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NTE RRR OT magne COURT OF APPEAL HEARS FINAL PLE FORBEIER' FE Base Appeal on Lawyer’s As- sertion That Condemned Man Was “Framed-Up.” Fig Further appeals to United States Supreme Court Justices or to other Federal Judges are not expected, as Becker's counsel believe the decision of Justice Hughes leaves them no hope of Federal interference. A con- ference was held on the advisability pus ‘trom n Federal Sadge end at is ru im & e udge and it is TAKE NO ACTION, |fikery tts fine of action will bo aban: doned, - CITY EMPLOYEE ENDS HIS LIFE WITH RAZOR Inspector of Masonry Found in Bathroom of His Harlem Boarding House, Robert J. Dougherty, forty years old, an inspector of masonry in the Department of Public Works, was found dying with his throat and left wrist cut in the bathroom of his home 136 West One Hundred and Twenty-sixth Street at 6 A. M. to-day. A razor was on thé floor. He died short time after being taken to the Harlem Hospital. For the past eight weeks Dougherty had boarded with Mr. ai Mrs. Michael Murphy at the We: Hundred and ‘Twenty-sixth Street ad- dress, and no one about the place had noticed that he fapreres worried or despondent. He left rio note explain- ing his act. He is believed to havo relatives in New Brunswick, N. J. panel dirvian ASKS $10,000 DAMAGES. CAN Only Thing Judge Can Do Is to Lay Facts Before the Governor. deen the Venus.” named ‘ * ‘Attorneys for Charles Becker are @aking @ last effort to-day to get the Court of Appeals to take judicial no- tice of the statement of Attorney Harford T. Marshall that “Bridgie” Webber told him that he, Jack Rose and Harry Valion had “framed up” Becker to save themselves. The Judges are in session at Albany pre- liminary to closing for the summer \ vacations, and Martin T. Manton left { for Albany early to-day to make effort to have the Court consider Mar- shall's statement. Mr. Marshall submtited the state- ment by personal messenger to Chief Judge Bartlett. He received a reply yesterday, the nature of which he re- fused to divulge, but he turned it over to Mr. Manton to use as he saw fit. It fs not known whether Judge Bart- lett suggested the presentation of the statement to the entire Court, but it is believed that is the action decided on; img Blocke” L by Becker's lawyers, Samuel J. Kelly to-day filed in the If Mr. Manton succeeds in getting| Bronx County Court a $10,000 suit @ hearing on the statement it will be; against the New York Telephone Com- @ very unusual proceeding. The pur-|P&ny, alleging the company was guilty Pose for which the session was called | Shnapitr blocks on avin, lnemen’s vas solely to hand down decisions,| within two feet of the but by a personal appeal it is hoped | Pecks the Judges may be induced to take) the cognizance of the statement. It is! wit? said the only thing they can do, even! son if they decide to consider the matter, fe to call it to the attention of Gov. wy Whitman with a recommendation as! iustthe balance snd fein, ayi + what action might be taken be-j later. » nse of it. | ‘ir. Manton was to have visited | Becker with W. Bourke Cockran to- day, but this plan was changed at the Iast moment. A conference was arranged, however, between Becker and Mr. Cockran, If there was any likelihood of action by the Court of; 4, Appeals it was planned to have Me. ! cial LESSON Xill. What reforms, {| @ perfect figure? clothing. THE down to walk, which ved an enticement and yethat caused children to climb jes. rt F. Kelly, his ten-year-old son, laying in front of No. 808 Tack: venue, the Bronx, on Oct. 7 last. little brother by Bre and Robe: im ‘down. beauty (so called). based on radiant health. who torture their defensele: i d foll, dying two days —_—>__—_ Germany Approves of U. S, Setsure fashions at least WASHINGTON, July 13.—Taking over of the Sayville wireless station by the United States has met with the satisfaction of Germany and no complaint will be lodged with th Department, it was learned ti through German Embassy ofi- cal comfort and well-being. Cons! hygienic. & 38th Street FIFTH AVENUE 39th Street Store Hours 9 A. M. tos P.M. Closed Saturday Every UNTRIMMED HAT Formerly $3.00 to $4.95 Must Go At Medium Sized Shapes 5 Oc MILAN HEMP, LISERE, PLAIN HEMP Small and In the Fashionable Straws Hundreds of Smart Hats, the majority in black, although there are white, burnt and colored straws in the collection. Sailors—Tricornes—Turbans and. other leading shapes in~ the braids most in favor this season, Commencing Wednesday and Continuing Throughout the Week ? round Tab oan the D Department—Fourth Floor, ae ean eee ae eer ecmmremee emcee me as came cam cad ems amen emcee ure. to To-Day’s Illustrated Les- son Prescribes Proper Summer Wearing Ap- parel and Gives Leg Swinging Exercise Which Replace Fat With Muscle and Give ‘Poise. By Pauline Furlong. any, should you make in your wardrobe while you are fighting the battle for health and * THE EVENING WORLD , TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1916. WHAT EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW! How to Keep Well, Keep Strong and Keep a Perfect OF MOUNTED COPS Told in a Series of Illustrated Lessons Because of her perfect physical proportions, Pauline Furlong has “American Bhe ts the author of “Beauty Culture at Home,” and is an authority on all questions of woman's physical well-being. She wilt give a course of lessons to the women readers of The Eve- ning World thie ewmmer on “How to Make Yourself Well and Strong and Preserve Your Figure.” The unhygienic dress of the mod- ern woman is a point upon which the male physician and physical cul- ture expert always lay great stres: ‘They affirm that the loss of the prim- itive health and strength of the sa age woman is largely due to civilized ONLY TRUE BEAUTY [8 THAT OF RADIANT HEALTH. IT am the last one to deny that women have often sacrificed their health on the altar of fashion and There can, course, be no true beauty that is not Unques- tlonably there are still silly women! spring to revive the corset which bodies | pinches in the waist, but it is per- 1) and risk invalidism or even death by | fuctly possible, as 1 said the other wearing clothing that is too tight. But I believe that the number of these women is decreasing and that any woman to-day can follow the approximately without interfering with her physi- ot ir the modes of the mo- ment and see if | am not right. The skirt of to-day is essentially It is eo short that it cannot possibly pick up germs OED OGD 0: GED (0) GED 0 GREP (9) GP OEE (0) ED 0 RED 0 GE 0G (0 easy, although you dirt from the sidewalk, to carried later into the home, and it would seem to be designed es: pecially for rainy weather. Ite wearer is not troubled by the damp, muddy folds of cloth about the ankles. Aleo the skirt of 1915 ie wide enough so that a woman mi walk in it, climb stairs, step inte @ street car or automobile, with no danger of tripping and falling. Th cessively narrow skirt wae undoubtedly responsible for a certain number of sprained and broken ankles. There has been a slight effort this day, to purchase’ a model which, when adjusted, will make the wear- er’s waist measure exactly what it is in a state of nature, BEST SUMMER GARB LIGHT IN WEIGHT AND COLOR. Then take the matter of millinery. To begin with, there is great lati- tude in the various sha) Never- the smal! hat, lightly trimmed. Almost any doctor will tell you that the heavy hat, which weighs two or three pounds, is bad for the hair, bad for aches, This summer any woman who tle difficulty in finding light-weight millinery, yet many of the small hats, skin from the too direct rays of the | noonday sun, As far as texture and general | construction goes, it seems per- | fectly obvious to me that the clothes women are wearing this summer reach a higher level of hygienic excellence than those worn by men. Think of the suits most frequently worn by the lat- ter—of wool or part wool and of black or some other sombre hue! It has been proved that black and dark blue clothing cause the body to fee! the heat of the sun to a much greater degree than does white, Man: vests men wear both coa uring the summer, well 8 high, stiff linen collars and hats of heavy straw. Women, on the contrary, go about in white or light colored gowns, of some thin cotton or linen stuff. No coat is worn with these costumes, and they are frequently elbow-sleeved collariess. The air is allowed free access to the body, nor is there interference with the lat- ter’s normal evaporation through perspiration. ‘Woman's fondness during the warm weather for white shoes is distinctly hygienic, since white absorbs less of the sun's heat than any other color, Speaking of shoes, I suppose I ought to mention the quarrel about high ‘eels. My personal opinion is that a moderately high heel is not un- healthy, provided it be attached to a shoe that fits the foot and provided the wearer knows how to stand prop- erly, bearing the weight on the balls of the feet and balancing from them. SUMMER FURS A SOURCE OF “SUMMER COLDS.” Of course the white fur fad is a silly one, and is likely to induce that disagreeable ailment, the “summer cold,” because the skin at the back of the neck is made unduly sensi- tive to every vagrant breeze, But for the moment, at least, I can think of no other really unhygienic fashion for women this season. Therefore it seems to me that the stout woman who wants to reduce need make very few changes in her wardrobe, Above all things, how- ever, she should get rid of any ex- tremely tight clothing she may pos- |sess—any clothing of this sort, not merely corsets. I am speaking from an aesthetic as well as a hygienic point of view, A discovery | have ma summer underwear m: teresting to my womer ! ney, many of you have over the fact that you not fford to wear “cool silk” next to our ekin during the hot months. x fact, cotton un- wear is cooler than silk. The sand latter, because of ite close weave and Its tendency to remain moist with the body's perspiration, tually makes the wearer hotte: after a little, than does a coarser and cheaper ocotten garment. Whieh should be a consolation to those of us whose pocketbooks are not too well filled, MORE LEG SWINGING EXE CISES WHICH MAKE “PI The exercise which jecribing to you to-day is careful of her health will have lit-| is jthe leg circling exercise of which I told you during the first week and by the stationary running, supported |by a wand, which we tried for the |first time ‘yesterday. Both these) |Joint pivot more easily. For leg swinging you will need a | straight backed chair and a small | footstool. Assume the correct stand- |the chairback and the other on the| hip to help preserve your balance. Then swing briskly to and fro tho! lox furthest away from the chatr, | Keeping the instep straight and tho| toe pointed downward as in danciny, | The footstool will make this lasi| possible, | For as long as the movement is kept up the leg should be swung without pause, But it is never wise to carry on any exercise to the point of ex-| haustion, and on the first few days! that you practise this one you may swing each leg only a few times, Lt of course is necessary to turn around when you change legs, so that the one| inaction may be always furthest from the chair, At the end of each series of swings there should be two or three longer ones—higher kicks, so to speak—as Mlustrated in photograph No, 2. At first you probably cannot lift your leg as high as this, but with practice you should be able to raise it to the level of the top of the chair. When your hip joints have become supple and your leg muscles well de- veloped and controlled, thrust tho chair aside and take the exercise with your hands on your hi Tt will greatly increase your poise, and from the very beginning it will tend to re- duce your hips and the upper part of your legs by substituting muscle for fat. Breathe deeply and smoothly during the éxercise. You should with practice reach the point where you are able to perform it sixteen times in succession with each leg. Readers of Miss Furiong's ar- ticles who are keeping measure ment charts or otherwise follow- ing her lessons are invited to write to her, in care of The Evening World, asking any questions per- tinent to the lessons or requesting information that will aid them in following her rules for diet and erercise. Letters from Evening World Readers Following Miss Furlong’s Lessons. E. M. R. asks: Will you ‘please publish the diet for obesity? ‘The diet was printed in The Eve- ning World June 29 and July 3, M. F. writes: How can I reduce a obese abdomen without starving my- self? Follow the diet published and prac- tlee the bending and swaying exer- cises. Always eat @ little less than " ’ theless, the tendency is all toward beon prepared for it, in a degree, by not make me stout. Can you help me? Eat sparingly of the diet given and you will surely reduce weight, BE. K, R. asks: How can T reduce the nerves, and a promoter of head-|Movements tended to make the hip| my leg from the knee to ankle? Raine on the toes fifty times a day. Keep hands on hips meanwhile, MRS. H. RIEHL asks: Will salt |such as the Panama shapes, have |!) Position, chest forward, shoulders| water baths reduce me? I go in the sufficient brim to protect a delicate | Pack, abdomen in, resting one hand on) ocean every day. I hardly think the cold baths will take off flesh, but the exercise will benefit you. S. K. asks: What special exercise will reduce a very heavy bust and upper arms? Apply Turkish towels wrung out of hot water to open the pores and then rub with alcohol gently. Raising the arms above the head with wand will reduce shoulders. poet iS SR ROW IN JERSEY SCHOOL. Vice Pre Vote, and Then Learns He's Wr (Special to ‘The Evening World,) HACKENSACK, N. J., July 13.—The meeting of the Hackensack Board of Education ended abruptly at midnight ent Resigns to Keep this morning, when Vice President James W. Loveland, who was in ‘ie chalr, gned that office and refused to preside further, ‘This was the cul- mination of a series of resolutions offered by Paul Pratt, intended to cur- tall the authority of Dr. W. E. Stark, supervising principal, Mr. Pratt ex- plained that “Dr, Stark has been asked to revign, but refuses, and four of us intend to hamper his influence in every way possible."* he vote on all the resolutions was four to thr favor, because lee President Loveland did not know. he uld vote and cause a tle. “I resign cause I don't care to loae my vote on this important matter,” he re- marked. The rules were réad to him after he left the chalr and he was further chagrined. Dr, Stark's opponents insist he Is of @ statistician tha super= Ee - CHINESE GIRL A BRIDE. | Teave mt to ‘The marriage of Lee Chow, twenty- nine, and Lee Yok, twenty, was the cul- mination of a Chinese romance begun lover four years ago in San Francisco. Chow, who is a merchant at No. 19 Mott Street, and lives at No, 33 Mott Street, to New York three years ago, h ne. when his wite 140 Waverly where sho was came a girl be Lee Pine a je amon; r countrymen, She came to New York three months ago, The marriage, performed at No. 33 Mott Street. at noon yesterday by Rev. Lee To, head of a Chinese Christian mission in Chinatown, was a quiet one, the usual elaborate Chines bration being contrary to Chow's gious bellefs. you desire, MRS. C. N. P. asks and water reduce me? No liquids will reduce you, so take as little as possible. The lemon water is given to quench the thirst Will lemon MRS. H. W. P. writes: It seems T can think of nothing to eat that does VANCOUVER, B. C., July 13.