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Lop eA ee ae Ey é EAST eR ee ie AE Mahan tye GRRE ea Hy THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1916, sam conten Tae 8 dace ire FNRUSRUN [American Women NOT Most Beautiful, WELASVEMS TMISHSS |< —ASMEXICOHEAD | Lives Too Artificial, Says Indian Prince WFECOMMITTED | CX TOCONGUWNTE (recs : nde hap as you enn't let that property get = A A cane N f IF U. 5. MOVES Former Foreign Minister Under Madero Is Considered by Wilson, CARRANZA MAY BALK. Belief He Will Take Defiant Stand Against Presi- dent’s Policy. (Opeoctal from @ Staff Correspondent ef The Evening World.) ‘WASHINGTON, June 4—If the Usted States hae to pick the man fe be President of Mexico, the first @holce in line of legitimate succes- Gents Petre Lescurain, who was Min- jeter of Foreign Affairs under Presi- dent Madero. For a few hours ho| | estually wae President of the republic after President Madero and Vice Bresident Guares were assassinatedin Webroery, 1912, and until Huerta de- peeed him from office, Basourain was a men of wealth, eet when Huerta seized the Govern- ment his property was confiscated emi he became an exile. It is said that Laecurain nearly starved in New York and that he and his sister are mow conducting a boarding house fm that city to make a livics. Phe State Department bas looked =p the recoris in relation to Lascu- ‘Mim and he is on the list as one who cen be given moral support of this Government tn case leaders of war- ring factions do nat compose thelr differences and establish a govern- ment. ) Senor Lascussin has long been known to entertain the friendilest gentiments for the United States, both in a personal and an official sense, and when Minister of Foreign @ffaire he did much to promote a feeling of good will between the two countries. President Wilson's Mexican note “pas been delivered to Gen. Carranza and to the Constitutionalist Provision- al President Garza, Consul Silliman at Vera Cruz notified the State De- jay. He did not say how the note was received. T! dispatched also to Gen. Villa, offi stated, but owing to interrupted com- munications, it was not known whether it had been delivered. Secretary Bryan expects replies in a day or two from the Mexican ohtefe to the note. It Is believed Carranza will defy the United States im its effort to bring order and constitutional government to the re- public, and it is possible his atti- ture may force the hand of this Gov- ernment much sooner than was looked fer, 7 a Mayors’ © Ends. TROY, June 4.—The conference of Mayors and city oMctals of the State, h hag been in session here for three ded last night. Syracuse was ‘as the conference city for next USE POSLAM TO IMPROVE A BAD COMPLEXION Poslam works quickly. 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Keep your eye on the horizon if you wish to spend the best vacation that you possibly can, and ABOUT JUNE 141th you will find over 2,000 Summer Resort Hote! and Boarding Place announcements * THE WORLD'S SUMMER RESORT ANNUAL bor 1945 a atid y printes and profusely ile fastrated volume that will be distributed KLE AT ALI WORLD OFFICES (By Mail, Send 8s. for Postage) if you are a “Suimmer Resort” ade vertiser and your ad. is printed in The Work! ne ' june 6, it will be reproduces (9 this oeautitul and widely circulated guide. THE WORLD LEADS ALL AS A VACATION GUIDE! one of these was a trifle too fat.” Withal, the Prince is apologetic, if firm, He doesn't want to be the least bit discourteous to the American woman; he admires her, generically and specifically, tor many reasons. It is only that he cannot tell @ le, and that, when the question is thrust upon him, he !s constrained to admit he does not think we are beautiful. He doesn't think we compare a dit well with the pulchritudinous ladles of his native Punjab. And as soon as maybe he's going home to choose a wife from those same models of loveliness, DEFECTS OF THE AMERICAN AS FOUND BY PRINCE DHALIP. 