IfflV liim llmw'? s-'-f 4f vf-vw vAyMMP-h tftW i ww 1 ! 18 EVENING PUBLIC LEDGERPHIEADELPHIA, THURSDAY. OCTOBER 19, 1922 66-YEAR-OLD "DAD WILEY'S" EUGENIC BABIES NOW ROMPING, HUSKY AMERICAN TOUNGSTERS it nr . I ri 'k They Are Living Answers te Slurs at Noted Feed Specialist and Chemistty Expert Who Practices What He Preaches IN ALL THE familiar rules of everyday life there is none mere salutary than that flung at the theorist, the lefermer, the preacher of n new doctrine the rule, "practice what you preach. which the doctor has preached." was suggested. "Yes," she said, "for Instance, we always havn whole wheat bread for . . .. ..... . i t . .i ... , . . rncm. vv e sciie 10 ucerEin 10 cri iin Out in the Wiley nemc in vvasningten iney are practicing; wnat Dr. i ne,,iitl.rated sirup. They have ajl Harvey W. Wiley has preached, always. I hey arc living the daily life of pure feeds, pure medicines, pure thinking, pure living. They are very close te the absolute rule laid down by the head of the house, although Mrs. Anna Campbell Kolten Wiley admits she has strayed a little from the path of pure feed in rearing the two famous Wiley boys, Harvey Washington, Jr., and Jehn Preston. Uf The name of Dr. Harvey V. Wiley is known in almost every household. He has been a theorist and a reformer. He broke the path toward reform in feeds and drugs through Government supervision. He has fought the battle and con tinues te fight it today with a vigorous pen even though he is rounding the mark of four-score years. Te these who have cried "theorist and even "crank" at the old warrior, te these who have flung at him the challenge te "practice what he preached," Dr. Harvey W. Wiley can new etTev in answer two young boys, as fine specimens of American boyhood as will be found in the land. Assisting this old and yet young preacher, if net leading the way, in the Wiley home is Mr". Wiley. Almest twelve years have new gene f 1 !.,.. Annn fnninriell KeltOn. then thirty-three years old, daugh ter of General Jehn C. Kelten, became the wife of Dr. Harvey W. TVIIpv. then sixty-six years old, pictured by his friends in the years previous as a "confirmed old bach elor wedded te a mission of pure feeds and pure dru&s." Twelve years and the life moves en, as beautiful a home life, as happy a home life as there is te be found anywhere, and in every thing that same evidence cf sincer ity as is found in the fact that they are "practicing what Dr. Wiley preached." "There is the old story about the boys being denied candy," was sug gested te Mrs. Wiley. A friendly little smile, mdicatin perhaps a little embarrassment, b'reke ever the serene features this mother. innocent Little Gumdrop Gave Harvey Real Scare "That is net quite true," she said "Yeu knew if the doctor had his ,"way they would be denied all candy. ThBt is his belief. Until Harvey was about five years old he had had ae candy. Then he went te u Christmas festival here and they were passing around the little boxes of candy. The peer child had never tasted candy and he finally put a gumdrop in his mouth. It stuck te Ms teeth. Here he was he han always been taught that tee inuc candy would destroy his teeth and harm him and se he rushed home with that gumdrop stuck te his teeth, frightened very, very much. He was afraid it could net be re moved. "Well, I thought that was tee much te ask of the boys. With all the children around them eating candy new and then, te force them te deny themselves was tee much. And despite the doctor's wishes, I decided it Would be better te permit them te have a little candy and te put them en the honor system, and that is the rule new. "Ker instance, I put a box of candy in a desk drawer geed candy and then I tell them they can have one piece each day and net mere than one. They have ebber.ed the rule. I give ycu my word, theie has been a box of candy upstairs in one of the drawers for two weeks and they 'just ate the last piece yes terday." Just then Harvey Washington, Jr., came into the room. He I new ten years old. n Mi: liny, with well-formed body, excellent shoulders n fine head and eyei that sparkle. In every feature and In his every movement thtre Is the picture of health. Ami he is a regular boy, fin he seen showed. "Mether. they are getting tlie base. ball scores ever lit the service nation and I want te go ever and wntrh." he ' said. 