The evening world. Newspaper, May 10, 1916, Page 10

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because T refused to acquiesce in the! sale of his Jersey City property. The night we had discussion about it) FE AND GAS METER | | fore His Birth. “She used to gr of my coat and say don't y to her, ‘What’ Are you crag: Strike me I used to the matter, woman? Come on now, kiss me, Annie, dear, and don't be s0/ foolish! It didn't seem to do very} much good to appeal to her, thus,” | Yute divorce, told Vice Chancellor yh Jobn Griffin that her husband had her a “gutter snipe.” Mrs. La Riviere admitted that she was fifty- five years old, and that ber husband, |Her Methods of Raising Her “White Hope” Be aaa a THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, How the Best Mother in New York City hes bea 1916, ‘ bath, and is nursed for just a lit- {ways disagreed with Jonnnie—al- while. By 9 o'clock is |though he needed it—until they told At 10 he is put into hie |me at the milk station to give him him alcohol rubs several times { week. I try to keep him on a syst, to have regular hours for every - ing preparation which fs easily assimiated in most Instances. Where used in omnec- tion with nourishing food and proper ty! it has given widespread relief, Its freedom from polsonous of habit+ forming drugs of any nature whatsoever | renders It safe to try. And its content of calcium gives It tonto value. ‘At your druggist's, “In the house, however, his clothing is light. Most mothers bundle their babies too much. Johnnie wears his band, a shirt, one petticoat and a dress, besides his shoes and stock- ings. At night, just now, he wears a little sleeveless shirt under his night- gown. In the summer that will be thinner and he won't wear any shirt jast week during the two days he was examined, has never had any serious iliness. | “T can't say enough in praise of the Board of Health Milk Station. When you take your baby to a doctor he won't stop to weigh it or take off its clothes and examine it. At the milk station baby ts weighed every week, He For sal ¥ husband kept me awake until 3| e—often he doesn’t wake [the juice a full hour after his meal, | tail of his daily life. Oh, yes, It tos { o'clock in the morning. I had-to get) . . e e aken first te the milk jinstead of a few minutes, time and work, but it pays,” end I q bed and walk into the next 0: er to ride th Another thing that's helped | Johnnie's mother, 4 | Sieur inns! Raised Baby Declared Finest in 30,000; | iiruts ty — iE J j bornea Che Rained vie bed to] > ; —— » oF eurneneal let him f Heed the Warning o tness tes ec ir pr that ue ! © DECLARED HUSBAND (2 si05 :u00, ome me —- Her Case Upsets Anti-Suffrage Theory cra er If You Have a Coug if ‘ ehans a farm in ¢ eo where the | canna 0 RANI 00 00 1 ARAN RRR RLS Oe rt AAAI AAAIY RARASRARAADAAAAAAAAAARAADADACS | He sleeps in a room with an open | Th* deep mated, eae ay ae to t — | efop r She said! indow, doesn’t he?” I asked, yie c Fentme lea to H aeons a i Lee ce eway rer a couple ot weeks Mrs. Jennie Ryan, Whose Mi twayee’ eld Mre iyon, “And | distressing pulmonary troubles, Of Teney That Didn’t Win the ‘ told her he had been pl yan, a more comfortable position, and jhe is Sutdoors pmornings and after-| bring on a chronic Metall io ‘ fins oO 0 4 e « noons—at least five or six hours every | yf persone now incapacitated fe! Woman a Divorce in New [tPF W suviers an tad) Eb ght» Months - Old pebedy, Reareancther sound fram | ioe r take him out no matter what nove avcided rach dlsastroue rveuR by ~iil it Jersey Court | very much doubted him,” sald the Johnnie Won Gold Cup “Ho has cut six teeth, and two|the weather Is. He didn’t stay in one |ameiy care and efficient medical treatsent. { y : witness, : see, others are almost through, yet he|sinsle day last wintery Of course I |” xmong the Intter Hekman's Alveative ij On the stand 10 Riviere declared) in Competition, Worked practically never ties,” said. Mrs, [Wrap him up warmly when it snow. | 0 Cn enetabie record. It tn m llmeaear- Mrs, Annie La Riviere who sued | Mat bis mite secned ve torhim int) Ontil Three Months Be- Ryan, “He has never had colle, His |!n# or very cold. @ retired perfumer, is in his seventy- third year. She said that the de- féadant is her second husband, and defendant sadl Griffin concluded the Chancelor th Vice conclusion of that ehe is his fourth wife missed Mra. 1.4 Hiviere's petition | ering.”’ ; MI left him because I could no = fonger endure his ont of me,” 2 Bobble Baras Tn temtified Mrs. 1 : y 10.-—Johnny to tell _me clalins the bantamweigiit | founded liar ‘ cored @ technical knockout over | he gas meter in the cellar fourth “In March, 1913," said the witness, Burns was | “my husband decided to buy a farm fe rth round |$8 in the baby in Delaware, and became annoyed and the referee stopped the fight 1 fection. | ton fathers | the minute of his birth | with quiet but justifiable pride. | ‘Look at the white ho; | Maternity Hospital ANTI-SUFFRAGISTS. “Did you take particularly care of yourself just before his a rival?” I asked Ryan | Then Mrs. This Week—and This Week Only Gas Ranges Sold at Half Price IHROUGHOUT the Country this will be known as “Gas Range Week”—May 8 to May 13, inclusive. We desire to enter not only into the spirit of this national movement but into its practical side by giving the people of Manhattan and the Bronx REMARKABLE PURCHASING OPPORTUNITIES On certain Double-Oven and Elevated-Oven Gas Ranges and “Cookers” that we have in stock, the selling prices will be cut in half. This is our offer:— DOUBLE OVE N, $8. cash; $9," in casy installments; Just Helf Our Reguler Price ELEVATED OVEN, 13. ct, 118." uy ction “COOKERS,” $5, cash; $5.5 in easy installments; Just Helf Our gular Price A Waffle Iron and a Toaster will be given with each Range purchased and the purchaser of a “Cooker” may have either one of those useful household appliances. Now is the time to give thought to a cool, comfortable Summer Kitchen. A Gas Range assures your having one. Gas Water Heaters—insuring a hot-water supply day and night—we sell on easy terms. Communicate with or visit one of these Gas Offices this week :— Ne. 157 Hester Street Tet. Conei 8400 No. 130 E. 15th Street Tel. Stuyvesant 4900 Ne. 140 E. 15th Street Tel. Stuyvesant 4950 No. 112 W. 42d Street Tel, Bryent ¢348 No, 2084 Third Avenue Tet. Heriem 6: No. 281 Lenox Avenue Morningside 190 No. 32 We.t 125th Street Tel. Meriem 3533 No. 1909 Amsterdam Ave. Tet. Audubon 8900 Tet. Courtlandt Av. & 148th St. Melee 8000 No. 173 Hunter Avenue Ne. 142 East 15th Street Long Island City No. 1815 Webster Avenue Fol stuyvesents 1309 Tr Asteria 1086 Tel. Trem. “The Right Way is the Gas Way” Consolidated Gas Company of New York GEO. B. CORTELYOU, President Have Been Simple, but Based on Real ‘‘Moth- | John's mother began by telling me that he was a “white hope” from “He weighed nine and a half pounds,” she said, “And the first thing the doctor said was, As for the nurses. they called him ‘the cop.’ iMRS. RYAN DEALS BLOW TO good all unconsciously JOHN RYAN «... By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. This is a story about the best mother in New York. Vor if the proof of the pudding is in the eating, the proof of the mother And little John Ryan of No. Sixty-sixth Stre cup for being the very best baby in Greater New York. | John won his trophy in competition with some 30,000 other youngsters, 60 you see that he must be @ very fine child indeed. I asked Mrs. Jennie Ryan, John’s mother, to ex- plain how she had brought him to such a point of per- And, like almost every other great achieve- ment, I found that eight-months-old John was trained) into his present condition of super-babyhood by com- paratively simple methods. be of interest to other New York mothers—not to men- Kast One Handred and t, the Bronx, has just received a gold I am sure that they will he was born at the Sloane dealt a knock-out blow to the anti- Suffragist theory that the “sheltered, home woman is the only one properly qualified to bear and rear the next generation,” for the mother of New York's plu-perfect baby has been economically independent for years. She worked until within four months of her baby’s arrival, She plans to! work next summer—and her Johnnie won't be neglected, either. “I was on the stage “in vaudeville. she explained, | I didn’t give up my/| act till May, and the baby was born/| in August. I may go out this summer, | and if-I do, baby and my mother will | travel with me, I shall nurse him till! September, and take a hammock with me in which he may sleep, “The best thing I've given Johnnie, the best thing any wom- an can give her baby, is mothe: ing. 1 myself have fed Johnn bathed him, taken him out. 1 haven't trusted him to anybody | else. For one year | have given myself unreservedly to my son. Of course I'm going back to work, if | can find what | want. But | why not? Johnnie wil. go with me. And, by way of wildiy waved hi tle, He nding in front of his mother, lightly supported by her two| capable hands. He is really a de-| lightful child. 