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Y 4 fed GOES EVERYTHING ‘ Venus of Milo to Remain the Type Of Physically Perfect Woman; Not OOOOH adder Gymnasts and Porch Climbers Will Be at Your Back Windows Now. “ SLEARING THE WAY OUT. a _. No Nonsense, Says Commis- \ _ sloner—Family Steak Will _.. Fall With Rest of Debris. . /Mbring worked successfully with 4, (agme nesdle squads, gum shoe brigades |. $a@ tady commissioners, Father Knick- a» Wbecker te coon te turn the firemen » Wl Cenement-house inspectors inte an Gimbere—secend story mea, This ‘SPOBBHOOOHOOOOOHOOOOOOOOOOO Golden Mean Between Angles and Redundant Curves, ‘the Body Neither Starved Nor Padded, Will Remain the Permanent Ideal of Fem- ee wil strtte here and there inine Beauty, Says Mrs. Edith » Hag we shall be toning hothouse Stevena Parsons. wemafortera, inte the w: vanes on By Marguerite Mooere Marshall. very day ou Fashion eays— ; a bore on That @ woman should be very slight, thin-chested and nervous. the cameras—this crusadé for the pro-| —“ctence save Uestion of life and liberty. PANCY CLIMBERS AND LADDER DANCERS IN THE PARTY. ing That a woman should be compactly built, with o deep chest, steady nerves and enough flesh to round out the anatomical angles. Art saye— That a woman should be tall with long, flowing Mnes, a natural waist, moderately wide hips and an erect, buoyant carriage. And there you are! So, whether you resemble a knitting needle, a hausfrau, or a Venus de Milo, you have your admirers and defenders. If only you do not make the mistake of the old man in the fable, who tried to please everybody, you cam hardly help pleasing somebody. ‘The standards which fashion and science set up for the female form @ivine have just been clearly defined in an address by Dr. Richard Root Smith before the National Conference! © geed ene or she rebels against am Rase Betterment. But since for ma| ltving up to her knowledge. at leant, art is always the final a-| “All any one has to do to be con- thority, I asked Mra Hiith Stevens | vinced of the malicadility of the female Parsons, the sculptor, to identity the|form ts to study the Illustrated papers type of woman whom aha believes to] for the Inet half century. The same be the most baautiful, Mra. Parsona is] woman will appear in a number a talented member of the somewhat sive-| photographs, and ach time the ai able group of American women sulp- | houette will he different. The figuras tors. She has won a number of prises of enme w.men change completely in offered by Mra, Harry Payne Whitney | outline ¢rom one season to the next, for the heat fountain and garden de- | nding to the dictates of fashion.” signe, and te showing neveral dolight-| “But what in the fol examplen of her work at the pres- {and keeping @ good fi ent exhibit of the National Academy. PERMANENT IDEAL REMAINS Uur plan is to have some of the fancy climbers of the department acoompanied by their neti id gooseneck ladders ac- | ‘ompany our tenement house inspectors. When we have struck a particularity fertile block of fire escapes, draped with the superfiuous articles of a household, then we shall get ready for business. The tenement house inspectors wil) sta- _.* Won ‘themselves in the yard holding the ife news and men will reach the first ,, ianding of fire escapes with the ald of %¢ thelr own ladders, TANGO’S WOEFUL EFFECTS ON FACE of the Excelsior, a! tango's physical eff two eomplete sots of | Qrawn-down expression of the mouth, and destood—but that, you know, will all » be in a day's work. ve. 2 supORe you are aware,” Mr. Mur- * phy was asked, ‘that the family larders ase kept in large cat-proof boxes on Gre escapes?” “1 am," replied the Commissioner, “and I know, too, that a good many husbands ‘wil come home and learn that their quently. slower to develop the tango-look, “their position during being more nearly normal." clipe for making: eo?" T asked, jRecie [8 FOR WOMEN WHO DE- SIRE GOOD FIGURES. , ‘of chuck, sirloin rterhi 7 fo “Be city pound. Articles of food| “The parfent phynical woman?’ re | American woman has the beat figure In laced on fire escapes are not objected| peated Mra, Parrons in her rathat | the world, ha an many have contended, i te if they are not obstructions, how-| dreamy tones, “Why. we thn perety It tn hecanae she has more itberty than if, ” u eo ly other women of an; io pLa¢ FB, ata Se Shae int: | a ttn [Saks row evan! tear] TOQ COMMANDING WARNING CIRCULARE OF NO AC: “Phe woman shaped like an hour Perera 20s ele aan ed ’ whom one saw everywhere @ a COUNT AT ALL, | qiase whom ome cvyucoran mer ehe | Set tee, mash fo sat and an wan ALLEGES HUSBAND ~ gesent Monroe street fire the escapes) abectutely atraight up end down sodas ean eatee tee 8 ake 7 swore not blocked as was at fret re: woman of to-fay ts elmoct equally feos ba pat ey parted, and that those wi succeed) aanatuarel, if lees obtrusively esty. “1 think It's @ eplendid thing that th ” 2 Brgetting out of the building safely] To." Stmeneat tacel of feminise | American youne eit! le taking euch an | Holland Says Wife Was So ) ie tile eves to Se task Wat she fire] Qeeuty remaine the classto type. | interest in athletion. Bho walka, rides, Nagging He Had he eneapes rf. the golden mean between angles drives, rows, plays tennis, golf and | concer| Serco eae Se | al ing s.| . i tow posded, nor comatrieted, but has | consequence «me rarely ness the ‘dumpy" Under Fire. Reon left to follow the sataral tines | maiden, Alracet Invariahly the girl of _—! of growth and development. “To thin woman te the loveliest of all. But almost any w ery lives to-day fe inches taller than har mother.” “Yet ‘en't % possthle,” 1 avmmssted, “that a girl may ‘train tno strenuously? seen girl athieter of soolety wi and fiat-chestad as hal Like her distinguished fathe: eral Hood, the tall, fierce Misi [who was tn New York, They the orincipal languages of the world. - Fo ene editors of these publications Com- missioner Murphy will send requests tor @urning editorials on the fre escape @ifficulties, He will also appeal to the ‘of all the morning and afternoon yet to do with the “What do you propose ‘and tons of stuff you will confie- Murphy was nt not redeemed in thirty days we @might auction it off—that is, the im- perishable stuff” he sald. THE BEST SUNDAY READING. To make Ove cents go as far as pos gible get a copy of the Guaday World to-morrow and anjo: & i4-pase erowded with arta structive as the: and thet's saying & grea' ‘Another copy of “FUN,” Weekly Joke Book th arow AIM OF ATHLETICS SHOULD BSE TO DEVELOP WEALTH. eo herpic type, and I dare sa: hi ls lesa monotonous for our Mfterences.” ‘We ware talking in Mre. Parsons’s workmanlike atudin et No, 204 Waat Thirteenth street, My eyes fell op « email bronze of s nude woman that ‘even in tts miniature form showed the grecioun Gravk linea, the pase of rbyth- mic perfection, “It ia a water nymph.” explained the sculptor, aa she caught the direction my glance, “She Is more girl than god- dese, but [ beve tried to make her an expression of natural feminine beauty and charm, You can't imagine wearing @ corent, oan you, or a bev: shapeless bat op that thrown-beck tively commanded those about her. says she commanded him until he hi his life “intolerable and unbearable.” The rebeliion in the Holland fam! was brought into court to-day wh Jetios, paradoxical as {t sounds. shonkt not be the making of athletes but the development of sermaily healthy buman ca Commissioner Fel anent alimony, F i : 3 i i 2 | » Holla jf nish Company. He has an income about $10,000 a year, besides ownl: stock in the concern, Mrs, i h j d i i dren, E. H. Holland jr. years, and Odille Holland, aged t y , two years ago, Holland adm: the abandonment, but atieges that Mi Holland habitually nagged him untdl was driven from her Mra, Holland ie the great Masissippi plantations, one of acres and the other of 1,20 acres, head?” “Yes, but she ls reasonably slender,” Lebjected. “At least, abe isn't fat. Do you think all woman ebould go without corsets?” ry day more women are leaving Teens asserted, with “That is one got | z tp eamiredl: ing And grace of movement have nuch to éo with the general impreasion of beauty which a woman's figure gives. That ‘9 why I believe that the free, in- dependent woman has an sesthetic vantage over her timid, tradition-bound sister, The woman whose thoughts are free unconsciously translates them into 1 |unshackled, graceful movement Her shoulders are thrown back, her head fa well up and she meets the world with brave eyes. About her hangs 01 trace of the cringe and crouch of the bondwoman. And, happily, the entire trend of the modera world ‘s toward the multiplication of this type of womanhood." 2 i ete fg words and music of “Hach Pearl a Thought,” the famous love cong trom T Say.” ‘on the ni the Agu: Gdltorial Gootion feature: “The eta ‘Whdon ural lines but that in time it changes and distorts them, {t ts not the natural framew: of the humas body, To my Wajority of women would be attractive if they never wore walsts, from the cotton crops, weevil. ——_-— Woman Ass! t jon) BORDENTOWN, N, Mabel Jarrett, dav:rht Jan, 10.—M! of Mra, Gi eee tal, Trenton, has been appointed THE EVENING WORLD, SATURDAY, JANV The Hausfrau or Knitting Needle OF THE DANCER. PARIS, Jan. 10.—Maurice Dekobra studying the quarantess: jeep wrinkles etween the eyes, a double set of weinkles about the neck, a deep quick development of a double and sometimes a triple chin, insloping unhealthy-looking shoulders, fossa of distinction in the style of carrying tho head, as among the results of dancing this step too fre- He saya he finds the men the dance Mra. Odille Hood Holland, has instino- fact, Bdward H. Holland, her husband, to desert her, ae he put it, she made tice Guy awarded Mra, Holand $250 in ace tion sult brought Standerd Var- Holland asserts that her hus- band deserted her and their two chil- aged elght cated near Woodville; but the proceeds Mra. Holland testified, have been exceedingly meagre because of the devastations of the ball trude Jarrett of th's city, a graduate of the Training, School of Mercy Hospi- pagina tn nent Preacher-Actor in BELIEVE WOMAN HEADS GANG OF COUNTERFETERS “Mrs. Jane Brown,” Distin- guished Appearing, Arrested With Raised Bill. SEEKING CONFEDERATES Gold Notes for $20 Being} Raised by Criminals and Passed for $50. “Mrs. Jane Brown,” @ waa! looking Englishwoman, was arraigned | to-day in the United Staten Commis- sioner’s Court on a charge of trying to Pass a raised bill. Behind this appar- | ently not uncommon charge, secret eer. | || Yiee amen belteve, Mea one of the most | ~ @ | Tomantic of counterfeiting ewindies, with an organised gang of the cleverest | rime and an adroit scheme of “shorng the queer” in many cities. The secret 2 |pervice men have been trying for months OOOO: counterfeit Bills and believe that Brown” offers the key to the pussie. “Mrs. Brown was arrested yesterday afternoon in Gimbel Brother depart. ment etore efter she had offered a 90 di ¢o pay for a 960 umbrella. The employees of the store had been warned to be on the lookout for epurious (20 notes and the one offered by che woman ‘was of the kind being sought. During the Christmas shopping rush various stores and hotels in New ¥ ‘Degan to complain about the’ receipt of bad 960 dill, On examination it was found that these bills were really $20 notes, cleverly erased and “raised” te 0, Evidently large numbers of the bills were being circulated, and the at- tempt to trace the gullty persons led to the brief detention of various women who offered the bills. In each case the woman held found to be of high character, and \t was shown that the ‘pad” dill had come to her as “change.” SECRET VICE WILL MAKE |navis, known on the etage as Adele MANY ARRESTS. Blood, leading woman in “Every- ‘The police Gnally reduced their watch-| woman.” The bill was filed yesterday fulness to one woman described ae be-/in the Supreme Court, ing English, about forty years old, Mrs. Loulee Power Bryant, wife of tremely well Gressed, ‘tall, blonde| Frederick E. Bryant, actor and etege and distinguished looking.” Yesterday |director, aad known on the stage as ehe walked inte Gimbel Brothers, | Jule Power, is named as 0o-respondent. brelias, selected one| Miss Power is leading woman for Davis Adele. Blood Sues Preacher- Actor and Names Jule Power as Her Rival. Edward Davis, actor and former Deeacher, has been named as defendant in an action for @ivorce by Mra. Adele sisted ¢hat it John J. Henry, local head of the Secret | Bryant and then | Bervice, took charge of ¢he case and im-| Mr. Bryant named Davis as co-re- ' mediately began to spread a net in half ja dozen cities to apprehend the other | members of what he feels certain ts a large and clever gang of swindiers, | It was rumored that Capt. Henry was | having two large loca! hotels watched for mate confederates of “Mrs. Brown.” Another report said that the men had ‘been at the hotels, but had fled at the | wife’ warning given by thelr female confed- | Bryant eal erate’s failure to return, Capt. Henry had the woman taken to the offices of the Secret Service in the Custom House, and subjected her to four hours of rigorous crose-examina- tion without finding out anything mate- rial, Bhe admitted that she had passed | eral of the bills, but denied that had any confederates or that al had given o false name. Shp would not say where she had come trom or give her New York address, FIGURE “2” ERASED AND “6” IN- had been married at Manchester, Mass., in 197, and lived bapplly until Davis came on the scene. The Giret intimation he received of his 8 misconduct with Davis, Mr. id, was trom L. C. Jenks, Destin; He went to the apartment which he and his wife had occupied be- fore she weat on tour, and found it stripped of ite furniture. The janitor told him Mre, Bryant had put it in storage. ‘These allegations in the Bryant case eet forth in Mrs, Davis's