Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
WH 33ak.,OLEIBTREY VAIN VAR he E VE RANCE SaSer ENINYU WORLD, Wikuwaovaxr, GIRL OLYMPIC ATHLETES HOME FROM VICTORIES TO SMOTHER HER WITH HIS KES Manicure’s Love Plea Gets to Mrs. Helperin and Love Gives Way to Law Suit. Mra, Dorothy Helprin of No 600 Warwick. Street, Brooklyn, to-day asked Suprome Court Justice Bene ict through her counsel in Brook- lyn for ‘alimony and counsel pending the outcome of « separation tees gult she has started against her hus- | band, Dr. Benjamin E. Helprin of No. 264 Troy Avenue, Brooklyn For ten years subsequent to thet Marriage in 1905 there was no rift in their bliss, Mrs. Helprin declared, but when Miss Anna Moscowits, a pretty manicure, began to receive attentions from her husband, a cording to Mrs. Helprin, love fled into the grave, “Miss Moscowltz used to visit the Helprin home to meet the doctor and go with him to dinner,” the plaintiff averred, “This was done to break my heart.” (Mrs. Helprin included in her papers a copy of a letter said to have been written to her husband while he was stationed in a Western camp as a member of the “Army Medical Corps. in which ‘Miss Moscowitz, after de soribing her birthday, was quoted as @aying: “Visions of Inst year keep popping up before me. All the glory of your wonderful golf keeps flashing through my mind. I seo you now enchanting by fascinating me. The picture is too vivid, 1 want to run toward it, to be held in your arms and smothered with kisses." Dr. Helprin said the manteure's epistles were “only the silly effusions of o silly girl to a man in uniform.” He dented that his income is $9,000 a year and declared he had only $300 equity in hia automobile, Justice Benedict reserved decision respecting alimony and counsel feos and sent the action to a referes, me STREET CLEANERS ASK RAISE Charles W. Stenborg, Scoretary of the Street Cleaning Drivers' Union, declared yesterday that 6,000 rect fam Morris of Brooklyn, in the to-day, He had he had assaulted No, 3901 Second of oulja board. Three weeks ane friend wha “the Ouija board 1 jleged to” have "Cs0-0-p-e-1." called on | ity. ot even the In anewer told the Mag American citize |" pra you ev -After a lon “Tt weems like | “Did you ever "| tinued the Magistrate | Another quite sure he | “Such is fame,” pause, Sessions. Avenute, missed a diamond ring sulted a Oulja board on Morris refo: dy."" Mra. ow “Ouija tella the truth,” said Wil! ‘ 104 Front ifth Avenue Court just admitted that James Cooper of Brooklyn, ‘his pal for fifteen’ years, as a result nformation supplied solely by a Morris con- dd by ped Ouija ts al- spelled ‘Thereupon Cooper, according pallce, and (beat him into insensibi!- he Morris I heard the name.” hear of Cox?” con- reet, | Morris | a to as out Morris to the Morels wus an and Morrie 1 never he sald: was rd of Cox. d the Magistrate MAYOR ACTS TO | cette Urges Commissioner Mann to Call Confefence of Construction Materials Men. Mayor Hylan that ke will Commiastoner |Chairman of call ac terials. mon here In the 1 liead of heads of tt st to announced ask Tenement | Frank Mann, who Is the Mayor's Conference Committee, to Immediately inference of building material men In or near this city and ask them point blank what reductions they are willing to make on the cost of ma- SPEED UP BUILDING Housing | The Mayor says it is up to materials follow industry in the in Ohlcago begin to fw not known meet the — serial ial oe ands thi8 | Wwost, who, at a meeting week to the Board of Estimate. Aye een agetan di Chauffeurs, auto engine men and muto | PPOmaNe & aad truck drivers will demand $8, the |¢79P right awa 7 RK larivers, hostlers and stadleman 67, ana) Wherher Chairman Mann w the sweepers $6.50 a day. The ‘men|Dullding materials men bef fo Want @ three-week Vacation with|appear before the Lockwood os in the Dever ment of Street nfng now run