The evening world. Newspaper, October 11, 1912, Page 28

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met age 28 Divorce Prevention The Object of Latest Society Run by Women| “A Committee Might, Serve Quarrelsome Married Folk the Rail-| road Sign ‘Stop! Look!! Listen!!!’"’ Says Mrs. Arthur A. Brooks, Who Is Interested in the| Family Hearth. THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1912, dames McCreary & Co. 23rd Street 34th Street Avpual Week of Sales 55 Years of Growth in Merchandising | SEASONABLE MERCHANDISE OF STANDARD,QUALITY || AT LARGE CONCESSIONS FROM REGULAR PRICES. Discovery Day Some of the exceptional merchandise offerings which will mark the day. Golden Specials for Women $30 Tailored Suits for $18.75 Their maker never tailors anything less than $80 News Oddities Fishermen's selnes off Patchogue were carried to mea by thousands of en- | trapped bluefish, A Huntington (Ll. 1) florist, Archibald M. Funnell, ays his tranaplanted yellow chrysanthemums made themselves #ick by inhaling more ozoneous Lone | Island air than they could digest, Not that tt t# germane, but if you want to know snakes killed 24,264 people \Jn India last year On her wedding day Mise Fvelyn Baxter Nason, @ Philadelphia eoctety gtrl, [announced that hell was only @ masterpiece of mythology. Premature, per- haps. —— % Crackerjack baseball players, declares Dr. Martin Bruns of Rat Me timore, are assisted by a set of refer actions art up in the lumbar region of the spinal column by previous baseball experience, and 80 possess an auriliary baschail brain which i missing in the ordinary man. ut in @ bill for $165, Mayor James exhumed and examined to see what Becauar a Camden (N, J) under | Breary will have the body of Ellen Bre Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Who was the first man to call the woman's club an enemy to the home? Lat the base caltiff come forth and eat hia words in the presence of the City; Federation! For Mrs. Mildred Manly Easton, president of the Life as a Fi Art Club, ts responsible for the idea! of @ real Home Guard, a Committee for M Easton's plan is most ent received throughout clubdom, According to this eminently laudable scheme, & committee of truly sympa- thetic and refined women will wait upon any weak sister who has been ween .9 purchase a copy of the song, on the Koad to Reno.” firmly the guardians of the hearth will set before this erring wife the pains and perils facing her, She will that Jawyers are not philanthropis and that alimony deferred maketh the heart sick. Coercion will form no part of the committee's tactics, but moral suasion will be freely used, and in peculiarly recalcitrant cases resource will be hud to the methods of mental heallng—or perhaps to the lady's husband. Jt ts understood that the committee's motio Gently but “rm | I think a prevention committee would do well to emphasize to both parents that separation from little beings beloved by both, whatever thelr desire to be rid of each other, A child {s compromise persont- fed “In a phrase, 1 @hould say that a Committee the Prevention of Di- vorce might serve quarrelsome married folk an the big figna at the railroad crossings serve wayfarera. ‘The com- mittee and tho aign exist to prevent audden catastrophe, and the message states unequivocally, “The Home MUST | Of each, fe the game, ‘Stop! Look!! Be Preserved!" (iit PRONOUNCE IT A_ 6PLENDID IDEA. “Wow, isn't that @ splendid ide claimed Mrs, Arthur erously, Mrs. of the Gotham C| springing new projects. find perl e great mind always welcomes greatness in others! “Of course,” ahe added, “the mem- bers of such @ commitioe would have to be ever so tactful, and experienced, too, I should think.” “You mean that they should be divor- coos?” 1 suggested. “They'd know most about their sub- fect, wouldn't they?’ mused Mre. Brooke. “Like the women who have been married three times and then lec- ture on the carnal deggadation of the dond—they’ve seen folly of it. 1 really don't see how woman who's never had any trouble with her husband can properly advise the wife whore spouse mops up the foor with her. It would be as !f the daughter of « mill- fonaire should attempt to teach a girl earning % a week how to keep out of ; debt. “The woman who has taken such eldents too seriously ts not often given the vpportuntty to put back the hands of the clock. Occasionally one hears of the remarriage to each other of per- fons who have once before becn man apd wife, But such @ turn of events is rare indeed, Now, surely the woman Who realizes that she has rid herself teo quickly of a husband whom she cannot win back will be giad to do anything In her power to keep another oman from making # similar mis- regretful women of my ac- the women who can't et divorces, not those who have got them," I objected. MANY NOT HAPPY TILL THEY GET IT. “Ot course there are women much ppler after their divorces than they REBELS SLAUGHTER A SMALL FEDERAL FORCE IN MEXICO 1,800 Attack 150, Hang Com- mander, Cut Off Ears of a Score. LAREDO, Tex,, Oct. 11.—Rebels num. Campos, & force of 10 Federals near tween Jiminez and Torreon, to advices received here t sald to are four 2, In com- 0 rebele hanged his body to a telegraph pole, Eighteen Federals were captured and thetr cars cut off. ‘The Federal flag bearer was offered his Liberty if he would surrender the flag, which he kept after he was captured, He refused and was shot. The Fede were marching on the public road In a wooded section, accord- ing to the report, when the rebels sud- denly appeared on both sides and in front of them. ‘The battle did not last long as the rebel force was overwhelm- ing. The Federals are reported to have in- flicted severe loss upon the rebels, but the number of the latter killed ts not known. > GOSPEL BY AUTOMOBILE. CLEVELAND, Oct. 11.~"If the people wih come to church we must tak: the church to them.” This doctrine for Eptscopalians war preached to-day by a number of speak ers at che Council of the Fifth Mission- ary Department of the Episcopal Chureh, They told how they had held services from automobiles in rural dis triets, in dance halls gunmen resort and in lite rooms © coal mining ever were before,” admitted Mrs.| districts of Southern ‘Minols, Arch: Vrooks. "I must be fair-minded, even! Geacon Joseph H. Dodshon” of the if 1 am praising @ divorce prevention | Southern Diocese of Ohio, told of his committee, Why, knew @ young woman married to @ rich man, a banker, who simply loaded her down with every- thing. But among all his gifts he wouldn't include his own society, Ae she said, he would ‘eat and run,’ leav- ing her alone to study the wall paper and wait for something to happen, “She told him s! see him oftener or not business and couldn ed to change his ways, 80 Kot a divorce | for neglect, and 1 must © y she had & case If ever any one did, Later she married @ young architect, without much money but devotedly in love with her, and @he's been happy as a queen | ever since. re WAS @ case where all the world viniai| is determined to Sepa: from her husband, and has equi- rounds for doing so, no rane, ed, modern person wants to stop A prevention committee | would get in its good work among the! foolishly dissatisiied Wives whose hus- bands are more sinned against than sinning.” “But how could the commiitee know whether iis interference was | “AE @ woman deserves @ divorce she | My) to be able to answer jeations im the efirmative: ad tried to secure your busbend's material comfort? ‘Mave you attempted mental com- wedesbip with hin? Do you know Row to spend his money? Are you Ruling your share in "Of course, when there another set of complic doubt if one can tay ¢ ms to cover tie ; husband and A mother. that a divorce should never Re perantiea under these ofpgumatances. aren, automobile work. Don't get bald HAMPOO jarly with | Resinol Soap. Its soothing, | healing, sntiavosio baisains step the var folel nd es, loss of hair by Tabla fect scalp hi | cases of hair scalp troubion Resinol Soap | Ointment rubbed hly | into the scalp at night. Sham- | poo next morning. Trial free: Besinol Boap (26c) and Reel nol Ointment (600) are ree cromended for all corte of skin and scalp 2 cody wee fe Ont BA. Reset Chamten! ! “ + | bought it. the undertaker did. ® third husband. BUill, there's momething uncomforta’ certain lifeboat. “Before I die,” atreet, “I want to feel for once in Please kiss me.” Her request granted, al ‘Thin tm getting to be @ bad cou What's in @ name? Mrs. Marte Lips, fifty-one years old, of Jamatea, who has twice been divorced, in trying to upset the decree that prevents her kissing ble in the 1dea of that Tokio steamship company which issues with every passage ticket a coupon for a seat in a anid Miss Ada Welch of St Loula to a stranger on the my life the touch of human kindness, he drank poison and died instantly. ry for royalties, A Newport bull put Prince Gennaro Caracciolo to flight over a fence yesterday. According to an advertisement, @ Washington dyer and cleaner has reno- vated 1,500 pairs of gloves for Mra. Al foe Longworth at five cents a patr. ANSWER TO CORRESPONDENT.—No, the new preparafion of that Call- fornia chemist to keep roostera from after the world's series or election day. crowing will be of no service to you Five times @ white bulldog has prevented deputy sheriffs from #erving habeas corpus papers in @ domestio suit on Clarke Whitlock of Houston, Tex, A novel plea ts advn cused at White Plains made her a kleptom: need by Mise Helen Louise Watson, « trained nuree, ac- grand larceny, , and that she steals only when she is tired. She says long hours of watching have HE MAY NOW sit IN SEAT OF SHAKESPEARE. Mr. Aldrich Wins Possession of a Chair Reputed to Have Belonged to the Great Poet. An old armchatr, sald to have once belonged to William Shakesp: the chief exhibit tn Justice part of the City Court yesterday in a @ult brought by Walter Aldrich of No, 180 Murray treet, Flushing, to recover eoutore of the Bouton, who wi dealer in antiques, Aldrioh alleged that he bought the chair on Aug. 5, for $ but did not desire it Last Febru defendants to deliver the chair to him, but they refused. He says It has in- creased in value by $1,200 sinoe Conder, as the only fendant living, offered in court to si render the chair to Mr, Aldrich, and Justice Green dismiased the complaint, EMBEZZLER OF $17,000 IE SET FREE BY GOV. DIX. Andrew W. Smith, who was sentenced to nine ‘years and six months’ imprison- ment for embezzlement in January, 1909, recelved @ commutation of sente ¢ yes- terday from Gov. Dix. Smith, who was convicted of stealing $17,000 while em- ployed by the Warner Chemical Com- pany of No. 141 Broadway, will be re- leased on Oct. %, after serving three Years and elght months, After his conviction friends made ap- plication to the Governor to commute his sentence. Their efforts were reward- ed yesterday, the Warner concern mak- ibg no protest, “‘McCreery Silks” Famous over half a Century. 20,000 yards of Plain and Rovelt iy 4 Silks and Satins. - value 1.00 to 3.00, 00 a yd. Hats and Feathers Black Velvet Untrimmed Hats in_a variety of shapes. Special, 2.25 and 2.95 Fancy Ostrich Novelties.......Special, 2.75 Black and White Feathers, French curl. 16 in.. .value 3.00 to 5.50..1.95, 2.45, 3.25 18 “.. “ 6.50 “ 10.75..4.50, 5.25, 6.95 Suits and Coats For Misses and Small Women Velveteen Suits, new oe coat, plaited skirt. value 37.50, 9.50 Attractive Suits in various_ materials and models. values 18.50, 25.00, 12.50 and 19.50 Chinchilla Coats,—bound with braid, collar and revers trimmed with cloth in contrasting colors. value 27.50, Chinchilla Coats,—full length loose model with value 18.50, 11.50 Misses’ Skirts and Bath Robes Wool Jersey Skirts with messaline ruffle. Black only. Lengths 84 to 36 in. 1.9. value 2.75 belt. brought by Laura Burt, the a recover damages from the Castle Square Opera Company, of which Henry W, wage is the controlling spirit, was re- sumed in the Supreme Court yesterday, it was announced the parties had agreed to a settlement. It was said Miss Burt would received $200, SAGE AND SULPHUR, ASSCALP TONG AND COLOR RESTORER Gives Color, Lustre to Faded and Gray Hair—Dandruff Quickly Removed. For generat! 5 ives knee aad’ tor Yast aad foale troubles, value of such a combination for keeping the hair a good even color, for curing dandruff, iteh calp and falling hair, and for promot rowth of the 4 Sulphur Almost every one knows the OLD-TIME REMEDY, An {deal preparation of this sort Silk Jersey Skirts in all the new shades and Black. Lengths 34 to 36 in. vatue 3.75, 2.75 Bath Robes,—price according to size, 2 to 16 years. Eiderdown..... Menorees 1.95 to 4.95 Blanket Flannel..................1.75 “ 7.50 Flannelette...............-00++.. 95e “ 1.45 Japanese Quilted Silk.............3.50 “ 9.75 Suits, Dresses and Coats For Juniors and Girls is Wyeth's Sage end Sulphur Heir Juniors’ Suits in various plain tailored or fancy Remedy, Febicty Sage gad Sulphur models. Sizes 14 and 16 years. are com! ed with other valuable reme- dies for scalp troubles and thin, ‘weak 12.50 and 17.50 hair that is losing its color ot coming og 7 gut. sister using. this remedy for, | Juniors’ Dresses of Serge, with sailor collar lew days you will notice the col 0] i i Si radually coming back, your Ae eee and cuffs of cloth, braid trimmed. Size 12 to 16 er, the andl will soon" be] Years. value 7.50, 5.00 gone, in less than a month's time ; 4 acd ‘i : there will be a wonderful difference in Girls’ Coats of Chinchilla, wool lined,—full your hair, Don't neglect your hair if it is full suits. Made of beautiful worsteds that go into ending ff $30 and $35 suits and which promise never ending durability; or of the better kinds of diagonal cheviot, of black and white stripes; in all the good and new and scarce colors, and of course, plenty of black and navy blue; in every way suits of fine quality, in all sizes. Linings are of rich silk; collars just so; shoulders of the most enviable kind. is perfect. They fit without a wrinkle. We do not know of any better $30 suits anywhere. And these are $18.75. Petticoats $1.95 for $3.75 silk petti- coats—brocades, plaids, messa- lines, some with wool jersey top. 78c for $1 and $1.50 black Heatherbloom skirts with the label on. Subway floor, Old Building. Golden Specials for Young Women $16.50 Tailored Suits, $10 Black and blue diagonal cheviot, man-tailored; trimmed with little crochet ornaments in the back. Flannel interlined and lined with guaranteed satin. Only 100 at this price. Sizes 14 to 18 years. Subway foor, Old Building. Tailored Suits and Liberty Satin Dresses Tailored suits of Scotch tweed, plain or with hunting jacket, twill serge in blue. Flannel interlined and lined with guaranteed satin or fancy silk. Sizes 14, 16 and 18 years. Regularly $20 to $25, for $14.50. Second floor, Old Building Prettiest Liberty satin dresses, with shoulder yoke effect, white and satin vest, net chemisette, long sleeves. Sizes 14 to 18 years. Black, taupe, navy, gray, pale blue and pink. Regularly $11.50, for $7.75. No duplicates after this lot is sold. Subway floor Old Building Waists Charmeuse, satin and chiffon, some in white, many new styles, all fresh, $2.75, $3, $3.50 and $3.85, worth $5 and $6. Sizes 14 to 18 years. Golden Specials for