The evening world. Newspaper, November 2, 1917, Page 20

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2, (4,000,000 MARK PASSED BY AMERICAN RED GROSS First of Year—Junior Class Established. WASITINGTON, Nov. 2.—The mem- berhaip of the American®Red Cro Look for the Bayer Cross when, you buy Aspirin. to announcer Cross War 76,000 me There are now 2, | Amerinn Red Cross scattered through- out the country, with 434 auxiliartes, While sport of these bers are an- nual members, paying the $1 fee, there fare more than 300,000 rubseribing mem bers and more than 20,000 life members bers the first of the year. ~. It is on every tablet and every package of the genuine, “The Your Guarantee of Purtty’’ In thin 4 a memberahip fee of twenty-five centa TABLETS in poe! Bottles of 2: CAPSULES packages icacid in these table Vassar Collexe, has volunteered hin aer- of malicy ‘of the reliable Bayer manufac Junior Membership. © oa? Fulton St.,cBrid e St. At Subway jon, Brooklyn. 1329-1331 Broadway Near Gates Ave., Brooklyn. 4810-4812 Fifth Ave. Bet. 48th and 49th Sts., Brooklyn, pecially Arranged for Saturday A Sale of 2500 Superb Winter Coats Presenting a Large and Beautiful Collection of the Smartest Modes for Women and Misses Enriched All the by most luxurious fashionable furs colors This Remarkable Offering Comprises: Coats at ‘15% | Coats at ‘18” Belted model of wool velour, lined and Beautiful full flare belted models of half lined; all wool chinchilla coats pom pom, wool velour and divet de with sealette collar and cuffs, laine; many with fur collars and cuffs. Coats at 24”. Coats at 35” ewe reer faring effects of broadcloth, Luxurious garments fashioned of wool wool velour, pom pom and Bovilia, with velour, fine broadcloth and kersey; large fur collar, cuffs and deep border lined with silk and interlined; large of fashionable furs, lined and inter collars and cuffs of Hudson seal or lined. skunk opossum, =Specially Reduced for Saturday 220 Dresses | 350 Odd Suits Serge, satin and crepe de chine. From our regular stock. $1500 & $1875 $1875 & $2850 Formerly to $29.75 Formerly to $39.75 A fashionable array vf smart mod Superbly tailored and fur trimmed els in pleated, embroidered, belted | models in the richest fabrics and and beaded effects. choicest styles. Sale of New Silk Blouses Georgette, Crepe de Chine, Wash Satin Beautiful tail ite, $3.95 vara rent $4.95 pkg ca G5 dress models able suit colors Had Only 275,000 Members the | has} panned the four million mark, according nt made by the Red neil to-day. It had only | chapters of the ‘A new class of members hae been in- augurated with the establishment of the Junior Hed Cross, to which the 22,000,- 000 achool children of the United States are eligible, Members wilt be enrolled tment upon the payment of Dr. H. N. MacCracken, President of vices as Director of the Bureau of ought to di child-fancier, be she mother or Any Mother’s Bringing Up of Any Baby And Its Sanely Human Development Made Easy by Woman Author’s Recipe Common Sense, Love, Discipline and Physical Care Requifed, Seasoned With Humor, Good panionship, Ethel M. Kelley Says. $ Marguerite Mooers Marshall, S67 TAKE equal parts of love and discipline, Add a pinch of cupful of physi- cal care and plenty of juve- nile companton- ship and outdoor Mife. Dust all over with com- mon sense and season with a good example. DO NOT stir continually.” That {s the sensible recipe Bthel M. Kelley offers to Anymother for making a sane, healthy, happy human being out of Anybaby. In her new novel, “Turn About Bleanor,” Miss Kelley, who has studied chil- dren and written about and for them in many poems and tales, pokes gen- tle but intelligent fun at the various elaborate theories of child culture with which a number of us are get- ting a bit fed up. She tells how six unmarried young men and women co-operatively adopt Eleanor, a pretty, self-respecting little girl from Cape Cod, and try to “develop” her according to Mme. Montessori, et al —to the child's intense discomfort and boredom, “y AM going to turn you loose In the apartment and let you do what you like,” co-operative Aunt Beulah told Eleanor on the first morning, “I want you to enjoy yourself in your own way." For the book said, “Give the child absolute freedom tn which to demonstrate the worth and value af Its OBO. 4 Kleanor, Miss Kelley relates. with great sympathy, “looked about her helplessly. She turned a desperate face from the window. ‘Do I have | Example and Juvenile Com-| humor, @ large) TAL MODERN DON’T KEEP THE CHILD UNDER. GLASS JAR> TAE MIND MUST NOT BE GIVEN Too Db MUCH MOTHER PUTS TAE!| thereby making it unnecessary for the CHILD UNDER THE MICROSCOPE. || BE TAUGHT To OBEY— ie Taw 4000800 GASCARETS SELL serceererrcea ae ERENT MILLION rege re” BOYES PER YEAR WASHINGTON 2.