The evening world. Newspaper, May 6, 1919, Page 12

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ip tte ia a, FORMISSING OTHESOF GIRL HO MURDERED ties Considering Search lammier Bungalows Near Canaan, Conn. of the little tqo and three #4 S)ef Wahackma Road, New ‘Conn. where the body of an ‘woman was found last f May be undertaken by 4 County authorities, ware ecores of these bunga- the neighborhood. They are Sd often for the entire year and the tenants who live in New Br rt, South Norwalk and visit them for week-ends the winter months as well as gmmer. There is some rab- ell to be had in the around Buttonbush Bog. body was found, igators think it probable Woman was a week-end vis- one of these cottages in that death may have come to through an operation, or some natural cause, but compelled her or companions to rid of the body. Authorities want to find the les of clothing which the ‘Must have worn. When it was only a two-piece sult, and ekirt and a pair of covered the body. There ‘anderwear, shoes or hat, Comstock Pond, into which of the bog empties, was Dut it revealed no clothing. bog and pond are in @ val- the inhabitants of the vicinity 4 oot ong ING AND FINANCIAL Z + ey c x to traders and in once, 2 SECURITIES _ 0 Broad St. 505 Fifth Ave. | feb. Brood 2910 Tel, Murray Hil T120 } H NEW YORK PHILADELPHIA Direct Private Wires PITTSBURGH ; GmicAcO pDETaoIT BOSTON Don't Be “Short” on Uncle Sam's Bonds2 \ _ Ash Me About These Active Stocks L MYT Rader Kesetene? Telephone, 42 New Street Wines f=. mer” cottages in the vicl-| € How to Group Stocks For Greater Safety and Profit, Explained Free peo YOU know the plan by which successful traders and in- est pocket size. Free Call, phone or write for No. E. W.-473 JONES & BAKER DON'T BE FOUR-FIFTHS AMERICAN ! Mention stook in which interested and writ: be ' ‘ter—TO-DAY—mo obligation. (eran . HAMILTON B. WILLS MEMBER STANDARD STOCK BXCHANGE OF TORONTO, and all use the lowlands as a dump. Piles of old kitchen utensils and household goods are scattered through the woods. It is ths that leads to the suspicion that whoever left the body |in Buttonbush Bog knew this and be Neved that a body covered with debriv and saw mill waste would be un- |noticed among the piles of refuse al- ready there, | Lanes ‘ead into the bog and through the bills surrounding it, Although the conclusion that the bod was car- ried there in an automobile ts gener- ally acecpted, it Is not unlikely that it may have been taken to its surface grave in some port of ® man-pro- |pelied vehicle, a wheelbarrow or |small wagon, or even dragged through the lanes. It is also ‘ikely that the authorities | will try to learn what cottages had been used for week-end or nightly visits by occupants during the months of February, March and April. | Coroner Pheian's office in Bridge- port announced to-day that until the body had been identified there would be no inquest, The coroner is not willing to give out the results of the chemical analysis of the viscera which was made by r. Bruce Weaver of Stamford, State detectives have turned thetr | attention to the stained bran sack found Sunday as a possible clue to the murderer. (odd te a TO BUY WHEAT FROM CANADA MINNEAPOLIS, May 6. — President Julius H. Barnes of the United Staten! Grain Corporation announced to-day reports that the corporation had Purchased 25,000,000 bushels of wheat from Canada were untrue, but he sald arrangements had been made for the Purchase of ‘a moderate amount” of wheat from the Dominion, He declined at this time to issue a etailed statement regarding the pros pective purchases. He held confi ences with millers and grain m 4 said @ moderate downward revision in prices of foodstuffs is anticipated. suf- ficient wheat is available to keep the price of flour from soaring above $12 a barrel, he added, but no radical price revision can be expected until the American export demands are greatly reduced. BANKING AND FINANCIAL, simple, up-to-date vestors. Order at | |icked; the living statues of Biblical THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAY ray Bluest of Society Blue-Bloods And Merry Midnight Frolickers Romp as One at Benefit Bal Bleu Im, Brilliant Entertainment at Ritz Given by Big Sisters’ Organ- ization to Aid City Children Who Failed to Get Proper Start in Li (5 The bluest of blue-blooded society women danced; the most merry of Midnight frolic entertainers frol- epochs made a perfect fol! for the modern and transparent draperies of way maids and matrons—all this ut the Sisters’ Bal Blue in the Ritz- Carlton ballroom last night. Tho Big Sisters’ Organization, com- prising the Catholic, Protestant and Jewish faiths, with headquarters ot No. 681 Fifth Avenue, was organized primarily to give ald to the Children's Court of the City of New York. ‘To| the wayward child, the child suffering from improper guardianship, and al- leged delinquents who have been denied their right of a normal and happy childhood, the Big Sister comes as a Heaven-sent friend and brings the hope and the chance for a wee ee ‘ Gum nowas, Pourahe. Masoe. Garena DD Aexanver Au Hacorl brighter, cleaner and finer life. For the benefit of these unfortu- nate children the ball was given. Florenz Ziegfeld loaned bis entire Midnight Frolic. Ned Wayburn, the mud of London yet on his boots, the piquancy of French life still lurking about his genial drectional tactics, stage-managed all action—oral, terp- sichorean and temperamental. An even dozen beauties, brought here from England and France by Way- burn, made their American debut last night. Joseph Urban's spirit was seen in every nook and cranny of the ballropm and dining room of the Ritz, Gen, Robert Alexander of the 77th Division one-stepped about the waxed floor with Mrs, W. K. Vanderbilt until 2 o'clock, News- paper writers fox-trotted with Fifth Avenue belles. AFTER MIDNIGHT WHEN THE REAL FESTIVITIES BEGAN, The monster benefit was scheduled to begin at 10.30, Because every one | had previous engagements, no one ar- rived until midnight—that is, the tra- ditional New York benefit attendant. They were comfortably seated; their first round of Anderson Agitators had been poured and all pairs of pat- ent-leather feet had permanently i PRarinGMu: | been parked ‘neath the prettily deco- rated tables, when Miss Lillian Lor- | raine appeared, In pink, singing and | laughing, sang Lilllan—"When My | Sweetie Comes Back to Me.” Four) Diack boys, costumed as Turkish brigands on a rampage in Avenue A, sang liltingly, astwere. j ‘The Ringlings—Jobn, Alf and Char- He—overlooked one best bet when they forgot to book Hal Hixon. With | vivacious partners, Hixon gave exhi-| bitions of all kinds of dancing, includ- ing the Bryan Jag—same being ex- | ecuted while in violent contorticns balancing a container of cool wate: @ glass cherry inserted therein. | The “Pastel Blue,” a number with | pretty girls, was written exclusively | for this benefit by P, G, Wodehouse and Melville Gideon, New York en- tertainment absorbers probably wit- | nessed for the first time last night a! dallet.dance designed by a member | of the “Four Hundred.” “The Bal Bleu Ballet” was exclusively designed | by Mrs. W. K, Vanderbilt jr. Emerging from the velvet curtains, Evan Burrows Fontaine, Titian braids and blue costume, ambled to the melight, Following her with the persistency of rent collectors were four mafdens, Draping them- NNKING AND FINANCIAL. INTERCONTINENTAL tore Influencing Doint advance and ri onent activi Details of the, bie contract With Keystone Tire & Kubber Compan, a4 RUBBE Dividend” prosvects’ tor the be abi oi, Will oa by Mlaweat Kern Write or Call New York Rake Ee. Broad 601 Traded in on » Specialists tn angeburnett Oil Co. Higher Prices Expected PAUL A. NEWMAN & CO. New York Curb Mangeburnett UU Any or All of These Books and “Weekly Market Despawh" FREE Write for Them Fast Telephone Trading on all Active OIL, MINING INDUSTRIAL and CURB SECURITIES Call Broad 6016 For Accurate Quotations BANKING AND FINANCIAL. ry DHMH) **Don*t Be ‘Short’ on Uncle Sam’s Bonds” ments when called for. TIMMINS BUFFALO Discriminate— VERY trader and investor is entitled to and should de- mand a perfect brokerage