The evening world. Newspaper, May 29, 1914, Page 6

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PSHERLOGK HOLMES |Overhaul Marriage Mode Shop an }) SLEUTHS TOWN On an Efficiency Basis, Urges Mrs. Austin # i} LR BAe With Lady Doyle, Sir Arthur Visits Mitchel, but Crowd Doesn’t See Him. PRAISES THE POLICE. y7Aand,” He Adds, “Your Traffic Regulations Are About as Good as London’s.” } f ; @nerlock Holmes, accompanied by fashionably dressed woman who Mater proved to be Lady A. Conan Doyle and by his faithful Dr. Wat- @en—Goeorge T. Wilson of the Pil Soclety—stole into the New fork City Hall to-day observed by ene but half a hundred who had 4 bis arrival—a score or more Rewapaper men who hed been told ‘would arrive and every employee the city who could manage to ee ‘SEB EVENING WORLD, PRIDAY, MAY 29, foe Gach Man TweRe A GROUP OF PoTenTiAL Young Should Be Educated to Select Mates Who Can Keep Up and Not Become a Drag—Court- ship Centres to Promote Marriage, Court of Advisers to Help Keep Them Happy. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Pat marriage on an ofiiciency basis! Make it a r jon of real and definite value, both to the individuals that venture it and to society that applauds the venture. Free it from the @ntangling superstitions, the antique fashions, the un- fair demands that are straining it to the breaking point and past. Force it to serve the welfare of all normal ™men and women, not of a pampered few nor yet of a bloodless, unhuman ideal. Make it work! That ie the vigorous gospel set forth in Mrs. Mary Austin's remarkable book, “Love and the Soul Maker,’ which appears to-day. It is a searching and chal- lenging analysis of the emotional relations between the modern man and the modern woman, a complete mes MITFiaAns overhauling of the shop where all our marriage modes are kept. And it has a constructive element which books of this sort frequently do not possess. In fact, Mre. Austin might be described as a matrimonial pragmatist. “Bome one wan needed to consider Marriage from the point of view of @Mciency,” told me when I sa her at the National Arts Club, It seemed to me that a gloam of feeling Passed over her usually immobile face, She wrote “The Arrow Maker,” the Indian play put on by the New Theatre, and I fancy that she acquired something of their unbending reserve from the Western tribes she knows 80 well. MUST STUDY MARRIAGE BROAD VIEW. “Beome one was needed to look on marriage from the viewpoint of the any,” she went on. “The trouble with Ellen Key, Bernard Shaw and FROM | other individualists is that they are and| Slways thinking in terms of a small class. what he thought of Mayor Sir Conan eaid very 3 “ET think ty g K charm- “It's all very well to say that a man should not be compelled to live with &@ woman he no longer loves, But go down into the Domestic Relations Court, as I did, and hear a woman whose budy is bent and broken with child-bearing plead that her husband has deserted her and their six chil- @ren for a pretty, young girl. And remember that his wages are enough for one family, but not’ enough for two, You can't tell him that he ts free to leave his wife, since he no ‘treet | Jonger loves her!" Yet compelling him to retarn home against his will—the obvious make- shift—doesn't bring his marriage up Mvai| to the level of Mrs, Austin’s ideal. Bhe atates that ideal rather admir- ably, it seems to me, eveu though I don't agree with all her plans for at- taining it. “To love and to keep on loving. and distress, Millions of men and women to-day know that it is needless to have Ci A little Diapepsin eecasionally keeps the stomach regu- lated and they eat their favorite foods without fear, If your stomach docsn't take care of your liberal limit without rebellion; if your food is « damage instead of help, remember the quickest, surest, most harmless re! pe Ppepsis, which costs only fifty cents for a large di tores, It’s truly wonder. ful—it digests food i 0 gently and Please don’ Thie Ie the ene way ef making marriage do ite work in the world. ly terme we have a right to mi ith marriage are that it shall et hort of unfitting us for the imperative ebligations of lov- ing and serving.” “But just what are your definite suggestions for realising this ideal?” T asked. “First of all, boys and girls should be educated for loving,” she