frm $1.40 to $1,800 A year, and a general average of $1,679 prevails. At present chauffeurs are getting $23 @ week and sweepers $30, SMALL BOYS SEE THEIR BIG IDEAL JACKSON BROKEN 'd Never. Have Thought It of You, Joe,” One Sighs as He Quits Jury Room, CHICAGO, Sept. 29. HEIN Joe Jackson left the W Criminal Courts Building in custody of a Sheriff after telling his story to the Grand Jury, he found several hundred youngsters, ranging in age trom six to sixteen, wasting a glimpse of thelr former idol. One little urchin stepped up to the outflelder and, grabbing his cont sleeve, sadd * “Tt ain't true, is It, “Yes, kid, I'm afre gon replied for Joe Jd it 14," Jack- The boys opened a path for the ballplayer and stood in silence until he paased out of sight “Well, I'd never have thought it," sighed the lad who ‘had stopped Jackson. \ » i lative Committee, | thin city Jiature in an prices of bu _ ing brought White Star Liverpool Sept shipment is $16, to ers. The largest of which there ts an was approximately $ al Natler Dies of € Orlando the home Riv bocker Hospital wounds in the d Saturday of John G recel op man Avenue, Brooklyn, following a aensatie ia held for the crime, New nee Baltic, ny 8 wide Drives died to-day an a result of gunshot and left | while dete ‘s apartment against John Howkins of No. who 00,000, shot Wor which ta to meet In thia week for the purpose of jcarrying out the wishes of the Legia- investigation ding materials of RECORD SHIPMENT OF GOLD IS ON WAY Liner Baltic Carries $16,750,000, Largest Sum Ever Brought Across Atlantic. The largest shipment of gold ever transported across the Atlantic is be- York by which The value of the 60,000. | It 1s consigned to American bank previous ship known record bi bons of n Knicker ib aa the held him in $500 bail for Special to-day How the e they Legis- high the | left nt itler in No. 494 ted | chase. IF NAPTOR Licks His Pal (qlnqy FTE ASKED THE DOCTOR - Tip He A COUNTY DETECTIVE From Ouija sabeeniaelas But Court Doesn't Approve and Morris Is Held—He Never Heard of Cox. | USTED IN NASSAL GAMBLING INQUIRY Carman Plant and His Assist- ant Dismissed by District Attorney. arman Plant of Lynbrook, County Detective of Nassau County, and his egsiatant, Thomas V. B: dismissed from office by District At- torney Weeks to-day, Both had been under fire by the officens of the Nas- sau County Association for more than a year, There was an apen break between the District Attorney and Attorney Vandewater and Secretary Meisher of the Association for a time because Weeks refused to dismiss Plant and Bartute, It was charged that their ute, were s Police Department relations with certain politicians and consults the oulja board,” said Magis- gambiens—now under Grand Jury in- trate Gelsmar, “and if they did the | evidence would not hold tn court.” to a question, strate that and voted. hear of Harling?” asked tho Magistrate. pause vestigation — interfered their public usefulnesa. Plant collected the evidence which with HUNT FOR DOCTOR IN PARDON FRAUD General Alarm Out Lazarus, Indicted emor's Testimony, Detectives from Potico Headquarters today notified Assistant District At torney Tatiey that they had been un able to locate a Dr. Rernard Lazar described as a weat side physician, In dicted for Bernard on Govy- yesterday by tho Grand Jury Jointly with Mnurtoe J. Rosenberg, an insurance broker of No. 14 Nassau Street, for obtaining $5,000 trom Louis Smith and Mra. Rebecca Smith, to gain & pardon for Jacob Smith, nerving tin in Auburn for arson. Mr, Talley |i mediately communicated with Pollce Compissioner Enright, requesting th a cfreuiar be tesued calling for the doctor's arrest and that the circular and a general alarm be sent out to the principal cities. ‘Tho Indictment againat the two men wan found after tgstimony had been given befory the Grand Jury by Gov Smith, the complainant against them