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SUES TO ENON USE OF HER NAME BY “GIRL DIANA” Mrs. Beatrice Chipchase Alleges « Helen Preece Usurped It at Horse Show. HUBBY IN MIX-UP, TOO. Wife Alleges He Took Her Saddle, Bonds and Piano, and Seeks Alimony. * PRIDE'S CROSSING, Mass. July | %—Mrs. Beatrice M. Chipchase of | New York has filed « bill of equity! eballenging the right of Helen Preece, the English “girl Diana,” to use the | name of Mra. George H. Chipchase. | Further light is turned on the pe- cullar tangle in another suit filed by | the same petitioner against George | Chipehase, manager of Judge William H. Moore's stables in New York, | Holen Preece’s riding was the talk | of the New York Horse Show in 1912. | ‘The petitioner in the suit here alleges | the English girl has used the name of Mra. George H. Chipchase fraudu- jently at the Brooklyn and the Wasb- ington horse shows and at Deerlands, N.Y. Beatrice M. Chipchase says she ia an equestrienne of ability, that her reputation was acquired as Mra. George H. Chipchase and her services are in great demand at horse shows. ‘she declares she bas been seriously in- jured by Helen Preece's use of the name at horse shows, and asks that Helen Preece be restrained by in- junction from using the name of Mra. George H. Chipchase. It is admitted in the petition that & ceremony of marriage was per- formed in New York between George . Chipchase and Helen Preece on ‘March 20, 1915, but it is asserted the ceremony was void because Chipchase had a living wife in the person of the petitioner at that time. The petitioner saya she and George H. Chipchase were married in New York about 1905, but lately have been living apart. She alleges her hus- band converted to his own use a $250 saddie, a $950 piano player and steel bonds worth $2,500 belonging to her, and asks that the court establish h debt and order it paid, and enjoin t transfer of certain shares of stock | | Cc filed an ay plication for the custody of her two children, saying a divorce was granted between her and Chipchase in Janu- ary of this year, which will become absolute July 12. She asks for ali- mony, Helen Preece was fourteen years vld when she appeared at the New York Horse Show four years ago with her hair hanging down her back. She had a world-wide reputation as a horsewoman, and was here pro- claimed the greatest girl rider in the| world, She won the Durland gold cup in open competition with girls of all nations. In England she has won many honors, and on one occasion was summoned to the royal box by Queen Alexandra. She also is an ex- pert swimmer, fencer, target shooter and all-round hiete, Her sister, Maude Preece, appeared at the Horse Show in Madison Square Garden to} substitute for Helen a few years ago because Helen could not leave school, pelted Dat TRAGEDY OF THE FILMS. ¥ the Leg to the Movies Then to Jail, Seen tm St Lanaa’s Three R. Sig. Antonio Lanza is a grand old} tregedian of the Neapolitan school. He {a most excellent villain, But he 0, that the movies| ing all the profits out of the; leased from Tomasso | reels of war films and went on the road. Cassesse heard no word from Sig. Bis films and got no money. He at- tended the former London Theatre last even’ home of Neapolitan SPaskiing, in the v Ben and Pflaster to Headquarters this mitted having leased bad,” he cried, the reels I had to to the Bowery, while with the other three, is still ing to work his way back to New ork. Iam now being a villain that I may honestly repay this good man.” TEST THE RAPID HEALING WORK OF POSLAM, It is wonderful to see how greatly ry mall quantity of Poslam, and few plications, will benefit any diseased, eruptional skin, Often after brief treatment the improvement is start- ee quickly controls and eradi- ‘Lanza He adi ls. “Business is ve tragieatty. “One o to Ket back my son, eatee Eczema, Acne, and stubborn, tkin ‘roubles, ‘tching ‘so Dandruff, Chahine West, Heshes, Inflamed Com: aid all are benefited at once by at a stretch without drinking, for other long periods of hours with- out sleeping, They have managed to stifle the human compantonship, stops, so does the lif an extensive seems to me that they went at the WHAT EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW! How to Keep Well, Keep Strong and Keep a Perfect Fi Six Weeks’ Course of Exercise and Diet for Women Readers of The Evening World, Arranged by Pauline Furlong, Au at Home.” | thor of “Beauty Culture To-Day’s Illustrated Lesson Shows You How to Breathe Properly and Gives Some New Wand Exerci: Abdomen. Because of her perfect physical proportions, Pauline Furlong has deen named the “American Venus.” ture at Home,” and ts an authority well-being, Bhe will give a course The Evening World this summer on “How to Make Yourself Well and Strong and Preserve Your Figure.” LESSON X. By