The evening world. Newspaper, October 25, 1912, Page 28

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Wha OOG THE & POSSEOOCOOSSEHECONEDCOD00e0 t As to the Part Sentiment Should Play “in the Lives of Those Who Are Married Copyright, 192, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World). VENING WORLD, FRIDAY ocoTos Clty Clad Federation Names Her Candidate for Presidency, Polltical differences in the New York City Federation of Women’ which holds its autumn co @ay at the Hotel Astor, hi @ fusion candidal Miss Florence G cepted by both sides and indications are she will be returned next February by the unanimous vote of the assembly. Miss Guernsey is President of the Eclectic Club and is an active club- women, Mrs. John Francis Yawger withdrew. It was believed the possibie election of Mr. Yawger to the Bta' Losi ELEVENTH ARTICLE OF A SERIES [v] George W. Fishtack, to the complaint states Fishback was served with the papers at No. si Ww AGREE ON MISS GUERNSEY. |WIFE’S CHUM ASKS $42,000. ble Stocks in His Keeping. Sult was filed yestorda An 1d avenue, afternoon in the Supreme Court by Harold Reming- ton of No. 16 Broadw Violet Beach, whom in the papers, to recover Remington said the action was brought to recover the value of stocks which Fishback had in his keeping and that hi hl Saye Fishback Hae Her Valea- Formerly A. T. Stewart & Co. Broadway, Fourth avenue, Eighth to fenth strect Op millinery secrets are out! — Black EAL lace collars and cuffs, spangled eve- and Too Much T APTER MARMAGE ore reporae io natements to Lis prvi plusl Poe pa thy ‘ea ra eS aw; uc "NO NGED OF SENTIMEN’ bad ad absolutely ni with beautiful ostrich plumes. re | thin, s than cost. ei ; °S maetaliggd ‘yf Their| | SE Goss wrnour Savmig? Manag, biskdbstoc For $12. 4 $1.25 to 813.50, regularly Big, -Attention From Included are all the 83 to $20. ‘xh Husbands, They Are Too new shapes copied from A few large collar, . Sentimental, They Read Too Many Silly Novels and Love Stories. They Expect Their Husbands ¥ to Be Always Making a ‘ Fuse Over Them,” Writes “Mrs. A. D.” 23rd Street James McCreery & Co. 34th Street EXCEPTIONAL VALUES the French—small, medium and large, besides the elon- gated hats now so fashion- able. Our most artistic mil- liners have been designing them nearly all week. We think they are the most distinguished hats ever shown in our Millinery Salons at $72. and yokes of black silk hand-made Cluny lace, and white batiste collars hand em- broidered and edged with real Princess lace. Drawn black or white tissue scarfs, hand sewn, with silver, gold or jet. 83, were $13.50. ¢ Striped chiffon scarfs‘ | For Saturday, October 26th Dabo le Wh sfieeat run with gold” or _ sil- ple who understand yer, light colors. | gcd eed Wife ped the art of finding the right $2.50, were 89. lome lamma hape for the individual cus- decent theFiret Shadow Falle,” WOMEN’S COATS. im noth stores, | tomer fn attendance" "Black or white net scant Millinery Salons, Second floor, my gh tag 7 eed aad ae Long Coats of Velour and Plush....... ‘oid Buiaing Uf be kay Rd. | ser at Men Who Marry Such Girls |, Get Laughed At. | 4 BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH. in twelve years there has not been wives demand too much attention from, their husbands. “They are too sentimental, They read too many silly novels and love stories. They expect their husbands to be always making a fuss over them. After ‘Tlage love goes without saying.” I wonder {f this ts true? If a home is without visible uffection, without caresses of speech and look, isn’t it more than likely that Love will go without saying in another IXOLA GR SM sense—will take a last sad look a’ the tired business, man on the sitting room couch sleeping the sleep of sthe overfed after dinner, at the phlegmatic wife contentedly playing soil- taire, and Will put on bie Mttle het and steal away, never to return? ‘There are to be sire women whove sof the heart as soon as they have found Matures are as soft and saccharine as @/ some one tu tend the flame? fruit—human