service. the facilities of your broker for the prompt, efficient and accurate handling of your interests. You should have prompt and accurate execution of your orders, quick delivery of certificates, and immediate settle- Paramount to all of these is reliable information and analyti- cal reports, such as are published weekly in WILL’S MARKET DESPATCH “The Kind of News That Pays” This is the service which I offer YOU—a service un- excelled in its completeness, combined with brains of a al department second to none! You are invited to visit my Board Room, where you will receive expert and courteous attention. Ask me about your investments—no obligation, IN B. Meriber Toro! Standard Stock! A2New St. New York Wires to Canada end oll ANKING ANS FINANCIAL. You should know sll selves upon the golden staircase with a patience born of waiting for the league of Nations to materialize, were other maidens, The Royal Blue Lady of Bengal, in yellow draperies cloistered at spaced intervals about her person, stood immobile, waiting for some recognition of her queen- liness and exhibiting close appiica- tion during a Correspondence Course of Concentration, Gowns, beautiful and transparent, were everywhere. Dancers, barefooted and sandalled, pranced about. Heigh-hot Van and Schenck, Irish warblers of humorous ditties; songsters, girls in quaint, modern—yea, even prehis-! toric—costumes, were seen as Rivers of the World. The t and Hudson were well represented, Songs and dances, comedy and se- riousnes#s followed one another with tantalizing frequency. DeLyle Alda, Lillie Lorraine and Johnny Doo:ey caused eyes to sparkle and shoulders to heave with suppressed emotion. There is no use dening it—a shimmy dance has the same effect, whether at a rabbit skinners’ clambake or in the ballroom of the Ritz. AS a test of the popularity of the benefit one man bid $260 for a table which had originally sold for $25. At Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt's. table were Mr. and Mrs. James Gerard, Lieut. Col. and Mrs. W. DeLancy Kountze, Mrs. J. Borden Harriman, Major Thwaites, General Robert Alexander, and the hostess and chairman of the evening, Mrs. W. Vv. Robert A’exander danced ali evening. Be it the Aife, the Argonne or the Ritz, the general's boots trod a sure and even tread, not skidding once. Mr. Gerard enjoyed the dancing also— from his seat at the table. Craig Biddle, brown as a berry, did a little o' this and a little o' that —everywhe Capt. John Wana- maker jr., was present, as also Mr, and Mrs, Stuart Duncan, Capt. and Mrs. Perry Osborn, Mrs. Ben Ali Haggin, in white and alone, sat at a! made impossible and communication table in a corner of the room. Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney, in a white and silver brocaded gown, danced mer- first with one and then with her. Her daughter, Flora, gowned simply in black, was eagerly sought jafter by ardent disciples of the jazz.|‘roops there, the residents of the Vlora looked as ready for a type- writer and notebook as for dancing and music. Mrs, Hamilton Fish, Mrs. Frederick Lieut. Leonard Cox, with C., won with the 77th Divi- e but a small parcel of the exclusives attending the Blue Ball last night. The Ritz gave its rogm: the Ziegfeld entertainers w: gratutiously, and the greatest ex- pense was the tip exacted by the bandits working in the cuise of walt- ers, A fine time was had by all, the East. But the job got into meat. eliminated waste. meat everywhere. ROCHESTER DETROIT The packers solved the problem. up plants where the “live haul’ and the “meat haul’ were in the right balance. They They built up distributing systems—refrigerator cars, refrigerating plants, branch houses. They saved time, money and The stockraiser benefited in better markets and higher prices; the con- sumer, in better meat and lower prices. As the country grew, the packers had to grow, or break down. Because of its present size and efficiency, Swift & Company is able to perform its part in this service at a fraction of a cent per pound profit. Swift & Company, U.S.A. Seventeen Wholesale Distributing Markets in Greater New York Central Office, 32 Tenth Avenue G, J. Edwards, District Manager PETROGRAD SOON TO BE WRESTED FROM BOLSHEVIK! Russians Operating With the | Finns Are Gradually Ap- proaching City. PARIS, May 6 (Associated Press).