The evening world. Newspaper, November 4, 1914, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ILE DISAPPEARS ER TWO ARE INJURED and Young Woman Com- panion Huft When Car Hits Tree. Anna Haslinger, twenty-one old, of No. 422 Hamburg ave- Brooklyn, is in Coney Inland ae wuffering! from an injury Goctors there believe to be a Of the skull. She wan hurt OR automobile accident on Ocean between Avenues N and road early to-day. ear in which she wan riding @wned and operated by Alfred | » & butcher, forty years old, No. 18% Jefforson avenue, Mrook- 4 Something went wrong with the a and Schaefer lost control the mavhine, which dashed into a the shock throwing out both Dr. Yon Deylen removed them to y_Isiand Hospital, where it waa Behacter had mes O'lirien, who was femt to investieate the accident, was ~ to find the wrecked auto when Feached the point where the car hit 1) SIMPLE TO HEAL } SHIN TROUBLES WITH POSLAM the use of Poslam the process ra any skin trouble is simple. gil for you can see improv: every application. Itchi: in is comforted at fou take no chances in using Poslam, ft cannot possibly harm. It i kille germ life and is unequal a eradication of Ecsems, Acne, imples, etc. four druggist sells Poslam. For free write to Emergency Laboratories, feat 25th Street, New York: Boap is non-irrit pure, luxurious and bene use, toilet and bath. £5 ce eents.—Advt. ward Shoe © 4 When your arch } breaks down, hold: it up—in Fe theCowardArch Support Shoe. JAMES S. COWARD 964-274 Greenwich at., N. ¥. (Wan Waneen oracet) ‘Bist Orders Pilied | Seed ter Catalogue B y Saving a Ri Th nis New Tal oe! Saves space and serves 0s three pieces of furniture at the price of one. aweek *: [ogi ONLY STORE aCe hme BE EVEN! 66 ty-Fifty, Says Mrs. Comstock, Novelist; Save Your Individuality and Start With the Truth, to Keep Love Permanently on the Job. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. What are the tials of a happy married life? Bix sine qua n aro written down tn the matrimonial lexicon of 100 Detroit wives, and every ono of the #ix defines a performance of duty on the part of the husband, He must be ardent; domestic, {ndustrious, pure, respectful and temperate. But Mra Harriet T. Comstock, author of “The Place Beyond the Winde,” “Joyce of the North Woods” and a number of ness in three rules: 1, Marringe must be based on complete truth, 2. Husband and wife must love each other better than the senseless rubbish of the world, 3. Each of the two must be allowed a complete rvensic: «= individuality, Like that other writer of charming love stories, Mra, Everard Cotes, Mra, Comstock does not believe that the happiness of married lite depends entirely upon the conduct of the husband. But, unlike Mrs, Cotes, the American vovelint refuses to place upon the wife the major responsibility for domestic biias, What she propones in to divide that responsibility between husband and wife on a fifty-fifty basia. “And the first atep toward such alfear of being found opt" declared @ivision must be taken before the| Mra. Comatock. Marriage actually occurs,” Mra, Com- baaben A ALEVE Wenn ANY Stock told me when I talked to her| “I don’t belleve,” aho added quick- in the pleasant reception room of the|!¥ “that men are any worse than Foaiand Beveh Club yesterday, Tol ve etien given uo thele Delt - is their halt- stand any Féal chance of happiness |begt simply because we demanded with each other, a young man ought! nothing better of t If we inalet to be just as fair and atraightforward {on truth we shall {t, If we say with the girl he has asked to marry /that we must have the single stand- him as he expecta her to be withdard of morality we shall get that. him. To prove that truth was one! For « litte while women must atand of the reasona why I wrote “Tho Place |togethor until men willingly take Beyond the Winds’ their hands and work with them It hae always seemed to me | against ignorance and tradition, that no man should ask for pure “One trouble with marri love without the equivalent to of- fl fer in return. But if thie ie im- peesible, he eught at least to tell the girl to whom he proposes what he ie offering h if he expecte—and he je—that the pages