mangoes that| However, there are @ great many A married woman who says that @ quarrel in her home declares that best place of all, WE ARE COMPELLED TO LAUGH WHEN HE ACIKNQWLEDGES HIS QWTTERFLY 1S WITHOUT he wants at home, and says It is the MRS, A. values 38.00 and 45.00, Velour Coats, trimmed with values 32.50 and 35.00, values 11.50 and 16.50, Suits in various models shades and mixed fabrics. l Dresses for afternoon (OEas* MARY F. ay Heavy weight Coat: Order Church to Clear Sidewalk. D. Sidewalk reform bit St. Peter's Church Another woman reader, in comment-|in Barclay street yesterday when the ing on the letter of a man who de-| BUreau of Incumbrances sent an order SUITS, DRESSES & COATS. For Small Women and Misses Charmeuse, Crepe Meteor and Velveteen. Three-quarter length Corduroy Velvet and white corduroy. 22.50 and 28.00 values 22.50 and 29.50 Raincoats of Rubberized Materials......... 8.50 and 12.50 In Both Stores, and materials, —plain 19.50 wear, of 16.50 s of Chinchilla, linedy and strect throughout with satin,—model buttoned to neck. ee surprising hats made in our- work- rooms. 4 For $5 to 89.60. Children’s pretty school hats of broad-brimmed felt, ties, at $1. Millinery Sal First floor, Building. GOLDEN Special of 600 untrimmed hats copied from the French. $2.75, regularly $4 to $12. All just specially pur- chased from a large im- porting house—the newest and finest of American-made hats. Feathers, flowers and ribbons nearby give a thousand different suggestions for their trimming. Millinery Salons, First floor, ‘Old Building. OMEN’S WARM ULSTERS, $22.50 —yreat, soft woolen coats of tweed, striped boucle or chev- iot. Also Neckwear, 25c and 50c, usual- ly 50¢ to $3. Sample jabots, Robes- pierre linen or satin stocks, Dutch collarettes, low collars, Are wives too sentimental? Or Street and Motor Coats of Boucle Cheviot, draped with Roman striped wld anno bariae satin li satin, eRe ahaa mae 4 Lisle rag not sentimental satin lined throughout. 18.50 and 22.50 Rayularly 88 and 88,00 qualt- OWELS—S¢otch, Irish and German— at the prices of ten years ago, although every six months wholesale costs throughout the market have gone up. $1.50, $1.80, 82.16, $2.25, $2.50 and $3 dozen. Napkins—all linen, full bleached from Belfast, silver bleached from Bohemia. $1.25 dozen. Doilies — colored linen damask—pink, blue, yel- lo Subway floor, Old Building. VERYTHING for the 4 toilet—because of spe cial arrangements, we offer these fine toilet helps for less: - Saturday Opportunitiesat , 18.50 t thrive at all in the temperate | women who demand too much sugar in of marriage. “human nature's daily food, nd to it for every one of these t# there/them the wife who abhors sentiment | Offers some excellent advice. Her let- to the re sh haga Ieee removal of eroachments. the [4 stons - ‘approach tor the shuren ovens | SUITS & DRESSES. it! the building line, Priests said the clared that women get thelr ideas from thelr husbands, supplics nn analysis of the butterfly wife. She gays: WHY THE PLODDING DRAUGHT 40c hairbrushes, 25e. 2ée to 3° tooth brushes, 15¢. 15e noid brushes, 100, Three-quarter or seven- eighths length. Blues, In Both Stores, tex follows: HUSBAND'S JOKES PREVENT QUARRELS. Deer Madam—My husband and my- self have been married twelve years, and I can truthfully say we have had what could be called a quarrel, If I happen to get over anything, my husband jus she me out of it, vexed 1 keep quict. ed of @ lot of love-making Loves goes without with the mi t they read too and love siortes, ani pect the husband to be always n ing @ fuss over them, I think a men Mikes to be ‘let a and let enjoy himself in his ow: y. There is no need of a woman trying to cajole and please a husband too much, but just be natural, Take an interest in what- he fire does not grow & until you feel that ye worth Hving wit nd the one does not to have pleasure unless the would not the othe’ since no- & else 9 @ woman expected to is them? Why should mavried lo fellow the examp! can share it. My and offer an inferior article! goes out In the evening because it has eliminated competition?