The evening world. Newspaper, April 3, 1915, Page 3

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STORM HOLDS LUSITANIA AND PALE PASSENGERS Fe, Caerman Submarine Mokes Alion Board Nervous ie Cancel Passage Fast TR Is PLANNED dner's Speed Expected to Pro- tect Greatest: Number Sail Since War Began —— With specialty picked coe! tn her lo Dusters end her en, Geared to a ight knote an hour, the Line wil) wat pmo if the weather permits the largest pansenger list of any ship! @inning of the war, Capt. W ‘Turner intends to drive his ship etraight to Liverpool in t he} hopes will prove record time for the (ransatiantic passa, Up to 180 o'clock this afternoon the Lusitania had not left her pier, the Diissant making navigation in the farbor extremely precarious Will not back out into the river Ot KeO A Bhip's length id Capt. Turner, ‘The lausitant cabin passenger: @mond cabin, Paarengers and 20 in the etrerage, nd 2,748 bags of mail Even though it is believed the Lu-| aitania’s great speed renders her safe from eubmarine attack, there Noticeable nervousness among @reat many of the passongors, par- tleularly thors who found their state- | Fooms were beiow the water line, Beveral of the latter, among them F. W. Whitridge, President of the Third Avenue Railway Company, demand. | @d accommodations higher up, in de- fault of which they declared thoy! Would cancel their sailing. last moment A. J. Drexel of Phila- @elplia and New York actually did cancel his passage and will sail on! the New York of the American Line. DETECTIVES QUESTION ALL’ PASSENGERS OF LINER. | Mrs. W. 18. Leeds, widow of the | “tin plate king,” also cancelled her | fercrvation ut the eleventh hour and | will follow Mr. Drexei's example by | eailing on the New York, it being her | tmpression that the Stars and Stripes | offer a better guarantee of safety, Gust now, than the Union Jack. Private detectives on every hand carefully scrutinized caci passonger and visitor as be came on tho pler and the visiting privilege aboard the ship was abridged to such an extent @hat not more than two friends of | each passenger were allowed to cross the gang plank. Each passenger had to {dentify bis| baggage in person before It was taken aboard. Among those who shivered | fo the cold blasts of the untimely storm was Richard Croker, who Is re- turning to his home at Glencairn, Ire- fand, with bis Indian bride. The change from sunny Palm Beach to} the frosty Cunard pier seemed to tell! on tho former boss, and by the time he had identified cach of bis many pieces of baggage he was in most @olefwl mood. “When will you be back again, Mr. Croker?” hy was asked, “f may never come back!" shouted the shivering bridegroom. “Ig tt true you are going to raise @ company of Irish volunteers?” “Phut's all nensense, I'm going back to raco my horses. ROBERT BACON SAILS ON A RED CROSS MISSION, Robert Bacon, former American Ambasudor to France alsd sailed oa the Lusitania. Mr, Bacon said he was going abroad oa Red Cross work, At the last moment @ messenger raced downto the dock, and handed @ packdxe tontaining $500 to Mme. Louise Vandervelde, wife of the Bel- gian Minister of State, who has been here for six months collecting funds for the suffering masses in her c. ane try. Bho said sho had collected $200,- 000 and expected more. Mme. Van- @ervelde said she would go directly to Ypres to take charge of a hospital there. She was Inoculated against typhold this morning. When the Lusitania was late in geting away there was a rumor on the pler that the Prins Hitel ¥ried; y fch interned at Newport News, ecaped in the storm and tho ‘Lalas pa crs was waiting for a confirmation of this report in order that she might gall out beyond the three mile noutral limit and then send a wireless warn- ing’ to the British warships to be on the lookout for the German cruiser. ‘Among the war correspondents who sailed on the Lusitania were Gran- ville Fortescue, Alexander Powell and Gerald Morgan. Other passengera on the Lusitania were Mile, Gabrielle Dorziet, French actress; Lieutenant Commander 3, Takahashi of the Japanese navy: Canon James Hannay, rector of 8 Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin, who is bl known under his pen name of A. Birmingham; William OrDonnell