replied. “Each young person ould be taught that the right mate is the other hand, the other eye of oneself.” “You mean the theory that each Person is made and designed for one other person, the dactrine of affinity?" T asked, eagerly, for despite the cheapening of the word I've always held the belief behind it. MATES SHOULD BE EQUAL IN DEVELOPMENT. But Mrs. Austin dissented, “Nature wouldn't be so wasteful as @ pnly of for each wo- and vice v: she observed. “In that case, if your mate should happen to die of measles in child- hood, the possibility of q happy mar- riage would be blotted out for you. “For each human being there is a group of potential mates, young person should learn to recognize the group charac’ ites, Yet this quality of other-selfness isn’t enough to guarantee a risht marriage. “Only persone with the same ratio ef development should marry. Thus we shall have an end to one of the commonest in- of unhappiness in the marriage—the case of the man or weman united to a part- ner whe can't keep up. The In- dex of the personal efficiency of every individual should be deter- mined and placed on record in youth. Then the man who et growing at thirty won't rled to the woman who expands several years longer, nor will the great man be bound to a wife whom other people wish he'd leave at home. re should, of course, be no marriages which involve the trans- ference of disease. Also t! can help us by interpo: sonable period of consideration be- tween the obtaining of the license and the performing of the ceremony, For the protection of the unborn, & pair desiring marriage should have time and opportunity to learn some- thing of the ancestral baggage they carry. “Why do you suppose there are more unhappy marriages in Amer- ica to-day than there were in the past?” Mrs, Austin broke off sud- denly. “I think that one reason why there seem to be more unhappy unions is because men and women demand more positive happli than they once did,’ SHE DECLARES. “There ig something in that,” a4- mitted the\ writer. “But I believe wet bad HAVE A BOARD OF ADVISERS FOR. MARITAL OISPUTES in divorce Is the increase in the artificial © conditions surrounding. marriage. Our social contacts much more narrow than th in the pioneer days or in the later homely democracy, ' “To inaure freedom of selection our educational leaders should seriously work for the eatablish- ment of courtship centres, social gathering where the young sible places for young people to court in, The average home with its one living room, ite weary and self-absorbed adults, its clamor- @us younger children, is the least propitious envirenment for the ing pair. } ut iy everything settled and suaranteed with the ceremony, eveo after the cautious choosing you have | described?" 1 asked. | “To help people with thelr marital ; troubles there should be a board of | advisers,” she replied. “Though tech. nically @ court of Judgment, the Do- mestic Relations Court in New York d Put It THE HOME tS NO PLACE To COURT IN ‘TODAY Rs Many AUSTIN offers much help of: this nature. should be available to unhappy mar- ried folk everywhere. “Then we must dispense with our! f, marriage modes that are alr empty of meaning. For instance, there in the home fetich. We must stop sentimentalizing about the home. | + It ts @ nest, but not a fenced-off, in- violable quarter, It absolutely re- quires only sfch furnishings as satis- fy the fundamental fuinily need. Nor Have You the “Blues’’? More than likely your stomach is out of order a quence your liver off the poirons of your body. = ples and boila are eradicated by Dr. PIERCE’S GOLDEN MEDICAL DISCOVERY Gn Tablet or Liquid Form) t it should the wife be acclaimed, willy- nilly, the Lady of the House. The re- union between two who love should be enhanced when each comes from congenial and not merely convention. al work, | “Marriages fail” Mrs. Austin summed up, “not because they fall short of any purpose of nature, but because either party fails to conform to the predetermined pattern, What we have to realize, if we would make the married relation # success, is that its onsentials are at all times superior to the fashions by which it is ex. pressed.” ——— INDIAN HIGHWAYMAN IN CENTRAL PARK Es A Siwash Brave Charged With Taking Part in a Hold-Up. Arthur R. Stanlu, a Siwagsh Indian, who was left in Now