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| : q {. said he thought all the prints were ee HERFOOTPRNTSW BLOOD, HSER, Orthopaedic Expert Sdentifies | Tracks on Stairs Near Ballou’s Body as Hers. ntellsoenree eS HER FEET SHOWN IN INK. State Introduces Imprints of Accused Woman’s Soles as Taken by Police. (Special From a Staff Correspondent.) BRIDGEPORT, Conn., March 9.—! Tupressiods in India ink of both feet act Mra. Helen M. Angle, taken July “11, 1914, at Police Headquarters in Stamford, were put in as evidence by the State to-day, at her trial for manslaughter in connection with the idexth.of Waldo R. Ballou. It is the $ show that the bloody barpfoot prints “found in the lower hallway and on the stairway outside Mrs. Angle's | Peon, on the third floor of the Rip- powum Building, correspond with the impressions of t and thet the blo S niade by Mrs. Angle. Photographs showing the bloody | footprints leading to Mrs. Anyle's %, door also were introduced by the ip State and accepted by the court. De- Pi tective Sergt. Thomas Foley of Stam- | ford identified them as the prints he | e-traced to Mrs. Angle's apartment the | day Ballou was fougd on the pave- ment with his head crushed. Mrs. Angle appeared slightly nerv- fie this waa going on. Several | times she barely suppressed her shud- dors and she shifted in her seat nerv- ously. Dr, Charlton Wallace of No. 601 West One Hundred and Tenth Street, New York City, an orthopaedic spe- clalist, added to the other scientific data of the case with testimony re- merding the footprints in Mrs. Angle's apartment and regarding her feet, as shown by the impressions taken | by the police. ORTHOPEDIC EXPERT SAYS FOOTPRINTS ARE MRS. ANGLE’S. Dr. Wallace said he noticed a dis- crepancy in the size of the footprints Just inside of Mrs. Angle's door, He defendant's ferte footprints were ai >| made by the same feet, however, but that impression was different when the owner of the foot was in rapid motion and when the whole weight rested on the foot. He had studied r WS. ELT WHY EARLY MAR Economic Expert of the University of Pennsyl- RIAGE vania Raps Attitude of Modern Civi- lization Toward Marriage. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. Philadelphia, March 9. The early marriage te doomed. I see no hope for Ut. Every force, im- pulse and tendency of modern civieation ta against it. Instead of helping young people to marry, society pute in their way all the obstacles {¢ can replies to what is late martiages, “Encouraging college women to marry and have children is racial stock,” be solemnly averred. devise, Our whole attitude toward marriage and par enthood is anti-social, anti-moral—in fact, there te no word strong enough fitly to characterize it.” That is how Dr. Scott Nearing of the University of Pennsylvania and one of the leading authorities on social and economic questions in the United States charged by Prof. Roswell H. Johnson ot the University of Pitteburgh—that the health and intellectual standing of America are being menaced by late marri in the false hope of getting more inteligent offspring will hasten a danger Intention of the progecution, accord- toward which this country is already drifting at an {ng to Btate's Attornty Cummings, to: prof, Johnson. Then he offered up the jarming rate,” said usual scapegoat: “The failure of killing off some of our best If any one in America is competent to analyze the problem of our pro- crastinated marriages that person is Dr. Nearing. Before he was thirty Speer ceenvoereiyyeseiesiasationsnansmuenennensieientsieaasieisesntsintsiias: he had to his credit half a dozen vol- umes, each of them a valuable contri- bution to the serious social thought of the day. In at least two, “Woman and Social Progress” and “The Super- Race,” he gives admirable expression to the new ideals of marriage and par \thood. When | talked with him to-day in his home at No. 6223 Lau- rens Street he didn't merely denounce | d blame on the college woman,” I re- marked. I had felt pretty sure he wouldn't, for his own wife le a Je uate of Bryn Mawr with a master’s IS DOOMED 1. Unwiilingness of the thoughtful, educated woman to marry unless she can find an Al man. 2. Modern young man’s reluctance to marry a woman who is merely a parasite. &. Economic sttuation in which the ruling wage is that needed by the single worker rather than \by’the married one. 4. Prevalent belief that marriage is a trap from which escape is difficult. Se . Told by Prof. Nearing PROF. SCOTT NEARING earning Ws than 9500 that three-quarters of earning less than ly that nine-tenthe are receiving lees the steady tendency to put off the] h wedding day—be explained It. FOUR CAUSES THAT MEAN DOOM Mrs, Aggle's feet and positively iden- tifled the footprints as hers. : Dr. Wallace told Judge Downs he |, did not examine any footprints out- eide of Mra. Angle's rooms. Clifton D. Waterbury of the instal- “tation department of the Stamford Lighting Company gave testimony yeparding the arrangement and con- * trol of the