1 am sutticiently a} a heretic not to find all babies beautiful; some seem to me to resemble small rats before the hair com Johnnie is emphatically a PERSON: He weighs twenty-three pounds and eight , he has satiny knees, solid as Is, and big, blue, intelligent » his mother's. He apparently junderstands everything that goes on |about him, even if he doesn’t put his thoughts into words. leyes li {milk and feed it to him with a spoon, at night. Riker- ve Jearned so many useful things anere i 4 “tte ia bathed every day and T piva nge juice Liggetts’ | <, | Mra. dENNIE RYAN.. wrist attrac and how much feed him?" I at nd how often do you ked. six months “Then 1 station at No and they said |that 1 might gradually begin giving }him other food. | “So 1 make cornmeal gruel for him, a cup of water come to a boil, then salt it and stir in two table- spoonsful of corn meal. That cooks |thoroughly; in fact, I boil it until it lis nearly dry. Then I thin it with k him to the milk 334 Webster Avenue t 1 You want the best cigarette you can buy for your Cents, don’t you? Then remember this— Lots of children won't eat gruel be- cause the mothers give it to them when it's thin, like water, Mine, when I serve it to Johnnie, is of a consis- tency which permits me to cut it up into small squares. He likes to eat it because he feels as if he had something tn his mouth. He won't take it thin, Of ewurse | make tt fresh for him every time.” HOW LITTLE JOHNNY EATS, SLEEPS AND ENJOYS LIFE “What is his daily regim day of the best ter New York: 30 or 6, and moth: the j At 8 o'clock Eczema and similar skin diseases rarely cure themselves, but grow worse from week to week until the sufferer is nearly driven mad with irritation. Don’t waste time experimenting. Get a 25c box of Cadum Ointment and apply it immedi- ately. The itching will usually stop at once and a great Mo ncaremant will be noticed. People who have itched and scratched for years find sleep and rest soon after Cadum Ointment is applied. It is also good for pimples, blotches, rash, eruptions, scaly skin, chafings, itch, tetter, sores, scabs, ringworm, cuts, burns, etc. At druggists, 25c. Three Million Boxes Sold in is An hour ZIRA is better than many other 5 Cent cigarettes. HONESTLY BETTER. \f you can get more quality value for your money, you want to ju h The roundness of knee, cheek and No. 9060 (with basting line and added seam allowance), Dress with over-bodice, for Misses, and Small Women, 16 and 18 years, Call at THE B Ul Donald Buildl mbel Bros.) ew York oin or stamps for each IMPORTANT--Write specify size wanted. * The May Manton NING WORLD MAY MA France Every Year get it, don't you? You CAN buy & HIGH- GRADE cigarette for 5 Fashions Plaid taffeta is the material Which this frock is made, w terials ar the most f Cc its— Fi and the frock is one that ean be on for. 89 many oceasions that it 1s essen- e tially practic but every woman i i tt tives fier Ge tesa? mee The Mildest cigaretts are available, and this model, in com- — mon with many others, can be made suited to every-day occasions or to dressy occasions as one material or an- other is choser re made up in plaid tiste or hand- kerchief lawn for the gulmpe, it a ttractive every- day made of rose col ta, with bands of black velvet ribbon finishing the edges of th bodice and with the guimpe of white Georgette crepe faced with a little lace at the neck edge, and with lace on th sleeves, it would be adapted to the formal afternoon oceasion, to the dance and the like. In the back view there is @ suggestion for making with high nee d with long sleeves, and that treatment can be followed whenever it is found becoming summer frock tor wanted, iL would be py over-blouse and skir If just a simple fterng were y to make th of a plaid or with the gulmpe lawn for contrast, or chief lawn in striped could be or the over-blouse and striped cotton voile, of handkerehiet handke green, with the fuimpe of white organdy, and in such the skirt could be ‘tr ed with litt t the same, for or- wandy is ost fashionabe materials ¢ as well as one of the nd the colored organdies are t vogue. Yor the 16 year size will be needed 4 yards of material 27 inches wid yards 36, 6 44, with 2M he guimpe js cut in sizes yard! f YN FASHION ng, 100 West Thirty nd Street (op Sixth Avenue and ‘Thirty-second nail on receipt of twelve cents in pattern ordered your address th AN ; . nwt, plainly and always

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