of her life should be an open beok te him, let him show her what le in hie own pact. Let him give her the chance to make her choice with epen eyes. . in, if who decides to accept him, thel# married life will begin on a« basis of square dealing and honesty 1 should think the man himself would uch rather have it that way. 1 imagine anything more dreadful than «life haunted by th ind fed through oom with Anty for ber. That's what you Responsibility for Wedded Bliss Should Be Split Fit- other novels, gums up the essentials of married happl-|~ Drudge Hears the Old Story of Hard Work Drudge—“Then you don't do what Mra Wisely does. I've just been in her house, and it’s as neat as a pin. She uses Fele-Naptha Soap and lete it do the hard part of her work NG WORLD, DON'T GE ConTEWT To Live SAFE w A NEST FED THROUGH YOUR LONGINGS AND DESIRES Ge | her longings and desires. She never gots to life firsthand, and @0 she doesn’t know how te make the most of life or of her hus- band.” “You believe that the considera- tions determining a marriage of con- venlenee dave, dite to do with @ truly habpy wat eo?" 1 suggested, For in “The Place Beyond the Winds” two young persons of decidedly dit- ferent social station are congratu- lated for “sweeping aside the sense- less rubbish of life and getting each other.” GIRLS TOO OFTEN EXPECTED TO MARRY LABELS. “Differences in fortuno or social position or anything of that sort amount to nothing at all when two persons aro really in love with each | § Mrs. “We ought to have a greater democracy in our romances the | £7 millionaire and a trained nurse become acquainted ‘n my book they discover that they other's real selves,” assented Comstock. and our friendships, When daughter of a were made to be the best of chums, “A young man and woman who come to know and love each other should never worry about the worldly viewpoint on t riage. Too often « girl ed to marry a man who hae won her friendship fection. She meets a suc- id youths rub t to dry Mra. Toohard—“I don't see how you can do your work and do it right in such a short time. I can’t, and your family is larger than mine.” should do.” i ‘WEDNESDAY Doormat” Wife Inperils the Happy. Home; Needs Mind of Her Own to Keep Hubby’s Love MERE INVESTIGATE I) NOVEM (MDEPENDaNT OF LABELS -— parlor and the parlors of in her @ few other p and amon: 01 re take this from th a right to take “Then you b e that the mar- ried woman should preserve har Jeconomic independence?” “Anwuredly,” sald Mra. Comstock. “It may be done in various ways. For example, I have a friend gvho married ja man when he was making $75 a |month, After paying the household bills the surplus was always scrupu- ORIGINAL ) and no one h. te ; i MIKO 4 ge ave Inttations” \The Food-Drink for all Ageo( Rich milk, malted grain, in powder form: | For infants,invalide and growing children, Purenutrition, upbuilding the whole body, | invigorates nursing mothers and the aged, More healthful than tea or co Take no substitu < Grumbling won't help you work done, but Fels-Naptha In fact, Fels-Naptha will actually do the hard part for you. grumbling, and start doing your wor the easy way—that’s with cool or luke- warm water and Fels-Naptha Soap. For instance, by using Fels-Naptha Soap for the weekly washing you can get it done and on the line hours earlier than ever before and your work will be easy, too—no hard rubbing or boili clothes. minutes with lukewarm water; Just put them hem lightly . They'll be out of time for the noon meal. BR 4, 1014 wha atipulated | 4 made lit- ti could, and worth more money than ly proud of share, The wife saved or profe she wants to cdntinue, I don’t think she should be obliged to give it up e. I have two children ys kept bi have eo ordered my life that I've gone on with my writing. I bell that can follow woman who retains individuality, ‘who 4 most apt a him to “A friend of ularly fond of a certal ter cakes which only 6 can pt pare. He has to have his breakfast very early. Instead of leaving it to the maid and getting the rest of which she’s physically in need, this woman gets up and makes the cakcs every morning. It se to me that she’s just putting herself in the way of a snub. If