The evening world. Newspaper, November 16, 1915, 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)

t - ~ NEBRASKANS PUT -PRESDENTAL PROBLEM "SQUARE TO HUGHES Copy of Petition Placing His! Name on State Primary Bal- THE EVEN | tne statement made at his home to.! jday. “What it will be he is not yet ready to announce.” MAYO MEN DINE TO-NIGHT. Famoas Organization to Have Many of Ita Not at the Table, A dinner celebrating the thirtieth an- niversnry of the County Mayo Men's Association of New York is to be given at Murray’s in West Forty-second Street thie evening. This organization t# one of the most influential of the Irish so- cleties in the city. | Among the speakers who will be heard | | WHEN See 1s GOOD Snes vERy very @ood BUT WHEN Shes Bad SHE HORRID og iG 8 am I tot Is Wired to Justice. at the banquet to-night are ex-Governor | Martin H. Glynn, Justice John Ford of Supreme Court, Former Attorney gi General Edward KR. O'Malley and WASHINGTON, Nov. 16—A tele. | el 3. O'Brien, John Finnegan Braphic copy of the petition filed by Nebraska Republicans, placing Jus | tice Hughes's name on the Presidential primary ballot in that State, was latd solotat of the Cathedral choir, will | ng, and John Kastner will play the in to the piano accompanimine of his slater, Diana Kastner. Among the guests will be many men before the Justice to-day by his secre- | bern in Mayo and the sons of parents | me = . * | born in the County of Mayo, who have } tary. Within a few days, it Is under- | naa, names for themselves in this city | stood, Justice Hughes will settle deft- | and state nitely whether he will allow his name} It is the boast of the Mayo Men's or- . | ganization that it numbers In its mem- | j to go before the next Republican > herthip sobre ohioehe of prosiimenes ana tional Convention. distinction than any other Irish county ‘The action of several hundred No- | or#anization braskans has forced Justice Hughes's hand. They filed the necessary peti- tion with the Secretary of State at Lincoln, although the Justice let it be known several weeks ago that ho would not be a candidate. Only by $7,500 for mt Eye. tative Hamill of Jersey City to-day his intention to intro- esolution in Congress appropri- custodian of | obtaining a court injunction can|the Hoboken Federal Bullding. Inj ye og | Lowering the flag on the building Au, Hughes keep bis name off the printed | 3" T9i3, Huhn ran up « Indder to un: tangle a knot. his eve against @ bolt in th injuring the eye that to sav: eve its removal was necessal ballots “Justice Hughes will undoubtedly take some action in the matte; DAVIES 29 West 54th St. | \ By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Has the American mother failed? “No,” says Kathleen Norris, the novelist who has interpreted the spirit of motherhood more tenderly and understandingly than any other American writer and who is herself the mother of a dark-eyed young son, Mrs. Norris believes that the American mother is a success, (1) because often she deliberately elects her profession; (2) because she is the companion of her children, instead of relegating them to thelr own quarters and to servants; (3) because she applies her brains, and not merely her instincts, to the problem of bringing up a family; (4) because she {s almost invari- | 4 ably kind and tender with her little ones. eS Do Evening World readers agree with Mrs. Norris MrVMARWALL that the American mother ii uccess? I shall be glad to print letters in defense of her, for some of tk» charges against her are serious. Dr. William H. Guilfoy, Registrar for the City Héalth Department, says—and figures bear him out—that American women do not make as good 20: CBOE Se Z ‘A First to Come to the Defense of the American Mother Is Mrs. Kathleen Norris, the Author, Who Declares She Is a “Self-Starter,” While the European Mother Is “‘Cranked Up” to Ma- ternity by the Instinct of Dame Nature. { WEDNESDAY—A SALE OF UNUSUAL IMPORTANCE Smart Full Flare Coats ne Reema eee sale ING WORLD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1 1915 ARE FOREIGN-BORN MOTHERS BETTER THAN AMERICAN MOTHERS? Ai THE AMERICAN MOTHER 1S HIND ~ SWE Tames THE Hippies TO THE MOVIES celebrity of to-morrow to repeat truthfully the great man's great think about her. REDUCING (OR ENLARGING) MOTHERHOOD TO A BUSINESS. mothers as foreign-born women; that the children of the latter, in New York City, better chance of life than the children of native Americans. He | says that the American mother fails begause she doesn’t keep herself physi-| cally fit for maternity, because she doesn’t want babies; because she refuses to give them her personal care and because she doesn't wisely control them } as they grow older. | Do the men and women who acrificing woman whom | read The Evening World think songs and stories that Dr. Guilfo; hi te honor? O the all of his criticis: mother det: zed the modern girl and jorn man; what about the mother of to-day? Is she the which has been raised so often of recent years? Does she neglect such babies as she has—or does she overindulge them? Will it be possible for the American PLAIN SAILING FOR BUYERS OF FINE DIAMONDS “good mother” of yesterday, the loyal, conscientious, hard-work- Zibeline Broadcloth Vieuna Fur Fur Fur ‘ Trimmed Trimmed Trimmed We smooth the path of him who comes $18.50 $18.50 $18.50 to buy a Solitaire Diamond Engagement Ring. We could not show him a low- quality Diamond for we do not carry a poor diamond. We do not sell anything thet hasn't merit. Merit in a Diamond means purity of color and perfection of cutting. We never have asked high prices for Diamonds and we stick to our ancient rule even now when supplies in general of fine Diamonds are running low. We are still importing Diamonds direct, keeping away from middlemen. All Diamonds in this store are up to the old Lambert standard of brilliancy and pure color. Solitaire Diamond Engagement Rings $10.00 to $1500. Mountings from the Lambert factory, in solid 14 karat and A collection of over twenty extremely fashionable models (three of which are illustrated) of Corduroy, Wool Plush, Velour, Broadcloth, Zibeline, Hindu Lynx and Vicuna. Effectively fur trimmed. Fully lined with soft silks and warmly interlined. Sizes 14 to 44. ; FURNISHED a THE HIGH RENY DISTRICY arr » 3 ROOMS 18 karat gold. Pierced platinum settings and new models , with Period Furniture $925 in platinum with paved sides. sig . 6-ROOM OUTFIT, “L. B.” Seamless Solid Gold Wedding Rings bought bhp hanes Furniture, at 97 Furniture, Value $000. ‘Now °300 Credit Terms a sie Grand Ra, nearly 40 years ago and worn steadily ever since are as bright and strong to-day as those that shine on the hands of the brides of 1915. Enough said. All shapes, styles, and thicknesses. Guaranteed solid 14 karat,, $3.30 up; 18 karat, $4.00 up; 22 karat, $5.25 up. Pianos. eee . ex Weekly. ' i is uCredl || >| > > j . 14-karat, $3.30 up| 14-karat, $4.40 up) 14-karat, 99.50 up|I4-karat, 96.60 200 (20 « 12.50 16-karat, $4.00 up |18-karat, $5.50 up| Is-knew p|lS karat, 38:10 up 300 30 *3.00 22-Kurat, $5.25 up |22-karat, $7.00 up|22- karat, $8.78 up /22-karat, $10.50 up 400 "40 "4.00 | Initials and date engraved Free. { 500 50 "5.00 | Wedding Gift Suggestions: | Larger amounte on to ] We Pay Freigh nger terme i} ieee Tas TeNE® 3 087 Gare, Doiteites Diamond and Solid Gold Brooches, Lavallieres, Bracelets, i Rallroad Fares! Sinie, New dere, Gonneuaeee, "ere Everywhere Diamond and Platinum pendants, Solid Gold Bracelet Watches, Solid Gold Vanity Boxes. LAMBERT BROTHERS Diamonds—Jewelry—W atches OLZWAS 1417-1423 THIRD SER I asked Mrs, Norris for her opintot because, from her first tremendously! successful novel, “Mother,” to her latest volume, the fecently published “Story of Julia Page,” sbe has writ. ten a kind of prose epic of the busi- ness of being a mother, You think at first—or I thought, anyway—that Mra, | Norris views motherhood as a sort of sentimental journey, rather than as @ business, But she takes, in “Thi Story of Julia Page,” a sentimen sugarcandy, cunnin’ little mother quite gently but quite relentle: shows how a woman who Is merely a sop of affectionate intentions can come close to ruiming the lives of her children. The analyses of this mater- nal failure and of still another one are the best things in the book, And yet, on the whole, she believes | that the Americap mother is a suc- | cess. We talked about her over the teapup and before a glorious wood | firé in Mrs. Norris's Port Washing: | ton home, while small son Frank listened demurely, passed the box of chocolates, and did his satisfactory best to prove that HIS mother, at any rate, is a success, _ “I think that there ought to be a distinction between the New York mother and the American mother,” Mrs, Norris began, “The chief trouble with the New York mother is that she doesn’t have any children, That ts because New York is essentially arti- ficial, A Californian told me that he had been homesick in Chicago and in Philadelphia, but never in New York. ‘Of course not,’ I replied, ‘and for the same reason you will never be home- sick after death, There is nothing in New York which by any chance could remind anyone of his home. Home was never like this, We may assume that the same thing is true of whichever place we go to when we die.’ MATERNAL RESPONSIBILITY 18 NOW TAKEN MORE SERIOUSLY, “that, except ‘THE DEVOTION BeTWeen S/STeRS AND BROTHERS 13 “TESTIMONY OF MOTHERS EXCELLENT TRAINING York has shown interest in thone| tnovements,” readily admitted Mrs. Norris, ‘Another proof that New York women who have children take good care of them is the beautiful, healthy look of the children them- selves. Go into a park in any section of the city and you will see fy » round, rosy little persons, even if their numbers are few in comparison with the grown-ups. When she returned from abroad my sister said that, after taiking with the pallid, stunted chil- dren of London and of the Ital: over to our east side and see a youn, ster who probably sat in the gutt and sucked a pickle, but who did look sturdy and fat.” Don't you thinl ng the very poor, 00," I suggested, th merican own time and than tl more of her chil foreign mother gi leed I do,” said Mrs. Norr! nod of her beautifully poised She has ,the shoulders, the carriage of Hera, mother gives women service to h of the other ay “The mpanion He eats with the their rooms, sleeps » goes out to walk w of l} and kind is not wil her oun re i ) Y Beautifully dressed who brut pensive a Tage wore in bal reasons why the is @ success. chil brought up in t ise, is kind. nal ung son indigestible, raised ii “4 she does it because he the baby to the movies when it should be having a nap because she wants to make the baby happy. Hardly ever does one hear of an American mother little child. ally abu: bout hes te watch their little Shs fect oe tors id ie merican gives PIAN In order to make room for stock now on its way to us, EVERY PIANO in our warerooms formerly selling up to $350 will be closed MORROW ONLY out Brand New OS 190 $5 Down and $5 Monthly New 88-Note PLAYER- A limited number of Player- Pianos of different styles and woods, formerly selling up to $600, will be cl out TO-MORROW ONLY PIANOS "390 ROLLS OF MUSIC and Fine Bench with Player, aa YOUR PIANO Taken in Exchange ue Open Wednesday Evening Until 9 A. M. KNAB mm MI wit equalled and justify “But the American mother, the mother of the West who only one generation away from the pioneer woman, the mother of the Middle West, the mother of the country, the mother no farther away than New Jersey or Long Island, is a success in a large ma- jority of cases. | think she is like the little girl who had a little ourl when she is good she is very, very good and when she is bad she is horrid. In the last ten years, ally, the American mother— New York ‘mother—has nal responsibilities jean and conscle: with seriou tiousness.” “One fact which I have observed about the New York mother,” I ven- tured to Insert, the almost feverish fnterest which she displays in any new plan for the bettcr care or education of children. Think of the enthusiasm with which the better baby movement was takon up here, And last spring, when Mrs. Winifred Stoner came to AVENUE REET. NEAR 80" ST Third Avenue, Cor. 58th Street Store Open Saturday Nights Until 10. |tell ua about her system of ‘Natural | Education,’ the halls where she leo- tured were literally mobbed with women,” “And the Montessori method and the plan for the Gary achool—New I The charm of an Alexander Slipper is enhanced by accurate lines, ensuring a correct fit and the desired dainty ¢ffect. The cardul workmanship makes for serviceability. A ESTABLISHED 1857 Andrew Alexander Sixth Avenue. at Nineteenth Street) r= HE season of opera, balls and evening slippers is here Never has the store held so and we are ready. S. ! quisite models in cloth many beautiful slippers—ex of gold and silver, velvet, satin, new beaded effects—the list} been known as Slipper Headquarters by three generations of fashionable women and this season’s assortment does he prices, we believe, are un- full justice to tradition. . full justice a special effort to at least comeand see. A smart new model in tent leather or dull idskin—suitable for afternoon as well as evening wear. $5.00 Same model in all blue or gray kid- skin at $5. Piped with white kid- skin, this patent leather slipper is stun- ning with an evening gown. Appropriate ‘or after- noon wear also. $5 NONANTTNN mM HN AA per kid, is endless. and satin We have

Other pages from this issue: