The evening world. Newspaper, May 13, 1912, Page 3

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ak ‘THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, , DEATHCELL READY | FOR ICHESON IN THE STATE PRON Warden Prepares for Execution , as the Alienists Complete | Work of Examination. EX-MINISTER IS CHIPPER. Shows Less Exhaustion From| Yesterday's Tests Than the Three Experts. BOSTON, May 18.—While the alleniste @ve continuing to-day the examination @ Rev. Clarence V. T. Richeson to de- termine his mental condition, Warden Bridges put the death cell in order. white washing of the walls was early in the day. ‘To prevent any possible “untoward | event” during the execution, the wires @rough whioh will pass the current the Muntoe Mountain murderer, was electrocuted in January, are A snlocted tary ot on Jury of twelve citizens as Witnesses for the Stato, the apecialists Dre. Henry R. Stedman, Henry P, Prost and George T. Tuttle continued which the minister-murderer was syb- fected in yesterday's nine-hour exam- fuation. ‘The three alienists showed signs of fatigue. Richeson showed none. He} had slept well Jest night and after a| hearty breakfast to-day walked cheer- fly from his cell to the jail music-rooin in company with two guarde who at- tend him night and day, It in expected the reports of the three famous allenists, with those of Dr, | Morton Prince and Dr. L, Vernon Briggs will be thoroughly gone over | by Gov. Foss this evening. | If the majority of the alfentsts say Richeson is sane the ex-minister will @le in the chatr shortly after 2 o'clock next Sunday night. ‘Richeson seems to be standing up well under the allenist ordeal,” sald the former minister's counsel, Wiillam A. Morse, upon leaving the Charlea street Jail to-day. | Sheriff Quinn announced to-~jay that | Richeson would not be removed to the | chamber in che State prison where he) will await death until after the meeting | he council on Wednesday. ly for not sending ham River to the death cell,” said Sheriff Quinn, “are that I want to be humane and considerate of a man in his position and also to Give the alienists, who might want to return, a chance to resume thelr ex- amination under the same conditions | ea those of yesterday and Saturday.” paliiosieds “caediaals CUPID TURNS HIM FROM | STUDY OF THEOLOGY TO ART. | Now Mr. Selden Exhibits His Paint- | ings at: His Prospective Father- in-Law's Studio. GRONNWICH, Conn, May 13—An q@hibit of paintings here by young artist at the studio of a famous sculp- tor proves to be the prelude to a wed- @img which te expected to take place le summer. The artist is Henry iii Senden, son of the Ri ph H. Sekien, | D. D., and the bride-to-be is Miss Masel Dumont Potter, daughter of E. @. Potter, the sculptor, whose massive | marble Hons guard the Fifth avenue! entrance to the New York Pubic Ubrary. It was the girl's friendly encourag ment which led Mr. Selden to abandon | plans to prepare for the ministry and turn to art. Mr. Selden was a student at Yale a few years ago when {t was decided by the young lovers that he should pursue | his studies for the pulpit no further. He | entered the New York Art League, | where at present a brother of Miss! Potter is @ student. Mr. Selden has | fince studied abroad. His recent paintings will be on exhibi- fon at Mr. Potter's studio in North ach afternoon until next Thurs- | in 2 until 6 o'clock, AL Nil ICEBERG FAR SOUTH. Capt. Polack of the North German Moya liner George Washington, arriving here to-day, reported sighting a great iceberg in latitude 3.02 north and longi- tude 47.05 west, This 18 farther south than this city The ship passed about fifteen miles from the floal siand of tcc, whi seemed 0 be it a quarter of a mile Jong at the water line and rose 15 feet into the alr, It was fifteen miles distant from the George Washington, which was at no time in the slightest danger. The ship was following the extreme southern course, It was 7 o'clock in the morning when the fceberg was sighted and the passengers piled up on deck to look at ft as soon as they were notified Abraham Erlanger, the theatrical magnate, was a passenger oo Taft Controls Montana, BUTTE The Montana Btate Republic nvention at Living ston May 16 fo name delegates to the Republican Convention at Chicago will be Hed by the Taft forces by a majority of ab returns from al! counties exces were carried by Kt 7 would not y ghake the control of the Taft forces, | wether, Ip that sense the old saw, aero in Philadelphia the virthrate im work, | whdé had to choose between rem! In the. Girl With the Square Jaw Lies Real Hope of the Future; ‘Doll-Faced Type Passing Away Copy-tght, 1912, by The