The evening world. Newspaper, September 27, 1907, Page 3

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THE EVENING WORLD,iFRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, WON'T PAY BILLS Less Mollycoddling and More Spanking the Need __Of Public Schools, Says Commissioner Jonas FOR PARIS GOWNS ~ SAYS PECK’S ‘AD j Rich Clothier Warns French MUST. GET Shopkeepers Not to Trust His Wife. SHE PUZZLES HIM.| Liberal and Loving Husband Alarmed. by ‘Apparently Useless Purchases. Belleving his beautiful young wife buying too many expensive gowns and other things for whictv-she has no use Samuel W. Peck, business and-c mi who lives at the Ansonta, has publict warned shopkeepers of Paris, where, mittee to Inquire as to whether the ab: Mrs, Peck t# now visiting, that he will 1 punishment In the} nstble for her debts. has been a good thing or not West side social circles were mi ly he ds of the opinton th prised to-day w nen the mis ax been detri tal to the spirit of eratanding” between Pecks Winé and respect for autlority in| reached here. ¥ schools. home soon, and tials Tm that some psopte will Be able to explain her exten he adoption of cory. purchases. He tn entirely unable so far, the achools agin however, to acco or them. He ts ' sald esident of Samuel W. Peck & Co. | i nsplred ent! wholesale clothiers at No. $9 Prond-| by pus fr of revolt and dls- way, a man of wealth, and hag always | Obeiienre on the part of soma pupl been exceeding! ral wittr his wife, |! do rove of brutality her relatives sa She js the daugh but on the 6 of the late Joseph Stiner, who made a that dixcipline sheuld |be m fortune In tea and bullt up a chain of the stores, Speaking of his adver appeared in a Paris sement, paper not tradesmen not to give credit to his w Mr. Peok maid i Mra. Peck and.t parted 1 of terme-wherr eats Months ago. But soon after she reached Red Paris I learned « wan making e¢x- travagant expendi Tt seenipd as] of Inquiry. §f she had no control over hern Ste} bought costly gowns for whieh had tonne nts no use and which she poxsibly never S spending thousands of dollars pineeacd er some remarkable trielty ow uteracilahs tenis aiw caused them to buy that way Berpiexal. Beyond her extravagant ex- TAG Gee iancheseean her felends In, the nobility by te advertisement. It: letters she malr- vere iieacethave oes ville," 1s sald to be not ‘and country places of the titled TAINS whe has Veen entiraiy JuntiNed tn r = than the Countess of Warwick, couple are show places. - =F What she has done. : { mean being very |esteemed the most beautiful woman 1A] Se ane whl oneKinge id: Mr. and Mra. Peck have been appare| gate ano fn aweet-natured, (England. Tho purpose of her visit to| ward, th Prince of Wales, ently much devoted to eaca other, They Naeae at ‘5 He k fas been kept. secret and| involved, the Countess of Warwick was have two hu reneh automobiles and In ¢ Of the sentinentallsts, s i Lady Boke, her yusband not having often have inade-eouniry—inipe-AL-tie- doesn't looh—in_the-foaei Hke—a person {thare ti lively interest in England over| (iii tiie tien Te Noid that gos. fashionable restuurants here they were with a distortai vision of life: on the, her movements, sip set on fopt by the artless talk of) rrgulr Patrons. | Ms Peck belongs to) comrary. he looks like the rort of man ‘The Countess of Warwick 1s an aris-| Lady Brooke resilted In the exposure the Criterion and other elu J ; : of teh acandal, and for tals reason she) Who Weuid be a comirada to a hoy, tocraite Soslalist, She-te-noted for ter] Pk oP Scandal Ang io ae rook" He dors Vollave In some almple, old- rest In philanthropic work and hasl in London ever since. MARS, LEVI. LETTER ~ DANGEROUSLY ILL’ | the Good Old Days of | the Rattan. | a DISCIPLINE, | Cites Case of Unruly Pupil | Who Hurled Ink-Well at His Teacher. By Edna Cain. JONAS ts'ot the, © much mollycoil evalts fn school sy and he thinks-that ¢ M tem of this ¢ the Bibilcal kindergarten motto Sol ts| Mons about sparing the rod and spoll- Ing the child sti! haa a remnant of wi | He Looks Back with Regret io Countess of Warwick Coming Here on a Secret Mission nit | He te-pather-surprised-at-the str-eret ated by his resolution to appoint a com-| ‘ou see T hasize the ‘ashio things, though, and one of | them spanking, Be niniscences of achoul daya lighted up his eyes. and | told me of the times when * ritin' and ‘rithmetic were taught to me with a hickory stick.* i Feit a Rattan Himself. He sald he weat to achool In Broo | lyn—the very hool his ithe daurht WHY THE ROD IS NEEDED: IN THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS. “I Lelieve that sparing the rod spoils the child.” Aboy..threw an inkwy He couldn't be punished. the y-coddling In our school systein to- Human-nature hasn't changed much, and I don't suppose dad boys I may men- ell full of tatement rod in svkaols—, attended now—and he \was punished 3 e Her Si H a H tp With rattan by an) old-fashioned “I was punished with a rattan myself when at school in Brooklyn. er Son Hurrying to Her in scnootnamer. I believe the punishment helped to make me a good citizen.” Pp. : H D h A zs ad do you think that .disciniine selva ‘aris—Her Daughters Are | Melped to make you w ood elt 21 meee Aan RT With Her, “Yes, 1 do. Mcreove! kK We have | day, + | to much molly-coddis our school [are any more sensitive and shrinking than they used Yo be. sama system to-day Human nature hasn't ; - PARIS, Sept. 27sJoseph = Lalter,- of | eHanned:-much, and L-don't suppaye bad J tlon-one-_tnetence tue -trooklya—school- Chicago. in ying here to the bedside | boy's are any more s ive and shrink- fink at a young woman teache of his mother, Mrs Lavi % Leiter, who | Jue than they us: nool Commissioner Jonas, who wants to reviv {a dangerously il with an affection of | Jon one Tastance tr the liver, Severs ive Is her most alarming symptom, Mra. Leiter's dau of Suffolk and Mra, © are with her, FAIR HANDS SPANK OGLER... | and-perststont—jaun~ untees | » ‘ampbell, | about, ‘ap. A boy threw an inkwe | young woman teacher. lie couldn't be oh, c fished | teachors wore the sort of You believe wint Solomon says would deal ith tle in child. do you i t Aid Mr. Jonas agreed that we covld members still leven something trom the wisdom nus 1 of Solomon. oes not = olly-Geddling. Lame whtch Too Muth | Referring again w ig molly-coditiing Firat Kapuake In Ducked tm Geeek | 293001. he saic iat calldren, used. ty by Wrathey Dunkirk Beties, Werke ol ot a uit that just Red how. they entirely \ DUNKIRK, _N. ot, %7.—Walen| right ‘rour hopeful. Kupuske i a rather handsome chap.) ctors the & Special Spanking, Perhaps: Last evening he took a position near the f is sald, When Ow be, oxied. hit whi ks Motel with the. Jatenaon, 5000-100 and.thought he siniled back. Goose Creek near by. other administered & good spanking. large agement. Policeman Votter called home. Well Begun Is A: Race Half-Won! It's the man who starts promptly at the word “GO” that is most likely to win in his ra¢e-for the Position, Worker, Homé, Invest- ment or. Bargain he seeks, “GO! 99 and order your advertisement for next Sunday's. WORLD. to-day. Don’t wait till to-morrow, or something may happen to Inter- fere with your plans. To-day is the day to attend to''this import- ant taatter+if you wish to Avoid Taking Chances ! Dt Huan ty trey —weteed timate oven be— debit k ba Rik Pky LOO. Again and agnin the girls ducked him and tien drawing bim out one held him firmly while the crowd offered wonts of encour- : the patrot | wagon and Kapuake was bundled off to the police station while thé girls went it ‘ voys undoubtedly did Raid the take xdvantage: of the fact) thatthe; principal could got punish them no what they did. and. they defied The law comps school.” he sald, petted) Pre dreatpitne: ought to be maintalne Mr. Jonas sald he thought the knowl- edge that the teacher contd and would aie "A punish would act as a deterrent and | that it would not be necessary to pan- Brateeihe 1 | wy) an in a {ah often. jigisivell) ate ds It badly. Opinion Has Changed, news Grandmo: He sald two years bad elapsed sinco|” And Mr, Jonas ts probably corporal punishment wan adolished and) saying that hove da not. he thought--the Investigating commit-| teacher who can be soatt ltee ought to galn some Interesting In- aa formation from the teaqhers as to re- i akg agen = Ge CE ut aad nt wan anol: | VOUNGSTERS VOTE ished bt Was by a vote of 22 10 16, f ‘ x Jonas's resolution passed by a’ vote! **NO?? TO SPANKING of 19 to 10, and he thinks this certainly Indicatea a division of cptnion on the 1a hoy old tell PLAN