'Yeu have n music .qieiniment at ." clock." suggested hi metlur "I want you te remember that watch in J our pocket and time for the appointment." There was a perfect uiiderstniiding between the mother and her son. tnew be would Re te the tien and he would teturn as she di rected, Uu did ns he wan ordered 10 ile. Then he pished his blcjcle through the deer, Jumped en It and was off te watch the baseball scores. 'He weighs ninety-one pounds new," Mid hit mother proudly as he disap Reared devyn the street. Then she added tkat Jehn Preston, wne is cijjjh -eur In the home. Neither of the boys show- i eii the slightest sign of surplus flesh. ' They were both as hard as is the aver- ' nee football player. "Hnrvey is Interested very much In ' baseball." snid his mother "Me knows I nil the players and the in makers and the club, and he play the game very well. lit. I think, is of the artistic temperament, the dreamer, the rx rx plerer. He rides nil ever thp city en 1 1 i bicjcle. inpci"lng the new build ings jitu the new cnsiiiccrlns project. I nut trying te have him interested in music, but It is a difflc ult task jut i.ew. "(In the ether hand. Jein. Preston 1 mere piuctl.ul in his methods. He is direct. knows what he wants te de and tiles te de It. He c.ime te me the ether l.i with a leiiuest that he be permitted le jet sulm rtptlen for maR.17.lnes as some of his Ihiv friends vveir doing. Anether day he wanted te sell some seme thltu else. It seems te me the bejs will be entite'j illffeient III that respect." Mrs. Wiley Frightened ! at the Public's Interest And went is ilie dally life of the Wiley bejs and the Wiley family? The the cereal feeds. They have their meal nt regular hours nnd de net eat between nieal. They have plenty of geed milk, all they desire of that. They go te boil nt a regular hour. They are net t permitted te go en the street after din- ' tier In the evening. Frem the time they i finish their dinner until they go te bed they must remain nt home, and in that time, they read or have me read te them. Then they arise in the morning well In summer, when we are up at the farm they are up before daybreak, and throughout the day they are regu lar boys, with their studies and their plaj and their work also." , In that alone is shown the harmony there is in the Wiley home, a home ever which a theorist or as his opponents would hnve It, "a crank" presides. In Mich n home, there Is mere difficulty in maintaining harmony of purpose en these theories, espoused by the theorist There fertuinly would be mere difficult in living up te the Ideals fixed by the theorist. Hut they are doing it te an extent which some might believe im possible nnd they are doing it because of the affection in the home, the tre mendous love and respect which Mrs. Wiley bears for her husband and the love and respect and confidence which Dr. Wiley ha for and in his wife. "Is the doctor as rigid In the life of the home e he Is in his writings?" Mrs. Wiley wai asked. Perhaps. It whs nn unfair question, one which should have Ik en asked of the doctor, anil .vet there was net the slightest doubt the doctor would have approved the question. "Absolutely," she said. "He does net deviate at all from the course he lias alwajs outlined. He Is very firm with the bejs and that Is very interest ing fe me for this reason : "Yeu knew the doctor alwajs ha i YmgMHE 1 1 j iv ' 'MiiMffiyw ' t ! i ' i vMH6 PWLwMMffWryftlt mrTfTMfiti rmfr JPHfii-.'- Vstw3l 1 W MiiraPBiniHHI Hi it-is-, i- . r S SOW kr m W ' v Mether Glorying in Their Spartan Training, Tells of Humorous Deviation in Way of Anathema Candy I case, or olmest nlvvnjs the rase, in the average home. Their father Is a stern taskmaster. Their mother is equally stern, the difference being that she tempers her sternness with the touch of mother's love. She is n mother new who laughingly suggests tbnt It Is about time te think of "mother's rights," nnd she Is interesting herself In the future political status of the woman. At the present time Mrs. Wiley is associated with the Weman's Party. She is high in the councils, the chair mnn of one of the groups which have developed In the organization. She is assisting In directing- the work te lay bare the handicaps which have been put upon the women of the country, the women of the home or the women of piofessieniil life, but mere the women of the home, because she sa.vs that IK) per cent of the women arc women of the helne. "It is very Interesting," she said as she began te discuss this work. "Hut." she was interrupted, "there is