Press Publishing Co. (The New York World). Mother of the Coming Super-Race Will Be the Square-Faced Type, Which Constitutes Real Feminine Beauty, As- serts Prof. Nearing of the Unwersity of Penn- sylvania. By Nixola GreeleyeSmith. Are you a round-faced wom- an or @ square faced woman? The hopes of humanity hang on your answer, for Prof. Scott! Nearing of the Wharton school of the University of Pennsylvania has announced that the only girl who may aspire to become a super-woman and the mother of the “super race” is the girl with the jaw. Women, according to Prof. Near ing, may be divided into two general classes or types, round-faced women and long-faced women, and the fu- ture holds no hope for the chubby, chinless, doll-faced type that has con- etituted the popular {deal for so long. ‘The woman with the long face and the | square Jaw {8 the real beauty, Prot. | Nearing eays. And because the faces | of American women show distinct jaws instead of the melting oval of the classic {deal, they may bec ne mothers of “The Super-Race" told of in an inter- esting treatise on the new sclence of eugenics which Mr. Nearing has just published. WOMEN CONFRONTED BY A CHOICE. American women may be. word may. For Prof. Nearing says the | same choice confronts us that was faced by the women of Rome's degeneracy ning sober matrons and becoming profiigates | and who took the easter and rv way. | “Women,” said Prof. Nearing to me yesterdn, divided into two classes—round-facea woren and long-faced women, The round- feced woman is the soft, chiniess, overscxed, big-eyed type that con- stituted the old ideal of beauty. Mark the “Mrs, Nearing and I were in Bus rope last summer and we were @- tounded at the preponderance of the) round-faced type in the art ga) leries, the weak, sloping ova! that ideal, 1 tell you tt was a} to get back to America and seo ome women with jaws, It was @ Joy} to see the girls on the magazine covers. | be high art, but they all ay American art {s bu at any rate, it has; developed T Gri with the Jaw. Women are social, men aggressive, | the super-race women will have | ned “ager iveness without losing ir social qualities. Men will be more | social, but not # Masculln "L judge from these remarks that Beauty will not play an {mportant part in the development of the super-race?” I interjected. DOLL-FACED TYPE WILL NOT FIGURE AT ALL. “That depends on what you mean by uty," Prof. Nearing answered, “Phe type won't figure at all, Ul- I hope she'll ditappear alto- the classic had jaws. not original, doll-fa tinat | super-race al ‘THE OLD FASHIONED , “ROUND PACE ‘TYPICAL OF EvuRoPe AND THE SQUARE JAW TYPICAL OF THE US. ! ‘Beauty 1s only skin deep,’ applies. But 1f you mean real beauty, the beauty of free, healthy, well developed body, the beauty that any man or woman may we, why, then, beauty will reach the m that the so-ealled resembles your super- ‘and that you have no elt ideal of the au- tomatic mother." “None whatever,” Prof. Nearing an- swered, astounding how that no- tion {s kept altve among civilized per- sons. Yet only last year a senior in the university here expressed to me as his serious opinion that women are only machines for having children, ‘There is no hope for a super-race so long as that ideal prevatis and we fa! to realize that the race rises or falls with woman, the parent stem of, hu- manity, for you know the latest blologt- cal theory 1s that femaleness Is maleness plus Xx. In other words, the latest biologic theory is that man is a minus quan- tity. We've known !t all along! “Women do the selecting in marriage," Prof. Nearing added. ‘Tne way to Je- velop a super race !# to teach young | girls how to aclect husbands wisely, It in only tn novels that girls fall in love | because they can’t help it. Alre: have unconscious eugenics tn certain! things. There t# a taboo on marriage between the white and the yellow or Diack races. There is a tadoo again marrying the insane, the feeble-minded, the epileptic, the sexually diseased, To | bring about conscious eugenics we will | have to increase the number of these taboos. A girl will have to feel that it 4 Just as taboo to marry a consumptive or @ man of immoral life as it would be to choose @ mate from the allen! races. COLLEGE WOMEN LOOKED TO FOR THE SOLUTION. “The college wo:nan, tho self-support- ing woman, is the greatest hope of the super race. There is a great deal of | nonsense talked and written about the college girl. It 1s said that she doesn't to marry. She does want to andard of what slie and she can make | $1,200 a year until she finds the right} man. She doesn't have to take up marriage aa trade, as at least 60 per cent. of