—Two farmers, Ernest Namel and David Kit- jzcl, have been arrested here on @ | charge of high treason, They are Ger- | man born, but have lived in Canada for more than thirty years, It ja alleged that in April they as; | gisted two Germans named Keppel and cord to escape from British Columbia. across the boundary into the United States and to Germany, GOATS GOT GOATS 0 Belle t 1 { urtyar Beto fracture the ves oe eee ee Going Deaf? SOME FACTS ABOUT LOW FE Wren the first cut-rate drug stor Pe was opened the other druggists bs to convinee their customers he cut-rate drug store sold or Police Use Lassoes and Corral ¢* Invading Army to Save Precious Gardens. INLIVELY ROUNDUP 100 Nannies Ate Way Out of Barn and Scattered Over Brooklyn. OWNER IS IN A CELL. “Kt-ya.” ‘This waa the battle cry of Mounted Policeman James Doody, ex-cowboy, as he rode his fiery eteed up and down and across the placid confines of Gravesend to-day, twirling his lasso above his head and ever and anon Iassoing a goat. Other mounted Policemen assisted him in Inssoing ‘and otherwise overcoming goats, but none of them could zip out “Ki-ya” with the penetrating efficiency of James Doody, he having acquired eaid efficiency on the boundless plains in the Southwestern part of our well known country. It fotl to the lot to-day of James Doody and his associate centaure of the Sheepshead Bay Police Precinct to mingle in the greatest round-up of goats in the history of Brooklyn. But to get down to the action in the tale we must go back to James Murdock of West Fifth Street and Avenue U. James Murdock has been for along time addicted to the nabit of rearing goats, Time and again his neighbors complaiped of the near-fragrance and plaintive sounds emanating from & barn on Murdock’s place and time and again he waa fined a small sum in Coney Inland Police Court, But he persisted in his favorite Industry un- til yesterday, when he waa fined $100 in Coney Island Police Court, with the alternative of spending 40 days in jail. Murdock elected to go to jail and ho ving 65 goats of indiscriminate ‘ages and amiability locked up in his barn, practically without any guardi- anship or protection whatsoever. He had lived alone and none of his nel bors thought it necessary to inves- tigate the pleadings of the goats which resounded throughout Gravesend the whole night long. With the coming of daylight the goats, having devoured all the in- terlor fittings of the barn, simply walked right out through the wall on one side and permeated the entire neighborhood in every way possible for a gont to permeate. Aged billy- goats with long whiskers and cute little goatlets and nannygoate that would have been sedate had they not been so hungry glimpsed the lawns and garden plots of Gravesend and went to them. With by -s and dleats of joy the goats proceeded ‘on .their work of devastation. The residend were pow- erless. Many who sought to prevent the invasion of thetr premises were butted all over the place, Finally, in answer to numerous appeals, Lieut, MoCarthy sent out #ix mounted po- licemen under the leadership of ex- Cowboy Doody to round up the in- vaders, At noon there were forty-two goats in the barn of the Sheepshead Bay station, and Doody, with his "Ki-ya” and his no less valorous but less vocal assistants, were scattering out toward Sheepshead Bay, Flatbush, Bensanhuret and Bay Ridge in search of the most nimble and adventurous of the flock. Some of the goats that ventured into the Italian district along New Utrecht Avenue will never be seen again, but the rest will all be assembled before night. Lieut. MeCarthy is open to sugges- tions as to methods of chaperoning fifty or upward assorted boats. —_———_—_— rea § rit i E Clogged N Dr treat, Beaten and Ra Bene c soon tenet } pate = “7 bee Be an To the Mountains or the Seashor By auto, train or ship? 4 Are questions to be answered When you take your Summer's. To answer them correctly Read what World Want ads, say; To Nature's playgrounds They'll guide you any day, 4,058 WORLD “SUMMER RESORT ADS. WERE PRINTED LAST WEEK= . 1,793 More Than the Herald, Times, ‘Tribune aud Press COMBINED: Reavers Dam Lake Inlet, ALBANY, July 13.—Beavers have dammed the Inlet of Spectacle Lake in the Adirondacks, causing the water to fall more than two foot The Conser- vation Commission here to-day permit- mplainants to destroy the dam jcar the channel. and he Iakg belonging to were affected by wealthy the water's low lev CLOSE TO 1,000 VACATION PLACES: ARE SEPARATELY ADVERTISED IN THE WORNING WORLD TO-DAY) oP hash st | po Bl titi A 1 sealant H 4 oa