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7? ._.. WILSON SHOPS iS THE GIR THE EVENING WORLD MONDAY, OCTOBER ii, 1915. y DIDNT WANT TOBE OF TO-DAY: s She eoerereee A SUCCESS A FAILURE eeeerereee. 2 SUDDEN WEDDING Peerrrrtrr tertieee The ™ teen de , wes of Evening W ‘ ' " ‘ $ and makes out # strong ' P “?< “one GH m4 P ng Be - ome ~» ees ‘ Purchas 1 u of . Giver 6 w Stick for D “ a | } \ - DET AI KEPT Ss | } = cart Presid Bride-to-l ; Urged | Their — “Set O@EWwr * HW mown he Soutt wee PEDESTAL BoCAUTE 5m OB ets i e ” ar * from her | wury MeAdvo ge : " The MODERN GL 15 A ne The Business Girl Makes a Good Wife and Mother| | °° "Ave Weerewoene veh Because She Is a Business Girland Knows More | |(<ves cong, \ gs, Va tnouew Foe xt week, us| of the Problems of Life Than the Stay-at- Cine" we sunnctar Home Old-Fashioned Girl. } ps ot the Navy, wit hes been visitit —————_—_--———— AQ) ora” Kile m the South, will come back imine By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Hately to W | To-day che business girl speaks io ber own defense, The criticiame of mae Me 1 whe wis BO her hive boon lavish and emphatic, She hus been culled “an awful up-to ; iene dator,” “a dressed-up clown,” “a domevtic iguoramus" and “a failure as a} | sWeutheart.” It ix time to give ber a chunce to an si sige : swer some of these strictures, and 1 am glad that 1} be 10 Gan Ling: have received letters from her which present her owa Fhe Pr nt to-day sent a lotter to! side of the cause with Mueuey aud fervor. se eget le AME oe lol ag ‘The girl writer who foresess that, as a grand- an lvitalion uf the school e mother she may recall with a doleful sigh the pure and | ehuldren thers. The petition "bore at perfect maidens of 1915, makes an excellent point. The tly rolled made a in diameter M t and when tig “Y —_— Vv lk , ‘ass Christian are old.” The generation that has forgotten how, in! of Your Idemin did hide @ wicked | to Pass Christian “en ,, heart, a deceitful mature and many a y hone ymoon by the MmaReAll its time, it played with love, money, freedom and life's | other views, d the castdown eyes | F suey a ary Smith, cous s y werd A L, ane, nape ish other conventions cannot forgive youth's gay Insolences Lane fnen, me eae you any t % i hing but tradition to fa at New Orleans. President A lack of roverence for itwelf is one, Tho girl of to-day has Mentified her- | 151" i suppose. t spent Christmas at Pass Christian of the sins which age charges up| self so passionately with the last balfl you and | live long enuush tredae i Ph and it Was sugKested against the modorn girl, She ts ac-laf this theorem that she is inclined | be telling our grandchildren of y that hi ight be married “Otte ef careless contempt for the|to forget the first half, and to con-|S00d vid days of 1915 when maids during the Christmas recesy of Con- were never forward or bold, Oh, yea, gress and go for a short trip South, | wishes or commands of those set In|demn parental orthodoxy on all) va snail, for our vices of to-duy will Despite reports and signs that the authority over her, And a sharp dis-| points. In colloquial English, she| jc the virtues of to-morrow. wedding might be held very ny He ste for restraint in any form, aj thinks she knows it all. But ber cou-| “Then, too, who is the successful to-day in well informed |." ; ; . ‘ other of te 7 LT think you will ire ss e! of to accepted |viction is a natural envugh reuction! mother that the plans were still for |Teckless levelling of hither dee paroieaa : 5 sd on ngree with me when Tsay it is the i Nedding carly ‘ine December. No|standards, is certainly characteristic] rrom the older yeueration’s own suus Wignin who keeps abreast with the change bas been made in the arrange-|of tho girl of to-day. As a conse-|seit-vatcuns, A tet beh Ras requirements of the p t and ment to have the ceremony in Mrs |quence, she sometimes makes a fool) Peovis nlut th us.” §8 sees through unprejudiced eyes the Jalt's home here a \tbe normal mentai attitude of must ( n She “1 Me reeidene and. Mra: N of herself, and in other instances) men ‘aud women over (itty when thoy Virtues of modernisin. She does, not H ents for the} sent than any mere docile inheritor} Lt may be a matter of Persenal sty of the girls of ‘my day. This day Vt 4d Mrs./of bas-lcen wisdom. cheney Eaten Wear once: she makes hers and her daughter's. ave not dix tailod |THE COMMON MISTAKE MADE Jsiightiy brazen modern’ girl is more Her mental vision Is not ever luoking and Yeti sha THE AGED. | Promising material than the ‘lepend- backward, b! rd. and relative . ort. sugar-coated, “muidenly" miss 1 do not think t because | go} atulations fro: parts of | Becaus course of action has the! of other days. re aro suine girls, t? dancing school once a Weak aldo See ae contest rie ate hetion of mature conservatives it is! as we all know, who have. lust tho # social affair, dancing icing tiely Team (Drei Pettatn, Cabron ae | Mot, necessarily, to-e despised; nor is! Pretty munners of an earlier wenera; ALY the worse, Guatemals lent Wilson is an-|!t, on the other hand, to acceyted | {10m tne SUC MC ACOK. SEARS A nalts “When | have a caller Ido not wering personally the messag without reflection or investigation. | supporting gitl, however, can show| think it essential that | at wet detipite winnings of Indepondence,| forced Danes sai courage and intelligence to offset pos-| WOMesON TT Javed to play the ’ For Liebmann's brand this merry band Of RHEINAROONS now cheer; Year in and out without a doubt They'll root for Rheingold Beer. Rheingold Beer il, Jof a mild, puro malt bevera: Reingoia Beer ie as healthful ae it ie pleasant. 8. Liebmann’s Sons Brewing Co. busis of much eriticism of the present generation ts to be found in a single sentence: “You are young and we sible losses in feminine charm and | sweetne But is the modern girl too sure | of herself for her own safety? Should she pay more heed to the advice of her elders? Is she too ano, do I strike up some mourn: ‘ul march of Chopin's, If my o ler ‘chooses to talk about ba ball, Tean talk with him; if he | Tikes a heated argument on the situation | can oppose him. | pusiness world ue lemen will contemptuous of mother’s point | you think he enjoys this Iways respect her, but of course in of view; too selfish, too independ- | sort of an evening lots more | cyary generation there are courteous ent, too ambitious? hy ail | than he would if | were an old and discourt us men, hat eondi ure asa daughter? The mothers | fashioned girl? Uon will always exist, The time is and daughters who read TheEve- | “fiusiness girls, if yeu think of these | not fur distant when woman will | ning World must have their opin: | things a little more you will appreciate | nave her suy in the making of the ions on this point, and | shall be | the fact that modernism isn't half bad. | jaws by which she is governed, and rN to print any letters from | 1 think you are comparing some of our | (here is no reason Why she, being just | m. unfortunate sisters who have an er-| aq intelligent and just as mentally SURE ENOUGH MODERN GIRL i ous, ee, of modertiann, with your capable as man, should not |ideal old-fashioned gir >, my dear ‘The qirl of t is a good semen iene HER, SISTERS. | business girl, modernism isn't all bad.| chum and is not afraid to speak anwhitie, 8 ow the busl-| 7 Jove it, and think it no vite to pro-| up for herself and come out in hess girl to tuke the stand in ber owe) claim the fact. I do not think our! the open and say what she means, defense Maker thinks less of us poor modern The girl of to-day is not taught “Dear Madam: remarks on tne Jorn girl, a su jness Girl’ in last nigh |dently thinks her a failu a business girl, as far as jone-half hours a day make me one. | My work as a stenographer in the office of a prominent lawyer and en- You have invited subject of ‘the mod- ss or failure.’ ‘Busi- s World evi- [also am n and ites, and, after all, that's about all we have to worry about A MODERN GIRL." SHE'S NOT THE SILLY GIRL OF DANCE HALL AND CAFE. "Dear Madam: The girl of to-d is by no means a failure. [t is fool to ly thusiasite polftician brings mo in{!s%. hot to say extremely unfair, “Dei ead y ROR het Wii ABDUL BYerat aheee ee tako the silly «irl of the dance all or | Pes ay ns Having read your | human life, both male and female, | caf a8 an example when discussing | oie being a failure, f , , The city in'which I live and work is| {he FMRI witieche win oF | to differ with your Gir' Dressy Coats Inhabited iby thirty-five | thousand | Pare, jodern irl with the Ki ori myself, am a business States’ foe 18 in the Wooden Nutmeg) ay an examplo the girl who rep: ants eb foih y 32 Mung Rison Of Broadcloth, Corduroy and ened Am. & modern girk—perhapa |this ‘wo shall. choonn tho ewe do |My idea of the girl of to-day | Velveteen in Navy, Brown, | her te ny ay re eels CU ni and highly intelligent business > ls SAREE i Deena " Green and Black; fur trime . : Higent business | tependent, and is not under ae | n girls, Girt te Be fouRe Wh every olty oF & MERTON tO anyone. oF 4 med, full lined. 