Mother's Day or Mothers' Day?

As the picture clearly shows we say Mother's Day and not Mothers´ Day. 
Does this mean that saying Mothers' Day is grammatically incorrect? The answer is NO. 
In fact it makes more sense to say Mothers' Day than Mother's Day. Really this problem is similar to that when we say Merry Christmas, but  not Happy Christmas. Both are correct but everyone says "Merry Christmas".      
In the case of "Merry Christmas" we could say the explanation is that Collocation decides so (Collocation indicates that some words can only occur with certain words and not with others, e.g. set a price  but not establish a price).
The case of  "Mother's" is different because it does not happen due to Collocation..
Apparently, the person who started it all, back in 1908 in the U.S., Ms. Anne Jarvis, wanted a celebration that sparked the family spirit so each mother in every family would be truly the center of this celebration and not all the mothers of the world at the same time and when she promoted the creation of this special day she also made sure that it would be called Mother's  Day and not Mothers' Day.          
As you can see, Mother's Day is then special in more than one way.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     

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