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‘i to President Wilson, where the de- * tug and escaped by the pier, leaving THE EVENING WUALD, YULSYAY, JULY 6, 1916, GERMANY'S REPLY ON THE LUSITANIA DUE THIS WEEK Official Announcement That It Is Under Consideration Made in Berlin. WILSON NOT SATISFIED. Rumor in Cornish Is That Ger- many Will Not Materially Modify Submarine Raids. BERN (via wireless to London), July 6—"The German reply in the Lusitania matter is now being con- sidered by the Government,” it was stated officially this afternoon. “Its| Gelivery may be expected by the end| of the week.” CORNISH, N. H,, July 6.—Prest- dent Wilson to-day exchanged confi- Aential code messages with Secretary Lansing in connection with the state- ment, transmitted here by the State Department, of Germany's informal outline of her position regarding sub- marine warfare, While absolute secrecy regarding the situation was maintained at President Wilson's summer home, {¢ was under- stood that the President was reluctant to enter Into any arrangement with Germany which could be interpreted as the surrender by the United States of its stand for the freedom of the soar. The view: the President, indicated a desire on| the part of the Government of that | country to reach un agreement with the United States, but there was no} Indication here that Germany was} ready materially to modify her use of | submarines against the merchant) ships of her enemies, The President spent several hours fn his study reading the despatches from Washington and working on his reply. It was stated that the nego- tintions were in so Incomplete a state that no announcement concerning| them would be forthcoming at this time. WASHINGTON, July 6,—Secretary Lansing stated to-day that a des- patch had been received from Ambas sador Gerard giving informally tho views of the German Government on submarine warfare, but this Govern- ment has not replied, While declining to discuss the con- tents of the despatch, Mr. Lansing Jet it be known that the proposals contained in it were similar to those which have already been discussed ‘im Berlin press despatches, indicating @ desire to clarify the situation be- fore making formal answer. Mr. Lansing sald there had been no exchange of views as yet and that no negotiations had been entered into by the American Government. Mr. Ger- ard’s despatch has been transmitted cision rests as to the character of in- structions to be given the American Ambassador in answering the in- quiries of Berlin officials. —.——_—_ YOUTH, SHOT, ACCUSED AS TUGBOAT ROBBER Abandoned His Boat in Flight, Say Police, and Came Back Twice "to Get It. A man rowed to the tugboat Lib- erty at Thirteenth Street and Go- ‘wanus Canal, Brooklyn, early to-day, broke into the engine room and took f@ bat and raincoat, which he threw to an adjoining tug. A watchman shouted at him and he ran off the his boat tied to the Liberty. Later he came back ip another boat to get his abandoned craft, and was again fiightened away. The third tine he came, at 6 A. M,, the police had been tipped off. There was ‘a chase of more than a mile through the streets, Policeman Grennan of the Fifth Avenue Station fired five shots, which only made him run faster. At Fourth Avenue and Fit- teenth Street Policeman Pegnan fired one shot In the alr and two ata man he saw running, A youth describing himself as Peter Goodmiller, eighteen, of No. 288 Sixteenth Street, fell with @ bullet in his abdomen and his right hand. He is in @ serious condition tn Seney Hospital, and the police charge » with burglar For Constipation EX LAX ‘The Delicious Laxative Chocolate Ex-Lax relieves constipation, regulates the stomach and bowels, stimulates the liver and promotes digestion. Good for young and old, 1c, 5c, and 50c, at all druggists. WHAT EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW! How to Kee Well, Keep Strong and Keep a Perfect Figure, Told in a Series of Illustrated Lessons > ny iy o Because of her perfect physical proportions, Pauline Furlong has been named the “American Venus.” ture at Home,” and is an authority on all questions of woman's physical well-being. She will give a course of lessons to the women readers of The Evening World this suntmer on “How to Make Yourself Well and Strong and Preserve Your Figure.” LESSON Vil. By Pauline Furlong. “If a woman develops her muscles, will she not lose in feminine ax and loveliness what she may gain in strength?” That is ‘the question which one woman puts to me and which is doubtless dormant in many women’s minds. The fact that the query was answered affirmatively during a long period of years constitutes one of the} reasons why, by more or less common consent, women were barred from