The evening world. Newspaper, August 22, 1921, Page 1

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\ re To-Night’s Weather—FAIR, VOL. LXII. NO. 21,824—DAILY. Copyright, 192) Co. (The New York World), “Circulation Books Open to All.” | 1) by The Press Publishing ROBERT OLIVER THE WINNER OF SARATOGA STEEPLECHASE - THIMBLE FIST. FLU SECOND, * —INOPENING RAGE Favorite Gets Away to a Good Start and Finishes a Lengih in Front. ROBERT OLIVER VICTOR. Defeats Alyardi After a Driving Finish on the Flat in Steeplechase. Ry Vircent Treanor. FAR ATA RACE THACI Rice up. didn , in he ‘ a tie open rrnn ho 1 id went to uf th final Rice 4 but she fine todd what sh emule os won the Absa t fn nt at trom.) but owned © aint Robert live tas ready to make his pid. Tier pped plac ‘ yeu —s FERD. W. ROE | LING, BRIDGE Bul.OER, LEFT $10,460,337 ESTATE. ik Vee arpolidie 100 suare ne} wet: for four-year. re we pant 144 *Ovorinaten’ 1g ts Natural Bdge lth 103 a Condonion, *Anmentice allowaiice claimed, Weather clear, ‘Track feat, =f An es- was left | ces S ty, vare n the John Ay ; 00, . "SARATOGA ENTRIES. SARATO 553 i dS. Y., AUG, For thremyear- Won drivin Si a. Murph Evening World Racing Chart | WEATHER CLEAR. RACK FAST AL pest 010 xo. nile, lace same w parse Winns malen-Afarphy entry, Raber to the finkh, Alganti was onwle a mp and ontgamed him Aagee, Orton little too mich use of tn earl THIRD RACKE—Warrensburg Hig! olds and upward; six furlongs. No. Horse, 1 RESULT OF MRS hweight Hundicap; tor three-ye No, Horse wt 4--Aiken 109 5—Routledge 119 6—Pride of India 107 First Second Third 1 A ‘MAYO CHARGES “DROWNING” CHEATHAM IS HOAX AS —— ‘eee 5 Elder Woman - Vanishes at|fourteen years ago, Mrs, Cheatham i a went to Colorado with her two chil Coney Island After Fight dren, Charlotte and Joseph, Reports eG, lpnicn ahi were received whieh caused member Over Grandchild. efitha facilly! (oa: Weal and [ave i ‘tigate. ‘They were shocked at their ing that he believes the report | discovarie: Mr € at nt wa. disappearance and supposed | brought back with her two children. death by drowning at Coney Islund| Which ware placed in school, Mrs. | . oe Cheatham ain xelurned to Colo- | esterday of Mrs. BE. 8, Cheatham, his | rade ppearing late n Tennes 1 wife's mother, is a hoax, Roy Altred |companied by her husband, Golden. | ©, on investment broker, In aff. Against the advice of her relative ) javity fled in the Supreme Court to-|She took charge of her children, en ip ace shawera GUI Maye affidavit says that al day in answer to rs. ayo's suit for though Mrs. Mayo told him that she| divorce, charges his wife and her jad never been married bef: he | mother with illegal practices in Den-|has learned that she previously |ver in 1913 and that once before Mrs, |Married Joseph DP. Archileta of Den- i ver. | c d_pretende | heathaum had pretended suicide to} Anton Siegel) No. 1640 Broadway | conceal the fact that she was serving a sentence in jail in Chicago for shop- | iifting. | In referring io this incident Mayo |says that a detective went to their apartment and requested Mrs. Mayo to go to a department store regard- ling some trouble her mother was in | Mayo says he went also and learned |tat his mother-in-law had been sent to prison for shoplifting. He swears ‘he found Mrs, Cheatham a pris under the name of Mary Mayo, according to his affi- that she had twenty- two days to serve, at the end of which time she would be released if her fine of $31.50 was paid, Mayo says he paid the fine Attached to the affidavit is a receipt jet the Department of Correction in |@hicago for the money paid by Mayo. eat Shaikdmem i114 | Mrs, Cheatham was released April Por RTH Adinmdack Handicap; | 18, 1917. tor iwo,sear. Come w:,| Mayo also charges that at Pupblo, Mistant @&t Col., July 10, 1913, three years before Dall, Hl ne married Mrs. Mayo, she and her ee} Sth dry tou 8" + {]8] mother and H. F, Neher were en- conte | Kai sung iid 4] gaged in a blackmailing scheme. FIFTH 1 for maiiens; ttave| Chief of Police J, M. Daly of the Passes, ane sue Home wt, | Pueblo Police Department submitted | HF Gatun, gaecty . 