another question in relation te that work. There was, nt the time of the organization of the Wemnn's Party, a certain antagonism throughout the cenn- trj. The antagonism, was built en the idea that the plnte of a woman was in the home nnd net in active politics. Parden the question, but have you Mn. Harvey W. Wiley and her c;igenic babies" net babies new, ht'sky American youngsters two but The boys indulge in almost all forms of exercise. Here they arc getting a little coaching from "Dad" Wiley In the gentle art of boxing I'l.rne ceuntrv was interested when this marriage was anneumed. There was even mere Interest when the first son wns born te a man then almost reach ing his three-sceie and ten. When the second son arrived, the Interest was in en used tremendously ami se much was wrlttm about the Wij s a few jears age that Harvey rebelled against "the ail veitlsement," even as their mother had become timid and somewhat frightened bj the public Interest dlspljjcd In her ami her husband. "Yeu see." Dr. Wiley explained, i "befete Mrs. Wiley wa married she , lived in that seclusion which Is one of the feiiiuies of mllltaij life. All her people were military men. When our 1 en',Mgemcnt was nr.-neunicd in letters that high" the doctor Indicated about I three mi lies "she shrank from It; did net like It. When Harvej was born lii.r Hun mull mnrfi lillhllettv nn.l t-hn Keep veur ul!j ,,U11 IMnn. embarrassed about it. return In the time Jehn 1'iesten was born she bad become somewhat used te it, al though she does net understand it as de these who experience it In ordinary She I cvirj -cln life." service st.i . . ,, . r, r eua lur ine i wu ueys Is Carefully Selected Se te Mrs. Wiley went the cor respondent after Dr. Wiley had pre pared the waj. Mrs. Wiley, a woman of tine carriage, strung tiyure, line head and very pleasant but strong features, received the correspondent In her home. "If I can de anything that might help ethers I an willing," she said when asked teJjubiiilt te an interview about her biyaTtnil her home. "I suppose et td from the rule ive up te me precept had a tremendous love for children, for any ihild. Well, when n limn os old I as he was has his own son, and when he has had that tiemendnus love for all 'hlldren, you can just Imagine hew1 great hU love was for his child. Think of It, te hove his own ser; at his age. Of course, he adores the boys and given te them all that tremendous love he has for children. It is difficult te realize. ' just hew much he does love them And jet, he is rigid, he is strict and he can be stern with them. Yeung Harney is shown at his favorite sport, baseball Employs Silent Treatment in Disciplining Beys "He has hU own method of disciplin ing: them. His method is te bnvc the boy understand that he has failed te dn something he was supposed te de and then te punish him by telling him that he is r.et his boy. He just says, 'Well, you are net my son today.' Then he refuses te hnve any dealing with the boy for a certain period, perhaps two hours or mere. At the end of that time there is n reconciliation and they are i . , . . friends again. It Is wonderful hew cf- , he results in the T lley home of prac- feitlve that is. He gets result. Hut I tiring the Wiley doctrine. Had the or anv mother, nnve nei inu umc ter "j u-n ni: u nun iuihheij v..wj ...... that method. results. ... . I V kgfr? I .vj njrBnTiMPT' -'" i-s. ,; ' $&! !&$& lfc?2aE& A, t '. A,. .yL & s. isaiwaiMgflgaiBBr HBl m fr A tL . .vi.' i Wi-3.'l' Will VA.t-jt . ': . sv r Hn'T.vvir. imv'- ft-c - ' r'jaB fcahji ?? . found that your Interest in the work of that organization has done anything te detract from your Interest In your home?" The question was rnthcr blunt, hut It was a fine time te ask it because here undoubtedly, wns a successful mother nnd n successful housewife who ws taking nn nctive plncc in public life, the life of politics. "I de net," she sold, quicklv and kindly. "On the contrary, I think there is every reason te believe that such nn interest will add te your in terest in your home, in nil the homes of the country. That is the thought, te better the conditions in the henwi, the status of the mother, the wife, tat woman of the home. "It has always seemed te me that U Is the duty of a woman te continue her interest in her work prier te mir riage. If she hns been nn attorney, then she should continue her work with the. law. If she ha been n musician, she should continue her study of