The evening world. Newspaper, March 11, 1914, Page 3

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Al, 1944. rininshlhdrenchliaddndrsichialed MEMBERS OBJECT PARIS WOMEN SHOCKED|®®- Who Developed Method Through Own Son| 101 W.W. ARMY | Y FASHONS PLAN | 3 — \ TIRES MODEST N DRESS) Sy ¢ ele ti 4 g st A \ Re OR Fa reo At kA D, WEDNESDAY, MARO: ¢. AQ MY BEST,” : |‘American Montessori’ Is a Mother- Teacher ~CLARES GLEN ~ GING UP SHEL <Commissioner Says If $3,500 Officials Are Incompetent They Must Get Out. ‘The Cunarder - ‘i eatled Patriotic League Issues Protest] tiles Zesteney, sveuine. mad whose wife Against All Garments Con- [t eparation er ae bore Decen her sult against Mra Gi Wrary/0 cys | Mackay for $3,000,000 for alienation her husband's affections A fellow | Passenger of Dr. Blake, who sailed Ge“ \)) der an assumed name, said thet the doctor ae ee ee 7 | Sharp Criticism Follows Enter- tainment of 150 in Parish House. | , PARIS, March 11—A_ distinct novelty (or this @ay capital is a movement inaugurated by women for reform in the matter of dress, The object Is to discourage the immodest- ly frank gowns that have become the vogue and return to a style which will ¢ to hide rather 1. an reveal Best Thing to Turkey the female form divine. Tbe reform- ere state tha. conditions as to the and Champagne.” |dress of women in Paris have be- como intolerable, Recently @ priest was obliged to re- |MUSIC AND SPEECHES. Leader Says “This Is the Next a ¥ ‘ i dock and went at once to his room. His wife, who has a court directing that she be paid alimony, was surprised when tom the doctor had -_ ag gre a was about joride. Inspector in Spectacular | Trip to Station. In pursuance of his policy of hold- been informed take a trip to Fi “This,” said a “soldier” in Frank | ——enellieanioin fuse his blessing to a marriage be- : ' Se Biasissstiol ond captalne peresnatty Tannenbaum’s I w. W.-Anarehiot cause the bride's white dress was 2o| GAR HONORS WICKERSHAM, res — ‘my of unemployed" when he and | fagrantly transparent. . \ Tesponsible for the condition of Maa] 149 others of his kind arose to-day! ‘The initiative 1H ike new campaign Former Attorney-General George [A , districts Police Commissioner MoKa: {in the parish hall of Bt, George's Innes been taken by the pop Ded pegieten was clected ey the Bar Association of the City ordered charges of neglect of duty | | Stuyvesant Square and had & g00d League of French Women, which | York at a regular, bi- and violation of the rules preferred ks ore a ie ae are through ite titled members has sent | held last night in noe -ragainst Capt. James H. Gillen to-day. retry tos pel) baat thing to turkey [°Ut to society women a manifesto! street. He wan chosen by M nt k ee es ee cae aie, with and champagne.” berated Doves fo pe the ure of | Vote sham : : (oa om . Me ah aa Tannenbaum, before being sent to | ivenis lebekg edrnegmant 3 } aie ome METOOUNE: DANIO, | jail, told the members of the “grmy” bese pat thd niliaer Bes ed | which embraces the old Tenderloin. that they ought to be drinking cham. |™e"t reads, “for the reputation | in the associat A The Commisstoner visited the West pagne and eating turkey at the ex- France hitherto has borne for of President | cota veg at a pense of rich persons in New York. wy cai ‘ i LW. We. . A women are ur not Jast night and entered on the blotter taken’ Inia) (HAC fond 6e: Reagoasepey m an order reducing the Inspector and | suspending him pending trial. The} charges of neglect of duty and viola- tion of the rules are based un the fact that Lieut. Dan Costigan’s men have “been wor! in the Third District for a month, and last night, over the heads of Gillen and Capt. Ward of the West Thirtieth street station, raided the Hotel, Mumm, in West ‘Thirty-ninth street; the Hotel Atlan, in West Thirty-fourth street; the Me- dalion Hotel, No. 34 Sixth avenue; ‘Tekulsky’s Cafe, No. 309 Sixth ave- only to reject ultra-modern fashions, others do} reminded that what they do always is imitated by women | of other classes. To aid the crusade, 4 document signed by as many of the prominent society women an can be induced to attach their names will be presented to the leaders in the dress- making industry in hope they will return to more modest principles of dress, “The youngest and prettiest Mote | taken Into the fold of St.,George's by the Rev. Karl Rojland, the rector, who first “set em up" to a good meal, ‘with cigarettes and cigars, Indignation prevailed to-day among Mrs. Marietta L. Johnson Subordinates Grades and LT pedo phatbhlernng toi Alegent Examinations and Pass Marks to the Broader pitality extended to the “army.” The Purpose of Cultivating a Normal, Complete 4 fea, Gabravar whe tat seppoctea ‘oy Human Being, Emotionally and Phys- euercise || some of the wealthiest families in ically as Well as Mentally. the city. One of the parishionors said to-day: 8 “This is getting pretty close to the are to head the movement,” the secretary of the league. “ fe want » If these men really wanted/a woman to be able to be chic with- By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. mit. Si nue, and the Madson Square Hotel, ‘The American Montessori has just arrived in New York. She is LEY TS AUT ° pinky og reccs an their peeled ie eg Soon they ore beyond ox- Sixth avenue and Twenty-fourth} Mrs. Marietta L. Johnson, a mother-teacher who in Fairhope, Alabama, ’ are men who Gaunt the red flag of La + yg eneaaink ii treet. has founded and now directs a school as unconventional in its method deman -| “"Thes , \- ie ABANDONS THE OLD OCHEME and {idealistic in its aim as the House of Childhood ian Secibe © wo-called ‘army: |darmes,” who aiwaye osme "tn "th RCH MILNER AND BOOKKEEPER INWURED Snow-Filled Streets Respon- sible for a Serious Acci- dent in the Bronx. , OF TRANSFERS. Commissioner McKay announced te-day that he would not resort to \ the time honored custom of transfer- ring inepectors and captains who fall . .te make good. They are to be held ' -vesponsible and will have to stand trial if it fe found that they cannot Gieorderty places and en- the lawe relating thereto. “Inapectors getting $8,500 a year 4 7) captains getting $2,750 a year i whould be competent to discharge the ‘ duties of their rank,” said the Com- missioner. “If they don't discharge ‘ their duties they will have to stand trial.” ‘The Commiasioner pointed out that | Costigan's men got evigence against | the alleged disorderly hotels, He held that if Costig: men could do it, Gillen’s men should have done it. ‘The CommigasioneF does not take into account the claim that the hotels in question hi been running off and on for years, and that the proprietor and ing. Members of the eo-called ‘army’ have repeatedly refused to work be- cause they were not offered thirty cents an bour. Hardly a man among them is @ skillea mechanic.” Teh who are interested in the vialist pulpit of St. Mark’e Church in bast Tenth street paved the way for the hospitality displayed by the in the same puritan that Ia whieh as ry Vicar Geer welcomed to Bt. darmea, who always come on the scene wherr it l@ too late. Let their patriotism be reaas@red; we are going to close the skirt, now that the mod- ern dance, which made it necessary, j has gone wrong.” GIRL PUPIL TOO BIG FOR CHAIR IN SGHOOL Is Why Twelve-Year-Old Gertie Schwartz Played Hookey, The reason Gertie Schwarts been playing hooky from Public School No. 168, in Bartlett street, Brooklyn, for the last month is be- cause she is twelve years old, 5 feet 1% inches tall and weighs 140 pounds. She in growing all the time, too. “I can't sit in In the room in 4B grade," explained Gertie, when her father, Solomon, of No. 662 Flushing aven was summoned to) of which we heard so much from the famous Italian | educator a few months ago. And to Americans Mrs. Johnson's educational experiment possesses the great | - - advantage of having been worked out by an American | woman for American children, It is therefore not subject to the adaptations and alterations which it seems to me must be made in the practice, if not in) the principle, of Madame Montessori’s system when it is employed among the children of this country. “The most efficlent way of developing power” how Prof. John Dewey of Columbia sums up Mrs. Johnson's school teach- ing. She herself puts it a bit differently, “The average schoo} Kills at leas$}quires with speed and facility know- one part of the average child,” she!ledge which really harms him at an told me, “If the little’body doesn’t} earlier period, since he must subject suffer—and frequently it docs—if the{ himself to a physical strain if he sits young mind is not injured—and fre-|at a desk studying book lessons, quently it is—at™least the spirit of “At a recent convention of edu- initiative is choked and destroyed.| cators it was found that twenty- What my school tries to do !s to in-| five per cent. of the school chil- crease the child's growth in every pos} dren in a certain large city wore sible way and to kill off nothing. That| glacees. But was there any m: fs why I call it the School of Or-| ment to abolish the requirements ganic Education, because ita design is| in reading and writing for young ciplined, however delightful?” (1 asked. “Is it a fair preparation for life to bring children up on a go-as- you-please plan? They must submit to control and restriction later on." | “But so they do at Fairhope,” the educator protested, quickly. “We try not to ask the children to do things they don't like. We ir Paul'e—ae spiritual guests. : After the 4 That Ralph Wilson, wealthy silk dealer beer and milliner at No. 13 East Thirty- xhird -street, in recovering at his home, No, 4828 Barnes avenue, the ‘Bronx, from the shock and severe cuts sustained in an automobile acci- dent last night. His bookkeeper, Miss Jeanette Helm, twenty-two years old, who lives at No. 136 College ave. nue, Mount Vernon, has a fractured upper right jaw and bad cute on the face. = boy who doesn't want to go to bed has to go to bed. The girl who wants to learn to read before has naid that Dr. Arundel approved of th right in auserting that they were titled to a decent living, but at one time he tald down the law firmly and unmistakably, and he was not ap- plauded for his frank remarks, “There can be no alternative to this side of the issue,” he is reported to vere secleres: ie old enough to do so with to herself must be rest it ined. When in our best judgment a child should do certain things he does them; even if coercion ie necessary. “But ronderful spirit of co-opera- tion exists among our boys and girls,” " thi b Gates Avenue Police Court clerks probably knew all of Gillen't ity neip the whole child, to help him| children? No, indeed! It was |Mre. Johnson added. | "Perhaps the) me couple were going to thelr | shovelling snow. Aad he ‘Gatid tol bscatae oe tare neniattne CEYLON TEA , t is physically and emotionally as well] merely deci that school | ie thelr Joy im thelr work. They aca| homes last night in Wilson's limou- |take what 1s offered him as a com-|achool. “I am bigger than : “Any Inspector,” said the Commin- | POTD ayy ss physician should cafefully fit Sele He woe ¥ AF®| sine, driven by Edmund Kincusk! of Densation.”_ [two wirle in my clase put stoner, “can have all the men he sce] spectacles to each child who |fiven large amount of freedom, and wo,’ 14g South Fourteenth atreety| »,Tangenbaum, indicted yesterday on) am x foot or more taller than any of wants, and can pick bis own men, 11} 4 WOMAN OF INTELLIGENCE needed them.” they are alowed the noise and activity) srount Vernon, On White Plains bi Bey tA 9.5 pating in bagel pete bid png i Woolen te Gillen’s men were too well known he | AND TACT. which ts their birthright. They are . “Do you have regular school hours and any sort of a fixed programme?” I asked Mrs, Johnson. {road near Two Hundred and Thirty- weventh street the automobile over- took @ truck on the northbound car demeanor, was ht before Judge Rosalsky in General Sessions to en- ter a plea to-day, His lawyer, Justus ! Gould haye had others assigned to his thone little girls.’ idx was told by tendance officer, Wiillam Mc- not constantly repressed, and their satisfaction in expreasion ts a delight Mrs, Johnson ts a motherly appear- Ing woman of about medium height. the Ld ” 4, “PO1D THE BEST | COULD,” SAYS | Her dark hair is parted smoothly in|” wphe pessions for the younger chil. | '° 8°" tracks, The street was so filled with Grreaues tks lyiaare tall een Ber caicca to i edilay Pet piers | Fy GILLEN. the middie and brought down in two| aren are from 9 to 11 in the morning | SOMETHING FOR SCHOOL BOARD .ow that it was impossible for the| now is 87,500. enlarged for the use of the big little Gillen called at Headquarters this | bands over her wide, intelligent fore-| ang from 1.20 to 3.80 in the after: | TO HEED. automobile to leave the car tracks, | THREE RAIDERS ARE GIVEN Pip. |firl, but sho had refused to attond Jmorning and turned over his shield|head, 1 think hor most noticeable che replies, “The clder aroup| “How did sow ortataate your methe|| .ikimcuskd taemed to the bet to pase TEEN DAYS EACH school anyhow on the ground that nnd police property to Chief Inspector | feature is her eyes, They are curtous- hos an extra half hour in the morning. | od?" I questioned, the truck and found himself facing a| Eight men, all but two of army |journed the hearing until next M GHehmittberger. He will probably be |Iy like the eyer of Madame Monten | pROgRAMME SUBJECT TO IN-| Lat tho New York Hoard of Hduca-| southbound trolley car in charge of [af 191 yet tintrled for their raid on ay and will consult in the menn- ried within a week, All he would | brown and bright and constantly STANT CHANGE. {tion shudderingly take heed—Mre.