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

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{DNIPPED BABYS MOTHER GETS TWO M DEMANDS Wentz Threaten Violence if Money Is Not Paid. Mra; Elsa Wentz, No. 725 Home ” Street, Bronx, received a letter this morning demanding $250 for the safe return of her stolen baby and threat- ‘ failed the child relying chiefly on their own efforts its bead sent to her by mail. There were two letters, both appar- ‘antly from the same person. One de- manded the money and gave detailed instructions for its delivery. The other was marked with a skull and cross bones and a black hand, It referred to the first letter and said: “No fooling—no marked bille—oo police.” Mra, Wents was made almost hys- terieal by the two letters, but she courageously turned them both over to the police, and detectives are working on them, They have tried to convince Mrs. Wents that the threats will not be carried out. ‘The baby, Arthur, elght weeks old, was stolen about ten days ago from its carriage in front of a Bronx de- partment store. The police since then have made no progress in the search, and Mr. and Mrs. Wentz have been QUALITY MEATS—PROVISIONS— POULTRY : _ SUBSTANTIAL SAVING FRIDAY and SATURDAY Loin of PORK OFFICE AND WARBHOUSE, 517 WEST 16TH fang 2 a Any Girl Could Do It clothes—well you're wrong. She jouses or fade or get yellow she Tinfexes them. That wonderful maize evening dress = hes J eae ee hast wi george! ec dress—tin' 5 There's wonderful peach shade lown to You know it's only 10 cents.” Hd agreed bite | fiery, Aig) sate solvin, nful of e mi ie powder “in'« palon of luke-warm water. ‘You know you don't have to boil Tintex—all you do is to dip the dress up and down uniil you get the shade you want.” le lan as e ee for the at tin Sy T can go to the house now. {othe meanwhile, I'H tint all my faded and yellowed underwear and blouses. Thi it was so easy to use Ti Have you tried Ti Ady. 30 Cts, a Lb. ’ met THE EVENING WORLD, would be killed with a hammer and fotowed tetiee ney metone ‘oer and refused to discues the new devel: opment. Mra. Wentz did not make public the instructions sne hed re- ceived for paying the ransom de- manded. AUTO IN CRASH CARRYING WOMEN One Man Killed and Another Injured in Collision With Physician’s Car. An automobile sent out by the Mar- mon Company through the Bay Ridge section of Brooklyn to collect {ts strike bound employees was struck at Bighth Avenue and 44t! Street this morning by a car owned by Dr. Morris Cohen of No. 1820 46th Street, ‘The Marmon car was knocked »ver the curb of Eighth Avenuo and over- turned, Walter H. Preiss of No, 9620 127th Street, Richmond Hill was instantly killed. Frank Brenkerhoff of No. 620 1224 Street, Richmond Hill, Edna and Josephine Reilly of No. 1780 46th Street, Johanna Lannigan of No, 18 First Street, Brooklyn, and May and Loretta McGinnis, who were in the Marmon car, were sent to the Sama- ritan Hospital, as was Mrs. Anne Bleinstein, of No, 1482 41st Street, who was in Dr, Cohen's car and whose jaw was broken, George Smith of No. 3110 Fulton on FRIDAY, AUGUST TO WORK; SI HURT Street, the driver of the Marmon Company's car was detained by the police a8 a witness. The police were told that Dr. Cohen was at the wheel of his own car when the accident ut were not able to find bepome of him. It was he was hurt and was taken to the home of friends. ——_——. POLES OCCUPY MINSK. Setse City 200 Miles Kast Border of Province. newapapers there that tl bordera of the old province of Poland. It is the capital of the old Russian rovince of Minsk, sltuated near the Border of the province of Vilna. and Shout 168 miles aouthesst of the city of ina, Beef and “Pep” AL Beef is the Body Builder. There are few foods that put such pressure be- hind human energy. How many ever think of the months and years of effort that have gone into the making of this healthful food. Producers have given years to improvement of breeds of cattle in order that your piece of beef may be more juicy and tender. . Nothing is more savory than a cut of fine, juicy There is no substitute for beef. ; Easy of digestion, its life-giving properties pro- . mote growth and stimulate appetite. New vim and vigor are imparted to growing children. The worker has his labor-worn tissues replaced by beef. American National Live Stock Association National Wool Growers’ Asscciation Cattle Ralsers’ Association of Texas Corn Belt Meat Producers’ Association of lowa Kansas Live Stock Association Southern Cattlemen's Association Panhandle and Southwestern Stockmen's Association HUVAGQOG000O0UEOUUUUAAQUAERLUOGLOGOOANOUUUGOONAAEOEEDUUGGOOADANTOUOOEOOSUOROOAGEMARESUUUGL Association Republished by the Amprican Ment Packers’ hiss nv tnaiatin Anxiety to Learn to Make Bead Bags Leads to Strange Complications, Miss Gertrude M. Farrell of No. of] 114 West 114th Street has learned PARIS, Aug. 8.