Pauline Furlong. Breathe and be thin! That {s an alliterative statement of an actual truth; although a truth that needs qualification and explanation. the formal breathing exercises—that they are a bore and an ineffectual It remains a fact that most persons—Iif we except those who dally occupy themselves with severe manual labor—do not know how to breathe. This is an utterly absurd state of affairs when we stop to think that of all the great human processes breathing is the most essential one. have been known to live without eating for many days at a time. bore. They have existed for many hours and instinets for self- reproduction, for But when breath of the human preservation, for being. DEEP BREATHING SHOULD BE MADE AN UNCONSCIOUS HABIT. Nevertheless, we are so stingy with ourselves in this matter of breathing. “Free as alr" is a common expression, yet we seem to grudge our bodies the air they actually need, While carry- ing on our ordinary pursultea we breathe just as little as we can help, and then when the emergency ap- pears—perhaps in the form of a street car for which we must sprint— we puff and pant and are conscious of an ill-defined sense of irritation and injury. That is the condition which the ad- vocates of deep breathing exercises tried to remedy a few years ago with Propaganda. But it problem in the wrong way. They made deep breathing a fad with many persons; a habit with only a few. Standing in front of an open window for ten minutes every morning and filling the lungs with fresh air is all right far as it goes, but it doesn't go far. There are 1,430 other minutes in tach day of twenty-four hours. ‘The way you breathe during those minutes is the big factor in de- termining your health, strength and size. For the way you breathe has more to do with the pounds you weigh than you fancy, Perhaps you may re- shih ar aaa EL 1s Which Help to Reduce Waist and Bhe is the author of “Beauty Oul on all questions of woman's physical of lessons to the women readers of T have told you my opinion about not this excuse are shallow breathers, They could breathe properly, but they won't—or do! Fat is carbon, and, like wood or other carbon products, can be burned up with comparative ease. The way to burn up the surplus fat of the body is to give it more oxygen. The black- smith applies what {s really the same principle when he forces air from the | belloggupon his forge fire, to make it \ burn Better. Such exercises as | @ rec- mmended to you in the past and 8 | shall present to you in the uture, tegether with most ath- letic sere. give the stout woman two favorable reactions. They make her torpid or atrophied muscles work and gradually effect @ substitution of muscle flesh for adipose tissue. And they compel deep breathing, which increases the supply of on t blood f the body which are being exercised, and its red corpus consisting largely, of oxygen, in contact with tho fatty tissu carbon, remember—and burn it up. Now do you begin to understand why it is particularly important for the person who wishes to reduce to acquire the habit of deep breathing? The train of logic is so simple that every lazy breather should be able to follow it, What is the right way to breathe? In the first place, always inhale and exhale through the nose. The only exceptions to this rule allowed by one of the most famous physical cul- ture teachers are for the sports ot} swimming and sprinting. He says it may be permissible to breathe through | the mouth and exhale, under water, | through the nose, and in sprinting he admits that he inhales and exhales through the mouth, . MOUTH BREATHING INVITES CONGESTION OF THE LUNGS, Generally speaking, however, mouth breathing is a detestable practice, Mouths of human beings were made for talking and eating, and some ports aay some mouths were made ‘or kissing, But noses were made for | lesson. ure, Told in a Series of Illustrated Lessons passages are so ingeniously constructed that, provided the are warmed by the passage through them of the exhaled air, the inhalation of cold air is not even unpleasant. There were many more mouth- breathers in the last generation than there wil, be in the one that is now growing Op. The medical discovery of lenoids, the growth in the upper part of the nowe that prevents the air from passing freely through, explains much mouthsbreathing. As you bly know, the operation for re- moving adenoids, If performed on a small child, is probably the simplest, least dangerous ope jon in all surgery. ‘The medical inspectors in the New York public schools are on the watch for mouth-breathers and frequently recommend the adenoids operation. A brighter, healthier, happier boy or girl develops after it, in the cases where it is needed, But with many persons not even this slight surgical treat- ment is needed to induce no breathing. The