The evening world. Newspaper, July 14, 1922, Page 6

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} I 1 1} | i} a a Pe ae Se om. ere 6 HOPE ABANDONED {CITY LOSES SUIT FOR DR. TAKAMINE, | TO OUST CENTRAL Internationally Famous} Court of Appeals Upholds Chemist in Lenox Hill Hos- | Road's Title to Seven-Mile pital With Nephritis. Strip on Waterfront. The unanimous decision of the Court of Appeals, upholding the title tation, whose home is in Passaic, N. | Of the New York Central Railroad to 3., Is so critically {11 at Lenox Hill] its seven-mile right of way through Hospital that there is little hope he} the Riverside district of Manhattan may survive. He has been at the hos-]from 724 Street to Spuyten Duyvil, pital since June & under the constant | ends @ bitter battle waged by the city care of Dr. Max Einhorn, one of the|against the railway for The physicians who attended President | decision, handed Wednesday McKinley in his final iliness. It was|vecame known to-day, but did not be sald to-day by Eben Takamine, his|come public until yesterday son, that practically all hope for his} In December, 1918, father had been relinquished. Counsel Burr began an action for Dr. Takamine: is suffering with ne-|ejectment against the railroad. The phritis and is conscious only @ part} basis of the suit the opinion of euch day. Mrs. Takamine, his] ;eached by the Public Service Com- mission and other investigators that the railroad could not prove title to the lands over which it operated Its trains north of @2d Street und velow the Harlem Ship Cunal The suit was one of several brought in recent years having for their general purpose the reclaiming (or the city of the right of way along Riverside Drive The chief contention of the city was that the railroad had been using Jands belonging to the elty for which it never had obtained title, and for that its occupancy constituted Dr. Jokicht Takamine, « chemist and discoverer of International repu- years, down Corporation was The railroad has insisted that its possession of the sixty-foot wide strip of lund and land under water occupled by Its tracks between Street and Spuyten Duyvil was law- ful, claiming absolute title by ad verse possession and through deeds from upland owners. taal 2 OE WEALTHY WOMAN ——————____ BR JOKiCM) TAKAMINE, American wife, and their son have Teoms near him in the hospital and FOUND MURDERED Most of the time the patient ts kept! Victim Beaten to Death After under the influence of opiates. A Within the past few days letters Desperate Struggle With and iclegrams for Dr. Takamine, Intruders. making inquiry as to his condition or oa —— in sympathy over his grave c-mdition, MACKINAW, IIl., July 14.—Miss have been received from many parts} Sue Harris, the younger of the two of this country, Europe and Asia.|gray-haired spinster daughters of There have been constant communi- | Tazewell County's oldest family, was cations from Japan, where the Em-| murdered Wednesday night at the old Peror and scientific societies have} Harris homestead, three miles from conferred many orders and dignities| here, where she and her sister Hat- upon him tie had been living alone for years, Among thoxe who have cabled 6r|wealthy but unattended. written are Baron Shibusawa, the Mi- kado's financial and commercial rep- resentative, sometimes referred to as perenouse (2 Lie OOF Blent and “the J. P. Morgan of Japan"; Baron} 0"), Farge 6 two, Women. Mitsui, Baron Masuda, Mr. Saburi of | TW hours after they had gone Hattie the Japanese Embasay at Washing-|™@Maged to free herself and stag- ton, and the Imperial Academy of} S¢Ted into her sister's bedroom, She Japan, of which Dr, ine is a] !@y limp across her bed, tled hand Mla euisnedimenper and foot and disheveled, as if she had Dr. Takamine was removed to the fought savagely A blow on the head, hospital from his Passaic home, No.| ¢Vidently with a pistol, had killed 93 Boulevard, when it was seen that} her. She was sixty fears old. ‘The the illness, which had confined him] Surviving sister is sixty-five years old to his bed ‘sitice Dec. 15, had reached} nd an invalld, but she managed @ critical stage. His illness was ag- somehow to dress and summon help. Kravated by his efforts to entertain] In an hour the country roads for the Japanese mission to the Disarma-| miles in every direction were being ment Conference. patroled by farmer posses, armed with One of the greatest discoveries of] shotguns and squirrel rifles. But it Dr. Takamine was adrenalin, the] was too late, Residents along the most powerful astringent and heart] main highway leading from Mackinaw tonic known to science. By its use| to Peoria remembered having seen a minor surgical operations may be per-] big automobile, containing four men, formed without the loss of a drop of|tearing through the night without blood lights, No other strangers could be It was in 1890 that Dr. Takamine] found on the road came to this country to make it his The only persons in the farmhouse home, but he had been here a8 Im-] at the time were the two sisters and perial Japanese Commissioner to the | Mrs, Woods, a trained nurse, who had Cotton Centennial in New Orleans in| peen engaged to care for Hattie Har 1885, and at that time married Miss Mrs. Woods-fled-when: she heard ‘aroline Hiteh, of that city men breaking into the house Not since pioneer days has there Dr. Takamine is President of the| been a murder in the Mackinaw sec- Takamine Ferment Company 1m Chi-| tion of ‘Tazewell County ‘o, the International Takamine} Citizens of Mackinaw raised a $500 erment Company and other similar} reward fund and the County Commis- organizations, He has a large re-! signers. immediately voted a similar seafch laboratory tn this city. His) amount. The whole offer was brought Seuaty Renate ‘le at Marstwold. M. Ful to Gib00 by David Hartls, a brothe, where there are extensive gardens if} wig has lived in Denvers, Ill., for the Japanese style. several years CHINESE TROOPS WOMAN ARRESTED , FIRE ON U.S. BARGE)! IN BRUNEN MURDER Four men broke into the lonely They NTON, July 14 (Associated Press) :. PARKERSBURG, W. Va., July 14.— ~Two Standard Oil barges fying the) phe arrest here of Mary Miller, with a American ff. rere OF the] carnival company, may help to unravel river two miles fr y r two miles from here by troops Ofltne mysterious killing of John T Sip 'Kue, the opponent of Sun Tat Sen, Brunen, circus proprietor, at Riverside, flag were fired on in the deposed President of the South China Republic N. J., on March 10, it is thought by About a New Jersey authorities. hundred shots were fired, but the barges were not damaged, Officers left morning on an is wanted a with Miss Miller wife Sakaeaneiiammme fry. SETS VALUE OF PROPERTY mother,| OF GERMANY IN BELGIUM Mrs, N. Willard Curtis, were sub- F peensed yesterday to appear before] BRUSSELS, July 14.—Premier ‘The- unts placed at + in White Plains, | the liquidation value of t as a Magistrate in the| German property in Belgiv The Gove ing of this y a fund fi Justice Morschaus who is sittin ef the Ward family and others con-| Probert aspired to defeat justice in connection} which with the indictment of Ward for the| during the war of Clarence Peters. the Belgian and ¢ They will be called to testify to-day. | for the redemption Mra. Curtis engaged former District At- | broken off recently Lee ons Davis) as her| considered quate Germany's crea Kiddie Klub Prize Winners at Luna Par THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JULY 14, i922. THIS WEATHER DUE TO FIGHT OF ZONES ROnNT Row .b To Tels SYRVIA, SELNU& MAR SHAK, MOTE TING mre me < Crey eos Pmize) MaRiE SaiMaLe GStGIRLS PRE) (2N© Prize) Acting Health Commissioner ane ELENOR MAGUIRE FR @iais Hume Pee), Commends Evening World ‘flaven’ For Whooping Cough Victims Dr. Monahan Dedlares 1h Duty of All Good Citizens to Spread the News of the Health Restoring Camp on Riverside Island. As Dr. Copeland, readers of The F an outing in t of children Commissioner o hair and sunligh the y were ning World, children suffering from whooping very ones f Health, has already pointed out to pugh need t more urgently than any other class § who were excluded from any such opportunity until The Evening World Kiddie Klub Country Fund was organ- ived and, vital need with the co-operation of the Health Department, supplied the Until recently whooping cough has been regarded as a matter of little consequence—the Closer study, ed on ¢ more deadly than measles and equal of scarlet fever, and that in its indirect results, as conducive to pneu- monia and tuberculosis, it is a most dangerous disease Children with whooping cough were not only in danger themselves but were a menace to the health of other children in their neighborhoods. Dr. Copeland also knew of the fine, fireproof, — breeze-swept — dormitory | buildings on Riverside Island that could be used to house the children, but it remained for the Kiddie Klub to find a way of gathering up these children, of providing such items of food as Grade A" milk, and clothing for romping on playgrounds, and ot supplying games and toys and diver- sional teachers. Acting Commissioner Monahan, who will act in Commissioner Copelanc place while he is abroad studying health conditions there, estimates that there are in New York City 600 cough requiring it, nutritious He says: “It cases of whooping fresh air and sun food and medical care is the duty of every sood citizen of this city promulgate news of the most de work The E » Worl ie Klub and th partment of Health are doing, so that the poor children who 1 and a vacation in the country may come to us and obtain them. Eyery kiddie with whooping cough needs the coun try and every child who has whooping cough is poor—for no charity, no camp, no hotel will accept them, Kiddie Kl ‘ountry Fund cam he at Riverside nd is their only haven." The Kiddie Klub Country Fund's latest big donation is from Dr. A Posner, Inc. It took the form of seventy-five pairs of socks for the kiddies, which they wore for the first time on visiting day. My, but the poor little disease victims were proud of them! LORD NORTHCLIFFE SUFFERS RELAPSE Bulletin Announces Heart Is Weaker, Condition Unsatisfactory. 92 (New York Ev Publishing Cot LONDON, July 14.—A bulletin {s- unexpectedly this sued reads: “Viscount Nortacliffe'’s condition is not so satis tory. The heart is somewhat weaker and the obscure toxic process which was present when Lord Northcliffe returned from the Continent has not subsided.” _ BOY WINS $20,000 AWARD FOR LOSS OF HIS TOES "The Court of Appeals to-day affirmed a verdict of 2 warded by a jury in Justice Finch’s part of for injuries sustained in Jincent Albano, #ix years old reet wher morning of No, who lost the toes he was run over of his left fo by an automobile owned by J. H. Tapley & Co. Louis H. Sehlelder of No, 61 Cham bers Street, who was counsel for the tn jured lad, proved that the boy stopped Ata street crossing to Ue his shoe, when he was struck by the automobile. The standing unat and was started paying with the machine had been | tended sponsibility for the aec that the chauffeur bh mobile outside of a lot of every child together with meusles and prickly heat istics of last year, the #———— shows that it is directly tar 700 REBELS ROUT MEXICAN TROOPS; MANY DESERTERS 10,000 Reported in Band Under Gen, Carrasco in Mazatlan. NOGAL, Ariz., July 14 Seven hundred rebels under Gen. JuangCar rasco routed attacking Government troops, 1,200 strong, leg by Gen, Al- varado Rodriguez, in a battle Tues- day, about 30 miles from Mazatlan, inaloa, according to unconfirmed ad vices on the to-day After the Federal whose band is be more than 10,000. reported to be border rout, it was said, many soldiers joined Carrasco, ved to number The Government is rushing reinforcements to the Mazatian zone in preparation for attack. All Government troops stationed in Sonora, it have been sent south of Sin. ARREST CHAUFFEUR TO TEST BOND LAW Constitutionality of New Act to Be Decided by Courts. another Charles: Martin of No. 96 1 a taxicab chauffeur rey Street White Streets on a charge of having failed to submitted to arrest to-day at and Centre provide himself with an indemnity bond as required by an amendment to the highway law passed by the last legislature. The arrest was arranged between District Attorney Banton and taxicab owners and operators, who charge the law is unconstitutional on the ground. that it is class legislation requiring taxicab owners to bond themselves but making no such re- quirement of truck owner Martin was arraigned by liam A, Sullivan before Detective Magistrate Frothingham in Centre Street Police Court. He pleaded not guilty and was held in $500 bail for trial in the Court of Special ssions. The trial will be expedited and the case will be app to the court of final juris- diction as rapidly as possible. The ob ject orf the arrest is to test the con stitutionality of the law ~~ NOTED WOMAN CON “ZURICH, July 14.—t UNIST DI Bloch, died at a the German Communist © te an, intimate the late Rosa Luxemburg Zetkin, She was active | and Swiss extremist m women. Beauty Contented You are always confident hat your beeuty bas beew of its possibilities after using Gourand's Oris tal ream. Send 15¢. for Trial Size lay, aged forty: friend and Clara hospital she and had left 4 without thei was eating his luncheon | _———— —. —— + , COUSIN ELEANOR 6 Danube ADE LINE. GREY, JODGED THE CONTEST River, to the Battling for Last ‘Two Months. WASHINGTON, July 14.—A battle between t juator and the Arctic Cielo is responsible for the freakish weather throughout the country dur- ing the last two weeks, Charles F Marvin, head of the United States Weather Bureau, suys air currents north, the Every so often of the Kat winds from the ice ntor move fields start and then the mighty battle of the air begins, A short time ago the North Pot and the Equator started ‘major of fensives."" The result has been all kinds of weather—cloudbursts, thun derstorms, tornadoes, drouths, swel- tering heat with sudden drop in tem perature—in fact about every thing in the deck om ENVER PASHA BEATEN IN FIGHT WITH SOVIETS just 200 of Mountains ern Are July 14 (Associated Press) Flees to MOSCOY ‘The campaign againat the n and Khiva furkish com- recording Pravda Soviet re gime tn Bokbar headed by Br munist, is end to advices to th The Bokhara Isted by the Russians, 4 merits near Bisum, and on pick of Ei forces, le were defeated near Karn more than 200 kil clared to have fled into the mountains. x om H. F. M’CORMICK HERE, MATHILDE COMING Will Make Final Plea for Rocke= feller Consent to Marringe. CHICAGO, July 14.—Mathilde Me- Cormick left to-day to make a final plea to grandfather, John D. Rockefeller, p to Max O: her for consent to her mar Swit ria livery stable proprietor and riding master. She plans to join her father, Harold F. McCormick, in New York and they will sail to Europe on July 20. According to present plans Mathilde will be married in the early fall. Mr. McCormick, who left for New York y recovered from nt operation, He will meet his son Fowler and daughter Muriel in New k at the Dla Hotel yesterday, appeared his rece HERMITAGH GOMs BROKE THROUGH PRO Prohibition has put Square hotel in the way of going out of business, A receiver for the Hermit- age in Seventh Avenue just below 42d Street has been appointed by Justice Wagner, Time was when the Hermitage bar was one of the most popular .n town, ‘The hotel business has been un- profitable since the bars were closed,” sald Mr. Coxton to-day, “For some ttr past the average daily income of t Hermitage has been only about $290." $290."" Chiffonier, Semi-Vanity Dull Rubbed Finish Harlem Store: Here's Success ! Drink to the Drink . ET’ quaff a toast, brothers! The biggest success in years—Good Old Scotch Brew. carries you back to glorious old times. A blend of good, rich hops and fragrant malt—a drink for thirsty days. It’s a’ drink that From Scotland comes the taste. A drink nearly 200 years old—not a flat pro- hibition substitute. Yet within the law. Bottoms up, men! The talk of the town Mon, it’s a grand drink! Good Old Scotch Brew makes new friends by the hundreds every day. Everyone likes it. Just take a look at Good Old Scotch Brew. See the creamy bead surge and froth. No wonder they all smile. A bubbling, tumbling, airy bead—and the rich, smooth Pilsner taste. Doesn’t it take you afternoon in the city. OSU EO e Ene Buckley-Newhall @ BLUE RIBBON FURNITURE Sixth Avenue at 41# St. OPPOSITE BRYANT PARK Four pieces, of American walnut combination, Dresser, Totlet Table, Bow-End Bed. LUE RIBBON FURNITURE is of modern manufacture and reflects the highest type of the cabinetmaker's art. manship of pre-war days and insures dependable service. The Above Special at Sixth Avenue Store Literal Terms of Payment if Credit Is Desir 47 West 125th St. Os Uionit?: $229. Tt surpasses the work Brooklyn Store: 1333-39 Broadwa years back? After the 18th hole—after a stifling Any time, any place, when your throat is parched and your collar’s wilted, open up a bottle. It’s here, folks! LExhilarating, refresh- ing, yet within the law. From bonnie auld Scotland—Good Old Scotch Brew. At your favorite hotel, at your town or country club, at your dealer’s, at roadside inns, at railroad stations—in every section of the Me- tropolis you can get Good Old Scotch Brew. Give it a whirl today. Order a case from your dealer. Treat your friends and yourself to the Drink of Drinks. OOD OLD SCOTCH BREW “We found it in Scotland, men” ra oe Ta wth UEBMANN'S S06. New youn ® GH. Yi LMI

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