10/an aMdavit showing that on March Sen “in” Wind! 118 28, 1914, Neher admitted to the police arn ince Contin: etic; ewe | Metal that he and the two women -okhs: fire furlongs. had participated in blackmailing op- Mie [gs tiem. yanehtz| erations throughout Colorado. iim! 240 8! Another affidavit incorporated in the papers is that of J. J. Williams, formerly Mayor of Memphis, Tenn. heal Peet ia, 400 Sis" Ten |i signed by his wife, Mrs. Mattie C. By Erato: ig, 0 uta Cisw"1eo | Williams, and their two sons, Gordon j and Joseph J. Williams, alleging that after the death of E, 8. Cheatham, |prepared the papers for Ma Mrs, Mayo went to Coney Island to-day and identified as her mother lelothing the unelaimed garmer |found in a locker af Richman's hs. We hope," she said to an yenin World reporter, “my mother was taken ill and is now in a bungalow at the beach, but our fear is that she may have drowned herself through melancholy over the disappearance | of my little daughter, Charlotte, of whom: she \.as passionately fond." | Mrs, Mayo added that her mother left her apartment terday after noon, saying that was to meet some friends from Memphis, ‘Tenn., at Bretton Hall, 86th Street and| Broadway, and then go bathing with them at Coney Island. Inquiry at Bretton Hall showed no one from Memphis is staying there and Mrs, Cheatham was not there yesterday afternoon, cee RUBBER TUBE MOONSHINER | GETS 3 MONTHS IN JAIL. Henry Invented Unique Method of Dispensing Hooch, | William Henry was sentenced te ree | months tn jail by County Judge Mitchell May in Brooklyn this morning. ite pleaded ‘gulity to serving I Frederick Reger with moonshine w in the dark hallway of a Brooklyn terement house, | The whiskey came through a rubber tube attached to a rubber bi ) Henry's coat, which was placed hi jeustomer's mouth, Judge May said Henry formerly had sold habit form) drug. He lived at No. 496 Hudson | Avetpe, Brooklya, an in BASEBALL —=< ae NATIONAL LEAGUE. AY NEW vor! St. Louis 40 nts . 00 atteries—Pertica an Aipsmt Shea and Snyde VP BROOK Cineinnati.. 3 0 0 Brookly! 030 Batte Luque and Hargrave Ca lore and Krueger. an ADELPRIA— Chicago.... 0 0 Philadelphia 1 0 ries —Ponder O'arvell sand Peter AT BOSTON— Pittsburgh, 2 0 3 0 Boston. oooo Battert Hamilton gnd Seinitdt; McQuillan and O'Neil. U. 8. CHILD LABOR LAW HELD INVALID REENSEORO, N. C, Aug. 22.— Judge James EB. By Court, to-day held the new Federal hild Labor Liw unconstitutional, ‘The Owen-Keating Child w was © beld unconstitutional Labor NEW YORK, MONDAY, AUGUST 22, 19 “Circulation Boo! 21, ‘To-Morrow's Weather—FAIR. 5 (all THE orld, Rene Open to All.” PRICE THREE CENTS WEALTHY MAN’S SON KILLS SELF AFTER FAILURE IN ART COLLINS DEC:INES ARTIST KILLS SELF WAY FUR TALLEY ON Justice’s Formal Action Leaves Harry Little Doubt of Back-Down by Murphy. HASKELL CAMPAIGN ON. NOTE TELLS MOTIVE on ae Cohen facturer’s Son, Takes Gas in His Lodgings Judge Promises Hot Fight— Calls Life “Sordid, Monotonous Curran Headquarters Are Opened. Justice ( Court of fled with ‘ornelius F Special the B Collin formally to- lections day his declination of the Tammany | designation [Court of clears the way of Judge Alfred J. Talley, who was joriginally turned down by Tammany | was to be appointed The Tammany for nomi General for t at the last minute, although it allowed ¢ Ition to the office to which he w Smith by Gov Comr nation to the ion This he designation had in Federal been generally understood that he stand for el mittee on Sub Judge Boyd two years ago and stitutions and Withdrawals will meet ruling was upheld by the SU- tomorrow or Wednesday, — Inas breme Court of the United) Btstas, much as the declination of lustice ‘i SO ea, ee eeasany Collins was prompted by his desire order restraining J. W. Bailey, Collector ; tuted for