The evening world. Newspaper, March 22, 1915, Page 3

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teen mca “FRE BVEWING WORLD, Mu... == iv } HUG rin\ ’ - Pe Ee See Tig CORSETS MAKE-UP The Woman Who Wears Her }\Cheap Rouge and Powders 1! iy iPif jit tHIIBRY Corsets Too Tight Injures} Compounded of Strong Vu fier Ve , Chemicaja Are Reaponsible Hig So Loow That She Can} for the Nad Complexions = how a toat in Them Com- Which So Many American Cwm " fortatly. Women Have. ‘ er Alter These Sweeping Denunciations, Dr. Ida C.' Nahm Tells How Beauty and Health May Be ; : Ketained by Soap and Water, Open Air ALL PIANNI Y GiRI Exercise and Drinking Two Quarts of - Water a Day. ‘ormer M Rernheimer and sige too emall and four inches too high tn “Jimmy” Murray Looking 1y Marguerite Mooers Marohall. “The American woman cheats herself of her youth WIth thick coaty for Nest in Brooklyn of cheap rouge and powder compownded of strong chemicals, with corsets | too tightly laced, with shoes half —_— the heel, with hate weighing three or four pounds dimmy Murray former doorman at! the Birentn West, and bin pi No 88 Central Park the pos ty bride, who was until Thursday evening Mine Isabel Heroheimer, were out house hunting In Brookiyn to-day, with plans for the fiture wor yer definitely settled. They stayed Saturday nteht at the home of Mrs. Katherine Casey, Murray's eon sin, following thelr clopernent, whteh) women, For years she worked among thi Murray's wealthy fath Hernhetmer “dimmy in a nice boy,” Mra, Co 1 The other day a European beauty # ald toedey, “an honest and tru ‘ai dived Wat white Amneri« worthy lad, but not the kind of hus : women are often lune their good | band that young girl should have, 1 | lan't capable of making enough money fo support her as ef emerves, Inde LEAST WASH OFF pendent of her station in lte. ‘The wen only bit of business tact bever heard of hin showing, was when he sold the stury of hiv elopement to a morn ing paper. mab the whole thing and there in no nonsense about t They stopped with us Saturday and she Just pitched in and help | with the dishes and m the broom | fly. She told me she had lots of offera of n her own kind of people, but n who wanted to marry her to her. She had been in a convent in Paris up to last October, when she came home on ac- count of the w She conducted the! elopement ail by be f. She sald ste | Joved Jimmie and she did all the woo- | ing and, practically, the proposing. | She made the arrangements at the Church of the Blessed Sacrament, whi was baptised a Catholic in the e when she was with me. But the ldea]/called beautiful, of her going to work in @ soap fac- With all aids to easeful living tory, which has been published, is at their command, with nothin 1 id, with nothing ridiculous, She never will have to do in the world to do but keep them- such a thing. eelves lovely, th richest women “She says she knows ber father will] of America had stout, ungraceful come around all right—that the chief] bodies, necks the reverse of objection comes from her uncle! gwan-like, and faces on which the Joseph Rothschild, who had selected! ¢99 obvious rouge and rice pow: for her the man she was to marry. der could not hide the hard, Uncle Joo feels much aggrieved, I] drawn lines. man of his choice instead of her own.” lose her youthful —— ly?” Lasked Dr Nahm. could take you outside now’ Thomas Fegan, Irish tenor, whose golden notes—he gets $1,200 a week, they say on Broadway—tilled the Pal- ace Theatre last week, was held toy day by Magistrate Finn in the West Bide Court for Special Sessions on a oharge of assault, with bail fixed at $200, The complainant was Ivan Me- Ginn, a law student. ..| tore going out on the street. McGinn said he went to Egan's ah bialhe the oterasl ermasine Gressing room at the Palace Satur-| ang powdering to which they eub- @ay afternoon and sent in word tol jece their faces for the bad com- him that he was the representative of plexions which many American fa musical paper and would like to} Women have, The ingredients of n interview with him, Then] many toilet preparations are n appeared, McGinn served a] gheap and harmful, and clogging mmons in supplementary proceed-| — ¢he port they do with the ele tation of heat and pi “A process server,” said Baan, and| skin trouble may ve started that then, according to McGinn, the tenor| will ruin the looxs. in which she makes up her face. \, nit him cs the nose and the left eye,|SOAP ANDO WARM WATER THE blackening it, and if it hadn't beef BAPROT COMMETICS: for Mrs an there's no telling what| “If A girl insiate of making up, way 4 t she do it just in the evening, might have happened, McGinn de- can she goes ot, aiid come to work | + clares, with a clean face? At any rate, if | Tortures of Indigestion Miseries of Constipation, Quickly and Safely Removed by EX-LAX The Chocolate Laxative eS Ex-Lax Saves Pain and Suffering; makes people healthy and is safe for infants and grown-ups. Ex-Lax is guaranteed to be efficient, gentle, harmless, A 10c, Box Will Prove This; Try It Today—All Druggiste, { sutiful they vk in middie 1 she bad been attending ever|life or earlier because they use too ainco ste came back from Paris. She|much make-up and do not care for their health properly, At the Fashion vent and was afterward confirmed. | Show held in New York last fall and ‘Isabel evidently did not get mar- attended by most of the maids and ried on any wild impulse, but care- matrons whose names fill up the So- fully prepared for It, She |s a capable/cial Directory, I saw very few women girl at housework, She showed that] over twenty who could really be guess, because she did not marry the] *Why doex the American woman shness 80 quick- ‘PROCESS SERVER SAYS “One reason is assuredly this mad- ness for make-up," she responded TENOR EAGAN HIT HIM promptly, “The girls will use it, and lecturing doesn't do a bit of good. 1 peli) we nat in the office of the business estab- Singer Is Haled to Court Afterlisnment where #he may be found Scene in Palace Dressing Room {8% days out of seven—“and show : you twenty girls each of whom ts Not Down on Bill. making herself look twenty years older than her real age by the way “I have many friends on the stage where make-up {s legitimately used to counteract the effect of the strong light. But these women clean their skins most carefully after every per- formance, and would never dream of plastering on rouge and powder be- | ably by some we one thing of which you must be ab- solutely sure in selecting your foot- j reet eau: Evils of Impure Blood every one can living in a hall bedroom 10-cent basin and take a sponge bath every day. One of the cheapest and most successful ways of reducing brovded for some timegver ill peal aptece, she does her beat to destroy the natural beauty | 408 in a vain effort to attain artificial I nese «Khe might keep beauty and youth, too, of ahe | would but conform to the ta That t* the verdict of Dr passed after years of shrewd, observing study of many) groups and types of American women, Hesldes win: ning her medica! diploma Dr Nal is a eraduate nurse = She te a member of the League and has many friends among New York club: | & mills in Penn | ime ane complete surpriae to Mrs. daylvanta, endeavoring to instruct them as to the care of thelr health, At! 1 Charles D Toresent one of the largest business firms in New York employs her in an advisory capacity to its women employees. of healthful women of th she coats her fa der’ or pastes, sh to wash it off at night with warm with ‘Nauld pow the skin, but failure to remove make- | UP, especially during sume start an ecsema eight times out ot ‘Aren't there many American girls and women who dress without proper regard to their health and the beauty that depends on it?” 1 cked “Certainly there . uhm. "For a temp: critce permanent ch There has been gr ment in the designing rh ee sets, with their low-cut busts and the elastic pieces set into the sides, But all this avails nothing to & woman If she does not wear @ cor: that is right for her, A properly fitted one does no harm; indeed, women need the support They didn't once, perhaps; but the modern wom- an is the descendant of macy ken- erations of corset-wearing ancestors, and cannot at once dispense with stays “But ee woman who wears her earse ure, ald Dr ry effect they gan row in them comforta’ That is the test of proper bodily freedom, And if you depend on les and your backbone, ie your body becomes round and shapely. t woman ehould not w straitjacket. TIGHT SHOES CAUSE LINES OF PAIN IN THE FACE. “Next to corsets and make-up, I know of nothing which destroys good leoks more quickly than badly fttung shoes, It is a well known fact that Many women wear shoes half a size too small for them, out of a foolish vanity, The pain of a tight shoe Is < bound to bring a hard, drawn line in the face. The very high heela also cause a muscular strain, Yet very low heels cannot be worn comfort- en, Comfort is the wea Then Dr. im took a conversa. tional jump to the other extreme of the feminine tollet. From discussing heels she turned to heads. fhe heavy hat, shot with many hatping, is a menace to beauty,” she said. “It puts too much weight on the head and overheats tt. This} causes the hair to lose eventually te 8 lustre and fall out. The heavy ver the forehoad Iso di- of lines and wrin “The life led by many girls and young women in New York bur: ne the candle of youth and beauty In tight, unheaithful clothing, their faces covered with coametics, they spend hours every night, when they should be sleep- ing, in hot, ill-ventilated, tobacco- impregnated ball- hat tilted SANE EXERCISE A HEALTHFUL BEAUTIFIER. "1 observed, "Of course there are,” ‘said Dr, ahm. Soap and water are cosmetics afford, Even a girl an buy a DA IDA NAHM C Nahm, and it ta! rotessional Woman's! should never fall e youthful figure. @irls and women row, awim, The: immediate rosiness and slender- | ness which the devotees of the | Ldh Kinke ie make-up box and the tight corset and Body,” Note Read. seek. yet exact no toll of you opm leisure, | from her work with five blocks and. 4 crease to twenty blocks She may have to rise fifte earlier, but what will amount to It's ca end of the month she willing to throw away her make-up box." Commissioner Goldwater Recom-| Champ Clark, Mrs, Clark — and “straphanger t Brooklyn was sub mitted this sioner G ing of the He poses the | | menda inspectors and James W. Andrews of N “But there are healthful ways of | found ded at 2 o'clock this rerning | being beautiful ton | Hussion fo investigate nd fini ay Pou Rrehue address identified th ” body that of his son, why, he said, TIGHT SHOES HATS The Pain of a Tight Stow ts The Heavy Wat Puts foo Much Wetght on the Head and Overheats It Thi Causes the Harr to Lowe Its Lustre and Eventually Fall Out Bound to Bring a Herd Drawn Line in the lace The Vergy High Heels Albeo Cause @ Muscular Strain and Wrinkles vo aT ™ Compeey OF A CORMT — Row ww iT WeAvT, MOT MATE OVERHKAT THE HEAD AWD maine THE HAIR COME OVT WOMAN AND CHILD DEAD BEHIND NAILED DOORS; ‘Tho best and most permanent }water and soap. ‘To do it in cold|the wetght is to drink two quarts of MESSAGE 10 CORONER) water simply wrinkles and withers water a day. — should walk, skate, play tennis, things give tho | Be Suicide With Sound Mind W, master of phy ys that « KINGSTON, N. Y., March 22~ Mrs has Higned ath Williane 1) Dutton and her five-yeur- only three which Physica i Gulted to women, ante 1! daughter were found dead to-day modern girl for sports and Hind doors that had been nailed in a ndid sign, If she fast in their home at Ellenville, A iad iii aa ct TT RT acl note addressed to the Coroner read “And even the itl in shop or office| “lt Is usual in cases like this to Will food by and look better ender a verdict of suicide while in- will take ja brisk little walk in ane. Your verdict, to ae the facts in this ease, shou vrdowith ir Every day. 1 know she r feet ak al and that | Ra) mus t much time hoon, but let{elde with perfectly sound mind and ty walking a few blocks to or] body. tart off! ates, ute formerly) it Sy ae | ae utton formerly lived in Cheyenne, Wyo. Nelghborn said that minutes | for sever ks she had threatened I oN eae to Kil her husband, from whom ehe at her just try tie A ap ae separated four years ago, and visited tt @ than dancin Kingston last week to buy poison, it's outdoors. f think which, she was quoted as saying, was ‘less mussy than a revolver” —_—-— a ASKS BOARD OF HEALTH | SPEAKER CLARK FiGHTs Fine. With Family TO AID STRAP-HANGERS| wren ores 16 nresteorea. (Syecial to The Brening World.) JACKSON, Miss, Mar : e Clome Cail = 3 Geneviewe Clark had nar mends 50 Per Cent. Rule for |uarty to-day when t at Hass Christian was by OW eReupe Standees on Brooklyn Cars 1 portion of the personal effects of | : A recommendation in behalf of the | the Clark family was saved. Other ‘iso had to run from the flanes | Speaker Clark assisted t }Mghting the blaze The | totally wetroyed, involving @ Jabout $ n fire fj vin by Commis hotel was of ——— RARE ART FOR CHARITY, enth Avenue and the line mianuit ( wate Gs ten im Lo If ' bit at Altman How permitted one |. Benjamin Altman‘ nouse, at Fifth t capacity Com! on heed. | his death, will be opened to the public f tude hy | from Wednesday until April 4, for a tationed | te js to furnish food and clothing to deatitute women, children and aged people In France. Admission will cost $5 the first day and 81 at other times, Paintings will be supplied by Henry thirty years old,|C, Frick, Stanley Mortimer, Harry ue, Brooklyn, was] Payne Whitney, Are M. Huntington, EJ. Berwind, John W Charles B, Alexander, Samuel R. Bert rou, EB. R, Bacon, George F. Bal Otto H. Kahn, Mortimer Shiff, Mra. Va. sould. — aot edie ened ENDED LIFE V WITH GAS, | pr Andrews W ‘ourth A lodging house at No. 119 Washin t, Brooklyn, where he re The Kas in the room war turned } nd the oor caused Night Clerk, duties | derbilt and George J. John Andrews. of ss RY BRIE How American WomanCheats Herselfol youth MATHER OF VICTIM ~ WIDOW ACCUSED SAYSCLEARY KNEW AS ALOVE PIRATE; AWAY 1S" LIKE GIRL AAD MARRIED SUED FOR $75,000 NOTED ANCESTOR ~SRWALTER oS Matiida Avery (Gaean tiue les Murdock of appraised by who mays ehe lost them + $200,000 fron passengers i there wae aathe nd Hotel at Mlue ning of her trow ind exhaling sere thd the present MOTHER NOT HEARD AT TRIAL TESTIFIES Jown atthe table with upied room™ and her hus in the morning before Awd in moing t w ard & nolne on th or below and, Providence, where hie frat lecture w le eiven He Carter jaan ' bem i time with fir Gilbert and * Thomas, "The VW tridor and talking softy, reprimanded her husband, and a We © feel pretty pen days later left the hotel and went mary walked in polltion, » L went into business take the best of it to see Eugene in Haverstraw right ary wants] Murdock ‘They met Mr Ho sure to got him up there’ Ramed wiskop & Moss anked |nad given this conversation to Me. Gagan or his assistant, former insisted she |had but admitted she told them rhe could not awWeur to a statement that n told his daugh- short distan the men recognised them both ran, di 4 her daughter bid house for w time and then A Mra, Kennett, , the witnons said, was « aister of came to the door in a Nennett refused to ten door upon them. ed the hotel and after a tine saw Mr. Murdock emorg 1 be admitted to ‘ went to the hatel. ter was married Tho first witness catled was George Haveratraw the cellar a Murdock said she was willing husband and ive with him as they had lived prior “Verdict in This Case Should) ry did not seem very drunk fonal and natural cromm-examination k said whe and M dock were mar- , admitted it had been a com: naw marriaKs, ny having been per Onn child thet Surrogate Joh and Hernard came to him f of hin clomest *, Marie Cahill Famous Come Londonfeathe rHat.$sto $10 rmed she had Graham of Naw is counsel for Mra. Mur (kK and. Robert Pellotreau of Pat. WHITMAN MAY GIVE P. S, OFFICIALS MORE TIME Indicates That Newman counnel “Teould not sa West One Hundred and Fifty-olghth friend of Mrs. ther, who haw t POSLAM QUICK TO STOP THAT r AWFUL ITCH Uf you feel as though you wor on anything just to relieve itching distress, ¢ sioners to-morrow or an adjourn-|remember that Poslam setually ment will be taken until later in the] itching as soon as applied hats { he gave the answer charges of in- lect of duty inveatigution of tho Cleary family McCall and Others Can Have Hearing on Charges Delayed, if Desired ALBANY, March 22.—Gov. man is uncertain whether he will dis- boxe of the charges aguiust the four Service Commis- the day of th hultae wald at the trial it TENDS TO SHOW CLEARY KNEW OF WEDDING. md an eanential when he learn tot his daughter's ¢ and did not know of more, quick skin to health, i septic, healing influence me Controls and erad as ie Readily removes Pi missioners ¢ efficiency and and was Killed. hultes in her riage if Anna ¢ anid Mrs Re The Governor said to-day he had ved no word from the © rite ries, 38 Weat dun" ‘Stevet, New York. Poslam Soup, rys as Koon Lynne Castle! Anna wan dang e4 that they would appear be fore him to-morrow ia improves the skin with ite daily wae, for toilet and bath, 25 cents and 16 cents.—Advt, STRENGTHing J MOTHERHOOD marriage was token te the Cleary house twenty-four time established at uf the Commiasioners requr st- adjournment the requ urs before th trial of Cleary v Commissionerahips > Meade teatitied, that reporters had been asking him If. the one Cleary used fixed March 29 as the ring before him * am all rusty ‘and he had it with hh he Ho slapped his pocke’ * Compensation the trial that eat f that day it will | Avenue and Miftieth Street, closed since Fev! fiver Innit heen Ieft inn denwer in 4 hin relations with telegrams and 4,600 n exhibition of Afty patntings from | along the line of tiese roads, particu. | some of the Anegt private galleries in| gaw ouen Hall Hall the elty, ‘The oxhibition will be in| charge of the Secours National, the] the and smiling. eryman, said he garecnen 10. Rpeeiar Immediately walking’ either and local option x swide prohibition asked if Gagan r talked to Hose, Gagan, ait | ting bentde Moss some trepidation by remark- he Commissioner will say that he has read the record of the rebuttal Moss calmed him. ing about the (rial 1 me he had to get minute adjournment to persuade ruff Simpson, | Mr objected to this as an y Elizabeth Freyfogel said Chiet Word talked with her the day “Because he dida't want to rake up . after Nowman was shot, Office, 204 Wushing- Brook , Mrvokiza, for BO. Wiistige he’ printing et the edvertisommet. : F Moss's question: jagan in another conversa- fon sald the verdict acquittlag Cleary | “They say it was you was an outrage. Commissioner What did you say to him and he to you? your, gun it was Hoghkies caused | had my gun with me all the tse.” *s Here n tame verpeet mone Kole, @ t ® sho atte. ond tow . “ OObert ' © oon, Pe aca pePCYAEAA es e te f submannee soon the @ret pool, but pooled to he mewtt ve ewceper and Heat (the press on Ay Queenstown, cr f email thine om | ‘ panty and @tted © ew boats are excitement im vet parting om eon foot ching 216 Lr ie not an adven= ve first Halelah te ne ‘ f one of the “he said, “money » in politics | —<—= at ie Ga eine bgt Brings just the sooth- medicated with Poslam, wa

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