| with him, and then on! * Myst men and womom bank the fires please me, as he hay all ‘The United States Supreme Court is pondering whether a rotten ese ts Benstitutions. Ee acosettes are strategists, Barred from “tagging,” tacy took out peddlers’ Meenses. Through a lege! tangle a Cificagy man who has no wife ts suing for an iment of hi» marriage. are Bulgars, not burglars. y man fell into wn exoavation and * married on crutches, » visitl tration of Park at a ‘ew York for w far Amert- ‘ine when it was At, ‘Trenton igo © Mhough breaking into Turkey, t “Ey —_——— re Mrs. Woodrow Wilson told the Philadelphia Home and School League were more important than vo 4 ‘On his way to his wedding a bi lex, At the appointed } 2 tbetanu twasht iret time in thirty years, points Bee inty the future the naming of the outskirts of the city, Caught kissing his friegd’s wife and named as co-:erp in testifies they have been kissing each other for forty y they met, ‘Don's fail to to-day! This ts printed exclusively for Samuel D., um of No, 1822 Madison avenue. The Supreme Court yesterday the election officers of his ,district to reconvene to-day and let ) put bie name down apd admired as such by discriminating citizens, ‘hisslled away and the garb altered, . every | 1s mort amu: he does not the price all marriage he “deadly com clinging v he 8 rise those cute litte butterMies? Imply HORSE LAUGHS. Dear Madam—The wali of F. A. T. Can St be possible Ww that he is paying who marry Before nh pay loathed girks.”" It was @ for him, and now that he has :narried lls leat of woman- hocd (each man's wife represents hie ries, “Who installs in her + cne-inch brain the first few of common scnse and intelll- | ence she ever possesacd—for before age she was indeed a frivolous competied acknowledges to the his superior brain that hia butterfly’ ing in it but cloth colffures, &c. @ ren] woman hy would be to lay off ‘three days out of * once In a While and ehe would to the situation. < ly wife rns home to mamma when the first shadow falls. MARY F, i. Mite AS SUGGESTS INFERNO FOR DIVORCED NEW YORKER. the Ground 0, Nev., Oc! M, Coft in New York. ‘peared for him on | } tes ' was frequently stru times locked in ly, she rested lightly tod in te: t | Sara json, | thes for eal Ell Reno Judge Grants Decree to the Wife of William J. Coffey on of Cruelty, t, %.—Telling y of Riverside 1 hat her husoand, Wills Coffey, would do well to visit ving pietures of Dante's Inferno, Morin has granted her a di- n the ground of extreme ecruelt: sin the cloak and sult business A local attorney ap- telegraphia request New York, but there was no con- Mra. Coffey teatified that her refusal comply with certain requests of the nt was Invatiably followed by ause and physical cruelty, She ck and shaken her room occasion, she sald, ahe went to a theatre with friend: her husband consenting, ‘eturn, he belng In bed, he . This and subsequent ‘used her to leave hi } January and come direct to Reno, 1 her husband attended chureh his religion upon him. Tha couple New vr stifled, York, in Pl Paso, y settlement o c. 1, |" ars. Coffey has been @ conspicuous figure In colony life here. B, EI. 1e home of 118 Weat One She was bor this clty more than ninety years ai ns The family moved to Elgin County in A statue of Christopher Columbus, which was a feature} Ontario, and there In 1851 @ railroad On one thorities e consented to let enough of the steps remain to save the edifice from disfigurement. Sizes 14 and 16 years. the the | We Fill Oculist’s Prescriptions We take as much pride in the filling of the prescription of your Oculist as we do in the manufacture of the eee prescribed by our own Physi- cians, Accuracy is guaranteed— and the services of expert Opticians for the fitting and ad- iusting of the mountings are assured you, We operate four large fac- tories and can grind the most complicated lenses in a few hours. Because of the magnitude of our business, our prices are much lower than elsewhere. Harris Glasseacost $2ormore 66 East @3rd St., near Fourth Ave. Juniors’ Rainproof Co; raglan sleeves. Girls’ Dres patent leather belt. Size 6 The 17 years. to 19 years. Young Men’s Suits. 