dselin, and Bliss Iselin, —_——_— PROGRESS, (Prom the Loulgrille Courier-Journal.) had my son in the offve two firs’ bs is he making any progress?" yes, I thing he's as good as en: | py “Painless” | teacher, ca HN YI HME Third of a Series of Interviews Given to The Evening | World ——- 09. Method Child Can Learn to Read at Change @ Little Later, Write | 16 Months, Own Name at Leas Than Two Years, and Runa Typewriter, Which Holds an important Place in the Scheme of Netural Education, at the Same Time. 7 te the third of @ aerice by Mra Wintired Berkeiiie Bloner Natural Béucation” and wother of Winifred Boner ir, the most talented t year-old im the ed Biates In these interviews Mre Bloner tells American mothers her simple, natural ecwcational methods, as @ reeult of whut own little daughter ts the author of ten hooks the wosrensor of a college education, yet @ healthy, happy, Ruman hild The third bth dente” protien of “Mow to Behoot Your Child at Home has done nothing third interviow. “What are yor “Would you do away with the teacher TALENT IN EVERY CHILD WEEDS DON’T CHOKE IT. “No, indeed,” she denied, “But I believe that Nuture intended that @ child’e first lessons should be gives him by the mother; that she, be- cause of her great love, may teach him more in a few minutes than @ who does not love Bim, may give him in hours of enforced study. ‘Our teachers aro overworked and I hope the day will come when no teacher has more than ten children in her charge. Then each child witl get individual attention, withou! which no great man or wom- an ever d ped. “| believe that a child should be ‘educated from his first breath to his last. He has a mind in those years before he is sent to school, Nature abhors a vacuum, and if his mother doesn’t fill his mind with some- thing good it will be filled some- how with what is bad or worth- less. Moreover, | believe that every normal child has some tal- ent. The reason why the weede of neglect have choked so many talents is simply that the moth drs didn’t discover them in time.” ‘And then Mrs, Sioner told how an lintelligent mother may teach her little one the three R's, spelling, mu- sic, dancing, nature study, ReoRraphy, physiology and history before the child's sixth birthday. THE LETTERS OF THE AL- one ABET TO YOUR BABY. “You may begin to teach your baby the alphabet when he is #ix months old," she said, “Make a dado of white cardboard around the walls of his nursery. On one side paste large red letters; on the second side, short, simple nouns; on the third, the num- bers up to 100, and on the urth, the notes of the musical scale: “A baby learns through his ears be- fore he learns through his eyes. Sing tho letters of the alphabet to him ong after the other, pointing to thelr rep- resontations on the wall as you do so, They will sink into his mind and be- fore long he will find any letter you ask for in a box of anagrams. After Set {it is an casy step to the learning he short words on the igbboring aN , assisted by pictures of the ob- jects for which the words stand, Re- turning to the anagrams the child may be taught to put together the words he has learned on the wall Now he knows what reading means, TEACHING BABY TO WRITE AT EIGHTEEN MONTHS. “I wish,” interpolated Mrs, Stoner, “that every parent would try to give his children all the good books he can procure, Public libraries are helpful, but the child should possess books of his very own. Such volumes as ‘Tho | underpaid. to the stenographer now,” Book of Knowledge,’ in which so of inte IF) many on te The By Marguerite Mooere Marshall. How would you like to have your ebild ‘Which hae tett New York eince the be. | WSK’ change and write bis own name before the age of tvo yours, use a] | © to read at sialeru months every Chino SHovLO WAVE A TrrtutiTee ~ — am Coy The Comic d At the typewriter expertly before his third birthday, and when he is three years old play simple melodies on the piano? | ‘That all these achievements are perfectly possible is the firm conviction of Mrs. Winifred Sackville Stoner, | Of ramos,” replied Mra, Stoner. They were performed by her daughter, Winifred jr., and with a generosity and broad-mindedness unusual in mothers Mre. Stoner is certain that her little girl other little girls and boys can’t do. ur reasons for advocating home edu- cation in the branches usually relegated to the public school?” I inquired. altogether?” youthful questions are an- swered, are of really great educational lue. “When may a mother begin to teach her child to write?” 