Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
HOME EDUCATION “THE CHILD'S FIRST SCHO! the National New York City. weekly in Issued by 40 Street, Kindergarten ' Association, 0L IS THE FAMILY"—Froebel. 8 West These articles are appearing columns, our “She’s Teacher’s Pet” L By MRS. W On a beautiful a cirele of happy kinderg children were sitting in the corner of the playground during a short intern ion Mrs. New kirk had purposely Ioft them their bwn devices for a min utes, knowing that need a little time whe; ion not at all on the “Ohy there goes Jane! oie little tot Several of the children gav~ their childish hail and waved en ergetically at who first grade child “Humph!” said gerious “my brother says she's the er's pet.” “It’s not to " answered the cause my mother told id teachers just he treat ‘the chil ferent’ like she does Jc e and home. Sometimes Johnnie as bad as I am so he don't have to sit in a chair as much as I do and then it locks if Mother was nicer to him and loved him more.. But sometimes he and I am good, then he Jooks as if Mother was me."” “My mother, she's just as mics to us as can be when are good,” said a jolly little boy, “but when we're bad she gets ‘feroci ous’. Maybe that is the way with teachers, too.” Such remarks actually hearl from “children of pre-school give feachers and parents an op timistfic view of the effect home spring afte children suparvi is exclain ed Jane, was a Betty teach that speak me so. ve t nice say first just me at is bad it nicer {c say we . B. BAILEY e ———— ning has with regard to creat- public opinion or sentimeni ng little people. In the above nce, the application of a mo careful explanation was publicly to establish an at toward a question of vital to their child-group. The question of who. is teach er's pet and why, means as much the children who are just ready to enter the first year of school as any of the great po litical, social or religious ques tions will mean to them in late years. to 1hou So much unhappiness could be | avoided if a child were given, very early in life, a few fundamental principles upon which he might his opinions regarding con- especially that of other peo- ple—and get a correct and reason able idea of the purpose back of | all behaviour. Children very early begin to think for themselves. They begin to measure all per- sons with whom they come in con tact by some sort of standard. It is the work of adults in the homa and school to help the child to form safe standards of judgment. | Busy parents are often prome to forget how large a small prob- lem may become in a child’s mind and how difficult it may be for his little group to solve it wisely Blessed is the mother who can | early develop in her childrea broad views and safe principles, and twice blessed are her chil- dren and all with whom they have to do. K oyl 05, & Notices for tnis cauren corumn must be received by The Empire not later than 10 o'clock Satur- day ‘morning to guarantee change ofisermon topics etc. ! Christian Science Church services wiil be held at 1% a. m .in the Church of Chris- tian Science So~fety of Junean on Fifth and Malin Streets. The sub- Ject’ will be, “Matter.” $tifiday School at 12:15 p. m. iWednesday, 8:15 p. m —Testi- mbnial meeting. hristian Science Reading Room i church building. This room is ofgen to the public Wednesday affernoons from 2:30 to 4. #The public is cordially invited ) attend these services and visit l)p reading room. !Le Metiodist Eplwonnluchurchfij i Fourth ana seward Streets ?EV4 R. A G {10:00 a. m, 11:00 a. ln‘_l’zod Praying. $7:30 p. m Sermon: Many Churches are Not AILEY, Making ¥ invited. ity Cathedral CHARLES E. RICE, Dean. : Phone 5603 Sunday services: Holy Communion 8:00 a. m. Morning Prayer and Sermon, 11:00 o'clock. Sunday School, No service at Toy. ridays during Lent: ’ddross at 8:00 p. m. i \ BV. 0. A. STILLMAN, Pastor 1:00 a. m.—Morning worshi; m by the Pastor. thful Unto Death.” 2:15—Bible School. 