The evening world. Newspaper, May 8, 1914, Page 3

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WIFE OF BECKER AND PRIEST ARE » BARRED AT TOMBS Prisoner’s Lawyers May Ask Court fo Compel Can- cellation of Order, ‘ MISS DAVIS SCORED. She Charged Becker With Conspiracy and Cut Off All Privileges. The right of Katharine B, Davi Commissioner of Correction, to hold Charles Becker incommunicado tn the Tombs is to be tested in the courts if the present plans of Beck- ers counsel do not miscarry, The issue was brought toa point demand- ing action to-day when Father James Curry of St. James's Church, Catholic chaplain of the Tombs, was refused | Permission to see Becker in his cell. Father Curry was astounded when informed by Warden Hanley that Miss Davis had given orders that Becker shall receive visits from no- body but his counsel and shall con- sult with counsel only in his cel The priest had not heard of the Charge of Miss Davis that Becker engineered a conspiracy in the Tombs to “discredit my administration and the administration of Mayor Mitchel. ‘Such an assertion is absurd,” de- | elared Father Curry, “Even if Becker had such an inclination he has too Much common sense to involve him- eelf in anything that would hurt him at this time, when he is on trial for Bis life. “This is the first time in my life 1 was denied permission to see a pris-| oner in the Tombs for a spiritual purpose.” Father Curry hurried over to the Criminal Courts Building and hunted up Martin Manton and H, T. Mar- shall of counsel for Becker. Ho was faformed by the lawyers that Miss Davis had refused to allow Becker's wife to enter the Tombs. | “Miss Davis,” sald Mr. Marshall, | “has put herself in a ridiculous po- | Gition, and we shall establish that in av short time. f can’t call the! » lady a liar, but 1 can say that netther | & Becker, Mr. Manton nor mysolf knew | $ anything about this plot to discredit | the Commissioner of Correction until we read it in the newspapers yester- day afternoon. “1 think it is an outrageous thing to prefer such a charge 4s this @gainst 4 man on trial for his life. Miss Davis should not have brought her suspicions forward at the present crucial moment when we are trying to aelect unprejudiced jurors to try the case. If there is any conspiracy ft is not in the Tombs but cutsicel the Tombs and is not directed against Miss Davis. 1 will leave the public to gue» what 1 mean.” Miss Davis, acting on information given by Philip Musica, who has Pleaded guilty and ts trying to get a @uspension of sentence, is fully con- inved that she has unearthed a gi- ntic conspiracy to discredit the Mitchel administration and her own. In her statement given out yesterday said Musica told her that the con- spiracy originated in ‘Tammany Hail, Musica has been prominent around the District-Attorney’s office of late. He has been almost a daily visitor to the offive of Assistant District-At- of the cle 8OOSS OO HEH CORRECT SITTING POSTURE WePRRSET NAMING DEBUTANTE BLOUCH e call from death to-d Hay, a good . North Beach, | Rooney managed to free himself! been murdered, their lives are in the jfrom the shell as it went over and gravest danger.” No Debutante Slauch Taught in saw to Walk, Sit DOd Cen EEE Et bax bavO® WINS SWIM WITH DEATH AND COLLAPSES ON BEACH Champion Oarsman, Barely Makes Shore When Shell Overturns More Than Mile Out. Thomas ttooney, champion oarsman } Ravenswood Boat Club, had # y when his single scull shell capsized In Flushing | Sequentiy were unable to ave » and a halt from r mbree, He has had many tarney ‘ ‘ Istarted to swim ashore. The struggle priviieges in the Tombs bat thos: was a bitter one and he must hace privileges have been taken away be- \i i sfessed partin the 2USt barely managed to win out, for way : : an hour after he reached the heach conspiracy to obtain the siznatures ¢ Tombn prisoners to un-attack upon | B& Was found unconsctous at the ‘ % oP water's edge. His shell had come Miss Davis. —_———— HORSE'S APPENDIX REMOVED, Veter! ctently ony. Astoria. TRENTON, May &.