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_THURSDAY, NOVEMRER 11, 1915.-
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Ella Wheeler Wilcox Writes on
Short-Sighted
v Parents 9§
Famous Writer Show How Children Ave Spoiled by
Careless Fathers and Mothers.
By ELLA WHEELER WILCOX.
(Copyright, 1915, Star Couinpany.)
lF you are the parént of a child,
you no doubt resent any advice
or interference from friends or
neighbors regarding the proper meth
‘od of bringing up your offspring.
You congider it an impertinence not
te be tolerated.
But, sit-or madam, have you
stopped to consider How absolutely
fllmsy is your oft-repeated assertion
that “your children are your own, and
that it is not the business of your
neighbors how rou bring them up?”
So far as your methods of educa
tion or your ideas of religion are con
cerned yvour words are true.
It is an impertinence for ahyone to
oriticise you for Keeping your child
until it is 10 years old before it is
tanzht the alphahet, if voiu gss At Ty
Coprvight, 1915, Intersationsl News Service. Regletersd 0. 8. Patent Ofice.
Copyright, 1915, Intermational News Service. Kegistersd U, 8. Patest Offies.
;lfi‘l. 1915, Newspaper Feature Servics, Ine. Registersd U, 8. Fatent Officw,
Great Britaln Rights Reserved.
Registored U. 8. Patent Offlcs.
do so, or for teaching it to speai
three languages in i.tf infancy, if
you have kept it well and strong at
the same time.
Men and women have grown to ro
bust maturity who have been rearad
in both ways. 1
Neither does it concern anyone
what creed you teach your child nor
if you teach it no creed save morality
and love of its Creator and its fellow
men,
In almost every other least partic
ular it concerns every human being
individually and the whole world n
general how you bring up your chil
dren.
The World Is Interested.
If your son mistreats dumb anis
mals, or uses coarse language, or Is
impolite to his elders, it is my busi
nem;, for I am the friend and kin of
all dumb things, and 1 have a right
to refoite ahd be glgd in life, which
-THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN
I can not do if obliged to hear vulgar
speech; and since courtesy is an im
portant feature in our\ association
with one another, it is my business,
if your son is lacking in it, to remind
him and youl of the faet, in such ways
as I feel could be helpful to you.
If you have permitted your daugh
tér to grow into a disagreeable girl,
selfish, thoughtless and jealous, or in
dolent and without a purpose, it is my
business, and that of all right-minded
people, to try to make you realize your
responsibility.
It is the business of the whole com
munity if you are making dyspeptics
and invalids of your children by imi
proper food and neglect of hygienic
principles of life. If you are sane and
healthy, and are gble to feed and
clothe your echildren, it iBS no one's
business how many you bring into the
world, but it is a matter which con
“orils humanity st large how voi
There’'s No Doubt the Count Sized Up Joe Beamish
Honest, We Wish Shrimp Had Got a Good One
bfing them up in the world.
Away off in an interior town of Illi
hoiz—that birthplace of great men-——
live several growing boys, under 16,
who have been reared without proper
instruction by their parents. These
boys imagined they were having “fun”
when they destroyed the cart of an
old man of 70, who maintains himself
and wife by carting ashes from pri
vate houses.
A self-made young woman, indig
nant at the oceurrence, set herself the
task of finding who the vandals were,
and of visiting their parents and urg
ing them to make good the old man's
loss, and to rebuke their children.
As a consequence the young woman
was abused and insulted by these par
ents,, who congider her conduct im
pertinent and meddlesome—instead of
humane and just and kind, which it
was. Not long ago a teachetr in a
«choo! met parents whom )wi informesd
0 .
Once Is Plenty, and Plenty Is Too Much
Delicla’s Had ti-l;a;ei;—l\l;fiiral Effect
of the misconduct of children after
school hours.
A Foolish Opinion,
These parents believed the teacher
was yhnterfering with matters which
did not concern him, because the mis
behavior of the children octurred aft
er school hours. But the behavior of
the children, their manners ahd their
morals should concern every human
being who has the interest of human
ity at heart.
No sensible person expects children
to be paragons of perfection. If they
are noisy in their play, if they some
times quarrel, if they are guilty of
childish misdemeanors, the less said
or thought of it the better.
But the child who maltreats or
abuses an animal or a younger child,
wh otantalizes or ridiculeg a beggar
or a deformed person, who destroys
the property of another, who steals his
peighbor's fruit or flowers, or who
uses disrespectful language to older
pe;)ple, ghould be taught better by
the friends of humanity; and his par
ents should be made to realize that he
is in need of wiser a4nd more sympa
thetic counsel than they have be
stowed.
Every child on earth to-day is not
merely ‘its parents’ e¢hild; it is the
world’'s future citizen, and it is there
fore important to all of us how that
child grows up.
It is better to offend a fooligh, short
sighted father or mother than to neg
lect a duty to society.
Would Look at Trains.
A somewhat Inebriated man walked
into a ticket office recently, and, smug
ly smiling, showed a note to the clerk.
“Where do you want to go?” inquired
the latter.
Reflecting for @& moment, the ine
briated oen sludenly had an inspirdtion.
Broadly grinning now, he asked:
““What trains have you?"
-ATLA.NTé Oé
Krazy Kat
Cepyright., I¥ls, Intermational News
Hegivtased U. 8. Patent Ofon p"
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A Tough Old Ship.
About one hundred and twenty-ei -
years ago a vessel named the Jenny
was built with timbers of old British
P
oak, and she is now regarded as the
oldest vessel trading under the Boand
of Trade regulations. Her certificate ol
registry shows that she was bullt a
Nevin, Carnarvonshire, in 1787.
ancient craft has weathered masy
R
storm. More than once she has Be
driven ashore, but she iso stsufl
built that she never sustained seviou
damag~ :;‘_