The evening world. Newspaper, July 19, 1915, Page 3

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mre 3 " se vid THE BVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 1 WHAT EVERY WOMAN SHOULD KNOW! ~ JOFFRE PREPARES Zt s§ wns \¥ f { | FRTHE sts SUPREME BLOW Awaiting the Great Drive on Paris if Warsaw Is Taken. 7 + NEW FORTS RING CITY. Von Hindenburg Expected to’ Lead the Forces in the West. - By William Philip Simms. (United Press Staff Correspondent.) PARIS, July 19.—Quick capture of ‘Wersaw, then a crushing drive south- ward to the French Channel jorts and finally a triumpho! entry into Paris—j| ‘that ts what the Kaiser is believed to) dave meant when he said a few days ago: “Germany will the war by! October!” | But France is amply prepared for _ @ny mad en masse drive on the cap- | ital, Military men and strategic i-writere here are not worrying over ‘the Kaiser's ‘plans, “Lat the German start,” said a high oMieial to-day. “Joffre will be there.” Because of its close connection with future developments on the Franco: Flanders front, the great battle bein, jwaged for Warsaw holds Paris tense with excitement. Not since the Ger- . mans attempted to reach Paris last summer have the street crowds fo! Jowed the bulletin boards so closely, ‘The map fans are following every move of the Russian and German armies with thenr pins and flags. | From Swiss sources tt is learned thre that Gen. von Hindenburg, tar from “being in disgrace,” is really fm high favor with the German Em- Peror. Before the Warsaw campaign , Was started he held two important wonferences with the Kaiser, It is reported here that he was told could squeeze the Russians out ~ of ‘arsaw he would be given su- preme command of the German forces in the west for the great drive on Calais and Paris, while other com- were assigned to the task of sweeping the French out of Alsace, The Kaiser, according to Swiss reports, is said to have declared that even the defeat of a new dash on Paris would bring the allies to terms. He argued that the French “enust withdraw their forces from Alsace to meet the new German of- fengive and that the aillles thereby ‘would lose their last hold on German woll, and be willing to make peace, Austria, the Kaiser is understood to believe, can take care of Italy with- out German assistance, Gen. Joffre has not been asleep while Germany was mapping her campaign to end the war. Paris is now protected by ring after ring of new defenses. The same thing ts true win of Calais and other coast tow. The ” French commander, meanwhi s de. termined to continue playing his own @eme and toymake Germany Play his game, too, Like Gen. Grant, he “will Hght ft out on thore Hnes,” not only . all summer, but all next winter, too, if necessary. Stategists here point out that Joffre really has forced Germany to play his game since Charlerol and the vic- tory of the Marne early in the war, He stopped@he German drive toward the French coast by refusing to play the German game, At present he is less occupied in attempting to drive the Germans back with great sacri- fices than in conserving his men for a great, smashing blow the moment the enemy drops guard. pods il Nacsa tas I LUNA’S $25,000 UMBRELLA. Marvellous Device to Shed Rain Sun at Coney. How would you like to stand at ease under a $25,000 umbrella? The manage- ment of Luna Park issues a statement that nobody need fear a shower at Luna fn the future because a great part of the park will be under an umbrella with filuminated ribs and an illuminated top, and “as she turns she'll serve as a beacon to ships at d The plan under consideration calls for an immense steel shaft or mast 150 feet high, with ten strong steel ribs, each one 120 feet long, the latter when raised into position covering an area 240 feet in diameter, sufficient, the ifieations state, to provide shade d shelter for 5,000 persons. ABs Bd WATER UP TO THEIR NECKS. Fifteen Persons waning by Flood When Rescued, KENTON, 0., July 19.