The evening world. Newspaper, December 21, 1921, Page 3

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THE EVEN PROF. MOYLAN OF COLUMBIA, PRESIDENT OF AMERICAN PHYSICAL EDUCATION ASSN., TALKS ON KEEPING YOUNG & ¥ “A man of forty-five or fiity should be in hix prime, * * * OE Some men of thirty or thirty-five a en Be til are old beyond their years,” Eh, “They are below par because they are lax in essentials of life and overindulge when the should exercise restraint.” 75 ARE EXAMINED {SAYS INJURED GIRL, [HAYWARD DENIES AT LORENZ CLINIC; | CARRIED TO COURT, | INJUNCTION PLAN “Don't overeat, don't under- exercise; have a physical exam- ination at least once a year.” Many Had Been in Line, All} js if Suing as Permanent Crippte}Says It Is Not Part of His Night—Parents Hold Place for $50,000° Damages— Office to Initiate Such for Children. Was Struck by Auto, Proceedings. Only seventy-five cripptes, who had Although Miss Marie Frye is seek-| d States District Attorney cards, could reddy Tr. | ing damages on the grounds that she| Hayward denied to-day a report Adolf Lorenz to-da of Health clinic in the Board he held in Brooklyn at the headquarters at Flatbush Ave- nue and Willoughby §00 others away. Many of these had been in line since 9.30 o'clock last night. There were uo children in the waiting throng at printed in a morning newspaper that his office was engaged in a campaign to dry up New York for the holidays by the injunction method. The report alleged thet injunctions would be ob- tained against the proprietors of all hotels and restaurants who are sus- pected of seliing liquor even though is permanently incapacitated and can- not walk as the result of injuries re- cvived in an automobile accident, at- torneys for the defendant in the ac- tion on trial in the Supreme Court at White Plains declared they had evi- dence that she was seen dancing at Coney Island last summer. . and about tfully turned were regr p is 7 v ainst : ; Miss Frye, whose home in is Peeks-| ‘here is no direct evidence agi that time nor until the doors were them. on 4M i kill, was struck by the automobile ot = opened at 6 o'clock this morning.| Waite is Gage, Heal master of the| "NO. applications for injunctions However, places in the line were held | (70000 Bonet nie rd ‘a have been made to me,” said Col. by parents and otiver members: of | O08 so) rag, ar 5 sal own, OM Hayward. “It is not the part of this families, who relieved one another | X°™. 20 he brought action for office to initiate proceedings of that sort. If the Prohibition Director ap- plies for injunctions we will prepare the papers, but it is too late now to | $50,000, ‘The case was cried once ani j resulted in a disagreoment. It has | been before Judge Young and a jury | for two days, Her mecical witnesses have testified that che received a broken pelvis and other inturies, She | Was carried into court to give her tes- during the nig Preliminary examination of pa- tients will Le bezun to-morrow In Brooklyn by physicians of the Board of Health, and these ¥ be continued from 9 to 12 o'clock -every day save t. fective by Christmas. There must be well established suspicion to warrant Wednesday 1 Saturday. From) timony and fainted twice while solinjunction proceedings. It would be those thus examined the seventy-five} doing. Her allegation is that her in-j ad proceeding! ; patients for Dr. Lorenz's Wednesday | jury is permanent and she never wiil! Possible obtain injunctions against diagnoses will be selected. be able to walk. She is twenty-two]all persons who have been convicted HT RSH eta are peel, hisy Pins eer of violation of the Volstead Act, but gun in Manhattan yesterday and will!” Detectives for the defendant fol- i é ¥ tank," he held every day « Mondays, Fri-}lowed the young woman to Coney tOA would be a big task days and Sundays Island and Prospect Park, and twel William Bogart, head of the Dr. Lorenz arrived at the Brooklyn | shapskots were introduced by Charles|lezal department of the Prohibition Ane thornlne M Aee mt fe awoner D. Mara, of counsel for the des Enforcement othee of this districi, . orning and went to work endant. Some of these showed Miss * ‘ ‘i once, assisted by eighicen nurses and | Frye sitting on a rock in the park.» |aPPears to be the instigator of the half a dozen physicians ne board ere you in Prospect Park, Brook-|!njunction proce’s of drying up Now A nine old op mien Ms Bg ie at the plaintiff was asked. York. He sa to-day that he be by Dr. Lorenz yesterday on Lorvaia “was her reply. \aven the: law ndilowacr is Denoegre, daught Mrs. And “And how did you get up on thi 1 s the law wi arrant the issu Denegre of Jersey City, in the CHY rock Jance of injunctions in cases where a Hospitul, Both of the child’s less | was helped up by Miss Nolan, my | Prohibition officer makes an affidavit have been twisted and uscless since | friend, that he has reason law will be violated. “And then,” said Mr. Bogart, tri- umphantly, “if the law is violated we can proceed against the offender for content.” Mr. Bogart said he had not con- sulted with the United States Dis- trict Attorney, but that two of Col. to belleve the doatter uel the casts shi will be surely birth, but Dr, Lorenz 5; operation that when he removed the girl able to k. The pperation re- quired tWenty-eight minutes and comprised three resorts to the knife and six to bloodless surgery. Tae tendons of both knees were lengih ened, as were the hamstring tendons snd the Achilles tendons of both fect After that the feet themselves we Were you in pain when the picture was taken?'S “Not so much pain >s now,” she ye also admitted that she ted the Palace Theatre after leav- ing Coney Island and that she came | from Coney Island to New York vit | the elevated. When asked how she got up the steps she said she was | assisted by her friend. | : Hayward’s assistants, Cohen and str tened, Mv. Gage claims Miss Frye stepped] 43 bee Invitation of Mayor Cousins | directs In front of his car. Clark, were working on the injune- of Detroit, Dr. Lorenz will hold a! gE eae See tion matter. “This was news 10 Cul. clinic in that city soon atter Feb. 1. EDITH KELLY GOULD IS Hayward after which he will tour Michigan on an especially equipped hospital train.| BACK, BUT KEEP IT QUIET | JAIL TERMS FOR TAXI ——————__ A 2 ROBBED JUDGE'S HOME All Very Secret—She's to Name DRIVER; HAD NO LICENS= ris Women in Her Diverce TO DEFEND OTHER CRIME Needed Money for Christmas, He —~ | Baith y Gould reached New York Explains tm Court, Lawyer's Defense Shows Mam io-day on the U A States liner Pan-| cote tment diva le ne Couldn't Have Repeated, handle State from London. Her name| ov house for driving without It was certainly a hard luck s was not on the passenger list and one eee aoe ae a vcity, Prison Samucl Furstenberg, a lawyer 1 | managed to convey the impression that |(onee. 10 {00 Care in ussenger out of fudge Koenig in the Court of General | she wanted to get ashore without being | 0, were to-day imposed on Charles vif recognized. However. she admitted: sesvians to-day on behat William |” “That she is to be featured in a Lon-| Mi taxi driver of No. 230 West ya young man who Nad pleaded | don theatrical suecess which Is to open )1i1th Sireet, by Magistrate Cobb in the detectives had) OM Jan. 23. rr rt mya Dolaosy ed Or GU her lawyers will continue their |Tramc Cou “, # jimmy found he | effor' side the divorce decree| It was at 116th Street and Lenox Newly and i M obta nk Gould, her busband. |ayene that the first offense occurrad w unt in i ‘on the.ground that he ts an ita oe : eati- Hert American citizen and the French court |@hd when Miller's record was invest had no jurisdiction. it was found that gatea iso] ‘That she will press her divorce suit |drive was «uspended in Brookiy t in against Mr, Gould in the New York |month on his third convietion for apecd i al ‘courts, naming as co-respondents {Woling, . Miller said that h agon. for ‘ Nlicute tis young | Parie women and. alleging. miscon Griving when he had no license was be- ‘ Judge Valley's | of (of the hueoand with other jtaus could get_no other. Job me de mpliined Furston. | om nam wanted to make some money for : ive committed | That she ha Rolldays inple reagon | that husband re a duri Jot suomarin | - » |BEAUVAIS NOT TO TAKE raat rv count ud he to « ‘HATED SISTER WHO TRIED TO KEEP HER RIGHT ants ithe ta oe tes STAND IN STILL! N SUIT Girl Fo d Dead From Gas Carried Matuln, were sentenced to | sintie (ound, Utes Waar dant deta i madian Hearings te Start dae: ophia Kasser, nineteen, wos found ang ix mon v.10 Tostity, +g dead in the apartment of Mrs, Mae Mc- — sal MONTREAL, Dec, 21.—Fred Bean- Kenna, with whom she boarded at No. ENEMENT POET TY PURE vei, Indian gitide named as co-res 42) Elizabeth Avenue, Elizabeth, N. J SCCARE. den in the divorce case of Jemes A ‘ast night. A gas tube from an open Jembors of neatly a score of families gtiiiman, will fake the stand at jet wae held in ner mouth. Heside lier rom the tenement No. 163 Green- |Canadian hearings of the case, it was 0, the bed was the faliowing note: fled from the tenement No. 168 Greed: (toned here. to-day. ‘Please do not turn my body over to point Avenue, Brooklyn. at oon (0. |. Mrs. Stillman’s interests at the hear- my sister, ae I hate hi day when fire Was discovered in the |i,¢— which are to open ‘ere Jan. 11 wil! ene sister to-day said she had tried to jonery and cigar store of Mra lbe protected by John De sauiniers, advise and correot Sophie but (hat rhe ry on the ground floor while Noah K. Taflamme will ge 1 ple were foreigners and many |fained by. Stillman. Both are noted ‘left her home, nildren canie running out witn [Cr aadian lawyers. | A bank book found In the giri’s jaa presenta and decorations in|~ The hearings will cover.a three day laiawed a balance of 820% to ne: Arma. The diaze did about $3.00) period and the defense will Introduce lies mother and @ilother sister = @ least -thiry-two witnesses, Poland. tter had resented her efforts and haa nom Ive 500 TURNED AWAY DANGED AT CONEY FORORY CRISTINA take any action which would be ef- ieee fs ING WORLD, “To visit a physician once a year is important. * * * What achine is more important than your hody?” “If a mam once lets himself go it is the hardest thing in the world to rebuild him.” “It Is always a case of output and intake. * * * More exer- — cise and less overeating.” mrs “Men like Charles Eliot, Dr. Lyman Abbott and Chauncey De- pew are exceptions. Because their HOW NOT TO GO TO SEED AT 45; HOW TO KEEP YOUNG; TOLD BY PROF. MOYLAN OF COLUMBIA Head of Physical Education Association Has Three Simple Rules for Active Longevity: Don’t Overeat, Don’t Underexercise and Be Physically Examined Once a Year—Fol- RAILWAY TUNNEL TO STATEN ISLAND FIRST ONPROGRAM Chairman McAneny of Transit Commission Said Construc- low Them and Keep Young. tho haraest thing in the world to re- build him. Hig lazy habits have grown. Lut there ts the case of Horace Fletch- er. At the age of forty-nine he found himself a physical wreck. By gradual and methodical methods he built him- self up again, But it is always the case of output and intake, More ex- ercise and less overeating, The average man is too lax.” By Ruth Snyder. Why is it so many men when they have reached the age of forty-five or fifty allow themselves to slip back in the active-life procession? But, you ask, is it trae? Look around for yourselves and in the ma- jority of cases you will agree that it is, Then, if you still doubt, read what Prof. George L. Moylan, President of the American Physical Education As- Sociation, has to say about it. “It is quite true that many men, when they reach the age of forty-five or fifty, are below par—that is, they are not all, physically, mentally and morally, what we expect. “A man of that age should be in jhis prime," he agreed when 1 re- d him of the recent statement attributed to Bill Roper, Princeton's football coach, } Mr, Roper declared at a lecture in |the Young Men's Hebrew Association “But there are men who are phy- sically fit at seventy and over,” 1 in- terrupted. *"Is it because they’ do not worry?” “It's rot so much a question of not worrying,” volunteered Prof. Moylan. “Some men have the power of throw- ing o¥ their worries Others carry them with them to bed, and lose tnelr sleep or carry them to their meais and get indigestion. Men like Dr, Charles Eliot