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_THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1921. Successful School Teacher Must Rate High In— Decision Industry Patience RS Persistence Discipline Progressiveness Ability to Impart Te: Ability to Reason Sb Ability to Analyze Must Not Love Children Too Much Lest Affection Overrule Her Reason. Copstight, 1921) by the Press Publishing Co, (Tho New York Evening World This is the eleventh in a series of articics written especially readers vf The Evening World by William Judson Kibby, the nolo charocter analyst and industrial psychologist, whose services are re tained by a number of big business corporations. Mr. Kibby is teach- ing his readers to analyze themselves and decide whether or not they ft their present jobs, or for which vocation they are best fitted. or AVING received seve H giving the qualification teacher. There whieh call for gre. teaching as it is de requests, T am to-day of a, Public School « few vocations filled by women skill than that of day, for the school room has been compelled to assume the role of many fune- tions of the home, Yesterday Mother and Mather were inclined to assist idren with their lessons, the study habit was more common. More time was spent in the home. Father and mother grew up with their chil- dren, but to- the Moving Picture has taken the in- between time, and almost all of the time given in bygone days to study is spent mainly in getting away trom study, except those of our foreign born, who are c less in their hunger for learning and are rea the native born American to shame in r for education The Public School teacher should in most cases not be too maternal, for Would © her hands full, and even Tue taht dv CHEE charrieaty aul then she would have a difficult prob- lem due to the lack of helpfulness teachers have possessed hain specislized e- y putting valance between the mater Her inilysis of two teach- c! ne. Th prs one is the rating .of stin id disc: he eine and) aisotpll g one of the most efficient te: Ts 1 who loves children too much is apt have known. Number two is the rat to let her affection overrule her 1 ner ¢ t teacher T have known very won, while the teacher possessing a Well who is more loved by the chil- Haiitee ‘helwnciritions Cee c dren than number one, but her room tiled with i# apt to exhibit a kindly eve backed pot work as by @ voice which leaves no doubt as No. 1 is te to the understanding of who is in Mtelligent command. Wort No: 2: Oak chenine Health sane 75 80 ae Industrious - 80 60 teacher's ne Persistent .... 80 20 why her pet dog Tootsie, Deliberate 0 35 ove efused to go ver eeieton: COIS, FA) 20 before us, refused £0 to lier | Paticnos zB 30 when she gave the command ‘The Love of children... 60 95 answer was that dos ¢ Net Obe Discipline 85 20 commands because i knowledge Concentration ....... 70 al of the meaning of words but sviely Conscientious - 80 70 by the sound or inflection of the Ability to reason..., 90 70 voice. Her words sid to bed," Painstaking ......... 80 60 while t he voice Analytic 80 80 denied the ny wel, Common sense ..... 70 35 eatin pline be- Practical ...... - 40 hacer (omimand, Theoretical ) 70 90 and yet I would not for one minute Order and method... 75 35 put this as the main standard « Ability to impart..... 90 50 qualification, for as a result of years Qptimism ........... 65 80 of study with men regard their Progressive ......... 80 80 eatly education, a summary the Vo analyze yourself, make out a experience would be that it was the the one given teacher who loved them too much to above t and make spoil them who gave them the great- several carbon copies, On one shee est inspiration and help while attend- set down the percentages that vou ing school. ‘There are too many would Have you teachers in our.public schools who timat Ditsiness should never teach, because as a re sult of a very few years of teaching r estimate Then the children become t em objects sults to rule and t thereafter fail to your rat add the fi perform the greatest function of a \ nit divide the toual by nty teacher, and tha! is the ability te ou should haye a final rating of at educt their latent gifts; the ch to qualify, Rate 10 to 20, get on their nerves to 30, poor: 30 to 40 ‘The present day teach im made to be efficient, t vin the seh 4) to good medium to 80 lium high; Character Analysis A STUDY OF THE WIDE HEAD. ] studying human nature, 1 find be very destructive, they would 1 that the study of animal life has lly exterminate, kill. ee ah , Ninety-five per cent. of the file@ no small part, We have up g,tuanivon vp Boca gent of the \ to this time covered several angles of tions of any importance possess J4!7 with weeping eyes—not that inder kic You must be my friends think | am wild. Now, “Bear (Mise Vincent: | am a i the human he we will now turn wide heads, emotion had overcome her, but be- Che of Mrs, Kittingly’ Miss Vincent | am not, and how young man twenty-seven years » of the When one combines the wide cause she was peeling onions. series of bands can | make them think different- of age earning thirty-five dollars Pus Paouatia to: the: study, OC Me aii Gia anit forehea, “Then why didn't awe, take her?” been any brain duster cocktails sincc 4 a@ week with good chances of ad ’ wide head, which is shown tm this an ( revilieiyy ol toaay (one asked Mr.Jarr, who had stepped in te war ly? Jam, seventeen: and ia senior vancement. have been going article. chin, you nave one of the most splen- the kitchen to help, but, really, as “lm glad of it" sald Mr » in high school, WORRIED. out with diferent girls, but do not Je it Iying this study to did types of executives be found. Mrs Jarr could have told you, was Who was in a fretful mood “and I our frends will not think you are seem to care for any of them. I We find in applying BME, it \ fe zeMy P there never will be any re of Y h i } 1 would not have my readers form only in the way t ; é ja" unless you assume that don't. Met one recently whom | think a \ Siti peas PRL ALIDEY MN OE UG Ome ee KIAIGRNan IRGETROMIDRE ecules. RGRORe CU: ROW) TUGTS Henry IVs my opinion that men who "w x lot of, but it seems that she is } terminating animals have possessed ment to be feared, for without eom- would have charged us for her board: nk brain dusten cockttlls had no care, careless attitude. Be deliberato only ‘looking for a good time the wide head, such as the Tiger, bat in the human brain we would besides she wouldn't go anyway when MT AN wont tela toe met ae: Iman and take plenty of time — Every time | ask hee when | can Wolf, Hyena, Lion, &e In sind have no pep or ginger, but the point she heard that the automobile on the WAY: Tt yeH wom Help te get ¢ yr your answers rather than ass see her she repli iy that, she does the Puen payage we find: thay we are seeking 10 make is that com- only a flivver,” replied Mrs. "So Mr, Jarr went into the dining in stful, helter-skelter manner, Net know. Kindly advise me too have had this wide are givin to exterminating, every- destruction of too many splendid gifts thing which obstructs their object of these same men have’ possessed, but possession, they seek to put aside which were never allowed to develop \ with all the strength they have, even because of this one unruly ehild of \ to death; while with the human, those the train et good strata, exe command, — Some tt men well known to demand, strike out with energy, and the publie who pc sed wide heads: when there js a large development of N ‘on, We on, Washington, COMBAT th re apt to be danger- Grant, Lee, Goethals, Lloyd (ivonge, ous and in the heat of temper would Foch Until the Doctor Comes By Charlotte C. West, M.D. > Copyright, 1921, by the Prem Pablishing Co. (The New York Fyening World.) COLD SORES—SORE MOUTH. the skin, may be confined ¢ OLD sors or fever blisters on Point and to one blisters somet| ( the tipa or at the corners of {Hey Mreak out in many Huy litt ttended with much hing, the mouth are very common in jijrning and tingling, and 16 feverish colds or when the system is quite distwurin as they usually slightly below par. They may ap- Just from four to twelve days pear inside of the mouth, on the "Gan they be aborted? Take cheek or Just under the tongue, These g brisk cathartic. Use an alkaline are almost always caused by indi- mouth wash. Cover the blisters with gestion, ‘The salivary glands not very dry boracic acid. All smokers only secrete saliva, but also excrete should give up tobacco for the time substances absorbed into the system being. ‘The sores should not be from the stomach, which thus set up picked. Painting w wien is local trouble in the mouth. _ poor treatment. It is better to dry The mucous membrane (ining) of out the blisters, Sopping with swee the mouth an exceedingly jecate spirits of nitre or with spir tissue, very easily broken, When the shor is also very good, Ou teeth ere sound the mouth is acid is better, sweet, clean and | y nature takes canker, or ulcer of the mouth, care of the little breaks in this tissue, there is nothing perior to pure otherwise inflarnmation, softening of tincture of fodine, touched Nhtly on the gums, blecding, blisters and little the spot with the tip of a toothplek ulcers follow in rapid succession. wrapped in cotton; the mouth should Mucous and pus may form and the be rinsed in 4 mild solution—thirty breath become fetid, when it is no drops of the tincture to a half glass longer a simple condition. Indeed, in of water, every hour or two. Dry children infectious mouth conditions alum or dry boracie acid applied di- are @ serious matter, rectly on the canker is also good Co! sores proper, on the surface of treatment. Do not use carbolic acid, 1, They bativeness uncontrolled has been the J @ Does a College Education Shield Girls’ Hearts From Cupid’s Arrows? Can You Beat It! cxutns, By Maurice Ketten Statistics Indicate Rate Recent Figures Show of Marriages and More and More Births Is Steadily © firls Are Entering | DON'T SEE S11 CAN'T SEE Decreasing Among Professions After WHY PEOPLE RAVE / \NHY SHE Gor Graduate oy College. ABOUT HER THE BEAUTY _ But College Heads and “Grads” Insist College Girl — PRI = Still Ranks Marriage and a Home Foremost. ray By Fay Stevenson. 1W2L, by the Prem Publlahing Co, (The New York Evening World) race suicide increasing among colle I Do college youths and maidens read Bliss Carman together, rave over cupper-colored hair, blue-blue eyes, purplish-pink ekies, golden- and THIEN, after the degree is handed out, forget ail ebout romance, marriage certificates and love-in-a-bungalow? graduates? glow sur It seems that many of them do. e - a ‘ a Raviay Ws sy have few that Barnand only dates back Hale Mey do waadltiey © twenty-tive years and that it would ny children. = be unfair to quote the table on fami- Maurice Ricker of the United jies for the last fow yeans, general States Public Health Service points indic ations re, that the paras : totes statistics Tate has dropped while the birth rate ut these facts and quotes StAUISHC® Feoined almost static up to 1013 to prove his and has fallen off since. convention In the first year of Barnard’s exis- ia RaviaL & a- tence, out of a class of eight, six mar Beene ate Molnes: la, Mee iticker tied and they had five children. In oes ection’ by’ the ‘Federal the year 1911, when the graduating Hi Teativaereice over a period Class first numbered more’ than. 100, Addressing the | CAN'T SEE WHY ALL THE GIRLS ARE NOR 1. T CAN'T SEE ANY BEAUTY f indicates that the progeny the subsequent marriages totaled oF L000 eradudtes from such insti- thirty-two, with thirty children, The CRAZY INC HIM ea eee ydee Princeton, Dercentize of girl students who mar- AROUT jah ‘exceed Tied reached a peak with the class of eae aul aie pt exceed tool, Fifty-elgnt. per. cent. of thie titty in Se i ompare the re- &20UP married. ‘They have forty-one He proceeded t “Canvass among Children, Since that year, althouga sults of EL nd sald it indi. the graduating class has been steadily ne ee eee ace period the orig. ICreasing, marriages have been fewer a nousamt would oe multiplied at and the birth rate low, according to nik id would be multi ee ast a hundred times. Frederick I Allen, Secretary of the Do bow! (Study and Digher srarvard University Corporation, pro- ambitions ee ET ket each Guced in reply some tizurcs of his Do Willy and Hetty own from Harv. yoords } Fe a eT et TaRR cane « om Harvard records: NT ee ey lM imurbed inthe , "Mr. Kickers aarertion.” he sald. in ns Billy absorbec 8 would seem at first reading to give th impression that colloge students e on the average less than one ld apie This is not so among Harvard graduates, at any rat “Among the classes of 1881-1890 at Harvard, the last ten classes whose statistics are available and may be considered fairly complete, va family as if they had not tars te average number of men per class ta few y¥ dara iw insist they Was 248, of whom 183 married and The deans and “grads ‘ had children, an average of 2.06 HE PERFECTLY IS oT q: Ohtidren per married graduate, or 1 N pet hear | ADORABLE ) ‘ollege girts, Hi CIO aa enon children per capita for the who BE OT\ EU L ° entightened and educated person the cits. The Yale figures for the same A AG a Hot have the linge families that the Deriog are similar, a 5 smnmigrant aie ean, Ap The birth rate among Harvard harms told me, “But I should judge STaduates seats duclite neweven om general observation that college ' ABAa Tl Meee Men's colleges 2870 and 1890 than jt had been previ day than wh j To-day at, Ously, and a situation which is dis- et silos nd er act Pie he quieting at best seems thus to be hehe r eau ation, and naturally many fee SS OMNGET NORGRCY Wh) MeDE 2 ba isiiaae wach) FXo figures on the subject are avail course ame. “ble from Wellesley College, but vet en ielthpstag college President Ellen 8. Pendieton’ gives rime the. fe just a little afraid or i 98 her impression that as far as keri ; it the ealtoge “6 alumnae of Wellesley aie con- stands in awe of cerned the number of marriages and I asked Miss He eat ht have the number of children per marriag In the old days, he might have nave increased rather than decreased considered her a blue-stocking, but 7 ! T do not think he wonld feel’ that O#,the years have gone dollars or his profession, the law or some ar- listic bent? they remember those dances strolls and Blix Carman's lyrics? Or, if by chance Hetty meets another and Billy mee cond copper-color haired in they not just apt to wed eha Het r ld ha tainly, when one waiks through way now. replied Ais , itiahon. tho campus of a co-ed college anit However 1 will say thes No owe notes certain unmistakable traits of eee i ny $2,600. to $8000 Cupid between the youths and maklens Noes Le re nat meacryr Tere iBcha on in the world why thin carnini: poswibly. $1,800 or $2,000 OD€ Should think that qarriages and Courtship and Marriage births will not goon “just as usual,” By Betty Vincent org Noe Ge » Class day, dances, "football and Fey eevnes and.'a basketball games all soe happy ple anont,” coneluded — Miss tures of youth and tove, at both men's Sisen why afew years and women's colleges, Marry? Of should so change a course they will, And probably they nature, and it seems to Wil have one or two or even three ind domestic duties aro children, but of course you would not of individual inclination expect more than that, for it realty The Jarr Family By Roy L. McCardell Copyright, 1921, by the Prem Publishing Co. (The New York Kvening World.) ‘Copyright, 1021, by the Prem Publishing Co, ('TRe New York Evening World a : ¢ i cay ue arate decent fannen in the best regulated SRTRUDE, the maid, being still Drews, too, and Mrs. Kittingly told me “D EAR MISS VINCENT: | he seems to be very sociable, but - . that her s ond husband, no, I thin! acts cool towa me an joes no! G Sway on her vacation, Mrs. se was her last one, used ‘to abuse het are eee rena heal talk, Should | discontinue his Jarr was preparing the eve- Greadfully at meal times, but he could of help, and only hope friendship or ask him to explain = meal with ber own fair hands. carve beautitully and never got adrop you ean help me the way you his actions? ve M." We should have taken Gertrude of, ery Os when he was full of bi h us when we went to Uncle Wiatain Gusters?™ rep Henry's farm for a week,” said Mrs. “That's a cocktail with ¢ in, even have so many others. | have 5, many friends and they all tell me | am goed looking, But many of mply assume the same cool 1 tow that he as usine you, Tf he the slich your friendship he will wake ow she's ta rried sis ing her vacation what to do, give her up or be who runs a room little more persistent? A. B. J.” nd set the table, getting every rong, of ¢ thing boarding house and has twins and no “'yut then Mrs. Jarr, like all good “Dear Miss Vincent: 1 have Krom her answer 1 aid Su help and is sick. I suppose Gertrude s, believes husbands do that go known a boy many years and that the youns woman is really will come back all worn out and so ¢} fon't he asked to help when the have now grown to love him. ful, You see you always is r emss that she'll take to her bed and maid's away, Lately when with my girl friends = when you tay sve , whieh would ii to wait on her!” z _ —— rally mean for her to’ set a tine to ate sweetness and light, dear @ Cul Why not be more direct and heart," Mr. Jarr advised, “radiate @ q ask if you might aul on Wednesday sweetness and light.” or Priday ling, selling your 1 secesee tuueriien., eens Group Exercises ca “- | nearly burned out peeling onions and “Dear Miss Vincent: Am eight BEWARE OF INSE when Iam all through I remembered ° 7 § cen and in love with a young - Wading in dtoectoud “Hike ne § Specially Arranged by Doris Doscher man twenty-six, Though. |’ have em erening en) the ay Happy Homes’ in the Perfect Ladies’ Copyright, 1941, by the Prom: Publishing Qo, (Tao New York Evening World) known this young man for four | 1k the ineccis ah at bey, fa Journal that one can peel onions years, I've only just awakened to | ae "Lt 0 Without smarting one's eyes if one the fact that I have loved him For Wander's Lime drives them away: holds them under water and peels since | was a little girl in hair | ribbons. Two years ago he asked me to marry him, but | did not | know my own mind. Then we | decided to wait two years, and at a dance | introduced him to one | of my chums. He immediately began to make love to her (ho | Bays now to get me jealous). | them." ‘And also remember that onions, eaten in haste, will remove the odor ef tee cream ‘from the breath, and also onions, while they will build one » physically, yet they will tear one down socially,” remarke Jarr solemnly. The porch will be a much pleasanter location when -free of germ-bearing insects. Doctors pipes that typhoid and many "Get out of this kitchen!" cried Then he escort her or Fr higg are carried by Mrs, Jarr. “Instead of giving me a about. He | toes. Spray the porch band you only stand around making to her, Lately he wrote me his ‘ . Tam tr ‘ » hash, regrets in this matter and wishes | with a solution of Wander's 4 We : id meat Jue BACEM ARE to break off and become engaged Chlorinated Lime and will Is you won to me. He claims he wants to be | be free of denger ender's i carve, at Vil try, honorable about it, however, and 7 mis URE TOTAL NO. 12—JUMPING FORWARD AND BACKWARD, honorable abaus 1G however end Chlorinated Lime is a disinfect. ‘And a nice mess you make of & ONE—Hands on hips. Knees bent. 1a tt t ter that he give her up now be- ant-of the most powerful type ‘when you ir Me Cees Lune, Ac fore he makes her unhappy? Or I { * Mrs. dare t I think it Is Heels raised, f your leader, it : should he marry her and make ts use is a preventive measure tume you learned to carve not TWO—Jump forward. ett You can sive direction three lives miserable? in the fight against Infection. but Mr, Hangle THREE—Jump backward or jumping sideways of just “PEGGY.” y when the Ranwles FOUR—Position. juarter turn er halt SF company At other times h You have a the jumping is done on t Hopping on alte ba t roth v aft ore _ ae usles have stew v 1 . p Rangle generally one ypinge exercises this on ont you have leaned @ your rt with 4 WMD A. 9130 aps mp lucky stiff!" muttered Mr. prove the carrit, to all of the a! exer * your body 9 tent that ba fist Meorre op Mt From id clasticlty to the walk should be nimble enuur do this he ' rder a tine Lapele aya 00 What are you saying?’ asked Mra, i jy to inereese the clroula- reise gra ally an with ense, te dca a wird Jes a. On the} 89. Or, Btreet. Bey ‘ork Jarr, suspiciously, “Well, never mind, tien through the strong werk done by lic ’ you ne ee and evenly Der hau 1 de not velleve in two fly iid otler ip goed anil if it’ was about that man Tangle ic the large muscular ups ox the all during xerek To me ves being made unhappy, nor do I an let aad wasn't important But what [ th jumping should be takem on his fect as agilely ag a panther is think the man would by “honorable’ | wanted to remark was that Mr. Stry- in even and rhythmic time, the crowning feat of wrestler or ath- in marrying the girl if be does not an een ver carves, and they, have a duck 1 have given you this jumping ex- lete. love her,