electric lights in the Rip- powan Building. Foley identified photographs of the building and explained the compara- tive situation of Mrs. Angie's apart- ment and that of Patrick Rabbitt. Coroner Phelan explained, last week, that he had ordered a dummy repre- aenting Ballou thrown down the stairs from Mrs. Angie's door, while he stood in Rabbitt’s apartment, lis- tening to the sound through a par- tition, Attorney Jacob B. Klein for Mrs, Angie objected to the admission of photographs of Mrs, Angle's rooms, because, he argued, “seven or eight SALTS IF BACKACHY AND KIDNEYS HURT Stop eating meat for a while if your Bladder is troubling you. : : * = When you wake up with backache and misery in the aber recion it gen- dull yetally means you have m eating too Ret meat, says alwell-known authority, x t forms uric acid which overworks the kidneys in their effort to filter it from the blood and they become sort of paralysed and loggy, When your kidneys gt ish and clog you must relieve moving all the you relieve your bowe else you have backache, body's urinous kk headache, dissy spells; your stomach is coated, tnd when the weathe is bod heumatic twinges. The urine of sedi chai ged to seek relief two or three times during the night. Either consult » good, reliable physi- cian at once or get from your pharmacis' it four ounces of Jad Salta; take | a tablespoonful in a glass of water! before breakfast for a few days and your ; kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts ls made from the acid of gri and lemon juice, combined with lit! end bas for generations to dean and stimulate sluggish kidneys, | tileo to heutralize acids in the urine go it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder | AT TAT Sette lan life saver for- regular <mect caters, It is pensive, cannot OF EARLY MARRIAGE, “There are at least four causes for the decrease in early mar- riages,” he said. “First, we have the unwillingness of the thought- ful, educated woman to marry un- less can find an Al man. is a ecarce article, The is the modern young mai luctance to marry a woman who is merely a parasite, a sponge who ison, from whi impossible or severe strug- ente: escape possible only afte Sm glad you don't put all the — hours after the tragedy” had no bearing on the state of the room when Ballou .net with his fatal in- jury. The tures were admitted as correct a. .ue time taken, Mr. Kiein and Mr, Cummings be- came involved in bitter comments on each other's conduct and Intelli- gence, Mr. Klein hotly protested: “I suppose I'm always wrong,” Mr. Cummings sourly retorted: “Ah, no, you are sometimes right,” in a tone that so amused the spectators that Sheriff and Judge both had to call for order, A», photograph followed photograph there were ten or more in all—it became apparent to the disappointed spectatora that Mr, Cummings has not yet completed his minute, almost tedious, technical presentation of the Physical conditions of the tragedy, which occupied two court days last week, The testimony so far has been drawn from six autopsy experts, one draughtsman, 01 architect, one photographer, one coroner, one ortho- aedist, one electrician and one identifier of photographs, So the audience, which still fills all the seats and standing room, yawns and awaits the appearance of the real actors in the drama, for which the stage has been so painstakingly set, Mr, Cummings rather hearers by speaking of Ballou's death as an “accident.” He sald aftorwurd the term was a slip. He bad intended to say tra, A corruge the tread a tep below Mra, Angle’ door was shown to Foiey, It was ad mitted in evidence despite earnost protest from Mr, Kiein that "36,000 to 45,000" men had walked on it since June 23, Foley went on to describe the foot- rints outside Mrs. Angle's door aad in her room, In cross: ination Mr, Klein attacked Foley's evidence regarding the confition of the stairs| | and floors, which had apparently been sees ha Ric gf e tartied hia | strip of rubber from | me from Pennsylvania, Also bs taught for scveral years in & co-educational university. He mentioned that last fact and added, conclusively: “It isn't. that college girls don't want to marry. It is that they don't want to marry until they find the right man, They have a high standard, and the number of men | who measure up to it is not large. Out of all the clissea graduated from Bryn Mawr there are only three in which more than half the members have married.” ut of course that includes all the graduates of recent years,” I protest: ed, “and there's stil plonty of chance for them.” ° Dr. Nearing permitted himself a emile, Slight und spare and. bi eyed, he looks younger than « when he smiles, MATTER OF CHOICE AS MUCH AS CHANCE. “Marriage with the college woman 4s not so much a question of chance as of choice,” he declared. “She isn't obliged to put up with the first suitor that comes along, and she won't do it, She makes as the determining test: ‘Ia this the man } want for the father of my chiltren?” And sh right to act it up. “If a girl of twent; man of twenty-five w sical health, abi wi r thirty-five, she hag better wai for him forever, rather than make an early marriage with a rotter. 