1 asked. “The day that tho baby eece hie mother writing and reaches for a pencil is the day he should receive his firet writing lesson, it may be at the age of seven- teen or eighteen months. Don't let him scribble in undirected idleness. Suggest to ‘him that he learn to write his own name ‘to lease father.’ He will work busily at the task and may be signing his name to a hotol register be- fore he is two years old. “For the spelling book the substi- tute in natural education 1s the type- writer, I wish every child in every | school might have one. {this wonderful machine @ child of three may be a proficient speller. As soon as he desires to use it he should be instructed in the uso of capitals and the space key and then given great poems to copy. “Five desirable resul The chil receives epellinggand pun on, He learns to operdte a machine, Ile stores his memory with bewutiful passages of verse. And his finger muscles are strengthened so that practice on mu- sical instruments is made easier. “Next to reading, an apprec' ts are achieved. fect training in tion of music is the most valu- singing them 9 te th nat re- He sh and pointin: be taught production: iso with him will not find drudgery. NEVER REPROVE BABY IN HARSH, DISCORDANT TONE. “By marching games and eimpie @ances taught him as soon as he can walk a baby's musical sense is de- veloped, As soon as he can speak words he should be encouraged to ging them. If the mother is not musical herself she should let him hear others sing as often as possible, using ‘canned music’ if necessary, Even when reproving him #he should never speak In a harsh, discordant tone. “When possible a mother should take her child into the woods and ids and make him famillar with nature's mu#io. The mother who can wpend even part of the year in the country with her little one has a hun- dred text books from which to choose. “Even in weekly or monthly out- ings the small youngster may learn from the mother who has the knowl- edge, or is willing to seek it, moat valuable lessons in botany and soology. By answering his eager questions and telling amusing stories about the plants and animals he dis- covers, mother may teach her baby lore which would not ahame the grown-up student of many books,” “Can arithmetic be made really in- wing World! It was Mrs. Stoner's plan for conducting a schoo! | room in the home which I asked her to discuss in our By the aid of) - cee Spe te ee ee Av emaee! | At J q —2) tN COvRAEy ey 9 ror ™ ee (wi FOURTEEN HUNDRED AND NINETY TWO, | COWMBYS SAILED (“THE OCEAN BuVe ! ——_. VB: yl EARN wi. ( ‘acrony i [ts | Nee Yer 4" . ANG s -* Wy @ b ac, . a teresting to the small child? 1 quea- toned, wen “You, if it is given him in the form atl HOW TO MAKE EVEN ARITHME- i / TIC INTERESTING TO A CHILD. TUE Sioa Hat ware Sh “He may learn to count by Swit 9 bering tho bye of =~ | peas he shells from o | Bevo hun Hatta 225 SO MOOLMAAMS HAVE at once, Perches! will help him to add, and small bundles of sticks! properly combined will show bim the principies of the multl plication, table. "o learn the tal weights and m ty ery shop. inting, pa int apple, the d, the num- ~ A RUNAWAY HAY RIDE Two Brooklyn Teachers Have * Thrilling Dash Down Steep Slope. Milas Ida Lipches, a teacher in Pub- Me School No, 160, Brooklyn, kept a pair of runaway horses, drawing a load of hay, on thelr feet and in the middie of the road yesterday after- m sterilized meray y and ure yeare ed to earn pen- pected to keep an ac . ‘of them he will have a fii ining in practical busi: noon for a quarter of a mile down arithmetio. he SWVith a lobo, play journeys ovee|*h® steed eurtern slope of Hook dig maps, a aundbox for tmitating| Mountain, in Pine Brook, N. J., thus mountains and other prvaical “cone eaving ber life and that of her com- urations and plenty | of stories 4 about the different countries of the panicn, Miss Jennie Arnold, also « Brooklyn teacher, world, any mother should be able. to The pace down Bill was so wild make geography