5S Mra.! 97 West 34th t. Sth & Oth Aves, Dri vey a ies 1 mar Leuox Ave. 442 Colum Bist and Bed Sts, x 70 Nassou St, ‘near John St. Boys’ Polo Overcoats. 1009 Broadway, near Willo'by, Bklyn 480 Fulton St. opp. A. & Sy Bkiyn 597 Broad ear Hahne’ Newark and her ICN (2 tablespoon- fulsto pallof water) ff drives out that dan- gerous dampness, | Kills disease germs i] as wellas all forms of vermin, Makes cellar clean and Tex, ut of material and labor, we conti: Sorosis value in . H mn 23rd Street s 14 and 16 ye: Students’ first Long Trouser Suits. For Juniors and Girls. Juniors’ Suits in plain tailored or fancy models. 12.00 to 16.50 values 18.00 to 25.00 ats of Tan Poplin,— 6.75 value 10.50 es of Serge,—Russian model with to 10 years. 4.50 value 6.00 BOYS’, STUDENTS’ AND YOUNG MEN’sS Suits & Overcoats; Children’s Hats and Furnishixgs Boys’ Norfolk and Double Breasted Jacket Suits,—one and two pairs of trousers. Size 8 to 5.00 to 12.50 Size 15 8.75 to 16.50 ize 34 to 38. , aia 15.00 to 22.50 Size 3 to 10, years... 5.00 to 12.50 Students’ Overcoats. ‘Size 11 to 18 years.... 6.75 to 18.00 SOROSIS — SHOES AT 3.50 Notwithstanding the advance in the cost of nue to offer the same WOMEN’S 3.50 SHOES in the largest range of models ever shown. 34th Street grays, black mixtures, browns —the colors most desirable. Every variety of model, plain, with velvet collars, braid bound, belted. And if what you wish is not in this group—find just what will please you fully, at $13.50 to $200, econd floor, Cld Building. R Specialty Store for Girls and Young Women has made prepara- tions for a memorable Satur- day in the smartest und most desirable models of topcoats and tailored suits. A tailored suit of clay serge, $80. Chinchilla cloth collar, $33.59. Cheviot with velour collar, $1 with velvet K Chinchilla with velvet collar, $16.50, rls’ Coats, sizes 6 to 10 years. Second floor, Old Building. NEY chemises from 4 Paris are hand-em- broidered with bow-knot de- signs and in-set with Valen- ¢ Kes al for the first time. je French Shop, Li Third floor, Old Building. HE comfort of leather furniture — such as this deals store in--is weil worth the full price it carries, \ tomorrow — mor are $32.50, i #95; Spanish leather $34, instead of 50, instead w Building. The bath sprays, 50c. 40e rubber gloves, 26c. 25 Le Directoire perfume, 15¢. $1 Colinette cream, 25e, because of a mistake in the printing on the jar. ive toilet soap, 5c. Large bar of castile soap, 10¢. Specially good whisk brooms, Ie. Subway floor, Old Building. (Queaaets The Prin- cess May, of course! Impossible to get a better dollar glove than the Princess May. We have hunted all over the world and found none so good, now in the nd pique Prin- cess May gloves—black, white and colors, und in broad-cut capeskin in tans. Main floor, Old Building. NTY dancing a charming em- broidered serge dress, a popu- lar whipcord, an attractive dress of fine crepe meteor silk All at $10.75. All were made to sell at $15 or more. Subway floor, Old Building APED French Chemis are pre- women who do r putting Ss ribbon in the Hand-emb:oidered, Plain with ribbon. Little French Third floor, ! Building, Just to Remind You That— OMORROW is_ the second day of the six day Golden Special offer. ings of the Piano Store— THE FREDERICK DOLL piano, $175—al- ways sold under another name at 8275. THE MARSHALL & WENDELL piano, $175 —regular price, $275. THLE LINDEMAN- ANGELUS play no $495—regular price, $¢ THIS store backs up each offering with its regular guarantee — your money back, freely, if anything is unsatisfactory, TERMS will be made, within reason, to suit each purchaser, T.-H E FREDERICK + A small first payment DOLL player-piano, $375 —regulur price, $550, Pisno Salons, First Gallery, New Building, will bring the instrument to your home,

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