athletic activity until a comparatively recent date, Even the small girl not out of pina- fores was a victim to the feeling that Physical weakness was somehow sy- nonymous with physical beauty in the case of the female sex. It was not her happy privilege to go swimming and camping, to climb fences and trees and to share in her brother's rough outdoor games. She must sit in the house, playing with dolls and sewing patchwork, and, as a young lady of fifty years ago, croquet and archery were the only athletic (7) pastimes permitted to her. No Won- der she was called the weaker sex! STRONG MUSCLES NOT INCOM- PATABLE WITH BEAUTY. Now we have changed all that. Many women who alternate be- tween the gymnasium and the tennis court are living denials of the theory that trained, strong muscles are incompatible with womanly beauty and grace. And, as | hav woman with her mai of surplus flesh is the flabbily musoled woman. | do not think she is generally held to be beau- tiful anywhere outside of a Ma- hometan paradise. The beautiful lines and contours of a woman's figure are formed only by muscles in a state of rest, There is a widespread but mistaken notion that muscles are hard, knotty sub- stances, and are the fitting develop- ment of no one except the professional male athlete, This is a mistake. In the statues that have come down to us from antiquity and that are generally accepted as ideal personifi- cations of beauty, it is the muscles and nothing but the muscles that |form the beautifully rounded arms, hips and shoulders, the carefully modelled waists. The surface layer of fat is exceedingly thin, and is distributed so evenly that the form itself is in no way modified. The skeleton shows itself too prom- inently if there are not enough mus- cles; even if the form is obese it con- veys a certain impression of flatness and therefore of ugly angularity, The fat is arbitrarily disposed, in lumps, hillocks and bulging rolis, and if a tight corset is worn {he reduction of the measurements at one point la overbalanced by the unpleasant pro- tuberance above and below. UGLY SUPERFLUOUS FLESH “MUST GO SOMEWHERE.” I once heard a French artist in New York wailing his despair over the un- naturally long and tight corset worn by women who wished to display the though I never rately spoil, in such a fashion, one of the most beautiful curves in her whole body. “Ze flesh mus’ go somewhere,” be- moaned the artist. “Mos'ly goes here,” and he seized his legs a few inches above the knee, “It ees po de- formed an’ #o ogly—it spoils every hard, what le called “muscle-flesh” is invariably v Ay | Siz Weeks’ Course of Exercise and Diet for Women Readers of The Evening World, Arranged by Pauline Furlong, Author of “‘Beauty Culture at ” of Germany, received by! To«Day’s Illustrated Lesson Shows the Value of Tennis as a Healthful Beautifier and the Bene- fits of Knowing How to Sit Correctly. \ | a= r* TARE NT FES STARTED I HOME WER FAMILY Household of John D. Trenor Awakes to Figd Blazes in ' Rooms and Cellar. She is the author of “Beauty Cul- || -- I will stick to something more strenuous. . There is scarcely a muscle in the body that tennis does not and strengthen. The low balls, which ministe: suppleness of the joints. As I cannot repeat too many times, | what puts on muscle takes off flesh. | You may remember that I bave al-)| Fire marshals and detectives are in- vestigating three mysterious fires which were started early to-day in S 7 ready given you exercises with wands| Kast Sixty-second Stre ‘, apparent disposed according to certain |and dumbbells to develop the mus- pong ld a belt Pegs structural laws, a.id gives the | cles in shoulders, arms and upper {PY Some person bent upan revenge natural, beautiful, approp torso, and therefo: to reduce to| The lives of Mr. Trenor, his wife, his she oto the figure. If you would |shapeliness the overbeavy bust and] sister-in-law, Misa Helen Le Cc eo what mean, study the |forearms. The tennis racquet serves PR RISSEMGRT KElaaG 2 famous etatue of the Verus de |the eame purpose. And the bending | 204 ¢Wo servants, asicep on the top movements from the hips and waist, | floor, were tnpariled. the kicking movements with the legs,| Mr, ‘Trenor, who was formerly are Boarly all of them duplicated Inj president of the Hawailan Sugar You are also aware that perspira-|/lanters’ Association, was to have tion Is of great assistance in melting oe with his household to his sum- off the fatty tissues. ‘Two or three mer home at York Cliffs, Me., to-day jew mi , | hours of tennis in the hot sun shoul @ the place of have nearly the sweating effect of When the family retired last night all xhuisite muscular develop- hot bath and a nap under warm cov-| the trunks and | we had been the figure of the woman ers, and, if you have any fondness for | packed and were on the parlor floor in who has never exercised the |sports, should prove Infinitely more| readiness for transportation to the muscle-roots of abdomen and enjoyable. If you are not accus-| station, torso. tomed to ‘playing, don't overdo It the | "AHOM, Sei Pan first blazing afternoon you appear on ‘8. Trenor, who had been unable to AS IMPORTANT TO SIT COR®|th, court, and always wear a shade sleep, smelled smoke at 1.80, id RECTLY AS TO WALK RIGHT. | hat to protect your eyes and skin. But | awakened her husband, He telephoned the more you play the more pounds | you will take off. —>—_ 176 PERSONS INJURED CELEBRATING FOURTH Yesterday's Record for Manhattan and the Bronx Exceeds Last I have given you explicit directions as to how to walk and how to stand in order to bi the different por- tions of the trunk into right relations with each other and make muscular exercise a pleasure instead of a fa- Uguing discomfort. But careful ob- servation of women in the street cars, restaurants and ‘theatres of New York has convineed me that many of you| do not even know how to take the| right position in sitting. When you are in a chair your body to Fire Headquarters and an engine from Eact Sixty-seventh Street and Third Avenue was on the scene in a few minutes. The firemen were admitted by Mr. Trenor, They found the house full of amoke from three separate fires, one among rubbish in the cellar, one in @ trunk in the parlor and one in 4 closet in the library, uid be aa well goleed # The fires were extinguished with- ee oe oe ee cates Cn erate , 4 out difficulty and the Fire Marshal's on your feet, The main thing to re- Year's by 57 Cases. office was notified. Search of the member is to avoid undue curvature house revealed that there had been of the spine. You must not lean for.| Accidents trom New York's last day|no attempt at robbery. The doors ward, sidewise or backward, except|of celebrating its latest “Safe and) “nd windows of the lower floor were that ‘when you are frankly’ resting|Sane Fourth” were numerous enough | *!! #ecurel tened, and none bore marks of having been forced. of the members of the family furnish the investigutors with a clue, SLADE TRIAL GOES OVER UNTIL MONDAY Judge Still Ill and Court Wams you may lean back in your chair if| you will promise not to slump on the end of your spine, Give your spine a chance; it has enough work to do already.’ Sit on the forward edge of your chair or as far back as possible, so long as you clear the chairback. Don't hunch over le or desk, and don't permit your chair to be in'such close juxtaposition with them that you are tempted to crouch, If you keep your spine un- to read ke a battlefield casualty re- port. As on the preceding day, the chief damage done was by blank cart- ridges. Scores of children were in- jured by the explosion of these or tho bursting of cheap revolvers. ‘The police record showed that 176 accidents were reported from explo- ives in Manhattan and the Bronx yesterday. The total last year was 119, There were 4) fires, against 33 last year. M crooked_and your chest erect an ‘However, only one death and one Jurors Not to Discuss Hess uiwary you willl preet possibly fatal injury were recorded. pets eri Work patter: At | in Brooklyn there were few gccidents, \ Case. i Antonio Tedisio was burning ‘k- working nger ang nevertne: | les" ‘on the fire eecape of his home ac| Perhaps Oliver Ovborne will get to tee fae! Me At | No. 225 East One Hundred and Elev-| court after all. The trial of David and ion is working anit Bisoet iene Peer Te hie exeite- Maxwell Slade and Detective MoCul- lough for conspiracy was postponed this morning until next Monday morn- ing, owing to the continuance of Judge Gordon Russell's iWiness with malaria, The two big trunks and the suit jecessary organs are no longer being thrust out of place. The results of keeping your circulation as it should be— another thing helped or hindered by correct sitting—are less imme- diately discernible but even more important and lasting. Many of my readers are now on their vacations and I hope they will net neglect one of the finest exercises for strengthening all the muscles and | correcting obesity—the game of idwn | tennis, Even the girls and women who are still in the city may find op- portunity for it; there are neighbor- hood and park courts, not a few of them. killed. Eleven-year-old Margaret Kelly of No. 22 West End Avenue lighted a cannon cracker and hurled it into the street. When it exploded it tore up bits of pavement and a plece of cement struck the girl on the head ‘At Roosevelt Hospital it was said her skull was fractured, but she might recover. fore the jury when court was opened, and only three or four minor wit- nesses remained to be examined to complete the case for the prosecution when United States Attorney H Snowden Marshall received word from Dr, Fielding Taylor, who has charge of Judge Russell's case at the New York Hospital, that he thought it ad- visable to let the Judge get entirely well before resuming the trial Mr. Marshall notified Judge Grubb, who sat in Judge Russell's place, and he adjourned the trial, warning the jurors meantime to refrain from dis- guasing jit and to notify the trial rey any one should try to talk them about it — MONUMENT TO OLD SLAVE. to Liberty, July 6—A_ monument to Harriet Tubman, @ colored woman, THE VALUE OF TENNI8 AS Al who died last year at the age of HEALTHFUL BEAUTIFIER, ninety-six, was unvetled at Fort Hill From the viewpoint of physical de- | C tery to-day by the New York velopment T conaider tennis a much | Bt Federation of Colored Women's ore valuable | Clubs. more valuable Age San goll ale Horn in slavery, she fled to the North and led more than 400 fugitive mended to the tired business C=] ‘ves to freedom. John Brown com- Let him enjoy his quiet, peacefu fer "Gen Pupman® “and | Jud egunters over the green, but you and gave her « pension. with ATBURN, the honif¥ of John D. Trenor, No, 142} case full of dainty Oliver's silk socks } and other dazzling finery lay open be- | 4 =e IRE GEE br seers SIX TEACHERS FROW SCHOOL TO BE MARRIED Cuptd has been lurking about Publ School No. #8, Elm Avenue and Fresh Pond Road, Ridgewood, L of Queens, this year. He found the hunt ing good, for six of the r that school expect to be married ‘vacation time, ; George H. Schoettle, who taugit 6B is to wed Miss Helen Ties, © taught class 5A, and they will «pend: honeymoon in Maine. Charles A. who taught class 7A, in to wed Adele Montz, who taught class 4A, ceremony will be performed bride's home, No. $3 Clinton Brooklyn. Friends say Miss Florence B. wit PPS HE AE ERVED ON WOMAN ABOARD vac) MASHNGTON AGENTS State Department Told Condi- Tugs Used in Chase After Mrs.] _ tions at Capital and Other Bay, Cruising About Places Are Pitiful. the Sound. |CAPT. METZER NAMED. a WASHINGTON, July 6.—The State Department received its first despatch toeday from Consul Shanklin and Red | Suse and ‘ins lear Robs Cross Agent O'Connor since their ar-| {he primary teachers, are tives is ‘Mexico City, Tt was dated] It is sald that, any pumber of % July 1. They said the situation was| teachers are looking for { very nerious and that the sufferings of |in' the hope that Cupid ‘will rem the people are intense. The ‘acon In the towns about Mexico City they declared conditions worse than in the Capital, and even the harvest would help Ittle, since the crop was only 10 to 50 per cent. of the normal. They summed up the situation as “pitiful.” Information from another source State Department official sid, came from an inveatigator who had been touring the northern States and who reported that famine conditions there had not been exaggerated, despite the denials of Mexican leaders. eee nceniane GIFT TO BABY LEADS TO ARREST FOR MURDER) Hotelkeeper’s Wife Lived on His Boat, Is Claim, Though She Has Her Own. « ‘There have heen lively times among certain private yachts in Petham Bay during the last few months, the de- tails of which were revealed to-day when Peter Bay, forty-two, owner of the Westchester Hotel, Med suit in the County Court for absolute divorcee from Salina Bay, thirty-nine, who, he saya, has abandoned him and is now living with a Capt. J. H, Metser of South Caroll on the latter's private yacht Leonora, In order to procure service on Mra Bi Bennett KE. Stegelstein, No. 99 Nassau Street, attorney for the plain- tiff, had to hire tugs from time to time, and send them crulsing around Long Island Sound in pursuit of the elusive “Leonora” and Mrs, Bay's own private yacht, the “Satbay." ‘These chases have tagen place dur- ing the last five months and it was only on June 15 that Mra, Bay is said | to have been located on Capt. Metzer's Detectives Trace Barber to Con- necticut by Postmark on Spe- cial Delivery Package. Angelo .Malino, a barber, was ar- rested to-day in Saugatauck, Conn. by Detectives Enright and Conroy of this city for the murder of his wife on Aug. §, 1914, The barber, accord- various A lingering piquant fla~ yacht and served with the divoré|ing to the police, returned to hia} | VOF that is pleasing, papers. The filing of the complaint) icine unexpectedly one morning and,| | ble and satisfying. was held up until to-day to avold/anding his wife, Marguerite, with premature publicity, and the defendant | Frank Paduchio, shot and kitled the it toanorrow to file her | former and wounded the man. bee Masa " The detectives learned that a cou- blake) sin of his living o nOne Hundred and edings | All the parties to the pro ‘Thirty-second Street was to have a are well known in Westchester, the} child christened last night and went OLD v1 » rather, Col. there, Malino wasn’t there, but has scraper ap icesigae Bisby sent & present to the baby by special sTv.e 4 jay, having been delivery. The letter bore the Bauga- area once known as “Baychester,"|tuck postmark and when the barber 4 now Westchester Square. Mra, Bay] opened his shop to-day he found two ’ is sald to have become infatuated | ew customers, He waived extradis It gives just the right zest with Capt. Metzer while he was at the Fort Schnyler Road Hotel in 1914, playing golf, The Captain is de- scribed as attractive and wealthy and owns another private yacht besides —>—— to soups, oysters, meats, gravies and SEVEN PERSONS HURT AS AUTO OVERTURNS}| Delicatessen Stores, LO Made by E. Pritchard, 331 Spring St., N, ‘This is not the first time Mra. Bay has attracted attention by affairs in which she has been concerned. She and her husband, with whom their two children, Chester, aged eleven, and Viola, nine, seem to have lived together happily enough until 1912, when In the Bay mansion on Fort | Schuyler Road there was 4 brawl be- tween two soclety women and two men, members of a nearby golf club, |known as the Gees brothers, All | those present were arrested, but Mrs, Bay i# said to have protected the men in the matter and no complaint | was filed, In 1918 a Joseph Connelly was killed in the hdtel owned by Mr, Bay in a fight with a captain of one of the boats than at anchor In the Sound Mrs. Bay's interest In the captain ts sald to have been such that she suc- cessfully shielded him, and though | she was taken to the House of Deten- e she was later re- GREENWICH, Conn., July 6.—Sev- en persone were injured to-day whon an automobile owned and driven by Joseph de Georgo of Brooklyn, N. Y., overturned as it was crossing the trolley tr Some of the occupants were thrown ito the roadway, Others were caught benoath the machine. ‘The moat seriously hurt was Doug: | las de Georgo, twelve years old, %} son of the owner. {n addition to a broken arm he ta thdught to be in- SILK STOCKINGS THAT WEAR _GOTHAM Goto Strip: REG U.S PAT.OFF 400 DIFFERENT SHADES. consisting of De Georgo, ir son and two daughters, brother Joseph and Mrs. Edith Patterson of New York, were bound for Windsor Locks, Conn. AT TOUR DEALER'S AND GOTHAM HOSIERY SHOP, 27 WEST STH ST. tion at that tir leased without further action being taken | "In 1914 Peter Bay was awarded $26,000 by the City of New York as indemnity for some land which had \come down to him, and Mrs. Bay was induced to accept $14,000 of it for the release of her dower rights. It ts stated that she took $15,000 at once and bought her private yacht, the Salbay, which she now maintains on the Sound with a crew of fourteen men. She also owns two buildings on Br , near One Hundred and Thirty-seventh Street, With the revenue from this prop- she is able to be erty, it is asserted near the “Leonora” as much as she \desires, and it {s the promiscuous |use of either her own eraft or that of Capt, Meltzer, as alleged by the husband, which furnished grounds for. the divorce proceedings. | Attorney Siegel stein had a man hiding on the “Salbay” June 14 and 15, but the fair owner did not, come aboard. The two children are now in &camp in Maine with their father. — HOSPITAL AFLOAT FOR POOR. with Steamer Begine Dally T Mothers and Chil The floating ‘hospital Helen ©. | guutiard of St. John's Guild began her |trips for the season to-day, These will be continued daily throughout the summer, This sailing achedute has beon ai ranged for the season: On Mondays land ‘Thursdays, from Bast Twenty- fourth Street, 8 A. M.; East Third Street, 4.80 A, M., and Market Street, 0 A. M. On Tuesdays and Fridays from West Fiftieth Street, 8 A, M. | West Thirty-fourth Street, 8.30 A. M., jand Weat Tenth Street, 9 A. M. On | Wednesdays and Saturdays trips will jbo for the Brooklyn mothers and chil- dren principally, although some of the patie will be received at M. at Bast Twenty-fourth Street. Brooklyn stopr will be: Metro- Rheingold Beer Gatiety any taste. | politan Avenue, 8.15 A. M.; Hudson Ave- |hue, #45 A. M., and Hamftton Avenue, | 9.48 A. M. A large amount of money is required to maintain this work ani rovide these benefits for the poor of e city, and contributions Seligman, Avenue. be sent to Isaac No, 108 treasurer, PITTSBURGH, July train which is taking the Liberty Bell on its westward Journey to the Pan- ‘ma-Pacific Wxposition arrived here at 310 A.M, to-day and left tht . utes later over the Pittsburgh, Wayne | Were a ay hadley ra