—Fifteen per- fons, standing up to their necks in water and almost drowned, were res- cued early to-day from a flood-sub- merged house in the Scioto marsh, near Foraker, a suburb of Kenton, Rain fell nearly all last night, caus+ ing a renewal of last week's inunda- | tion. Tt ts feared that more residents \ of the marsh may be in similar straits “end loss of life may possibly have oc- curred. >>—_;qx2=z~i7~is=eEee_ For Constipation EX LAX Laxative Chocolate | ExeLax ition, regulates ear | Week in perfecting herself in the ex- How to Keep Well, Keep Strong and Keep a Perfect ure, Told in a Series of Illustrated Lessons To-Day’s Illustrated Les- son Begins a Course of Diet and Exercise De- signed to Build Up and Develop Figures That Are Too Slender. igoause of her perfect physical proportions, Pauline Furlong hes deen named the “Americon Venus.” She te the author of “Beauty Culture at Home,” and te an authority on all questions of woman's physical well-being. Bhe wih give a course of leapons to the women readers of The Hve- ning World this summer on “How to Make Yourself Well and Strong and Preserve Your Figure.” LESSON XVIII, By Pauline Furlong. This is to be the thin woman's week. The woman who is really thin, who ie under her normal weight, needs a system of health culture quite as badly as her stout sister. I consid- ered the case of the latter first sim- ply because it seemed to me that she was in the majority. But if the oman who is too fat has studied arefully during the past three weeks the lessons in breathing, bath- ing, dress and diet, the simple, health-giving exercises which Ihave prescribed, she has enough to keep her busy for a while. T advise hor to spend the coming erclees Ireacdy printed, some of which are by no means easy for un- t ed Meanwhile, she should not deviate from her diet, To- day I start in The Evening World a course of exercises and advice for the woman who . s to develop. EXCESSIVE SLENDERNESS DUE TO ABNORMAL CONDITION. First of all, excessive thinness, like excessive fatness, must be recog- nized as neither normal nor beautiful. Faaciation is a pathological s| even as is obesity, The 1 , is mo: erally acknov as an aesthetic defect, and yet does! any really discerning critic of feml-} nine loveliness cali the thin woman; bee ful? Can she conscientiously apply that a jective to herself? If you, dear madam, bre @ creature of bones and 4 ‘es, study urself with the ald of that most remorscless of ¢*! ics— Ising glass. Forget the flat-| teries of your dressmaker, spoken and) also ex; ssed jn acts—those full! draperies and ruffles which are used! to conceal your lack of symmetry.| ‘They do not really make you beautl- ful; they only hide your defects It is often said\that “the styles are made for thin people.” should rather say that while it may be true that certain styles look a few degrees less ugly on thin women than on stout ones, nevertheless every sort of dre always most becoming to the woman with the strong, supple, rounded, graceful figure, the ‘woman who is neither too fat nor too thin. However, there are thin women who do as need to be convinced that thelr extreme slenderness ie no beauty. I have received ‘etters from many of these women eaking for in- | struction in building up and develop- ing the body. That is another reason why I have decided to devote this week specially to this subject. ‘To-day The Evening World prints a new measurement chart, Therefore | the first thing for the thin woman to do is to weigh herself, take the meas- | urements of height, head, neck, chest, waist, hips, thigus, calf, ankle, upper ‘m, forearm, wrist and Inseribe these on the column of the chart marked “At Start." This column has been Joft on the chart especially for the thin women who start their course in developing to-day, The women who have already filled out the chart printed on June 28 may leave this | column empty. BUILDING UP MUCH EASIER THAN REDUCING, When the thin woman has thus visibly indicated her present physical condition, she should cut out the chart, paste it on a bit of cardboard and hang it in her room where her eyes will fall upon it constanuy, Dur- ing this week the exercises described and iilustrated will be specially adapted toward bringing about the change in her measurements which she desires; For Nhe final two weeks of the course some very interesting and fairly difficult exercises will be printed, most of which will work both ways—they will make thin persons fatter and cause the stout to lose flesh, ‘At the outset I want to encourage the thin woman by assuring her that she will have a much easier time in her fight for perfect physical develop- mont than the corpulent lady has had during the past three weeks. I