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con Woman Knocked Down Ny a Tast. Nelson, fifty-five Jal in the war A ff ‘ , German authoritien on thelr way seabed bciaclle On $1, 000 HONEYMOON The Niewwa Van Dein Das Moh of neue. wit ce shortly. that coun r Ment Wilson's words 18) be made and America must be m remove us *: BACK AFTER FACING (Brom ‘puaneneers wn mee ° Not All the Siftings Came Through the War Mesh, but Broker's Young Employee, Taken |i ing tout the United beats, Wil Se wearily Meme.) Wi piers In Switzerland from Swiss travelera All Are Amusing—For Instance, “A Statesman Is a From Bride on Theft Charge, iclpate in the world war a | hip’ must be Kept by +9 Duan eke twas cae Patriot Who Offers Your Services to His Country’ Says It Was “Grand Time.” * neutraiat says. that_newape abelian Austria. Hungar it as learned that d USE IT AS A LINIMENT | TRIALS NI GERMANY the food supply question is growing “With Two Exceptions All Our Ex-Presidents Agree"! weeks of honeymooning for ; RADWAY'S READY RELI EF mora sembarramine to _ihe Govern That Woodrow Can Run the War Better Than They day hid the ett wane Kn to-| lon sy Prepared for | rh speaking of the poenibilities of a Could”—“New Game of Cards Is European Poker Ang aan Wi and One Hundred | rom unny ey A evolution fi n un’ ‘ i} a t, SI jo ed The rab tye bed lOther Passengers on Spanish) "hss nara to predice what 0 etary Played Without Kings or Queens”—“Kaiser Would {cn a charset stenting 000 on | fiaid, opens the pores of the Liner Tell of Starvation ing people will do,’ Stand for Any American Atrocity Except Interning ¥¢. 2% from William R. Craig, a ru ernie ad eres of fy Autetrla | Mr. and Mrs. Hartwig Devison and 400 German Sailors in a Dry State.” | broker, of No. 26 Broad Street, by i” foo! - ay Oscar Pflug, about wh fo much = AMERICAN CONSULS | was cabled after they On yird the Alfonso XII which mature! arrived t>-day from Vigo, Spain, wer hs. Ab |fve American Consuls General trom ir will ditappear | ti your skin will Germany who ar n their way to pemain whole Washington to report. While they refuse to be quoted for publication they admit that they will tell $19.98 $2 5,00 You owe it to yourself to inspect D. Price & Co.'s Suits before pur- chasing else where. Smarter styles are not to be had —values are supreme. A selection of hun- dreds of Suite in scores of modele— the newest tallored, semi-tal and dressy —inall the fashion- able fabrics col- ors. Sizes 14 to 44, 219, 221, 223, 225, 227 Grand Street Cor, Driggs Ave. 0c Weekly Opens a New Clothing Account Chiffoniers y yw fine in owl 10°; Disen eredi i} STREETS Alterations Free of Charge We will positively make deliveries on all garments requiring alterations prior to Easter. Easter Coats— D. PRICE & CO. FULTON AND BRIDGE Ser plour, Street Coats, Semi- Conte and Wool Ultra smart models that will appeal to the most | fashionable women — ' Coats notable alike for | their splendid style and low prices. Covert, Poiret Twill and Poplin—in black, nav colo! the new high » also plaids and checks, Sizes 14 BROOKLYN to 44, 164, 1 No Deposit Parlor Suits ure hanes when oven ary | piece sult at this psale for ’ f { s}¥ou can buy a fine leather or| ;} mule skin Parlor Suit here for; $55.50, or a good silk plush) loose cushion 3- 35:50 he Jest OFtLN MONDAY AND SATURDAY EVE: NINGS, » 168 and 170 Smith Street Cor, Wyckoff St. GOODS DELIVERED ANYWHERE IN GREATER NEW YORK Worth of Furniture $1 Weekly China Closet Week r Stock Movie ny fine very | State Department they were delib the ely nd hindered by had been re uted by Ambassador Gerard and taken from his # ed the om G Fre border en route rmany to Paris, were on the Alf XII, All three claim to be American citizens, and Pflug was an interpreter in the American Embassy in Be | Devison for in and his wife have lived years in Germany and both are of German birth. They and Pflug | were equipped with