The evening world. Newspaper, March 14, 1921, Page 9

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Sen oe Devices atatar tie tractteaetat tanaka ces, 1 aleidt ah. pba aaeiaainetiadaa ih a A ahi an aig Aone i teh Gh) TT Hla) es ) 7,000 OF RED ARMY DESERT TO REBELS BEFORE KRONSTADT enmity Bolsheviki Conduct Campaign of Terrorism in Petrograd to Prevent Defections. WASHINGTON, March 14.—Seven thousand soldiers from the Russian Soviet Army have deserted and gone ever to the anti-revolutionists !n con, trol of the fortress of Kronstadt, ac- cording to State Department advices’ to-day. House to house searches for revo- lutionists and sympathizers with the anti-Bolshevik movement are being carried on by Soviet authorities daily in Petrograd, according to the reports to the State Department. Numbers of executions have been made of revo- lutionists in a campaign of terrorism by the Bolsheviki to prevent further additions to the ranks of the revolu- tlonists HELSINGFORS, March 14.—A vir- tual. ultimatum from the Bolsheviki was received by the Finnish Gov- ernment to-day. ‘The Finns were warned not to communicate with Kronstadt, stronghold of the Russian rebeis. Reports told of increasing agita- tion against the Soviet Government with important defections in South- ern Russia and Siberia. Oranienbaum, a port west of Petro- grad, was said to have capitulated to the rebels Saturday after two days of hard fighting in which the Red casualties reached 400 dead and 1,800 wounded. The town itself was destroyed, largely by the heavy firing on both sides, Sailors who landed there were en reute to Petrograd by land, their Progress covered by an artillery bar- rage from Kronstadt. Ice breakers were cleaving a way into Petrograd) for the warships selzed by the revolu- tionarles. Tamboff, in Southern Russia, cast off the Soviet commissars, Indirect word from Harbin said Red soldiers ‘were deserting their colors and flock- ing to the revolutionary stan- dard. Omsk and Krasnolarsk were said to be centres of that movement. Meanwhile Moscow was said to be making desperate efforts to over- come the resentment of Russian citizens, appcasing the workers by increase in food and clothing allow- | ances. An increased ration was dis- tributed in Moscow and Petrograd. Fifty thousand pairs of shoes col- lected by the Government were issued | to workers. Serious street fighting in Moscow | was reported by the Finnish Tm- bassy. Other sources stated that brown, beaver, a |have positively Sdentified Quigley as - aeons Gen. Budenny had thrown his lot wi the evolutionists, taking 120. v0 | | cavalrymen with him. Sanita BOLSHEVIKI TAKE GEORGIAN SEAPORT) Civilians in Tiflis Slain in Revenge | for Execution of Soviet Mission There. CONSTANTINOPLE, March 13,- The seaport of Poti Georgia, on the Black Sea north of Batum, has been occupied by the Bolshevik, says a de- spatch received here to-day. The re- tiring Georgians burned the coal sheds and left the pore on steamers in @ severe storm. The Turkish Nationalists who re- cently occupied Batum are said to be disarming all incoming Georgian soldiers, and the town of Kutais, fifty miles east of Poti, has been looted. Georgian civilians have been executed in Tiflis by the Bolsheviki occupying the city in revenge for the execution of the Bolshevik Mission there by the Georgians before the latter retired. plates Roesch SAY HE DROVE AUTO THAT KILLED TWO Identified as Man Who Jumped From Stolen ‘Machine at Time of Accident. Joseph M. Quigley, of No. 430 Flush- ing Avenue, Brooklyn, was arrested at his home early to-day on a homicide charge, in connection with the death of two women who a week ago last Saturday night were struck by an au- tomobile. ‘They were Mrs. Bessie Wentck andy her sister-in-law, Mrs. Mrs. Mary Wenick, both of No. 648 Marcy Avenue, Brooklyn. Three other persons were seriously injured and are in the Beth Moses Hospital. ‘The automobile was owned by Oscar | fy Jackson, an insurance broker, of No, 8502 Ridge Boulevard, whose chauffeur, Charles Kammerer, No. 716 Bedford Avenue, was first arrested Kammerer insisted that the automo- bile had just been stolen from in front of his home and that the thief had been driving it when the accident occurred. The police said to-day that persons the man who jumped out of the auto- mobile after the accident and fled. He | was arraigned in Court. DEFENDS TAKING TIP. Indicted Custows Man seen No Wrong—Didn’t Demand It. Isidor Cohen, a customs inspector, indicted a month ago on a charge of the Bridge Plaza accepting money presents from persons | if whose baggage or imports he had in- spected, raised a novel point in a de- murrer to the indictment he filed in the |} Federal Court to-day. The point is, virtually, a customs inspector ought to be allowed to accept fees if he doesn't ask for them. The demurrer points out there ts no charge in the indictment Cohen “so- Ucited, asked or demanded” money. On argument of the demurrer Cohen's counsel will attack the provision of Tariff Act which makes it an offe for a Government employee in the tor ti FE OWT ERE, CURLY ° ial \THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, MARCH 1%, 1921.” day on the piers which will be con- tinued until every man has been laid in his last resting place, Services will be held Wednesday a Transport Somme Docks at Hobokin With First Large Arrival of War Dead. The U. S. Army transport Somme arrived at the Government piers, Ho- boken, to-day, bringing the bodies of 1,609 soldiers, of whom 1,598 were killed in action, This is the first large arrival of the ‘bodies of men killed in battle and buried in cemeteries close to the spot where they fell, ‘Two hundred and fifty of the 27th Division New York National Guard troops were among the dead of the Somme's cargo. There were others from the 77th Division, the 30th, the Ist and 2d Divisions, and five bodies of men of the 165th Infantry of the 424 Division. The dead of the 27th fell in the battle in which the Min- denberg line was smashed. Jl the bodies, except thirteen from the American forces in Germany taken on at Antwerp, were taken to the Somme at Calais from the cemetery at Bony, France. On the transport were 587 soldiers returning home for discharge on the IN AP WE THE This week we must Attractive, snappy 119—She fold Cracker & Cheese Dish $15.00 UST one shop on Fifth Avenue! Yet the name of Ovington’s is as well- known to Seattle as it is to Dallas—the shop is as famous with the discrimi- nating shoppers of Park Avenue, St. Paul, as it is with those of Park Ave-~ nue, New York. OVINGTON'S » The Gift Shop of 5th Ave.” 314 Fifth Ave., nr. 324 St. of fur. Many a year may this week. al season’s use. following: Wondertui Sale of An Woon sktet Este. SUITS age TOPCOATS Natural ith Ave. Tailors. Mink $ ‘50 $499.50 Values if to 12: to $80 Wraps ’ ; COTES 206-7 Sixth Av | 1] Full Lensth G. Altman & Co. MADISON AVENUE-FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK Thirty-fourth Street For to-morrow (Tuesday) An Extraordinary Offering of Women’s Marvex Glacé Kidskin Gloves (short length) in plain white, and white with black stitching; plain ‘black, and black with white stitching; and in gray, pearl, nd light tan at the phenomenally low price of $2.75 per pair Marvex Gloves (manufactured im France) are too well and favorably known to need any recommendation. will present a worth-while opportunity for purchasing fine-quality gloves at a money-saving price. (Sale on the First Floor) Taupe or |] Australian Opossum BOAS vd Brown FOX BOAS Thirty-fifth Street This Sale Machines, as illu trated, a $5 7:50 DIRECT SALE FROM WHOLESALER TO CONSUMER The JACKMAN guarantee is back of every garment we sell. remaining Coats and Wraps (about 500 in number) to make room for the abundant supply of new Spring furs that our factory is producing. Boas in all the most wanted varieties and Wraps of the high standard that we produce can be purchased at so low a price as we will close these out at It will pay to buy them NOW for next Amidst these hundreds of beautiful Scarfs and Coats are to be found the ‘at hata | a | an (atte La FREE STORAGE first year on purchases made at this SALE WM. JACKMAN’S SONS America’s Largest Wholesale Furriers 35-37-39 WEST 35th STREET ESTABLISHED ES) a SEWING MACHINES ON CREDIT UP TO $110, OPEN MONDAY AND SATURDAY EVENING s morning in the plier shed over the New York soldicrs. The coffins of the New York men were separated fom the others and grouped at one end of the pier for this ceremony € up Pont tm Greece. | A March 14 (Associated | Press).—Kdward Capps, American Min- | ister Greece, retired from his post yesterday, turning over the legation to! Barton Hall, the First Secretary, who. will act as charge d'affaires until the arrival of the successor of Mr. Ca) who probably _ return to Amer! within a month, A END move out our last little Scarfs and pass before Coats Natural Hudson Raccoon Seal Coats Wraps ster Full Length ‘200 Natural Fitch BOAS 2 Skins *16 *300 Our Easy Payment Pian Applies Ev ery where within 150 Miles of New York. We Furnish Apartm | and Homes on Weekly or Monthly Payments. and Cortina Foreign Lan- guage Records Serene Stern Brothers — West 42nd Street (Between 5th and 6th Avenues) West 43rd Sti Announcing a Continuation of Our Extraordinary Value-giving Sale of Women’s Tailored Spring Suits’ $4950) LONG: “donde: line effects developed in Poiret, Twill, | Tricotine, Hairline Stripes and Oxford Cloths of an. unusually fine grade. Handsomely finished and silk lined.’ Colors comprise: Grey, Beaver, Rookie, Navy Blue and Black. Sizes 34 to 5014 bust. An Exceptional Feature Sale for To-morrow will comprise an excellent, high-grade assortment of * WOMEN’S Fashionable STRAP PUMPS | 3 at $7. 45 per pair | | mE A decisive, worth-while concession on the a originally quoted for these highly desirable Pumps. Black or Tan Calfskin with welted soles and walking heels. The Spring Display of RIBBONS i Featuring new novelties in Foreign and Domestic Ribbons, suitable % = > for Sashes, Girdles, Lingerie, Millinery and other trimming purposes. __Espee ial attention is directed to our collection of Frin, Sashes— Fashion's latest innovation for this season’s costumes. Very Special Values for Tuesday: i ie — = : ce ene ei At A A A A CE a a tt i AA LLL LLL LLL | OA AA '¥ Self-Colored Jacquard Ribbon , © qT 744-in., per yard. 7T8e Pink or Blue. rane i i Satin Taffeta Ribbon Fancy Warp Ribbon ¥ | ff 9 | - 5%-ins., 48¢ 7 ins, 62c ya. 534 ins, 39c 61 ins. 45¢ ya. jf , 4 \ Imported Jacquard Lingerie Ribbon a | i j » No.1 114 2 3 5 we A ni 48¢ 58 75c 95c $1.35 | “\ ia} (Formerly 90c to $2.40) White, Pink or Blue. Per piece of 934 yards. Featur'ng the Season’s newest textile innovations in Wool Dress Fabrics a Coatings as produced for Spring and Summer 1921, by the foremost fabric originators. <: yy. 4 Included in the display are Twill Cords, Piquetine and Poiret Twill. ae EXCEPTIONAL OFFERINGS for TO-MORROW: All Wool Tricotine and Poiret Twill— 5+ inches wide; choice quality; dress and suiting weight: complete assortment of new Spring colors and Black. Yd. Imported All Wool Velour Checks— 54 inches wide; a select assortment of color combinations, including Brown and ‘Tan or Brown and Blue. - - - Yard Imported All Wool Plaids and Checks— A choice assortment of Tartan Plaids, Black and White or Blue and White Checks. - - - - - - + - - Yard All. Wool Fine Twill Serge— ” 54 inches wide; soft finish; superior quality; Navy Blue and Black. = + - = + ‘2 © © © * 9 930 a ee

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