once said that all any one needs to do to become thin is to stay in bed all day and eat potatoes and lve cream. That in rather overstating the case, but the night, and should take a. ni the afternoon if it is po her to do se. should exercise for ten or fifteen minutes every day, but should avoi it vigorous sports and athletic pas- times. She should tak only soptd baths or, after her exercises, @ cold shower. Above all, she should cultivate a different habit of mind. The thin woman |# usually « fretty, fidgety, excitable person. She is possessed of @ surplus nervous energy, just as the stout woman is possessed of surplus tissue. The one must transform flesh into energy; the other must work the roverse process. Although | think exercises are not n veep breathing pecially inter , and although the stout woman certainly spend her time better in doing things which compel breath- ing deeply, the thin woman will probably be improved by taking the regulation breathing exercises. Thi fact that they are stupid will be all reed up int 28. MA have followed these instructior the abdomen will now lie flat, while your cheat will be thrown id out. ‘he breath should Breathe in this way for ten min- tes, morning and night in the open id in a few weeks you will be jsed at your appearance and ent. w surprii develo} DUMB-BELL EXERCISES TO AID CHEST DEVELOPMENT. For developing the chest and cov- ering it with firm, rounded muscle t flesh there are also certain exce! and not too exhausting exercises which may be performed with light dumb-bells, Two of these are pictured to-day First, take the correct standing Position, knees straight, abdomen in, chest up, shoulders bac! Th should be at the sides, a du either hand. Bend over at the waist, bringing the dumb-bells In front of you, as in Pose No. 1; then cross your Observance of Miss arma, so that the elbows touch, as in Pose ' No. A shpilar exercise, to develop the same parts of the body, is pictured in Poses 8 and 4. Stand erect, as in Pose with the dumb- bells held arm’ ngth, shoulder- high and horizontally In front of you. Then move your arms down and back so that the dumb-bells clash behind your back. These exercises should be performed from five to ten times when you them; ofte as you fool “ not ex- orcize If you don’t know whether you are Seen saa in apart the height and istered on you rs ment chart with the follow g table 0 normal heights and weights: 105 pounds. 110 pounds. 115 pounds, 5 feet & inoh 6 feet 7 inohes.. Readers of Mise Furlong'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 exercise, Letters From Evening World EVENING WORLD MEASUREMENT CHART Cut This Out and Keep the Record of Changes Following Furlong’s Exercises and Readers Following Miss Furlong’s Lessons. “CORNELL CO-ED" asks—"Bince you aay it Is not necessary to exercise more than ten or fifteen minutes each Diet | MEASUREMENTS OF Miss Furlong, Venus | At Start July 24 YOUR MEASUREMENTS July 31 Aug. 7 thin woman's regime is really not a hard_one to follow. ne woman who wants to put on the stomach and bowels, stimulates the liver and promotes digestion. Good for | ferns oat Sie Hw Bin end 108 61 | josh should eat plentifully of wholesome, ly digested foods, in which sweets, starches and fats should preponderate. She should aleep alne er ten heure every 125 Ibs. | Weight If you miss one of the arti icles of the series send for a copy. in- closing stamp. You will want the complete series. table of A PEACE MISSION TO WELSH MINERS Will Appeal to Them in Person at Cardiff To-Night—New Proposal Taken Up. LONDON, July 19.—Minister of Mu- nitions Lioyd George will leave for day, how can I do all you have shown in a half-hour?” It 1s not necessary to do each ex- ercise every day, for many of them are advanced methods of those shown beginning of my series. M. D. A. asks: “How can I incr my height and at what age do fs 1 al T am now sixteen years old,” (1) Hang from transom or stro! curtain pole and twist body several times a day. Do not overdo this. (2) About twenty-one years, Mrs. F. R. M. asks: “Will you sen me the diet list and back numbers of your articles?” Send stamps to cover cost of same, They started June 28th, CONSTANT READER asks: “Ho can I reduce stoutness in the legs?” Raise on toes and heels—hands on hips—about fifty times each day. Mrs. H. asks: “Will you please print a diet