of Harvard, Dr. Lyman Abvott und Chauncey Depew are exceptions. It is because their lives are regulate They ure mentally, physically an morally fit. I say morally, because i: all comes down to the question of re- straint. A man will sit down to a table and accept a piece of mince pie. When a second piece ts offered him he " is a e that. He has not the wiil | OF PBIAGCIDEIA That “ons OF the T8980 ower to-netibe, Why, he will comer pitiful aspects of life to-day in Amer- times take the third alece ica is the great number of men who| ie at forty-five or filty years of age, .n! “pp, is one of the best Eliot ex-| |the prime of their lives practically, amples 1 know of 4 man sete si |neem to have one foot in the grave.|cally At, He has tewulgr tetiue Before the lime is half run they! When J was a student at Harvard I have allowed themselves to go ty| would see Dr. Eliot up every morning seed. {at 7 o'clock riding his horse.” |,."How can a man keep from obesity _ “But” Prof. Moylan voucked, “it|in the wimter? So many men dread is not only true of the mam of forty-| putting on flesh in the winter.” ft me men of thirty or thirt “It all comes back to the same prin- tion Is First Step in Plans. One of the first Commission proposes to take is the steps the Transit construction of a $25,000,000 railway tunnel under the Narrows to connect Staten Island with Brooklyn, This announcement was made this afternoon by Chairman McAneny of the Commission, in re- George sponse to the appeal of George Crom- former President of the ough of Richmond, that Staten land ‘be granted some relief from the Por- Is- well, ‘ overcroWded ferries. | Chairman McAneny said further) that such a tunnel would be built] the proposed freight was constructed, ‘The engi- whether or not tunnel neers of the Commission had advised, | he went on, that while the building of both tunnels simultaneously would | reduce the cost 40 per cent. twin{ tunnels were impracticable from en- | gineering and safety standpoints. | “Field Day" for the general public | to speak fveely an what it thinks of | the proposed transit plan was held by ransit Commission to-day at} 19 Lafayette Street | McAneny announced the No. Chairman pilrpose of giving the public an op- five are old beyond thelr years, It is ciple—output and Intake. because they are lax in the essent of life and overindulgent In matte where they should exercise more re- straint.” “Have yau any set rules you could suggest to these men to keep them from going to seed?” I queried. The brown eyes their glasses. “There can be no set rules. man is physically the same ‘There was Is|a man came to see me the other day. He is getting overstout and wanted jto know ,what to do about it. TI finally discovered that he could not g0 past a stand without buying a bar of chocolate. Why, if a man wants to overload his stomach with choco- late six or seven times a day he can- not help but put on flesh. That is why @ man, a business man, will put No|on ‘Weight in tho winter. He does not What!exercise enough and on the other snapped behind might be one man's food would be| hand he overeats—with banquets and another man's poison. But we can|all other things that come in winter, say this. If the average man will/It is just the opposite with the men under me here at Columbia. They get thin in the winter when they are ex- ere'sing so frequently, and fat in the summer when they are resting. So, I said before, what holds true for Have a physical cramination at} One Man js not true for another, ex- least once @ year. | cept as far as these three rules go: | “Don't overeat. “Don't tinderexercise | “And visit a physician at lei @ year.” AS Ae SLAIN MAN IDENTIFIED BY HIS FINGERPRINTS live up to these three Principals he| can do a great deal toward keeping himself physically capable: . Don’i overcat. Don't wnderexercise. “To visit a physician at least once 4 year is of primary importance,” ad- ed the Professor, “If a man has expensive automobile, he will to be overhauled repeatedly. same is true of a typewriter or other machine, What machine t once more important than your body. It is far more precious, Its machinery Ne ¢ jg far more complicated. But the|#® Wa" arasar ane: Clue: majority of men are far too carcless, te Mursere: too inclined to take the easiest course,| Isador Haber of No, 254 Hooper If a man be a golfer, he will get up| Street, Brookiyn, identified to-day in| i Me penne ans A a ee the Flatbush Morgue the ody of the} won't golf this 3 RAR {man who was found with three bui'st | |Gradually the habit will grow. He| Wounds in the neck this morning in, find bimself exercising less and| Fourteenth Avenue, near 834 Street, ie Hrooklyn, as that of this brother-in- - w, Louis Goldberg, twenty-six. of “Do you think a man who has ex 3613 Mermaid Avenue, Coney Inland ised or has been quite an athlete, n his younger days, is more inclined |, doldbere’s identification followed the \io go to seed’ as Mr. Roper phrases! discovery that the fingerprints of the | Ye at's logically so," he agreed | Goldie of Queens. who was arreuted a with a quick nod of his head. “His|seer ago on a charge of possessing a heart action has been stimulated, lia) pistol. Haber eld Goldberg was known | muscles have been developed. | The|te.many people as Jack Goldie, a prise | | ethletics of his early days do not | ine policn we vat have ar c ways presuppose a foundation for hial cide site Vo the dante faeces ne | liter iife As a matter of record, Tling of Goldberg or to the murderers. | olf crews. rowers was seventy recently investigated the physical con- | There are no houses near the,place the | ditions of the men on one of Yale's| body was found. Haber auld he dia not The average lite of these | believe. his brother-in-iaw had any enemics, | years —— ee But be- portunity to be heard, and the first response came from the City Chub, represented by Nelson $. Spencer. Mr. Spencer sald, in part: The club, you are no doubt aware, is not in sympathy with the! legislative act under which the com- | mission {s sitting. At the same time, we are anxious to contribute any- thing we may in the way of service in the solution of this exceedingly important problem; and, therefore, we have given the plan which has been ‘proposed by the Transit Com- mittee very careful consideration.” Mr. Spencer then introduced Delos 1. Wilcox, a franchise on public utilities: Mr. Wilcox read a report compris- ing thirty-six pages of typewritten} matter. It was both “hot and cold" | toward the plan. A perusal of it} would indicate that the Club! pelds the yiew that certain features f the plan are “dangerous Some excerpts from the report are 1. If the traction properties are un- expert deryalued nothing can compel the} owners to accept the plan own ers can stay out of the plan and make | complaint about the inadequacy of the five-cent fare. If the valuations | are too high the city will properly refuse lo co-opgrate and the plan will fail it would be unfair to the public to bny off Manhattan ,stockhold- | ers of the “L" lines without deduct- | ing the ransom from the value of} the interborough's subway leases, 3. The plan cannot sneceed with cut the ciQ’s co-operation, while the y legislation itself invites the levty's antagoniem 4 The plan of bonuses for em- ployses would put a premium on waste and extravagance 5. It would seem that the experience of other cities combines with sound theory to Indicate that an unlimited self-acting mathematical device for fare réwulation, such as the Tranalt for $ York, hey e m1 " | Commi pases e cause ty Ure gs or eves, hdi,| MORRAY HURLBERT SWORN IN. (iy Utopian in ite virtues and Machia- | Vidual does not prove that rowing. Dk Commlastoner Murray Hurlbert, | veliian in ite vices, | Aid it. It le because they, at the bes Preaident-elect of the Roard of Alder-| § Moxiblo fares in Cleveland, , ginning, were ploked men. They were) men. Look the oath of his ew office he- Montreal, Rosten and Cincinnat! are of the best physically. Their earlier | (07% Supreme cio ped “nt Fabert F not a success. Rights of car riders are habits lived with chem Laage he wht dates ihe teal ee tha |t9 be subordina to rights of In-| = week (o clog up.the affairs of his veator “Mf a man once lete himaeif go, it is