Rosenberg was arraigned to-day tn General Sessions and bail was fixed at $10,000. Rosenberg's counsel protested at this amount, but It was not reduced And the prisoner was returhed to the Tombs, Later the attorney said that the bail would be furnished. B. R. T. STRIKE LOST; TIP OF THE UNION Jo the conviotion of Dr. W. K.jONe of the Outs™Is Told There m Wilkins for wife murdor possible and Isn't 3 Chance of ‘ he had shown remarkable, ability in Pan trailing criminals and solving crimes Winning, of robbery and ¥ nee. Recently! First admission by Jclals of tne Matthew O'Netll was brought from| A™@lamated Association of Street and ing, where he nerving a three | Electrical Railway Employes that the and.a half to seven year sentence for| Seon” BM IE Striiee sme teat . ‘ | was reported to-day. John J. Kelly of dealing In stolen automobiles, becnuse| No, 222 Sumpter N. Breoki a of statements he regarding| striking motorman, reported th: Mant and Barbute After hearing] “hen he applied to ond =Dhuy, O'Neill and making independent in- Veatigation Weeks told his friends he was dismissing the two as a result the testémony Weeks, when the ng crusades were started by 4 County Association, relied tmplicitly on the reports of Plant and Barbute regard- ing conditions. The John Doe hear- ings before Justice Scudder have given Weeks reason to know thtae re- ports were not always as informing as they should have been. During the period In which the reports were made Plant and Barbute were active in raid) ckel-in-tho-slot machines ASKS 7-CENT FARE ON TROLLEYS HERE New York, Westchester and Boston Road Says It Lo: Local Traff w York, and rond Company, a trolley ewed its efforts to obtain are on its line within the ork City before Dep- ¢ Commiraioner Hal- verett 8. Miller, Presi ompany testified that his within the city of New in ony $50,000 a year In nd pays out $23,000 in rent nd $72,000 for taxes to the municipal ity, Mr. soven-ce be out 008, s on The Roston ¥ car Ine, re A weven-cent lnrits of New uty Public Se ley to-day, 1 dent of the Westchester revenue Miller declared that even at n t fare the company will still of pocket so far this elty A seven-cent fare has been in in Mt. Vernon and New Hochelie for two years. The rate in New York City, ‘od, 4a leas than a cent a mile, while company obtaining from 21-2 8 cents a in cities In West ter County —— os TWO HELD FOR OIL DIVIDEND, Brokers Accused Connection W an he de- the of Swindle Stan Co, Judge Sheppard in United Staten Dia trict Court fn $10,000 batt each for trial Mra, Katherine M. b to-day held Stan- ton and ‘Albert J. Froehlich of the K M. Stanton Company, Inc., brokerage firm of No. 20 Broad Street, who were indicted with Frank A, Dwyer of the| firm on charge of ualng the mails to defraud, ‘Phe company Is atieged to have sold $760,000 in stock in the Stan: } ton OU Company. {s alleged the It brokerage concerr organized in May, 1917, to ae stock of the y. and that in declared, w provides diviiend gannot bo deslured Until four months ‘after @ company hes sold ob ayn member o fthe Strikers’ Joint Commit tee and § ary of Diviaion 879, ask in gfor strike benefit. i ho was advived to get a Job as “there tan't @ ehance of winning.” John MeVengh of No, 2194 Fulte Street, a striking subway guard, r Ported that when he waked for atric funds, Dhuy advised him th try to ge hla Job ack. MeVeugh aake! If th atrike wan ist and reported Dhuy wi replying “It's not a long way from it.” — So Thomas © xton Gregory In Sued by mente Blain. Mra. Bugenia Gregory, known as igenio Lé Blain, lending woman with “The Sporting Widows," now playing in Cincinnati, brought an action for al voree to-day in Brooklyn Supreme Court against Thomas Claxton Gregory of No. Beaumont Avent Island 2 action was undete jorge Coffin testified he had a gagement ® mee tel MeAlpin on F the entry: ‘Thomas Gregory at the 28 Inat, and Claxton Gre and wife” on the re He puahed open the door and found Gregory in the room with a "tall th blonde” who was not sion was reserved. his wife. Decl MLEENSRIGGIN By SEPTEMB OLYMPIC ATHLETES. MEET SECOND JINY: SMALLPOX ON SHP All Forced to Undergo Vac- cination Before Landing From Liner Here. Forty-five members of the Amer. | lean Olympic team who returned to- day aboard the Mobile encountered a | second Jinx In their Journey yesterday | when smallpox was dincovered in the juteerngo of the veasel The first Jinx ‘Waa encountered at | Liverpool, where they started to make the return journey aboard the ‘Anti- gone, on which the Olympic Commit- tee sought to quarter four women to ch stateroom and all the men in th hold. The athletes objected astren- uously and obtained first cabins aboard the Mobile, That veasel was 4 up for seven hours in Quarantine esterday, all the 550 cabin pasnen- and 630 steerage being trans- red to Hoffman Intand and all the | athlotea being compelled to undergo vaccination, Fourteon-year-old Bileen Riggin of No, 135 Remsen Street, Brooklyn, wii ner of the fancy high dive at Ant-| werp, Was among the returning ath- aw the Eiffel Tower, tho Place de la Concorde and the rest of the ps en, who is a mem of ber ‘ening World Kiddie Klub and who ta yot to enter her first year of high school, "but 1 iiked the shops in the Rue de la Paix best. { | bought two hats and a gown In the | nd I think y are delightful,” she dded, meaning both the shops and her purchases | Jimmy Carson, ono of the athle contracted measles during the yoy age. Among those who composed the group of returning athletes were sev cral Ha jan swimmers, Miss Ethel- da Bleibtrey and Dick Langdon, the high jumper Other girl athletes to return wore |Helen Wainwright, a ranner, and | Margaret Woodbridge of Detroit and | Fre en Cowell of St. Loutla, bot! |ewimmers, all being chaperoned |SMiss Charlotte Epstein of | Women's Swimming Association |Now York City by the of —_ “Cheer” at Min Are Fined. that was found Fair last week Sold a a Fair a of the Mineola County Some the cheer” from the hostelry of Willlam ish at Mineola, according ‘to Fodera agents. ash was arralg before | Federal Jusuce Garvin in Brooklyn. to. Jay, plended guilty of selling the stuff was fined $130 for quor Bales bartender, Ovto ttbers " aded guilty. Ho was fined $5 WISTINCTI hSS Heomoses Tit aud Ek 29, 1920, MARGARET WOOD BRIDGE C=AMLOTTE SOvLE, RENE BASEBALL MAZAGINE ATTACKS FULLERTON Could See Little in Charges of Crookedness in the 1919 World's Series, ‘The Bancball Magazine of February, 1920, In dealing with Hugh ton's articles telling the first story of crookednens in the Werld Series, which appeared in ‘The Evening World, printed the following The sport world was recently greeted with a giddy screed from the facile pen of Hugh Fullerton ‘The screed began with the senaa- tHonal statement: “Haseball has reached a crisis The major leagues, both owners and players, are on trial.” To this we reply, very Interesting, true. Who ts to try them? Presum- ably, Mr. Fullerton. If so, we tremble at the result, for we know of no one loss competent t ‘ar rensoning and fairness of vision to pass judgment on #0 broad a question, Mr. Fullerton goes on to say that ertain gamblers, whom he claims to know, have made repeated assertions that players on the White Sox team were in thelr pay, Can anything be more vague or unsubstantial than thie? ‘In the last tinues Mr World's Sories,” con Fullerton, "the charge was made that seven members of the White Sox team entered Into a con. epiracy with gamblers to throw the series , of the men whone names are my friend and men I would trust anywhere, the story ts told apenty with so mucl elroumstantial nam| and with ". places and dates that many Fuller- | one Is bew!ldered.” Referring to thease players,’ Fuller- ton saya: “If these men are guilty they should be ekpelled. If they are innocent they should be allowed to prove it and the persona who are re- sponsible for the charges whould be driven out of the sport forever.” We agreo with Mr. Fullerton) If ho were driven out of the aport for- ever it would be a consummation de: ly to be wished. ‘wilerton Koes on to miskey) has offered $10,000 for loge) proof that his men were not rying in the eertos.’ Lf Mr. Fuller- ton has any real proof why does he not claim the $10,000? If he has no real proof why dues he come out with thie sensational story of wholesale anuendo based enurely on the stor? nblers? eay: ‘He « ppours, Is on trial ail is to start a aweoping in- Veatigation, And what is the end of| All this? Must baseball conduct an investigation every time a gambler inakes criticism of players or every TO PROBE ALLEGED MATERIALS POOL U.S, to Investigate Charges That It Fixes Prices of Building Supplies. Investigation of charges that there i# o price-fixing combmation among the building ‘material manufacturers has been ordered by Attorney General Paimer, Representative Isaac Siegel of this city, Who advocated such an inveatigae fon, to-day made publio a telegram from the Attorney General. Mr. Siegel anked to place any Information he had before Federal Attorney Caffey, who has been instructed “to consider whether the fects tend to show a vio= lation of the Federal laws." Mr, gel said he would confer with Mr. Oaf- fey immediate: State Attorney General Newt thas, into Reprene Une Mr, Fullerton thinks 1 sbould | he*.(eformes, Resrevestatve Geea =e be done? Lf #0 baseball had bettor| ton” of the charges. wet aside & commission to sit in ~ perpetuity on the claims of gamblers and Mr, Fullerton. They will be kept busy three hundred and sixty-five} days & year and on leap years three hundred and sixty-wix. “Who ts Hugh Fullerton anyway? A visionary and erratic writer noted for two things: First, his celebrated system for doping plays and players reby he modestly attempts to foretell (erroneously) not only which team will win a series but exactly how many runs and hits will be made game by game. Hecond, for his pro- clivity In writing) sensational stories usually with the Yaguest foundation # all? he buy one other bid no; the contemptible way in he deserted the sport which him a living many years, the dark days during the war, Tho slanderous lbela with which he reviled the game, the own to which bas gi era and the players on that occasion 1 t membered by thou- persons wi with supreme dlaguat CUTS HER THROAT WHEN SISTER DIES Staten Island School Teacher At+_ tenypts Suicide After Her Long Nursing Fails, Two hours after her sister Sallie died this morning, Misa Annie Shanks, & teacher in the Tottnville, Staten Ivland, high school, cut her throat and both her wrists with « penknife im their home, No. 176 Johnson Avenue, Tottenville, and was taken to the Me- mortal Horpital at Princes Bay in such condition that she: will probably die, Miss Sallie @hanks, who was thirty= three Syears old, five years younger than her sister, was also a teacher in the high school and the two were in= parable, For five montha Miss Sale @ had been i and her sister had her, giving up oll her spare to the task BONWIT TELLER & CO. The Specialty Shop of Oriinalions Specially Priced at 16.50 FIFTH AVENUE AT 38™ STREET Introduce the Vogue of Paris Sponsored by Leading Modistes FELT TAILORED HATS FOR WOMEN AND MISSES These exceedingly chic types are presented to the well dressed women of America, simultaneous with their appearance in Par 3. The hats take form in Breton sailors, mush- rooms, roll brim and straight brim shapes ribbon bound and trimmed. Navy blue, brown, jade SABLES | 391 Fifth Avenue | Furriers Exclastoely for One Hundred Years copper, sand, black, Colors: orange, green, hunter’s green, Bordeaux, taupe, leather, TAILORED MILLINERY MAIN FLOOR sapphire. t Wy