— Specialists on Russian subjects at- tached to various Allied delegations at the Peace Conference expect de- clded changes in the Russian situa- tion within the next few weeks. The Finnish military movement | which has been threatening Petro- grad and which has been shrouded with mystery is now well defined Ggneral Udenitech and 4,000 Ru _sians operating with him have the support of the Finnish Government and troops and have recruited large num- bers of Russian peasants who have become tired of Bolshevik requisl- tions. General Udenitch has occupied Petroz Avodsk, Olonetz and Ladeince Pole, east of Lake Ladoga, and thus controls the southern end of the Kola railway. The escape of | forces in the Kola peninsula has been | | between the Moscow Government and |the Murman coast has been cut. Under the direction of General Ude- | nitch and the leaders of the Finnish | Karelia district are apparently pre- | paring to launch a movement looking jto thelr annexation to Finland, This | would give Finland the Kola railway | and a northern outlet to the Arctic The Russian committee working |for a united Russia here is unfavor- Jable to such a step and is trying to| the | | Bolsheviki operating against Allied | threatening Petrograd so sertousty that the Bolsheviki are evacuating the city. If Udenitch should occupy Petrograd, the revictualling of the city by the Allies would be easy, and the apparent abandonment of the Nansen plan of revictualling Petrograd under neutral auspices is regarded as an indication that the Entente expects the Bolsheviki soon to be forced to withdraw to Moscow. Admiral Kelchak’s Siberian army continues its movement Deetward toward the Volga, and it is expected that the cities of Viatka and Samara will fall inte their hands soon, The Bolshevik forces there are apparent-' ly incapable of checking the orderly, well-organized advance from the east. Disregurding the recommendations of M. Zinovieff, Governor of Peétro« grad, Nikolai Lenine has been re- leasing virtually all political pris- oners there in an effort to show that the Government is becoming more tolerant, One result of this step, it is believed by specialists here, may be to produce a leader who will ul- timately organize the opposition to the present regime, Despatches received here from, Ekaterinodar state that Gen, Dene-« kine and his high command have, issued a statement of their principles © for the information of the Entente powers, They say their purpose is to overthrow Bolshevik anarchy and then work for a united Russia by calling a People's Assembly on the basis of universal suffrage. _>— HOLLAND PREPARING TO PROTECT EX-KAISER Government id to Have Been | Advised by Lawyers Not to Surrender Him, THE HAC , May 6 (United Press), ¢ —That Holland will refuse the expected demand of the Allies to turn Wilhelm Hohenzollern over to them for trial was indicated in information obtained to-day ! from confidential sources, A commission of international law-! et report to the’ which recommends in accordance to which she tered this country as @ pri-/ h law applies © block it. | Entente Udenitch Many persons believe the movement, which = is The Flow of Meat Two-thirds of the live stock in the United States has to be raised in the West. One-half of the consumers of meat live in In other words; most of the live stock is one or two thousand miles distant from most of the people who need it in the form of food. Fifty years ago, when live stock was raised close to every consuming center, the country butcher could handle the job after a fashion. too big. Now millions of animals have to be moved hundreds of miles to millions of people. Some- where on the way they have to be turned They Powers are encouraging the | aw recognizes imes for which foreignera+ but none applies to t te Wi set

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