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y é . SNS ANOTHER WED EARLY SAYS ONE DOCTOR; NO, Dr. Bous’s Advice to Marry Young ‘All Wrong, Asserts Dr. Eugenia Hancock. GIRL AT 25, MAN AT 30. Women of Mature Age Said to Be Mothers of World’s Greatest Men. Marguerite Mooers Marshall. That the early marriage secures the freatest happiness for husband and wife, @e well as a superior quality of chil- he contention of Dr. Wiliam of the Massachusetts General Dr, Boos is setting himecit st the modern tendency in » but that does not disturd “Tt ts, but hadn't ought to be,” seems the trenchant if ungrammatical summing up of his att!- tude, But here are his own worde: “Our Heas on the subject of the mar- tlageable’age and the requirements for the union are ab, wrong. The average self-made American father is only too ‘apt to tell his son to put all ideas of marriage out of his head until he is en- tirely able by his own efforts to sup- port a wife and children. Instead of that, he should do all in his power to emoourage the boy to marry young. If he thinks the boy hae chosen wisely, he should offer to help him establish a home and defray the expenses. “Under the conditions of to-day few yeung men can make it possible en- tirely ‘by their own efforts to found a home before they are thirty years old. But the marriages that usually end in divorce are contracted by persons more than thirty years of age. On the other hand, the marriages of pereons under twenty-five are apt to be the bert from every standpoint.” OR. HANCOCK FAVORS A MORE ADVANCED AGE. However, doctors may disagree, and Dr, Eugenia Hanoock of No, 1% East Thrty-fourth street certainly doesn't agree with Dr. Boos, “A girl ought net to marry be fore she is twenty-five,” Dr. Zan- eck told me yesterday. “And since Ber husband should be four or five Years her senior, the marriageabdic age for the man is brought up to about thirty, The best time in a ‘wom27's Mle for bearing children fe the decade between twenty-five ana tk:-ty-Bve, $There is one legitimate 2rgument in favor of the carly marriage,” contin- ued the doctor, “and there is another angwer for that. It 1s claimed that young men who postpone ¢! often plunge Into diestpatio larly in a large city. Their health ts in- jured, and when they do eventually marry their children are likely to be less strong. But that objection to de- ferring the marriage may be easily met by @ course in personal hygiene, begin. ning In boyhood. “On the other hand, there are 90 many reasons against marrying young that I hardly know where to begin. Perhaps I'd better taxe the physt standpoint first, and speak of the dis- agtrous physical effects of the early marriage. QUESTION OF COMPLETE MEN- TAL DEVELOPMENT. “No young woman has any rfght to become a mother, no young man to! become a father, until each has at- tained absolutely complete physical and mental development. And in the great | majority of cases this maturity ‘s not) complete in either man or woman be- fore the age of twenty-five. “Ae @ physician, I have seen innumer- able cases of young-old women of thirty who are broken down invalids teeause they married too young. In a recent series of magazine articles it was shown that our respected Colontal fathers married, Iterally, early and often, They had to do one if they did the other, for the girl-wife of seven: | teen was generally dead ‘before her| thirtieth year. And the big percenta; of deaths among the small children the Colonial families seems to show that the offspring of immature moth- ere are lacking in strength and const | tutional resistance to disease, “The mothers of most of the world's | greatest men were of a mature age at) the birth of thelr distin- en, Tt has often been | It ‘ mean that ma should be de- ferred till Inte maturity, but Ido thik children should be born tn the vigor- ous prime of t arents’ youth, not in Its early stage FATHER SHOULD BE PREPARED TO CARE FOR OFFSPRING. “and (hen there {s the economic side I suggested. | Hancock, “and the health In a healthful environme this possible, the husband and father should be well established in the busi- ness or profession he has chosen, or at least should be ear ® comfortable salary. Then he ehildren frewh air, pure milk, m clothing and the other actual necessitivs of healthy without fe, And-he can do it ‘ing himself out by over- work and worry, or subjecting the wife and mother to a similar strain, “Phe gir! also has a certain amount of work to do before assuming the @uties of wifshood and motherhood, fhe will not, like the man, be concerned with attaining a certain position in the But before marrying business world. Bh We @ course in nursing and in child| | marriage ‘hystene. She ought to understand adout marketing and the keeping of accounts. She ought to know how to sew and mend. In a word, she ought to be pre- Dared for the job that's ahead of her. “And most of these things have to be learned outside her regular school train- ing, which ts apt to fill up her time until she is in the late teens. From then until twenty-five ts none too short @ period for the home training.” “But Dr, Boos cleatms that the mar- tlages that do not take pince early are t to end in divorce. Do you It's simply the moment when the weary husband and wife stand back and look at each other and murmur helplessly, ‘Why did I ever do it” Neither one would be the mature choice of the other. ° “IT can't think of a worse propogal than that the young man should marry and be supported by hia father,” con- cluded Dr, Hancock. “Such an ar. rangement would be almost sure to kill the yBung husband’ ence and make pa: ites of him and his wife. Also it wi be a bid for un. limited interference from the in-la and that is always dleastro Here’s the BEER! PALE RIPE RHEINGOL All brewers make individual and special claims, such as “finest barley malt;” “imported Pilsener hops;” “pure yeast;” “pure water;” “thorough pasteuriza- Rheingold Beer actually comprises all these. We claim, therefore, that no beer can be any better than Rheingold. $1 a case, 24 bottles, in Greater It is brewed by tion;” “aging.” New York. TRUS BOOMERS CROW OVER TAFT'S LOSSIN PRIMARIES | Declare Result in North Da- | | kota Shows the President Cannot Win. Far from being cast down over the | swamping of Col. Roosevelt in the North ;,| Dakota primaries, the Roossvelt boom- era in the Metropolitan Tower declared to~lay the result simply proves their contention that the Colonel is the strong: eat candidate and the people want him. Charles Duell, the Roosevelt manager, made this statement: “La Follette cannot be nominated and he knows it. He had been working for @ long time in North Dakota. His suc+ cess in the primaries does not surprive natural tndepend- | ug, “The significant feature of the hap- pening in North Daxota is the fact that President Taft is nowhere in the run- ning. He polled only 5 per cent. of the total vote, “It matters not that the Republican voters 1 thelr allegiance between ever held. MENT € WHER “Norrt Dekota is a typical N State. It is the barometer of sentiment {in Washington, Idaho, Oregon, South Dakota, California, Nebraska, Colorado and other States, Yesterday's primary confirms our contention that Taft can- of the Mississipp! River whtle Roosevelt can sweep every State.” State Chairman Barnes and County Chairman Koenig did not discuss the | North Dakota primaries beyond saying the result was not conclusive. ‘They | Pointed to the fact that the Democratic | voters did not vote in their own prim- aries at all, but swarmed to the Re- Publican primaries and voted for | Roosevelt and La Follette with the ob- | Ject of widening the split in the Repub- Nean party. | Both Barnes and Koenig waxed sar- | castic in speaking of Col, Roosevelt's | statement on the preferential primary | idea. They referred the Colonel to | Charles F. Murphy for rellef in this State. “As chairman of the State organiza- Col | Roosevelt. The fact t s. was a caller at Roosevelt, this: The Tart Ad ration has veen |Peadquariers to-day, He brought with jalmost unanimo repudiaied in the | him tidings of a poll he took on the) first State-wide preferential primery |tfain comlag from the Pacific coast to CALLS IT BAROMETER OF SENTI- | |tton, thin tty In the course of his journey he ex-| tracted from every pussenger and train man @ preference for President. The sald Mr. Barnes, “1 disclaim] the party responsibilities for the shortcomings of] drew" « & Democratic Legislature and a Demo. Mr. Herrm has for sever cratic Governor heon a apecialist in municipal g P. Sweet, a hotel man from| ment, He is Presitent of the N Bareball Comm! nati lon and of the ‘ational League Cl | Poll resulted this way: Taft, forty: La not carry the Republican territory west Waseh CINGL mi: ren vant S. 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