Interesting to her| child. Tcannot emphasize too strongly | that the horses wabbled when they veyane etd telling for the COB") reached the level, and the drive “History, which ts usually so weart-| Would have been # complete success some to a child, may be taught firat) for Miss Lipches but for a sharp turn by stories, then by acting out the! in the road while the wagon was atill stories, and finally--to take the place) yng, onderc *§ of the hated examinations—by al Under Mts ponderous momentum, At tions and answers, with| ‘at point the jade: yriZes, i the rein Many facts,’ dry and diMeult to! take the remember in se, may be learned, " casity be the guild if the mother ad. {82 YOUN Women, ‘The hay toppled ministers them in the form of rhym. P¥¢r first, cushioned their fall and ine jingles. In this way Winifred, let them off with no serious damage: eet tas remembers the number of bones tn! YOUNG BRIDE SUCCUMBS, her body and their names, Health| game of qu appropriate animals obeyed but the waxon would mot turn and upset with the education ix something which every) mother should give her child. By al little fudictous conversation in hin! Operation Relieves Paraly presonco jt is easy to arouse hia curl. osity on any point of hygtene, and! 5 then to tench him by answering hia! mmonta Ie Fat sumieen Mrs. May Dedney, elghteon, wan To-morrow Mra. Stoner wilt tell | hetiees ig ed In her eottage home at vou “How to Amuse Your Child.” dus ¥., on Sept, 24 Inst, a few | months after being married whe n, in shaking out a bed sheet the trigger of Wher husband's revolver, which he had Former Housekeeper Sues Dr, Stew: |Mept under his pillow, caught in tie Mra. Irene Gertrude Nicholas, for- | anect und. the revolver’ wor tired ment? merly housckeeper for Dr, Howard thi a bullet into the bride's chest ard Stewart, why lives at No. 76 Young Punqiralng to her spine. She lived, Z AE ut becuine puraly xe¢ Street, Pelham, and haw an office at | "sue war rouriit to Harlem Hospital oO, 69 Weat Forty-sixth Street, Man- anuary and Dr. Chapman of the hattan, brought a suit for $10,000 ish Hospital, Brooklyn, operated damages in the Supreme Court yer- apine., Mae Hedin, Sepression ot terday against her former employer. partial use Of het Minbe Shee wen Mra. Nicholas alleges she was roughly showing steady improvement when a handled by the doctor Jan. 4 in a dig- few daya ago pneumonia set in. It pute with Dr. Stewart's daughter. resulted In her death last night. The war has abolished the old pouter pigeon type of Brittah soldier, and in developing Tommy Atkins alertnoss and agility, mental and physical, are now aimed for and cadets are taught what they call “monkey tricks.” Soldiers have found a way to provide their own "X rays." They take a flashlight, with which all are equipped, and by putting it behind a hand or foot inside a cigar box, are able to And fractares and iron splinters. American representatives abroad have notified manufacturers that the tificial limbs will be great from now on, It requires from months after an amputation to Mt an artificial limb satisfac- torlly, and men wounded carly in the war are just getting able to try| wooden or cork legs. Rye bread has become such a tad ermany the use of an undue pro Portion of rye has made it necessary to remove some of the revtrictians op wheat and allow the people to use more of it, her of Winifred Stoner, of Winifred Stoner, 'TENI} ost alented Child in the U.S. Child in the U.S. | Mr. While a French Lieutenant and Sergeant were 6,000 feet up in an aero- plane in Flanders trying to locate a German battery a shell exploded near them, the Lieutenant was wounded and the Sergeant blinded for life. ‘The Sergeant, however, divected by the Lieutenant, guided the machine safely back to bis own linea, WOOED BY “OLIVER” WAS HONEYBUG, 100 fave and His Hebags Nurse r Han to Be Neighborly brom Adm ul Says Me “ Aldene Cont Her § - ’ Yot he & he + fof Dewle on thee ond THIN TE WED ANOTHER named ‘Tutt —paae —_ ~~ 5 | eee oop Records Show as Maise Mason! hoon hint of an eneet ‘ tiviped a whete lot en \ Married Ethel Brook fat Weil, em Last Jun wen fore down at y 1, tote Ne. ‘ 1 o4 8 voods ail around us sined tone - - +) (ie people down there are « that of a MISS IRENE C HICKOK § | eo ke (oe summer Hotel ao me ames W. Ob We fonee try eed te promise a la +B. = g - ‘ F noxveny _ “lable belp the meighbore cat Mates Lie ey Marahall 08-1140 Loecutur treet, Brooklyn, as mt do the chores and shaw pects addith t Grom til been awarded «$000 acholareh en cau do to time a! prep dagptid York We're Barnard © che » chickens Sixteen hy M Huth T who may become! po, post radu work any nati |i or . " «tar withens Gover the esuntl . eagles ite efforte to : aid Sure we'll he agetn “a bag ioerg aot ae be Wwonly’ Tray! give that eal a boost, Mhe'e all been found to be se. eer lalieady om “a Jomnite ane for ner | rant Nope che won't. gwe aD Gep poena, Nor Yas any trace been fo future | Ghe ond to-day Mame mot Come down and seo # “Olwer Oavorne [intend to use my scholarship ot |“ “hd We'll Be up seme Gener, Hoot Office Lnapectors have learned | Columbia University. b will apectal that mueh cf OL ver's rive ward in ee mie t are ‘MAN HURLED FROM AuTO robe wae pur ed at mecond hand tan Mickow iris’ Meh Bet stores Meventh Avenue spent the fies AND HIS SKU L A Little dowht was a alned to-day | lowe irae at Packer tn about the Federal Huliding Chat the | sebel + 4 whe just py <a man known as Oliver ¢ na to the [SWarded le known an the | tiraduate b . F ellowahip of Columbia Univerntt 5 ono , same Who under the Bame of Males |Teuewsni of Cotu versity” | Nebon B. Green of trvington, N. Joy n Nye married Miss Kihol Hrooks| graduating chum whe wa mont Killed When Car Strikes No, 436 West Twenty-fourth Streat| bromine in her chowen fleld of work n June 2, 114, in Weehawken, ‘The ceremony was performed by the Rev August Weher of the German Evan gelical Church, Mrs Nye is now liv ing at the Weat Twenty-fourth Street address. ‘Tho certificate of marriage shows Nye said he was @ native of Califor. nia and that be was born June 1, 1 Hin father is given as Maise M. 4 hin mother as Mrs, Adeline | Mason Nye, ‘The bridegroom did not way in what part of California be was bori ‘The bride said she was born at Dun- kirk, N. ¥., Aug. 14, 1692, and she was the daughter of Charles J. and Kthel Davidson Brooks. She said she hed never been married before. After the wedding the couple went to live at the West Twenty-fourth Street house, where they remained for @ month, Then the bridegroom said would take the jewelry he Ba given to his wife to be cleaned and repaired, This was the last she saw of him. Avother young woman came to Dia- trict Attorney Muraball's office yea- terday wo tell of an experience with Oliver Osborne, Her name is with- held at Mr. Marsha request, but he will use her as a witness before the Grand Jury. ye brought with her fifteen love ‘® covering the period betweeu Maren 1%) and May 1, 1914 It was immediately after this that Osborue fell tn love with the woman he married. The Government's informant is » ursemaid, and when she first mot liver wax employed by a lawyer. The girl said that the man's courteous manner disarmed her sus- picione and she soon accepted hin as a sweetheart. She gave him $250 of her savings to invest In atocks on a marginal basis, and began prepar- ing for her wedding, She bought an elaborate trousseau, and told ber employer no to be married Then Oliver disappeared and the girl could get no trace of him or of her money, ‘Tho letters aro in the now familiar writing of the ‘io and contain the same expressions, ‘The nurse was Oliver's oney Bug," just ay tho others had been, FASHIONABLE HOUSE FOR NEGRO, CHEAP Neighbor Gets Back at Pastor Barn- hill, Who Objected to Rug Beating, ’ Because @ Stapleton magistrate has |} refused to allow Keuben Mord's mat to beat his rugs Mondays and Tues- days, aa those are the days the Key. Oliver P. Barnhill, pastor of the First Presbyterian Church, bas his wash bung out, Mr. Mord announced yes. terday that be would sell his big house on fashionable Harrison Street cheap, provided @ negro buys It, He prefers the father of @ large family, Last Friday tne Key. Mr. Barnhill, whose yard adjoins Mord's, had the jatter's maid before Magistrate Marsh, The Magistrate told Mord his maid must beat no rugs on the first two days of the week and told the Rev. Mr. Barnhill his wash must be | off the lines before Wednesda week. Mr. Mord considers this ¢ limitation of his rights. He tertains a suspicion that the resl- dents of Harrison Street, including Barnhill, would not relish a ne- Mrs. Catherin ny No. 68 Pall- sade Avenue iar nel, N. J, who has been missing from her home sin March 6, was found dead early night én'the east shore of the Passa Kiver, in Passaic Park, She had com- mitted, suicide. An Erle the body as his tr rising a bridge over the ‘wiver ana ‘potited the police. | CATHEDRAL BOMBMAKERS’ May Light Fuse in Court to Test Its Burning Qualities tor the Jurors, Assistant District will decide to-day Attorney Train whether to make A court test of the burning qualities TRIAL TO END MONDAY - of the fuse attached to the Cathedral bombas, for the placing of which Frank Abarno and Carmine Carbone are on trial before Judge Nott. The detectives pay Abarno lighted the bomb. Yesterday he swore he had the bomb unlighted under his cout when arrested, and that If it was lighted one of the detectives must have lighted it with a mateh, A test would show whether the fuse could have been lighted with a during the brief time Abarno was knecling In a pow. The case did not go on to-day, but probably will be finished Monday. Both the defendants have testified that Detective Polignano forced them to do what they did. Ten frequentera of Anarchist cir have testified that the detective was the only man they had ever heard susgest violence. Abarno's story agreed in, the main with that of tho detective, pt that he made the detective the inatt- gator of everything that was done > POUND TYPEWRITER TO TUNE OF ‘TIPPERARY’? Teacher Demonstrates ‘ Learn Best When Is Played, A theory that the use of the type- writer can be taught best to the a mpaniment of “Tipperary” music with & similar “sawing” ia demonstrated at the Kastern mercial Teachers’ Association, ing at th Hotel McAlpin. The demonstration ducted by Miss i is in charge of ment of th ey vat Pupils Music or other ein mm Red Bank, the being con- ‘born, who relal de . High sue ved when on a new record and Machine to Koing the pupils wait only long enough to caten the rhythm, ‘Then they pound the typewriters in time to the musk The right music helps the feet to step lively in marching,” Miss Dear- born explained, "and my theory ts it also helps the fingers to move at a lively rate in manipulating the type- writer.” ' © hallway KIN, ats Who lives on sent from the to Cumberland the Kround f Ralph Avenue Street Hospital THE WEATHER Forecast: gro neighbor. — | LOST WOMAN'S BODY FOUND. | Unsettled Tonight ani Tomorrow; Probably Rain, NO SUNSHINE, But A GOOD Day for iit Telegraph Pole. Neleon Pt Greea of Irvington, N. 3. wor killed Inst night when an automo- bile In whieh he wes riding with Roy 6. States, a f Irvington, and BR label of Newark crashed into « tele- eraph pole in Main Street, Rockaway, Nod ‘The automobile was owned and driven by States, who was driving from Irving> ton to Dover Apparently something went wrong With the steering gear and States lost eontrol of the car, Green was thrqwn to the street, falling on his head nnd crushing hin still The dead man was twer ° old and son of Alexander 8. een, & of Police of Irvington. were detained by the paltse sone bending as Investigation. wi in Pera’s Capital. LIMA, Peru, April 3.—Fire in the central business district yesterday ée- atroyed many stores. The lose te about ; Person was killed and Don’t Give Up! care » habit dney Pills ought to bei Fr Bik con) fetes le all over the world whe room an's. Proof from the Bronx. Mrs, N. Thi Bronx, says: “I thi the life of every one when a littl medicine is necessary. signs of weakness and Doan's Kidney Pills seemed to tone my system nicely and removed the backache. U think that the remedy that oes soaatsliy in bringing such good results should be recommen \n' relief, of pe mend 50¢ at all Drug Stores Foster-Milburn Co. Prope. Buffalo,.NY. Far Reaching! To-morrow will be “round-up” day for articles of value that have been lost during the past week: If your “LOST AND FOUND” AD. is printed in THE BIG SUNDAY WORLD will get a CIRCULATION in New York City GREATER than if published in the Sunday Herald, Sunday Times and Sunday Tribune COMBINE There's no time to tse— 4000 Beekman! Ser’ 1

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