The evening world. Newspaper, April 30, 1913, Page 24

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Mental Companionship Is First Aid to Love, and Without It the Man Who Develops Grows Away Gradually From His Wife. Facial Massage Ie All Right, but the Woman Who Never Massages Her Mind While Phys- teal Charms Decay Has Sad Fate in Store. Pledges Be Kept. XTRA SESSION SOON. Declares He Will Legislature at Work Until It Accepts Bill, (Continued from Fiest Page.) Marguerite Mooers Marshall. What happens to the stationary wife, the wife who doesn't grow “pr ‘Two women dramatists have dealt ae Ms pli on A woman novelist, Ellen Glasgow, has keep after ‘em until made a far more searching study of ) | the stationary wife, and, consequently, n@ | Geduced for her a more relentless dea- decking tiny. The dramatists concentrated their the primary | attention on the wife who neglects to mind, who refuses to buy new clothes lor her thoughts. And the result? This the situation between Virginia and husband at the end of twenty years married life, mever spoke to her of his work in terms of filppant ridicule & ile | nea ft vetween them, yet eo ly id ahe still accept the tra- fictions of marriage, that she have been astonished at the sug- that a love which could survive ef tragedy might at last from a gradual decline of iT LH el il |Pity the Poor Wife Who Never Grows Up! | Ellen Glasgow Tells How Love Dies ry his speech was restored. according to @ court decision. Paris yesterday. of 1906, back as visitors.” and Miss Glasgow doesn't. I aidly. does her future hold? thing.’ + i nee ishts § 385 A} $ tr I be tle 3 i i f ‘ f if iil ii 3 i a i fi i ke aut KNOW BILL. “They claim—the party leaders claim,’ the Governor was told, “that you didn’ Governor's face broadened into a He pulled his nose, as is his when in thought, then he rubbed in with one hand and patted the of his wire-haired Irieb terrier, Patsy, with the other. “My sos," he said, “if I was awak- iF cont and voting a straight party ticket ting @ cross in a circle abolished. want the candidates to be listed on je ballot under the title of the office, order of arrangement to be deter- | mined by lot by the commissioners of election in the presence of the candi- =-«eel Are You Anaemic? 4 ot, and I want every voter to indicate his choice by making @ sep- arate mark before the name of each candidate. “I want @ party Btate committee of 160 members, one from each Assembly 9)| district in the State and a party county committee in each county, to be made up of one member from each ction | me , Pe on Gistrict, I want each party to a} ig ty council to frame a platform, the 4 p: . A Headache, | ror pn te in ‘gubernatorial - PBick, Sour Stomach, | years, of tne party candidates to be Coated voted for by the State at large, candi- a 4 id dates for the Senate and Assembly and \ , Tongue Con- members of the State committen, and oh stipation in other years the council to consist w of members of the State committer, v Indi-| CaMAldates for Assembly and the repre- Pw Miserable | 2e2tatives of the party in the State’ y | cs couse] WILLING TO GO TO THE with PLE WITH FIGHT. || aleo want @ special enrollment each year, in the month of June, for a new i your com. | hibited. ss oo “These are the most important pro- visions of my bill. I am willing to go! == 10-c35nt | before the people of the State on them | you| ana Gght it out with any party, be it T of| my own party or the opposition, pow| The Sulser bill was drawn in compli- liver | ance with a party pledge, know | made me Governor. I bring good man who in real life if not in drama—Virginia fa left alone. One can't make another Derson of oneself at forty-seven. “I have so much sympathy for that woman, that average type of woman,” Mise Glasgow told me. have almost as much sympathy for Public office who have other interests to| primary bill? Do you think the mem- serve than the interests of the people. Tam not afraid of th more at stake than any State, I say that frankly.” “It is claimed,” told, “that you want this primary bill throughout the State that will ena! you to pick all your running mates on the State ticket.” The Sulzer smile appeared for @ full minute. The Governor got up and walked a few paces from his desk. “Let them rave,” he said. the people are quaiifiod to lect they shit GOENIne. i She Neeser, should be qualified to nominate, I also QH® AT (OBA HE DOESN'T think that the people will not nominate men whose records do not etsablish them as men who have the interests of the people at heart. raw the Gulsey bill—that you