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BOND REQUEST Y DOGK TOUGK LUNES Maltbie, After Investigation, | Holds Up Plan to Scale Down Deals. \ FRANCHISE BOUGHT? Entry on Company’s Books Not to Liking of the ‘Tee Dry Dock, East Broadway and corporation ymin | fn All Their Athletics the Aim of the Greeks Was to Combine the Maximum Amount of Activity With the Mini- mum Expenditure of Energy,’’ Says Mre. Diana Watts, Which, She Adds, Is the Secret of Being Beautiful. the Pubiio Service Com- permission to issue §3,- 890,000 tm bonds to fund ite variety @ Siena te th debts, listed as bell atone Counsel for inquiring “The Fashionable Debu- tante Slouch Is a Sor- rowful Thing and Ruin- ous to the Figure’ Value of the Principle of Balance in Movement Explained. To The Evening World Co: er Maltbie said: For these women of forty-seven. And yet she has no desire to dis- Place golf, football, dancing or eny other of our well-loved bodily exer- ciees, When she lectures at Yale and at the Colony Club she will explain that her syater, far from being op- the atblete and the dancer more pro- ficient and more beautiful than ever before. , the MEN AND WOMEN CAN ALL BE BEAUTIFUL. “We can all be beautiful, told me, earnestly, when I talked with ber at the National Arte Club. “Men and women, we can have the beautiful strong bodies of the ancient Greeks if ‘we make use of their secret. I believe that I have discovered it. In all their athletics the alm of the Greeks was to coml the mazimum «mount of activity with the minimum expendi- ture of energy. “Te be strong and beautiful all the muscles must be exercieved; not one est at the expense of the others. It is the lack of harmony in the modern woman which | 60 deprecate. Thie fashionable debu- tante slouch ie a dreadful thing and ruinous to the figure. The firet step toward putting all the muscles in a proper state of ten- clon is to stand properly, with the weight on the balls of the feet. When a weman stands she should the ear, the shoulder, the hip and the ball of the foot are in @ atraight line.” ‘That is how Mrs. Watts stands, She rose to show me, anc then obligingly talisation almost in managers to give inferior high rates.” - ‘ehows BLOCKS OF SKIN BY INGESSANT LIGHT Doctor, by Sunlight and Electricity, Covers Boy's Large Wound and Avoids Grafting. A new process of covering wounds with néw ekin by means of light and “Over. air was announced last night by Dr. Josegh Schmaskin of the Lebanon Hospital, who told how by keeping an imcessant glare of sunlight, and 1 electric lights. when there Bo sun, on the neck and breast By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. low would you like to be a Greek goddess at forty-seven? You can be. What women has done woman can do. And within three ‘Tears of completing the first half-century of her life the remarkable English woman, Mrs. Diana Watts, possesses the resilient curves, @he slender, springing lines, the buoyant liberty of Movement which make the goddess-women of the Greek friezes the loveliest things brain of man ever dreamed, hand of man ever fashioned, or eye of man ever saw. THE EVENING WORLD, P:S:C. DEADLOCKED' Woman of 50 Can Look Like a Greek Goddess, With a Youthful Figure, it She Works for It SATURDAY, MARUEH a 4 Lazy woman's EXERCisé are no mere bodiless visions of a soulptor; they are far too vital for that. They once walked the earth, and, in the opinion of Mrs. Watts, there is no reason why women like them should not people the modern world—even up to and past the age Mrs. Watts bas just arrived in America to found a new system for per- fecting the control of the human body. Roughly speaking, she may be said to have a new method of physical training. is the ball of the font. Therefore, a Proper control of the abdominal muscles is necessary to keep the law of balance in movement. Most ‘women have not this control, because of the corsets with which they ruin their figures." THE KIND OF CORSET THAT SHOULD BE WORN. “You are absolutely “opposed cori T asked, ‘ he replied, rather surpris- ingly, “I always wear a girdle corset. But it Is very short, and it te loose enough not to weaken my muscles by artificial constriction mas- querading as support. “I believe in my idea, but I don't care to make a fad of jt. Therefore, I am not silly enough to preach the doing away with conventional dress for conventional occasions. All I urge fe an adaptation of this Uress to avold discomfort. I should hate to have people turn around and stare at me!” Mrs, Watts added with a little shiver of dislike. An1 she was dressed in a neat but not at all unusual blue taflored suit, with hat to match—very becoming to her hazel eyes and the English pink in her cheeks, and pleasantly sug- gestive to other reformers who think idiosyncrasy a profitable advertise- ment of ideas, “After a person stands and walks correctly, what other exercises do you recommend?" I asked. to Ni @fihie home, No. 380 West One Hun- @e04 and Fitty-cighth street, Jan. 37, Mw had grown thirty square inches of Bew skin over the wounds. ‘The parents of the child were too poor to pay for akin grafting, so Dr. cenenn, who makes ana aor stud: such cases, dec! a it. “rh boy will be dis- Harpe to-day perfectly healed. ‘A little girl from whose leg about twenty square inches of skin were he : inganes and wl lave theo same illustrated the right way to walk, which is the next thing to learn after the standing ition. “It sounds simple,” she emiled. “But {t seems extremely difficult to most persons. The rig t way to walk is to advance while keeping the stationary pose. “Every step should be taken on the ball of the foot, and the body should go ferward all te- gether. The average women puts her foot forward and helde the reset ef herself back. She seems afraid te advance above the knee. But the great law of balance In movement, which alone ie able to assure the economy ef fo claree that the centre of gravity must be kept over the base. “Maturally, the centre of gravity in the human body is very near the cen- tre of the body. Ad the proper base ) leave the hospital in ho discovery is considered of the it importance by Dr. Schmas- his Rrother physicians at the ————_—_ Call te National Banke. \ a “In my book, ‘The Renaissance of the Greek Ideal,’ which is shortly 4 be published, I have twelve basic exercises which will put the muscles in a proper slate of tension,” she re- plied, arm movements. Others are movements. But they involve every muscle of the human body, and stretch it to its fullest tension. Tha is what is needed; not detached calisthenics which knot the muscles in certain parts of the body and leave other parts unexercised. No Greek sculptor ever carved an atbiete with an abnormally developed muscle or @ bulging cord. “Under perfect conditions of balance the human being may achieve in movement the acour- acy of the compass, the limbs eoming capable of describing the moet complicated geometrical designs. And no apparatus of any thie training “Gome of them are chiefly) 4 tou | Any woman may take up the ex- ercises | recommend and perform them in her own home. They lly compose what the Greeks called fect.” aervatol duties, manent Res gym though they di of the dance their rhythm ts per- Incidentally, Mrs. Watta will per- form for the firat time during her American visit a real Greek dance which she set to the only piece of Greek music known, now possessed by President Faure of the Paria Con- He gave permission to use it to her alone after hearing her lecture on the Greek ideal, USE OF THE ALANCE. “But once a woman had grasped tho principle of balance in movement she can make use of it In everything she does—in walking, re. in soci Mrs, Watts, “Except that I do not believe she could succeed in redeem- ing the so-called ‘new dances’ from utter ugliness, stronger and more beautiful athfet 1 myself have sent a golf ball much further than an experienced player, and I did not adopt the awkward | golfing atttitude.” “Have you any suggestions as to diet for the woman who would make and keep a Greek figure?” “The modern woman eats toe much and too often. | two meals a day, and though | |, the laziest way of Asking exer- | “Also women should be careful of their shoes, which should be to their what gloves are to the hands, Yr inner line of the shoe should be raight and the heel low. | “The woman who bulances prop- jerly not only looks #0 much better, | but she feels so much better,” the lit- tle Engiish woman ended, glowingly. And I think myself that to have a figure like hers would be w very per- | incentive to an optimistic | outlook. Lvehe-ailianeeebioee SUFFRAGE IN UNION LEAGUE. Opposing Votes | Women Brings Argument to Vote. Impromptu debates on the question of oman's #\ffrage took place at short in- als jn the Union League Club to- ‘The club 4 to put itself on record regarding votes for women when the March meeting takes place next Thurs- Exchange place, one of members, offered ge to ed the resolution tes for women" wal f the club’ eas. | Others argued that the club to put Itaelf on record. ally the committee decided to ri matter to the members next Thi —_—— Rev. Dr. Jowett Wi The Rev. Dr. John Henry Jowett, pas- tor of the Fifth Avenue Iresbyterian Church has de ned to gece wu ional lon ‘ 0 ehureh in London.” He cable Haat to-day, Dr. Jowett came here MIKE LYNCH'S TURTLES, 10,000 OF THEM, RAN OUT WAN FINE NIGHT. They Had rege Treated With a Secret Acid and Mike Val- ued Them at a Million. PRINCIPLE OF On the steamer Almirante of i United Fruit line, which arrived this} morning from W@t Indian and South American porta, was Michael Lynch, | formerly of San Franclaco, Cal. Mr. Lynch ts the apostie of hard luck. He went through the fire of Ban