emorgency pass- ports issued by tit} American Em- | |basey in Berlin which Ambassador | Gerard has sald were given out with- Jout his permission. | irregularity Because of the passporte and | Ambassador Gerard | of their the fact that would not guaran their Amert- canism as they were fleeing from Germany they were sent to Elis Island to await examination, Ruth Law, the American aviatrix who went to France to offer her ser- vices—which were politely declined — on the Alfonso XII, While the French would not admit her to the flying corps they gave her some rides on new batfleplanes cap- able of making 180 miles an hour. eee THREE MEN SENTENCED FOR GUMINA KIDNAPPING Instigators of Crime of 1914 Get Six to Fifteen Years Follow- ing Confession, After nearly three years the final chaptet was written to-day in a kid- napping case which had the whole clty aroused whilo five-year-old Giu- seppo Gumina, the son of a grocer in Kast Sixty-first Street, was held by a hand of extortioners. ‘The boy was stolen from the street in front of his home April 28, 1914, Capt, Jones and a squad of detec- tives finally located the boy and four Italians, three men and @ woman, who had been holding and torturing him, were sent to prison in June, 1914, for terms ranging from ten to fifty years, Three weeks ago two of them, Vito Brusso and his wife, Mina, made a confession. As a result Vito Pettl- nato, a grocer of 1145 First Avenue, Vincenzo Vagenella of No, 307 East Seventy-first Street and Vincenzo No, 1106 First Avenue were with instigating came home apping. reo pleaded gullty before Judge Rosulsky to-day. All were in- ated in Pettinato's grocery. amina started a store around the corner. They employed a gang of kidnappers to steal Gumina'’s boy in the hope of driving him out of the neighborhood, Judge Rosalsky sentenced all three to serve not less than six years nor more than fifteen years in prison | BOWIE ‘ENTRIES. HACK TRACK, NOWIR, M,, Apel 4 eosin for Wworrow'e micee Are ae follows The FIRST RACK-—-Selling: maiden two-year-olda: four turcooge Fantan, 311; *Wichaka, 106; Bill Livingston, 105) Mr.‘ Dooley, 108; Lady Bileen, 100: Wi pllttle, Sweeper, (107 Clatming three year. 910 ‘at. Bisote three yearolda and Rirlonae ena Hemarianie la’ Fredericks, nyal Inter 112; * Tale ‘aut 100" na Salon, 115; Londora, Aida Abne, 107 Preliminary handicap ns Pt Cake, 1205 10: Kentieky Hoy 104, Sivdge Wing olde and Hin Money 110) Lona, 108; “Ger The fur RACE—Claiming fouryearcotts and Orperth, 116 Page W LIN; Gaines ing Fest, 113; "Pautsen, 1 ir ear-olte and | fo Distarbes jean | Menle Ciatming fo nixtewnth A pSinin Hvow i aa reasquable THE EVENING WORLD, _WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 1917. _ SIFTING THE DAY’S NEWS ‘By Arthur (« tu Lig al “THINK Fooli#h Pennsylvania man got mar- red in order to avoid possi ment in case of war, He's a nut. Now he's enlisted in a war that will | last for life, Economical Massachusetts women are knitting socks for American sol- diers without any heels in ‘em, They look just as well from the front and Bo enemy will ever see ‘em from the r, Paste that in your hat. Kentucky woman got divorce be- cause her husband allowed his whis- kers to grow for two days and in- sisted on playing his chin on the graphaphone, President Wilson is tired of the Mailed Fist. Going to mail some of | our own, postage prepaid, History shows that a statesman is @ patriot who offers your services to his country. Representative Jeanette Rankin fan't the only woman in Congress. We always have had old ladies there, even before La Follette, Rhode Island man was pinched for shooting at first robin of spring. It was on his w new hat, Uncle Sam hasn't mixed any battle soup for twenty years, but he hasn't forgotten the recipe. New York hobo who said he couldn't keep a Job because everybody discharged him, finally met a Magis- trate who wouldn't, He will be safe from submarines for thirty days, Having the right on your side ts nice, but don't forget to swing your left too, We've been rational so long that we intend to spell it rawhtonal for a while. Now 1s the time for Bill Bryan to get out his megaphone and shoot the enemy dead, America doesn’t want any man of the hour, Take twenty-four of ‘em to eteer us through a day. Generally discover that who talks the loudest about war and take the antlers to a taxidermist to be mounted, Better watch our battleships. First thing you know, Teddy will be rowing one over to Europe single-handed. Apparently successful Newark mil- Honaire unfulfilled ambition of his life to as- certain how soup tasted through @ veil, known breakfast cereal either, With two exceptions, all our ex run the war better than they could, New game of cards ts called Euro- pean poker, is played without the | kings and qu @ Administration got tired of evasive Prussian notes. Put- ting in new needles doesn’t change the tune when the record 1s the same | old one. About time to enemy Turkey but hate to Inhale him, The Largest Artistic Class Used in public by the world's most eminent ar- tists, among whom are Ku- belik, Amato, Schuman Heink, Campanari, Farrar, Friml, Nordica, Powel, eid], Paur WISSNER WAREROOMS 55 FLATBUSH AVE, BROOKLYN Beautiful hand- with ribbon and flo ade hats of : Dress Hats $2.98 Milan Hemp and Fashionable Shapes, for this lustrated Lisere trim sale with newest fancies, the guy thunder Js the gent who can’t kill a mosquito without having a desire to claims it has been the one The new food that we are going to shoot from guns won't be that well Presidents agree that Woodrow can Hope that the war doesn’t carry us 4 Don't mind fighting the SPECIAL FOR THURSDAY Children’s 98c to $1.48 Trimmed Hats, at ers; big assortment of styles and colors; special ) to- morrow at less than half the regular price. Big Easter Special : $5.00 Trimmed Straws), ed especially Astonishing Values in Tailored Easter Hats up to sled ‘Bugs’’) Baer. Ini train as they Copyright, 1917, by ‘The Press Publishing Co. (The New York Evening Wortay, | Fifty-first Street When @ man reruses your open hand, only thing left to do le to close it. Makes an American feel proud to tlon, Europe's growing debt indicat that the gi it Generals are tho a ones with mi Seems that the Kaiser would stand for anysAmerican atrocity except in- terning 400 German sallors in « dry State, Audience in the theatre of war ts growing smaller and smaller, but they aren't walking out, They are climbing up on the stage. High prices of gasoline doesn't af- fect the man Whose only method of propulsion 18 toe power, President says internal disloyalty will be knocked deader than three barrels of salted herring, Nobody can soll our soil, powder. Gun for Burope and roach for Mexico, Uncle Sam kept turning his other cheek so often that it became a ques- tion whether we were @ nation or a windmill, Time that the notes ceased and ac- tion started. Stephen Decatur didn't mean our country, write or wrong, but mostly write, TS BORROWS GUN FOR SUICIDE. By Do! Mrs, Ashley Ca’ Brother-in-Law’s Arrest. Despondent because of ill health, Loulse Ashley, thirty-nine, a widow, committed suicide yesterday afternoon the head with Schmidt's Schmidt heard the shot an‘ rushed to his sister-in-law's root apartment. If Food Disagrees ‘When food lies like lead in your stomach and you have that uncomfortable bloated feeling and your stomach is sour and burning {t is usually because of @ secretion of from chronte h. In such @ & good and sate tri ment for catarrh of the stomach ts to take teaspoonful of pure bisu- A in half a glass of wal hot aa you can comfortably drink {1 ¢ hot water washes the mucus from the stomach Walls and draws the blood to the omach while the bisurated magnesia ix @ solvent for mucus, thus Incrensin, giflciency of the Not water tre the excess acid nh contents, neala tri te a far better plan than that of ing some or tablet which tment wallow mply artl~ ida it ati into the will do almost as much stomach, ‘As there @re various forms of magnesia be sure in following above directions to ask the druggist for Bisurated Magn ither In powder or tablet form) which specially prep: for the correction tomach acidity,—Advt, 9OSTOTOOS BROOKLYNessasasecseneCoTOeese| Millinery Store in America OOo 79c silk and lace trimmed fancy braid, at flowers and ornaments, One style | learn that the dictionary factories are | going to cease making our armmuni- | Situation demands two kinds of | in the home of her brother-in-law, Frederick W. Schmidt, at No. 6800/ Broadwa: The police ar- | rested him for having @ revolver in may Drink Hot Water| ig Viewpons, 6 0 eer, per, “it makes a great ary eth ine full ¢ AMSTERDAM, April 4 (vin Lon-| Whether America Jol “4 HIS LAST STOP whom he was employed as a runner. George is twenty years old and lives | at No, 785 East Ono Hundred and His bride, who was with him at the time of his arrest, went home to her parents, “I wae getting eight dollars week,” George told Captain of De- toctives Deovy. “I had a longing for good grub and to marry my girl, That morning I was sent to the bank with $1,000. Instead of going there a, Bee, is unique in delicious flavor YOURGROCERHASIT, 10%, 18° &35° | SEALED PACKETS ONLY I went to the Bronx, grabbed my girl, got married and went on a trip to Boston, Washington and Niagara Falls. Say, we had one grand time, ould have seen me in my silk ‘BILL TO MAKE CITIZENS OF GERMANS 5 YEARS HERE. Thousands Who Neglected to Take | Out Papers Are Anxious Now to | Become Real Americans. WASHINGTON, April 4.—A bill to| grant American citizenship to all Ger- mans who have lived in the United| States five years was introduced to. | day by Senator Townsend of Michi. gan. Thousands of Germans who have lived here a long time, he says, are anxious now to become citizens, but had neglected to take out their pa- pers. No other oatmeal has the flavor. by special process from the cream of the BROOKLYN OPPENHEIM. CLLINS & G Fulton and Bridge Sts., Brookly | Girls’ Spring Coats and Dresses Exceptionally smart models in practical lines for School or Dress Wear at prices which are extremely attractive. Girls’ Coats 4 to 10 years Girls’ Coats 8 to 16 years Girls’ Coats of serge or black and white checks, pique collars, novelty pockets,lined throughout Special 8.9 0 Girls’ Velour Check or Serge Coats, full skirt and double strap belts, pique collar, silk tie. 10.75 Dressy Coats of Serge or Velour Checks in smart color combinations, belted and flare models, new pocket effects. 15.00 Girls’ Smart Velour Check Coats in several color combinations with the new slit pockets. Special 7.90 Girls’ Velour Check Coats, over-collars of white pique, novelty belts and pockets, half lined. Special 9.75 Girls’ Whipcord Coats in navy blue and tan, silk trimmed in contrast- ing colors, large cape collar; new belt effect. 13.50 | Special if Special Special Girls’ Coats in regular stock range from..... Girls’ Dresses in regular stock range from.. 7.90 to 32.50 2.00 to 25.00 Misses’ and Juniors’ Sprin Specially Designed for the Miss or Small Woman Distinctive tailored, belted and pleated models of exceptional charm, in novelty homespuns, velour checks, serges and gabardine 20.00 25.00 29.75 35.00 Suits Fur Fashions for the Spring and Summer Showing tinctive new stoles, capes, collarettes and odd pieces fashioned of kolinsky, mole, ermine, kolinsky-squirrel, Hudson Seal, silver fox, natural blue fox, and smart combinations of fur, silks and chiffons At Our Usual Moderate Price: Important Sale Thursday 125 Pairs of Smart Spring Boots A Very Attractive Model A high cut 9%inch Lace Boot for Woman and Misses with patent leather Vamps and heel foxing; Champagne colored Suede tops and Louis XV. heels, Actual 10.00 value. "SALADA" )