1 talked with the Prince in his com- fortable living room, done in soft, dull blues and greens, with an Ortental vase or two, some charming paint- ings of trees and sky, and a chubby little bronze Buddha chaperoning us from the mantelpiece, The Prince himself 1s a tall, graceful young man, who has a brush of thick black hair, @ pair of big brown eyes and a skin just touched with bronze, These are some th detects often too gers. Sh monious perfection. “Just three beautiful Amertean | men have I seen,” he admitted, “One of them was in China, One was on Riverside Drive, The third, who had with her two charming little about six and eight years old Ively, was at Newport, she, the American won has al lovely fe there is usually ething | the matter with her figure much | ylittie. When her figure is reautifully moulded, there are faults Jin her face, If by any chance both | face and figure are beyond criticiam, | the the hands are large and awk. wardly shaped and the feet are ugly, WOMEN OF PUNJAB DON’T AD. | VERTISE THEIR CHARMS, but | come wornen thern Indin, 4 of white and of arely visit Has Seen Only Three Fascinating United States Women, and of These One Was in China and An- other Too Fat—Believes Only Brunettes Are Ideally Pretty and Can’t Understand the Desire to Be Blonde, Even to the Use of Chemical Coloring. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “The American woman is NOT the most beautiful woman in the world, TI have seen thousands, and of them all only three were really beautiful— Tho author of this jewel of originality, this really glorious heresy, is Prince Dhalip Singh Gill of Patiala, Punjab, India, for the past three or four years a stu- dent at Columbia and at New York University and now writing a book about America. If either of the institu- tions he has attended gave an honorary degree for sheer, unqualified, audacious veracity, Prince Dhalip Singh Gill would walk off with it. All my interviewing life I've been waiting for the foreign guest whois suf- ficiently an intellectual pioneer and an honest man ta perceive that some few of our women are not living Venuses. Yesterday afternoon in an apartment on West One Hundred and Fifteenth Street I found what Diogenes sought if@v: ‘ain. judge us all by the types of rather common women whom they see in the uth. The women of the Punjab do not advertise their charms, Here the pho- tograph of any woman who is thought lovely i# published in the newspapers, not once, but many times. Nothing of the sort happens in my country. Only the Mohammedan women are veiled, but the Hindu women revea) their charms to none save their fam- ily and friends.” “But what is your ideal of feminine beauty, to which the American woman #o rarely conforms?” I asked, “The beauty should be between 6 feet 7 inches and 5 feet 9 inches in height, slender, graceful and perfectly proportioned. “She should have classic, reg- ular features, and she should be does not need to or to wear corsets, happy, conten’ nat is the type of woman found in the Punjab,” reiterated the prings patriotically. “Her skin is very light, much lighter than that of the men, and there Is natural color in her cheoks and lips, I do not understand why you in this country place so high an aesthetic value upon the blonde coloring that many women strive to imitate it artificially, For the reason [ have mentioned a blonde can nette; the light eyes and brows of the blonde are almost sure to make her look insipid and doll-like.”” LIVES OF AMERICANS TOO AR- TIFICIAL. “Why are not American women more beautiful?” I asked “LL seems to moe that many of them lead too artificial a life,” he offered. “Their clothes are exaggerated and artiticlal, ‘They have the high-heeled | shoes, tho tht corsets, the heavy hats. They Wear so much clothing, ba ite wiylo ie conatantiy, changing to conform to ar ry standards of beauty, and ult be pI np The women of my country wear| | Don’t Let Your Stomach Trouble You | When you feel miserable, run down, have a bad taste in the mouth, coated | | tongue and frequent headaches, it is @ sure sign that your stomach, liver | end bowels are not in order and need a good, thorough cleansing at once. Ambansador a | | | to send @ per a Ne Frequent » resu | | porte that Austrian oly | The Delicious, Laxative Chocolate will cleanse your system in a natural, healthy manner, without pain or griping. bex-Lax will roliove yew bowels of the undigested waste matter, and in several hours your head wii be clear and your eyes will sparkle. One 10¢ box of Ex-Las is enough to convince you. Get it ot your drug storeto-day, 10c., 25¢ and 0e Aes’ oe ever be as beautiful as a bru-| ~—ERURY NUIT ELT | Five Hundred Lusty Young Son