haven't/im— @ DEMOCRATIC PLEDGE, “Now, as to the attitude of the Sen- je. Do you think the Benate will dare was overpowered, interposed. “And<T think comfortable back of the old-fashioned sofa bebide her hearth, and regarded me with a smile of young, bright defiance. It takes an effort to remember that she has ten volumes to her credit, work which for careful thinking and careful adjourn without passing a State-wide bers of the Legislature are going on Ing refused to carry out of the platform? Speak- party man, as a Democrat, I "t think they will have the effront- to do suche thing. And I shall use ry honorable means within my power, and the power of my office, to keep them fror @ thi the Governor was out in e@pite of her. BURGLAR IN LIBRARY. ‘Robert Faust, twenty-one years old, was held to-day by Magistrate Herbert rt on “I think if aw a man leaving ¢! . Placing her hand over her bus- band’s mouth she awakened him and ‘old him what she had seen, Procuring mind too long. MUST BE KEPT. 5 a short struggle and the prewler ng TINE RY, as THE EVENING WORLD, WEDHESDAY, APRIL PLAYING SOULFUL music fn the restaurant of a big uptown hotel, a violinist was interrupted by @ summons in a breach of promise sult. BOHEMIAN CLUB of San Francisco ts to receive from figypt a mummy of the Ramesis period to take the piace of the one destroyed in the earthquake I do know that she Is and al- ways wit be radiantly young, from her} passion for physical anil sentimental crown of glinting brown hair to her|immolation! | email, slim foe. Sho has the brown eyes, arched brows and delicately drawn features of a Thomas Nelson Pago hero- ine, or of on’ of her own, but an intel- lecually alive expression for which one searches in vain among the sweet emp-| “earest to her. should the bygone beauties, Which,| °¢ Be #0 inflexible that it allows after all, is probably why they date} 3° retura. MENTAL COMPANIONGHIP AG FIRST AID TO LOVE. “And you think that the American ‘wife is apt to love without wisdom?’ asked. “E think that has been the trouble] tlk about the pares with her,” the novelist conceded car- “It’a bean the fault of her train-| ONY Jn the leat fi ing. She has been brought up to think a that love, in the sense of a sentimental relationship, is the ond and alm of her the tate ating unebie to heen icv after| When it 16 associated with dimples #t 1s given to her. And then what else “Husband and wife must be mentally companionable if their happiness is to last through the years. That's the great/ finished Miss Glasgow, with anot! I know Miss Glasgow was in earnest | because, for the first time, she forgot! to keep her Southern upbringing from coloring her English, the clean-cut, | black and white, non-sectional Eng-j sh which she writes and usually speaks. But in her last sentence the beautiful blurred “r” that belonge be- low Mason and Dixon's line slipped “Even if a woman has children she should not devote herself to them to the extent of ignoring her own devel- opment. That's not only bad for her, Dut it’s bad for the children. I have watched so many cases in which the @ charge of burglary. He was discov-| mother spemt every minute of her time Working for her little ones during the Abbot's home, at No. 278|first years of their lives. She gave ‘second street. Mre. Ab-|the most elaborate attention to their awakened by a slight nolse| physical needs. But eas they grew ir apart-jolder and desired her to a#hare their mental interests she failed them hape- lessly. She had neglected her own club the husband went downstairs found Faust in his library. There | SZLF-SACRIPICING WOMAN NOT DUMB for more than twenty years, a Paris (Ky.) merchant coughed eo bard HUSBAND tn Ohio must continue to pay alimony after the death of his wife, ; i onan oY, 80, 1018. ‘ i" od neers James McCreery & Co. 34th Street 23rd Street | “McCreery Silks” PARISIAN GAYETY-=Geventeen lamp-posts were overturned by taxicabs tn | LOST DIAMOND BRACELET was found on top of the flagpole over the Hotel Astor. Here is the diagram: hotel roof tied the balioon to her bracelet, which became unclasped. Child playing with @ toy balloon on the | BURGLAR who robbed a saloon in Indianapolis jeft @ note stating he wished | It distinctly understood that he had not touched the rum, as he was « teetotaler. | ATTRACTIONS of summer life at the penitentiary on Blackwell's Intand | are so strong the warden has posted a sign reading “No ex-convicts allowed eee execution puta to shame most modern their mother and people called them American fiction. I don’t know how old ‘so aelfish.’ Aw if the first selfishness wasn't on the motier’s side, a eelfieh| Since it is mote blessed to give persea try 08 Tacacpetiee cas Dlessing? aed “According to my observation tne! American wife errs in just this fashion, I've heard a great deal of woman, but! er meen her. ow years, I think, on learning that companionship better thing than self-sacrificing effacement. “Charm without brains is effective I have to confess I've and pink cheeks and youthful curves. But what about the brainless woman of forty? Yet she can't put on @ cap and retire to the chimney corner. “I believe in the modern wom brilliant smile. “She will be the je “I'm so glad you've emphasised it," I] ine of my next book. And she will “We've heard s0 much make the homes of to-morrow hap- about the decease of marital affection) pier than the homes of the past have being due to the absence of the beauty | ever bee: ———————K——eee—eEeEEe——— ASKIN OF =! WONDERFUL CLEARNESS neat retire, Begin aint ver 5 fi ta No VELOGEN ‘‘Beauty’s Guardian” the ‘hing fragrant emol- Cp ro makes the skin clear. jon makes an tm. provement, ‘A week's ayetematio use @ trans formation, At Your Druggist's, In Cot. Iapaible Tubes, BETTER THAN COLD Mi USED THE SAME WAY. — ——SS——= Clothing To Ladies and Gentlemen! at either of our two stores ON OUR CONFIDENTIAL Credit *= PALLoR of the skin, palpitation and debility, are the is your rominent ptoms of anemia. trouble, and you ized i Perhaps ven’t fully realized it. There is only one thing for you to do, and that’s to take y ed will attack the poisons les now so Golden Medical reliable medicine that and expel in your system and increase the red deficient in your blood. Dr, Pierce’s has demonstrated durin the past forty years that 1 is composed of the most suc- cessful ingredients known to co Discovery before you will feel the the medical world that can ‘ iving. aid the stomach in manufac- enjoyment of living. life-givin: x turing rich, red, blood. Science has pla its seal of approval on every- Y one of these ingredients. | stamps for a trial box. Address Dr. Pierce’s Invalids Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y. you . se Take this medicine. in today and you will find that the time will not be inn our druggist can supply in liquid or tablet form or you can send 50 one-cent No Mone: 2274 3°Av|7"-1 om syee 4 tase leat Pee am 430-440-442 RUG“°CARPET CLEANSING in Fre-Preof Building. Famous Over Half a Century WHITE SILK SALE Commencing Thursday. May ‘Ist. 50,000 yards of the newest and most fashionable weaves suitable for Gowns, Commencement and Confirmation Dresses, Waists and Blouses. White Crepe de Chine......... 1.25 to 1.85 yd. value 1.75 to 3.00 White Charmeuse............ 1.25 to 1.85 yd. value 2.00 to 3.00 White Meteor.............004 1.50 to 1.85 yd. value 2.25 to 3.00 White Satin Messaline......:.. 85¢ to 1.25 yd. value 1.25 to 2.00 White Brocaded Satin Charmeuse......... value1.75t03.00, 1.25 to 1.85 yd. White Japanese Washahle Habutai..........+0++ value 78 to 2.28, SOc to 1.50 yd. WHITE DRESS GOODS 10,000 Yards of White Summer. Wool Serge T7772 value 1.00 to 2.00, - 68c to 1.25 yd. White Wash Goods, —Fine Irish Shirting or Blouse Linen. $6 inches wide. 39c yd. value 1.00 French Ramie Dress Linen. 36 inches wide... value 45c, 29¢ yd. 44 inches wide............value 7Sc, 45c yd. French Ratine or Eponge Suiting. 44 inches wide. value 1.50, 95c yd. FURNITURE Considerably Reduced Dining Room Furniture Three-piece Sheraton Mahogany Suites, in- cluding Buffet, China Closet and Service Table. fegularly 135.00, 100.00 Three-piece Sheraton Mahogany Suites with narrow line inlay, —Buffet, China Closet and Service Table. regularly 159.50, 125.00 Colonial Mahogany Dining Tables..............' regularly 35.00 and 55.00, 29.50 and 45.00 Sheraton Mahogany Dining Tables.....30.00 regularly 35.00 Gray Ash and White Enamel Bungalow Chairs, Rockers and Settees. Gray Ash Rockers with wide arms.....7...0 0) regularly 9.00 and 10.00, 7.00 and 8.00 Gray Ash Chairs...........fegularly 7.90, 5,75 Gray Ash Settees....10.75, 13.50 and 15.00 regularly 14.50, 17.00 and 19.00 White Enamel Rockers with cane seats..........3 regularly 10.50 and 22.00. 8.25 and 17.50 White Enamel Tables to match..........24.00 regularly 30.00 FUR STORAGE Fur Garments, Muffs, Neckpieces, Suits, Dresses, Rugs, Curtains, etc., insured against loss or damage. Moderate Rates 34th Street 23rd Street Edgewood, RED-MAN LOOK FOR THE BRAKE EARL @ W. MAKERS OF TROY's BEST PRODUCT. IT MAKES LITTLE DIFPERENCE WHAT YOU-WANT,

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