10 to 16 years | well as myself that { wish to 1 ts a girl who can dance at the| Support, and sometin » ix the defend the modern girl, | dance Jright time—and what man despises a |Support of her family not ir Special 19,75 every time | get an opportunity; |e ful dancer?—is aiwaye ready | dependence mean suc it true >pecial ste dress within my means and Jind anxious to learn, dresses with | that just because @ girl can wash think it not at all sinful; | talk |uoq taste she does not wear a skirt dishes and scrub floors that she w about the ‘fellers’ if conversation mole bu beer-burrel | make a good wife? A girl can pe in quires, | powder my nose if than anything else and. can | business and still be able thowe is too hloy fe make @ pretty /discuss everyday topics with an in- | thing: a4 picture ut, then, think a mo- [teiligence and fluency which any man “| work from morning until late Maid si i i sate ment, dear ‘Business Girl,’ don’t |{nizit well be proud of at night, and | still find time to Plaid silk waist with pleated you know that the old-fashioned | ° As for the fad of ‘making up, girl powdered her hair and pasted } pass as have all stimes injuric Anot conceive d who considers her siste to inevitable ruination this “Then, too, ‘Business ( any proof that the old-fash does net associate with thousands of splendid y to be found in the business w erywhere to-day, BUSINESS GIRL MAKES GOOD WIFE AND OTHER, r Madam The modern For Constipation use EX-LAX The Delicious Laxative Chocola' Ex-Lax relieves constipation, regulates the stomach and bowels, stimuletes the liver and promotes digestion, Good for young old, 100, 28¢ and 0c, at ail druggpets. girl, | think, is very, very She is not afraid if and earn independent way with much a success, to strike out for he her own living; she d has a h 9 the clinging: k goodn: true that she is ‘man: competing,’ but why should she not be, since sho is just as intelli: ont as her beether? As far asa usiness girl's ‘mad scramble for eoncerned, | think the lettér published in it evenin, World is entirely wrong. On the eentrary, the girl of to-day is which, th: past. Iti | was a girl's one occupation. day that is not so, and the aver- s 4 age bus girl will look long | father Mrs. Helen Stevenson had | Willett, former Congressman from and hard before she jumps into consented to the adoption of Muriel by |Queens, who was convicted of at- of a imething which never! Bete Surrogate proceeded with {nomination from “Curly” Joo Caa- othe her old-fashioned — sister, | Nis deamon i m itroae and de | sidy, Democratic bons of Queens, will {The modern girl does sot want to Hausbter: webs made ut former {be transferred to-day to Great rain aio willing to work to help| Stevenson No. 1 Willett has been Chief Justice of vet the home together, In days qone| “Just think of the sttuation that the Mutual Welfare League Court, by girls married some of them just | because it Was customary, with no well with ort ho how tnd thought of financually An that do will look average modern girl thoy thought | how their children were to Le brought up. In olden times marriage To- will ahead were of not and | think of her future nese ho will make a good wife and mother, be- ause in these times, the cost of lv- | ing being so high, she will k to make her money her children will have jo! ‘a good education the modern busine |ligent and has to she Is doing 4 4 her position ub as her | well deserves the littie her p because she furth: advantage er rl ts very int just ant and in yw how ar from having a ‘shallow’ mind, 4 p her brain right | | Girls’ Velvet and Corduroy Coats ax vig sh vation she 4s not have to come off ty the to look up to men as lords of the land, for she is beginning to real- ize that she brain matter a TAL "S," SHE IS. twice as much the majority of ANOTHER BUSINESS GIRL.” \Y SHE'S A SUCCESS WITH A CAPI help my mother with the house work, ning after | busin: ' 1 do washing, ironing and home from so devote my time Sunday mornings to my home, to make it look neat and attractiv and | also find time for a little recreation. I dress in on up-to-d but not immode Cant myself a failure here sof & © bust 084 Stylin tl are Yes, | again repeat that day is A SUCCESS A CONSTANT READER.” — The Rey. Perey %. K vering | The Rev. Percy Stickney ( of the Church of the A Avenue and Ninth Street Redford Hillx tack of pneumonia from a fifty-mile tri mobile early Inst neral vices. H of the church, Informed yesterday that Mr ger ing were conducted by the Naumano, of Chicage. all Grant Is Re Services in the church last ey é e \ to HIS BABY'S BROTHER SO TAKES HIS CHILD WHITMAN AGAIN SAYS WOMEN SHOULD VOTE Mab aicme ” t foreta. 0 Departure # . Se ‘ -~ NOMEN ASTE OUT ALE HOPE ABANDONED . ; OR MISSING STEAMER = °~: : 1 tue brome t \ P ~ i 1 Wis f \ Vessel, 1s Be-[ oer * ” ' mated With t high lee ak ’ by Miva W ° ” ‘ ’ VANLADELPHIA, Oct 1. Hope ' aif swedish steam. | ¢ ‘ e abandoned to-| ob ‘ The ' from Gree » en i are f a march had been . A . vt | ne vessel, but thet! ® Rurrogate Kou uld be found. In reference to the ' . 1 vigo which carried « on the Governor « yely ' by Mrs. France » afd was one of /receipt of numerous applications for F arryit oats places on the commi but woult Jonep' Ihe meh . s be ‘ ben make na eh ee for a while. ind econd nd, who trade, left Narvik) As about to board the tra ad apked ro. th sdeiphia with « oargo| the Governor said he would vote for adopt Muriel, achod ore consigned iy| Distrlet Attorney Perkir Tiwasa Frida Ou soot | _ : ' Norrbotton rowen oF amavTy when Mra, He rt me (Prem the Houses Pos) f Mo and firat wife of the avie * message to (he station Why don't you sue the road for dam tor, punched Mr M: Hall Steven ‘ Newfoundland, saying | ages’ son, tha amcond wife, in the Jaw just {#6 Would arrive in Philadelphia Sept.) “But t wase't burt, and tt was my ows a they wor leaving the Surrogate’s | Ne ¢ has been heard from che! fault” uae Vensel since that time A uirl an beautiful aa you are doomn't “With ttuntinn settled by today's | On Sept 24 and 2 a storm of un a" be Hurt, oF Mehl, to get @ ver. 0 ttn “*Tusuat vioiane off Newfound. | Muriel will now Rrow Up tO lignd, ft is sbipping cir. Btevenson as her father, Had! eles that the n was caught te OW eoded D re guc. [in this burrican® apd seat to the ceeded in adopting the child she woud |Pottom. ee have become his atater, by law, and wnat Sees SING SING LOSES tend if successful tient, to bring the child up tn ignorance of the omplex situation Bot irs ven were In Sar yato Fowler's chambers to-day, ee- | attacks by Convicts Upon yin « far apart aw possible . . the amall room. ‘They were not Cause His Transfer to Great | there long, however, before Surrogate Meadow To-Day. wler announced that his mind was up to give Muriel to her Exceptional showing of exclus with trimmings of Beaver, Skunk, Richly lined and wool int 13.75 19.75 9.75 ’ Practical Coats models of Wool Plush, cline, mixtures and Pebble Cheviot, fur and velvet, trim- | med in desirable colorings. | 10 to 16 years. Special 13.75 Six | | || Girl | skirts of serge or corduroy, in Navy, Green and Brown; heme stitched pique collar. §& to 1b yeurs. | Special 5.90 Exclusive and distinctive 2.75 5.00 7.50 LE eT CULYUEEUNS EOS SHOU miKKe Dut 46 was tne éiittax of thé” Whole” OSSINING, N, Y,, 00, 11--Willlam OPPENHEIM. CLLINS & G 34th Street—New York Directs particular attention to ve Oppenheim, Collins & Co.’s models, 25.00 Girls’ and Children’s Hats Velvet, Velour, Corduroy and Felt, trimmed with fancy flowers and ribbons. Him Fitch and Fox. erlined. 32.50 Girls’ School Coats Four models of Broadcloth, Wool Plush, Diagonal Cloth and Corduroy, fur collars, full lined and wool interlined. 4 to 10 yeurs. Special 9.75 Girls’ Dress Coats Belt model of Velveteen in Brown, Green, Burgundy and Black, Beaver collar, full lined and interlined. 4 to 10 years. Special 12.75 Girls’ VelveteenDresses Russian and waist line models of Velveteen in Navy, Brown, Green and Black; guimpe of Crepe de Chine and Pongee. 3 to 14 years. spect 9.75. youthful models, in 10.00 aod upward oe