The evening world. Newspaper, October 22, 1912, Page 22

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@©00G THE EVENING WORLD, 1©O®OGOOOHO9OODOOOOQOOOQOOOOOOL ™ home .”. Copyright, 191%, by the Press Publishing Co. (Tne New York World.) “This Untiring Human Mechanism Who Works His Fingers to the Bone That His Rib,” the Same Being His Wife, “May Be Well Clothed, Well Fed, Who Initiates Her Into the Don’t Worry Club, Is the One Who Makes the Happy Home,” Writes “‘F. A. wee How a Man Can Marry One of Those Painted Girls, Who Wear Skin- Tight Clothes and Have Morbidly Discussed Sex Problems From the Age of Eleven, Is a Mystery His Family Comforts | pike, Linoleumville, has returned from TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1912." EIGHTH ARTICLE OF A SERIES | 30O00OOQOOOOOOOOOG Problem Rests With the Husband, Who Labors to Give ry | Effects of the Electric Current in Pub- jeale at her home on South avenue, | ters, | guest of friends in Manhattan. Miss Margaret Blair of Cornell ave- nue, West New Brighton, sailed on Sat- | urday for England, where she will visit relatives. road, New Springville, will have a fair] CAMDEN, N, J, Oct, 2.—Frederick In the lecture room of the church to-lteaman, seventy years, of No. 49 Ms orth Forty-second street, started on eran, a clerk in the Migh=| oo yay mn to finish: painting @ way Department of Richinond Boroug™. | house he had bought recently. Said h spends all of his leisure time farming j"wnen 1 get through thia work in his garden at Hart Park, West New| work again on Sunday.” An Brighton. He has made a specialty of after that he fell from the root. pumpkins this season, and has grown ed yesterday tn the Cooper Hos- Formerly A. T. one which weighs 129 pounds, breaking the record of big pumpkins In New| York State. ‘The largest grown pre ously weighed 124 pounds and won the prize at the last Mineola Fair, He will present it to President-elect Wood- row Wilson on Nov, 6. James Knox of the Richmond Turn- @ six-months’ visit spent with his par- ents and relatives in Ayr, Scotland, Chief Clerk Willlam Nash of the County Clerk's office is 111 in his home. on Clark avenue, Richmond, Frederick W. Huntington will deliver “hemical and Heating | lie School No. 4, Pleasant Plains, next Thursday evening. Miss Daisy Osborn will give a must- Mariners’ Harbor, this evening. The! proceeds will be for the building fund of the Summerfield Methodist Episcopal Church. ‘William J. Davidson of Fisk avenue, rleigh, Pgesitent of the Staten Island Shipbuilding Company of Port Richmond, with his wife and daugh- 0 Visiting relatives at his birth- place, Armagh, Ireland. Mrs. Wal Bedell of Princes Bay is visiting friends in Yonkers. Miss Sarah Burfleld of Clifton ts the She will be gone for @ year. jebel Leader Hurt , Oct, 22.—Antonto! sty-nine years old, grandfath- er of Mrs. Pascual Orozco jr., wife of the Mexican rebel leader, and uncle of tter, was probably fatally injured lethodist Episcopal Church, O14 stone} He's Done With Sanday Work. If you could call at our mill each morning for your H-O Oatmeal you wouldn't get it any better or cleaner than at your grocer's, The specially wrapped package keeps the flavor in and the dust out. After sealing, every box of H-O Oatmeal is wrapped all around with paper. There is not one chink or crevice through which dust -and germs can enter. Our special packing method costs us thousands of extra dollars each year. Fresh from Paris—White | crepe de chine Houses, mace | after models from Paquin, Cal- lot, Cheruit. Really extreor- dinary at $12, $13.50, $15, $18, $22.50 and $25. ; Among them crepe de chine with pleated double frill and Robespierre collar, at $12. A similar model with embroidered Robespierre collar, $15. | A pleated model with Robes- pierre collar, $12, or another buttoning in the back with panelsofhand-embroidery, $12. Crepe de chine blouses in lin- gerie effect, with Irish or other laces, $20. | Embroidered crepe de chine | blouses with narrow pleated is a white Broadway, Fourth Avenue, Eighth to Tenth St Y alii Stewart & Co. An unus:ial gold: sp-elal— 50 ticyc'es for met—-°2) for the $26.59 grade. Made for us by the Pepe M stur- ing Company, makers cf th Columbia ard Hartford w'ce" t, in consideration g our price, makes this en un; usval opportunity «for the cyclist. 20 and 22-inch black enamel frames; United States Hart- ford tires; new departure coast- er brake; double-spring padded leather saddle; extension handlebars; best ball-bearing; leather tool bag with full tool equipment; all covered by the Wanamaker bicycle guarantee against defects in tires or frames. This is a splendid oppor- tunity to be prepared for Christmas. Se maken Only 50. struck by @ street car last night, i i -dOWN Gres: The injured man, who ts a brother of You get the benefit. frill and charming lay-down — s,orting Goods Store, Subway floor, to Me,” He Adds. Col. Pascual Orozco gr., accompanied . i collar, three-quarter sleeves, at $18. Old Building the family of the rebel leader to Los Angeles several months ago. The H:O Company. Buffalo. “HUSBAND 'S THE CEASELESS, UN® Metre renee Ray eu cae BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. TIRING HUMAN MECHANISM® FAT, This is the husband's day in court. He takes tho stand in his own de fense, and if we accept his testimony at its face value we shall have to acknowledge him for what he claims to be, the motor dynamo of happ!- neas. “‘What makes a happy home?’ Why, the husband, to be sure,” one earnest reader of The Evening World informs us. And ff you picture the author of this sweeping statement to be @ wife who has just received a new set of furs you are letting your imagination run away with you, for it's @ man who enters the Hsts in defense and glorification of his sex. And 4t's another man who writes that “all married men are martyrs.” 'e man who NIXOLA GREELEYSSMITH And te atti, anotner s “4 well-known dictum that “All who marry for love either beat their wives or rum away from them.” . As to the last statement, J can say only that a man who married, frankly for her money, a widow many years older than himself can hardly be accepted as’ an euthority on the failure of marriage for love. And as love or some one of it# poor reletions 18 Before commenting on this tanty the basis of the great majority of mar-|recognition of the merit or at least the riages in the United States, to prove/general utility of husbands, it seems the truth of the Disraeli epigram there|proper to present the communtcation of should be no married woman among Us another man who looks upon his mar- ‘unbeaten or undeserted, However, the|ried brother not as the motor power of plea. for husbands {s waiting to be| happiness but as a martyr to frivolous heard, Here it Js: her Lasphp ingest Aygo dela eyn- A HY Te Ne eye eM ee oe Ron, TALE : What makes @ . PS wk Bs. sli tha, waauahe ve Dear Madam: Please allow me to be sure, and who could doubt nis | submit my “tale of woe” I am word for it? Is it not he who looks thirty years of age, happy, healthy, after the all important eolution of | @94 through hard work financially Life's greatest. problem, namely, well fixed. I have travelled exton- fwinging home the bacon? aivety and am naturally a student ‘untiring human mechan- | of human nature, How a man can pg ‘who work his fingers to the | marry one of those be-painted gins ‘bene 1) | OF women, who wear skintight tiutbed, well fed: who tuitiates ner | clothes and have morbidly dlacumsed fmto the “Don't Worry” Club, and ex problems from the age of eleven, who eees to it that her every whim | t# @ mystery to me. ‘The future @n4 fancy 1s appeased, who installa | mother!" What hypocrisy! ff. puny, one-inch brain the first ‘True love, in the home or any- bya ‘of common #ense and in- | ‘where elec, is @ rarity as far as our Qelligence that she ever posseaned— | present Kenoration is concerned, The for before marriage sho was indeed average married man is @ martyr, @ frivolous dame. Let the devoted I shall never marry. I've seen too fusband from whom everybody much of fe Let the martyrs get eects to snatch the high tributes ed. 3. iB due bém slacken Gown, let him work Ww, every one of us—woree luck!— three (days out of the #ix in the |knowe # martyr, or even a dosen mar- ieee Van as to tee tern? Une tyre. ‘eareieaa person leaves the window But the distribution or assign- gar, and at the first eneese love and ment of martyrdom seems fairly bappiness evaporate rat. evenly divided between the sexes. Gov. Dix care the tinen was worth ft ‘Archtiahop Iretand-ters “Oh, Promise Me” et all Catholio weddings in his Minnesota diocese, ‘Turkish Lemnos hee-teen banded to the Greek fcet, Lemnos ts not a mis- Print but en island, Buen the: Retired. Poltoeman-te not in the eame class with the Retired Workingman. Newark pastor hurle @ Bitie at a Surslar, The burglar (s running yet. Capt. Lee of the Norwestan steamer Onland ts in port with @ @ea yarn of lassoing monkeys from shipboard during @ hurricane off Yucatan. After reading the reports of the Senate Commtttes gitmpsing campaign funds Gov. Hooper of Tennessee hae declined $170 raised for his reelection by inmates of the State penitentiary, A Philadelphia negro with nine wtituhes-tn his heart will testify today against the man who stabbed &1m, About to announce their secret wedding of nine months ago, a Cincinnatt couple discovered that @ mouse had renoed thelr marriage certificate, "School of Mothercraft’ just started in New York to teach mother why the baby ortes, the young hopeful ties and the cook quits. Taft smile came off wi “Honey Pitz," sing at a Beverly rec Alice Thornton, Heltot College co-ed, was awakened by a burglar atoaling her violin, Setzing a hatpln and ¢ nly in ber pajamaa, ehe chased him across the campus, Jabbing him at every etep. Ie dropped the violin and Miss Thornton went dack to bed. Murrah for votes for women! A nugret of gold as inrge a2 4 pea was found in a Long Igland duck bought Dy « Pittsfield woman from @ local dealer. There te no confirmation of the feport that the duck was raised near Charlos F, Murphy's home at Good —ite hte nie 3 mn the President heard Mayor Fitzgerald of money is plentiful the white man's burden seems the greater. Among the poor the woman carries the heavier load. So long as the possession or scquisition of or par- tlotpetion in & fortune imposes the curse of uselessness upon woman- Xing the middie class man—speak- ing of financial classes—will need @ lot more sympathy than he gets. But, numerically, he is negligible. The poor man's wife, who conducts ® household without assistance and with Inadequate resources and who Dears and rears a large family of children, certainly executes # more Gimfoult task than that of working eight oF even ten hours a day for the money which maintains the home. That is, her task is more GiMonlt if she attends to it prop- erly, Wh she does or not & leave to the married to say. After reading the letter of the dis- Mlusioned bachelor it 1s pleasant to turn to @ definintion of the happy bh it appears to @ poeticul reader (also @ man) who writes: THE HAPPY HOME. ‘Tia as easy an emiling, and easter than ther young partners for To bulla @ eoft mest tn the turmoll of city Or eeek the quiet comfort of calm coun- try shades, There must be constmcted by love a dig window ‘Through which life looke pleasant, un- aloudy and free; of duty, Are walle of coment that will harden with years, Anh, there ts nothing easier, when one is inolined, Destroys Odors Purifies Air Use freely In sinks, tollet pools, dan cellars, garbage pails, ete, A drop of CN in cup of water makes most powerful disinfectant known, 10c All grocers, druggists and department stores The yellow package with the gable top. West Disinfecting Co. New Yor! |tan, next Thursday on the | struct an additional track across the fole ome aa | 8 ‘The sense of possession, of trust and | §, To trample to earth selfish concelt and pride That the bond of true friendship ehall stand every test That wedlock enjoins and that honor demands, Where mutual concessions and mutual amends Make home the fair kingdom of love, Not bullt on the dross of mere wealth. W. J. O'R, neisaidliniles STATEN ISLAND NOTES. St. Vincent's Hospital, West New| Brighton, will have a harvest home fea- tival Nov. 1. It will be under the aus-| pices of the Ladies’ Auxiliary, Mr. and Mrs, Frank B. KiIMan of Elm avenue, New Dorp, have returned from a delightful automobile trip to White Lake and Liberty in Sullivan County, N. ¥, There will be a hearing for the clti- zens of Staten Island, taxpayers and | others, who may be Interested therein | before the Board of Estimate and Ap- portionment in the Clty Hall, Manhat- | of the Staten Island Rapid Transit Ratl- Toad Company for permission to con- lowing Streets: Iluguenot avenu doy road near Huguenot, Seguli nue, Bayview avenue, Woodvall avenue, Sharrott avenue and’ Amboy road near Pleasant Plains, all in the Fifth Ward. Mrs. B. Frank Maupin of Annadale Is in Chicago. Before returning hope sht Will make @ trip through the Southern States. Miss Regina Bannister of Roe street, West New Brighton, is visiting relatives in Little Falls. Edgewater Circle No, 3, Companions of the Forest of America, 1s making Preparations for @ necktle and apron soclable on Nov. 2. Mra, Katherine Hand wil deliver a lecture on “Scottish Music" in Public School No, 12, Stapleton, this evening. Tho Ladies’ Aid Soctety of the Asbury Letters of a Slim - Made Woman to Her Fat Sister. ‘Tenth Letter: On the Fat Man Who Caught Up With the Procession. ° Bis:—Your fer of congratulation tn Just lke you, des now I'll be happy with him, but you t refer to him as “Fatty any more or your Betty will pout. He hai work and p! ht the procermion" tn man's ai vine, ore the soft, Roly-Poly baby- And all these wonders have jn & fow months simply by @ harmless little Marmola Presertp- hiet four times a day, You Know the wonderful rectpe I told you ofthe one that really rid me of my . Well, that eame harmless I told him about the prescription, but wald he ly would break the betti admin ib fueryinng fy he Ig an ae fe adn’ inthe" at iain Bediclne ting Ww ff he'll take the tan er found The Ww articles ade orld will be James McCreery & Co, . 23rd Street 34th Strect On Wednesday, October 23rd | WOMEN’S MUSLIN UNDERWEAR. In Both Stores. Garments of finest Nainsook, Cambric and Batiste, broideries. trimmed with various laces and em- Gowns...........95e, 1.25, 1.75 and 2.00 value 1.25 to 2.75 Skirts..........1,25, 1.75, 2.50 and 3.25 value 1.75 to 3.95 Princess Slips...95c, 1.50, 2.25 and 2.95 Combination Garments. . value 1.25 to 4.50 95c, 1 value 1.50 to 3.50 50, 2.50 ead 3.75 SILK PETTICOATS Numerous models in Messaline, Taffeta, Jersey, Changeable and Stripe Silks. prices. At moderate UMBRELLAS. In Both Stores, For Men and Women. Spitalfield Silk Umbrellas,—assorted handles of plain or carved wood. 2.95 values 5.00 and 6.00 Twilled Silk Umbrellas,—natural or mission wood handles. values 3.00 and 3.50, 1.95 :|LACES. I Both stores, Exceptional Values. Point Venise Bands in White or Ecru. 6 in. wide. 8 to 35c to 95¢ a yd. Imitation Valenciennes Edges and Insertions. 2 to 5 in. wide. 9c to 35¢ a yd. Linen Cluny Lace,—new designs in Edges and Insertions. 1 to9 in. wide. Real Irish Laces. 1 to 4 in. wide.. 7c to 85¢ a yd. 45c to 4.95 a yd. IMPORTED NOVELTIES. In Both Stores, Mirrors in various styles,—ribbon embroidered. values 3.75, 5.00, 7.00, 2.50, 3.75 and 5.00 Embroidered Boxes, Letter Racks and Port- folios. Embroidered Trays of shapes. 23rd Street value 3.75 to 5.75, ys, glass covered. value 1.50 to 8.75, Decorated Gold Baskets special values 2.50 A variety 50c to 3.60 1.50 and 1.75 34th Street and Cushions..... Embroidered all-over models with net yoke and deep cuffs, $22.50. Another hand-embroidered model, unusually conserva- tive, $13.50. Many other styles—each one in all sizes—will be presented in the Little French Shops. Third floor, O'd Bldg. At least 1500 beautiful gowns and wraps were included in this Distinguished Sale of | Fashions. Tcmerrow will be | the third day of this extraordi- nary presentation of costumes | for the social season. Second floor, Old Bldg. Last Friday the Women’s Store on the Subway floor offered remarkable evening | dresses of chiffon, satin and | other materials at $10.75. They were the daintiest our customers had ever ceen at the price and so immediate was the response that it induced us to search for another lot. We have just succeeded in finding another maker with a small lot of dresses which he disposed of for us to sell at average less than wholesale price. $15 to $20 evening gowns at $10.75. All sorts of lovely styles— the little simple affairs of crepe de chine with lace yokes for debutantes and more elab- orate models for brides and older women. We are sorry there are only 214. Subway fioor, Old Building, A sale of Oriental Jewelry + in artistic and timely color. combinations is a unique fea- ture of our jewelry store, Each of these pieces will be sold for $2. . | Their duplicate qualities are in our regular stock at from | $4 to $15. Brooches, buckles, sash pins, clasps and necklaces. | * Unique combinations of met- | als and colored stones. Clasps, brooches ard reck- laces, for example, that will harmonize exquisitely with the soft shades of taupe and gray and the amber and brown shades so fashionable this winter. Also many other jew- elry combinations, Tomorrow each piece will be $2. Main Aisle, Main floor, Old Bldg, Boys’ Dollar Blouse | 75c each. | flannel. The collar in our new models is slightly different. Hence this clean-out — a small quantity at 75c, instead Of $. Third floor, Old Building, Waists, Of blue and striped Tomorrow—100 high-grade refrigcrators—one of today’s golden specials, We are not permitted to mention the manufacturer's name because of the excep, tional low price, but it appear, on every refrigerator. $42 to $125 values for $26 to $90 $57.50, $78 and $99 refrigerators— new prices—are glass-lined with porcelain enameled shelv The $65 re.rigerators—new prices —ere vitreous enamel (porcelain) lined, all white inside end oytside and have nicke!-plated metal trim- mings. The rest ere lined with porce'sin enamel steel, All cases are kiln dried oak, fitted and Fnished vit grade varnish, solid brass hardwar the iatches are of the paren: leve catch design. heavily tin Subway floor, New Cuil seeet At the Men’s Store Golden special for men— $7,474 worth of Wanamaker Hosiery and Underwear for $4,307. The Hosiery —1,725 pairs pure silk in shot eficc:s and vertical siripes; and imported fancy lisle, shot with silk; regularly 50c and 75c, tomorrow 25¢ pair. 423 pairs French lisle thread, black or colored ground?, em- broidered or stripe $1.50, tomorrow 65¢ p e price, 36 pairs 5 682 pairs pure silk, black or colors, regularly $1, tomorrow 65¢ pair, At the same price, 82 pairs lavender and purple, regularly $1.50, . 159 pairs pure sifk, black or colors, self-clocked, All sizes in the lot, but not in each shade— regularly $2, tomorrow $1 pair, English hand-made, lack or colored grounds, shot with contrasting colors, reg- ulariy $3.75, tomorrow $2.50 pair, The Underwear—2,000 gar. ments—shirts or drawers—mering gray ribbed, or plain balbriggan, medium weight; regularly $1, to. morrow 65c each, 812 garments—shirts or drat ~ worsted, heavy wees reg@larly $2, tomorrow $1 each, Burlington Arcade floor, New Building. Men will find in the New Store for Men an offering of Sack Suits, made to meas- ure-- fabrics that go into $30 to $40 Ready-to-Wear Su. “ for $18.50 There are choose from. / Allord delivered from the da; i Your individual mo-p:, ments will be taken here the store by competert tasor each suit will be cut separate’ y and when you try it on cori. pleted, if it dees not fit, alveva- tions will be made free of charge. Your order places you under no obligation to take the suit, if it is not entirely satisfacto; as to fit. Only 1,500 orders can be taken. First come, first Broadway, cornes 6th Street, 40

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