women do, accepting the first husband they can get because father ts tred of supporting them, REASONS WHY AMERICA IS IN THE LEAD. | Prof. Nearing offers six reasons why | America may produce the super-race. which all good patriots should be glad to hear, They are: | 1, Our superior natural re- sources, | 2, Our superior racial stock, | 3. The growing emancipation of women in America, 4. The movement toward the | abandonment of war, which takes the best of @ race. 6, Our faculty for social adjust- ment. @, Our educations! faciliti But don't get the idea that we are Not even Phila- t. This admission | from a U. of P. professor snows the earnestness of Mr, Nearing's purpose, “Mankind 1% not advancing,” said the, advocate of eugenics, “In the birth rave of tries to-day there prev the of the unfittest, An English student + haw discovered that r of the popula not uur delphians ave p Avillzed coun jderstand that fact the super-race Ww! ! the movement ar the prosperous suburban districts is sev- enteen per cent.; in the pvore: and most densely populated sections of the elty it is fifty-nine per cent. “fa other words, w getting quantity at the expense of qual- ity. Before we develop » super- Face we will have to get rid of the {dee popularizea by Roosevelt and the Kaiser that woman is merely onild-bearing machine. “The Kaiser, I beileve, has offered to subsidize every eighth child in @ family, and {t doesn’t seem to matter to him or to Roosevelt if the other seven are ldtots or e ‘To say that is what counts in children sounds like & bromide, but once men and women un- be @ near possibility. and father, thelr boy {s a future Prest- dent of the United States. woman wants to be the mother of future President, she must choose her husband wisely and carefglly, the young m must show equal disérimination tn selecting a wife. We should begin by teaching biology and the laws of “d= ity in the public hools, Some part of the $100,000,000 we spend to teach sewins, reading and dra ig should go toward ng the parents of the future for ik, Until this ts done America y go on turning out steel rails, shoes and text books for @ few generations with success, but tt will grow furthe and further away from the super-race,”’ tlds HAS $300.000 IN CHECKS, CHARGED WITH FRAUD. Frank T, Hughes Arrested In Den- ver Claimed to Have Credit for $1,200,000. DENVER, May 13.--Frank T. Hughes, allas Stephen Wilson, under arrest here accused of trying to pass a fraudu- lent check for $86, when searched to- day was found to have in his posses- lon two checks for a ‘otal of $0,(00, One check, drawn on the Firat Na- tional Bank of Cripple Creek, was for $125,000, while the other for $175,000 was drawn on a Victor bank. ¥ Hughes a few days ago gave up @ mining lease and exhibit telegr purporting to be from Daugt, Company, New York, — establishin credit to the amount of $1,200,000, He is sald to have gone to several banks To every moth L. a in Cripple Creek where he tried to raiye money on the strength of the telegrams. Daigherty New York Yo such firm WwW. L "1 mentioned in thi -- ——>_—_. /AUTHORS UNIONIZED NOW. Publishers w © don't pay and thom | who don't pay enough will have to look ut. The authors of America are organ- Ka business league to protect thetr sts. It is to be like the Authors’ Sootety nd and the Gens de Lettres of Among inte those who are identified with John Burroughs, Ellen Rachel Crothers, Augustus Rupert Hughes, A. ©. Tho: nd Moffutt, Thompson By ton Royle J. O'Migins, Hopkins Adama, W. M. Sloane, Arthur Johneo tobert Chureh asrow t Bur. Walter Judwon ¢ Lang, Jui Palmer, Franklin 1 Langa George Wa k th quality and not quantity | i} But it a al MERCHANT HAULED “INTO TWO COURTS AS A PCAPOCKET Robbed on “L,” Blunder Has Biber Arrested Because He’s Standing Near. | FREED IN BROOKLYN. Then Brought by Detective to| Manhattan and Again Dis- | charged as Not Guilty. Acoured of @ crime of which he was Not guilty, looked up in a police station | and denied all bail, Herman Biber, fifty: | five years old, a wealthy woollen mer-| chant, to-day was arraigned in two dif-) ferent police courts and honorably dte- | charged. | Biber was first arraigand before Magis. | trate Nash in Gates Avenue Couri, | Brooklyn, on the charge of acting as a “sta for a “mob" of “dips” picked the pocket of Marcus Blunder of No, 120 Watkins street, getting #15 tn cash, @ diamond ring worth $166 and a| pawn ticket. Magistrate Gates diaminsed the charge, with the intimation that if any crime had been committed tt had} been in Manhattan. Later Mr. Biber was arraigned before Maxistrate Bar-| low tn Ensex Market Court and die charged again. Biber ts a wealthy business man, with offices at No. #1 Broadway, Manhatttan He lives at No. 84 Park avenue, Brook- lyn, He was arrested last night on a crowded elevated train in Brooklyn, after Blunder, crying out that he had deen robbed, pointed to Mr. Biber an| the man who had held him while the pickpockets ‘worked. (Mr. Biber dented | hia guilt, but volunteered to accompany Detective Kilroy to the Ralph avenue station, where he submitted to a thor. ough search, None of Blunder's mening Property was found on him. Nevertheless, Biber was locked up. At 1 o'clock this morning, Mrs. Biber appeared in the police station with the deeds to ral pieces of property owned by her husband, but the police Neutenant refused to accept them as| ‘bail. In both courte to-day, Mr. Biber was defended by hix son, Herman Bider. Hie father produced half a! dozen bank books and a number of deeds to real estats to show his finan- | cial standing, while a number of his| business associates testified to his rep- | utation and character. | Magistrate Gates immediately dis- charged Mr. Biber, but told Detective Kilroy that 1 @ crime had been com- mitted at all, it had taken place in Manhattan, For that readon, Mr, Bi- ber was later arraigned before Magia- trate Barlow. Blunder repeated his charges, but there was nothing to| substantiate them and Mr. Biber was discharged. At No, #1 Broadway, where Biber shares an office with I. Cohan, de er in buttons, .the story of Biber's arrest would hardly be believed. Cohan immediately set forth for Brooklyn with a goodly selection of rea! estate deeds! | to ald tn freeing his friend | “Mr, Biber is too old and respectable a Dusiness man to be a party to any pocket-picking,” said Cohan. “He ts a married man with a family and an owner jof Brooklyn real estate. This man Blun- der certainly made a collowal blunder.” ph ED aule abba |INCONSTANT PUG, HALED TO COURT, POOR WITNESS. |Wags Tail for Anybody, So Rival | Claimants Fail in Effort to Prove Selves His Master. ‘Tis a wise dog that knows his own master, but Fritz or Carlo or Prince take your choice of naines—who ap- peared before Magistrate O'Comor, in the Yorkville Court, to-day 1s not that Kind of @ dog. This canine of many aliases would wag his tall and bark Joyously tf you called him by @ short and ugty word, if you only did it with a smile, fra. Mary Dandeknask, of No, 310 East Thirty-elhth etreet, told the Ma-/ gistrate the collie was hers and that Charles Angdback, whom she had haled | to court on @ summons, was not t rightful possessor of the animals, To prove she was mistress, Mrs, Dan- |deknack had the dog brought inside the rail and called ingratiatingly u Frits, nice doxey bounded over to her, Hoked her hands and wagged his tail “Just watch me, your Honor," then | interposed Angeback, the defendant Here, Carlo, old dow! | Carlo Come here, | ‘The colle atraightway forsook Mrs Dandeknack and fawned over Ange- | vack'a fest. When a court attentant called him Prince, he showed the same neonstancy of affections, and he eve the hand of another who #d-! | dressed him as “Mutt.” ‘The Magistrate allowed Angeback + N al ] It soothes the aching nerves in & most wonderful way, and hae brought nights of peaceful rest to people who have suffered agonies, i Trig) bowe ‘os. ; large bottles age, puc NEW YORK HEIRESS WHO REFUSED TO WED A SPANISH PRINCE. PHOTS GY OG BAIN. NEW PARIS SKIRTS ARE TIGHTER, BUT OH, YOU STOCKINGS If Not Ribbon — Stripes : You'd Not Know the Ladies Wore ’Em. for | PARTS, May 18.—If anything, skirts are tighter than ever this spring, despite | the decree of dressmakers, and in the in- | closure at the Longchamps race course | far more tight dresses than panniers | were seen. | Some of the new creations were so | tight walking was poasiie only through alits made in the hem in front, at the! ack or on the side, Many pannier| dresses were seen, but they are assum- ing a new form. One of white Uberty satin had a small box pleated tunic, arranged in tiers. Another with box| pleata looked as if the panniers had | slipped down toward the fect. Tt te thks costeme that Is likely to be followed in all the summer tollettes. ‘The hips are free and the drapery te ®athered up on each side tn cirodltr folds from the knees downward AN white lace frocks had rose colored sashes, draped high round the walet and hanging down in front, Many of | the women are giving free retn to thelr fancy in the matter of stockings, which | are 90 thin in many inet: they are) hanily visible except for narrow bla ribbons crossing almost up to the k after the.fashion of auclent Gree ‘Thin sliver and gold tissue stocking: with striped shoes richly Jewelled at the toe and along