a woman deliberately turns into a doormat, somebody will step on her sooner or later. Out of pity they may walk around her for a while, but the trampling is due in the end. “The wife who teels that the cultl- ; The wind from an open window and a “That's one reason w believe a girl should learn to ¢ pme sort of work before her marriage, and, if] possible, marry a man whom she has known througn work as well as through play, Moi er, | think that neither she nor bh usband shoud lose Independence on account of mar- riage, They will lov ch other bet- jter if each keeps a net individu. ality. Women, @# ally, let peop! vation of individ y will interfers with love is mist she concluded. PBs LE VICTIM OF WIND AND GAS. Breese Detached Tube and Tailor Narrowly Fee a Death. Jacob Berman, a tailor working for Nathan Kaplan at No, 243 Broome street, made his bed last night in the bench room instead of going to his home tn Brownavil He turned off the gas at the stove instead of the jet and ‘was this morning discovered by his em- ployer unconscious. fanlight above the door had swept a heavy portiere against the rubber tube and broke the connection. Policeman Coleman, @ “rookie,” had the man out of danger by the time Leddy ar- rived from Gouverneur H TINY HATS TELL COMPLEXION SECRETS thie fall our millinery will have an are overtopped by tall 80 email they perch high You ed VELOGEN to keep your | complexion soft and smooth, No wide. | brimmed hat will hide a skin of coarse texture. Rub VELOGEN on your skin if it ts roughened by the wind or burned by the sun. Cleanse ane rg it rotect yi sar kin with VELOGEN for der. It will SILVER Sterling & Plate. This Graceful and Artistic Sterling Silver Centerpiece is just one among hundreds of appropriate sug- gestions for wedding and anniversary gifts, ex- hibited at the INTERNATIONAL Store. ‘This fine piece serves two purposes. It holds the flowers for the table decoration, By removing the mesh and the rim, it is transformed into a very handsome bowl. 12¢ inches in diameter. Price $59.00. In seeking a service, a set, ag a single piece of sterling silver or silver plate, we invite you to visit this block-deep store, with its vast and varied collections. International Silver Company Succeeding The MERIDEN Co. Established, 1852 40-51 West sqth St, through to 68-70 West ssth 6t., New York Why Have the People Used Over a Hundred Million Boxes? he extraordinary merit of Laxative Bromo Quinine ex. plains the reason why the people of all nations have used the enormous quantity of over One Hundred Million Established 52 years. | N Eyeglasses— N' N What Will They Cost? \ N Eyes Examined Without Charg: N by Registered Eye Physicia: N Perfect Fitting Glasses as Iw as $2.50 N New York: 184 B'way, at John St N N 223 Sixth Av.,15th St. N 350 Sixth Ave., 22d St. N 101 Nassau,at Ann St. N 'els-Naptha and cool or after they’ve soaked, , Yinse and put out 12. We et 42d Street, N Brooklyn: 498 Fulton St., cor. Bond St. ATE et your oap will. sto of the to soak for 30 the way before beer # 8 z 100,000,000) Boxes of this famous remedy. hed reading the accompanying label from the box of Lay pa ig be uinine, ‘telling Earns? losualiy euastore, wah colts, “Tue eecoed of ba and how ore it does it, you can understand why this remedy is used s0 effectively by so many millions of people. Whenever you feel acold com- ing on-think of the, name Laxative ‘Pec-olmite of tabel on beck of Lazstive Bromo Quisine box) Bromo Quinine., —bhut remember there Is Only One «Bromo Quinine” Te Get The GENUINE, Call For The Full Name Laxative Bromo Quinine Look fer thie signatare an the box. Price 85a. Lrove i $53] Hie = ti tablet can be blokes or Hit eo e Mountain of Apartment Houses &% =———————===_=_—_—_—_—SBan==— > That's what you would see if the high-clas» multi-family dwelling houses advertised in The World were piled one upon another, And what a wonderful sight it would be! And what a monument to modern comfort and convenience ! in home life it would represe 2 The World prints more separate “To Let” than the Herald, Times, Sun and Tr \DDED TOGETHER. SO Move Now and Get Settle? N Comfortably Before the Holidays!

Other pages from this issue: