The evening world. Newspaper, August 18, 1922, Page 9

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CANDLER ACCUSE NEW YORK LAWYER IN BYFIELD CASE Declares August Dreyer De- manded $5,000 on Threat fo “Shoot Him Up.” ATLANTA, Dreyer, w York lawyer and thea trical man whose namo appears as a witness on a letter which Walter 'T Candler received trom Clyde K. By- field, after the men had fight in Mrs. Byfleld's stateroom aboard the Berengaria, July 16, called on Mr. Candler and demanded a $5,000 fee for his services in the case, according to a statement from Mr, Candler, pub shed in the Atlanta Journal yester. Jay ‘The letter purported to withdraw Charges made against Mr. Candler by Mr. Byfield, in connection with the fight. Reuben R. Arnold, chief counsel for Mr. Candler, In his suit to prevent Mr. Byfield from realizing on the $20,500 note given him and in his de- fense against Mrs. Byfield’s $100,900 damage suit, asserted that the pur- ported demand would be investigated and that, should Dreyer be summoned to Atlanta 4s a'witness, steps might be taken regarding it. “Dreyer knew nothing whatever about the incident between Byfield and myself," said the statement is- sued by the Atlanta banker, “as he Was not there and neither heard nor aw any part of it, “Dreyer was introduced to me as his friend by one of three gamblers, men- tioned in my petition, who frequented the ship. He went with the party to Paris and made himself generally off- clous and was the witness to Byfleld’s Ga, Aug. 18.—August their statement. Dreyer claimed to be a lawyer and made a demand on me for $5,000 on leaving Paris, which I did not pay. “Dreyer called me over the tele- Phone in Atlanta yesterday and de- manded to know whether I was ing to pay him. I told him I owed him nothing and would pay him nothing. He then said he was going to show me up. I told him he could do anything he pleased, that I would not talk any longer over the tele- phone, and I hung up t > HEIRESS TO $500,000 PLANS TO BE MINISTER Gives Up Soctety to Join Holiness Association. ANN ARBOR, Mich. Aug. 18.—Miss Florence Schletcher, twenty-one years ld, with $500,000 in her own right, to- @ay announced that she intended to prepare for the mifnist She has thrown in her lot with a rellglous sect known as the Hol Association having a wide fleld in this country and @ growing field na and India The association practises divine he and looks for the s Christ. ———— WESTCHESTER NOTES. It 1s now propose: Btreet in Gquare to the Tuc the trolley tracks from tl centre of the street, and also the trolley tracks from Milan: which have not been used in ten y end which are considered tramc. John Boland of Tuckahoe {s motor! through the Berkshires Dr. J. a menace to F. Weston, house physictan of © Hospital, Bronxville, 1s on MeGutre of Tuckahos 1s, mo- toring through Canada. Mr. and Mrs. Morton R. Cross ot Bdgewood Avenue, Pelham Hetghts, are @t Lake Placid. Mrs. William L. Bradley, who spent five weeks at Hoosic Falls has returned fo her home in Pelham Heights. Mr. and Mrs. If, Gulbenkien of Corites Spec ht and her daugh- and Isabelle, of Ce m Helghts, h ester, Mass., heen since July 1 turned where they have Robert Coulson of Wynnewood Rond, Pelham Manor, has returned from Mexico. Mrs, Thomas L. McCready of Pelham Manor, has been visiting her mother, Mrs, George A. Strong, of Easthamp- ton, L. I Edgar H. Laing and family of Pelham Manor are at Saranac Lake. Mrs. Northrup Dawson of Pelham Manor has returned from Maplewood vt Harold FE. Barker of Fourth Street North Pelham, Carrol J. MeNelll and Kenneth Peck of Mount Vernon have retiirned from Seaheck Lake, Me ‘orth Pelham 1s fon Red § The people of New the opportunity thi he propositi that elty @bout fen years ago, the clergy and many ehureh peor ft and the an At diffe phenson Park titions to the ¢ proposition lw taken up aga ago the petition was ignor Council the Council has ve submit the mn to the people at the general © There will bq on- have Rochelle will fall of voting position trom the Woman's Christian emperance Union, and st is expedted Met the Protestant churches will again organize agains proposition, ——ie ee IN NEW YORK TO-DAY, {lers’ Associa- Armory, et 2.30 P.M National Ass ton meeting, ‘entral Pala liso Patr, Central Palkne and Tist Regiment Ar- TURNS DOWN OCEAN OF FINEST WINE FOR AN AMERICAN GIRL Miss FRANCES G. TURK. Ex-Soldier Thinks Bronx Maid Preferable to Freneh Maid and a Vineyard. Although he fs hetr in France to a vineyard with enough wine last him the rest of his life, In ft to provid- ing he would marry the French girl in the Gi- ronde River on Armistice Day, 1, 1918, while all France was cele- brating, Harry Turk, an ex-doughboy, turned down the offer and yesterday married Miss Frances Goldberg, just a plain American girl from the Bronx. Mr. Turk served as a Sergeant with the 47th Coast Artillery for seventeen months. The only wounds he received in the big fight were from the scratches the French girl made on his face while he was dragging her out of the muddy stream into which she fell Yesterday, !n the presence of twen- ty-five of his buddies he married Miss erg, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. toldberg of No, 1006 Stebbins Avenue, the Bronx. He met his bride only one month ago while teaching her to swim in the City Island waters. It was, according to the couple, a case of love at first sight Mr. Turk is now in t ness at No, 1006 East 163d Street. He and his bride will be the guests at a dinner in the Pennsylyanid Hotel ar- ranged for them by his doughboy com- rades. After the dinner the couple will leave on a honeymoon for Atlan- tie City. he saved from drowning cigar busl- a COLORADO PRISON FOR FOSTER, IS THREAT Adjutant (Saca Promises Arrest that he came around for re’ if Agitator Retarna. nd got caught with the othe DENVER, Col, Aug. 18—Willlam | by © Sea Bass to restore the P . eader who @ | ste money to the old bank Pre fi = Z. Foster, labor leader who was who had been 1 cloud Jeweled G ejected from Colorado recently under orders of Adj. Gen. Hamrock, would be jailed immediately if he were to attempt to carry out his alleged an- nounced intention of returning to Denver to address a mass meeting, Col. Hammock has announced. “LT will order Foster placed in fail without a warrant and IT will have him kept there, should he come back into the State.” said Hamrock. “This auld give his clates to make atest » the legality of the Col be taken on the assumption that it would be legal to arrest any one whose presence in the State would reaten to cause turmoil and strife." Oo INDICT 2 FOR KO LOW’S DEATH, Two Chinese, Tom Yee, of 19 Broadway, President of shot on Aug. 7 in front of Street. The Indictments y the Grand Jury before Koenig in General ‘Sessi an opportunity to Foster Hamrock said hts action would No. 53 South Oxford Street and James Chuck Brooklyn, were esterday for the murder of Ko the Hip 333% OFF Closing Out All Summer Furniture THE BVONING WORLD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 18, 1928, 9 THE NEW PLAYS “Lights Out” ) Funnier Than a Movie By CHARLES DARNTON HE S chandeliers, Fifth simple “preps” moved by it all that she plaintively murmured: ke this!’ ‘Thereupon Sea Bass, scenario writing, waa a transatlantic crook, yet standing there amidst glittering silverware, lace-covered bed and other of the motion picture studio, Hairpin Annie was 60 “Oh, E wish T had a home from bank robbing to smiled Indulgently and suggested she join him, Eagerly, Avenue who had gone “You mean go hopefully, she asked: straight? “Hell, nol’? he roared, “go into the plotures."* This must not be taken to mean St Re RCTS ASF) Who got away after turning out the that “Lights Out’ casts any reflec- | 110 BO tvay after tlon on the industry that makes home| very fond of Kghert, life in Hollywood so charming. It | ny goodby to hi simply that Paul Dickey and Mann w art Page, in their really illuminating s Out" turned out to be fun- 1a movie and quite as thrill- comedy-thriller revealed last night at therto unsuspected sense of He had grown but, of course, old friend the Vanderbilt Theatre, show it takes was developed by Fellx a crook to make a film crook play so sHea Bass. Robert Ames authentic, so true to the sensitive art » eager Hebert. Beatrice Hairpin Annte a French of burglary, that a trusting publi business reasons, while C. may accept it without the slightest] ter don polished off High Shine fear of having {ts falth Imposed upon. | Joe tn patent leather style. A droll We learned as gnuch when Sea j ded by san Janney Bass, in the observation car ofa train iincu William Hs. Merrie was m conte at night, held up an ingenuous youth| mercially temperamental movie pro- carrying a mysterious bag thought to} 4 und Cy Plunkett as a colored so helped to make the in- be filled with money amounting to n less than $1,000,000. But on opening the bag he found only movie mar scripts, and before he had read a page of The Great Sand Bank Robbery,’ | ty or something like that, he declared with the scorn of an expert tliat it wasn't worth a cent, He laughed at wv Egbert, the innocent author, and as-| te Clocks can be Installed pr alie sured him that he had everything all] prison ainent. omicala, in Almay wrong. He then proceeded ts {acto have thelorded hten the amateur on yarlous pro us little musing SING SING STAFF PUNCH CLOCKS, ng Sing attaches announced yester- that time clocks are to keep tabs on the working hours of prison attend- + and employees, Like the convicts, they will ive numbers, Until the onal points, and showed him how arry his gun in the pocket—the inside one on the left t, if you care to know. Egber ghted at finding ‘the and tn his enthusiasm tie “quick urged Sea Bass to become his collaly rator, But it was only becau yearned to show the world, 1 of the screen, the methods ¢ TODAY AND by a double-crossing cro TOMORROW High Shine Joe that Sea F sented to join Egbert in wr Red Trall."" Was it a success? A The authors got along f always wore silk dress their work. But “The F ONLY nsation! mously and o similar to the unsolved myster the Austin bank robbery that the police became suspicious and finalls arrested ever in the studio. High Shine # so indignant at having been she probably felt it was unprofe yup on the screen long that ert was happy too, f daughter was waiting th a taxt for eyes W Adjusted Regulated Wet OWE UF tO VOURSELE TO INVES \ SING 1 = Sloan's © . Liniment Such relief in emergencies for only Sit Wing that if y WALTHAM aa gp Regulated At the first stab of nevralgle pain—use 8! Just spread it penetrates without rub= Bink Bian eates the tinatin This guaranteed Waltham movement, complete, happy relief fror filled case, te guarantend pain, For all aches and at it kills pain! B. GUITER&SONS 17 NASSAU ST.,N.Y, At Park Row and Nassau Sk Fibre Rush Porch F Hammocks All Summer Goods Couch Oldest Furniture 3rd Avenue qT and 12let St. id Stores Natural Reed Wicker Chairs and Rockers Cedar and Maple Lawn Settees and T FURNITURE, CARPETS, RUGS AND Everything for Housekeeping on Liberal Credit “Everlasting Furniture’’—Ask Your Grandfather aS ‘Harlem Store Open Monday Evenings COWPERTHWAIT .. SONS “CREDIT TERMS $3.00 Down on $50 500 0° 75 750 “ “ 100 10.00 “ “ 150 15.00 “ “ 200 25,00 “ 300 3 FOR ‘THis MOS (8 COUCH BEL, Cen ring ond SPECIAL, urniture. $31 HOME. NINGS, 50 up ‘ables and Stands Complete Reduced One Third House in America 193 to 205 Park Row at Chatham Sq. SELLING OUT BECAUSE WE ARE GOING OUT OF BUSINESS! We are the manufacturers of nationally known Rochester Art Clothes, which are retailed by high-class stores everywhere. our lofts are to let and we may have to move out at short notice. imperative that we sell—and sell out at once—and that is why we are offering Our Entire $500,000 Stock Men’s anc Young Men’s Suits, Topcoats, Overcoats, Tuxedos and Full Dress AT 50)” orr ‘That means just half the amazing low prices we have been regularly offering the public! Extraordinary Feature —1,530 SUITS Not to Be Judged by the Price, Because Every One Is a Right Good Suit Regular Retail Values! Regular Retail Values} Regular Retail Values | Regular Retail Values to $39.50 Our Regular Price, $30 TO GO AT 4* 19° 24% 29 15 The Sale includes Shorts, Stouts, Slims, Swagger, Semi-Con- servative, Conservative and Sport Models, also Topcoats, Overcoats and Tuxedos—all high grade fabrics. Samuel Blum 740 BROADWAY, Cor. Astor Place Most Sensational Men’ Ever Held in New York!! A strong statement but the absolute truth, and every retail clothing merchant knows it to be 100% fact. question of profit with us, but the absolute necessity of quick liquidation of our factory’s production. OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY s Clothing Sale It is nota We are We are going out of business— It is, therefore, Regular Retail Values to $35 We Sell Them Regularly Up to $20 "10 to $55 Regular Price, $40 TO GO AT to $65 Regular Price, $50 TO GO AT to $79.50 Regular Price, $60 TO GO AT All Our $10, $15 and $20 Mohair and Palm Beach Suits IN TWO GREAT GROUPS 6” & i Every Garment a “Rochester Art” Model that is worth more at wholesale today. All wonderfully tailored in a manner good enough for any man. Take Elevator to Sixth Floor OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY 2 ae ee es Oe ane me

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