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‘ "PNM cP TES THE 1080) “AFTER ZERO HASE AD 1) ers nervy “ | FouR.time ! Serer! 5 ha ae dition an atter ‘he hed’ retired. gue e f ‘ Young Patrolman, Off Duty, | Lehn se Promises to Go Back After Pre- te iearn se ne ae al ight Wren | Americans Among Those tow Finds Big Negro Looting —§ SS ENOUGH liminary Hearing of Mile | as, unable, core ave ‘weno ‘nis! Whom Money Is Due—He ' His House. sii Soe lionaire Companion. “hey ‘wit ste} Wants Cash for Army. % your nerves and help you to sleep.” Ps — He did so, a FIGHTS HIM IN LOT. NERVOUS, 7 7 yovleNe (fipsclad to The Brening World.) la Mine MEXICO CITY, Jan, 1%-<Allesing 6o PR rion BECOMING MOBILE, Ala, fan. 13--Deiilah Brad-| STOLE BABY CARRIAGES. Ita excuse that the. pacincatign of = io , WRINKLED “ Wy Ge DN Wee ones ee oe ee Deteotive McGrath of the Mortivanin| Hest Prose pd anneual HUH HG ROSE ill [itty rll il | i; et 1 iy Fe I i i Hf tie hy e the ae-| more time and money than you can afford. But that isn't all. There is ro window excellent medical authority for the prediction that the 3 —S bond cpp tango will eventually “get” you with almost the facility 4s E o Ferrer lie ot a New York gunman or a Kentucky feudist. In plain ee bee br ‘ae cieadh a English, the tango, or rather the New York version of : : E daa 44 € La loom owed bam, it, fe dangerous to life and limb, not to mention health ' 5 ; - - : AEE The negro scales the fence ime an and good looks. If you've escaped so far it’s no sign ‘ eee ree Caen “geet you'll always be so lucky. biccisbr lrg eg raph rvs ermer The pathological perils of the dance, which has where he turned again and darted into received eo much attention in its moral aspécts, have fa big vacant lot. Brennan continued only just begun to be seriously considered. A French soe bie ees gregh teongieny investigator discovered that the eyes and necks of negro 484 got halt. tango performers quickly became wrinkled, that their mouths had a drawn s me mo meithis of tee voces ie expression and their shoulders sloped, that they did not carry their heads ‘atood ground Brennan ‘negro peeled ‘cs bana 2 fea and—horror of horrors!—that they were subject to double and revelver as @ club. He had to give the chins. negro Be subd- Dr. Cecile L, Greil of the Manhattan Trade School confirmed all these 8 Perils of the Tango Are Broken Hips, Heart Disease and Loss of Good Looks' ELOPING GIRL, |S Your PULSE 'S BEATING Two B “There Ie No Doubt That Modern Dancing Ie a Physically Dangerous Fad,” Says Dr. Claude evidowes hag ot the United @taten Diatriet- Atsorney — Ha ed re hahoeg Mauer‘s | p: Jan 1, April 1, July i and “ ore at No, 5 nn's venue, | € enough to enjoy | proper sleep, retired L. Wheeler, “ yesterday afternoon to talk over the| MoGuire was held for Special Searians, | $4i,000,0m) 4 per cent, Kold bongs of @t bis bome about 190 o'clock this A ItleA ° in Ne case with those who will prosecute! ani went to a cell. 194; coupons payable June 1 and w morning. Ap hour or ee later hie father, as le Abused lew a deen York—The New Dances Teach Women to Drink.” By Marquertte ‘Tho tango will “get” you if you don't watch out! Maybe it’s “got” you already, in the sense that you're spending on ft YOU WAVE LL, AS a . - beat ¥en __$8B BVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, JANU BY 18, 1014. a; ~—|DELILAH BRADLEY Foster, While she waa there her ’ath- er was brought into the room, “Papa! she cried. “y Delilah,” he sak, “and T am flere to tae you back home.” Father wnd daughter had a tong talk. In the Distriot- Attorney's office, Mr. Bradley was on the verge of @ Nervous collapse when he reached Mo- TO RETURN HOME not slept a wink wince £ left "he sald, You PRiNK “TOO The young woman was very much at Pemberton, N. J., with Joel M. Fos: ter, @ millionaire of Brown's Mills, N tw ¥ J., will return home after the prelim. ¥ inary examination of Foster on a charge, station saw & man pushing two baby! ment wan made to-day that the seuni- carriages along Wentchester avenue! annual interest tmyment on Mexiéo’s near Brook avenue, the Bronx, about! internal and external bonded debt Gus 1.9 o'clock this morning and stopped! this month will be passed. It was eal of white slavery before United States that all avatiavle fun Commissioner Richard Jones jr, on jus’ pushin’ ‘7m outa mer way." | to oarmy, buying arme an@ Wednesday, Will go with hor father, | Mumbled the my_, “Street all cluttered | q mand paying the soldiers Harry % Bradley, who reached Mobile| UP Dabdy carrtayes. Can't get by ‘em. | Internal and external & cop? Ought regulate tramic "I will go back home with you," anid the girl to her father when they met to-day in the office of the United States District-Attorney’s office, The father Leng weary and worn, but he smiled at McGrath took him to the station where he sud he was Edwant MeGuire, & bricklayer, of No, 903 Bast One Hui ¢ are dred and Third street tor he was arraigned before Magia McQuade | « in the Morrisanta Court. McGuire sald he had been drinking, but McGrath said he though McGuire’ intoxication was assumed for the o- casion Inaamuch as be discovered that one of the baby carriages had been | soli dites of payment € s follows: ed Internal 3 per. coupons payable of reo, 1. per cent. internal redeem ; coupons payable Apri. £ © 5 per cent. External Con- gold loan of 18%; coupons he anid. “You are atil] my daughter. Your place is at home with your moth- or.” ‘Miss Bradley was called to the office Moocere Marshall. Gire prophecies, and added that she expected an epidemic of foot troubles to follow the present dancing crase, In « recent number of the Journal of the American Medical Association a writer points out that there is grave danger for the many elderly persons who have taken up the new dancing, Housing New York City’s if & because of the extra strain on their And when I talked with Dr. Claude 1, Wheeler, editor of the New York Medical Journal, I found him full of forebodings as to the physical effect of turkey trotting on the human sys- tem, MODERN DANCING THING AWFUL. “There's no question,” he said, “that jee, He hed two watches, a cigar hold- er, a etickpin, a gold chain, two candle| modern dancing is a physically dan- ticks, €0ld spectacles and several) geroun fad. Why can't the middle- lockets, To-day he was held for the/aged and the elderly, at least, stick to <frand Jury in $2,600 ball on a charge of burglary by Magistrate Marsh in the West Farms police court. Magistrate Mareh highly compliment- ed Poltceman Brennan for his bravery and courage in chasing and capturing the man under the severe handicap of no gboes or stockings, scanty attire and the tcy biasts of t! Columbia University a student addressed | wascier, “to the sort of thing one sees the student body in the chapel there! 1, tne New York Gnd Parle dance hails to-day when Wallace ©. Taylor of the] aiq restaurants, It seems too bad to clase of 196 gav report of the! sum up these dances under the generic Y. M,C. A, misato conferonce held of ‘tango’ and heap criticlam on y at Kansas City, Kan, Mr. A young man told me the other ylor Was & delegate from the unl-| day that he had eeen the tango danced versity to the convention, at which! in Buenos Ayres by Aj inians in Practically every cotlege in the United) thelr native coatume, and that it was a States was represented. graceful, beautiful thing. He added FAT LESS AND TAKE Shilea ‘tango of New ‘York and Parts SHTS FOR KDNEYS ak hearts ontinued ex- *" he replied. 4 Certainly there 1 nothing of grace or Deauty mbout our local version of the South American original.” “Just what are some of the physical Gangers of these dances?” I asked the doctor, “The Journal of the Americ Association is certainly ‘ake a glass S if y speaks of the peril to Take a glass of Salts if your] speaks of the peril to, Back hurts or Bladder | ertions of the new dance: bothe: “Furthermore, there ‘s the danger of tehanitaald bursting a blood vessel, And sere ne ble chance of fracturing the ‘The Smeriens on gh women must beget je constantly against troul eer comelaniy ener Sr our { THE OLDER THE DANCER THE fs rich. Our blood is filled with uric MORE DANGEROUS. acid, which the kidneys strive to filter} ‘The older the dancer the more prob- out; they weaken from overwork, become} able this danger of fracture, because sluggish; the eliminative tissues clog, and| the bones of the middle-aged and the the result is kidney trouble, lder| elderly are specially brittia, But only weakness and a general decline in health. | this week ;there were two caves right When your kidneys feel like lumps of| here in New York of youn persons lead; your back hurts or the urine is} who sustained fracsures of the hip cloudy, full of sediment or you are} bone while drrcing the tango, There obliged to seek relief two or three times| is sharp and suvere strain on that ‘during the night; if you suffer with sick] member in the deop dip which ts #0 headache, or dissy, nervous » ecid| generally interpolated in this dance, stomach, or % have rheumatism when there is the physteal ‘the weather is bad, get from your phar-| twain of long hours of violent ox- “macist about four ounces of Jad Salts;| epeise undertaken, for the most takes tablespoonful in ® glass of Suse, by persons unaccustomed to wer oelere (wena CLS Cy Ren! oe nae Se ne Gone et me ur . ‘This famous salts is made from the acid] Zresast metmod of danaing fo tie. of grapes and lemon juice, combined with tithia, and has been used for generations stimulate cloy kidneys; he acids in the urine so it source of irritation, thus to flush MEN GHOW MORE SENSE THAN WOMEN. “It elso seems to me that women wear the wrong clothes for euch tren: tfal effervescent | vous work,” continued Dr. Wheeler, and belongs in| unconsclously confirming Dr. Grell's make| statements, ‘I should think they would fhasb-| be torvibty uncemfertable in enn ie, comasis and Usht, earpew chine, ive; cannot in- pees er ped eas coolest XS 18 SOME-| le it. hearts, throw the msvemente upon wrong sets of muscles, ve Then his blue eyes tv inkled. “The men have a trick worth two of that,” he chuckled, “They wear tango you know. A man would dance an ordinary dress shirt to pleces in a ain- So there has been designed ing wear a soft white shirt, not claim to be an latest haberdashery, lar is worn with @ reasonably sible costume even for conduct! wreatling match on @ dancing floor.’ He shook his head with a slight ironi- cal Uft of his well~marked eyebrows, though a tolerant smile tempered the irony. Dr, Wheeler is as wholesomely un-cynical as the afternoon sunshine that Moods in at the window left of his desk. When I asked him if he had any psychological explanation of the pre- vailing 4: madness, he only laughed. of doors, But the craze for motoring and the craze for turkey trotting ure both due to the modern impulse to get away from one's self, to forget one's troubles and leties in somo intoxi- cating pleasure, “The normal way of self-forgetful- ness is to throw one's self into one's work, But there are many who try other ways.” TANGOING 18 A DECIDED NER. VOUS STRAIN, “Then you f I suggested, “that the new dances are an abnormal mani- featation, that they are bad for nervox as well as for hip bones?” “Modern dancing ts «8 decided nervous strain. It requires great concentration of the will as well as physical effort, and it is emo- ttomally exci! au “Once we went to parties and dancea five or six hours during the Now we begin at ¢ in the and keep !t up into the small hours o: the morning, barely stopping for a bite of dinner. “Purthermnore, the dancin quently done in hot, dusi crowded, fil-ventilated rooms, Just sit- ting atill in these room: would be in- to fre. Jurious to the health, and they are aurely not suited to vigorous exercine, Also I believe that dancing in rentau- rants tends to increase the consump- tion of alcoholic liquors among women. They become hot and thirst: the dance and the means of tion is only too close at hand, are persuaded to tasti they would have left ie, ie =ohyateria won't 1 Wheeler concluded, optimiet: muat way, though, that th stops the better for women, --———_—>_-—_. A BOOK BY A FAMOUS AUTHOR, Somolee y-] as tnatalnena. One a week wi World “The Retura of ‘Tersan;? sequel to “Tarsan of the Apes,” be oye Monday. Order from news- ‘They what otherwise + over. | ANIMALS PAINTED ON THEIR FACES AS BEAUTY PATCHES. STORK OVERTAKES HER ON WAY TO HOSPITAL n| Pursues Mrs. Siegel From Subway to Police Station and De. livers Burden, Mrs, Guasle Siegel waa awakened this morning by the rustling of the wings of the stork at her\home, No. 1428 Stebbins avenue, anf calling her husband they Greseed hurriedly and started tor the Jewish Maternity Hospital, in Kast Broadway. Their course lay dy the subway, and it was thelr intentlon to get off at Canal atreet, but the national bird grew so importunate that they oame to the surtace at @pring street and Siegel whis- pered the news to Policeman Lawieas standing on the corner, | Lawless wrapped the woman in his jovercoat and carried her atound the corner to the Mulberry street station, and Lieut. Lyons sent for Mrs, B. Bot. tino, a midwife, living near by, and summoned am ambulance from Bt. Vin- cont's. When Dr. Baldwin arrived he found mother and daughter doing well and took them to the Jewish Meternity espital Telephone System ‘W YORK CITY has more ‘han 526,000 telephones. Through these teler:.ones over 2,000,000 messages are sent daily. To provide quarters for the 13,700 telephone workers and protection for the telephone apparatus necessary td furnish such a comprehensive service, requires extensive and efficient housing facilities. : Each section of the city must be served promptly and satisfactorily. It must have within easy call, telephone employees ready to install new service, to make repairs or inspections and to protect and maintain the service. Handy storerooms for sup- plies and equipment must be provided. Emergency forces must be conveniently located. In the “telephone center” of each section, therefore, there is located a completely equipped telephone building, of modest and economical design, yet of the best fireproof construction. It contains the switchboard that serves that section, and that is connected to all the other switehboards in the city by a network of “trunk wires.” It provides safe and pleasant quarters for employees and protection for apparatus. Our illustrations show a few of the 56 fireproof buildings that house the city’s telephone system. In each section also there is a “Commercial Office,” where the public may conveniently transact business with the company. This efficient and economical plan for housing the city’s telephone system is a big factor in helping us to provide in New York City “The Best Telephone Service in the World.”’