to remove blackheads and pim- ples?” All green vegetables, fruits, d&c., thin the sluggish blood, which causes these, Do not eat rich food, Miss K. E. 8. asks: “Will you please print some menus for lunches and dinners for a woman anxious to diet and reduce?” These will be printed shortly. J, K. asks lease tell me how to develop my bustand Increase weight." This will be printed in the lessons which start to-day. KILLS SON AND DAUGHTER; WIFE DISARMS SLAYER Woman's Bravery Saves Her From Fate of Children at Hands of Man Believed Insane. (Special to The Rvening World.) GROTON, Mags. July 1 ‘Harry Nutting shot and killed his son Ever- ett, twenty-one years old, a bis daughter Louise, nineteen years, with @ repeating rifle while they slept early to-day and then attacked his wife, After a hard struggle with her hus- band Mre, Nutting succeeded in get- ting the gun away from him and called the police, who locked the man up on a charge of murder. Neighbors stated that Nutting, who |s a cider maker, had been considered slightly deranged for some time. Mrs, Nutting was awakened by the | report of a gun from an adjoining room, followed almost immediately by | the sound of a second shot, She ran out of her room and found her bus- band in the hall with a rifle in Ma | hands. According to her statement to | the police, he tried to aim the weapon at her, but in a struggle she took it from: him, In thelr bedrooms Mra. | Nutting found the bodies of the son {and daughter. Nutting refused to make any statement, —— JUSTICE PRYOR 87 TO-DAY. je Vete! | Birthday Quietly, | Former Supreme Court Justice Roger Atkinson Pryor 1s eighty-seven years 1d to-day, He is celebrating the an- | niversary quietly at his home, No, 3 | West Sixty-ninth Street, where, to | friends who call to congratulate him, he Is recalling Incidents in bie stirring career. He was a Confederate Brigadier Gen- eral, and @ flery speech he made fe said | to have precipitated the attack on Fort | Sumter, During the war he was taken prisoner, charged with being a spy. He 8 Secretary of War Stanton wanted him hanged, but President | pared him after hearing that he had | Sen kind to Northern prisoners, The former Confederate leader came New York soon after the wa leading member of the daily walk in Central P fr ‘2 outrage, Cont. \t0 ‘ar! = Lincoln | Cardiff to-night to make a personal | appeal to the Welsh coal miners, his fellow-countrymen, to return to work {and prevent a slackening of the pro- |duction of war munitions. ‘This an- |nouncement was made this afternoon | following a special session of the Cab- linet at which the most serious internal jcrisis of the war was discussed Lioyd George's popularity among the workingmen, the Cabinet hopes, will bring about a settlement New proposals have been advanced which are likely to constitute « bridge whoreon both sides concerned in the strike will be able to arrange peace without loss of prestige another dramatic turn in the situa- tion this afternoon as the result of a communication sent following the Cabinet meeting to the Executive Committee of the miners at Cardiff. The committee, which was in session when the communication was re- ceived, adjourned immediately and prepared to start for London to meet Walter Runciman, President of the Board of Trade, this evening. Later, however, they received another mi sage from Mr. Runciman saying their presence was not needed. ‘The proposals for ending the strike originated with the miners, The plan contemplates temporary concession of the demands of the miners, which, however, would not be embodied in any new agreement until the Govern- ment has had ample time to con- sider the whole matter, The ques- tiona in dispute would then be re |ferred fo the Munitions Court, which | would decide regarding marginal dift- ferences between the award of Mr. Runciman and the full demands, The proposed terms entail some slight concessions on both sides, The outcome of the communication to the miners’ committee is accepted as an indication that the Ministry ratified ‘This will the proposed way out. by the ¢ Runciman, whatever it may be, <n WANTED TO BE A HERO Saved Train From Wreck Was Inspired by Holt’s Doings, READING, Pa, July 19. Harry F. night and to-day, acc lice, he confessed he scheme in the hope of getting a re- scheme to become @ hero and {mprove police, declared he had conceived the Frank Holt. The bomb, made at his home here, contained enough dynamite to destroy a city block. Last Thuraday night Weat- brook 1s quoted as sayin a point near Altoona, pl on the track, later r ved it, and told the officials of the railroad he had found it. The latter did not believe his story from the start Nd. t. The prisoner is thirty-two years . In the church of St. Jean the Bap- tiste, at Lexington Avenue and Sev- enty-sixth Street, the week is to be devoted to especial devotion of the novena of St. Anne. It will end Jul 26, the Saint's day. In this country there are five relics of ft, Anne, the New York church possess- ‘one, Many remetrkable cures have bee: ~ tributed to this and ti reste Of the church have @ case filled with the discarded crutches of those who sought the application of the relle, eo war has made the international resort of the Lourdes inaccessible and therefore the attendance this year at the shrine of St. J eve lore. i | i» {i HI ii MH) i : NE LLOYD GEORGE ON poopy PARKER There was | Pro the suggested compromise, accepting mean immediate return to work by the men and an undertaking to abide sion of the Court of Mr, $0 “PLANTED”? A BOMB Police Say Man Who Declared He Westbrook, who last week\went to a Pensylvania Railroad tower near Al- toona, Pa., with a piece of pipe con- taining twenty sticks of dynamite and sald that he had found the explonive on the tracks, was arrested here last] ted having taken two drinks just be- rding to the po- jad invented the ward, He added that he planned the his position in life for the sake of his wife and bables. Westbrook in his confession, nay the idea after reading of the exploits of which was he went to 1d the bomb — NOVENA OF ST. ANNE BEGUN. THEN TO HOSPTAL |, AFTER ACTING QUEERLY New Jersey Legislator Raised Disturbance in the Newark Railroad Station, Congressman Richard Wayne Par- ker of the Ninth New Jersey Con- Sreasional District was removed to the Newark City Hospital at noon to- day for observation as to his condi- ton after he had fought four police- | ¥ men in the Pennaylvania Railroad station at Newark. i Shortly before noon the Congress- man left his home in Newark, telling his wife he had been suddenly called to Washington on an important mat- ter, Im tho station he approached several people who did not know him and talked to them of the expected note to Germany and the policy of the Government, His toud talking and queer actions attracted a crowd, |)" and the police were notified. When the Congressman was ap- hed by the policemen who had an automobile waiting to take him to Police Headquarters he struck at them, It took them several minutes to subdue him, and after he was taken to Police Headquarters Dr, James L, Clarke, ghyaiclan to the De- partment, ordered him removed to the hospital. Congressman Parker served sixteen years in the House, until two years ago, when he was defeated for re- election by Walter I. McCoy. After Congressman McCoy was appointed Judge of the Federal Court in the District of Columbia, Parker again ran for the office and was elected, 20 DAYS FOR DRIVING AUTO WHILE TIPSY Real Estate Operator Swears He Was Simply Suffering From Fatigue. Blaine Maxwoll, a real estate op- erator of No. 501 West One Hundred and Forty-third Street, was sentenced to twenty days in the city prison by Justices Russell, Herrman and Her- bert in Special Sessions to-day for driving an automobile while intoxi- cated, Policoman McGuirk testified that at 4 o'clock In the morning of May 8 Maxwell, driving a car through One Hundred and Thirty-fitth Street at Lenox Avenue, sigzagged across the street and smashed into @ trolley pole. Maxwell eaid his unsteady driving was duo to fatigue, as he had been running the car for twenty-two hours, taking his mother and sisters on a long drive through New Jersey and was returning the car to a garage when the accident happened. He had several witnesses as to his usual so- briety and good character, but admit- staat of Roselle were play! the edge of waren he *, iti poh ace using LAD Pu 1 tn salad. A Product. “pure "and Wwholesema, he hasn't FRANCIS H. LEG Hudoon River, 27th to 28th Streets, StyHAT WEAR GOTHAM GotoGtrire, PEG L_ptcus AT OER | AT TOUR DEALER'S arp GOTHAM Hi Hop, wuss sete ot fore the accident,

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