music. "New, In my ease, I have said tlint for ten yenrs new I have sacrificed everything for the boys. We have gene virtually nowhere. We have done virtually nothing ether than that which was associated with the boys. We have given everything, and new'l have snld around this home thnt it Is about time thnt I was going te have etni rights. When Children Leave, Where Is Mether's Interest? "My thought en thnt is that certain ly there will come n time when the boys will leave you. Your children, you hnve them for a number of years nnd your Interest is In them and then suddenly they grew up and develop their own interests. They leave you. If the mother, after all these year." of sacrifice, has net retained an Inter est in her own work, in the work which she liked prier te her mnnlagc and her motherhood, then she is left adrift when her family passes out from under her care. And I don't think thnt l right. T think It is far better for the family and for the mother te maintain thnt early interest se that when the child grows up nnd moves en te hi own sphere, the mother shall hTe something te fall back en." It wn again the very practical wom an speaking, a woman who could make herself understood with very few word", who could offer very geed reasons for her work. There was nothing frivolem about it. It Interested her because she was interested in hcttermg the con ditiens of women, and that was suf ficient. It interested her because in ' liAtA1tlf flln iMiilitlnnn In Vi linmn I'VIIUI IMS, till 1 1'lllllllWtl? Ill HIT I1WIII' she was Interesting herself in her own home. Hut she could be as practical In ether pursuits. Immediately she began te tell of the Wiley farm In the Ulue Hidge foothills. lTp there, some dl-. tance from ether fnrms nnd ether farm houses, she and the boy spend the summers. There Dr. Wiley works, again n the theorist, but as the suc cessful theorist. There the Wiley boys also work. "The boys de everything up there that the father does," she said. "If he 1h mixing concrete, they work with him from dawn until dark. One time he was busy laying out his field, nin! each one wns precisely measured. Well. Harvey worked right with him, han dling one end of the line until the little fellow get se tired he bud te surrendrr. Hut the doctor went right en In the het sun, working all day. He is a wenderful man." Just a few hour previous Dr. Wiley had planned te get his wife te permit an Interview en the Wiley home and the Wilev children. It was easy te fee hew lie grew proud and prouder ever the thought of Mrs. Wiley. He did net express it in se ninny words, but i" everything he snid he suggested that she was a wonderful woman. The boys well, they show they ire wonderful American boys. There l harmony, devotion. They practice whit they preach. weliheuVseYenty-scven pounds trim fitUlv med evidence of tbe 'f llvlnr and correct diet en candy, they "The Docter and I have plans made'0 private school of the finest tjpe In ta; p the bevs. We plun te send them te Washington. Nevertheless they con-1 be mover College, n rather small insti- trncted most of the ills te which heys. fafj slsfty." The boys themselves were the answers. If there are any two strong American bevs in the land who are mere We have te get quick ' 'f hey had been afflicted with no disense worthy e the title of American boys, I until they started te school. They went I then they have cause te be proud. Cer tainly the Wiley family lias icasen te proud of the Wiley boys. ! The Mether New Insists en Her "Weman's Rights" Of course, much of this is due te the influence of their father in the J home, Hut undoubtedly he will tell you Ian that most of it is due te the lu fluenee of their mother, as lsnlways tbe for Hnnev tutlea down en the Ohie Hlver nnd net far from where the Uocter was born. It is an exceedingly fine Insti tution. It develops e many mission' aries. Thtre are lew frills te It, but we feel that It i what we-aesire that our all navtt Iscuasfea irae wen rert-- .fe. and fflrbi full heir. Hut their early training, the sound physical foundation helped them through. Their illness, at no time, had developed any serious re sults, f Had this strict tralnlnr,7thls careful supervision, developed anrltralts which ght be described as jKBOw or ins 4 ref J ehn Preston takes ca the receiving end when Harvey, Jr., Is pitching and thtf never get their signals crossed i 'c '.WW i .? . n. t H-tHtEX - V .''. r-t ...T.V' .I' ''". 1 -j. V t,W.