The evening world. Newspaper, November 6, 1907, Page 14

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

vening w 7 4g. Padlished Daily Except Sunday by the "Release Park Row) sl JOMETH TULITEEN, Pree, 1 eet 104 Birvet, 4 Buntered at tha Post-Office at New York as Becond-Clasa Mail Matter. fae land and the Con- ine Cy edt eater? torthe, Se end All Countrios ening World for the HEE icnal United States. Postal Union, Preas Publishing Company, Nos. 8 to ¢ few York. J. AMOUR BILAY, Goe-Troes., 901 Thoet 1172 Berest One Yoars.scsesesseeses 6,78 2 $3.50 30 One year. @ | One month. NO. 16,: One month. 878, TAOLUME 482../....---. _. SPANKING. —) POLL of ‘the. public school prin- pals shows:a majority in favor of ‘spanking... Undoubledty It: would . be easier to exclude boys and girks ’ ‘who seem in; ‘need of spanking than Nov orla Datly Magazine, Wed Such a Little One! By Maurice Ketten. “to keep (hem ire -the-schoots—and attempt to remodel and reform | them thee, > | ‘The “boy -who._has “—Looking—back—upon—the—expert. _ ences of boyhood, the spankings { gre riot unpleasant recollections. or locked up in a-dark closet, skmost es with a | As between belng spanked a every -boy-would-choose-spanking.—As_between_a_dozen - hickory rod or being-made to choose the’ rod which would Iast-only a few minutes rather than the | ignominy which would cling for a week or two. i ‘An abstract discussion of spanking involves two quite separate prop- ositions, one whether the boy or girl should be-spanked, and the other ‘93 to who should do the spanking. G ieee On the first of these propositions, the general experience is that “ epanking Is good for boys. It is the:opposite of mollycoddling. A boy = $s bound to he spanked some time, and there are many kinds of spanking: sit on'a bench with a class of little girls| who giggled and pointed their fingers at him, any ordinary boy-would;— more painful ‘than a shingle or a stipper. The Heinzes have just tad « Severe spanking in United Copper for which they would be glad to sub- stitute their mother’s hand or thelr father’s razor strap. Mr. Morse and 7Mr. Thomas have been experiencing a chastising by the clearing-house + Ability to take a spanking profitably and gracefully cannot be ‘nearly, acquired. » __If a boy is sheltered from deserved punishment until he becomes a x; man, the rebuffs which he receives from the world at large will fall on too sone “D morning of June 17, 1775, as he strode among the motley throng of patriets who lined the rough earthworks they had just tossed’ up on Breed’s Hill, to the northwest of Boston. of the Indian, wars. the news of Concord and Lexington: had reached hin.” Jumping on’ a work , horse Putnam had galloped to the front’to offer his services for liberty. . Her fvas but one of many, land, patriots by the thousands had flocked In. drilled, short of ‘ammunition: and’ shorter of food -or money. the Army now (two months afterthe Lexington fight) numbered’ ne 73 PPA IMPEDE VIIIEEY: ber 6: em NO. 7-THE REVOLUTION: Part I.—Bunker Hill. | ON'T Nre till you can see the whites of their eyes, Then aim at the ‘Shoulder-Strape’ (officers) !” So commanded a gray-haired, rawboned farmersoldier on the: The rawboned man was Israel Putnam, veteran He had been. ploughing on h!s Connecticut farm wher ew Eng +) From ‘every colony, but especially from Nb-arnied, : {il-dye t Part of these kept Gen. Gage and ‘tis, 5,000 British regi were, for the hands that erected them were more used to tilling the soll. “At one point a rail fence stuffed with hay was the men who held the queer fort were Tashtoned meskes; They hada pitiful} was the ragged, fearless mob that defied British -ships-in-the harber-and ata as day dawned. Then about 4,000 redcoats, were sent out from the city to capture the. hi! Up the slope in two columns tofled the British thick uniforms and heavy headgear. ridiculously small supply of ammunition the from behind the earthworks “On came the Bri moving with machine-like precision. hind the rough fortifticatio: victory, marched the redco ten. No mere machine-like firing this, of men who,-firing—at- close quarters, —tim—Phe effect was terrific Fi Battle of the Revolution, OES Control of hills around the city. thus bee ord came that Gage was about to extend hi Breed’s and Bunker Hills. To check this’ move nearly 3 Gen. Putnam and’ Col and fortify Bunker Hill. but the fight’that followed PO | Prescott were sent on the nig! At the last moment. Breéd’: s chosen insttad, Iways been known.as the “Battle of Bunker AlLnight the’men tofled; and at dawn the astonished British found the hill swarme Inge With patriots and guarded with —tresh- earthworks. 4 Odd contrivances these mounds of diré Ch The-First-Reoal nly defense wall. The Torte pirers oTold- ance of -pewder-—SUCh. the whole power of England. The from Boston, opened fire them under Gens. Howe and Pigot, The day was stiflingly hot ,_ welghted down by knapsack, © food or water and with a ninute men” awaited them 4; firing an they advanced; urn volley met them frorfi be r, full of confidence of easy but twenty rods away—now arnied W scant Without Nearer Now the Then—— At almost pointblank range a storm of lead swept the oncoming ranks but the deadiy, amerring marksmanship ad also hadstime to take deliberate, cleared the fore 4 British_column—was_realing back down the slope unabl tender_skin instead of normal callousness. The boy who hes learned to — 4 take the ‘Spanking which -he deserved-and then “go-out -and-piay-with-his = school vs will develop into a man who can face business failure or = political defeat without despondency and make-a-better fight the nex! oh In general a boy’s parents should do the necessary spanking, ~ preferably tils Tathier, “because a fathers spankings are triore®tikety-to-be % adjusted to the necessities of the case than a mother's, who is more teacher should keep his hands of. nie ~ “Only in cases wheré the boy's home discipline is defective should the school-teacher._bt Supply the deficiency, = As for girls, some girls need to be spanked. They are angelic || babies, and they develop into sweet, obedient schoo! girls. When. they —----wlolate ‘a rule the sense of wrongdoing hurts them more than a spank- "Ing. Of course such girls need not be spanked at all, though by the ¢urious reversal of disposition: which comes to many young women, some most-angelic girl babies become quite opposite in their adult years. Such girls as need spanking should be spanked by their mothers-and ot by the school-teacher. | On the whole the general rute might be laid down that in case of doubt a girl should not be spanked and a boy should; that is, if the boy 4s of the normal healthy type who would rather fight another boy of-his| own size than run. As for the cry-baby boys, their cases require ‘even more careful consideration than, girls, The candidates who. were ‘spanked yesterd: much tf they had practice as boys. - lay would not mind {ft so Letters from the People. Am Often am El To the Faitor of 7) jffiow many ti sbr¥e in muccensto nounce ‘audacity? ted—i Auda world produced came of large tamilie IT doubt {f-they had any schooling than Mr. Alfred's, however | bad that may be. Lincoln did not have | \the opportunity to study | ening World be: can a President Aiso how to pro. an our men of | © NORRIS iNRERGEN, | to-day. THEODORE BERG. Pastel © } ua Writes Another ‘ome. aria To the Editor of The Evening World | wo owhat kind. Tits ts another rhyme I composed: | Bieeiatiteca pe Oh, Bedelin had a bab: NG. And she named him Si = And she stuck him tn the bathtub. % by ollies, he coul wim Families and Vatinres, seh Atlth eS wate Set ater aaa Nee Shirtwatxe ts Proper. rl of #ixt «a tox party attended The party ds to b Ife ts due to the fact Ut der of ao ), the can the p: Now, ff Mr Alfred ould read the boyhood itfe of} muse. Do you think $< one of J n Abrabam Lin. | 1% Wear a fancy white coin, that he made a a dressy walt, or. should rent faistake hy putting the biame|! wear a fancy dress? Weare not go (won bis parents for hia fauiure jn life. | ag by carringe, but will ride in the car. Gaten jnt nh eomactnet |: wom saeetyreten a8 NT " tender-hearted. Where the father and mother do their duty the school! and then tell mo you had beer in the barber shop and that it was bay rum-I smelled T' that got to do with it?" aaloon! No, I tuke that back, In ie matter of saloons I—HinEe UCy £004, [a polling place.” Mr. Ja: The Useful “Dummies” TP a Bs _ By Roy L. McCardell. ELL, I'm glad the old election is over,” safa Mrs. Jerr! Now-you'h~ heveto--think-ip. some: ¢xcuses to account for your being out all nigh! + "Great Boot!" sald. Mr.—Jarr—_‘‘I_wasn't out « single night! I @ian‘t take°any interest in this election, although Jt_eurely wae a funny one. Who'd have thought the Pro- hibition ticket: would have gotten so many votes?’ ‘r¥eu.4tda't,'!.seld. Mre.Jarr.shortly...\If tae’ Prohibition Party depended on ‘you it would-be in a bad way.” “T don't know about that,’ said Mr Jar refiectively. wnat —woutd—you-say—tt-f tolt--you-i-did—vote forthe Prohibition’ ticket—partly 7” “Where 4id you vote? asked Mrs. Jarr sharply. “Just around the corner in Tony's barber shop,” sald Mr, “Well, then, don try to be funny by telling me you yeted for) the Prohibition ticket—partly,” sald Mra, Jarr. "Why, what has that to do with itt’ asked Mr. Jagr. ~What-has-tt-to-do-with {tf! echoed Mrs. Jarr. “Wasn't !t right next to that saloon on the corner, and haven't I seen’ you-come out of that place | nocence by aera. terian church, nicely, It had! Director,’ and! ot them, all loo the reason you "Oh, T na { “Yes, “you si j things lke that | puritanical or places_you had in a florist ahi them were pa and Mrs. Jarr's teoause It wap “Jumping G: “Admitting all that, although I “deny it,” said Mr. Jerr warmly. ‘What has i you know-that It haa a lot to do with It,” sadd Mrs. Jarr sadly. “Of all the places In New York-to-vataat-wou -voted-tn-a_barber-shop.-r! next toa saloon. y. Ng, Tan! 4 have expieined: prejudice, You go in the nearest the oftenest, but not ag a matter of favoritism.’ | ; “Now let me make one thing plain to you, Mra. Jarr, although it will do no said Mr.Jnrr very deciavely, “No voting !s-aver-done jn saloons; In fact|7~",™ Y they have te closs during voting hours {f they.are within certain distances of Noi tacaus j@ this with such unction that Mrs. Jarr wus forced | "I mix = —_ta_plense_m: you wanted to to-accept the-statenient- Mr. Jarr “Makes the Mistake of Voting Next Door to a Saloon When Mrs. Jarr- Says He Might Have Voted at the Florist’s., is RWS zone ieee lols entesn a Poser she remarked, acidly. “Oh, I saw lots of nice places, xt least nicer than that barber sho} Tiust down our street a few Di cronies at a barber shop near a saioon!”’ tntimiating that you yoted the Prob think to make n jent of me that way and that's the way you go about things t had to yote there or not -atal exg store, or at the re haveoknown: that pald ks farther I saw a voting place inj next tO the: Presby-) shops may not be ket Jiethat undertaker shor tl i. co 4 1 will admit that undertakers’ of Sour artticial palms in the window and the sign read “Mortuary he men that went fn that place to vote, from the @lance I had sked very respectable, very respectndie-Indeed, Perhaps that is dd-not-care-to. vote there, 34 h your said Mr, Jarr. : : aya Tots” Sak Mtrws— Jerr, Atomaiiy. “bur, Edward” |t_ fs Utple! which give me great uneasiness. I'm sure you cannot say I'm narrow minded; but it ts very sad to think that with all th to vote in—for I saw voting places—now I come to think of It in a butter and egg store, and in‘a real estate office. _All of nized by respectable looking men. And yet, and yet, voice had a catch-in {t, “you préferred to vote In a barber shop next door toa:saloon, ant then you try to impose on my In- ibitlon ticket In parTI- Don’a yo) fx-unkind, to say the least?” “ify 5 _ Jeet. “That's the way .you~talk,| hat causes all the war medicine! Don't Jace in my district, and that T ewhillikens!” exclatmed -¥ the barber shop 4s the polling pj VB ol] “And even if st Jnr. erinking when a al the extate office, how it was out of your-district, but that: please your wife? dn't, nor I wouldn said Mr. Jar. { said Mra,-Jarr, sadly. “you never do anything) Lit sald 4 wild hailstorm of leaden death. vafl fence with {ts meagre barrier of hay. Again at close range cans sent voll: fourths of the advancing detachment had fallen the British marines s re-forming their ranks, the regulars tharged up the hill: again: bodies of thelr—falen—comrades they charged. held their fre until] the enemy were close to the earthworks turned volley for volle. ly, with forts and batt the smoke of burning fore “they i ‘Their omicers siroutedt points to drive them forward {to the attavk. | way and fled down | 500. The ‘defeat’ meant more to the colonies than any later victory, wit proved (hat, on anythiug iike equat terms, the patriot was-a-mateh ter. the regular. De a war, | nized the state of belligerency, voted a larger army to be recruited fromthe ;thirteen—colonies—and—chose_as_that army's ccnmander-in-chief George Washington. a pnd aet..to. rabble in cheerful as barber shops, although this one! I speak of was fitted up verx— to King Alfonso, Taken a Dummy Baby to England.; Is Said to Have: CAN GE ‘ALONG WiTHOUT, yours KG WSO Aone DUAMY - BABY. yy y Uff \\\ Z A OUMMY MOTHER-IN-LAW. (NN (A SAY! woul DN TAIT. OE Sy GREAT, ey /F YOUR WIFE OCESN'T GET A QUMITY WIFE By F. G. Long, } 4 | men are married!" | | | retreatéd, | when news-of-the battle reached England, |no army left In America.” forthe Inxy and the unambitious. The right wing of the res » crashing into the redcoat files! until three nd the-rest—were inte: “urlous at their setback, rb of Boston; and then, . 6 Over. the Once more the Americans Then came from mound aréd rai! fence, The Brit ish re= id fora few moments the ‘battle waged ferocious jes below blazing away at the rude hill defenses an@ ariestown rolling up to darken the ksmanship, the Mere pricks But a ge hill in worse disorder th. after voll t fire to Charlestown, hat same murderous fust D nd time they gave n before. vit} ’ aid and another charge Americans had exhausted their ammunition. Reinforceme as ordered. Mean Ime the the issue might have been far different. But there was scarcely a single round of left to each man, So, as the British began their last advance the patriots fired once and “Two more such-victories,” sald one of King George's advisers ‘and—Great Britain will have A Defeat That Meant Victory. The British had lost more than 1,000 men, the Ame..cans ‘less than For: It also settled the question as to whether or not there was to After Bunker Hill there was ho drawing back. Congress recog 75, at Cambridge riled Washington-took charge of the patriot forces In July, 17 The War of the Revolution wag on. w #@ Greeley-Smit Discusses Heart Topics 10. A ‘THINKING TIME” FOR WIVES. HE Judges of Indianapolis have arranged thaa, “days shall come only once @. month A weekly as hith that quarreling coup! have ‘time to think.” The scheme ts eald to be well, and I have no doubt time” were made compulsory before the initial the-matrimonia! millennium would be upon us. The only difficulty 1s this: Many persons tf” ¢ hought.the.matter—oyer euffictently hi Saif, -and-that-insmy ‘opinion would ment of character, For even an unl think, better than non broader-and-lees selfiah view of Ute” than Ger as n_Man ate is likely to,possess, : Y have known a fow Gispositions “were “not “improved = by; roarriage; BULT have never seen the man who was not-made by {t binder more considerate of women,—less_self-centred and more tolerant of the lacdmforte of every day. That {s why girle exclaim ao often that “all the Bo they aré: But every woman has the chance before of making some bachelcr just as nice by the almple process of marrying. She must recognize the raw material of which good huabands are made by snd care and patience and good nature. Any girl who expects to find an huaband ready ‘made had best marry a widower. This, however, is the resert! It ie far better to make man over inte your? own {deal rather than take-him {x the mould of another woman. Wives have more time to think about domestic affairs than men, {t fa their business. In fheir ‘thinking time’ they should realise that ‘men, they are proporiy managed, are the most malleable material on earth. A many quarrels in married life are due to the wifes tgnoranoce of the in the usual masculine armor of etubbornness,and pride, But there alt one, and once she has discovered what it {a the most obstreperoms husband become as docile as Mary's lamb, With moat men this weak spot fe flattery, It ts not wrong for a wite her husband he 1s the greatest: man on earth, and the handeomest, ang nweetest-natured. She aught to think #o-1f she doesn’t, and she will fied saying 96 paya for her greater dividends of affection and unrolfish const than telling him that Mrs, Jones has a new net of fura, and he and Jones in the eame’ office-and Jones ia more auccessful than he Else how coutd y his wife ermine? é 3 Birches are some of the things wives should realize in their thtrirteg (mel after a quarrel, And if they do realise them the quarrela will rot be nett ey; frequent. ” i i Condensed Information. POPNT explorers insist that there are three natural bridges in South. ‘eastern Utah aa much largor than the Natural Bridge in Virsinia as Pike@ Peak 4s higher than Mount Washington, he name of a wonian in Lanaing, wno nas a brother “th the that being her maiden name, Pa., {n enti to have one of the most valuable It Includes practically ail the eyalome Inventeg “Sister ‘Brother 1 t priesthood named Tather Cousin, J. W, Beers, of West View, shorthand libraries In the world. pinice the year 1700. % + Teased by a Planet. P CG. PICKERING, Harvard's lending astronomer and scientist, Rew RO} ela pe tenses" P the world of astronomy and astrophymea by declaricg hat “Mare. a he has “abandoned any further Inve

Other pages from this issue: