The evening world. Newspaper, March 28, 1922, Page 6

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* Cousin of Girl’s Father Said tion with the disappearance of 2 year-old Tda Kramer from her home = here last Saturday night ~ Gloucester County that Miss ‘Tannen- “will be _. Woman Arrested THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MARCH oo 28, 1922. as Abductor (Of Kramer Girl Near Camden ooo to Have Been Seen With Her. WOODBURY, N. J, March 28. - Miss Fsther Tannenbaum of Camden NX. J., was arrested to-day in connec seven- A Mary Doe warrant charging abduction was served upon the woman after she hed een examined by Camden County Authorities. Three men identified her fas the woman seen to board a trolley ear in Woodbury Saturday night with & whimpering and reluctant child and Jeave the car nenr the New York Ship- * pallding plant in Camden. She pro- tested her innocence as she was taken to the Gloucester County Jail in ‘Woodbury. Miss Tannenbaum, who Is twenty - fight years old, was questioned last Bight after Mrs. Kramer, the missing @hild’s mother, told Sheriff Clark of baum had endeavored to revive a love affair with ber husband. According ~\g0 Mre. Kramer, Miss Tannenbaum attempted to communicate with Kramer on the telephone, and when the wife hung up the receiver each time Miss Tannenbaum summoned him to a public telephone by mes- wenger. Kramer is a butcher and Miles Tanvenbaum a saleswoman. ‘When the child disappeared Kiamer fold the police he thought it was a @ase of revenge. He named no one. ‘The child disappeared cai Satur: @ay night after her parents given CALDER BACKS PLAN FOR U. S. FIREARM LAW Would Meguinte ‘Thetr Oaking, Sale and Transportation. Advocacy of a Federal law regulating the manufacture, sale and transportation of firearms by Supreme Court Justices | 4 Kapper and Lewis of Brooklyn | * prompted United States Senator Calder and some of the Represeptatives in . Congress from Brooklyn to arrange for a conference with the object of fram! Sand infroducing bills of that charac “im both Houses of Congrese fzed by all police and prosecu ficials and Judges of the courts | city and State that the Sullivan without merit so long as pistols can be ) purchased in New Jersey or Connecticut ‘or obtained by parcel post Previous efforts to obtain action © along this line in the Congress have been futile. It is probable that the bills introduced before the close of the present Congressional session, al- = though action upon them before ad- dgurnment is not likety 104 KRAMER... her permission to play with a neigh bor's children, ‘Dhere-is no clue to the child's whereabouts SENATORS TO BE HERE TO MEET LAST U. S. DEAD Committee Appointed to Witness Arrival ef Bodies. WASHINGTON, March 28,—The Sen It be represented at New York jay, when the last of the bodies d American soldiers afrive from by the following committer: Senators Calder, Iepublican, New York; Fernald, Republican, Maine; tT, Republican, Missouri: Prous |, Democrat, Loulsiana, and Harris rat, Georgia, The Senat was appointed by Vice F Coolidge. A committee of five pointed several days ago to represent the House. —— LMATAN RU REPORT TO BE TO-DAY. WASHINCE March 28.—The re port of Mrs. Alexander P. Moore Lillian Russell) on immigration con- Gitions abroad will be presented to President Harding late to-day, Re Connection With Any Other Cetablichment it the World Ww © RTH Which Type of Coat Do You Like For Spring If You Wear Tailor-mades You'll appreciate the tailored man- nish lines of this Silvertip Bolivia box coat. If you have been shop- ping for this type of coat, you'll realize » what an extraordinary value this is at 30” ? If NewiColors Appeal tosYou Then this coat-of Shawsheen will appeal for its new colorings as well as for its chic lines. Ladybird, Filbert, Eagle, Corsair, as wel as Navy and Black. Lined with, Crepe de Chine, 40% All sizes for Women and. Misses Professor Aids Friend, Nabbed Asa Bootlegger Morris Carried Parcels for Hea quarters and Now Look Where He Is. Sometimes it doesn't pay to help a friend, Edwin H. Morris, sixty-three, of Sparkill, N. ¥., has learned. Mr. Morris, a former college professor and an authority om poultry, came to New y Saturday. On Front Street he mot a friend laden with parcels. After 4 short alk they discovered they wero both going to the Cortlandt Street Forry Mr. Morris obligingly picked up one of the bundles and started off a few steps ahead of his friend toward the ferr Policeman Johnson of the Old Slip Station had seen the, little epl- d didn't like the look of it have you there?" he asked Mr, A 8 “1 don't know what's in it giving my friend a lift." Johnson undid the bundle and~ you've guessed tt—there was whiskey five bottles of it To-day Mr I'm Morris told his story to Magistrate McAndrews in Centre Street Court Assistant District At- torney Baldwin believed it and recom- mended the prisoner's discharge. The police have the five bottles, Mr. Mor- ris has his liberty, but what has his frind? No Quiet Spot on the Earth Now; Expect Jazz at the Pole--Amundsen + |.