the ex the throat and shaking half the Ife out of me, r ts Joseph's * ogether chara this was tton.”” Mrs. Gordon, who sa on the sunny side of fifty, went on to comely plain that religious differences were at the bottom of Their first quarrel came after of the first of the six childr ‘ow these differences were Mra, Gordon didn't say, but she that, as the children came al apid succession thelr quarrels ed mult! D _—— DOCTOR’S AUTO HITS A CHILD. Physivian Picka Up Boy a rics Him Home, a Care While playing in the atreet in front of | his home to-day Jacob Rosenbauin, seven years old, of No. 7% East One iundred and Nineteenth stret, was nocked down by an automobile owned and operated by Dr. Frederick Ham- mond of No. 143 West One Hundred and y-second street » doctor stopped the car, Jumped picked up the boy, took him into house and attended to the child's classic goddesses because the spot was ordinary. I feel the fascination of the mysterious methods of Providence in a and belleve firmly tha: awn together by inev- two peop {table ne: LOVE MUST COME TO ALL WOMEN IS HER CREED. women the thing that has to be. “ belle’ she added, yesterda: women often know from thetr first meeting that they are destined for ench other, 1 and protect the home, “T think that if the women of to- Gay were more feminine there would not be nearly so many under the necessity of strsxgling for @ Uving and comp-ting with man tn | nis own fleld, There is a man for every woman, vay, and wh should n y prefer th reater bh ried fev" or every woman, n woman she wants THE r to suppo n ity-five or thirty a old before man she can | You t her to sit back snd ned father support her | pects a urely don't exp et an overburt to that age.” HAPPIER MARRIED THAN EARN- ING HER OWN LIVING, “Why not?” Mra. Houghton answered. It should be the father's pleasure, as tt} ts his duty, to do eo, Of course, I have | the greatest respect for the woman who is compelled to earn her own ‘ving and who does it without los! her feminin- | ity; but I belleve many self-t -supporting | women would be much happler if they were married, and many more of them would be married if they were moro | feminine. In my book one of the ohar- | | acters remarks; ‘The Amerioan girl {s a0 | naturally attractive and at the sam time content with 80 Uttle real cult! | tion; but there {8 also a minority whoso | thirst for intellect has robbed them of all feminine charm and desire to bo} womanly.” “E belleve @ woman will be « more interesting companion if she berg! out things for herself, but new woman, with her scorn of tainge domestic, ie intolerable to me—the woman who isn’t content “Situation Wanted” Ads. cost but from ‘12- words siie8 uarter"” wp io either os haw Beware of Idlers It stands to reason that the! workers who had 20,395 “Sit- uation Wanted” Ads. printed in The World last month 933 more than in September, | 1910--were ANXIOUS TO WORK. Isn't That the Kind of | Helpers You Need? nelieve that man was created to! | rifice their talents, thetr | advoc | Houghton answered. MEAN HAPPIER HOMES. . “The calling of one's father ‘Dad’ 1 annot endure, for instance, “If women clung to the feminine more, if they were content with woman's work, acknowledging men as the natural breadwinners and ing to compete with them, ‘would be more and happier but at all times ig to admit man's supertority v the succeeding years, every of which brings new and wonderful 8 and inventions, I he greater minds, en this—to be able to apprectate great things men have done, the es and comforts Inventions have | us, the relief medical sctence | a diate tn thetr sphere, any girls to ave any appreciation of the hings men have done? MODERN GIRL FOOLISH, BUT) MOTHER IS TO BLAME. “There is @ type very prevalent | ir New York, that knows nothing, that does not want to learn an; thing, that paints its face even a: this poor little girl is not to blame. Bhe is the victim of the modern mother, who has not trained her in Feverence for her own femininity, The tomboy, the hoyden who is Just as much like her brothers as Possible, does not develop into the charming woman, “Girls should be taught from the vers beginning to ft themselves for woman hood and posathle motherhood." “And you really believe in the tial inferlority of woman to ma repeated, wonderingly, for T was ati! unused to the vision of a young wom. who looks so much like the Shulamit that Solomon would write a new son {f he could see her, yet whose attitud toward her ex suggests that of D: Parkhurst or Edward W. Bok “Belteve in tt? I know it," Mrs Houghton replied. I know fifts extraordinary men to one extraordine-) woman." “Perhaps, but how many women sac dividuallty, t There ars the {deals you mute, Inglorious 6. tran ae housekeepers and cooks.” into infants’ nurses ‘I don't agree with you,” Mrs "Whatever powe: Tf ae \pacrificos her personal ambitions ebir @ woman haa ia felt somewhere, | may yet realize them in her chil And this—to Mrs. Houghton at seemed the final word —_ THINKS SON WAS KIDNAPPED, Mre. Annie Becker of No. 519 Bas Ono Hundred and Sixty-sixth street, Bronx, informed Ieut. Curtin of + Morrisania street e) that she suspects Louls, was kidnap Italians or Gypsies v five marriage was shattered to-day when| =3 tee ® Mrs. Rosina Marino applied to the Su-! Preme Court to have the marital knot Not Palsy or Cancer, but Sea- of