wrong tory method merely a bad habit, to be corrected by deter: mination and vigilance, Not even when yo re jeep should you breathe throu; it's se of that dark brown in the morning, If you fear that you are relaxing into while you are guard” during the night, tie your jawa together as the In- diane do with their papoos The mouth-breather is aiso the shallow breather. But as my space is diminishing and I have yet to tell you of the exercises which illustrate this I will walt ull to-morrow to describe the proper method of breath- ing, as differentiated from the res piration which inflates only the upper lobe of the lungs, WAND EXERCISES TO REDUCE WAIST AND ABDOMEN, The first wand exercise is a modi- fication, for variety’s sake, of the trunk bending which I gave you with your first lesson, Stand with the chest out, abdomen tn, legs straight, the feet elghteen inches apart, Lift wand overhead as high as you reach, holding It close to either end, Then bend as far sidewise as possi- ble, letting the wand follow the move- ment of the body. Take a long breath at the beginning, exhale as the body is bent sidewise, Inhale as it re- turns to the perpendicular position, Begin by bending tive times to the right and five times to the left, in- creasing the number of repititions as you feel able to do so. The move- ment exercises the muscles of waist and abdomen, and reduces the size of both. In the second wand exercise, which you should repeat from ten to thirty times, begin by taking what Lh soothing, healiag influence. member that, in our first lesson, when| breathing. The nose will remove the| told you is “horizontal position. Poslam Soap, medicated with Poslam, |) was giving you the causes of the| dust and the chill from inhaled air| standing erect, the feet cighteon fs unsurpassed in richness and those alesis ptt Pad Jeng se before ait Siren hel lungs, The nches apart. the wand held directly . mout ene ings8,/ in front o! \e body ay parallel with walitiee which make:for health of the | omer Sumber of instances it’ waa snih® person who gov Suddenly "| the floor, at a po! the far dow: a For samples, send 4c stamps to Emer-|due to atrophy of the thyroid gland, ro wes my plaee Li ALAS, the arme Baturany Fw with the eT eabornioreg, 88, Wort S6th St. | which actually preventa the persons Pe i si ola cd pr lew York City, Sold by all Druggiste. | go afflicted trom breathing proper; ders himeelf liable to a sudden owing ¢ id ove: low —Advt. ‘Many, many stout persons who ha’ congestion of the lun: Yet the ing the e: to follow ite direc: beara: a Se Se Se aS es See eee nel eee tion and thus throwin and neck far back. hest, neck | and shoulder musel: re strength- ened by this exer and it hoine markedly in melting away the double chin. INustration No, 3 may be called {the wand squat,” and will remind you of “the dumbbell squat” which we tried the other day. Stand erect with the heels together and one end of the wand resting on the floor, while your right hand grasps the other end, Sink to a squatting po- sition and then return to the original one. Do this at least five times, and oftener if you are able. The wand will help you to keep your balance, jand you wil be working the flesh off ' your legs, abdomen and back. Readers of Miss Furlong's ar- ticles who gre keeping measure. |] ment charta or otherwise follow- ing her lessons are invited to write to her, in care of The Bvening World, asking any questions per- tinent to the lessons or requesting information that will aid them in following her rules for diet and exercise, ————_ jas Keen Memory, (Special to ‘The Mrening World.) ORANGE, N, J., July 9.—Able to at- tend to her household affairs as well as to take an interest In current and religious matters, Mise Elizabeth Day Carey ts rating to-day her one hundredth birthday at her home here, ratulatory messag her home from 8 poured into all over the country, many being from prominent Sunday School workers, as Mis Carey ta the oldest member of the Hom of the Presbyterian Sunday Se America, Her memory ix 80 remark- able she repeat large portions of the Bible. «a deep interest in the European w pS ‘Tries to Die by Ammonia. Rhilip Jaffe, twenty, No, 67 Rutgers Street, owner of a candy store at Rivington and Suffolk Streets, went into the basement of his brother Henry's grocery store at No. 163 fenry Street to-day and drank four- teen ounc His brother @ soon had bi in the prison ward at pital, charged with atte if tis r says Philip has an idea ho has @ serious stomach trouble. >_—— 260,161 Hats Killed im Plague War, NEW ORLEANS, July 9.—Since Fi eral authorities took charge of the bu- bonic plague situation here and began a year aga a campaign against rate Seobi rodents have been trapped and killed, according toe report made pub- lic to-day by Dr. KR. ft United States Public Health Service. Only 244 rodents were plagu: it was said. The last human plegue was reported on Oct. 4, infected. 1016, TOOK GRAND TRUNK AIR LINE WHEN HE TRED TO MOVE JULE —_—>— Zoo Elephant Keepér Flung | Far as He Tried to Separate Jule From Hattie. Rob Hourton, keeper of the ele. phant house at Central Park Zoo, took a brief trip through the air this morning, alighting on a pile of hay with an uncommonly sound bump |but no serious Injury The motive power behind his flight was the indig- nant trunk of Hattie, one of the Zoo's big African elephanta, Hattie and Jule, the other females of the species, had always occupied separate stalls wntil the other day, when workmen began painting the elephant house, Jule was then brought into Hattie’s compartment temporarily, or at least tt had been the intention to make the arrange- ment only temporary, That issue is not decided yet, ‘Their new found companionship de- lighted the two elephants beyond measur, They had the accumulated gossip of years to exchange and, in short, they had conceived a vast af- fection for each other, For two days they have been standing with their trunks entwined, oblivious to every- thing but their own happiness, Threfore, when Jule's stall was dry and Bob Hourton came to take her there this morning he learned a new lesson in pachyderm psychology. Hat- tie sensed the impending separation and the next instant Bob was travel- ling by the grand trunk route. When he alighted at his unsought destination he still had wind enough left to shout for hel horeat Bil! Snyder, the head keoy pmpantes by Jim Crowley and George Sichert, ausixtants, ran in with pitehforks and |neld Hattie at bay until Hourton ‘could wip out. Hattie and Jule are still standing with their trunks linked in a conven- tionalized pretzel, while Suyder is planning a strategic move to Ket them separated again DEATH GLAIMS FRIEWD OF THE DOWN AND OUT Through McAuley Mission, Victim of Typhoid, There was mourning at the Mo- Auley Water Street Mission to-day. Clarence Nelson Squires, who for twenty-five years played (Me plano there and bad made a life work of helping “down-and-outers,” Is dead, Mr, Squires, a bachelor, was the manager of the art department of Tiffany's, and lived with his sis No, 712° Jowett Street, Brighton, Staten Island. young man he became intetested in the McAuley Mixsion. Wot only did Mr. Squires help out with the singing, but he had a piano installed and played it at the ser- vices, He took a personal interest tn men with hard luck stories and never hesitated to go into his own pocket to help them. Mr. Squires died at the Presbyter- jan Hospital of typhoid fever after a short illness, He will be buried Sun- day afternoon from his Staten Island home, — SHOTS STAYED FUGITIVES. Youths Arrested After a Burglary in Williamsburg Clothing Store. Burglars early this morning broke into the cellar of No. 158 Grand Street, Williamsburg, sawed a hole in the floor and climbed up into the cloth- ing store of Hyman Helaman, They helped themselves to $400 worth of the stock Police Sergeant Cassidy saw two youths making for the Williamsburg Bridge at 3 A." M. and started after them. They ran. He fired two shots, | but they ran faster, Policemen McAl- |linter and Bracken ran out on the bridge and fired at the youths as they dashing for a New York car. y then quit Police Headquarters the prison- ers said they w Frank Waller and Edward Marke old, of No. 28 Fi York. The 1 them a lot r Helaman's clothing, a bit woe, electric fash-lights, etc. They were held” for immys, burglary by, Magistrat: Court Nash in the Manhattan Avenue eaamectenens UNION TEAMSTER FREED. Acqultted of Murder Self-Defe: William F. Mangan of No. 220 Hudson treet, business agent of the Teamsters’ | Union, was acquitted to-day before Judge Wadhams, in General Sessions, of the murder of Luke Doyle, leader of the Independent Teamsters’ Union, in Washing cot on March 11, on the Ground of sug the trol Terence J. Mo+ F you were touring abroad aT TOUR DBALER’s awp | Manus. attorney for Mangan, sought to you would surely visit the GOTHAM HOSIERY SHop, | thi poultry museums and libraries in the WEST HTH BT. atragentea by the" obs |] Shore important cities, But the jury that Doyle, you don't even have to leave and another had ene nim t0. prepare to New York to see the best of die, hot all three. bes aa aoa GEN. GOURAUD LOSES ARM. French Command Also Otherw: PARIS, July 9.