bim thore is little doubt as of Interna! Revenue, from enforcing the 40 the backdown of Charles f. Mur act ‘The law imposed a federal tax of Phy in the Talley matter 10 per cent. on the profits derived from, Two cainpaigns for the nomination yreduets en which child labor was em-)for Mayor which will appeal to the yenrojied Republi voter wore r wttemmt of the Federal Govern-Iaunehed to-day -that Major ren imbemtton ot authority anda (Henry EH. Currai, who bas 4 ii viion of the soverelgn rights of the | tien indorrement, and that ode Mata Teche ude tis _Huling lRettben 1h Haskell of Broakiyn, who |is running as a straight Republican. snes VOSHELL AND HARDY 3OSTON, Ang. 22.—In first match finished in the national doubles the opened bis Hermitage bling his s cretary of State John J WIN DOUBLES MATCH. |r! manage the Curran compat headquarter and spent t state Lyons, whe Hotel sin the day a chatnpionship competition 8, H. Voshell| | Judge Haskell's managers announes d of New York and Samuel Handy of | that be is going to make a ca:npat ja Pittsburgh eliminated A, M. Ceggio| that will make the eity sit up and tuk ind [. B. Benedict, a local combina. | BoUce fe will have: headqua uh tit The scores of the straight set! each of the five borou Ref vic were 6-0, 6-3, 6-0. | primary election on 13 he ex Voshell and Hardy were always mas-| pects to be listened to by every en ters, the veteran Hardy contributing | Pisa Republican voter and the ually with his partner to the teani success, —‘Twenty-cight entered in the tournament sya re Ue MRS. JONES LEADING IN PLAY FOR GOLF TITLE. Mrs. Melvin recent winner Aug. Olympia Fields Chicago womens city golf *i! ed the carly finishers to-day jualifying round of the annual cham- pionship tournament of the Women’ Western. Golf ciation with 42-47— 8%, Which equalled Women's par for the course was one stroke better than the 48-4290 returned by Miss Doro- thy 1 1 young Midlothian. player. The tournament is being played at the Westmoreland Country Club, anston. BARE-KNEE PARADES BARRED BY POLICE AT LONG BEACH LONG BREACH, Bare kn I, Aug. 3 in Long Beach must be confined within walls or re- stricted to the batiing beaches, The edict has gone out from Capt, Walter Harruscale of the Lonz Beach poli Motorists entering the village limits are notified by a sign, and yesterday eight or ten who started their customary parade on foot to the leach in bathin= costumes with- ( t bath -obes were arrested and .id fines ranging from $10 to Long Beach will not counte- nance people coming here in au- tomobiles and wearing bathing costumes, without their limbs be- ng properly covered below the knees," Capt. Barruscale sald, “Neither will we permit people to go about the streets without bath- robes covering their bathing suits, These robes must extend below the knees” & j ical admin istration. terms | of voters who are not enrolled The Judge is a hurrah campaigner His platform, iis manag un {nounce, will be home rule and per ronal liberty for New York, oppo: tion to all blue laws and a pledges to | give the city an efficient and econom | The Prohibitionists, who had made | petition, | | Elections in the |S0me mistakes in their no were given lenter the primaries by the Hourd of Having opposition, their full party tic to-day. nating pert nto no inside ket for the city offices will be in the field on lection Day, ‘CROWD — LOOKS ON | AS BANDITS GET $2,000 IN HOLD-UP Patrick Moyland, fifty year | messenger for Mark Cross & Co {406 Fifth Avenue, was held uy o'clock on Friday afternoon on ‘Street, between &th and 9th Avenu |and tebbed of the po payr lamounting to between $2,009 and $3,000. He struggled on the lew }for fifteen |more than minutes wh 100 looked ile on 4 crowd 0} and not a \hand was lifted to aid him A man stepped up behind Moyland | under |and grabbed the box containing the money, but the messenger jthe box and they fell t to A ther. | crowd rapidly gathered, tut evidently jooncluded that it was a personal fight or a friendly scuffle and no one interfered. The thief finally wrenched the box from Moyland and ran When the messenger attempted to follow a second man hit him with a blackjack, and still the crowd looked on. ‘The thieves got away and the usual police secrecy was impressed upon sages received in El Paso by his father the robbed firm, and Not Worth Living. Grind” Harry Cohen, an artist and son of shen, Louis ¢ a wealthy manufacturer of theatrical shoes who lives at No. '610 Riverside Drive. of jIIuminating gas to-day in lodgings No. West 42d Street the last year ut he hue occupied for Ile had resisted all efforts of his father lo lake him into business, but had been unable to support himself | With pen and ink drawings, though | some of work had been highly vomimended, ) In lodgings Vrank Dac the the ri of a portrait: sketeh vhich the sala fad been hung of his dressing room’ and ill his friends tale of the room was found th was a letter from wk nowledy hie ling ceipt actor om the praised by } On the drew young man's npen let- August 21, 1921 ke gas because life is not worth living, 1 ted with the daily, sordid, 1s grind |. “I have decided to " feel my my heart Iam without iM feet nz for any one. I feel that Tam out of place here, where all is strife, and what £ want is pe at No. 610 River “My parents live [side Drive. 1 Dave a savings ac Jeount in the Franklin Savings Bank. All my effects T leave to my sister Sleie, to dispose of seen fit, Cohen's death was disclosed by Urederick Kopitzke, who occupied the He traced an odor of gas tween the rooms, which nd broke it dewn, had covered him- self with the clothes and an overcoat and gas from a , connected with the gas next room was locked The young artist bed inhaied heate jr by a rubber pipe. He had torn up la shirt and calked the eracks of the ind windows with the plsons. caife, who was called from York Hospital, said Cohen had en dead jess than an hour when {found at 9 o'clock. | Louis Cohen was notified and tuok Jeharge of his son's body, He said there had been no fricton setween the dead young man ana his fasnily Jexeept that which was due to the ive up his art studies ence on living alone | boy's refusal tog in. und to his jaw ay om hom . WOMEN WHO BOB HAIR MUST TAKE OUT BARBERS’ LICENSES IN CONNECTICUT. f .— required under & the Conn, air w 4 barbor public te Aug. Hb License, day by Attorney as given a formal opinion ninlssion that “bobbing of within the definition of who engage in od as barbers Will be required to qualification to cut hair rulos of the commission, and, will have to pay a $ yearly and furnish their own subj during the examinations. makes the concession licants that they may fitness to bob hair bobbing or beauty rs of hair their the Hf pesoed fr aeaaiainietae 0 Hoy Murdered in Mexteo. SO, Tex., Aug, 22,—Rennett, Boyd, eighteen years old, of El Paso, was ambushed and murdered by bandite in Mexico on Aug, 18, according to moa- | to-day, was found dead) TARE CHARGES — 'Big Change in Sentiment of the Peo- ple Seen as Senate For First Time | Defies the Anti-Saloon League’s Orders. By Da Lawrence. (Special Correspondent of the Evening World) WASHINGTON, Aug. 22 (Copyright, 1921)—The reaction \against Prohibition, or rather the extremes to which its advocates have gone in attempting to enforce their ideas, has come at last. Congress stands to-day divided as il never has. been before on the issue of whether a man’s home is protected by the Constitution of the Unitea States against search without a legal warrant. _ ——? Those who have been standing om thy side lines and predicting that sooner or Jater public sentiment would ‘euct agalust the extreme Prohibition | ists are saying that the inevitable ty “dry” every time the Ants) League put ity approval disap | Provai on u liquor measure now ure standing with the LiL nt as againot the Anti Grand Jury Acts Against Cop) ees! on Complaints of Two e's pro. Up to now tiere 1 no refuge [for the man in Cong who felt Women and Cripple. that the Prohibitionists were going too . | far, He has bad + iy Os (ie . branded a “we But the The Grand Jury to-day returned Z ie: 4 and stion has ¢ three indictments for assault in the! 4h char of the first and second degrees against Pa-|versy, ‘The question now js not trolman Charles F. ‘Tighe of In-{| Whether liquor shall be manifac- apecke hey's staft, who on duly 23| tuted and sold. The Federal Cone | stitution prohibits that and gives beat up men, women and children in| s (heGieht tolris fhe aniount a restaurant at No, 600 Ninth Avenue | rol in. beverage But thh re The complainants were Charles B.| action i inst the severity: of the Green, No. 219 Bast 75d Street, Mra.| Voistead act, which dealt with the Fmma Lennon, No. 561 West 50th| enforcement of the Constitution Street, and Mrs. Katherine Gerity of] Shall a man n home suite No, 345 West 430 Street mobile, his suite his hetel room be Tighe was arraigned before Judge| searched without a warrant Shall a Nott in General Sessions and held in| w Mt be issued unless there ts sworn $3,000 bail, (he bond he gave at the| proof that the ind sctual! time of his arrest in the Magistrate's | engaged in the sade If adhe Court being continued. He pleaded | gtanley amendment, which was passed not guilty and received a week to| unanimously by the nat moes change bis plea I through finally, Prohibition oficers wilt —_ have to present proof before they can RED CROSS OFFICIAL | get a warrant from a Jud. The E ates say this will dam ement officers hibition advc the enthusiasm ACCUSED OF STEALING ente $14,000 TO PLAY RACES. | ana sive bootiezsers « free hand. Tho other side insists that the Con- WASHINGTON, Aug, 22-0 wi |Stitution protects a citizen against son, Second Assistant Tr reh without warrant and that one American Red Cross, was part of the Constitution just as day, charged with lareeny red as another. ‘The vigorous fight audit ef libs books whieh put up by the Antl-Sa League cording to Director Livin Sealant nthe nies’ amendment ae a shortage of about $14,009 WAr=| proof, indeed, of the seriousness with rant specific: charged the theft. of $900, but Med Croas offteiaits sata this {MMEN the proposal is regarded, Some against tilt, According to’ the make the Volstead act almost impos- Wilson admitted rtases of more {sible of enforce 0 far as indi. than $1,000 and attributed lis misfor- | viduals are eonce Others on ch tune to gambling on horse race The | opposite sic y that would be a goad Juss fe fully covered by a surety bonda.}thing, for they clalin the people ¢ OP Feawe America only intended in the first STONE ALBANY TROLLEYS ce to abolish the saloon and dig- tillery and didn’t intend to interfere with home brewing or other personal liberties in conveying one's household to place, There has always been a good of political embarrassment abo Prohibition question, Many men who are liberal at heart have yoted dry and many who have voted wet have themselves been teetotallers The League, b splendid tion, has mani to crack taking c Sentiment against abuses. That same strength enabled the Ant Saloon League to put through the AFTER 2 DIE IN COLLISION. ALBANY, Aug. 21 Troy died to-day of at midnight in a trolley car and automobile on the Troy road, Me was the meond victim to succumb to injuries, Morris tobin of Chelsea, Mass. having been killed al- most instantly. Four others are in the hospital. After the accident several trolley cars were stoned by the crowd that assem- bled, The cara were operated by non- union crews who had replaced strikers, ee Rub ingu collision » Sack of sustained between a goods from place dea! t tho an organi the whip ove advantage of pu the saloon and other Congress by eh BUREAD, eck, fon ytwerat build et ‘tea | VOlatend forcement Act, But the 5 QVER HOME HOOCH RDS. eT NOE WITHOUT WARRANT G

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