| Motorman Patrick McGarry. The |S: Alphonsus's Church a week ago,|time with the district superintendent | were = arral; Say about the case was: ing in expression anything you | Johnson is before Magistrate mother-teacher and| chauffeur, believing ho had time to of Chiat about Gortie's cam like except sle : in i Campbell in the Es hares hed fa ES SE “The rules forbid me to discuss brown, Mrs, John. | “There ts a regular programme, but | ioricg in it! In fact, her bright little} pass the truck and get back to the | Magistrate McAagn In oth Renin @harges. However, 1 can nonestly |son's entire personality ts the reverse | It 18 subject to instant change by any | coven year-old son is really reapon-| north tracks before encountering the | Headquarters bullding In| Mulberry Toba Habit tate that I did the best I could.” of langubrous, if sho Is Just up from teacher, The children always spend! site for the School of Organic Edu-| car, put on full speed and was just Set vere dichaleee Wit rai t ps cco i | Gillen has been a policeman|the South, and she has a wholesome |More than half thetr day outdoors, | og tion, swinging over to the other tracks|0q'pontence, ‘Three demended { eighteen years. He was a Heutenant| and entertaining vivacity of speech, |@nd the periods are so arranged that) «1 courant subject him to the public| when the car hit bim. got it and went to Blackwell | when Commissioner Waldo put him in charge of the Boiler Squad ip 1911 and he cleaned up that long standing disgrace to the Police De- ” 5 for the child,” | head work and hand work alternate, ee schoo souls ibe foe to |For the children between nine and eleven have plenty to do with books. | They are taught, however, to use their school process,” she confessed, “al-| The trolley struck Wilson's car, ; though I myself was a part of that! crushed it in and shoved it against j Process for many years in many dif-| @ trolley pole. ‘ ferent capacities, So 1 made my be-| Wilson and Miss Helm were pinned nd for fifteen days each. The remaining two, whose cases are unimportant, will be tried in the Jefferson Market Court to-morow morning. in One Day Sanitarium Publishes she reiterated again and again. “But in our efforts to develop a splendid educational system, Free Book Showing How Tebacce Habit Can partment. Then lje was sent to the! faye we not made the mistake (Minds rather than to clog up thelr! pinning in Fairhope with my own|in the auto, Reversh wiatows In the ane eee, Faideries Miler ie Fi “ Fast Fifty-firat street station as | o¢ considering the ayatem at the (Memories. Their books hecome to|iittlo boy and his friends, My school] trolley car were broken ts A siees wae aha mente tee ew bo he jute Be Banished in From One captain and did so well there that them a delight and not » drudgery. expense of the child? Grad | examinations and pass mar only relatively important. Wi should count most is the satis- faction of the child's need to grow into a normal, compl that thoy had not been present at the Rutgers Square meeting which Tan- menbaum addressed before the raid jon the church and all denied that they had been disorderly in the church, Plunkett said he had been a mem- ber of the T. W. W. has never charged tuition in the alx! Kincuski was uninjured, having been “In ovr recitations the students alt| yours of its existence, and I hope to] tossed into a snow bank. ¢ | with their books open, and the class, continue it for as many yeara longer,| Wilson and Misa ifelm were only resolves itself infto a conference on! am already at work on plans for a [ova conscious, but when Dr, Al- 4 from Fordham Hospital yf the author in hand,| igh achool where my methods may be| Pet $™)’eccovered mufficiently to in- pd but not domt- | used." sist that they be taken home fn an- Commissioner Waldo made him an j inspector and sent him into the Third District to succeed Inspector Lahey, Gillen was reported in police circles to have the Third District in better | shape than it had been in for years, | Main #¢., Bt. Joseph. a free book showin of the vobacce uablt. a conference direc nated by the teach hibit the manufacture, sale importation of cigarettes. Hven examipa-| A number of New York women in-| other automobile, tho for two years tried this but Commissioner McKay was not | . Ph } Poireel ec tlons are frequently conducted with | terested in education attended a eum- ORT Tt ne tall ah tha “desire for \ satisfied with it. | | Redlys an bn ” ; open books, to show whether the child| mer school held last year by Mra! go nar € leave the headquarters of the T. W. : core epirit—this is education” iowa how to use them. There are| Johnson at Greenwich, Conn., and] orawa, March 11 dian |W. in Went street until 6.80 o'clock : i |, Now, please give me somo details” no study houra, no home lessons, but |there the Fairhope League waa organ: | pariiament has appointed a special com. (on the night of the rald, but Lieut, T requotted. “In just what respects the tittle scholar frequently becomen| ized to stimulate interest in the work. | | ‘only requirement. ‘The one-step [Gildea and Seret. Gegan were nure : USE POSLAM doen your school differ most from the they had seen him in the Rutgers Sutriveted free. Square meeting. ag so interested that he will study of his ete own free will,” “But isn't such @ training undis- Under ita auspices another course of vacation sessions will be held in Greenwich this summer. . ordinary public school?" “T suppose the first and most strik- | Ing difference is our use of hooks," replied Mrs, Johnston. | “The hundred children under my care are divided roughly into two and those between nine and eleven. , 7 Those in the younger group are prac- i ckly, even \ Podam will Soe 3 ‘i nekly, even tically forbidden books, Tor fifteen | Tortures of Indigestion ; Miseries of Constipation New ‘Backless’ Gowns Too Frank, Make Philadelphia Women Gasp PHILADELPHIA, March 11.—Tho fashionable women of Philadel- Evils of Impure Blood Itching stop as} minutes a day they are taught read- |} 110 ‘in an effort to follow the Parisian vogue, adopted the green wig i Quickly and Safely Removed by skin. The|ing and a very little arithmetic, bee in a twinkling and accepted the skillet hat without a murmur, but y the rent of the time they learn lessons || to.day, when the “backless” evening gown was exhibited by models, ; there were evidences of a fashionable revolt, ‘The exhibition of gowns was held at the Bellev w and the grand ballroom resounded with shocked “0! . Dianette Leduc walked out with nothing on her back but a string of beads and a draught. outside books, These ‘life classes,’ as we call them, take up such subjects ‘The gown was of bright green crepe de chine, velled with a lighter shade of tulle. There was hardly anything to the front of the waist The Chocolate Laxative and the back was entirely absent. As @ result, as the handsome model walked across the room, the effect was frank in the extreme, Each morning when | reach my To World Want Ads. I turn; For through them many ways (o get: 1 always learn. Int out good positions, jorkers, homes end bargains rare, opportunitios y make 8 gseptic stare, is rapid, improvement noted by day. bees oe oar by oy y Poslam and a all {te ugly manifestations driven away. as physical exerc! games, sense iP’ ‘bers’ “Bealp-| culture, nature ‘study, cooking, car- Pimples, ihee’sod all turf s|pentry, mat weaving, music, drama- to Poslam as to nothing elec. tization, gardening. healing is successful in] “There is no writing, no sewing \t cases. Poslam. For free and, as I said, almost no reading or i i at z= arithmetic. That is because the brain . Ex-Lax Saves Pain and Suffering; makes people ars Sth Biro, New York [ela and servous rotors ot the|| ‘no tecome popular ai once’ Philadelphia’, our ciagona! ||healthy and is safe for infants and grown-ups. rt e are n ly to d 4 Soap keeps the in healthy ai ri us ae meee roads, of Nendn. ary il shat stand between the wearer and pneu Ex-Lex is te be efficient, : hen ie meet beter guaranteed sentle, harmless. ten yeare old. At that uge be acy | A 100 Doug Will Prove Thies Try It TetRy—All Druggicte. li

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