for Third floor, Old Building. Men 300 Black Derby Hats at $2 made to sell at $3.50, $4, $5 and $6 These came from a hat maker whose name is known trom\| coast to coast. The maker, who made hats for Abraham ' Lincoln, did not put his label in these, but if they have any Every bit of detail work Second floor, Old Building. Hair Ornaments 25c, 50c and $1 for 50c to $2.25 pearl, black and other fancy hair ornaments—all new. No duplicates after this lot. Main aisle, Old Building a Hair Tonic o Years age, the only way to get of kind was to make of dandruff, losin ing out. Get a its color or com- ifty cent bottle of if the remedy d. dames McCreery & Co, 23rd Street ANNUAL MEN’S SALE 55 Years in Merchandising REMARKABLE VALUES ON SATURDAY, 34th Street of Growth length model buttoned to neck. Size 6 to 14 aene value 12.00, 50 it in the home, Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur from your| Girls’ Wool School Dresses,—one-piece model, nt'wil Yo forvon ‘Ai deja| trimmed with fancy braid, patent leather belt. ee that the Size 6 to 14 years. value 6.75, 4.50 Infants’ Coats and Hats Corduroy Coats in Navy Blue and Brown,— various models, Size 2 to 5 years. value 6.50. 4.745 Hats in a large variety of sivige Retna atas tna value 2.75 to 4.50, 1.95 and 2.95 Baby Coaches Pullman Sleepers, with roll hood and body, | heavy rubber tired wheels, upholstered in corduroy, | Fine Reed, white enamelled vatue 30.00.20.00 | Oak or Natural finish value 25.00.15,00 Dolls and Toys Royal Dolls,— satin finish, Angora sewed wig, moving eyes with eyelashes, shoes and stockings, | 22 inches high. value 4.25, <1 flaws we have riot found them. quality bands and trimmings. 288 English Tweed Caps at $1.50 Each Made up for us in London from the ends of materials Being ends there are only a few caps of a pattern—but every one is a beauty in material that always go into our $3 caps. and workmanship. A genuine imported tweed cap for $1.50. Sizes 65¢ to 7s. Burlington Arcade floor, New Building. All new 1912-13 blocks, first Men’s $2.00 Canes for $1.00 London doctor advises cane carrying toprevent nervousness. Partridge wood, penang, Cornell, Whangec, sterling silver or pleated gold trimmed. Burlington Arcade floor, New Building. Men’s and Women’s Hosiery @& Underwear g/ at less than usual prices Men's At 50c garment—Medium weight ecru ribbed cotton, Medium weight ino; heavy weight fleece- id drawers. rment—Medium or heavy weig! shirts ana drawers, strictly first quality; heavy weight natural gray ribbed merino shirts and drewers, “‘seconds.”” At $1.25 suit—'‘‘seconds” of $2 quality—Medium or heavy weight Women's At 18¢ a pair—"'seconds” of 28c and 35¢ quality—-1,440 pairs of fast black seamless liste thread, cotton and mercerized stockings; narrowed ankles, reiniorced hecls and toes, At 50c a suit—"seconds” of 61 and $1.25 quality--Women's medium weight white ribbed cotton combina- tion suits; low neck, sleeveless, knee length, regular and extra sizes; high Raincoats, English Top Coats, Mackinaw ats and Automobile Coats, Caps, Hats, Gloves and Gauntlets, Furnishings, Underwear, Half Hose, Shoes, Umbrellas and Travelling Bags. Boys’, Students’ and Young Men's Suits. Plush “Teddy” Bears—all white, best quality. | 22 inches long. value 1.00, 75c Parchesi Games, most popular one made. .50c value 69c Magic Lanterns, with one dozen extra slides, fine quality. value 1.50, 1.0 Winslow or Union Hardware Ball Bearing Roller Skates value 1.50, pair ecru ribbed cotton combination suits, strictly first quality; heavy weight blue-gray ribbed merino combination suits, neck, short sleeves, ankle length; regular sizes only, Subway floor, Old Building, Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co, Broadway, Fourth Avenue, Eighth to Tenth Streea 1 {

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