of Chicago Chlsins Niincniat Men. Anxious to. “Get a Also Accuses Her Divorce Crack at Austria.” Witnesses in Deposition. Nearly five hundred reservists flocked to the Italian Consulate to- ‘The face of Mrs. Albert Gallatia bland san eles rome 0 Wheeler, Jr, who was Claudia Carl-| go} stedt of footli¢ht fame, before she faved caalettenn eettte as ae rom wedded the son of a Chicago raliway|lads were when they rushed to the magnate, grew crimeon with Anger) recruiting places (o enlist against and indignation, today, when her| Spain. husband's charge that abe and ber|souty eg EArt of Latayelte Street witnesses had committed perjury wae read to a jury sitting in Justion Hendrick’e part of the Supreme Court. Wheeler was not/in court, He ts|and |living with his parents at No, ess6 | Crow! | Sheridan Road, Chicago, and beoause| ” signor ‘ne says he ts too poor to pay bis fare Ceageh weule | to New York, his deposition was ta~ ken there, to be used in his sult “0 thee two wrestle have fee searne compel Mra, Wheeler to return 818,- tees and that as many “nore will be 500 worth of furniture and brio-m-/enxaged os are needed to take the fanting men home.- jbrac which he bought to furnish) “Roserviats”in equada of ten were their home in the Dakota <Apart-| called over from the little park. They ments fn Central Park West. olimbed the stairs to the second floor, The perjury alleged by Wheeler weal Mui or "Ne pinokine’s cline, if room ‘No smoking” signs. committed, he declared, in a rece they were allowed to enter oMfce, where a clerk sat wife, which she won. Mrs. Wheeler's) Hote” nee, ic Bo a jaterec ac! | counsel, Emil Fuchs, declared that if/ man and gave him the ticket which Wheeler wanted to make such grave|will entitie him to _ TenaDOrTA tion charges, he should appear in court|When the ship is rea and undergo cross-examination. own Rat Naa Dale nok ony vorl “He doesn't dare come into New berthed had brought three friends best York State because he knows there ls one tn Ttaly’s call for Mehtorn, ‘Only | judement nat him for $600 un. |Onh I the whole crowd seamed to fee! paid allmony and he wil! be punished| "Pm tn bad." he explained. “T've if he shows up," declared Fuchs, Jus.) Rot ® business here, and when my tice Hendrick ordered the perjury | Wetenmmametom nt Oe the Colorn five charge stricken from the record. : Although given $500,000 to buy an} interest in the J. B. Russell Company, Wall Street brokers, Wheeler, in bis deposition, declares he !s now “broke” and was compelled to give his father a lien upon hie wedding presents and household belongings because of heavy indebtedness to him. Finally, be had to deed wedding presents and 1d shooed them over to the ye park aci ona the street. There era feared to crowds around their entrances, bay to ~~ #0 sensitive to crowds, Soaks hear the door of th It's a Premicr Product—the beg == | the bank feared ‘to wat money oan bay, bat net capeniv t De- en send: Hudson River & CANDY SPECIALS To-Day and To-Morrow A ow souvenir a8 to each purchaser. single long strip of cloth ited about the entire body and conforms to its lines, There are no corsets to distort the shape of the natural figure, and in place of boots that cramp the foot Punjab women wear soft slippers. Their diet is Cs most wholly vegetarian and drink no alcoholic liquors, no tea or coffee, They drink a great deal of milk. jany American women lose their beauty because they work so hard. In shop, in factory, in office, in hard manual labor they come into competition with men and they suffer in the etrife with su- perior physical force. Even in the arta and professions | hi seen women working away their bloom and freshness. They grow thin, white, wrinkled and gray-haired at too early an age. LABOR WILL NEVER SPOIL BEAUTY OF INDIAN WOMEN. “Our men think too much of thetr women to permit such exhausting la- bor, The poorest man in the Punjab will not allow his wife to overtax her health and strength, In the great establishments much responsibiilty upon the wife, but she never wears herself out physically and m Even among the women so many are employe one's burden is too heavy “Don't you think tha fean women play too hard?” 1 sug- gested. “I don't think that a life of unrelieved athletics is the best thing in the world for beauty.” “A little athletics wi me other vio- ity? Outdoor woman should sgt eae why the women of my | country are #0 lovely ta that they are #0 happy,” concluded Prince Dhalip “At leant’ ninety-five per cent, of our marriages turn out well; consequent- ly our women have cheerful, happy faces, and repose instead of reatlens- ness of manner, All this makes for grace and charm.” He was too poilte to complete the comparison, but perhaps some of us| vill involuntarily do Ho —— | |GZAR GRANTS PLEA THAT WILSON MADE ai Consents to Inspection of Siberian | Leroy Street and is not expected back Where Prisoners are Held Camps Austrian WASHINGTON, June 4—Kimperor | Nicholas of Russia has responded favorably to President Wilson's per onal letter conveying a request by Austria that provision be made for inspecting Siberian camps end Austrian prisoners are held Following unsuccessful new siaiiana| | President Wilwon nal letter to Emperor wae the re t of re prin re oof war were nut proper treatment. ‘The Austrian Gov ernment asked that the inapection be ondueted by American ited Crosse nt | Anewer was brought here to day by Hay Bak private secretary | to Ambassador Marye, ' SEARCH FOR MAN WHO SAYS HE SAW GUNS ON LUSITANIA Operatives of Department of Justice Begin Inquiry Re- garding Gustave Stahle. all to his father, he says, “My wife had no money when married her,” Wheeler declared, “an the first furniture I bought when w went to housekeeping wan given t her parents because the Sheriff be taken all their property.” ment his wife had Joc! the doors to their a couldn't get in. ‘tment s0 Wheeler for twelve yea you?” asked Mrs. Wheele: “You, unfortunately,” wi awor. laughed heartily. —_- Jall for Crooked Bankr Moses H. Levy and Philip B. who were convicted of having engage lawyer, Acting under orders from Wash- ington, Division Superintendent Wil- liam M. Offley, of the United States Department of Justice, Bureau of In- Van Weael, the truates, the asi the bankrupt firm of Herman Le Sons, diamond hep peat at aS rect, were. sente 0 veatigation, to-day sent Deputy Ba-| criminal branch of the Federal Diatrict ker and another operative to the| Court by Judge Pollock to serve. term house at No. 20 Leroy Street, recently | Penetentiary tion, Moxon Jucob Sib rupt, firm, partictpation in the Fined $600 and given of imprisonment in the the residence of Gustave Stahle, the German whose aMdavit Ambassador Bernatorff submitted to the Depart- ment of State in support of the Ger- man Government's contention that the Fusitania, on her last trip, had mounted guns aboard her. Baker and the other investigator made inquiries as to Stahie's quall- fications and possible motives for making such a @worn statement as that submitted to Washington. When they returned and made their report to Bupt. Offley he stated to reporters that his investigation would be con- cluded to-morrow and the ~esulte sent at once to Washington Search for Stahle himself has thus far proved fruitlens. conspiracy, wa: bul John J, Henry, in charge of the| United States Secret Service tn thin) The large bovine po pene city, stated his department was not) our 4 stores make: touching the S:ahle case. Deputy Col-| such values ch vals pone lector of the Port Stewart, in the absence of Collector Malone, declined | to state whether his chief was en- Jeavoring to find Stable, but it ts understood the neutrality squad or- | ganized by the Law Department of the customs service is working in| ] conjunction with the Department of| | Justice in an effort to establish the dibility or lack of credibility whieh be attached to the man’s state. also the latest I le hus not returned to No, 20 Hairline Worsteds, The trunk in the room occupied by | Atuble and his friend, Otto Kehubert, | belongs to the latter and Stahl te said to have brought nothing in the way of bagkawke with him when he took the room. He ts understood to have been in the neighborhood of the place last night and at one time ap- peared when reporters were talking to his room mate, but the latter gave him a signal to keap out of aight and he di red Yi Chocolate Raspberry | Fruit Bar AUERBACH @ SONS. new youn bee A = 15001 Ni nd lasting satleter We keep your pat 0, Mens Ho said that after their estrange- and chatned he “But you had been married to Mra, hadn' the Mrs. Wheeler and the jurors a". 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