department. Fv nt fare under the plan eee ge ~ | employees, placed every one under arr that they were all bootlegg arrested, charged with intoxication and disorderly | kiven as No. 30 Belmont Avenue, Jer- se: A a comes Sok SS Eee principles—output and intake.” lives are regulated they are fit.” is to be retained one year, “then the Ha will be off and the fare will go to where it must satisfy the condition that will produce the goods.” &—City would be shorn of its ‘Home rule.” Instead of having the right, as of old, to negotiate franchise grant the city will be privileged to sit by and see the automatic fare-regulator work Mr. ‘Wilcox's session on the witness stand was not very rosy, He was often interrupted by members of the commission and frequently by How- ard ‘Thayer, Kingsbury counsel to the commission, who questioned Mr. Wilcox on his knowledge of the tran- sit_act. When Mr. Wilcox sald the Commis- sion would be compelled to grant fare increases ao aa to yield the com- panies reasonable compensation for service rendered, all three Commis- sions—-as one—toofl issue and out of the chorus Mr. McAneny wae heard ask, “Where do you get that from Following a long colloquy about rate cases and opinions held by Com- missions, Mr, Wilcox admitted the ‘Transit Commission was not just now engaged in trying a rate case. Mr. Wilcox later admitted under hard pressure that he favored city ownership. a See BANDITS LOCK CASHIER IN VAULT AND ROB BANK Escape in Ante With §2,500—Ne boring Citles k Oo PITTSBURG, Dee. 21.—Two bandits held up Cashier Shope of the Btate Bank at Karthawy about fifteen iniles from here, to-day, locked him in a vault and escaped in a touring car after sweeping up all the currency ta sight, The cashier was resched by other Bank officials estimated the loss at $2,500. Police at Ridgway and Clearfield, where the bandits headed for, are on the lookout ~~. DRY AGENT PINCHED FOR BEING RUNK. Edward MeMahon, a Prohibition jagent in Newark, made (wo visits in about as many minutes to the store o! the Davis Electrical Company at No. 15 Central Avenue, Newark. Re- turning for a third call he flashed his badge and, according to the police, claiming He was conduct. His address war City, J torney, who claimed that the aMdavits alleging violation of the injunction were ploy of the Tompkins adjourned the casé unti! Jan. V4, stating that Inted the injunction they're going te tali for a long tim MORGAN FAVORS EX-SERVICE MEN Postmaster Spikes Rumor He Had Shown Discrimination in Holi- day Appointments. ‘The report that discrimination was being shown against ex-service men in the appointment of emergency Post Office clerks during the holiday season was met to-day by Postmaster Morgan with the statement that @ majority of the men so employed were ex-service men. “We are employing 2,200 emergeney clerks {n Manhattan and the Bronx,” Mr. Morgan said, “and whenever por sible ex-service men are given pref= erence.” 4 Peter J. Putz, appointment: clerk, said that the report of college men being engaged in preference to others rose from the fact that at this sea- son of the year it is the custom of the Post Office to send word to col- leges in this vicinity that there is an opportunity for students tg make extra money at Christmas. aes GIRL DETECTIVES TRAP PRIVATE TAXI DRIVERS Jail Sentences Face White Pal Mem Under Injenction. From evidence obtained by two good looking girl detectives, an attorney for Edward J, O'Brien of tho Transfer Taxt Company, Tompkins in White Plains to-day and asked that ten independent tax! drivers be sent to jail for violation of a recent lojunction signed by tho Justice whieh prohibits them from soliciting paasen- ers on the station grounds of the New Yor! Central Railroad tr White Plains. appeared tefore Justlee ‘The ten were represented by an at- he work of stool pigeons in the em- w York Central." Justice if these men have vio~ Owing to the Death of Mrs. Percival M. Barker (daughter of the late George Arnold Hearn) OUR STORES, WILL BE CLOSED TOMORROW TODAY and JAMES A. HEARN & SON, . Fourteenth Street aa

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