—Surgeons In the Veterinary Department of the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania recently performed an operation for appendicitia upon # | Chew valuable hy owned by A. Reeder | the Chambers of this city, and the anima fe now here ux well as ever, The horse tion to-day fs said to be the frst to have such an duty. The operation performed upon it, The animal was taken to Philadelphia 4 brought back again by boat. Mr, ) Freie wus so fond of it that he ob: tained tho best medical skill possible to ity tp Raye Its life aster it had been treated by ‘Trenton veterinarians. ship's store 1 ashore with tide and wind, and for time it was thought that he was lost ‘Tho oarsman was taken to a North Beach hotel, where he revived suffi- | childre to be taken to his home in WPORT, R. 1, May §. passed AVY, Was placed a sistant paymaster of p trial before a court martial at the naval training ata: on charges of neglect of ourt martial was ordered {after the discovery of alleged trregu-| Inrities In the accounts and stock of the at the station, Chief Ye James W, Smith will be tried after Ur exodus compulsory the Chew case 1s concluded ‘The orae | ceedings Were se mt, Tortures of Indigestion Miseries of Constipation Evils of Impure Blood Quickly and Safely Removed by EX-LAX The Chocolate Laxative Ex-Lax Saves Pain and Suffering; makes people» healthy and is safe for infants and grown-ups. Ex-Lox is guarenteed to be efficient, gentle, harmless, & 10s Bos Wil Prove Ibin, Sry it lexDay—mAll Dguggista, - . Pi ORRECT WALKING 3 OSTURR 8-O9-0-00-4-4-6-0.0.8004-04000009 REFUGEES SAY | SOOAMERIGANS ARE IN DANGER Declare Government Failed to! Furnish Adequate Protec- tion at Tampico. ‘There n, ehite | | territory | ON, Tex, May & Am men fully dren and tributary wsible to reach in time ican in to Tampico won the whom it nd cons 1 them- ofa refuge, We fear ly that if they have not already 30. was safe Such was the n Jed m seve n refugees on hoard ut |r off Gav on, 1 cone, | hairman of the Sen " jations ittee, in W “In all from the Tampico district, the petition stated, ‘there are 500 American men, women and forced business for tion froom who have been leave their homes and the lik of adequate prote our Government, Hid one American | yrunboat been allowed to remain: in the harbor, it is believed that there would not have heen any aetive de- monstration or attempt to destroy American property, notwithstanding the bitter feelings towards Ameri- cans. "We feel that conditions making were brought about solely by the et that our | Government failed to give us ades | quate protection at the critical mo | ment. ‘The properties. which we have been compeiled to abandon will b Jentirely lost unless our Government Jseos fit to protect those properties | and give us immediaie reltef in order | that we may return to look after them ourselves, The great number of vefu- gees Will be lofi homeless and desti- tute and what is true in this 9 t of the Tampico district is und - of Mexico. ly true of all other porti “phe failure of our Government to jtake a definite stand at this critical | | moment will make it impondible for to return with safety of Admiral | ride us to ever hop “When the gunboats command were | Ma | of ‘8 nt | mpico, ne intimation was n| to Americans of any danger what- | soever, | “After dark manifestations were | ade in the sha principally composed and the young men Huerta!’ and ‘Death to th Stones were thrown, a brick strikin) two Americans at the Southern Ho! of bOO4SO HOS TETEEYY & 09004404.0004 POSTURE. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. The debutante slouch may do very well for the daughters of the Four Hundred, but it won't do at all for the daughters of the Washington Irving High School. Out of the five thousand girls who every day pack the elght-story school building in Irving place from roof to basement, some | five hundred have shown leanings (literally) in the direction of the newest fashionable posture. Have they slumped in peace? They have not! ing assembly to dismissal not only their teachers but forty-five hundred fellow students have remorselessly commanded them to triumph of the healthy girl pose over the weeping willow effect came at a posture party the other day, when hundreds of students showed a large audience uaz) the results of @ year's determined effort to stand, sit wee and walk correctly. Watching their resilient erectness, their poised yet unfettered move- ments, I could hardly believe that the Droper posture campaign is such a re-| National Gud It was set on foot ®; stand?” T asked. ago by Gen cent development. little more than @ ye: orgs W. Wingate of the Nation Guard. On a visit of Inspection the school he aid to the girls: “Y¥! American girls walk like a lot staves ere is nothing queenly pose, the power, the upright carriage which ought to mark free- born women, When I see our you women walking on the street I am ashamed of our race. “Who stand the best In all Amer Think now, think hard, where nee ica? would you t riage in standing and walking Several! girls in she assembly call out, “West nt!" “Right” re «tthe € why are the go If you w' aed to neral, "A ti be ers at West Point and Annapolis are loosely clasped her lap. Tecausy all the time somebody 1! Her heels are together. looking out for th let's position. If he meets an officer, the youngs immediately comes to a dignified pe ‘ure, If he rises to recite In a i { rms are spread out and th inless his position is all that could} nag clasped around. the kne« desire | as could earn this] FOsMns kne h her is, Bw youl: Bin Puy | of course, incorrect in erouch- same fine, healthy, Iyome habit it you would West Point yourselves, SCHOOL GIRLS QUICK TO TAKE thoy not?” 1 asked. THE HINT. The Washington Irving girls their usual intelligent adopted the suggestion squad captains who watcher Whenever wi posture all day dong Class parses trom one room to @ cther one or more girls mareh att side to pote and correct wrong attl- | D) tudes on the part of their elass-mat During recitations and study how © finest example of dignified care | t standers and walk for High School Girls; and Stand Correctly CVGVDHEOOODEGS INCORRECT SITTING 859909-0-000-6-4-00000-900-2006 \Incorrect Postures Are Barred and the Pupils Are Drilled in the Proper’ Way to Dance the Tango to Learn Graceful Carriage. nal to ‘ou of he ! ng | | ed nd _FRIDAY, MAY 8, 1914, ALL PLANS READY bom ore bas CORRECT STANDING PosTURA 2999000 | | From morn- ‘stand up straight.” The final “Stand tall,” replied Miss Bar- nett. “Keep the chest out and the head high. Pull the body up from the ankles. Pulling up, aot pulling back. is the new ideal of the physical rector, “In the debutante slouch the right knee is bent loosely forward, That throws out the opposite hip and makes it look larger than tt 1s, Also in this attitude one shoulder is up and the other down, while the abdo- imen is thrust forward. It looks bad and it is bad. “In sitting, too, there is dis- tinctly @ wrong and a right po ture, In the latter the girl's chest is thrown out and her head up. Down to the elbows her arma are touching her body and her hands “One wrong sitting posture that is ter n8- ans= om the instructor sii n®qhear him | The th Initlative, | UP, ax when standing, but the body Thoy elected | Should bo thrust forward with each for their| step and the ball of the foot put a n he on irs, ho girl is allowed to sit bunched over her desk. "Hew much physical training do |MOOERN WOMEN NEED HEALTH, ris get during the year?” 1) NOT MUSCLE. 1 Miss Sara BR. Barnett, Chatr ‘What the modern girl and woman \ of the Physical Training De- | need,” continued Miss Burnett, “is not tment, | muscle but health and atrength. On ‘Every girl has two periods @| both these things posture haa @ very week, forty-five minutes apiece, In| direct influence, for good or evil the gymnasium,” she replied. “But | phat’s why we make such a point of that is only a part of the posture) jr jn the formative period, drill, Never for one moment while| “The giria aleo learn the proper they are in the building are they] postures for the new dances, They allowed to aysume incorrect attitudes | ape taught to dance the tango, the without protest, ‘They keep watch | hesitation and the one-step grace. ever each other, fully and correctly. ‘The girl who “Our latest foe has been the de- | plays man just touches the other's butante slouch, which a number of the older girls have deliber- ately attempted. In certain in- stances this slouch is a sign of | .. physical weakn our girl their new o healthy por bad for the digestion.” But some of who are perfectly well got the idea that to look right in models they must adopt this awkward and un- It is particularly very common is when the whole up- }per part of the body leans forward and the head ts held do: nd out over a desk or tab! “Tho girla practise walking, too, do ‘Certain); Ing the ch she replied. “In walk- at and head should be kept down first.” And that wiv fa exactly the direction several w by Mrs, + Watts, the English woman now lecturing in this country on the phys. cal culture of that auper-race, the ont Greeks, waist with her right hand, while her left hand is placed against the palm of her partner's right hand, extended at arm's length, The bodies do not touch, The tht, shoulder-hold is avoided, aa well as the putting of one, person's head on the other's shoulder, “The girls prefer to dance correctly, only at first they didn't know how. State, Naval and Army Offi- | mandant of the Brooklyn Navy Yard, | {to-day announced completed FORPUBLIC HONORS TO HEROES OF WAR President Will March in Cor-| tege From Pier A to Brook- lyn Navy Yard. DEWEY IS COMING.| cials to Honor Dead of Vera Cruz. Capt. Albert N. Gleaves, Com- plans for the ceremonies on Monday In honor of the seventeen seamen and marines who were killed during the upation of Vera Cruz, Their ies are being brought here on the oe be er er Montana, Final arrangementa have made by Mayor Mitchel and repre- sentatives of the navy, and commit. tees and escorts appointed. The Pree- ident, Admiral Dewey, the Secretaries of Navy and War and high officials in civil, army and navy life are in- been cluded, When the Montana swings into the upper bay off the Battery on Sunday afternoon she will be escorted by the Wyoming, which will leave the Brooklyn Navy Yard Sunday morn- ing at 11 o'clock. Shortly after, the Mayflower, President Wilson's yacht, bearing Secretary Daniels, will an- chor alongside, and the three will be guarded there by police boats until Monday morning at 8.80 o'clock. Early on Monday seventeen cals- sons, furnished by the National Guard of New York, each manned by a cor- awalting the arrival of the dead. | sd Rrig.-Gen staff will represent the na poral and private, will clatter onto! ie* honor the seventeen dead, and Pior A, where all tho officials who will progident Churehill of the Board of participate in the parade wil be! iducation has an all teachers to | gathored, Navy tugs will leave the assemble their pupils in the school jside of the Montana, bearing oe | the aten ue ee Pasties tha bodies ashore, 1a a room at Pier A tools re hundreds of toral tributes sent by | Menor econ t a echt aed sailors, soldiers ond civilians are|day morning, but will be closed after WAL Mo Hattle Wyoming leaves Brooklyn Navy Yard to meet criser Montana, bearing the Hodies of seventeen seamen and nes Killed at Vera Cruz. 1 VM. Montana and Wyoming anchor Josephus aniels, anchors along- side Montana and Wyoming. MONDAY, 830 A, Mo -The bodies ferred in Navy tugs to e on Pler A, North River. President Wilson, Admiral Dew ey, Secretary Daniels, Secretary Garrison, Congressional Commit+ tea, € Glynn, Mayor Mitchel, Gen. vans, Citizens’ Committee and escort assemble at Pier A, A. M.—Capt, Albert N. Gloaves, rshal of the cortege, 5! ts the wession up Broadw Sailors 1, followed by President Wilson Admiral Dewey. 9.15 A. M.—Cortege halts fifteen minutes in front of City Hall, Mayor Mitchel delivers a short address, Five hundred school chil- dren sing. 9.80 M.—Cortege passes Park Row, up. Centro st Canal atreot to Manhattan Bridge, to Naswau street, Hr Flushing avenue, to Marine [1 racks gate, to Marine Campus in t to George Te Brigade and ‘ommodora Robert Dwyer of the other officers, Forshew and | ‘al militia, | The funeral escort will include ma- rines and sailors from the Montana, ; the Wyoming, tho Texas and the Brooklyn Navy Yard. In the line| will be a band, a detail of seventy | men from the First and Second Field | Artillery, the citizens’ committee and various civic and fraternal bodies, | benidon State and Federal offictals, Manhattan Bridge will be closed from 9.15 to 11 o'clock, according to! orders issued by Bridge Comminstoner Kracke, and a special force of men will spread sand across the ap- proaches. As the funoral cortege passes from Pier A to the Navy Yard the big bell! In the tower of Brooklyn Borough Hall will toll continuously, Borough President Pounds has ordered the flag on Borough Hall to be kept at half- staff, and other flags throughout the city will be kept at halt-staff. All over New York City children in the schools will hold special services Firat MARINES, SEAMEN AND 80L- DIERS AS ESCORTS. The bodies will be placed on cats- sons immediately after the arrival and no cevemonics will be had during the stay at Battery Park. Escorted by sailors and marines, followed by troops from the Regular Army and rd, a committee of cltt- | zens apointed by Mayor Mitchel, head- ed hy Gen. Horace Porter, the Mayor, Gov. Glynn, high offeials in the army and navy, and with President Wil- son, guarded by Secret Service men bringing up the rear, according to naval etigy the long cortege will move up Hroadway to thy City Hall f policemen. wnt of a small stand at the City Hall and guarded by @ troop of mounted police, 500 school ehtidren, dressed in white, will be waiting, As tt the cor} stops for fifteen minute they will sing. Mayor Mitchel may deliver a short qidress, but this has not been decided The procession, departing from Ctty Hall, moves to Manhattan Bridge and thence to the Brooklyn y Yard, where, on the marine campu the funeral services will be heid at ntative plans for the simple Include an opening plain Cassard of the brief address: by yer by Rabbi | Wise of New York and a bencidletion hy Pather Chidwiek, who Was chap jain of the ill fated battleship Maine, ‘The ceremonies will conclude ‘with a aalute of twenty-one guns from the cruiser Tenness Ten thousand persons only will be admitted in the campus by order of Capt. Gleaves, who will offlelally rep- rial service ch b; Ac ident Wilaon a ar nt the Navy, while Brig.-Gen Robert K. Evans, commander of the Department of the Kast, will ip aent the Army President Wilton is expected to are | rive Sunday night with Secretary of War Garrison BELLS WILL TOLL IN HONOR OF DEAD. | Representing the will be Major-Gen rd| ny | National John F ory under supervision, and they are all learning to hold themselves correctly | In social dancing. | ‘But at least fifteen minutes out of every gymnasium period is devoted to the posture drills, | try to make the girls understand that their future success in busi- ness life will depend largely on the way they carry themselves, A man doesn't want a slouchy, slumpy person around his office, The girl without dignity of bear- i 4 utilitar- fan reason why all of us should try to sit, stand and walk with grace and correctness, You will discover a rea- gon of another sort if you study the correct and incorrect postures oblig- ingly assumed by Washington Irving ‘They dance during their periods in girls for The Evening World photog- “Just what is the pooper way to, fhe gymnasium gad af lunch-time,!rapher, Slouching is eo ugiyh the campus is filled. A stand for the high officials bas been erected on the pia. es PITTSRURGH, Pa., ¥ jwere being completed to-day for a full | military funerna for Patrick De | Lowry, a Pittsburgh man who dled at Vora Crus. The body of De Lowry, now on board the Montana, Is ex- pected to ranch here Tuesday morn- | Ing. ‘The remains will be taken from the train at East Diberty station and escorted to soldi and Sailors’ Memorial Hall, where they will Ie in state until ‘5 o'clock, ‘They will then be taken to the De Lowry home and held there until Wednesday morning, when requiem mans will be sald at St. Patrick's Cathedral, I funeral procession will form before the Cathedral and march to St. Mary's Cemetery, where, with full military honors, interment will be Plans SHIN IN, May &.—Ry unan- imous vote the Senate to-day adopted House re ment of a joint Henators and twent tives to represent Congresa at | funeral esereises Monday in | York City Vice L New aident Marshall this after- Unterimeyer York County Lawyers’ Association, held last night at the Hotel Aster, Samuel Untermyer, as Chairman 6. | ® report In which he stigmatised e- | Pra papers before they are tried in comet as scandalous and uncivilized, He added that the worst offenders agninat public prosecutors Brooklyn Navy Yard, Chuan: 1045 A. M.—-Cortege enters phoned Brooklyn Navy Yard: cruiser Ton- J) “The committee has invited the at nesses salutes with twenty-one | tention of the board of directors te guns ‘the present scandalous practic. © 11 A. M- Religious exerciae ae President Wilson delivers funeral || SUeKes that from the time @ ease oratie gets into court the law Pi | than a fair | the proc Committee De+ nounces Practice as Scam. dalous and Uncivilized, 2 + CD At the annual meoting of the Mtew he Committes on Lagi ation, mage ce of trying cases in the Bewee — he administration of justice are the ‘The report oom sidly La reports rtial account of en court, whieh prevailing longer a vestige of hibit ali comments and nd temp tings in is simtla in other civill There isn secrecy in the proceedings before the | Grand Jury in cases of public in- terest, Not only is the testimony of witnesses disclosed and often distort. ed, but their expected testimony on the eve of thelr appearance before the Grand Jury W set forth from the point, of view of the public prosecutor, “The obvioun result of this ts to poison the public mind and render more difficult the securing of impar- Mal junti that co-operation “It is believed with the more respectable news: pers can be had, looking toward jexisiation to correct this abuse and it will be the purpose of this committee to Invite such co-operation.” HERKIMER, peal for the trinf of dean cused of 1 ing his fort tencher, Lid were in the bow when court reconvened this morning. SALTS IF BACKACHY AND KIDNEYS HURT Stop eating meat for a while if your Bladder is troubling you. 7 ae you Natgat Hedet poke end dull misery in t ney region, ys a well-known euthor- ity. uric acid, which overs works the kidney: their effort to filter it from the blood and they become sort of paralyzed and loggy. When your kidneys get sluggish poy Pn you must relieve them, ie you psa your bowels; reno Il the body's uriaous : by you pee beckeche, eet iene ache, dizzy 4) ‘our stomach sours, tongue i touted, ad when the weather is bad you bave rheumatie ‘The urine is cloudy, full of sediment, channels often fet ‘sore, water scalde and you are obliged to scek relief two or three times during the a Hither consult @ good, reliable in at once or get from your pharmaciat about four ounces of dad Salts; tale ® tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. is famous salts is made from the acid of and lemon juice, combined with f and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate sluggish noon | Soulsb armed Seni ra Robinson, yGorman, Vardaman, Gul- a Brady ' Ben It is planned that thy f adjourn from Saturday | il ‘Tuesday axa tark of resp first word from the funeral ship, ne to the Navy Depart | Th | ment to-day, The commander wired that he Was conveying north abo@t i150 men whose enlistments wi about to expir -> READY FOR ‘VOTES’ MARCH. | WASHINGTON, May &—With but a jday remaining before they will march jon Congress and demand the passage ‘of constitutional amendment enfran- |chising women, suffragists from all over the United States were prepared to-day for their final charge. ything to In readiness for this demonstration and word from the Chief Marshal Hi, iN awaited to set the i was surpas# previous demoustrations ry State in the Union will be ted and many fart in the suffra: throughout the rep- monstrations niry Saturday ay in Washington p fight for epared to carry. thel: en the esis conn « nee semen urging th ‘7 t nEress. bearing. ps waned to th vote con- Auto Killing, you O., May S—Investl- gating the report ofan automobile acet- dent on the Boardman Road, five miles tr sarly yesterday morning, the fund Dovid: Miles, Couneh= mothe Fourth Ward, dead, and Joseph Kennedy the The po- Hision with obile and @ mearch ts for it being mail > With Coal for Warships. OL, View May With §500 | tons of coal-on bowed for the American | warships now in Mexico, the five: masted schooner nie Palmer satied yesterday for Key Weat. oe BY THE AUTHOR OF “RAFFLES,” ‘ \doesn’t suit. White Rove Caer, Only 35-0 Pond also to neutralize acids in the urine se it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is a life saver for regutar meat eaters, It is inexpensive, canmot injure an akes a delightful, offers vescent lithia-water drink, Are You Run Down? Perone suffering Mebiiy thin mith poor bloat. the greatest beoetit The Ol) used in = The’ taste’ of iovaeune re — Lai ttle, $1. 12 Bottles, $11.08 cer sa Co. (Al Pah ate be Bree work ee if bulk ou can always Don't scold ose CEYLON TEA CARPET J. &J.W. WILLIAMS.

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