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THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1913. ANOTHER FORTUNE |Spare the Rod and Call the Family Doctor, RAYMES WARNING OF $160,000FOR | Part of the Montessori Method of \ SIMON D, PADDOCK aE OLE NT aa “Millionaire Kid’ Declares He Will Not Dissipate His New Inheritance. HE HAS SETTLED DOWN. Has a Good Wife and Will Attend to Business for Her Sake. Mot content with having done tt once | @iready, young Simon D. Paddock, the ; “Millionaire Kid," has gone and wont | @n4 inher’ sd some more money. This time iti, 4 paltry 160,00 or ao, That fa, maybo, Paddock, be tt remembered, is the @retwhile chauffeur from Atlantic High- Jands, N. J., who in February, 1912, fell heir to a mere $50,000 left by an uncle Ughte" full cock until he used up the @llowance granted him pending the tlement of the estate, and wound up by getting married after he had beon dab- @ock has been laying low. Ho is a Education. married man now, an¢ his responsibill- No. © Flatbush avenue, Brooklyn. Albert J. Heath, the manager of the eoncern, wanted @ repair man. Ala @imon D. Paddock applied for the job end was taken on, the name meant ef Bimon D. Paddock. Really ant He didn't know the “Millionaire Ki fmg breathing racing automobile drew ‘wp in front of the store. With vistons of a big sale, perhaps, Mr. Heath “Morning, Mr. Heath,” said young Paddock, and he walked nonchalantly in “Well,” Heath to-day told an Evening World reporter, “you could ha fenoeked me over with a feather.” | “ ‘Where did you get that machine? | 1 asked him. it yours?” **Yep,' he said, gov Mamoaact @usic mills fell {11 and needed a doctor Were dally treated to the sight of a! Sp to thelr doors in a brute of a car that ground to a stop with @ shr! ing of brakes, and— Well, anyway, it b for me,” he vuid, “but he's the classl- @st repair man I ever heard of. 1s he friend huppened to be up in current at events, santa The $10,0002 AL right. Here cae] to Americs oes. enough when It Heath wrung from Paddock @ contes-; at the Holland House, when word came unvillcially to Pad- the past is be: more the news "1 will not say lich one of iny yela- | ised and punishes Gay. I'm just waiting for the official! We are the on enough. Besider I'm © crested nc came to be working here, 1 Wanted to} schools which einy be where I could work around m ‘No more ‘white lirhts’ eit! “Nothing doing. !'\e got the best) chairs, Attle wife in the world I'm going to] pictu IF KIDNEYS FEEL LIKE LEAD -—— We eat too much meat, | urine is cle which clogs Kidney No manor woman who eats meat regu- lerly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys oc: nally, says a well- known authority, Meat forms ut which clogs the kidney pores s@ they | traliy * ra ‘waste and poisons from the blood, | « ‘ou get sick. Nearly all rheuma- tise, bead » liver t ble, nervous-| not injure; wakes a constipation, dizziness, sleepless. | v nt lithia pees, bladiler disorders come from slug-) ular meat ev kidney Ler or your back hurts, or if the] kiducy complications. 4 tm Byracuse, N. ¥., bought # %-horee | Misbehavior, Like Baby’ Facing automobile, turned on the “white! Crying, Ie Sign of Ill- | ness, Declare Founder | of Famous House of Sling for a while in the brokerage bust-| Childhood School—Ex- That for history. Of late young Pad- Pp laine Her Sy stem of ties, to say nothing of that ebb tide c.f Aitowance, ave ent him steodit (Training Begins With| for a firm that sells music machines at! Birth and Babies Are! HE HAD NEVER HEARD oF THE| Taught Self - Reliance “MILLIONAIRE KID. Fi st of All, Literally Learning Through fame, how nl, ad! Wh . @ young chap who aid his namo waa] 2 Aeir Love of Play. pething to Heath. Ho had never heard | Marguerite Mooers Marshall. | ‘eso! training cour It's a grown-up’s world, my mas- from @ hole in the ground. ters, and that's just the trouble with | the aver: ‘Then, some days iater, @ big, snort-|it from the child's point of view. By| ‘Fain him in his own world. He even means of illnes: ly sought to ex- press his dissat-| det, isfaction. His ef-| exnjained. forts resulted | * sometimes pity, ‘9 mine’ ” | in Ellen! Now, Dr, Montessori he: e'f hag been] lead the way, unchecked, in pulling ¢ “Method” | Kitten's tall or slapping iw Little summed it up simply | “fother?* ed with her to-day | Some scandalized persons have und ow her famo: sion of his identity. “The reason why we have haa | Just such io] Method, In a Cusa del Bambi ‘venes." bit of furniture and de e vor: dy, offensive, full of sedi- ment, irregular of passage or atiended | °, os + And | bya sensation of scalding, get about four! “But how early may you adopt this few days and your kidneys fine Salts is inexpen to keep the kidneys el TO CHILDREN - youngsters between two and a half and ven, the perlod covered by the Mon- The attemp is to create an environment for the child as completely adapted to him as house ls unadapted, and .o eats his lunch at his own little lunca table, served by a playmate. stupidity, or! “sue just how did you first work out ed t0 open the-door for the young Naughtiness, he} your system?” I asked the doctor. man who had jumped out of the ma- has inarticulate-| BEGAN WITH BACKWARD AND fhine and was crossing the sidewalk, ly but vehement- DEFICIENT CHILDREN. “My work in the beginning was witn tive and backward children," she 1 was the first wor uate from the medical college at Rome, and when & philanthropic socie’ decided a few years ago to open schools io sometimes, and playgrounds for the children in the punishment,| modern tenements wich it owned I Thereafter patrons of the atc whose| almost never in understanding—until/ “** Asked to develop a programme, the twentieth ceutury. Then, swiftly, young man in oll-stained working |€ found not ove but two Inter-) “In my first experiments I found that @lothes dashing madly and snortingiy | Preters, two women with motherly | the bess way of reaching the abnormal | ins as well as hearts. ago, in the north of all beyond the| Key Wrote “The Century of the eomprehension of Heath, who put the|Child,” a book that did much to re-) response from the defective child should matter confidentially to a friend. verse the adult mental attitude to-| not reach even more quickiy the normal PRIEND WHO READS NEWSPAP-| ward childhood. At that very mo-| ERS KNEW PADDOCK’S STORY. | ment, in the south of Europe, Dr.| don't know who I've gut working| Maria Montessori was independent: ly conducting her first educational! Kidding me, oF Ia Lo suite millionaires [eXPeriments with young children. | I had always been sy in child psychology. elally interested ehild . by exercising and sharpening of aut a smal stincti hild you wiil see that tt in- y tries all the time, to see, touch, taste or smell more per- I discovered that and T let the son in disguise?” The practical system which she! uy Wed tee es a q “What did you say his name was?"Jevolved has already begun to metas) cynrrni RAIN dren?” Ts ate oe Royle the ériend, morphose our schools Siansonees “IRE Gaek fer a ae ds | And then the truth came out, for the ra bavy to stood that the Montessori M onsense. ‘They w jod meats Many Of | pressive countenance and her matroniy @ drown eyes, dusky hair and olive asin are racial to a de gree, but individuality triunphs in the ance and smi ete thro principles which al children must under offend against aay moral law. In Tame is| They must observe the demands in| Of courtesy. Ana they must not to all interfere with the rights of others, sor.| PRAISE GOOD RATHER THAN avety PUNISH 3AD, oration is con- structed on a juvenile tables, stationary wash-basins, s, floor coverin perfect my invention.” vest adapted to the comfortable use of | * ‘The | "7 @id not begin my system with the dea of banwmhing al! discipline and pun- hment. ‘That was one of the res: h evolves from We general method. 1 have simply found that in the vast majority of cases the child that is pr erly trained does not nom! punishinent m of corporal pun: Hocessary, un “ity hment is any circumstances, Ha child, his te rigat that habit of taking the right co: ticularly if you pra | for b jon ap! we. Dare se and caress him ng good, if you put the emphasis proval inatead of on disapproval ounces of Jad Salts from any reliable | *ttude?” I inquired they need a flushing pharmacy and take @ tablespoorful in| _"& Shilé's training should be- occasionally, a glass of water before bre: ein a8 soon se he is bora. The properly educated baby never cries, famous salts is made from| + BAve seen sinty infante less than and lemon juice, com-] © WeeS 014 ip @ Boman hospital d with lithia, and has been used for| Wass with mot @ wail breaking the ations to flush clogged kidneys and, Complete silence. Science kas not vacid,| stimulate them to activity, also Mi neu-| Yet succeeded in eliminating the i i i so it no lon duggishly filter or strain ouly part of} cau.<sirritation, thus ending bladder firet cry of the new-born babe, but fig,| that Arst one should also be the last.” ve and can-| “Do you never find It necessary to pun-! lightful effe r drink which all reg- 4 should take now and| that original sin must be squelched, nand the; “Usually the child who migvehaves moment youfccl adullacheinthe| blvd pure, thereby uvoiding serious'needs medicine and not punishment,” Dr, Monteasor, insisted, “Js be refuses to way, cause do goln's easivs.” tah a child’ [ asked. It 1 90 difficult for a New Englander to lose the theory ye Boat Upset, They Clung for | bing, sald that «ho was prepare act reasonably a physical examination Always show that something en remedied the child again ‘Three women and a man are fecovers| ing to-day from the exposure and ex- | Welnen to a hauation incident to a thrilling escape | Toke myself, from being swept over the Dundee Dam, which extends across the Passalc River between Clifton and Garfield, N. J. Mrs. Anton Werner, wife of a Gar- [feta hotel keep ALWAYS TO BE PITIED, “Tn the rare cases where no ailinent is discoverable He may be t imess too obscure part from his comp He Ix not to be he! as a disgraceful ovject, but as # pers found this treat- with a few toys. Mrs, George Werner, ond Louis 8 Vistied friends in Clifton, A little after j10 o'clock last night they started back child ig trained to live have} to Garfeid in @ rowboat, Blanch at the hil world dur- | oare. py Ing his school hours, jand they were drifted toward the dam The women began to scream and a crowd of several hundred gathered on the river hanks, The women were jwianding when the craft struck | edge of the dam, over which about) even incues of water was lowing. All shonld be a much closer co-operation than exists at present mother and teacher, There is no reason why the methods em- ployed in a Hous should not be taken over into the home by the mothe ought to be with her part of the time and she can allow thgir por- to develop freely if sho ce of it. In- deed, where there is no regular school employing my methods th: mother by adopting them may sond Olds to the graded school advanced far beyo: of Childhood Hea caildren his sense impressions. Thus my system | jucation was born, For 1 asked | myself why the method which brought | The boat turned over and caught oc a shag. TWO of the women grasped tt and held on, while Bianch and the other woman clutched a veam below the surface of the water than an hour men on oth river toed to th ng of some m rescue, while keep from beng draw Gustave Zh out in the midde of the river weii] TWO DOCTORS GET SUSPENDED 'y or girl, and why training should not | yegin ax early as possible. If you watch | Why shoud it seem terri ildres tverty en, Then Zeek other end of the sop: | Then the crowd drew the women and to the bank ft ff shanpening be reas. | Well, to make & long story short,| so much tronble with children im | #ured if they meet ite founder during | o we have con- | her triof visit. For there is Crmoas | Gock the other day that ansther relac] sidered them from our standpoint, | as well as eweetness in her piuinp, ex- tive had died « | had left him sio,99) tmstend of from shetrs, just had to leak out, | the actions for which we have criti- | figure. Her them are per- tives it is,” he suid to tho reporter to-] fectly matural, 1m @ child's wor! at fault if we try | iitelligence of natifioation.”* to make them live in our world be- “pnere “Then 1 suppose you'll have a whole} fore they are ready for i zur fluc of autumodilds?” was suggested. will be rendy much more quickly “a “Nope. ‘The one I've got it guod| they are allowed to follow their stand,” she said. “They must not y in| own aatural lines of development. ap lnvention of mine—a device that will] pr, Montcsaori’s school make tiking wachine manufacturers| called “The Hotse of Childhood;” sit up and take notice, That's how I} eed, this is the name given she is experimenting with the of youngsters between six and te hopes to Kee an intern station founded LONDON SOCIAL AFFAIR | Street Court sen! two chauffeurs to FOR WHITE HOUSE BRIDE) WHERE SHE 1S STIFLED] wie. isv Ss ets onal experinent tome tur ths work. AND RUNS INTO CLOSET, js Ambassador Page Arranging Din- ners in Honor of Mr. and Mrs. Sayre. Mra. {sit to Londoa, treet, Williamsburg, the wife of a trav | pan: y of State for F Jay by as too frighte on the tadl Will give aor harried couple, to wht the table, Mra. Re out of the apartm Sayre at the a prominent sires also to - iivuse bride and Mr, house heard her screams and Uroke into the] fed that early in the evening of Nov apartment. Mra, Ritch had fallen on the flo dining club, 4 The steamshtp arrangements of which Mr | De, Orlando 8. Rich, the father of her | husband Was summoned and sent mew: sage never g'ineter hy, he doesn't seem to be dolng any , But he'll never el He'll Jus? ait around ar “How 8) “At sequoters Inge Ghan ig conausped.’ | Ave er siz miles en hour,’ Education OF GRIMSPEEDERS ASHE IES THEM Magistrate Puts on the Limit, but Autoists Are Behav- ing Better Now. Ashes to auhew, Duet to duet; If the cars don't Kei us The automodties must Rectted today by Magintrate House, sitting in the Harlem Police Court, as he imposed fines of $60 each on #ix auto- mobile apeedors and a fine of on a automobtilat who had been anfortunate enough to allow smoke to ixsue from bis machine, The effect of tie sovere penalties im- | Pored on atitomeblie specdera in the} snmpal@n of the police and the etty | magistrates to reduco the periia of croming New York streets on foot DR. MARIA thown in the West Bide Court to-day, BLOWING SMOKE LIKE A CHIMNEY appares ook Sudiclal cognizance ot arm in Stree: Ss Suffragiet sy miertilae U the tact that whe was @ very peaueicat | Akarm in Street Over s mudge! warned by BW An na Tower | young woman in tearful distress. 1 | president of thetr assuctation, ta wes -_—#¥*>—- ! side #treete, where complaints regarding specding have been moat frequent, ‘There were ton charges against (he oper: | ators of Machines who allowed thelr | 2 to give off amoke, ‘THE ONLY PUNISHMENT MaT FITS THE CRIME | engt: wt 3 WOMEN AND MAN The apaeders were each fined #0 with | the Alternative of ten days im sail by Magistrate Murphy. Most of them pald ‘DRAGGED FROM DEATH {sic oho some place, Brooklyn, Magistrate Murphy took the precaution of anking her whether sho had the qoney to pay her! I fine pefore fixing !t. Mix Goate, sob: to pay. JUDGE FEARED HE WOULD “GO Hour Till Rope Was Float- BROKE.” + An abe toft the courtroom Magiatrate ed to Them. Murphy turned to Polleeman Bynon, ‘Omicer, 1 you have b no other algn, If you bh vo Vl go pay their fines Just ae TE wish 1 had pat the fine of that Indy, Have