FOR SCHOOLS, mo, daunted the It have. a totes not An Hest of the ren 9 poral p: and ¢ iggest shools Jy sit- Ty berated —— ie toke they ttre actu apres orm fe streeta, t reces« time we: nounced the plan ualshment my pants If they are kKome," sald litle Tony black eyes flashi x ny toache id time getting for I'm the pr @ Rayo pugiilstic ex- face of his meek com strevireeedt ot 1 Just wis hem n tu ara buat “and ‘they was an of! ti awh shment ud they’ sald, ow! 6 stu! all and take w questly But with the maj Ho thought |t very absurd that any ie children corpo one should think. wealtn and politica, ‘The ‘‘kida' are not at all in favor of Mice children corporal pull would be able to shleld bad boys! the proposed spanking rule. Corporal Adopted there ul the other ames. | na 1 piintshment proposed any mile ty will be exciting times. How Kids of Yore Incurred the Wrath Tre SPIT BALL | | You wu Pon's Us. ) | Which Brought Into Play the Birch ae i) the mam who | CHESS NAL BORG COMING HM Consuelo to Make Visit to Her Mother at End of Next st The. Duchess wan Misa Con of Marlborough, who velo Vanderbilt, {s com- ing to this Gy to vistt her mother, Mra Oliver H. P.. Belmont, next month, her. friends learned to-day, She will eail from England on Oct, 18 in senting the announcement of her Intended visit the Duchess did not say whether her two sons, Lord Ivor Churchill and the Marquis of Bland. ford, would accompany her, but {t ts believed only the younger on, Lord Ivor, will come. The Marquis, who Se now ten yearn old, is in the hands of tutors, and the Duchess will probabl consider-it tnwise te interrupt his edu cation at thin time, The question of the children will -re- main entirely with the Duchess. Unde: the terms of her separation from the Duke she has the exclusive oharge of them. The consideration for this priv- ile, extra $10,000 a year allotted to the Duke by William K. Vanderbilt, father of the Duchess, The Duchess last visited America in 19%__when she paid a brief visit to her mother, Mra, O. H. P, Belmont, at New- port and Hempstead. She remained long enough to withess a few hours of (the automobile race for the Vanderbilt Cup, At that time ane waa accom- panied only by her maids. WOMAN FACES ~ DEATH TO SAVE HER FU ©, Runs Back Into Fire After Es: caping, and Probably Will Die of Bums, tH) Mra. Anna Lyons, of No in her home last night. from an overturned quickly through her rooms. She wi | alone with her throe children and she kathered them about her and ran to the street, alarming the house, there were eight familtes, Mrs. Lyons was watch in which crowd and ran’ back Into tha house, aver. 1 Vilte, and T have ehosen death | erying out that she must nave her | Cet PY have no friends Farewell! goods. Joseph Berger,’ of-No, ¢72/Pleas- ant street, and Attonto Rocce, of No, 10 Gates avenue, ran after her, When -they RUT TO the top floor through blind. the berty—ot thew landing. She had: fallen, ov smoke, and her clothing was afire The men carried her, TAO eritical condition. | doing BO damage. PRINCE KILLED SLIDING BANISTER Son of Maximilian of Vhurn and Taxis Met Fatal Acci- dentin Army Quarters, sy POTSDAM, Prussia, Sept. 27.—Prince | Charles Gustavo Von Tharn und Taxta wns accidentally idjied at the rest- | mental mess of the Prussian’ Foot- | Ruards tast night tt was “Guest Night? | at the mess, and the Prince, who was a | lleutenant in the First Regiment of was, standing on | Prusstan Footguards, the top of the steps leading down from or denly announced his Intection of slid- ing down the banister He started to-do so, when he lost his foil to the bottom of the stips, 4 bis skull and died almeat im- ce Charles, who waa only twenty- one years of age, Wax the youngest non of the late Prince Maximlilan of Thur und Taxis, One branch of the fardly tniade a great fortune by having tie monopoly for nearly two hundred yeare of carrying (he malls for most of the | German sta! esr | MEMBER OF OLD 8PANISH FIRM DEAD, A. I, Monendes, a memebr of the old Menendex family: of sthuvana, a torday Mr = was twon of age. Ho wan 14) the rm of Joaquin Men- endex & of this oty, Spanish, concéen in the Untted States, Ho wad well known In noclal circles in Havana and this clty, A year ago he married Misa Emelina Vivo, well known in society in Havana, the oldest tt was stated at the time, was an_ ANITURE 1522 Gates avenue, Brooklyn, was burned so that she probably will die, in attempting to save household belongings from a fire The fire started lamp and «pread ic the progress lof ths fire when suddenly she left the thepstatrway} ome by | her cloth- Ing at!l are, to a lower fight, where they rolled her‘on the floor and ux- |Ungutshed tie flames. She was hu red to “Cie “German Fosidial In a) | ‘The fire was confined to the top floor, the @ntrance of the mess when-he aud-! 1907. SCORING MOTHER UPBRAOING HS pomeerg ~ DEVOTED MOTHER {8-Year-Old Louis Krause De- ‘neunces Parent After | Firing Shot. -QUESTIONS HJS_ BIRTH. Drama-Crazed Youth Upbraids Her When Found by Her Wounded, i NK Louls Krause, ninetecen years old, who attempted to commit auickle to-day at No, 65 Concord avenue, the Bronx, in a_jetter written before his trinl of eeit- destruction censured hin devated mother in a mammer that broke her hoart. She 1s in. utter collapse at her home, attend- led by two physicians, while the boy ts in Lebanon Honpital, with the chances favoring: his recovery. Young Louls 1s her only son. Her hus- band died when the boy was a baby and i s he married Louln Markart, a boas £ ‘ a. i baker, who works at night. The boy y was employed as an electrician'’a ap- prentice at the Splitdorf Laboratory, One Hundred and Thirty-eighth street and Ryder avenue. Up to about a year age Louis was alt! that a fond mother could wish of an: only son, Then he began to imagine that he was a real man. He was given te reading cheap novels and waa « steady patron at the theatres where melodramas are presented, Always pet- ted and humored, ho allowed his imn«- ination to be influenced by the atege | pictures he saw in the books he read until he looked upon himaelf ana per- | seeuted-pereon of réal importance. He chafed at work and he chafed at parental control, The mother, with the | absence of tact that distinguishes moth- ers when they feel thelr men-ohildren slipping away from them, sat up at| night and waited for him and tearfully upbralded him for spending so much’ ELLIS iSLAND HEARS WATCHORN WILL RESIGN. ‘K rumor was current on Ellis Island | yesterday that Commiasioner Watehorn war to resign to take a. position with the Canadién Pacific Rallroad, Mr Watchorn is now on his vacation in Canada. Aasiatant Commissioner Mur- ray, In charge of Ellis Taland, yatd ho knw of no foundation for tho! rumor, | Critic's Wife Studied “Dope ‘Tanguay on June %. She was the | best bet’ four days later, In the | Zittel says, through her ettorney, WANTS $50,000 FROM ACTRESS OR ‘2NT'S: LOVE oo Sheet,” and Odds on: Missy | Tanguay Roused Suspicion, / % i Misa Eva Tanguay, the actress, Sota. ing a $0,000 sult for allenation ef @ husband's affections ‘Mrs, Mardi” Zittel wants that eum, ahd hes ale@ named Miss Tanguay as co-respondent | _ in a sult for divorce trom Carl ¥ Zittel. Sho declarva her brother, 5 EH, Bernstein, nnd a squad of detecttwamyg traced Mr. Zittel and the actress to’ hotel at Brighton “Beach and got dence to warrant her aotion, Car! Zittel, or “Zity"" ae he te tnowelcd is employed on a local newspaper, emg, on Saturdays fegalea his readers * a theatrical “dope sheet," im smbhae tion of a racing chart. He gives @ “ong peat vet’ “and the odds on g ‘actreases to show their popularity with the public. : Mra, Zittel Wis dliatms “Zitt™ met it was “Eva Tangday, 1 to 14” Dickman, that Miss Eva employed Zittel at £02 2 week ss her manager this time, Meanwialle Miss ecame the leading favorite of all thas ages, and the odds in her, favor : lope’ was Mra, Zittel, and she ahe saw theroin a- light. Her mult camo yesterday before Justice Beas bury. After Miss Tanguey was 3 with the papers she went on with hep, turn at the Victoria, gayly singing ‘4 may be crazy, but I don't care,’ =} ‘The Zittels were married eleven if ago in Buffalo. Th: hat . ear-old son. Sirs, Zittel fan ex ae fy handsome woman. Critic. “zit Dagit) flicd'n general dental In the atvosoe- cf] btu eaceteet eea DR, COLLYER HONORED. LONDON, Sept. %1.—The Unt of Leads has conferred the degree Doctor of Letters on the Rev. Collyer, | the _ well-known: . Uni clersyman of New York. of his spare time away trom home. ‘The stepfather had little to do with the @lsputes between the mother and son. Louis got home at midnight yesterday | ‘and foung his mother in (tears, There waa a stormy scene before he went to nis room, She got up, as usual, at 6/ o'clock thla morning, .to_ prepare bis preakfast? Whtte at work in the kitchen ‘she heard @ platol phot and her little fog ran to her, barking in terror, Mrs, Markart hastened to her sors room, Ho was lying cross the bed, With blood flowing fronz a bullet woun: Th his_right temple and. & 32 calibre: a piato] in his Sea eere “Mamma,” he navi ttasied me when I haven't de- pore screamed for help plaedun sport time the boy was on to the fhoapital, ‘Then the police arrived and ed the room. They, Sound ; nig ogotiaticnl letter: the follor ihen am very sorry for Qotne this act, Dut the treatment you fotnk oon xiving me has compelled me pays, i. There is another thing that {0 Sin me. It is whether you are my purer or pot. If you were really my sugar would never have given me the treatment You ids nt Know T have a stopfather, 5 or mulled mo well. It ts more father's than a stepfuther’s, ‘you ant he will forgive me for | hope Youce T leave on you, but It ts alt) the disgratecount. For the Inst few | Jon 7ONr a told me to leave more than | weeks von ve taken my choice between treatme nike a addresmed read: these ni as note, neern,’ hay papers, } ames pubiished | they are my | ‘0. 20 Enst Twen- in Metz, No. 19qt = nine, Willam To) Smith, No. ‘ond Hundred nd Seventh 0) ther had borne up bravely _un- moread her son's letter. ‘That Jow that crushed her, street The NEED STEAM? Get_It fram Selected Food, | It ts good to-know thetdid-of food those with weak stomachs and hearts | can get along with, for when a miy | i or woman isa little below par an) ensily digested food is the thing that|§ goes right to the spot. Aman in Kirksville, Mo, tells how he got out of trouble by using Greje- nits-food.—He--eaya My iraubiet = was Intense suffering in the stomach. | 1t was called gastralgia, but no medi- ‘cine gaye any permanent relief. In June of last year I began to | grow much worse in every respect. I jee terribly constipated and the stomach pains were severe. I ran| us down. until L. welghed) only 120 Remington Type | pounds. I had to give up my busf- | ness, for my nerves were_complete Junstrung and I could not siéep more than two, or three hours during the night, and that only by snatches dur- ing a lull in the pain, | “I tried almost every kind of food, |\4 put finally!-wts put on Grape-Nuts, and in-wittle while {. began to mak {es worth known. I begdn to sleep better nights, my strengih gradually White Rose Ceylon Tea 1s the highest claim that can_ be made for any typewniter (locerporated) ‘New York and Everywhere writer Company ame back and I gained in welght rapidly uatll a Httle while ago i welghed 165 pounds and Have been a well man for months, with never a touch of the old troubl “My bowels are perfect, the nervous Son sREY ONTCH 4 ou can saye money by ord trouble has gone. You can realize I courcanys Watinkwa specialties appreciate the vaiue of Grape-Nuts peopic. We are looking for your + food.”” This {s another evidence of the practical. worth of Grape-Nuis food | in cases of weak stomach and bad} digestion, It ts the most sclentifical- | ily made food in extatence, and con tains absoluicly nothing but selected | parts of field ssratns, so cooked and | prepared as to admit of almost {m-| mediate digestion and assimilation, carrying with {t the elements fur: nished by Mother Nature for rebuild- {ng the nervous,syatem, the grdy mat ter of the brain nd tho solar plexu When one gets from food what the body needs it is easy to get well and keep well. “There's a Reason," Read “The Road to Wellvillo, ‘pkgs, 4 ') Sirloin Steaks .............. Shoulders and br fine Young =pring Chickens Special Prices Given Hotels, k Z2SVIRST AVE. Between 13th and i4th Strce {L STEIGERWALD PACKING CO. SATURDAY SPECIAL REPORT Fresh Hams Cut from Young pigeon 4e per tb, t of Veal... Fine Large Soup’Chickens, X!4,.:. Choice Cut frime Rib Roast Beet... LAC) per Ie ing from, our list, ev. Ty ar antisfying partioular Sunday dinner order, vesceserecere LOC per th. .10¢ per Ib, : 12:¢ per tbe veseeee LBC. per tb. y estaurants and Institutions, TELEPHONE x 705 Orchard.’

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