Fran- | claco in 1906 and was broke when re! in household dancing,” continued Bane ear tergeta | fleld, wot in on the boom, sold out hi holdings before the boom sarees and was a fairly fich man when he returned to San Francisco. ‘They were talking turtles when fr. Lynch reached the metropolis of the Pacific, The Gallpagos Islands in the South Pacific offered great adv tages to the investor. So to the G lipagos Islands went Mr. Lynch, In San Francisco he had met a man who sold him the hts to an acid for treating the shells of the turtles, A fortune was ahead Boll hts The soldier of mad headquartera on ropeail Toland on the Mosquito Coast in the Caribbean Sea. In the four years he wan away hi gathered a faim of 10,000 turties., A turtle is worth not leas than §20, but with Mr. Lynch's acid it was eati- mated that one of the ahellbacks was worth at least $100. Mr. Lynoh 1 take only int | limit the quan- bad trick of the ge. Ite worth $1,000,000. He ane up next morning worth not one Betwyeen sunset and so rie those 10,000 turtles got ine 8 a Games and waddied off the H.. sea, He believes a wie stroyed the fence that ‘eld "them | he aaid philosophically, on | to-day “it’e the Lynch luck. All my life I have been on od top or the bottom of fortun wa} I'm on the bottom again, but Tm ri wonder for reaching the top, worth a million dollara for a minute and I'll _be worth it again before I! quit. Watch for the name of M Lynch. Fortune can't fease me, I'v wot another scheme that will make m: another militon before the end of th let you know about it wher ing, Feb, 12 rer of No. 16 & resolution pposing the Constitution ex- i NORDICA’S HEALTH BETTER. of New York, the “reslution |Petma Do Steadily Improving | Saé fererred to the coinmittee on politi- Att P monia Attack. lea Mehea tno auton oie of Committee | THURSDAY IBLAND, Australasie, March 7—The condition of health of Lillian Nordica, the American singer, is said by her physicians to be steadily improving although eubject to frequent to be able to leave aime. Nordica red from @ serious tattack of pneumonia in December, bout by shock and ¢ f the grounding in 7 one oF | announce a new policy regarding tho | Tallroad stations and newapaper of- | ficea, so that persons who ere com- ; Delled to remain up fat 1 A. M, the Mayor says. ‘after that hour, but that part of thi (street for the firet time in twenty- | five years. “I bad to get a locksmith to make “Zhe old one ago. Hut the | epunetan e Gult me af whieh 4, 1914, NEW RULES TO-DAY FOR RESTAURANTS jWill Permit Places Having Cabaret Shows to Do Busi- ness Until 2 A. M. ALL-NIGHT LICENSES. Hotel Dining Rules to Close a’ 1 A. M. With Exemption for Private Parties. Following the closing of Jack's night restaurant, Sixth avenue and Forty-third street, at 1 o'clock thie morning, Mayor Mitchel to-day will closing bour of lobster palaces and other pli where food and driake are sold. Under that policy, all restaurants with cabaret shows will be permitted to do business until 2 A. M., instead of 1 o'clock as heretofore. A certain number cf restaurants will get licenses to temain open all night and drinks may be served in them, but there must be no singing or dancing after 2 o'clock in the morning, The places which will re- ceive all-night Hcenses will be near the morning will be and refreshments. Hotel dining rooms are to be cloned and drinks are not to be served in them provision does not apply io private parties Dunstan's face waa @ study when, promptly at 1 o'clock he turned a hey which closed his all-night plac at Sixth avenue and Forty-third me a key,” he sai y be’ used twice 9 day.” the ree- cn lade int at 3 o'clock "Thureday morn- trouble, re’ ht license. of why he lost his Neense, as told. 0- di rd S Rarer sd eons Jack's, when a college. youth Joined? thers "The wi carve th ordered not to ble men,” he red the college oe . Just then ano.her man passed and made a light remark about the uation, Then a fight was started. My waiters th the fighters out into the Cs doom Can PRESS FU OF PHONY BADGE LANDS EX-INSPECTOR'S SON IN POLICE CELL got through, Then he went to Soy Charles Flood Locked Up for Impersonating an Officer, After a Battle. After a lively battle Poliouman Rayfield of the Lenox avenue station was Charlies Flood of No. 256 Weet One Hundred and Twenty-seventh street, son of Former Police Inspector Flood, early to-day in je hia | negro tenement house at No. 128 West Hundred and Thirty-fourth treet and locked him up on a charge John T. One of impersonating an officer. For weeks the police had been re- ceiving complaints errevted a young man who sald he that @ young ent | white man was extorting money from to bed one night early last month| negroes in West One Hundred and with the proud reflection that he was | rnirty-fourth atreet. Raytteld, seeing | FRIGHTENS. CHIEF | GYPSY BAND TO DEATH Heart Disease Kills Father-in- Law of Man Who Swung Axe in Quarrel. No moving picture drama with ite adroitly manufactured thrills ever provided so much excitement in so ort a time ae what might be termed “The Gypates’ Quarrel," which was t | tun off to-day at High Bridge, about four miles from Paterson, . Bave for the incidental tragedy it would have made a feature reel. It vertain- ly possessed most of the elements of j one. The Buckland tribe of gypsies In encamped at High Bridge. Two of its members, Edward Harlson and |Thomaa Buckland, had @ discussion which in a moment flamed into a quarrel, In the heat of it Harrison caught up an axe and swung a mighty blow at his antagonist, This form of fighting may not have been entirely unknown to Buckland, be- caune as the weapon came whistling toward him he sprang aside, hin left arm flung up in guard, It was the m that saved him. Upon struck and he fell to the When the quarrel started a number of the tribesmen were gathered ubout two, Among them was Peter Gay, Harrison's father-in-law. He was an elder of the tribe and his heart was weak, so when the biow was struck and he saw Buckland fall he thought murder had been done. ‘The shock of it was too much for his heart, and with @ hand clutching — he fell and gasped and His antag t struck down and Peter Gay dead in Fine of my pales, Harrison flung a tok to flight, h sading for’ the Morris Suddenly into the ring camd Poitee!! man Patrick Hogan. He saw the two men on the ground and the fleecing kypsy und instantly started in pur- suit. Several of the horses of the pel were tethered little dis- tance away and Ho; Sprang upon one of them and clattered after Har- un The gypsy, looking back, saw that ing was responsible for the closing \Seatee a Mayor Mitchel, after in- pei d urged hi out on to the ice. For } ice was sufficient! would not bear Hofin and and (Aa) @ crash the salma daunted, turn but the animal could not swim in the cluttered water. Hogan tried to head It for the bank, but the horse was almost done for, Then several to 4 iegod the animal and the nm eafoty. But by this time Harrison had sleapoeares. MAGISTRATE HOUSE ILL. Dector faye He Has Paeumenta— ‘Temperature le Very High. Magistrate Frederick B. House ts sert- BLACK HAND IN PRIS Calluria’s Friends Try to Carry Out Threat “to Get” Mirendo —Scores in Panic. Twenty families living in the atm _» story tenement house ut No. 814 One Hundred and Twelfth street Be came panic-strickhen shertly after midnight when a bomb was explaaed on the first floor of the building. The explosion wrecked Vito BM rendo's drug store, in front of witeh the bomb was left, Wreckage Wes plied into the doorway, #0 those Whe ¢ ran down the atairway found th@mBe +) jaelves imprisoned in the building watt! several men cleared away the debris, Families in nearby tenement hewsee also were arouned by the noise, aa@ © they, too, ran to the atreet, seamtily clad. : Detectives Caaso and Enright, who were standing at Becond avenue ead © Ono Hundred and Eleventh street, at first believed the gas tanks on rn avenue had blown up. ‘When they realised it was a they sent in a call for the to the East One Hundred and rere" street station, and busied in caring for the frightened whom they finally masaged to back into the building. The police say that several megs ago Lorenso Calluria was seat, to Sing Sing for seven and cae-elé years for trying to extort 9000 ¢ram Mirendo. At that time Callurte ealé to the druggist: t “My friends will get you for and make no mistake about it,” bomb to-day is believed to have fulfilment of the threat. ' ‘ a“ es 4 Safety Ra Razor: The Sede oe hr os | Gillette tedeg, Wo sTROPrING ously ili at his home, No. 436 Convent avenue threatenud, his physician, Dr. Frank E. Shaw, sald this morning, with pneumonia and pulmonary complica- tions. Mrs, House sald her husband's temperature Wednesday evening was 108%, but that he tnsisted on going to the Zasex Market Court on Thursday. He hed to be hi home soon after je hed to ry oo og ed, by twi an attack of into. and wes use ot, tees CBE Flood standing in front of No, 128 to- day, questioned him. Ficod ineiste belived in the building, and Rayfield demanded that he prove be was tell ing the truth. ‘The two went to the third floo | wh roa) a | and asked 5 jood exp! ir to tell the policem: be did not. “Weill, then, I'll tell you the truth,” | the young man said to Rayfield, are a disgrace to jlaat time you attacking @ jay 26, Tuspector on M feat daa bility aad te now at that he lived there. Sbe replied that ivr) the Central Office, Here is my roduced a crude and battered Central OMice badge have the pleasure to announce that their entire “Collection @’Art” Gowns, Wraps & Hats exhibited at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel has been purchased by BALTMAN&CO. Thirty-fourth and Thirty-fifth Streets =_FIFTH AVENUF. NEW YORK de Paris