York when the 101 Ranch show pulled up ite stakes, was arraigned in Yorkville Police | Court to-day on the charge of high- way robbery. Stanlu and two other men, the police charge, hel@ up and robbed Abraham Moskowits of No, ;225 East One Hundred and Tenth| street, in Central Park last night. Moskowlta had his bride-to-be with | a when the com- sounded on tho sull summer alr he submitted to be- ng robbed. One of the three hold-up men shed a hand electric lamp in the es of kowite and hia flancee dd the flash was in by Policeman Melnerny, a policeman of long service in the Arsenal station, —Mclnerny hopped in the direction of the flash three highwaymen fled. The| » and he sent his night stick | atly between the legs of the Siwash, ne him to the ground, Stanlu was held for trial. His ex- plunution of his share of the hold-up was that he thought the two men wit! him were detectives making an ar Are Your Feet Like Balls of Fire? hing, throbbing, ampe sore from standing, walle ing, tramping over weary miles of floor or pavement. Wouldn't you like to feet'as foot-glad ax a barefoot boy in urns? john- you | CITY’S MONTHLY PAY DA $900,000 Sent to Mantctpal Ba ing, $100,000 to Brooktyn. Father Knickerbocker began his monthly task of paying out $200,000 to js great army of employees in Man- this morning in i. The money was taken to the building in automobiles under heavy guard from the National City Bank. By noon more than a third of the city employees had cashed their pay checks. More than $100,000 was taken at the me time to the Offerman Building, at tom and Duffield atreets, Brooklyn, where the city employes acruss the river can cash their checks without be- i jected to ‘ged in eat ent Beal these nying offioes, ninety-two to help the city in y checks con:ains the exact kind of nourishment needed by of city em- | Easein en] ish your corns. Get rid of your” “pets” once and for all, One box @f \ ierce’s will cure them in a few hours if they fire ordinary corns; if they're “old- timers’ two or three applications will rid you of your corn troubles== or the druggist will give your You Gan Buy th Foot Comfort for {0c and 25c a Box at all druggists, If you cannot conves niently got them in your neighborhood Bend 10¢ for emall box to A. CE CO., Soringtet |Father John’s Medicine’’, those who have lung | troubles and are weak and run down. is best for colds and throat and lung troubles. No weakening stimulants or danger- |i ous drug: GOhulich be Established 62 Years. Correct Glasses Ward Off Eye Trouble The time to insure your sight against serious trouble is before your eyes are past all help. Eyes Examined Without Charge by Registered Eye Physicians. Perfect Fitting Glasses, $2.50 to $12. 184 Breadway at John St. , Zormery, 223 6th Ave., 15th St.| 101 Nassou, Ann’ 'St. 350 6th Ave., 22d St.|1/ West 42d—N. Y. 496 Pulion St., Cor. Bend St., Brooklyn, Makes Hairy Growths Vanish From the Skin ady | every package. Made only by | THOMAS GILL SOAP CO. 711 Kent Av., B’klyn, N. Y. $s.00 O'CONNOR CO.ING. 1169 roadway New Ne ‘All lest er found articles ada vertiscd in The Werld will be Msted at The World's Informae tion Burean, Pullteer Bulldiag Arcade, Park Row: Brooklyn Office, 202 Washin, Bite, ioe raat ee te 39 “Guvertiveneut, A (Aids to Beauty) It is now cuch wn easy matter to not wanted that no wo- superfluous wek, =A le with a@ little pow. delatone and water and spread on the hairy surface 2 minutes, then bbed off, takes the hairs with i* and after it is washed to remove th. remaining delatone it will be fr from spot or blemish. To avoid di- ment, get Vel delatone in au vt CARPE CLEANING W.H. flankinsony | If WeMust CLEAN == al | That is why it * You can now buy Silk Stockings that will outwear all others because they are pro- tected from garter- pinch and strain, and “runners” cannot form, y PATENTED CARTER jistery This garter attachment is a part of the stocking and you fasten your garter to the loop or buttonhole, For Sale by all dealers at no extra price. Full Fash- | foned ilk, o 4 $1, $1.50 | Bilk Lisle, EOe a Pair $-Grain Lablet ivianes Fl-sh improve Uneir « d restore @ normul condition of the # ch and nerves, should adopt the wonderfully succesetul id drug: tablets,” full direc- pink cheeks in weight won results from several /

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