|Explorer Who Is Here for New Adventure to the Arctic to Use Radiophone. There isn't @ quiet spot on the face of the earth any more—not a desert nor an ocean nor a sleepy Main Street where @ man can be sure that the jazz of Broadway and the jazzed poll- tice’ of a dozen cappals and the new- est mother-in-law joke won't follow him Capt Roald “Amundsen, who aid manage to ‘‘get away from the din and turmoil of civilization’ when he discovered the South Pole in 1911, has no such hope in connection wit) his new venture, which is to spend tie next four or five years in an cifort to drift across the Arctic Basin in (he tight little Maud He reached New York to-day on the Stavangerfjord “The difference between this expe dition and the earlier ones,"’ he said ‘as that we shall never be out of hea ing of the rest of the world. ‘The wireless telephone is thé reason. No matter where we may be drifting the voices of the world will be at om cars and we shall be able fo send our own voices back." Kven at the North Pole, if he should happen to come across it (which is no part of the purpose of the expedi- tion, although it might very well hap- pen). he will be able to listen in on the news of the world. And if the fast as it has of late he may be able to sit beneath the Aurora Borealis with a receiver at his ear and pick up the newest popular song from a Broadway cabaret. He intends to take two airplanes along and make a few side trips from the drifting Maud. Capt. Amundsen expects to start from Seattle not later than June 1, in order to take advantage of currents which, he says, will give him’ a good getaway, He hopes to emerge be- tween Norway and Greenland. pL ative | heen BURY MOTHER AND 3 SLAIN BABIES TO-DAY (Special to The Fo cning World.) GREBNWIOH, Conu,, March 28— Henry Bacher was temporarily released from custody by the police this morn- ing to be paroled in he custody of his counsel, William ©. Rungee, so he could attend thefuneral of his wife and three murdered Phildren this afternoon Bacher said that he was at his home to visit his children Sunday morning, but did not speak to his wife. Julia Flealey of New York, a sister, came to see her in the afternoon and Bacher believes that something transpjred be- tween them which led his wife to mur- der the childfen, Bacher had been new science continues to develop as! held for investigation and as a witness, FRANK X. McCAFFRY OF BROOKLYN, DEAD Frank X. MoCaffry, former Asmstant District Attorney of Kings County, and one of the most prominent lawyers in Brooklyn died at St, Catherine's Hos- pital to-day, after # prolonged illness following a nervous breakdown about & year ago, He was fifty-six years old, a widower and lived at No. 117 Bain- bridgé Street. He in survived by Mrs. James E. Burke, a daughter, of No. 295 Parkside Avenue; William E. Of ‘y, a broth- er, and two cisterns, Miss Kathryn Mc- Cattry and Mrs. Pav y ng ihe 9 SUNSET dost thou feel thou must climb a ladder to look a stiake in the eye? Eat dates and thou shalt feel exalted as the Tower of Wool- worth.” ~The Wise Man of the Eats Dromedary Dates 10¢ IN THE PERSONAL PACKAGE Price proud! Hosiery is today a more ‘conspicuous item of dress than it has ever been before. For the world it must have elegance. For you it must have long mileage endurance. Phoenix leads in world sales for men, women and children because it satisfies these two requirements in a remarkable way. There is ever a thrill of de- light in the surety that so much can be purchased for so little. PHOENIX HOS IERY Franklin Simon a Co, A Store of Individual Shops FIFTH AVENUE, 37th and 38th STS, By For Children —~ Girls or Boys UNDERWEAR FOR SPRING AND SUMMER WEAR The days are growing lighter and underwear follows suit! , Children’s cotton gauze waist | union suits. 2tergyrs. 1,00 Girls’ fine ribbed cotton union suits, low neck, sleeveless, . knee length, 2% 76 yrs. 1.15t01.35 according to size Girls’ Swiss sheer ribbed lisle thread vests; low neck, sleeveless French band top. ¢%z6 yrs. .50 Misses’ athletic union suits of pink or white crossbar batiste, regu- larorbodicetop. z¢78yrs, 1.50 Boy’s cotton gauze union suits, athletic style. 1.00 ¢ to 16 yrs. Cuitpren’s UnpERWEAR Suop—Street Floor FOURTEENTH STREET Founded 1827 WEST OF FIFTH AVENUE MUSIC DEPARTMENT SUGGESTS THESE New Records for Your Phonograph PRICES ARE SPECIAL RECORDS 44 1 1132 {Ansel cniid Fox Trot { Somewhere in Naples. Fox Trot. 1126 {ga UGoodbye Shanghai. Fox Trot. ie -¥ . Fox Trot (From ( Veneti Love Boat. 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Old Fashioned Girl While Miami Dreams, Who Believed in You Gray Bweetheart of Mine Miamt Moon. ‘While You Are Smiling Somebody Ories, See Pages 8 and 23 for Other Hearn Advertising, New Facts New Figures New Subjects 1922 WORLD ALMANAC NOW ON SALE 35c on Stands By Mail 50c ADDRESS NEW YORK WORLD, NEW YORK CITY

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