—OMecial tab- ‘lation of repor' at headquarters here . " ews tn the Food Pledge Week campaign. Dest, safest cathartic for liver how that more than 4,000,000 Amert- and bowels, and people ican women have signed the card pledg- , 3 | ing themselves to conserve food. There know it. | are #till eight States that have not re- , 2 ‘i ported They're fine! Don’t stay | Indiana réports the largest number of | bilious, sick, headachy ards aligned since the last tabulation, | |27,211, which gives her the highest en-| rolment of States that have reported so far—147,493, Reasons why American corn, potato flour and other foodstuffs, which Her-| bert Hoover asks be substituted for Wheat, are nct shipped to the Allies su| that they may make the substitution, or constipated. | people of this country to reduce their | | wheat consumption, are given in @ statement fasued by the Food Adminis- tration to- ” Attention is called to the fact that Bu- ropean nations are already using from 20 to 60 per cent. of corn, potato and other adulterants in the manufacture of thelr daily bread. and enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and ALERT BOY SCOUT CAUSES | bower'cidunsing you ever experienced. TWO ARRESTS FOR THEFT) wise? cir, “sour tongue clean ath right, stomach sweet and your r and thirty feet of bowels active a box at any drug store straighten up. Stop the headaci bilious spells, bad colds and bad di —RBrighten up, Cheer up, Clean up! Mothers should give a whole Cascaret to children when cross, biliow ish or if tongue is coated—they harmless—never gripe or sicken Enjoy life! Keep clean inside with Cascarets. Take one or two at night ‘The arraignment to-day of two six- teen-year-ol! boys on @ larceny charge was due to the detective ability of Al- fonso Martada, welve-year-old Boy Scout of Troop 62, who hopes to get on the regular force when he grows up. Last night Alfonso saw two boys stop thelr motorcycle at Mott and Kenmare | Streets and take @ bundle from a truck. He followed them to a house on Eliza- | beth Street Then he hurried to Police Headquarters and told about it. Detective Patrick Sheridan was sent with him to tnvestigate, He pointed out the two boys as they started away on thelr motorcycle, and Sheridan ran after them, ‘They were going #o fast the detective was dragged fifty feet when he seized the machine, They led him to @ stairway and gave him the bundle, which, the police say, contained a bed ticking belonging to Emrock Bros., No, 105 Eldridge Street The prisoners deacribed themselves as Salvator De Angelo, No, 241 Eldridge Street, and Dello Bel, No, 319 East 21st Street. For VICTORS PERFECT SERVICE CALL OR WRITE FOR DETAILS Phone Vanderbilt 3091 WAREROOMS Sth Ave. at 391th $t. _—<»——— Anka to Drop the “German.” When Supreme Court Justice Don- she assured me, “And I think that] have been anid from the time he was|nelly took up yesterday the petition Rupture Kills every young man or woman, who ts}a baby has natural good manners, | not married who has the means and| The child who, as soon as he can) ¢ the German-American Insurance | Company to have its name changed 7. 000 A Li who likes children should become a| walk, learns to serve tea to a guest,| to the Great American Insurance Com- ’ nnualtly foster parent. Everybody wants some| as happened in the family of a friend| pany, William C. Breed, attorney for to? sho asked piteously, ‘have to amuse myself in my own way? I don’t know what you want me to do. I don't know what you think that I “And that’ the effect the modern each- er, has upon the modern child,” Miss Kelley told me with quiet emphasis, in her apartment at No, 189 Bast 16th Street. “The American child ts fright- fully scif-conselous, and the fault is with this new craze of insisting on his ‘nolf-expression,’ | “A child cannot be natural In | an atmosphere of self-conscious- | ness. And the mother of to-day is self-conscious. She is obsessed with all the patter about self-ex- pression; so she puts the child in the middle of the room, turns upon it the full power of her careful, mental microscope and says, ‘Now, dear, express yourself. Go to it!’ Even an adult could stand such a test with difficulty. A child is bored, terri rin self defense turns histrionic. What the child of te-d needs more than anything good ther- ough letting-alon Bur zoe matt, net read anything cold or heartless into that very sensible remark of Miss Kelley's, She believes in children, believes in them so much that she thinks people to whom they @re not born should achieve them. “Pm going to adopt one or more,” | There’s Superior Flavor To POSTUM as a table beverage. A package from the grocer is well worth a trial, in place of coffee — especially When CoffeeDisagrees! reduced to 25% OF! former price TON AN GARMEN 307 FIFTH AVE iad Son | should be fed, clothed, bathed, given | | 46S° many of these rules are steadying responsibility, I have seen|of 1 80 many people here in New York | }itab! ‘take familles,’ Two girls will take an apartment together, then, with the housekeeper as chaperon, they will board the brother of one of them, and in a short time they will have Ufe.* books,” concluded Miss Kelley. ‘The| ,“1tow !# your, boy Josh getting along “But you think ¢hat children should child who is loved and whose parental Ma studies?” be brought up by old-fashioned, rather are natural with it gets along better | ¢onsel, “ile knows Jes" enough more'n than new-fashioned rules?” I #ug-| than the child who 1s forced in a hot-|} do to make me feel embarras gested, house of theories.” ltry to ask him any questions.” 0 rer: oat 467] THINK that on the physical side the modern technique for| bringing up children {is admirable, Miss Kelley replied, “Etvery little child sleep and exerciae in the most careful and scientific manner, But I do be- Heve 4t's wrong to meddle continually with minds and souls, to work off on babies every intellectual fad in the way of education, “Men, because they are tempera- mentally so close to children, under- stand this truth, That's why the father who plays with his youngsters and is in their Lives a figure com- manding friendliness and respect, often influences them more than the mother who continually would pull up the little plants to see how they grow. “Little children are like little ani such. 9 puppy and the kitten plenty to eat and freedom for play, while teaching them simple rules of good behavior, But we don’t put them under a glass bell and stand watching every movement, nor are we continually prying into their consciousness.” | “You believe in discipline for chil- | dren?” I asked, | 1 belleve that each child should | a code and obey it," she an swered, “We grown-ups have our| code. There are laws which we must | obey, and if we don't obey them we have to pay 4 penalty serious in pro- portion to our disobedience. = Why should we bring up ehildren after a different standard, accustom them to a freedom, & contempt for authority, which they will not be allowed tn the adult world? Not to teach children the meaning of the word ‘obey’ seems to me & mere cruelty “And what should be the child's code?” I inquired | “He—and she, especially she— should be taught to oarry through, to ‘carry on, any experiment or work attempted. The child should ha keeping of prom A should be taught the importance of kindness. learned most easily through the example of the parents, Tho child to whom courteous and pleasant things | MRS. GILLIGAN REPRIEVED, | Governor Gives Coun Fight tor New Trial. HARTFORD, Conn, Noy, 3.—Mre Amy Archer Gilligan, who was to] have been hanged Tuesday for mur- | ler, Was reprioved until April to-day | by Gov, Holcomb, This delay will give her attorney, B, M, Holden, op- portunity to fight for a new trial, Mrs, Gilligan ts under sentence of deathgfor killing Franklin R. Brown, an iWinate of a home for the aged ,Which she ran at Windsor, will be instinctively mother |Newark, said such a change would vields to his inevitable demands to|cause confusion, For the appellant fl will easily learn the lesson of|John A. Garver anid the old name was an with natural common | constituted. Justice Donnelly reserved ness will find her own | decision. re helpful in bringing | er son or daughter than most of in| From the Washington Star) n made for themselves a real family {iP the American Insurance Company of & misnomer as the company ts now A ——— aring a t Superior Ansemption. by wen iy only a a collapsing wail in tho la *REB teat right in the priva a , OU cant appreciate \.UR- materials and workmanship probably cost us more than those employed by the general run of clothiers, but the thorough satisfac- tion our clothes give is so vastly greater that we find the additional cost a permanent investment in good will. The theory that highest quality means highest rices is exploded by the price moderation which pervades our entire Autumn showing of clothes for men, young men and boys, United States Army Uniforms Officers’ regulation eutfite BROKAW BROTHERS 1457-1463 BROADWAY AT FORTY-SECOND STREET 4 0 of thelr own home. The PLAPAO method y th title, tom rup- The PLAPAO PAD when adhering closely to the body cannot posstbly lip oF fore, cannot. chai y to apply: used whilet No ‘To be 8, » and the instructh —aavt quality and style are abused in aioe ar- guments these days until you see.the dis- tinctive and master made shoes that bear the Golden mark of merit this season +r, information ni Grawp Rapips FURNITURE CREDIT TERMS how much the words Smart Shoes forMen Theres a Golden Shop near zn Consult the pow tro Open Monday & Saturday Eve 104 ST. L. STATION AT CORNER FISHER Bros COLUMBUS AVE BET.103 & 104"st Important Notice to. World Readers Sunday World Edition \2 Limited to Demand 4 Readers of The Sunday World are requested to place their order in ad- vance with their newsdealer, This is the only way to be sure of getting © copy regularly, as The Sunday World is sold out early, Ow ng toa shortage of news-print Paper the newsdealers’ ' orders actual sales, are limited to

Other pages from this issue: