The evening world. Newspaper, August 8, 1919, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SEIZES BABY = TO SATISFY BOARD BILL Court Orders Infant Returned, So _ Chilld’s Clothes Are Withheld to Satisfy Claim Against Mothert TOPEKA, Aug. 8.—A baby was seized ‘here yesterday and held for « board bill. Young Mrs. Gertrude Stevenson had » but little money. When the land- Mrs. Ida Crayon. eentet in the, baby ‘and. retusea, (9 to Mrs. Stevenson, who to court to-day and tol ’ ordered = -LEMON JUICE FOR FRECKLES Girls! Make beauty lotion for a few cents—Try it! ‘but the infants clothes, which she & means of collecting the bill. Gqueere the juice of two lemons inte @ bottle containing three ounces ef orchard white, shake well, and you bee & quarter pint of the best freckle tan lotion and complexion beau- tifler at very, very small cost. Your grocer has the lemons and any n store or toilet counter will sup- (eng) MU rig orchard white for e cen pecenes this sweet! it lotion inte face, neck, and hands each day and see freckles and blemishes disappear how clear, soft and rosy white becomes. Yes! It is harm- leas and never irritates.—Advt. TRANSPORT BRS GERMAN BRIDES 0 YANKEE SOLDIER Part of Second Dh Division Also Comes in on Great North- ern in Time for Parade. The Second Battalion of the Sec- ond Engineer Regiment, Second Divi- sion, artived to-day just in time to send its colors, decorated with the French War Cross, and a detail of one man from each company, along with the battalion staff to join the | division parade on Fifth Ayenue, Tae! last citation of the iment was when jt built under fire the famous pontoon bridge over the Meuse in the fighting of Noy. 10 (the day before the armistice) for the last and wick- edest drive of the division agatact the Germans, The Second Engineers came over on the Great Northern's last trip “8 @ Daval transport. The fleet liner has gone over and back 18 times, carrying 35,000 soldiers to France and bringing 26,000 back. There! were 1,660 officers and men aboard her to-day, The first German war brides to come to the United States arrived on the Great Northern. They were the day, delicate much admired, Exquisite “Nadine Face Powde SGuleae. “olor ead! ‘are holds ite charm tmaparting to the aki that d refinement so | Nadine Face Powder Is cooling, re- freshing and harmless, @ positive pro- tection against wind, ten, sun-burn and Setara, of discolorations. Leaves the || sof, and smooth as rose petals. ‘This exquisite preparation, Nadine, beautifies millions of complexions today. jl Price pg if not entirely pleased. At leading Green Boxes Only. counters. If they haven't NATIONAL t Yoiewe COMPANY Paris, Tena, > VE is added to the cost of Brooklyn’sBiggest 219, 221, 223, 225, 227 Grand Street nt Te Your six’ coun, 6 $100 WORTH OF FURNITURE $1 WEEKLY VICTROLAS in seadD Bent Baby Carriages in| che elty at moderate 8 jany new shaper ‘our hig store uthrul 1 Customers and Company are protected by our very thorough and effi- cient system for establishing retail selling prices. Experts keep in close touch with market con- ditions. Their duty is to see that just sufficient fair, reasonable profit—no more. Fuge nen When Oening Yew Account. OT TTT ‘an article to give us a Credit House 164, 166, 168 and 170 SmithStreet hig Advertise: You and Get Myer tents Di “four. Credit Sommer Ciothing Wowey's axp Smart Suits 28" vv Girls’ SUMMER DRESSES ME Light Wiad Suits Boys’ *uyng Ss included among 250 young women of other nationalities who married “A perigee went de on peer The Great Northern Is to be tarded Palttp ie the army for bastion wa a eo tras Her na eo sony Capt. &. H.R. Dovie. co been ordered to shore duty at Wash- ington. Three hundred of the na’ [crew will be assigned to duty on a! destroyer to be commanded by Lieut. B. F. Tilley, who has been executive officer of the transport, The trans- port has the record of having carried | more troops than any other ship of, | her tonnage and of having made the) | fastest trip from New York to Brest and return—twelve days and one hour, Three days out from Brest the Great Northern was stopped by a call from the British freighter Mount Ba- ker of the Globe Line, which reported from @ hundred miles awgy that she Was out of fresh water, had six feet of salt water in her hold and that her engines were disabled, The transport raced to her, took her in tow, pumped out the salt water, pumped aboard 160 tons of fresh wa- ter and repaired her engines and then sent her on her yo vo Liverpool. |. On the Great Northern was the body of Thimt Class Engineer Rich- ard Reed cf the transport El Sol, who was killec two weeks in a fall- road accident.at Brest. It wt be sent to his home at Ada, Okla, Among the passen; were Con-| gressmen Goodall, Nealy and M Clintock, who have been making mere, of the battlefields of Europe, lajor Gen. Charles P. Rhodes, | who since his recovery from an air- — accident of last December has Re 7 are of Base Section in Bordeaux. a hia ‘Seles a Benton, who was for seventeen years professor of Latin at Smith College and is now dean of the | women's department of Carrelton College, Minnesota, returned the Great Northern from a mission se- lecting young French women to take courses in American universities. Miss Benton accompanied the Coun- tess Gozdava“Turezymowitz to Lith- uania on a Red Cross relief trip, They entered Munich on the last train which entered before the Bolshevist element took control. They were per- mitted to go to Berlin without mo- lestation. They were two months in Lithuania in and neaw Kovno, They found the inhabitants full of dreamr of military aid from the United States. ‘The commander of the 24 Battalion, 2d Engineers, was Major Theodore Wyman, formerly in the office of the Commissioner of Water Supply, Gas and Electricity, WEDDING PARTY THROWN OUT IN AUTO GOLLISIO Their Machine Upset by Small Car and Four Are Painfully Injured. Several persons were painfully hurt arly to-day when an automobile col- lision dumped a wedding party onto a grass plot in Park Avenue near 50th Street. Isidor Gitter, twenty-eight, of No. 1624 Madison Avenue, and Miss Anni Kastan had been married in the lat home, In West 176th Street. After the atre and supper they were in a big touring car en route north in Park nue. With them was Jack Kastan, nineteen, a brother of the bride. Leo Cohen of No, 52 West 116th Street was driving. Around the corner at 650th Street came 4 small car driven by Henry Goldstein and containing Milton T. Stein of the St. George Hotel, Brooklyn, a Miss Peggy Nolan of No, 100 West Tith Street. The small car knocked the big one completely over and threw the occupants to the turf. Bride, bride- groom, brother ana chauffeur were hurt, out after being attended went home, No one in the smafl car was injured. SYLVIA PANKHURST REPORTED BRIBED Scotland Yard Accuses Her of Re- | of the recent race riots to the exterior = 3300 WORKERS Men Demand With Withdrawal t Heavy-Guard of Police and State Troops. CHICAGO, Aug. 8 — A general strike of 33,000 employees at the packing plants in the stockyards he- wan at 9 o'clock this morning. The action followed the decision of the Stockyards Labor Council last night to call a general strike unless the State tre nd police guards were | immediately withdrawn from the plants, The strike was precipitated by the return of 5,000 negroes to work yesterday. When the negroes returned 500/ policemen and several hundred deputy sheriffs were assigned to the inclosure, while detachments of soldiers were moved from the scene of the yards. The white workers ob- jected to the presence of guards al- though their leadefs said they had no objection to working with the negroes, Many of the negroes, it ts sald, have refused to join the union, and that is said to be one cause of the strike. ‘The men walked out quietly after city and State authorities had re- fused to withdraw the guard. It is said that several thousand of the negro non-union workmen remained at their posts, ‘There was practically no trading in live stock here to-day. Even before the beginning of the strike in the stockyards establishments the buyers for the packing houses held off, awaiting developments as to the labor situation, Busines was further ham- pered by the uncertainty of shippers as to whether any railroad outlet for purchases hére would be avaliable. State troops were taken from the packing plants and mobilized in Dex- ter Pavilion, near the entran ft the itockyards, to held for emergency duty. More than 1,000 policemen and deputy sheriffs remained on duty in the various plants. ‘While the thousands of white em- ployees were walking out, a large number of negro men and women ap- plied for employment. Officers of the stock yards labor councils said that about 12,000 negroes have been employed by the different packers in Chicago and that of this number 3,000 are union men who walked out with the white workers, he BY Metatdy RESTRICTS PIER PASSES. jollector of Port‘ Hamper Bage Byron R. Newton, Collector of the Port, said to-day that the pre-war custom of giving passes to relatives and friends of incoming passengers from Europe, allowing them within the bag- kage inclosures on the piers, will not ‘ain be in effect. Collector Newton said that as many as 2,500 passes had been Issued to visit one homecoming ship before the war, and that such a crowd hindered the wage inspectors. Access to the pier wil’bs allowed, the only restriction at- footing, the apace where the baggage is he Says Crowds mapectors. —— FOOD PRICES DROP IN ALBANY nees Rates Lower Army Goods. ALBANY, Aug. 8.—With the sale of army foods in Albany half over, the largest retail dealer in the city has an- nounced a sale of canned meats and vegetables at prices as low or lower than those being paid for the army goods. in some Inatances, price reductions amount to 50 per cent. ceiving $30,000 From Bela Kun—She Denies It. LONDON, Aug. 8 (United Press) — Sylvia Pankhurst, England's leading feminine agitator, was again in the limelight to-day, when Scotland Yard officials charged she had received $30,000 in Russian gold from Bela Kun, former Hungarian soviet leader. The money was received through a Norwegian radical, it was stated, and was to be used for promoting British strikes, Miss Pankhurst denied she had received money. Scotland Yard operatives said pa- pers seized in @ recent raid in Glas- gow included @ complete set of rules of the soviet Republic and location of places where bombs were stored in Glasgow and Manchester, Dentistry That Lasts 1 We've established « reputation for mak~ Ing the finest, firm-holding plates, of which this t# one, Holds close to the TO CONFER ON STATE FOOD. 4 Lieut. Connolly Go Dr. Porter . Eugene H. Porter, State Co: joner of Farms and Markets, accompanied by Lieut. V. P. Connolly, supply ofcer at the my depot in Schenectady, left for Washington to-day for a conference with Federal authorities on the ques- tion of distribution of army food in this State. received at the Schenectady depot during the last twenty-four hours are in direct conflict, with the result that no food is being shipped. Food Tribunals to rofiteers, 8.—Steps were be- up the an- nouncement of Sir Auckland Geddes, Minister of Reconstruction, that local tribunals representing the workers and consumers be established, with power to 8 $100 fines against food profiteers and send more flagrant cases to the courts, which will be empowe to inflict a $1,000 fine or six mon: imprisonment, LONDON, Aus = ling taken to-day to follo 00,000,000 More Ger- man Cash, WEIMAR, Wednesday, Aug. 6 (As- gumi of exposed, Durable, comfortable 4 utiful, Does not p hibit eating ngs you like, Never tals (o'give full eatistaction, Made in | The WATERBURY Way Come here in the morning r FREB have your WITHOUT ne with a Fleck yed d 10008 teeth ed—~misaing teeth replaced without | WORK GUARANTEED 10 YEARS! 1 Surgery made ication to the ums f our NEW Ri wane DENTAL COMPANY ‘neon rated 1897 29W. ‘34th St., New York 414-16 Fulton St., Brooklyn Si 5 Hegre: © By penare 9102 tie LADIES IN ATTENDANCE : 4 sembly to-day to authorize the | Finance Minister to issue 6,000,000,000 | ‘marks (nominally $1,200,000,000) in | Frank F. sociated Press).—A bill was Intro- | duced in the German National As- | Treasury warrants and new money uring the coming yi Falls From Crowded € tured. As @ crowded Myrtle Avenue car reached the Manhattan end of the Brooklyn Bridge to-day, James Shay, forty-six, No. 335 West 17th Street, who was clinging on the rear, lost his grip und fell fifteen feet to the railroad cut, He sustained a fractured #kuil. celal ad A, ull Frac- “4 75.00 1 #6» 190.0 10° « * 150.0 15% 29000 | 25% “ ” 300 FREE Brass BED CALDER URGES Dectares U.S I Ss. Houses Behind Needs, in Ap- pealing for Loan Bank Bill, — WASHINGTON, Aug. 8 — The United States is 1,000,000 houses be- Bind the needs“of its people, Senator ,Calde Now York, asserted to-day in & Senate speech urging Congres- sional action to pipalate home build- ing. He advocated, passage of his bill creating “home loan banks,” the es- ,tablishment of which, he said, would make available $2,000,000,000 for home construction. High rents must continue, Senator Caller warned, unless some way is ‘found to increase the number of home owners. Abnormal profits in b yer Materials should be Fednoed, | “My own opinion is that we are] for many years, going to have! . Soe construction,” the Sen- | ater declared. “While it is true that the wages of wea are high, still, in. comparison with the things ‘these they are not too wove it pail ‘alt eb puildings. Sonstructed housing hg heed at ae ‘igoettl as they can Mepsoea “In the United Gtates there is need of approxima’ 8,~ 000,000.000 of building construction to the seat. or 009,000 worth pis an bo “EPS aiRbiy EX-POLICEMAN ENDS LIFE. 4. De Over Ill Health. Tiiness which he believed to be in- curable is held responsible for the sul- cide to-day of Michael J. Ansboro, an ex-policeman, He shot himself at his residence, No. 111 Gt. Felix Street, Brooklyn. Ansboro, who was attr seven years old, was forced to retire from the Police Department in 1917 be- cause of stomach recurred frequently 184—Buddha Bookends, Pair, $3.50 ‘UST as there is one jeweler for engagement rings, one engraver for wedding cards, and one } confectioner for weddings, so there is one shop for smart gifts. OVINGTON’S “The Gift Shop of 5th Ave.” 314 Fifth Av., near 32d St. CHAFE ? KORA - KONIA WILL BRING YOU BLESSED RELIEF br Down on $50 With Every ‘ale Senator Adel of Brooklyn Resigns. ALBANY, Au of | Adel, .. ond Senatorial 1 with the Secretary of State. No reasons were given for the action. Senator Adel js @ resident of Brooklya, COLUMBUS AVE BET. 103 &104 ST AT STOCK YARDS | $2000000000 | 280 PASSENGERS STRIKE CHCAGO, PLAN FOR HOMES SAFELY LANDED Is Million aa Star “Strands it in Fog Off and their transfer to Yarmouth was accomplished without accident, There was no panic. Several vessels were rushed to the aid of the stranded ship. The North Star, which ts in th service of the Eastern Steamship Lines, left Boston for Yarmouth last night, At last accounts the North Star was broadside to the west side the southern end of Green Isl and, although the sea was not rough, she was reported to be pounding somewhat heavily. The steamship Governor Cobb of the Eastern Steamship Lin jtranded on Green Island on July 1 almost the same point as the North Star, and was badly damaged. She floated after about four hours and landed her passengers, after which she was taken to New York for repajrs, Wy STEAMER ASHORE; on the tongue—-ke Nova Scotia Coast— your stomach swee Aid Quickly Rushed. BOSTON, Aug. 8.—The steamship North Star struck on Green Island, nine miles south of Yarmouth, N, 8, im a fog at 6.40 A. M. to-day. The removal of her passengers, 280 in all, SUNDAY WoRnLe WANTS wonk wi Monroe Clothe " NewNerk Style America = Monroe Clothes All New York Recommends When the folks at home pass judgment on your new Monroe Suit—you’ll hear ‘Monroe Special additional evidence that your selection is from the eet conceded best styled and MFA BY GOODALL WORSTED CO Light Outing Trousers $6.00 most moderately priced make of clothes in America—Monroe Clothes have to be to satisfy the more than 150,000 value seeking, critical New Yorkers who regularly buy them. While it’s just a little early to talk of. Fall clothes—it surely isn’t too early to think of them, especially-in view of the fact that prices continue swinging upward. We, of course, with our immense volume of business (the largest in America), prepared away ahead for this Fall’s needs and own our woolens away under existing market prices. oe A choice array of new Monroe Fall Suits are now in from our shops we want you to see them; you'll approve the smart styles shown and you'll be particularly delighted at the saving that will be yours because of getting Monroe Clothes —direct trom the maker —in our low rent Upstairs Shops —from America’s largest clothiers. Seventeen conveniently located Upstairs Monroe Clothes Shops ready to serve you—at a saving indeed worth while. (21. '25- *3o- Direct from maker to you—via the Economy Route. MANHATTAN Sad Sees com erent RASéAu * oPRANKIORT SCORTLAND™ * SWAY. th Se. opp ACAD. suagic ‘34th Street, Cor. B’WAY DROOKLYN.

Other pages from this issue: