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| ~ AEN ETE UR MN REE ee RR TWOAPLEBY SNS GET MON EFT BY FATHER Share the Vast Real Estate Holdings of Aged Parent, Buried Yesterday. PARTNERS AS LAWYERS. Both Are Modest and Show No Signs of Having Been Made Millionaires. Fortune and her twin sister, Mistor- tune, have added two names to the list of millionaires of New York. These are the names of Dégar Storm Appleby and hls brother, John Storm Appleby. They fare the only sons of Charles E. Apple by, one of the largest individual holders Of real estate in this city, who died on Dec. 18 at the age of ninety and waa buried yesterday. Although thetr father'a wij has not yet been filed, it Is estimated that {t disposes of property to the value of many millions, This great estate “will in all probability be divided equally ‘Detween the two sons. Edgar Storm Appleby, the eldest son, 19 @ man of fifty-one. He is about the medium height, smooth shaven and not at all the popular conception of a mil- Nonaire, which demands some outward aign of the bulging pocketbook within. | ‘He lives at No. 216 West Fitty-ninth| Street, the house in which his father dled and from which he was buried. OFFICE OLD FASHIONED LIKE| THE HOME. { Tt might be calied, in @ way, a rela. | tive of the office on the fifth floor of No. U John street, where the two sons transact their business—the law The office Is old-fashioned, too, with simple Severe furniture, and Just enough of it 7 are deska and tables there lit tered with letters and documents—tn» | Air of the piace Is that of the law office to which Dickens introduces the readers of “A Tale of Two Citles.” And both #ons are at that office to-day, beginning the task of going over the great es vhich Fate has lafd in their hande. elther of them would to-day speak in any way of the affairs of their father, nor commit: then $ to an estimate! of the w left behind hin . "The amount has been exaggerated. }and that’s al," was the word of each Jolin Storm Appi ur years his brother's junior, 1 enthusiastic is an chtsman and a member of the He: p> stead Harbor Yacht Club, in the re- attas of which he sails his own boat. | —_ WEW MAYOR RETURNS. =| “Mitchel Says He Didn't Discasn Ap- pointments With Wi yor-elect. Mitchel got back from Washington after 2 o'clock this after hoon with a denial of the story that} ho had gone te Politics with the President en if T had g nt to talk to discuss ‘a matter.” Mr. Mitchell wouldn't dis ments. ——————— COURT OF APPEALS ADJOURNS Gunmen De Becker pected Early tn | ALBANY, Doc, 19.—With the hearing | of a few minor cases this afternoon, the Court of Appeals closed the term. It will reconvene in January, Several jm- portant decisions, including those of the | Becker and gunmen cases, probe | ably will be handed down early in the new term. ——— CARDINAL MARTINELLI SICK. Papal Delegate | ¢ Term. | | Prelate Served at Washington, ROME, I inal Sebastian Martinelli, who was Papal Delega in the United States from 1896 to 1 4a seriously ill, The Curdinal, who) fs sixty-five years old, is Prefect of the Sacred Congregation of Rites. He | was born at Santa Anna in the Areb- diocese of Lucoa, Italy, 19.— Bol Oyater Stews to Replace Turkeys, MOUNDSVILLE, W. Va, Dec. 19.— Oysters will be substituted for turkey for the Christmas dinner of the 1,170 convicts in the State Penitentiary here, Warden M. L. Brown has ordered 145 | gallons of oysters for that purpose, | They will be served in stews. This will bo the first time oysters nave ever been served the convic | claw Use Ex-Lax For Aten Noyes Vemmmbermiarneth rue eran < THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19, 1913. Don’t Pour a Child Into a Mould and Expect A Perfect Casting, Says Dr. “THE CHILD FED AT SCHOOL 1S TAUGHT THINGS NEGLECTED AT HOME TABLE" "LET Them WATER Prants”* “the Conceptions of Some Parents and Teachers | That the Child Must Be Moulded to Surroundings | Which Have Positive Lines of Conduct Are | Wrong if Not Criminal,’”’ She Declares. | eteacn THE OF CRAM “Teach the Children a Love of Nature--Never Tell Them That Caterpillars or Wriggling Earthworms Are to Be Shunned”--How, What and When | to Feed the Little Ones for Health. | The dominating figure In the educational wort:' to-day is un. i Questionably ur. Maria Montessori. The famous “method” of the Italian teacher-psychologist is already revolutionizing the training of small children in‘every civilized country. Indeed, Dr. Montes. sori’s explanation of her system Is shortly to be translated into | Chin "OUTSIDE OF REGULAR Times FoR MEALS CHILDREN SHOULD NOT EAT AT ALL inwhile she Is now paying her first brief visit to Americ | and for the benefit of American mothers she has given The Eve- | ning World a series of interviews, In which all the most impor- i tant problems of child development are discussed, | | ARTICLE I1—Diet and Environment. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “Surround the child with that environment which seems best sulted to bis individual needs. If the public school is fashioning him to a certain standard, it may be necessary for the mother both to see that he gets the most good from his school and that his character building continues at home. We cannot have too many selentitleally trained, thinking mothers.” “in this country, That is bow Dr. Marta Montessori! epitomized in alt” Paragraph the puzzling problem of the proper sur. | nick UP My assertion roundings for small children. When I put my frat! things in America. question to her on this topic she shrugged her ghoul-| variety which we ders in true Latin fashion and pursed her lips in a YUF national diet pout which betokened momentary disapprovay | ours, you probably have seen by “You expect me to tell you all my ideas on this! has fon to ihe United Bist ike have come to the United States with | subject in a short space, when I have taken two or thelr own peculiar gastronomic habits, | three books to tell about it, and still have not finished," |!cluding, of course, garlic." she protested. “For when we come right down to fundamentals, Peg The Dottoressa's soft laugh was a mont actually takes in the whole acope of child education, ohyalcal, mental| otha peop ane but sltonvther Bae MuritUal dGeanit 1:1 (01 You! Amorteans; :withi sage, hurry, andl'goue| Hal \aae deck, 66° Ake: adios haste to see printed instantly that which we of Europe will wait paticcna a4 to hear after much mature consideration in the writing! eee ‘And yet, I to admit that Rot try to por | you, with all your haste and speed, | and expect Bim alwape eset have surrounded your children ® Perfect casting. von pa with an environment which is far Pouxed into mold will often show fects—so: have merel: n country t she replied "I You have a great do not have. And Sas Mawenact @ said, not explain. whether she meant the public school or @ school such ae she herself would conduct. “The ‘. superior to that of most places in | def metimes hes to be sent | cat in rimeiior dewey case esate my country and, in fact, in all of | DSK to the furnsos, mow Geiuiine We ateae ct as cout Perera iving in? $e suppose would like to see cooking of a sol- “Well.” 1 suggested through the in-| Mving, mobile organism entific nature for children in rich a6 well as poor homes. We should get more into the habit of spe clalizing in food for children.” “And about the preparation of that terpreter, “can't you give a few ideas to the American mother which you think she may need, which will help her to] % ® set patt of better even the conditions you praise?”| “Let me describe the attitude which "Of course," she replied, “I shall have! !* demanded of the teacters in the y ," 1 sald, hoping to eome to be more or less theoretical in this, I snus houses’ in Rome oat new ideas. * have not been im America long enough ere the children are occupied in to see What environments surround all) Varied ways Ly DIET MUST BE RICH IN FATS The teacher, the passive etivity, is on constant ervations of a psy- ture and along actentife sof your children, I have been |director of th large cities, but I have seen the, Watch, making and the small places only) chological AND SUGAR “Well,” the Dottoresaa sintled again— that wonderful smile which has brought county through the car windows, I under- |atandards. She is @ student in a labora- | Very One with whom she has come in st you have a country life that Is| tory, where the phenomena which sre | contact to her feet—"tho diet of ohil- most beautiful in many places. And! obser NSA STP FAS AOEN OP Jitle children, | Seem Ih Mie AIHE place mua be: Pah tn quite as much a part of naturi | fat8 and: sunar. ise towns are not to be compared with those | phenomena observed in the sheet [DB YRSep And BHIL SDOre Be: On OdASEN eT: of Hurope. It is very hard to give ad-| laboratory. She sees the actlonw and {Of child life developing naturally. vice on this point when I do not know! ¢), ; ond AK to whic! the reactiona, She observes what ADOUE thy perious Bheeve: OF Ute WEN | causom: will bring oertald reaciie aon br etre eppen arsine must obtain in such @ large country | {)0 n vuld be cut up—actually . tabulates all tale knowsa a aoe filled with a striving, progressive DOOBIN | Sutilne ratarenon cae as Wiedge for He cannot properly imaasticate ont into the subject in a gen- ms ee Mee iat cie like Whi he| 1h. the home thera ie opportunity for | Just such » laboratory. Stuy the indi. 4 anywhere with good results. If they are already in use, so much the| Vidual child and use your best judg- ment to provide him with the environ- again, T learn that some of your mining minced. his food and his little stomach tx not up to Ite taxi of mincing the food whic) Hd I should recom and balls i ft receives. Por th mend ps, pu better. el {ter three and h ment which se ‘ i meat. That is, a 6 and a ha WRONG = CONCENTIONS = OF | cds of his progreamton’ ne” °° "8! yeara, Up to that time ohlelly omKs und MOTHERS AND TEACHERS, milk, though the broths could be added ABOUT THE OUTDOOR LIFE OF CHILDREN. ‘Then the Dottoressa turned to another ase of the subject, the outdoor life | children, She continued bi “Teach the children a love of nature. Lead them to the doing of useful task | It will be play to them, if um feft to thelr own resources, just as | much a# the foolish ganies ty which | = they turn when no other kind of ity offers, “Im our schools the children at- tend to the watering of plants. ‘They are brought to the soll, They learn to love the beantifn! things ‘Un the first place, I ve that the conceptions of some parents and not @ few teachers that the child muat be molded to an environment which has! positive lines of conduct are erroneous— almost criminal in certain Instances, “@tudy the individual child. Do after the seoond year, Frult# are espe: cially good. For poor children there | & very good mixture of bread polled in salt water or in broth with an abund {ot when KM are active | Jewelers 18 90 different from | Montessori MARIA MONTESSORI TEACH THEM PEEL Fait To m oT TOBE AFRAID CREATURES © ING 7 wn, taken Just ax they are and then digested in the open air, f realize that such an ration Is next to inv | trom the te find that you eat a great many different | Possible in the cities. A good substitute, however, is to take fresh barely heat them in water. “All forms of meats are not adapted to jehildren and the preparation must dit- {fer an the age of the child increases pm three to five years of age finely und flesh is best, while after five the }normat child ought to be able to gr nd the meat with his bh. Then come the time when he should learn to masti cate properly because he has a to bolt his food and pring Jand kindred His nent many things whi home table wh t#, chicken and veal, are most adapted to the ehtld’s powers Lot aasimiation at this u ad the light flesh of fel ax well. Fillet of beef is sood after four years of age, but never the heavy, fatty flesh or sea food, "Milk foods are always good when eaten soon after preparation from fresh products, Bread is excellent and it in oes 4 tion whol mikht be well always to offer the crust to the child, “As to green vegetables, they should never be eaten raw—only cooked, and at that they are mot to be highly recommended, except spinach, which may be given in moderation. “Fruite, Uke eggs and milk, contain living attributes when freshly picked and aid greatly in the digestion of the little one’s food, Although most fruits oan be given to the child when raw, | pears, apples and plums are better cooked. I would exclude figs, | Pineapples, dates, inelons, walnu cherries, early childhood, In cating of fruits the ehild valid teught a4 Koon aN poxsivie W to eliminate carefully the pee) and the seeds. [le soon learns how tu eat fait properly and it becomes a Kource Mo Mutixfaction to. tim eive his | Joe orang tand to prepare it fo sting himee! GARLIC 1S A GOOD THING FOR A CHILD TO EAT. ines a abomination, f E. M. GATTLE & CO, avin te fe tga n had he convicted of murder, oF And have other | effects « { M At Cie tome of Besierte arrest, a year bua IE 1 LL asta os Td ast A Mra, Becker war very % ind tight | Vie Visite of Ner.aon veaeot | You y place in ney w 1 ‘nother on, Lieut. r wrt ‘ erages, fone Hecker of (he Police Department, hot wteaiteat | . hat al owen attacked | by ] No, indeed.” the Lot fend " ' ‘ nue Jvith ancnatior Water ts needed in| it | jedly to a aeiad tteate [ates and tho exciting to tab we irious, AN hia 5 beers! > awa ; ; H nif Attempt to Rescue