Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
CBE BVUERHAAG AUB, BEY My HY me mm, AEs ; Mc feed | WMATEUR BANDIT TAKEN |store rec mar Too Many Daughters Tied oe Oo ate eat as To To Mother’s | A ron Strings \x-Footer “Grabs Youth win | jor of money od lane ® * Abandoned tm Mar- Is Eleanor Gates’s View. 's28" ("gat Hera New Opportunities Tomorrow 1 Me 949 finer | edent Council of Harvard University, Those Enslaving Strings May Be Lengthened Enough to Permit Girl to Go Out and Work, but at Close of Day, Daughter Is Drawn Back to! Household § Drudgery and Tyranny—Even Some Mar-| ried Daughters Are So Held, in Bondage, but Girl With Job Is Worth More to Her Mother Than Girl With Husband, By Nixola Greeley-Smith. $67'M not a Jane, nor a akirt, nore dame any mors, I'm « voter,’ exclaimed Fieanor Gates proudly. I had not ono to talk with Mise Gates about votes, but about “Apron Strings,” a new) novel by the wom- an who wrote “The | Poor Little Rich Girl,” one of the most successful plays ever pro- ane duced in America, So I lot Miss Gates finish her jublia- tlons over the Suffrage victory, and | then I asked: exiats because of apron strings that | “Do you really believe that there|!f 1 can snip off some of them I shall are many daughters in this country think I haye | done h lhl Siti Job.” | H who aro tied all thetr lives to their rnothers' apron atrings?” Miss Gatea| PRINTER KILLED BY TRAIN had taken the theme of subject a aughtors for hor now book, and 1|“*e Rode Past station and Tried) if wondered if sho had found the situa.| ,*° Cress Tracks to Get Back. || 4168 common, Marry G. Lee, thirty-one years olf, | |i a printer of No, 6822 Sixth Avenue | Sé"THERE are hundreds of thou-| Brooklyn, went to sleep on a Sea Beach | sands of them,” Miss Gates| train while on his way home early to- replied in her deep, convincing voice. | day and rode past his station, ° jay, has recommended that th he weual series of emotete held by alt In e four lasses be abandoned thie ywar as « war measure a = || Concentration Sale | nd dragged him t Comes from him @ reece im tet oat atreet light NOWTON, Nov, 11.—Announcement piatol waa of the ammonte var. | Wae made to-day of the consolifation of hana | Sema ‘a zee Women’s REGAL Shoes ard Hannon, 17 he had @ furnished room by the combined names, The Congre- bth Streot,| eationaliat, aald to be the oldest rell- and Hecond Avenue Im over to Broadway and where he turned him over to Patrolman | ows paper in the country, alwaye hae | Bendt been published in Boston, and the Ad- — ——- 'T've worked a @ grocery clerk stnce vance In Chicago Regular Prices $5, $6, $7 up to $10 Established Over Half Century Furs of Distinction $1.95 Gun Metal Boot All Remaining Oxfords $195 Charlotte Shat- —made inetylish ing Boot—sever- Economy pat- and Pumps Now Priced 1 combinations of color, Just Prices $3. N BIVE business days, the Women for romah of Greater New York have bought and taken away nearly one half the 39,000 shoes we put into this great Con- centration Sale last Saturday morning. Naturally, this has left many of the styles broken in size—some almost completely sold out. Now, we have rearranged all the Oxfords and Pumps in these Ten Regal Stores and repriced them at $1.95. Patent Button Attractive Models Tan Coats—Capes Evening Wraps Scarfs and Muffs We also invite an inspection of our perfectly matched skins in “There are thousands of stenogra-| He tried to cross the tracks at Fort | Boot with Clot phers in New York City alone who| !amilton avenue and 624 Street to| [Rf Russian and Hudson Sable Patent Lace A most opportune offer of smart Top. Plain te Are absolutely tied to their mothers'| 298td a train approaching from the op- | | Boot,leathertop. business and dress low-shoes to wear Welt Sole with rae site direction, and was crushed be-| the daughter | vee tho forward trucks and platform. | AtCF/ When taken out after an hour's work to go out and work, put at the end of! 5. 9 wrecking crew, he was dead, | the day they draw her back home to pred eesie ees be tyrannized over. Killed by Fall on Ship. x | “Formerly there was a conspiracy i | daughters married as soon as pos-|* yn, @ car- | [Hf sible, ‘Two hundred’ years ago an|denter, fell thirty feet from a scaffold | ‘inmarried woman was not permitted | {nto the hold of the steamship Marte at to set up a household by herself. | If|the foot of 65th Btrect. Brooklyn. earls 6 0 de protectior to-day ie et rom @ broken k sho did not live under tho protection while” bene en ta ens ne i ack Collewe Hospital de in stylish a eecae now with spats—suggesting also a feel hae thought ahead to Spring and Summer. lar Price, $5, Note, please, the size ranges. In each of these Ten Regal Stores you will find your size in anexcellent choice of styles. The choice in the smaller sizes is | exceptionally complete. . © @ $1.95 In Pumps ~ $2. 95 Bleck, Gun Metal, Patent Ate $1 95 Leather, Kid Leather, in {ends nd Beton election of aoe we neers and josh Wii Metal, ; d Brown. re fom poy Ate Vpn of Boots White c ite uc! an Gan Reta. Pasene sate mc) pe mands: Kegther in Black, Brown in noe ie it. Rustrnate lnsoenplete, bores st ey ec $1.95 C. C. SHAYNE & CO. Manufacturers of Strictly Reliable Furs : 126 West 42d Street, New York of some man, a father, a brother, a busband or a cousin, she could be ar rested as a public nuisance. The women had to get married, Rut to- day mothers are just as much set on keeping their daughters single and working as they were in former days to get them married. A girl with job is worth much more to her mother than a girl with a husban¢ And although the daughter brings home the money that keeps the household together, it is she who ts advised and cautioned and commanded as if she wore a little girl “In homes where there are brothers and sisters tho brothers pay board and have nothing to do at hom copt rest for the next day's wor tho girls are expected to toll de town all day and then ovine home and be kitchenmaids. “y DON’T say that many mothers tyrannize over their daughters consciously, but there ts bardiy an unmarried girl! who does not feel her- self too much interfered with at home. “I know one girl who recently told her mother she could not stand iiv- , ing with her any longer; that she would always support her but sbe must be by herself, as she wanted quiet and peace. Of course the mother thought there was another reason and was heartbroken, But to- day she is quite reconciled. “If you doubt that the apron string bliem is & general one,’ Miss ates added earnestly, ‘find out how many middle-aged, unmarried teach~ ers there are in this country; women who have remained unmarried to sup- port thelr mothers, The boys of the family have gone off and married ‘Then, with a wife and children, it is impossible for them to hu'p, There 4s hardly a self-supporting woman} who has not a mother or emall aister to care for.” a) | HAVE always felt that there Is not enough respect for age in this country,” I interrupted at this point, Men with dependent mothers marry and the mothers are turned out by the daughters-in-law, Or @ woman marries and finds that her husband Insists on sending the mother ome, That seems outrageous to Yo In Oxfords Gun Metal, Russia Cal White Nubuck and White Canvas, Giseakia Wamp, lvory Kid Top. Weod Louis Heel, lain Toe, 10 tan Hel inch Boot. new uptodate These are the Ten Regal Stores Regular “Regular rrnyar rs Price, $10. sii 6th Ave, cor, 21st St. 150 E. 14th St. cor. Third Ave. 125th St.cor. 7thAve. 2929 Third Ave, near 152nd St, BROOKLYN 4 Flatbush Avenue 1375 Broadway cor, Fulton Street 301 Broadway - 1049 Broadway 466 Fifth Avenue 3. 4 A - JERSEY CITY: 108 Newark Avenue sy see geo nae in sone of ; Newest U ‘Sizes not complete in all lines boy ieee tard aloe Hd em ay VERCOAT Thousands Upon Thousands of Them In almost every style, fabric and pattern desired by Men and Young Men this season-—Overcoats that combine quality with depend- ability and thoroughness--made By the House of Kuppenheimer Their very exchange from our stock to you is a pledge of value, an assurance of service and a positive guarantee of satisfaction. k oe $22.50—$25.00-—- $30.00-- $35.00 -$40.00—and up to $65.00 Brill Cvercoats At $15 and $20 EE io YW Wl (These Aigures compiled by the Statistical Department the New SYork_ Evening Posh ) MUL ya think wad o YY ve that young people oli peopie, i Bird _ New Trench models, Box Coats,| New Trench models, Ulsterettes, Form-fitting Coats and belt-back| Balmaroons, Box, Form-fitting and models, with patch, slanting or flay | Chesterfield models, in black or Oxford EP ox. Advertising Printed. 4 AbveRTISING Recon. _i hss hove prosnet and with velvet or self-col-) Melton, fine mixtures and Scotch lars, at $20.00, worsteds, at $15.00, haa the r . ie be Suits, Too, by the Thousands “yp women Ww ) An almost endless variety of this season's most desirable styles—From 822.50 ' the/est eight one 1 depend to £50, suits by the House of Kuppenicmer, with the absolute assurance of j SY IYIT keep tees from lov | value and quality that goes with every Kuppenheimer garment—and at $15 mart cist | and $20, Brill Suits specially made and specially priced to please men of ibe ge ‘ , weal moderate means but good taste. The Kuppenheimer House in New York and Brooklyn 44 East IMth Street Broadway, at 49th Street 1456 Broadway, at 42d St, 2 Flatb 47 Cortlandt Street 125th Street, at 3d Ave. 279 Broadway, at Chambers eee Anew rr pare Aon ~Men's and Young Men's Kuppenheimer atyle book llddddldddddddddddded la