complaint She adds that her husband has contin- \ued his alliance with Jule Power eve: since. She asks for an absolute divorce and alimony. Davis began his public life as a Wife and Actress She Accuses " SDELE, BLOOD MR [ WIFE CASTS DAVIS |ACQUIT OFFICE FOR VILLAIN ROLE | OF ARMY ACCUSED INDIVORCE DRAMA, IN ALSACE RIOTS "| imprisonment imposed on him Dec, 19, stage carpenter for “The Kingdom of | P Divorce Drama, DWARDS Court Holds Col. Von Reuter, Lieut. Schad and Lieut: Von Forstner Were Insulted. STRASSBURG, Germany, Jan. 10— Courts-martial to-day acquitted all the German army officers charged with breaches of the law in connoction with the recent violent Incidents between the military and civilians of Zabern, the Military judges in all cases accepting the word of the officers against the sworn testimony of the civillan wit- nesses, Col. von Reuter, commander of the Ninety-ninth Infantry, was charged with wrongful imprisonment, but the court found hie acte justifiable and eet him | Tee free. Lieut. Schad, acoused of striking a prisoner, was also released by the same court of the ground that the charge had not been proved. Léeut. Baron von Foretner, won his appeal befure @ second court-martial against the sentence of forty-three days’ on a charge of sabring lame shoe maker al ‘The justin acta was based by the cree issued by the King of Prussia in 1890, which gavo the right to the mill- tary to Intervene without waiting for « st from the civil authorities In the latter were powerless to sup- ds This decree ently service instructions, and in present date in Alsace, alti sequent laws do not authorize military action without a requisition from the civilian authoritie The decree was insued at the time of the Holy Alliance, which existed from 1815 to 1990, between the European sov- Attomey General Ca COVERING 24 MILES “3 MUST BE TORN UP Causes Forfeiture of Chai of the Unused Lines. | to Remain Until Streets Are Repaired. More than twenty-four miles ¢f used or only occasionally used railway tracks in this elty are te removed and the etreste restored to the city. ‘This action te made possible ) the action to-day of Att i Carmody, who announced from AlRSGy the revocation of forty-two street way franchises. For a number of years many of Street car tines of thie city have. @bandoned the use of certain portions. their trackway or run @ car @ 4a7 them as “franchise holders.” Now, the announcement of the Att oral, these tracks are to come up et expense of the several reeds @ightliness of the streets ments for the forfeiture of these | used lines of the New York ‘Company, formerly the a Btreet Raliway, have deen entered | Carmody. y Attorney <eneral r. ¢ HOLDERG OF THE PORTV-TWO > oe politan Street Railway, New Harlem, Ninth avenue, Second with the city the sum of f, share of the cost of eemoving ite ‘The olty will bear the semainder expense when the time comes Cor repaving. FIGHT AGAINST THEM IN 1908, ‘The action to-day of Att 1 Carmody te the final order work which was begun ae far 1908, When the Public Servise C misalon come existence oa 1907, there were more than miles of unused or, tracks and very econ complaints 0¢ to come in from property owners from the Téam Owners’ ‘They declared the tracks to - ereigns and was intended to perpetuate the relgning dynasties and prevent rev- olutions, The President of the courtmartial tn expiaining the verdict of acquittal sald IRTED. According to Capt. Henry, the work on the dills which have been taken up in the last month is all of exactly sim- Nar character. The original dills are in every case $20 bank notes, The figures | are very carefully erased and fresh 60s put over them. The only discoverable | flaw és that the substituted figures are not quite eo clear and distinct as the originals. ‘The theory és that the money ts being | spalsed” in @ Western city and being | appear! passed in New York. The woman ia Power has been merely the agent for exchange—the | Ville thaa on in California, Joaquin Miller jm the sobriquet, “The Talmage West.” He preachea in Oakland with considerable success, but aban- doned the pulpit because, as he said, there wasn't enough money init As & acher he was known as the Rev. Cader Russel! Davis. He was gradu- ‘ated from Kentucky University. While he was preaching in Oakland Davis married Mise Alta Margaret ily en “hover,” in the crime argot. ‘The particular bill presented at Gtm- bel's was @ $20 note of the National Bank of Ellendale, N. D., and the work ‘on {t was not so good as on some of the others. iliac HELD ON ASSAULT CHARGE. nd of ng Confused by the traMc about him, Rudolph Pfeiffer, thirty-two years old, of No, #6 Ninth avenue, Astoria, L. 1, was knocked down to-day by « taxicab t Broadway and Fifty-elghth street and his skull was fractured. He 1s at Roosevelt Hcapital and may not live, ‘Two men walking along the Long Ie! and Railroad track on the edge of ‘Whitestone were halted early to-@ay by Detective Kelly. He noticed that one; The taxicab, which was driven by of the men had blood on his coat, and! y,sepn g, Phillips of No, 2272 il decided to take both to the Whitestone |), was going south on tear at: police station. A few minutes later « v ata’ ie eee 8 report came in that @ pair of burglars, | yy, ap eet geo secreted in the plant of the Kinema- eae taken ais wo te re. he wo lo- y ruck the injured color Film Company, in Whitestone the cab by Phillips and his passenger, had beaten the night watchman and | soggy guilivan of No. 39 Mount Vernon then fled without stealing anything. stree:, Hoston, and rushed to the hose The watonman, Jacob Moore, had deen i191, with a policeman on tho running attended by @ physician and had gone | joara of the cab. home. i] Bae Ses ‘The prisoners said they were Uarry (TRE SLOGAN OF THE JAM Sohwerts of No. 1886 Third avenue, the| (Prom tue Cleveland, Pato Dealer) Bronx, and Harry Cohen of No, 214| “Move up, move up!" roared the con- 'gast One Hundred and Fourteenth | ou: ‘amrnattan, Both denied know- Ing auything about the beating of the, Mun’ Le jer- aa ‘ever oot im type we SUNDAY WORLD WANTS Howptal at Onin, x ad an j Lrebyrgint4 Pebvsngeeatsh pet It wae de- h it ti whe gets in the not order the Sundey World ieave bere on Jan, to take up iar | to mm wal watchman | vestivule,” shouted the congucter. iy sewetease WORK MONDAY WONDERS dete cen | : ow [could ace them, | "Adove we move wl gia ll med iia mp tee Te i it had benn established by the evidence that the officers of the Ninety-ninth Infantry Regiment had been constantly insulted and stoned by civilians in Za- bern, and on one occasion shots had been fired. ‘The court, he sald, was convinced that the civil authorities of the town had falied to act with the necessary en- ing the outbreakas, and ton of the court the military officers undoubtediy justified in arresting the people who had insulted them, The Court oriered that the coste of the sult should be pald by tho State, ulated aE QUINN MAKES TWO RAIDS. p Evidence Guined hy Follows r Sergt. Quinn and twenty detectives under the direction of Deputy Police Commissioner Newburger made raids early to-day over the head of Dwyer at two pla: in West For fourth street, near Broadway. Prison- ere describing themselves as Frank Hogan, thirty-one, No. 250 West Forty- fourth street, and Edna Bright, colori No, 102 West Thirty-ninth street, taken in one place charged with keep- ing @ dinorderly house, and William Doran, No. 67 Elgnth avenue, was ar- vested on a almilar charge in the other. Detective Quinn had been posing as a “Millionaire Kid" to get evidence. ‘The police give the address of the first raid as No, 155 West Forty-fourth reet, the Cate Latin Quarter, formerly known as the Green Turtle, The other place is given on the records as the Rosedale, a furnished room house at No, 20 West Forty-fourth street, ~ (Prom Her Vartner—If you Mra, Newrocks, we'll at down & Iittle tete: » shall wet Mra, Newrocks—Ob, dear me, no; After gueh & big supper I eat sagther (bing thanke. onty unsightly, but @ constant met to the wheels of vehicles. 0 Commission of the First District New York called upon Att Malley, who was than in begin action to declare certain chises forfeit. The matter was hands of Assistant Kennedy, and aaa ’ charge of it ever sinc, =. | + | ‘The first of the street railway Hee be abandoned was the Fulton street Mme, which ceased running cara June 1004, Other lines followed at and naw ail of them not using tracks have had their franchises yoked, The polley of the is to require the railroads te the rails what selves as scrap iron. But if the attends to the removal it will the rails as it sees At, see sas SAVED ON “L” TRACKS. ney Lenape for Fraim Misene! and te Badly wort, ' Men and women on the Jackson nue station of the subway, at Second avenue elevated trains, ‘over « portion of the subway ti also stop, were terrified this . ‘ when Ofteen-year-old Ralph Ginger, 6F- No. 166 Trinity avenue late for downtown, ran across the and jumped for the rear the last car of elevated train pulling out of the platform. Me the jump and fell to the tracks, ‘The boy had fallen so that he within a few inches of the but he had not touched it hauled him out on the platform, Dr. Paley of Lebanon Hospital him. He found the boy's right left arm badly cut and took ™ ¥