a heart.” Bynon grinned and arraigned a mi The Magivtrate drew a deep sigh of re- Hef and satd with great emphasis: “You are fied A, In default of which you re committal to t ys in jail, What fa the inatter with you apeed maniaca anyway? You have tad warning, but your desire for the intoxication of reck- lessness maker you think that the laws this clty oan be tenered. This mpeeding moblies ts going . to stop if we have to petition the Legisla ture to ive us a la us to fx Jail sentences without the ai ternative of a fine, her daughter, Mias a Werner; her daugater-n-law, ch, he current was too swift for him, top Marka of Jamate: Prome Court Justice Van Siclen of the Becond Dintrict. At the request of a who said he was the secretary of the Justice the hearing way postponed until Saturday so that Justioe Vi {Siclen could be present. Magintrate Murphy said with a grim amile that the oF tee co Of the Justice would not affect tha ss pane, Inasmuch as Marks was alone deathe |{n the car when he was summoned @ rowboat | court by Policeman Van C re hurled ¢ t and swept to the dam. ‘ur more dew of the the four stu nto hored ck an qoove the dan and puis out a lone pe that floated down stream to the SENTENCES, AstAWa, Biinch made four nvoses: Sixteen automobile drivers were ar- done Wasp Maint nef te Geismar in Brooklyn, ty itimlt oon and other highways Fourteen were A 8H with the alternative of tye days in jail and all paid their fines. sed about the body of | ratuned befor the if 1 anchor and score with the A ing the sa Jford aven man bas) nto deep water and gradually | favored by motor|ste, 4 to the \iavit a SSE Two physicians, Dr. Richard iiatheld of No, 1634 Union street and br. DumMeld Pfeiffer of No. 36% MacWonough atreet were allowed to go with sus) mune of thelr a ed gen ements that hurrying on account of pro- noles Kempner in the Adame Magiatrate in butler Street urt fined six $2 and went three to ali for the reat of the day —ae —_—— Mrs. Lillian Ritch Found Dead! 4y7@ SAIL DRIVER After Small Blaze in Room SENT TO PRISON FOR SPEEDING BIG TRUCK. Is Put Out. anes zor = Jacob Warckman, twenty-five years old, of No, 180 Williams avenue, Brook lyn, operator of @ Unito! States mail ‘ian Ritch of No. 298 Eckworth automovile truck, to-day entered the prison attached to the Morrinania Po Court In the [tronx, to serve a ‘day"-—from 10 o'clock tn the mornin ye A mas iamp)antil 4 o'lcock in the afternvon—in in the partor of her apart | leu of a fing of $25 imponed by Magix trate Corrigan for reckless driving. Warckman was served with a sum monn on Nov, 1, walle the atrike of Mt, opened the toor | naufteurs of mail trucks was in A clowet and heat willy agminst the | progress, He asked fat the case be g salesman for a fountain pen com: Was suffocated tn her home to- fire from which she wan ed to es t upset and net fire to pa aon . intending to ru Al, trying to Maht her way out while | postponed because of the strike, When the flames spread, Warckman was arraigned to-day ho Vrederick Griffen, the owner of the] wan not represented by counsel. nd Riehard Curran, @ tenant, Motorcycle Policeman Donovan tert! of the cl net and they could and Forty-nintn street from Third avenue, narrowly missing two women, Warckman said that a police- man was beside him on the driver's 4] was working over her, to several cities in the west in| nee the eifort to reach hts son, Donovan further testified that the Pe truck was going from fifteen to | Gas Meter No elhteen miles an hou. From tue Freton Transcript.) Many jude trom Bleber'e reg nose| “That would have been imposel oa gas meter,” turning @ corner ate epeed than THE “MILLIONAIRE KID” WHO HAS INHERITED ANOTHER $160,000. [Mould not be created by By | The det ‘ whe re-nloote | Adaoctation « ytonal Ame felation w SIMON D. PADDOCK Fire Which Also Chokes the Subwa A fire in a rubbiah closet In the necond Butlding at nd street and Broadway to- ]who had summoned Miss Goato, and | day filled the whole building and the| F di: | subway station beneath It with a smoke smudge for a time to-day, shafts carried the amoke to the twe vse I @hall have to | floor; open windows there lor tt | the alr in such volumea that people in the street thought that the whole bulld- log was on fire. Chief Martin 5 groped dow the xmoko with 4 line of hose attache ndpipe of the building rkly tore the fire to pleces withou any damage to the building In the meantime ants of she b viieve the assurancs |danger, took to the street an fast as the cars could carry them down, Way passengers, emerging from trains ran back again and con next station, uarrowly escaped Which will allow | One of those arraigned was Clyde! chauffeur for Su-!” opnoman Barrow, a porter, fire unaided, He wan sent }to the Polyciinte Hospital to be treatet @" ) tor partial suffocation. beside CHAUFFEUR OVERCOME - BY KILLING OF CHILD Driver's Heart Affected by Accident and He Has to Be Seat to ning at Granade ton mtreet, Ast heaped off tug found that « Overs picked up tie John's Hospital, was recoKnined ag os6 Houlevard, had ween the ac trying to steal a dent sald the boy % overcome that him and found heart bad neon ie hurried hi: ‘Acker, Merrall & Condit Company 1820 Our Price Has Been and Is Now 33C' 1 the truck operated by Warckman |}/ swung in @ reckless manner inio One| not find her until after they had put! igundred yut the flames. She wae dying when they dlecovered her. She breathed her last as Dr, Heath of St, Catherine's 4 Dozen for in Sealed Cartons, Guaranteed Sound and Sweet seat and that the policeman had told, iim what there had been no reckless: | sa heavy drinker, but he's not. |#ald Warckman, "I have a governor machine which proventa ine from | INTISUFFRAGISTS HAVE THERDAY WITH CONGRESS. initiates Fight Demand of Foes for House Committee on Votes for Women. WASHINGTON, Dec 4--Opponent of er suffrage appeared before the Hole Rules Committee to-day to ergee why @ committes oo woman suffrage the Howse. gation Was headed by Mra A. Dodge of New York, who yester@ay eaident of the Nationa! posed to woman suffrage, The delegation marched to the Howe: Office Building in a pody, In thatthe apect they followed the plan of the Me an Woman suffrage Atso- Hh yent a delege- ton of nearly ene thous women to jer ont the cuffragiet ide of the argu- t Speakers t p t jare working wor were ony se to the frat weont tuey would lowe more than the would traty This was te enw + Ole Mtutement of the eet ra ' ¢ woman need et dud was etvongly te favor It wan con we suttrage | movement wa: iy its sature, tha ot wanted by lared, Tt was denied that (he suf fragixt movement had grown to ameh nuit i been Shaw | main away from the hearing room amd lgive thelr undivie attention to the businegs of the suffrage convention to which they had sent as delewates. The list of wati-suffrage speakers to- day Included: Mesa, 0, IL Talbot ef JOnlo: Miss Alico Hill Chl 1 of New York; Mra, Robert Garrett and Mir. Reiwood of Marylaud; Mr a. . Charles J, Underhilhiot eph G. Pyle of Min- Kissell of Delaware; Mias Minnie Bronson of lowa; Mra, IP. J. Goodwin and Mra, 0, D, Oliphant ot Now Jersey; Misa Lacy Dr. Lucy Banister and Abell of New York; Mis tin L, Dore through | sey and Miss Ella Hrahaut, Washingten; Mins Buck, New Jersey, Mies Harding and Mies Pelt, Pa. and Mise Flizabeth McCrackan of Massuclusetts. we bind your feetin narrow corns, bunions, rf te? Why. inileed, when good looking. roomy Rice & Hutchins Educators do not bend bones, but abolish corns, etc.? For men, women, children, $1.35 to $5.50, Next time you buy shoes, try on the Educator. I's not an orthopacdically { conect EJucatot, ualess Edu cator is branded on the sole, sa bee Nayfoire ; We Se . Rice & Hutchins Educator Shoes Signet ‘Shoe Co. 112 West 125th St. © and 149th St., Corner of Third Avesy New York, N.Y.