3 tter drown herself “It {s most hopeful for the future of the race that our educated women fre setting up such standards, ba- use it means that men must eventually meet them,” added Dr, Nearing. “But it is one reason for the late marriage, or even for no marriage at all, “On the other hand, the young man of to-day shrinks from the burden of the parasite wife. The wife no longer contributes to the family inco:ne by | creating values. With the increased | standard of elaborate dressing, she is often its chief burden, | “The woman of to-day is in the! third stage, Firat she was the siave, | the beast of burden, a creature that might bo beaten to enforce obedience to her lord and master. a stage of oo the cook stove was then of economle value, Now she is too often an econoric Hability, @ parasite. The whole concept of tho women of the imiddle and upper classes 1s to sponge upon the men, “A young man can no longer yeh Nimeelt with the comf: at ‘twe can Ii .” When he m: 10 find that it “You think that women should be wage earners after marriage “Every woman not engaged with the care of smal) children should give her- self to some other productive work,” said Dr. Nearing, “If the women of to-day continue to be the economic burdens to men that they are now, they will ruin this country, just as Rome was ruined by its dissolute women.” However, women are iponsible for only a fraction of the economic ob- clea to the early marriage. than ay It hae been es- timated that a man and his wife and three children cannot main- tain a normal standard of life on leas than arithmeti why there are fewer ear jon, why there are fewer ges at age, why there are aller families. it js the unmarried worker who the wage, not the married one,” said Dr, Nearing. “Our economic at- titude toward marriage is anti-social, anti-roral, the worst word you can think of to call it. It's the exceptional young man who can afford to get married before he's thirty, unless father says to him, ‘Go ahead and support you.’" “And do you think the father should a 0 ow, so that your children, | my future citizens, may be born be- fore you are too old, and I'll support you for five years.” But | realize that is not practical politics, and personal- ly I #ee no hope for the return to the early marriage.” EASY UNMARRIAGE MIGHT BE A SOLUTION. ‘ouldn’t it be more popular,” 1 interjected, “if we might get unmar- ried more easily? Rightly or wrongly, many of my generation are afraid o marriage. They ure afraid to risk condition which may ov so intoleri ble and from which cacape may be so! difficult.” “| don't doubt it,” said Dr, Nearing. ‘ersonally, I believe there snould be | greater freedom, just as | beiic ve that | the remedy for democracy should be more democracy. It seems Key Is right when she continuance of marcia its beginning, should be “Ho Cupid need that the well as| jor 8 t for Cupid, im by bringing together persons truly congenial, hence capable of an enduring lov have married a natty E net_or a cle jored a pa no safer to ‘follow nature servediy’ in picking out a than in bringing up a baby. “There should be a taboo on mare rying & man or woman unfit to be w parent, just as there Is now a taboo on marrying a person of a different HARTIGAN TO PROSECUTE LAW-BREAKING BAKERS Ipspectors Watch for Violations of Label Provisions While Await- ing New Law. Although bread is back to five cents @ loaf, Commissioner of Welghts and Measures Hartigan says hundreds of bakers throughout the city are retall- ating on the public by selling under- weight loaves. “I have come to the conclusion,” said Commissioner Harti; the only way a good many ba! in this city can be brought around to a sense of honesty and decency is to find law enough to clap them in jail. Now that there is no excuse by the retail bakers for skimping, I propose enforcing the provisions of th Brooks law. According to this me: ure a baker must use a small label on each loaf of bread telling the pur- chaser just how much it weighs, If a baker places a 14-ounce label on a 12-ounce loaf he may be sent to jail. Or, If he refuses to place any Inbel on a loaf of bread he may be sent to Jall. “With the assistance of The World, 1am having introduced at Albany to- day a Dill which will set a standard weight of a five-cent loaf of bread. When this becomes effective, and I feel certain it soon will, there will be no loop-hole for unscrupulous business inen who seek to gouge the poor at every opportunity.” Commissioner Hartigan to-day sent out twenty-five inspecto: to determine how. many bakera are selling bread lighter than marked on labels, Stabe Man With Pocket-Kalfe. A big pocket-kni’e, with a blade open at each id, was the weapon with which Michael Polinski, a dock laborer, harged into © crowd In front of No. 66 ett to avenge a fom Micha borer, an able to four deep stal ludson Btreet The stabhin ‘in early morning bat- ham Square, and he recely in the back, Hospital and was o seqi > 1 in Chat ACKER, MERRALL & CONDIT ex. — GOMPANY 1820 color, There should be a taboo on having a c you can't afford to bring up, to whom you can't give a high school educatio In thousands of American famili every child, af the fir is an economlo crime, Ttuce suicide nay simply be am awak ened sense of onsibility, — Bot men and went training for husbands, as well aa wives, have home duties, “From a racial standpoint I should nay that twenty-five was about the right age for men and women to marry. If by marriage late in life Prof, Johnsow means thirty-five or late ¢ is probably right in saying that such unions will affect the na- mentahand physical health,But parenthood, and should omen should have intelli. | Finest Creamery Butter 84c w. Mayflower Brand For “‘ Economy-times” AT ALL OUR STORES CLD ELOPERS HAVE CAPERO ON HONEYMOD Sixteen-Year-Old Husband and Seventeen-Year Bride Ac- companjed by Her Sister. { yo Official Finding Holds No One| _ Clogged Responsible for Brook- rt lyn Girl’s Death. NEW HAVEN, Conn., March 9— Coroner Kili Mix, in a formal finding made to-day, says Lillian May Cook, Philip Hone Le Roy Jones, sixteen- year old huaband and his séventeen- year old wife, who was Miss Margaret Forrester Andrew, had been taught so thoroughly advantage and social safety of being properly chaperoned, that when they eloped to Bristol, Tenn., they took a chaperone along. And now, atill observing the pro- prieties, they are in Chicago on their honeymoon with the bride's siste: M Beatrice, who is enjoying the novelty of chaperoning a wedded pair. Their respective parents are not angry. Col. Henry Hersey Andrew and the brid stepmother, Mra. Mary Raymond Garrettson Andrew, are preparing to welcome the chijdren at their home, No, 607 West End Avenue. Mr, and Mrs. H. Le Roy Jones of No. 17% West Seventy-second Street also are cager to give the parental blessing. But neither family has re- celved a message from the elopers, the first news o: the marriage coming nesse: through newspaper 4 tches from Bristol. March 4, died of @ pistol ‘a! nelf-inflicted, and that he is death was not caused by the I eal ort E geveral occasions had mate, Ellen Wilson, she inte take her life, and with « revol one occasion had indicated the man- ner in which she would do it. The Coroner examined four wit- porter to-day, “Our only concern is whether or not they will be happy. I don’t belleve in such early mar- riages. And think how ridiculous it is to take a chaperone on a weddi quiry it was known a sul was insued for Mayo. ‘This was vacated | {rom Saturday, and until the Cofoner made | Often enoug! ! his formal finding it was ‘not known | mastered. trip! I should think Beatrice would; the Coroner had examined Mayo in| includes find herself very much in the way. | regard to Mi:s Cook's act. As to the! medicine “Margaret and Le Roy have known! autopsy, the Coroner in his finding each other since they were little tots, | Tefera only to & woune. They used to play ‘house’ here in our; home. And the last year or so they have been writing letters to each, other almost every day. ° “At Christmas Le Roy bought Mar- ing to the theatre, and then ik to him: ‘We're going to “He thought it was « jwnee I came home some! me she was in earnest, | went to the theatre, for I knew where they garet an engagement ring, although {! . Of course I didn’t find| Will we took it rather as a joke, And 1 be sitting nals | them.” The boy-husband’s have since learned that last week be Ly re | went to Tiffany's and bought a wed-' Mra Herman Le Roy Jones, ding present for her. It was a beau- Pa ay ER. left, ate we tiful watch on a bracelet. Margaret’s by her will, but eventually he will chum told me she hid it from me, | come into much more. ir. Jones told me he and Philip! ~ were about to start to Washington DEVELOPSTHE BUST on a two weeks’ trip and they had ° Removes Wrinkles their trunks packed. I really think the anaes thought of being sep- a Dr. Charles Flesh Food has been used over Margaret for such dreadfully long time led him to pian In searching for some clue to their whereabouts, before I heard from the newspapers that they had been poe % Bristol, sO ac 13 : cary | that Margaret had kept. ‘old of | the daily meetings or letters and of| the ideal massage and dressing cream. the presents, It was very pretty in-| If you have never used Dr. Charles deed—but so foolish! No, of course,! Flesh Food, we earnestl; you to do I won't let you see the diary! That ‘ad wove Hts pleat wonder- is sacred. “Tho children planned the elope- ment Friday night, I understand, while Col, Andrew and I were away. Beatrice was a conspirator. On Sat- urday | was away when Le Ro; called for her in an automobile, 8! kissed her father, saying they were N, ist A Bad t and dainty rose odor make it corn To this populer One-Step «:/ ‘ood Brooklyn, i Y¥.—Advt. YOUR MONEY BACK IF IT FAILS Camden, N. 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