0.evening service. _ warm welcome | Besurrcction Lutheran Church oSS ERCE o hovs. dwal . of Thir@ ars ain Sts Y R. ALLEN, Pastor m.—Merning- worship. “The Law and the Gos- fir every- “Why | | WASHINGTON held in the church Wednes- v eveniag at 8:00 o'ck 8 hearty welcome awaits you. be ta Pifth and Gold 6:00 a. m.—Low pital Chapel. 8:00 a. m. — Low Sermon, General the children. 10:30 Sermon 1:30 p. 7:30 p. and Benediction Sacrament Streets. Mass in Hos- Mass and Communion for a. m.--High Mass and m.——Sunday Sehool. m. — Rosary, Sermon of the Blessed Presbfierian Natirve Church b HARRY WitLanD, Lay Worker . m.—Morning Service m.—Dible School p. m—Wednesuny—-Mid all to attend these services, s i Alsemblfi c;f Ci)d Mission ecostal Assembly) et s, hel Pentecos: 207 Seward CHAS. C. PERSONT Sunday services: 11:00 a. m.-—Morning ship. 12:156 p. 800 p. m.—~DTvening Worship | The Lord’s Supper the |Sunday of each month, ( Pastor Wor- T, =i idny and Friday at 8 p. m. ! -~ | CUPID FOLLOWS WOMEN IN FOREIGN SERVICE Since the state department began to take women into the foreign service, threc fhuvo received appointments. But one already has resigned to be | married and there is a rumor | that another plans to abandon | | | her® official career for matrimony. | Miss Lacille a Smith Ameri ! She w. admin Atchison of Ohio, college graduate, was first woman diplomat. appointed in the Harding tration and served as a {third secretary of legation in Berne and Panama. She now is 'mll'l'fl'll and lives in Chicago. Miss Pattie ¥eld of Denver, who has an A. B. degree from Radciiffe, was the ond in the foreign scivico. Ske was appoirt ed fn 1925 and siill is a vice con- ul at Amsterdam, whence the {humor concerning matrimony em- anates. The third is Miss Frances Wil- lis of Redlands, California, a grad- uate of Stanford university and a !!nrmer asgistant professor of po- litical science at Vassar. She i3 enroute to Valparaiso, Chile, as vice consul. 2 SAILORS PEAGTICE ABROAD LIVERPOOL, Eng., arch 17 —Canadian naval base at V couver Island has sent 16 seamen to England for six-month course in torpedo’ practice and s firsi | | Mid-week services every Tuce | | | BETHLEHEM, Pa., Another “unknown representative = of patriots of the American Revolu- tion, may soon be added to that galaxy of the nation’s heroic dead. The consecration is proposed at the Moravian Seminary and Col lege for Women, oldest woman's college in . America, which was turned over to the colonial armies as a general hospital during the war for indepemndence. March 17— soldier,” th> Brief records of the time show that for two years the young stu dents, all daaghters of influential families, gave up educational pur- suits to nurse approximately 3,000 soldiers, 700 of whom died and were huried on a hilltop adjoining the campus. Ever since tuen tue girls of the college have kept alive the tradl tion within their vanks by impres sive memorial' services and an nual pilgrimages to the little knoll, marked now by a tiny, foo: high granite tablet. Plans for a national monument, started by Ed- win J. Heath, president of the college, have the hearty support of the Pennsylvania Historical So. ciety and various groups and in dividuals in the state. Founded in 1742 vian church, a religious organiza- | tion that tock form in Bohemia the fifteenth century o the {'sst te teach the Prot t faith, the seminary of s 1 builiings houses hundreds memor. surrounding ‘ngton sent the orsenal thanks for Laremunerated | . “2ops. Lafayetts mds suffered crdent in his i aled i+ in the seminary n's Important politi- a suite for ma cal conf % vl {rin of the Liber. Phriladolnhia to Al-| | e 3 & the ivjedon: | ! on the v. The ansported istance of nin a the sor hich 18 was wroks en a hill noarby, al lewing the carefully-guarded fall into the road. An indus- 1 department in the school me to the rescue and repaired ! both the wagon and the bell. Today the school is a non-sec- tarian institution, the gift of the Moravian church. Its board of d'- rectors represent inany differen: faiths. From its campus, rich with an early Aunerican back- ground, have comeé many of the women leaders of the country, | | | JUST SOME HINTS ] | FOR MWOUSEWIVES | L | Green pepper cups at each end |of the salad bowl hold mnyon-i naise or thousand-island dressing, and the hostess can serve dress- |ing according to individual likes, |as voiced Dby those about the table. Color and ‘spice are thus | happily combined for the lovers ell salads. g | the cream white sauce to cover the family’s old favorite of baked | noodles gives wvariety and add { protein food value, Rings of green pepper for garmish are a refresh- ing addition, i — There are some charming styles prescmied for the little ones, and here are three typical exam- ples. Left—A garment of silk-finished embroi- dered woile, with tulle net on the sleeves, smock- ing forms yoke, Center—A frock of printed “UNKNOWN SOLDIER” OF REVOLUTION 1added | what 1t is until they openmed the bell | Chopped walnuts mixed with| striped linens, ( TO HAVE SHAFT ON HISTORIC CAMPUS| :0xpON—Amthousn net yet ol | | | i i i R - ranged around it on lettuce leaves. | Stuffed sliced green olives sup 700 nameless | ply color, and mayonnaise is the|qualitied as a shi dressing. | When preparing cracked crabh,| one housekeeper advises, use th:| metal nut cracker. It breaks th shell grisply, without crushin the meat. | Chopped celery and apples add| a surprise touch to a grated car rot salad and increases the! amount. Nuts, cut small, either| | almonds or walnuts, add an exo- tic flavor to the familiar vege-| table. Sardine canapes made with| minced sardines and finedy Cthn‘ ped green pepper on rounds of| brown toast are excellent for| starting the company dinner or to accompany the midnight supper of salad and coffee. Lemon juice| to the mixture hefnrei spreading gives tartness. A spread boiled layer of canned tomatoes! over layers of diced par-| rutabagas makes a com.! pany dish of an otherwise ordi-! n vegetable. Chopped onions! and green pepper add spice to the | digh, which slips into the oven long enough to finish cooking the| rutabaga. French fried carrots—they will! mislead the erstwhile diner. They are cut in shoestring lengths, are fried in deep fat and slipped in to| accompany those popular plate luncheons. ¢ A blackberry pie is entirely| changed wiin a top crust of whip: ped cream. Thicken the borries with cornstarch or flour and put into an already baked crust. When cool top with whipped cream. I/ the pie is thick enough it will as easily as a custard pie. Banana surprise provides threa; guesses for the family and theu| they probably couldn’t imagin- cabbage leaf—but that lets out, the whole story. Something new and different to, accompany the meat course was one of mother's self-confessed #oals in life, 8o she took tender leaves of new green cabbage, one large leat for each diner, parboil- ed slightly, and rolled a small ba nana in each leaf. Round strips of lemon peel spliced together at! the ends with' teothpicks held the rolls together. A flat casserole dish came into use to hold the cabbage rolls, which were dotted with butter and then baked in a medium oven until soft and slightly browned. Strips of _bright pimento alter- nated with the lemon strips for garnish when the dish was served at the table en casserole. ——— ST. Left-over fried or baked halibut is flaked the day, and mixed with a spl molded salad, either in itself or ar- linens with Indian wmotifs, bloomer style, and with woolen pom poms. Right—A frock of blazer |inat is repeated by the str: broidered touches. | (Internation2] Dlustrated News) ] Suzannce white flannel fi uit collared in it would develop in darker shades, a side {the three buttonhol en buttons add a t ery but wherte and woed- lored touch bloomer type, with hand-eit- |sleeves finished with button t and the employment of tech 1 knowledge cf all clag: s ‘kets in the world. began her care in this rected field as a clerk in @ Len?on shipbrokers' firm ——————————— WOMAN SHIP-BROKER 1S FIRST IN LONDON enough to vote, Miss Mah2l Wel- ler, 2 lias pa 1 exal ation | which make her tke first woman; OLD TALE TELLER DEAD oker in Eng | HONOLULU, Merch 17—Makia land. | Mainui, well known to tourists for legends he narrated is dead A dhiproker's |at the reported age of 107. Until the negotiating of g 2 _ et | ia month before his death Mainui steamers throughout the world = el | " > attended church regularly. He the bearing of responsibility for S > . : » jehunned much of modern life, discharging cl cargoes, the enter-’ ¢ ‘ R | . o preferring to live in a grass hut. ing into arrangements with cap- = 4 tains and crews of all nationali-iOld papers foi sate at The Empire duties iequire cargoes for Married Six Times and w Will Try It Once More UCK in odd numbers? Mrs. Myrtle Miller of Chicago thinks so, or at the very least she’s an optimist, because sa's been married no less than six times and con- fides that she’s contemplatin® going up to the altar for tha seventh, in the near future Mrs. Miller is candid about her collection of ex-hubbies. “Some were good,” she says, . “some were fair, and some were rotten.” Here's a chronological account of the Chicage woman's matrimonial experiences: Mr, Miller, 3 years; Mr. Seth, 3 months; Mr. George, 18 monthss . Mr, Billings, § months; Mr, Williams, 6 months} Mr., Wilson, 6 weeks. In the order of their appearance =and disappearance—her husbands were (1), a leather worker; (2), & carpenter; (3), a soldier; (4), & silk salesman; (5), a cement con= tractor, and (6), a salesman. Mrs. Miller keeps her own per~ sonal lawyer, who is called upom . m rather regularly to go to the courts Mrs. M}flfl. Miller and free her from her latest and (rnternationsl Iilustrated News) frksome matrimonial bonds. Peggy Hopkins Joyce, also well mates, could not be reached t¢ known as & “Lady Bluebeard” for comment upon the Chicagoan whq Ber ranidity in shelving uncdhgenial threatens to eelipse her record. DRIVE AWAY THAT HEADACHE OR TIRED FEELING—— A couple of hours spent 31; ithe Colineum next Tues- . day or Wednesday night will banish the worst case . of blues you ever had. Don’t miss seeing P - €LEAN-COMEDY BLUE RIBBON ‘BIKE For Ladies or Girls “Over a million in use today” Juneau-Young Hardware C HARDWARE and UNDERTAKING PHONE 12 ; e A S S S G SR S CHARMING NEW FROCKS EX CEPTIONALLY smart ecxpressions of the newest mode, em- bodying the new style featurgs. One and two picce models develop- cd in flat crepe in a delightful combination of plain and printed designs, in the spring shad of blue, red, tan and brown and black. All frocks collection are $12.75 in this Three -of the lovely frocks are fea- tured os s employing most of the smart spring touches. THE CHIC two piece navy blue and tan polka dot is especially in- terest The skirt of navy blue is covered with large tan polka dots across the front, which is pleated. A handkerchief square with the dots, forms rt finish to the neck while near the bottom of the blouse are two little po 5, bound with self material show- ing the poika dots. THE COSTUME of bright color combined with black is eloquent of spring. The skirt is finely pleat- ed in the front. The blouse is a colorful riot of red, green and white, in perfeet harmony, against a black background. The neck and cuffs are bound in black. POLKA DOTS are new this spring and the frock of bright red with tiny white dots is most appealing. A contrasting shade of red forms the band on collar and cufis and makes the belt. A band of red and large white polka dots gives a smart finish to the front border of thesblouse, « e PP ALASKA MEAT CO. " Wholesale and Retail I PHONE 39 Lors SETARD STREETY Is a mirthful musical comedy given by Alford John Bradford Post, Am- erican Legion, at Coliseum March 20th and 21st. @ ' “NOBODY LIED” when said Diamond Briquets are the idedl fuel for furnace, range or 3 e