—Dispatches from|®°™ething new about the American Warsaw carry the announcement by the| soldier, He is willing to go to jail— Polish troops | « “ have occupied ithe city of Minsk, "be thrown in,” in hig own language— a to learn how to do things which will Minak is some 200 miles east of the| convince his wor.:1 folks at home that he really loves them (or her). Miss Farrell was a teacher of the blind in the New York public schools before she volunteered to be sent sal they hate beds ‘tickled, alll ii i | the A. E. F. as a teacher of war blinded soldiers. After all the blind soldiers were sent home she was asked to remain and continue her other causes than eye trouble, “I went into the wards and found ing at the beaver board Geilings and more often than not talking to them- selves, which isn't good for the human boy. And: when I asked them it they wanted to learn bead work they woke up and looked at me as though I were a boogy-boo from out of @ nightmare and then they burst out laughing and showed me their big clumsy hands and roared like bables the first time they understand “So then I'd tell them that if they really wanted to they could make one of those bead bags like those the other fellows brought back from Paris and send it to their mother. It wasn't long after that before they went to work. “But the real trouble came when, mistakenly, I began to concentrate on the naughty boys who were put in the prison ward of the hofpital be- cause they were just too nervous and cross to be good. They seemed to need occupation more than the others. But when one of the men who had been ‘thrown in’ tried to smuggle out fa note (which was confiscated). in which he said to another buddie’ ‘You better do something to get in here even if it’s going A. W. O. L. because they learn you how to make those bead bags that you look at in Paris and can't buy because you've blown all your jack.’"" BOLSHEVISTS TERRORIZE SOUTHWEST HUNGARY Allied Troops Keep Order in Buda- pest, but Prominent Men Are Slain Outside City. BUDAPEST, Aug. 6 (United Preas).— While Allied troops are maintaining order in Budapest, the Bolsheviki are reported to have seized control in south- western Hungary and are said to be slaughtering the bourgeoisie population. Secret murders of hundreds of vic- time during the Bolshevik regime were just becoming known. The victims in- eluded Gen. Fery, who was lynched and thrown in the Danube, and Col, Borhy, who was shot and thrown in the river. The terrorist, Abraham Kohn, ho Was arrested to-day, boasted in an inter- view that he hi committed eighty |murders under the orders of Tibor | Seamuely, one of the Bolshevik leaders, | The murderers of Count Tisza, who |was killed under orders from a Soviet jcommissary, also are known. Army Stocks for 400,000,000, PARIS, Aug. 8.—An agreement for the sale of American Army’ stocks in France 4 yesterda cho de Pari: France will not rate of exchange which prevails at present. srunecemianlpiescncemenss Hoover Goes to V! PARIS, . Lorbert Hoover, Chatrman of the Inte Allied Relief Organization, left last night with Brig.’ Gen, Harry H. Band- holtz, for Vienna, He will be gone for about two weeks and during that time will visit virtually all the central Huropean capitals investigating food and economic conditions, fal aa Treeps and Police at Posen Mutiny. BERLIN. Aug. 7. Uce stationed at Posen, Prussia, mutined to-day and attacked several oMcers, said a despatch to the Vorwaerts, A number of the officers were wounded, “Lost and Found” article « pdvertions in The World or reported Bureau.” Ti work among the men disabled from them lying flat on their backs star- | that arrangements were | ‘Troops and po-| ih 8, A. E.F. Boys Willing to Go to Jail WOMEN FAINT AS AUTO KILLS e Love for Women Folk MEN IN STRIKE JAM First Death as Direct Result of B, R. T. Trouble at Williams- burg Bridge Plaza. ‘The first death as a direct result of the strike occurred this morning near the Williamsburg Bridge plaza, when a man believed to be John Morena was killed when he was struck by an auto- mobile. Trucks laden with employees of the Craske Felt Company of No. 80 Lafayette Street, Manhattan, The truck was being driven by Barney Neu- bar, 22 yeara old, of No. Henry Street, Winfeld, Le #. It was coming along South Fourth Street when Mo- Tens stepped off another truck directly in front. died on his way to the Williamsburg Hospital. A card was found in hif pocket bearing the name John Morena, with a number on Con- welyea Street torn off. A number of women in) the autom fainted. FIRST DEMAND OF ALLIES FOR TRIAL OF GERMAN Ask Surrender of Gen. Kruska, Ac- cused of Causing Epidemic in Prison Camp. LONDON, Aug. &—The surrender of Gen. Kruska, Commander of the Ger- man prison camp at Kaiser, has been demanded by the Allies as the first of the enemy officials to be tried for vio- lations of international law during the war, according to a Copenhagen de- apatch to the Exchange sraph Company quoting Berlin advices. Gen. Kruska is accused of havin) responsible for an, epidemic’ of been. typhus fever at the Kaiser samp which caused the deaths of 3,000 Fre: prisoners, One Trial Proves ~ PCr) Sure Rel BELLAN Buy Now WONT. deal more. 1514 Third Ave., Near 85th St. 2331 143 West 20th Street ( Order your Clothes at any of our stores NOW, and save $10 to $15 on every garment. We own large quantities of woolens for considerably eee ved de cere fy arb NOT only does our maker-to wearer tailoring system prices. ‘e could take ad- cut out all middlemen’s profits, but it assures vantage of the situation you of clothes to fit YOUR figure as well as your by selling them at very much higher prices, BUT WE We're going to give you the whole benefit. But don’t many suits now as you can afford—the same garments a size. little later will cot @ great 251 Ave., Near 23d St. 691 ‘Ave., Bet. 43d and 44th St. ighth Ave, 1 door above 125th Headquarters). 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