her seventeen-year-old son Ml we! be MEE Sickness, Daughter-in- The bride, Gerarda Marino, . s older than her husband they saw playin other musical instr her home yest The Mendelssohn elebrated its the Hotel Aste’ Kit, were @ banquet, speeoies Shannon's ‘Tw | pana and dan eons were present. Reg Hix hundred » ~ ¢ ‘onl OT G ) | SON LOST, SEES SECOND DIE. % hee. HENRY HOUGHTON — FLOPING BOY OF 17 lye -old son Jol wh lis Wie tam oft \sive her no inf ton. pale ing noticed a crowd | the ace ident ‘and swooned it won he Schoolmates’ Romance Shat- ewes Naser erate n to the Bb n District Hospital, Where tn the presence of his mother he ted less than two hours later. > - Money for Aged Clersymen, PSIMBLD, Mass, Oct t in the erson, tered by Action for Annul- LA REPRE LAT LIVERPOOL ment After a Month, A achootboy and schoolgirl! romance which resulted in an elopement and Law Says. sald to be pretty. SS ‘Hof These Beant A n published : sl | to-day, stated t toll jreatierde atChairs ; re a wa AoDaysireeirial So, after a few days, the t and | *e ted to have sald at Mr. Ro bridegroom parted, Mrs. M ul |efeller was suff from palsy. O ted Lawyer John 1 9, 0 1th irks passing: be Broadway, and had Court apr Mr. Rock 4 phyetctan t ner legal guar er son, THE SUT) wag an nt her tasted. Willlam G sons of Mr Adar tin AN ordir ouple me si lthe Aine ay 1 were near ne! Bay Pond, County from which Ino spent mt |potnt they ar and telephonte communt oy | Broadway | 1 am quite sure that reports con ald Mra, Willlam G. her parents a fo “tew doors a FINDS WIFE | A SUICIDE. oA hat John When nt K ecause of t rt of hh at the Hera e unger brot k confirm " nish tra not 4 Jowntown ¢ of treet this wit tandard O} s retu Yarrie, ¢ ‘ Cleveland ‘The dead woman, who wa t lacewene 4 the rice for complete 7 ears old, left n to exp William F are quite capable et ol six chairs, pay- 19:7 ulelde, 1 the ause at «Ww “ nen: " ble 50¢ a week vena cout hin ; oly to Ye bees” Tempire Furniture M/g.Co, 56-58 vi. 220 St., sew York City fend w ort Bedford and a dozen past ‘ make her home in en ndustrial organisation HUMAN CANNOT I WHISKE HUNTER baLTIMOn ING AK “NUITY rTER Cough Syrup Have y haby eroupy zh or | cough with Has the whooping SAMPLE, FREE, Then test the old " De. Buu's Ceara FROM SELECTED GRAIN Ae Te Cos, Ral TIFICALLY DISTILLED dpi D THOROUGHLY AGED ¢ and cough eres lug entirely #1 Loane, te fle, Del, REGULAR BOTTLE, 25 CTS, iioaretipy oman Syrup contains no mors | phineorchloruform, Lt is safest and best, | | Meriden Silver, Sterling and Plate. PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD Bulletin. DIRECT TO WEST AND SOUTH FROM HUDSON TERMINAL The exit from downtown New York to points on the Pennsylvania Railroad is made very easily and comfortably by the new electric trains from the Hudson Terminal through the Hudson and Manhattan tubes direct, without change at Jersey City, to Manhattan Transfer. Crossing the platform here the passenger finds the through train for Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, Pittsburgh, and all points in’ the West and South. The clectrie trains of spacious steel cars make the run in sixteen minutes, This is a great advantage to the man who leaves his office for a trip. Hudson Terminal is in easy reach of the Wall Street centre and the trip begins when the tube train starts. The downtown station not only means a saving of time to the busy man, but it makes for his comfort. There are prompt and direct connections from Hudson ‘Terminal for all the through trains, so that passengers from New York may start from the Hudson Terminal practically at the same hour the train leaves from Penn- sylvania Station. See time tables for exact time. The two stations, the Pennsylvania Station, one block from Broadway at 32d St., and Hudson Terminal, one block from Broadway at Cortlandt and Dey or Fulton, cover the transportation facilities of the city very effectively and com- prehensively. Pennsylvania Railroad Ticket Offices at 263 and 501 Fifth Avenue (open until 10.00 P. M. daily, including Sundays and holidays); 170, 461 Broadway, 111 West 125th Street, lower Hudson Terminal Station, Stations foot of Desbrosses Street and foot of Cortlandt Street, New York; $86 Fulton Street, and Flatbush Avenue (L. I. R. R. Station), Brooklyn. Telephone “7900 Madison Square.” Meriden Silver Has Intrinsic Worth Friendship can find no more fitting expres- sion than through a remembrance in Meriden Silver, exquisitely wrought, which becomes a perpetual reminder of the giver’s generosity. Displayed in this greatest of silver stores are countless needful and ornamental articles in Also Sil- WH ver Deposit Ware and rich Cut Glass, in new H and exclusive designs,of ourown manufacture, Silversmiths Gnternational Silver Co., Suecese > | 49-51 West 34th Street, New York and 68-70 West 35th Street BE) DrBulls r ee tee tee LA GRECQUE CORSET Stylish, Smooth-Fitting— a joy as long as it lasts Outwears two or three ordinary corsets $3.50 to $25 00 4 VAN ORDEN CORSET CO. x 45 West 34th > treet (Upstairs Toke E.evater) % & Bea HR ROH CACHE {OTE HIE AION AOR, 6 ag Makes Your Tea, Coffee and Cocna Really Delicious Borden's Eagle Brand !Goncensed Milk fhe Best Teapot Results Given by TetL SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS, ce OO CY

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