—Gen. raud, Commander of the nivred. was wounded recently tn th ut te reported as “doing well” Clarence N. Squires, Who Worked HM. J.B. Gou- French expedi- | tionary forces in the Dardanelles, who| operations on the Gallipoli peninsula, has had his| Creel of the arm amputated on the voyage to France. Gen, Gouraud ts suffering from frac- { tures of the right thigh and the left leg, BOAT RAGE INGOENT DOESN'T MENACE FOI CAUSES PROSECUTION OF ASTOR EMPLOYEE Millionaire Files Complaint Against Coast Guard, Who Accuse Tender’s Pilot. ‘The German steamer re carrying 300 tons of dynamite Sor Hamburg, dodged back from 4 clutches of a British oruiser September and anchored in G end Bay, She is there yet. lightning that has played around | during the past week has aroused the officers at Forts Wadsworth Hamilton a curiosity as to doers she would hurt their range- of explode their stores of ammumt-— tion if a bolt should happen te — eatoh her just right, The Secretary of Commerce has un- der advisement to-day charges againat the man in charge of Vincent Astor's yacht tender at the Pough- keepale boat races, June 28, and a counter complaint against Major Gen. Leonard Wi guard officers filed by Mi | manding the Department of Fast, — ‘The man in charge of the tender, if ent Lieut. Ahearn of the cutter found gullty, may lose his license and | xiannattan this morning to make ® ») bo fined $500, . » Lieut. Ahearn reported ‘The Astor yacht Noma was anchor- pede burg is a good 2,000 land, #0 ed below Poughkeepsie, near the east-| from the nearest erly shore of the Hudson, so those | she she won't take our aboard could view the college buat | With her, —_——— races, Some of the questa decided to Death te Masten croas the river to Highland and board ‘ein Anderson, forty-seven years old, an observation train for eesing the], member of the Maritime — nd a salesman for the New Jersey The boat race course had been | Axbestos Company, left his Br} cleared vf all craft except the patrol | 471, Kitty fret it ye and official boats when the tender |fering from left the side of the Noma. The tender took a diagonal course up-| Mesct Brooklyn, stream, and when it appeared within | ingach Say Yes, and ide tho lines of the course, a coast guard | the Morse Dry Dock Company. N boat stynalled it to turn off. The Astor craft continued ita way, and ‘another coast guard boat in mid- stream ordered it back. This order likewise was ignored and @ third order had no more effect. A coast guard boat tried to intercept the tender, but was not ly enough. the tender into the dock at and the arrest of the and the man in charge followed. com- Purity Premier saye— x tender The boat was detained until the last of the races had been rowed. It seems the loss of the use of the tender by Mr, Astor and his guests |S0Ul of salad. You can caused his complaint against coast ‘ > salad: guard officers, They In turn chat |make afBnity bi three separate violations of law in a|jevery time if you use report to the Department of Com~- merce in Washington, and the man in charge of the tender, it Is said, will be vigorously prosecuted. pil san ‘The dressing is the Mier LAD DRESSING AND CAPTURE MAN}. Mayonneise Delaoes” money can buy—bu? expensive Girl Unwittingly Leads Detectives | Your = grocer sells it.” to Prisoner Who Escaped Write for recipe booklet. 4 From “L” Train, Francis H. Leggett & Co., Hedesn River, 27th to 28th St., New York, The loyalty of a girl to her in- , jured sweetheart to-day led detec- tives to a room at No, 223 East + % Twelfth Street, where, suffering from painful Injuries, they found Freder- sk Collins, twenty-six, an alleged pickpocket, Three weeks ago while being corted to Police Headquarters on a southbound elevated train, Collins es- caped from Detectives Cassasa, Gay- nor and Brady by grabbing a steel stanchion on the “L" and swinging to the platform, Pursued by Brady, the prisoner slid down a@ pillar and made his escape, The’ detectives shadowed his elght- een. r-old sweetheart and when she went to his home thi with flowors, fruit and medicine they ught Collins, who said he sustained his injuries in his sensational leap. | BOUND, GAGGED BY LODGER. SHADOW SWEETHEART Majorie Bently Starring in Chin Chin, wear- ing one of our Fall Velvet Hats $5 to $10 on, In ‘Trussea ‘ashion Show i wane in Brooklyn. Prekbeady Collection af neighbor, Mrs, Mary Lew! view. three, bound and gagged in hi at No, 29 Montrose Street, Brooklyn, the police have been looking for man who 4 room of Mrs, Lewis three days Mra. Lew r was this man, name she doesn't know, who er up, without king her or without any attempt ‘The reason for the binding vd js another thing the police ar ing. —_—_—— Killed by Fall Down Statre, Michael Wilson, sixty-elght yeare old, 4 real estate broker, was killed shortly after midnight to-day by @ fall down a flixht of stairs at No. 601 Court Street, Brooklyn, where he lived. He leaves a daughter, Elizabeth school teacher, of No. 100 West nty-ninth Street, pecially designed to figures (up to 56 bust) Pree 4)" Lane Bryant ieee Greeley. SILK STOCKI THAT WEA _GOTHAM Goin Stripe, Re NGS R Little Vacations ina Big City RUNG. No, 3 400 DIFFERENT SHADES, American art and books at our own Metropolitan and Public Library. Just take « pape Bus