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Daily News from New York, New York • 9

Publication:
Daily Newsi
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1923 9 Ultra Ut Polo Body wdin s- PLAYER RESIGNS LEGAL HUSKIES WILL FIGHT STRONGARM POLL TACTICS announced that sample bfcllots sent out by district boards of elections to enrolled voters were being returned so fast that he was forced to send a truck to the post oflice for them. Chief City Magistrate McAdoo issued warrants for the arrest of twenty-six persons suspected of illegal registration. The Appellate division of. the Supreme court upheld the decision of the lower court in permitting the inmates of St. Francis' home, 609 5th to vote.

John Ferguson, superintendent of elections of Iludson county, yesterday refused to give the grand jury the names of his deputies to be assigned to the 504 polling places on election day. He Five hundred lawyers, many of them former college football players and athletes, are being sworn in by George Z. Medalie, special deputy attorney general, to serve at the polls and combat strong-arm methods with strong-arm methods, Medalie announced yesterday. The additional grand jury filed with Judge Morris Koenig in General Sessions, forty-eight more indictments in registration cases, bringing the total for the week up to 251. Medalie said he bad 300 more complaints to be considered and has the names of 2,000 persons believed to have registered illegally.

After hearing forty witnesses GETS $3,248 PAYROLL A lone robber struck William Mclntyre on the head with a blackjack yesterday and escaped with the $3,248 payroll he was carrying upstairs to the Fitch Publishing company offices on the fourth floor of 138 Pearl st. WORLD AFTER ROW OVER TEAM SELECTION By ROBERT CONWAY. The squabble among: America's polo players galloped into the spotlight yesterday, when J. Cheever Cowdin, veteran star and Social Registerite, socked his equally exclusive and wealthy buddies of the United States Polo association with curt and thorough resignation. "I'm through forever," he declared.

"Through as honorary treasurer, member of the executive board and as a player. Let them fill my place "with somebody who agrees with their, policies which I do not." The Polo association consists of such social luminaries as Tommy Hitchcock, W. Averill Harriman and Malcolm Stevenson. To these must be added the names of a number of other polo players of less social prominence. While Cowdin refused to explain the details of his tiff the management of the association, it is understood to have started over the selection of the international team which played Argentine's four.

Cowdin was first selected, then dropped in favor of Winston Quest. When Malcolm Stevenson was later withdrawn, Cowdin was still left on the sidelines, and Earle A. S. Hopping sent in to play. NAVY INSTRUCTOR KILLED AS PLANES CRASH OVER FIELD Pensacola, Nov.

2 (U.R).-2 Chief Aviation Pilot Enoch B. Mcintosh, United States navy, was killed today when two planes crashed in the air. Mcintosh was flight instructor at Corry field here. Ensign Irving H. Howell was injured.

Mcintosh's home was Norfolk, Va. Howell enlisted from Macomb, 111. Mcintosh's plane and another piloted by Lieut. Peter P. Schreider, marine corps, met scarcely 200 feet the ground.

Schreider brought his down successfully, but the other crashed. Howell, a student, flier, was in Mcintosh's plane. This was the second fatal air crash involving naval planes in two days. Thursday Capt. Robert J.

Archibald, marine corps pilot, was killed when his plane collided 2,000 feet up with another machine over ilarpersville, five miles north of Newport News. Capt. Earl H. De Ford, army airman, who was in the other plane, escaped injury. very It rji nh of sports covered In THE NEWS.

Don't miss this splendid feature. Sufferers Sleep Complete relief Nights of restful, health giving Bleep; returning appetite and cheerfni spirits are now possible for all sufferers of Asthma. Bronchitis or Hay Fever, who will send their name and address for onr Book of Treatment DR. B.W. HAIR MEDICINE.

COL Dept N-l. 303 Fiftfc Arenne, New loik J- 4 11 THE CENTER OF THE IN PEKING, China, stands the white altar of the matchless Tiemple of Heaven. In the very middle of this altar is a magnificent round block upon which the Emperor, the Son of Heaven, used to kneel, five hundred years ago when he prayed for the absolution of the sins of his people. And he knelt there, because to the Chinese, this marble block was the exact center of the earth. Five hundred years ago the Emperor of a mighty people alone was privileged to stand at the center of the earth.

Today each one of us is an emperor stand-ing at the center of the earth, for at our elbow is the telephone into which converges every mighty industry the social life of half the world the activity of some hundreds of millions of people. No matter how far tee may be from the centers of population, or how distant from the surge and rush of the cities, we are still at the center of tfie earth, for tee can talk to any one in the United States or Canada in Mexico, Cuba in London, Paris, Berlin -who is uiltliin reach of a telephone. And people xciihin the sound of each others' voices are side by side. The telephone has-put each one of us more truly at the center of the world than ever teas the -Son of lleaverU NEW YORK TELEPHONE COMPANY.

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About Daily News Archive

Pages Available:
18,845,294
Years Available:
1919-2024