the strap, are also popu- lar, | The craze for black and white has | brought out many pearls and dia- monds, and on every side were seen long strings of pearls, great diamond corsage ornameiits, hatpins, brooches | and buckles with Jewelled watches and | bracelets. . One of the surprises wan a new pa- gota sunshade of changeable atlk, oc- tagonal shaped, trimmed with lace and looking like @ lampshade, ‘They have short Jewelled white handles, ‘Taffeta dresses are in bright colors, princtpally emerald and cerise, blue and bright tones of rose, though the pref- erence ts for black and white effects oe ‘Taft to nm Newark’s Show. President Taft will press an electric buttor at 7 o'clock to-night that will start the ingustrial exposition in the Firat Regiment Armory, in Newark. ‘The exposition will continue for twelve ys, There will be 26 exhibitors of wark made goods. a Ne What More Can You ask than a tea that tastestwie es good and goes twice as far? DhiteRose CEYLON TEA Packed Where Grown. SPA TTI White Rese Coffee, Pound Tins, 35c. THE WAYNE Pa bertumeut re? One | 18 einen WAUAICE see y Whe EARA GO,, rose’ # AMERICAN DUKE'S | D’Aragon Returns to Spain Pigniatelit's depression is the determi- nation of Miss Mary L. Duke, daugh-| found in hla: pocket ter of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin N. Duke! of No, 1076 Fifth avenue, not to marry the Spanish nobleman. ———— tobacco prince’s daughter would’ we the visiting Spanish prince caused fauch scuaston last winter, though #0 en Wagement was announced, After the Prince sailed for Burope jast March it was said that King Alfonse of Spain had joined with Mr. Dulte in objecting to the match and that Prince Pigniatellt had left for Spain to win the King’s consent to his proposed alll- ance, Mr. Duke last evening at his residence authorized the following an- nouncement: wT here never was any engagement be: tween my daughter and Prince Pign! tell.” ‘On the Prince 4’Aragon’s arrival here last August he told reporters that his | engagement to Mise Helen Hilton had | been broken off because he was @ Ro man Catholic an DAUGHTER TURNS DOWN A PRINCE Depressed After Failure to Win Heiress. (Special to The Erening World), GREENWICH, Conn, May = Charged with stealing a valuable gold wateh and chain from the home of Mra Prince Ludovico Pigniatett 4’ Aragon of | Spain, according to letters recently re.|ieanor Hobby of Hankaviile, Conn, ceived here, has retired to Biarrita, very eee ne nent eae vtoleane much depressed. The cause of Prince| Me, was arrested to-day by Police | Chief Rich. The watel and chatn were McDonald went night, declaring to Bankaville Saturday he had come to take charge of the estate of E. T. Holmes of the Holmes Rumors that the Protective Bureau of New York, $20-$25 Suits Reduced To-morrow 2 | 3: 75 ‘The most sweeping, relentless reduction ever known 80 early in the season, but price cut has been decreed and go they must, re ardless of cost of production. Dressy a Suits ic Diagonal Suits Striped Novelty Suits English Mixture Suits A host of styles, each showing some unique and charming feature; conservative tailor- mades and dressy trimmed suits, where ex- quisite braids, contrasting satin, and beautiful materials combine in making each model a beauty. Alterations FREE SALEAT ALL THREE STORES S Bedell 14 and 16 West i4th Street- ww York 400 and 462 Fulton Street—Brooklyn 645-681 Broad Street--Newark, N. J. The World’s Greatest RETAIL SILK STORE Fourth Ave., at 24th St., N. Y. Two doors from 23d Street Subway. Location: One block East of Metropolitan Tower, : you can buy here every kind of fashionable silks by the yard at prices which cannot be dupli- cated elsewhere. NOTE THESE: 42-inch hand pr‘nted All Silk Voile, Bul- garian border effects (the new parchment color), 68¢ a yard, 31-inch Tub Silk, satin Stripes, the present craze in fashion for both men and women, 98c a yard, 28-inch Printed Shantung, pretty floral effects and natural grounds, 68¢ a yard. 42-inch Summer Silks, in pretty border effects, fashionable colors, 98¢ a yard. These prices are one-half previously quoted mill-tosconsumer prices. You will never know how cheaply you can buy silks until you come and compare. Mills to Looms to Consumer Wearer Rogers Thompson Givernaud Co. , Fourth Avenue at 24th St., N.Y ee Young Men’s Oxfords, $5 One of the new styles of the general character shown in shoes receding of the highest grade toe, broad shank and low heel, Many other styles in all leathers at the same price sixth Avenue at Nineteenth Street Filth Avenue above Vorty-fifth &, sven asta ca ata te ar er SE es ORR YT

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