The evening world. Newspaper, September 10, 1907, Page 12

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Se Te At ee ee ee Ch eo) ik dan slain scien ners neti sll saith Sie dill Sia we Si idk readin Cane ecient world: s ‘Daily Magazine, Tuesday 10, 1907. Deh ede dhpot PEPPPP HEP Epo dhs Soohp Looe reyeeroooooors LPLHHMOHHSLOSHPSODESSD : The Newly weds, ss Their Baby © By George McManus , No & to & e ‘vealed Daily except Bunday by the F Park Row, New Y FOREN PULITEER, Pres, 1 Kast 24 Sree J aNGUA tweet HIT rr SEP ae : mr Belin PeaCOnlde wt New Tone as i atatter “dN re "oh, Se ROC THATS LET HIM HAVE TT UNTIL. \ RESO AH, NOW Oerenine World for une’| Metter ‘ HEAR PAPA'S PRGNAE SHINE HE 1 COME BACK, ITLL KEEP TOnOOR Prunes Sues | One year WATCH TICK ! ony WANTED) AINT HIM FROM CRYING | oven TES } > - MORNING IT UDLEUMS? THE CHILD. AND THE ‘city. AT is the duty of the city to the} | i, arises at the; opening of every school year. Yesterday's reassembling of the! 650,000 school children of Great-| ‘er New York presents again un-} solved the same old probleni. A committee of the Board of] Education has reported that more| than half, the school children are physically defective, that many] mental deficiencies result fron Paral defects, that many children are improperly nourished, that others hav: Bad eyesight or hearing, consumptive lungs, obstructed air passages. That these statistics are fairly accurate no one disputes. -~ =: But what is to be done about it? Is the Board of Education te assume the colossal task of feeding 650,000 children, or even 100,000 chikiren? Is the Board of, Education to take over the work of the Health’ Department so far as the health of the school children is concemed? In other words, is the city to under-| | take the duty of the children’s parents, and during the years of school age to assume responsibility, not only for their mental training, but for their physical development and their health and nourishment? ~ 1n'most of these cases the fault is the parents’ solely. There is no excuse for giving a child nothing except tea or coffee and bread for ‘breakfast. Children should be no more allowed to drink tea or coffee fhan beer or whiskey. Any narcotic or stimulant, however small the dose, is injurious to a child’s mind and body. Adenoids are readily de- tected and the operation for removing them is slight and inexpensive. if the parent i is unwilling to pay the doctor’s fee there are scores of free ries where obstructions in the throat and nasal passages can be BAGY BROKE My WATCH , BUT 1 GOT IT FIXED AND IT’S Time Ut" SPRING! WATCH [! WHATS THIS? WATCH OUT FOR HARD TIMES THIS SPRING | ) HERE’S ONE WHEEL ASANO’ BABY HAS ANOTHER 1 The Mail-Order Wife = HEH Noa Orovtey'smth 0 Rules woeereson E CD ened ities ee eo aye | IES managing Husbands. an aunt lving in Bloomington, IL, and forthwith received| selecting a wife for him. But {t almost invariably happens that the motherly or | Indifferent Husbands’ a wife has sent the following rules for the manage. So wrote Loula L. Kramer, of Yuma, Ariz, to] Always a man has in nlg own famfy a mother or sister desperately bent elle reply to Mias Nixola Greeley-Smith’s article on “Discouraged Wives ment of husbands, which cannot fall to be of interest to women readers ef a photograph of the aunt's selection, wrote her several] sisterly chotce falls on precisely the one girl in the world that he knows «mes, proposed, was accepted and has just been married} won't do. The Evening World. Hor letter follows: to her. ‘Aa his relattves have not the proper perspective on the candidates for hie| Dear Miss Greeley-Smuth: ad _This proceeding suggests the possibility of the-matl- [rfana, and an he has no perspective at all, tho interference of some wise exvert Here ts a succesa(ul married woman's ten rules for managing a husbandt order wife A great many men of course prefer to pick] i mine Character might frequently help fim to a proper selection. eae hag kG MW OE ROO Y MEU or coe mac brace RGA RATS] STEGER thelr wives them d much unhappiness result#from| We know that man does not love for beauty alone very long. ‘Therefore the| 2 Don’t tell your troubles Sit Gown and think out @ plan of action to sue - ir ‘inability to y, shoddy material that will) idea of the mall-onier wife would eliminate the disturbing element of personal | your own case. x The Board of Education is already assuming too much. tosteach too many subjects and not anything thoroughly and well. The average grammar school graduate cannot spell correctly, write leg f ibly or figure accurately. The facile and comprehensive use of the Eng: | seated persploactty:in discerning the 1 ish. language is one: thing that the public schools do nat teach, KAU ea ae t leat ‘There are courses in physiology, and immature boys and girls are | Pod wowld be made over into taught what ventricles, aortas and the like are. A little girl may have < Cee ae ses of digestion and then eat a Aunch 2 Sues ‘The : Affinity Fad. for Wives. ce durable and generally less| loveliness which sonietimes upsets the most sedate young man’s preconcelved| 3% Remember that although your husband ls head of the family, you are neg al of a sober, {ndurzrious helpmeet and ties him for life to a pretty woman | its tai! or hindquarters essional shopper, why not the pro-| whose faults loom larger every year and whose beauty no longer atones for 4. Don't tell your ‘best friend’? about your husband. She will be sure to tell. - If some disinterested woman of | them S a “friend of hers,’ and so on till it goes the round. They will soon overwhelm nd evil qualities of her own sex were) The qualitios that a wine old Indy would choose for him would be mors apt} you with sympathy and gradually kill what love or respect ja loft, and, ike the eranteed to be good house-|to last. He might not love them, to be sure The variable quantity of love ts! woman who was bit by a poor innocent pup, you will be killed by your tmagina- bachelors of her nelghbor-| about the ont g that would seem to prevent the mail-order wife from super-| tion. And when your husband hears of It, /t won't ratse you any in hia esteem. dicts. The Hebrew |seding every other vartety. & Tell the world he 4s the best man on earth, even {f you hats the ground the walks on. “No person is so rank or rare but what a little good {s there.” 6. Correct your own faults; then start on him. Let him know that every, | sptsrermecting woman feels a certain humiliation in asking for every cent sha necds_and giving account of every shilling she spends. whether * be to husban It is trying : | or father. The parents should be held responsible for their children. If a chi By F.G. ‘Long. . 1, Teach the ebiMtren to kine him when he comes and goed. No man cam needs eyeglasses or spectacles and the pareni fails to provide them, or : re long resist the temptation of fondling his own handiwork and admiring. Every sit the:child is insufficiently-fed-or-clothed.-or-if adenoids are-not- removed Peer cata pee Nb bencintsed tached rod Cal ttt CEE MC thet? the parent, except in rare cases of helpless poverty, should be punished It is by the parent's act that the child came into this world, and thai Tesponsibility should not be shifted upom the community. To give free meals to sor Idren and not to others would be to impress harmful distinctions upo! - the childish mind. To give char- » ity‘to some children and rot to others would raise class discrimina- tion in the public schools. All charity should be kept out of the ( Soune THIS 1S bt AFFINITY | THE AFFINITY YOU'RE T0O CRUQE-FIND 7) ej 7H TEMPERAMENTALLY COARSE! se lve DECIDED To PUT You { Ee \ petit os 5 GET ASIOVE ON WITH | , or hindrance. THEM DISHES OR Tit Don't fet the obfidren dtwturdD Bim whflw he ts reading tis paper, but whee GETS THE <<) PUT-A-WAY. PUT You AWAY ANO he begins to work overtime on it Grop the baby in his (ap, just to let him knee you are still on earth. a eeu ME AN AFNITY! 2. Your work at home 1s equal to what he draws @ eslary for, Never @> preciate yourself. She that bloweth not ber own-hern the same shall not be dlown. §, Make htm think you are the onty peach in the basket, and ff he doesnt ante’ jto take care of you for your services to him and his, “there are fust es mang fiah in the sea as ever were caught” 10. Gently drop a hint about your nelghbor, whose kind trusband provides @ nurse or cook go that she may not lore her health in early youth and become an invalid for life. If he doesn’t succumb te'this send him to @ doctor. He hes a. draln-storm and needa relief. T am a matron of atx years standing and belong to the “wafety” brigade, Ls ‘ama very subdued and quiet wife, aged twenty-four, PM SSS bane ~~ public schools.“ Charity has iis own > Se " place—in the free dispensaries, in NENG ities Department, and-in the many : : ir By Helen Valt-Wallace. . — private charities. The _ public Za < x, y Briefs for Stout Women. schools are in no sense a ch “tnstitution. When the Board of Education succeeds in teaching every child the three R’s it may ask to be trusted further. TOUT women should weer the hair high to appear tallen Anything iS thad_inareasen_ fhe —helgtst tnsrenens “1n/ provortion. the. stoner: erent: 1 SHE FINDS AN AFFINITY — BUT~ @) Q) . e 8 @ Te a ee ee pee (Ge Mw heer fis AY Sava | | ie OMG | ovLowr Bees Jeon, disregard prevailing vtyie and adopt = style Dest suited to herself, ‘i AUR 0, e (BORN _FOR E ANH Vy! ) Lt) Socxkess 4 WIVES If you h 4, fall f void small, medium-sized, round, low. hate, Letters ir om ihe P eople. na DZ Lif Re HAVE. | Hudaanns wr cl 200 yas, een, rad oma matt, ron, ole March 31. magnitude of its lexal FOR HERN GACH AN | AFFINITIES broken. posnenier oat! round or full effects increase the rotund eppesranse ‘To the Dittor of The Hvening World You Save sou KS wy) AS WELL *: you are 5 to avo! i A i 3 ee on AE nae core ane adap Die AS 4 LP ‘A bonnet fitting the head neatly and draped with a vel ts always becoming tineaca’ ot eascation, | |@o ther HUSBANDS: to & plump face, when one ts old enough or otherwige has oocaston to wear one. To the Enlitor of the Pyening W To whom should } write for informa- tion concerning free nix New York? A | Course, for Office Boy. a |e the Mittor of The B i The office boy's job all norte of possibiities. Yet boy in five has sense or experien enough to take advantage of { chances and leave the business. W can't the Board ‘of Ed \ One of the most pitiable sights in this a to me {s a bound, pelted. high- stocked, high-heeled, rotund sister, whowe natural grace and good nature are trying to assert themsclves over these abominable obstructiins In terms of put fing, panting, mincing and wadding. y 1s the man and Wal- usb he lives in favoring elther, co Dress properly and be the eet arntable, natural, adorable creature that ' yoyr Creator intended. , jaa A, Makes Straw Hard as Metal. NEW process of ‘manufacturing strawboard bas theo Invented. Tt fs ex, WN ported that In preparing the straw pulp the addition of the process wilh, | Pur Away! ming Wi €aurse in office boy bus! — % Saar pee race a to the schoo! curriculum un 1 apply to have my name! {0¥, SYMPATHETIC SOUL! OH, COINCIDENCE MINE! SOUREA G000. give the atrawboard sufficient hardness to take the place of metal for expense of some of the ma me {0 FRABJOUS doy! SAY YOULL BE PY } COZY OLD THING machine journals, This, {t {= sald, has heen proven by a.practital test. By demp- or rafia courses, Boys Migh Priced Bat SS aem HILOPOE NA ANNO TLt e To HAVE AROUND, ening the strawboard It ts maid that st Is made pliable enough to be moked Inte iq yhape, The difference in material reduces the friction, and the test demon-* SE eRe GEORGE, BUT ued strkted that {ournala of strawboard require scarcely half the ofl of the journals BAND DON a By jaar | |i weneral use. b a Se METALS The Largest Dock. ORT MLFAST, Ireland, now has the largest dry dock tn the world. San Franctsoe | B will shortly possess m dock of even greater dimensions. The new dry dock, in the latter ¢ity will bo 1,060 feet long from gate to the Iendward extremity? i width at coping 14 feet and at bottom 92 feet; depth over alll and below. coping, | 39 feet 10 Inches, or 4 feet 6 inches at high water, The interior factng of the docks | will be of re-enforced concrete of an average thickness of fifteen inchea, ; eee Gate, Ld Ma | . Canada’s Wage Weaith- I | gONSUL GENERAL CHURCH HOWE, tp. « report trom Montrent, states Lo; that the’ total number of wage-sarners, covering all clarees of employees — pee fn manufacturing establishments, In Canada for the yenr bad was DALE Lena the wages ald amounted fo m18010800, work understandingly. cd rine faster. BPAVER STREET BOYS, No. AoW Cy the Editor of The Byeaing World’ ds there an Edison ster? 1 @tar js it that slines » Mara, fo Slop Smoking. World king for the past I 4 ke yery much of ee higher n to s i ud ader who hen ; ie: 3 7 u lod In brea the habit give i ni is Y Weataden sel W I im 1 illzation ts simpty fee We are living in a world so of the fy thal I marvel at ze

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