Comrade | coustres ¥ each a Mw exeu ‘ Who They Think Is Be ' Biven, Chocolate ged food ine Forcibly Fed see vf theit reailar thes for | for whe was almost blind and did nat " rhildwen should net Me ey | WONDON, tire, iiaBy menna of wwol core read Ab should be two meals at Kee chite | MEd an ate Was mate last night) He Known that fie mother Iren’s houses and blow up the wall of Holloway Jail, | ee iy bie dha ne eat her death wit Fe | otier ‘ q . rh ly of Mire Becker will be taken y the wtanta am t mt wn NOY rment, on | ve, tat " on ‘ he ’ vy th oor py : wish to empaai ews drey sich anton idee i which should atvond every ‘oie found two holes in the of ihe prison Me | MAL each about one doot square and | AIX inches te They ¢ penetrate | the wal) and youd ing and pple oft the. trie ttle damage t \ eased ‘ t ‘ | j | hohe ; wiley but th Ale Known + ty Mile at the Right Price. | HA | i Maybe the, reason 308 sever wuaht, 9 ¥ ’ . ee when ow oy + toed . rier charges A Safe, Gentle Physic It Is a Pleasant Chocolate Laxative NoPain,NoGriping. Children Love It When your bowels of the crawling creatures of the earth whioh bring a shudder to many an older person. I have seen ® group of my children intensely interested in the wrigglings of an earthworm or in the labored prog- Fees of @ oaterpillar, They do not shudder use they have never been told that such things are to be | Of uature, and they are not efraid | | re clogged, your] sweetens up your acid stomach, stops stomach sour, and bad breath proves] sick headache and bloating and makey you are bilious and stipated, Ex-Lax| you feel fine. Your appetite returns, you quickly, without griping | ambition revives, and by taking Ex-Lax ‘his pleasant-tasting, choco-| occasionally you maintain your good) shunned.” ‘e is the latest and best thing! health, Hales is perfectly harmless And now will you tell me a tit anaut a mild and gentle physic that| for grown folks and children, and tastes | the food suitable L urged, helps nature rid your body of its wastes] so delicious that every one likes to take | thi tte which When you are sick and need physic, as|it. Don't weaken you ‘stem with |aimost = invariably mpanics a most folks do, at times, you can get) pills and harsh cathartics. Try Ex-Lax | healthy outdoor life Pei as the Dot- | relief from Ex-Lax without bad after| next time your bowels don’t move right. toressa approves. effects, It acte on the liver direct, | Price, 10c, 860 and 60c, at all druggi “% hesitate to sey much about diet ais #0 - ay - Goldsmiths GOLD AND PLATINUM JEWELED BROOCHES of various and distinctive des 1s, Gold brooches from $ led platinum brooch: Platinumsmiths > trom Comparison of Values Invited E AT 38TH STREET JESSIE W'CANN HOT HELD | IN HOUSE AT BABYLON BECKER'S MOIHER ———_ Pym ano cic cit) ES UN IGNORANCE. | ie so tea. ‘Ftose Aged Woman Was Nov er Told CSYLON TEA Rep: Is Found. ef of Police of ylon, bo 1, “rt MeCann, father n, the missing Phat wring te way Chat a gud Mies MoCann was being The of Arrest and Sentence of, torhey Greene of Her Favorite Boy. vostinate Mr reporied ba be | that tie Cltef of Pollce was ine | i |The girl detained in the house to wien | . White Rose Coffee, Caly 33e.0 jn ret was “detained only ir The mother of former Polles Lieut y that she was pup sieally utiale HN Ghe ee Hecker, who is in the death —_ McCann sald this morning that) PUS® In Sing Sing awatting execution TO PARENTS, he had no other news in the case » for instigating the murder of gambler ‘ pin ey, tae family, he said, were di hi Herman Rosenthal, died early to-day be bar} “ath ing #o much nw the ap hoof Chrint. ‘ Pb LL . profively tMustrat Fs mas, Miss Mthel J nh inat work on at her ho 78 Greenwich avenue ro bet Feaaie Wd been ee eet ake wald) She wan very old and had been a bed Jossie had bexun for Wendie Squires on Inv or years the student in the School of Mines, who Ten Invaltd for year “practically” engaged to Josie Me. Mrs Ue died In Urnorance of the fact that her faverity and i i _ ea ey From the following brands of cigars, all firmly =stablished favorites UNITED CIGAR STORES from one end of the country to the other, is safe to make selections for holiday gifts. These cigars (packed 25 in a box) represent the widest variety of tastes. Each is recommended as a standard cigar of its kind, so that smokers themselves, or others buying for smokers (particularly the ladies) may make a choice with every assurance of going right. 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