The evening world. Newspaper, April 29, 1914, Page 12

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SUAANA NOTHER DRI, SHS OAS, ATER “1” © TRAN GOES OVER HM ai jf Mate of the Cecil Should Worry|$ Aw } fo . | About a Little Thing Like | ¢ ; ; HE Ballantine Breweries have been brewing Ale or Beer 1 for over eighty years in America, and for over seventy Being Run Over. years thelr New York City Depot has been located down town, @ For the better accommodation of their increased. and expanding trade, this depot has now been located on their own property at the above address, where they have estab- shed ample cold storage and delivery facilities. This new central 1 location will insure more prompt deliveries through- out all sections of Manhattan. Harlem and the Bronx. P. Ballantine @ Sons Ale and Beer Breweries Newark, N. J. One Way: Livein Separate Houses, Visit Each Other When You Wish New York City Depot Ballantine Breweries 617, 619 and 621 Eleventh Avenue Telephone Bryant 4286 policemen, ambulance eur- and firemen hed “excavated” S Gtae Oleson from beneath the trucks © Gf Third avenue train early to-day, | § : ra tpecting to Gnd him ground into a/| « Oy mass, Olas sat up and 5 : “Ay ban want another @rtak.” ; oh red who is thirty-eight and mate|@ “SF the Ceol, at Hoboken, came over “ Harry Hateen, last night, to| } ite. After seeing everything ‘was about the Bowery, they into the downtown Twenty- atreet “L" station on Third ‘@venue and snored until Joe Shields, | @ the agent, ordered them to be on _ their way. | Phere was a train approaching and NEW YORK eu 70 TW ira ne Bryant {qty ures fan was sent to pilot the sailor aboard. When R ‘was within a fell to where Olas had fallen. man’s clothing house. They finally got Olas He had Bogen between the rails escaped the wheels, but Dr. took him to Bellevue suff ing @ scalp wound received FRECKLES Is the Time to Get Rid of Those Fifth Avenue, N. Y. 35th and 36th Ste. Tel, 2044 Greeley. Pohvech eSons Established 52 Years. The Work of To-Day Is Constant Eye Work =the eyes are used in a con- _ tinual effort—sight don't grow onger, sO correct glasses pust be worn to preserve it. Examined Without Charge Registered Eye Physicians. Perfect Fitting Glasses, $2.50 to $12. MADreedway at JohaSt. ator ifnse, Sab Av. | 1Sth oe (108 Nescas, “Ana St. Oth A 7 West 42d—N. {5008 Pelton hg Cor, Bend St. Best. cuts, Bronze Kid and all other Lontbers, All sides, any had become o | Mrs, Havelock | Gives These Tips From Her Own Experience. ‘Tht mUSBAND SMOULD HAVE LONG ours OF So.iTUDE 40, Hee Preserve Your Individual Freedom. To Keep Marriage a Romance Have Just as Little Law and Compulsion as Possible. Let Your Husband Sew On His Own Buttons—Yours Too. He Shouldn’t be Ashamed of Making Beds. Neither Should Support the Other,} tne Havetock Eitises,’ our friend re- But They Can Give Presents. Living Alone, a Wife Can Entertain More Freely Than With a Husband Around. ested, stroys his youthful fdeal. defy this logic. ROMANCE DEFY TIME. ‘This is the explanation which Mrs. Ellis gave mo of her own time-defy- ing romance, “My husband and I have ilways been free human beings,” up, “aad our marriage has beep based ug but romantic love. other. and weeks whee we ha: even seen each other. We met only when we wanted meet, and the resultM.that we are even more desiroym of being “We have simply reversed the usual procedure. .Inatead of being inaep- arably domestic at the boginning of our marriage and then growing apart, we have all along preserved our in- dividual freedom, and we are now planning for a happy old age in the same little cottage.” Just at present Mra, Ellis ia the picture of busy, bustling, bright-eyed maturity, She holds her plump self very erect as she talks, and her blue eyes altine beneath a boyishly ar- ranged crop of gray-threaded red hair, Incidentally, the photographs of her husband bear a remarkable re- semblance to those of Thomas Car- lyle. “But how did you come to eatab- lish your remarkable menage? I asked, “It reminds me of the old Spartan law, forbidding the husl a B Quit Thinking q You Cannot Eat Ggod. Wholesome Food eh. Fey eatin with your food BIP « A MGEAWATER iene tas tien By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Twenty-two years married and sweethearts still! It is a record which surely confers a special distinction on two persons by no means undistinguished—Dr. and Mre. Havelook Bilis, of London. Dr, Ellis is known to us.as the author of the sanest, most illuminating studies in sex psychology yet written in English. His wife has published many novels sod plays, and has just arrived in New Yo the woman movement, in which abe | ‘k to talk about greatly inter- But so riany persons can write books. And so few, #0 tragically few, can live with romance for nearly quarte: century of married life. shall lose her,” | sh He loses her because he “watches, day by day, the py Fmanowit dust of time that stains her,” and that hides and de- Yet we all know of marriages which seem to| What ‘s their secret? HOW THEY MANAGE TO MAKE |to see his wife except by stealth.” “Who wins his love is Andrew Lang's exquisite lyric. And then Mra. Ellis made what scema to mo her moat valuable con- tribution to the philosophy of Marital | happiness, WOULDN'T FORCE THRIF SCHEME ON OTHERS. “Oh!” ahe exclaimed quickly, “you understand that I wouldn't advocate any law compelling other husbands and wives to live as we have IMed. “The beet way to keep mar- riage a remance is to have just as little law ang compulsion as pos- sible for fixing the ‘relations of husband and wife. Each pair of temperaments should be per- mitted to adjust themselves in their own way. There should be no conventionally fereordained arrangement, but rather freedom for any reasonable relationship. “In our own case, Dr. Ellis and 1 made up our minds that we would not be bored, At the time of our mar- rlage we looked about and decided that a great many husbands and wives of our acquaintance were in the habit of boring each other We thought that we should be in the same predicament if we saw each other too frequently. So we decided to have separate quarters, “My husband has a ogttage in Mid- dlesex and I have one in Cornwall. Then, he has a flat in London and I get rooms there when I want them. For days and time we don't see each other. his work my husband requires soll- tude and silence. hand, am very fond of people, be- cause I like to study human nature, If we were crowded together in the *ymetimes weeks at a For Meet Your Susband Only When ite Is Mutually Agreeable. pened to be a friend. ‘Those must be marked. ‘Oh, no!’ was the reply. ‘They couldn't have been married, for in his eyes! | saw there ” “But in these times when you're separated,” I said, “do you never Worry about his dinners being hot or his socks being mended?” She chuckled aloud. “He's ever so much more domestic than I am," she replied, blithely, “When I go to visit him he takes care of our rooms, The man of the future will acquire so-called feminine attributes, just as we shall share in #ome of the qualities hitherto attrib- uted to men, Why should a husband feel ashamed to sew on his own but- tons, or even his wife's?” “And you never fear that other women may take advantage of your absence?" “Perfect love moans perfect trust. There is no room for jealousy. If you care for @ person you want that per- son to be happy. If he proves to you one else, what can you tell him ex- Only HE never wants to Havelock Ellin's wife, with iE INDEPENDENT OF THE OTHER. Games ee "she resumed ment, I, on the other Sold by all druggists Beware of “substitutes” same flat neither one of ua would be able to work properly, “Under the present arrangement, I go to visit my husband and he pays visits to me. We have the most d Mghtful times! | togeths he never played a ga his life and he cares nothing about shooting “Buch an arrangement aa I havo | ti. Jetty, take care of centr “would be impossible, I think, unless husband and wife were economically Independent. I myself i.lways vowed that I never would marry until I met} @ man who could accept thruppence from a woman for omnibus fare with- out looking like a fool. At last I met him! And I have gone on earning my own living just as I did before marriage. Of course each of us en- joys making presenta to the other, but our love has never been mixed up with money. We bave no children. Where there are little ones I think the father should pay their expenses and the mother should care for thom. “It is the woman's dependence on the man for support which makes so many marriages un- happy. How can this dependence be compatible with true romantic love—where the man is always wooing and the woman siways fleeing? “I have never been away from my husband a day without receiving a love letter. Never before these last nine days which I have spent on the ocean. They have been so long--so long!" enced Mra, Elli, witb @ frankly plaintive sigh. It Is Darby and Joan--even {f it is alsc the twentieth century. that he can only be happy with some; * sow, Miram?" “Going to an agricultural college.” “I've heard them colleges ain't prac- eal.” ou heard wrong. right out in the fi eo heat Year th They put ‘em . My boy writes ng to let him nt . ki ESINOL OINTMENT, with Resinol Soap, stops’ itching instantly, quickly and easily heals the most distressing cases of eczema, rash or other tormenting skin or scalp eruption, and clears away pimples, blackheads, redness, voughness and dandruff, when other treatments have proved only a waste of time and money. Physicians have prescribed Resinol for eighteen years and every druggist in the country sells Resinol Soap and Resinol Oint- For free trial, write to Dept. 8-T, Resinol, Baltimore, Md. DDHOOHHOHDODOHOHOOOHHODGHOGO er TEA IMPORTERS ENJOINED. | Court Forbt imitation of “White Mose” Brand or Pac! Judge John C. Rose of the Unitea States District Court for the District of Maryland has just granted a per- petual injunction to Seeman Bro wholesale grocers, of New York City, enjoining the Bohea Importing C pany from packing, selling or d |ing In package tea under thelr “Our | Special” label, which was a decided imitation of the “White Rose” label, s;or in any package or container or style of get-up similar in appearance to the “White Rose” ‘This is ono of several similar cases eman Bros. have decided to prosecute in this manner. CASTORIA For Infante and Children, ‘The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the STYLE ae. ny yet a over groin. reas 430. Fe 1) pr rar At AD Dealers = WEINGARTEN BROS, {\it.35" 1 ACLEAR COMPLEXION Ruddy Cheeks—Sparkling Eyes —Most Women Can Have Says Dr. Edwards, a Well-Kaown Ohio Physician. that one's ale face, callow took, Dr. “wawarae snd pote he leasing’ renae RE Olive one solid - tee de ee oo p> ey song eine oak oh 1a Clon ats oF oak jension ‘Tabi Prices in Plain Figures. Auto Delivery Everywhere. Finkenb EVENINGS. FinKenb ibe ‘OR. 124TH 8T.&3D AV! »NEW YORK 2M GREEN STAMPS MORNINGS, IMANAHANS | SATCHEL FORME D ITARINE MOTH BAG TARINE MOTH SHIEETS Sold at all department and dru stores SS W. L. DOUGLAS *3'4 & '42 SHOES ‘o| There ie pleasure and comfort 7” wearing ‘W.L, Douglas shoes. | They require no break- ing in. 7 8 bee, feet ths pipinl Batic Per Bottle. “Edd Sauce is a good friend: of your appetite: ‘Eddy:s° Sein, ice 10¢ Grocers and Delica- tessen Stores Sell ‘ st Hie as : U The World has fairly tun away ‘roid all competition as a guide to Horse and Carriage Bargains! 8,041 . ° “HORSE & CARRIAGE” Were Printed Last Year— World Ads, eal i of

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