The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 31, 1919, Page 9

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wg ze Transports Reach ae N. Y. With YORK, March 31.—The fol-) ports arrived here to Siboney and Alaskan. The ts scheduled to arrive this on the Maui was Rrig. B. wry, com the 73rd infantry brigade and companies of the infantry, 65 officers and 2,617 ‘the majority of whom were Camp Sherman. | Organizations were casual| “1286, New Jersey; 1227, Carolina; 1228, INinols, and and special casual T4l, 73rd infantry brigade § 15 casual officers and E convalescent detachments 181 to 135 inclusive. Alaskan were the 46th field and staff; Second and b headquarters com | TTSTEIN LOSES HIS THE SEATTLE STAR—MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1919. MAY SERVE 10 ~ YEAR SENTENCE | Jury Finds Real Estate Deal- er Guilty Sentence on William Gott. stein, convicted Saturday night for the second time, of the mur. der of John Murray in the Des Moines woods last October, will probably be pronouncey in Judge Calvin 5. Hall's department of the superior court néxt Satur. day, unless held up by motion for a new trial, The minimum sentence Gottstein can receive under the second-degree murder conviction, is ten years in the penitentiary. | Gottstein, who was granted a new trial by Judge A. W. Frater, after | being convicted of the crime last November, walked room composedly, but broke down | U. S. Veterans pany; mess detachment, medical de tachment and companies ©, F, G, HH, I, K, L, and M, 40 officers and 2,081 men, and casual companies 604 and 611, There were 3,297 officers and men on the Siboney, of the following or ganizations: 36%rd infantry, head quarters, Second battalion supply company and companies I, G and H, 39 officers and 861 men; 364th infantry, field and staff headquar ters, Third battalion, ordnance and medical detachments, headquarters supply and machine gun companies and companies A, B, I, K, L and M, 51 officers and 2,069 men; casual company No. 612, New York; special casual compantes 618 and 619, St Nazaire convalescent detachment | No, 180 and two casual officers, — | The Culgoa has 104 men of the| following casual companies; 282, Ar kansas; 283, Texas; 274 North Caro. With @ debonair wave of his hand, Robert BH. Cade n of three | rs’ service in Uncle Sam's infan: | try, stepped out of the cockpit of an | Airplane 3,800 feet above Camp Lew is, Sunday afternoon, Less than two | minutes later he stood safely on the | ground, at almost the tdentical «pot | | from which the “ship” had taken off. | In his descent he proved the safety | |and efficiency of a newly invented |nomfoul parachute, the fabrication of W. P. Watkins, Perey Barnes, | | Lakeview aviator, piloted the ma-| chine from which Cadden made his | leap. As a parachute jumper, the soldier is a novice; in fact, he had fever | been off the ground in an airplane until last Wednesday, The first | thing he said when he was greeted | by the inventor of the parachute, after landing safely, was | “I wouldn't have missed the sensa tion for a million dollars, and we | puli@d the stunt, didn’t we? More than @ thousand people preparations for the | into the court ‘Drops From Clouds to Prove Parachute Safe| BATTLE FO OFFICER LOSES — CUFFS IN PARK Somewhere in Town Is Girl With His Bracelets Somewhere in our fair city a 16. year-old girl in wearing a pair of! bracelets that did not belong to her pendable parachute for aviators before Saturday night. They ure of | Cadden, wh« ade the leap yester.| polished at highly durable and} day, in 24 years old. His home ig at | double locked, and Park Officer Roy ellevue, where his her, Mrs, J.| Davis, of Woodland park, is minus F. Cadden, lives, The soldier has| his handcuffs. been discharged, and is now living at| According to a report mode by Da the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ club, Se-| Vis, he attempted to arrest Christ | atte, | Hartwig, proprietor of a grocery at) |901 W. 41st st, and the unknown |girl Saturday night, for being in Veterans Receive | Woodland park when others were Bonus on Release sre Davis handcuffed the girl, but Against the practice of Hartwig put up a fight, and during | 1 attorneys collect. |%¢ Melee the girl fled. ing the $60 veterans’ bonus on com Hartwig is held in the elty jail on| Mission basia, and announcing that |“! OPen charge. The girl's where the men are now being paid at the |®20Ut# are unknown. time of their release from Capt. HL A. Zillman, According to aviatior ont proves the efflewey of th se Watkins expects to continue the im provement of his invention by expert: | ment, and will enter the parachute | in competition with other such de! vices at Long Island next summer. A prize of $5,000 has been offered by the Aero club of America for a de Warning claim agents RF | the REE DOM Three Units of 91st Division Reach U.§ NEW YORK, March 31,—Heroces ot the Argonne! Every man with a record of at least one big engage ment and many of them with sev- eral in their experience during nine months of foreign service in France, 58 officers and 4,769 enlisted men of the Gist division, arrived in New York on the British liner Aquitania yesterday. They sailed from Brest Mareh Irkanizations represented were 16int field artillery brigade headquarters and 347th and 348th field arullery regiments. Storms off the coast delayed the arrival of the vessel, upon which the Gist arrived by almost 24 hours. Suffers Casualties Six brigadier generals and one ma- jor general were among the passen- gers, Brig, Gen. Beverly Bayne of Virginia being in command of the Vist troops, The division from the Northwest has suffered heavily in usualties, as is indicated in the Harold H. Huston, 221 Leary ing, Seattle. Others from Seattle included: vate Swan A. England, 816 Union Corporal H. H. Hunter, 1020 Denny way; Private Frank D i Dextor Horton bank; Gerald Grant, Seattle Car & Foundry, pany; Musician EB. M. Basse, Boylston ave; Musician Nathan: Busby, 1123 26th ave; Corporal rion B. EAwards, 1534 44th ave; vate Martin L. Adama, 116 Bast wt; Private Richard D. Johnson, West 74th st; Private Leo J. som, 440 North 52nd st; Private, thur E. Glennon, 130 North 84th Private Everett W. Hilton, 651% st; Private Arni T. Stray, Wagoner Russell J. Burton, Brooklyn ave; Private Zickrick, 3030 Kenyon st; Royal L. Forlefer, 1211 Olive geant Alvah J, Jeamer, vate Donald B, McCarthy, 1482 56th st; Private Daniel HL 6504 Brooklyn ave; Private T. Berg, New Richmond lina, 289, scattered; 292, Louisiana; | 298, Pennsylvania. | | The French liner La Lorraine ar © | rived later with 880 passengers, in cluding 287 officers and soldiers of when verdict waa announced. He | Watched the was led from the courtroom, sobbing | M#&Mt the battle against wind and | ana moaning. rain, as Aviator Barnes pushed his umber of replacements in the units arriving yesterday, The gaps were representing the secr Washington, fas announced, in a vate Robert A. Columbia, 610 Thth st.; Private Gustay Olson, Diapepsin at once ends | ‘"* following casual companies: 2.476 acidity, gas, hit Back! Your stom. fy acid, gassy and you feel eating or you have/ Of indigestion pain or) Never mind. Here is regulars, 2,417 scattered, 2478 South| ‘The caso went to the jury at 5/%h!P UP and up, and finally the oli Carolina, 2480 Yebraska and 2,481/p. m., and a verdict was reached |™&% when Cadden was sean to climb seattered; special casualty company, | at 10:30, Judge Hall being sum-| Ver the edge of the fuselage and 2.474, for discharge, and four casual | moned from his home. |@rop into space. officers. At the first trial, Gottatein was| Within 70 feot, It in estimated, the The 347th field artillery, 50 ofti-| found ultty of murder in the firat |Parachute opened. Cadden says it cers and 2,708 men from Camps | “e#ree, and faced a penalty of ute | wan only about Arts 9g Gat he Sherman, Funston, Lowis and Dodge | !™prisonment. didn't feel the slightest jolt. Becnuse arrived at Camp Merritt today, hay.|, He was found guilty of murder | Of ben geqercae Aor yggann i wee Se Ing reached port yesterday on the |! the second degree Saturday, | ously considered’ postponing | the Aquitanta. ‘They will be stationed at| Which means @ ten-year minimum | 10, Dut the sauller prinelpal would the campa from which they were|®¢Btence, and aa many more years | NOt hear je Was eager for the sent, prodably within a week or two. | the judge may determine. thrill During his trip down, made in } The other organizations arriving . ont he tie it tools the on the Aquitania went to Camps JURY FINDS CAPTAIN |than on-tenth the time it took the the altitude from message to representatives of the} commission on training camp activi ties, that the soldiers are being re turned from Europe as rapidly as military necessity and tonnage. will | permit, All drafted men must be re turned to civil life not more than four months after peace has been | made, under the selective draft law FOR ACCIDENT Clarence West Dies of Hurts and Wall Is Low pir salto Responsibility for the death of| Clarence West, 3450 W. 60th #t., who BELGIAN CONSUL SAYS | Sirence Moet. 2450 Ww: com nt. who PEOPLE WILL RECOVER) met. aa the result of injuries suf. # |fered Saturday morning, when he ‘The Belgians feel that the Amer: | was struck by an auto, will be fixed feans saved them not only from star-| hy a coroner's jury at 10 a m, Wed filled mostly wiht troops from Towa, Nebraska, the Dakotas and Minne- ota. The hardest fighting in which the division participated was the great Argonne drive. From September 26 until the second phase of the attack in mid-October, the 91st played an important part in this fight. It was stationed almost in the center of the American army's sector during the attack, being flanked on the north by the 35th and on the south by the 87th divisions. After the signing of the armistice, the Northwesterners were attached Sixth ave. airplane to get | vation, but from mlavery,” declared | nesday, The driver of the automo-|to the army of occupation and have Joweph A. Hertogs, Belgian vice con: | pie, W. 8. Wetzell, 8018 2st ave, N.|been thru Belgium into Luxemburg. sul, In an address to the King Coun-| w.,’ was released on $1,000 bail Sat-| Later they occupied part of the Cob- ty Democratic club Saturgay, at the | urday afternoon. lenz sector. Good Eats cafeteria. He predicted) Ww. gs, Wall, 56, of 3645 W. 50th st,| On board the vessel were 20 brides | that Belgium will recover from the| who was hit by the aame machine, isjof American soldiers, all from Eng- war in two or three years, if given | in a precarious condition at the city|iand. Most of the husbands were the means to till her soll and start| hospital. He is suffering from brok-|on board, but «aw their wives only her factories going, Telling of the| on ribs and a possible fracture of the |at meal times. | suffering in Belgium during th jekull. His condition Monday morn The 91st troops were transferred man occupation, he read # price lst !ing was pronounced iraproved lfrom the ship to debarkation camps showing that utter cont $4.50 a| —_—-——— near here, where they will go thru pound, mact $8.50, war bread $1.10, a Jeanitation processes before entrate- sult of clothes $150 and shoes $50 a| HOSPITAL PATIENTS ing for demobilization camps in the pair, Mrs. Victoria Trumbull de-| EAT COSTLY TROUT | Wrest. Most of them will eventually scribed od in the serine’ Inve Passed in the interest Of) penpING, March M.—~Patients in|be released from Camps Kearny, — the Mammoth Copper Company‘s| Funston and Lewis. NEW I jhoxpital at Kennett yesterday ate| The brigade staff officers include Credit for bringing another indus.| fish that cost $12.50 each after Jack | besides Gen. Brown, Lieut. Col. Star- try to Beattle was credited to the in.|Q. Boyd, master mechanic in the|rettford, Los Angeles; Capt. George dustrial bureau of the Seattle Cham. | company’s zine plant, was arrested| A. Monagan, New York; Lieut. A. R. ber of Commerce and Commercial |for angling in the Sacramento ahead | Club, Saturday when the Horne Man.|of the season, He had caught two ufacturing company,of Brooklyn, de-|trout. These were confiscated by cided to locate a branch factory for|Deputy Mish and Game Warden | building marine electrical equipment | White and turned over to the hos- |in this city. The factory site will be| pital. Boyd pleaded guilty by proxy, jannounced soon. ‘and: was fined $25. Mills, Dix and Upton, to be _ leaned | lwhich the leap was made, Cadden up” before being went to their tnitial . i AND CREW INNOCENT joi agned in’ semaphore’ code to campe, They were: §5th division! After deliberating 30 minutes Sat-| groups of soldiers on the ground, He headquarters and headquarters | urday afternoon, the jury in the case | landed almost directly in front of| troops; 166th field artillery, 169th In-| of Capt. L. EF. Madsen and 12 mem-|the hangar from which the plane | fantry brigade -headquarters, 347th | bers of the crew of the steam #choon-| was taken for the fligth at Lake | field artillery, 134th field artillery de | er F, 8. Loop, charged with violating | view, a short distance from Camp | tachments, 112th ammunition train|the Reed amendment, returned a| Lewis. | detachment, 135th field artillery de | verdict of not guilty | Just ae he was “picking a soft tachment, 112th engineers detach-| Capt. Madsen and members of his| spot,” his feet caught in the | ment, 145th infantry, Companies F,| crew were arrested several months | branches of a tree. Thin caused him |G. H, K, 1, L, My 146th infantry, ago, when the vessel was searched, | to healtate in his course, he lowt part 4 medical and camp detachments;/on arriving from California, and | of the parachute support, and the re upset! Ext a tablet of | 337th infantry, field and staff; 93d $2,000 worth of whisky found on/ mainder of hin descent was rather and immediately | base hggpietal, 40th base hospital board. precipitous, His ankles were slight gases, acidity and| Unit, two casual companies and 98 |ly bruised when he struck a box on yeh distress ends. casual officers, | NEW YORK, March 31.—Work ts/ the ground, . tablets are the ta be rushed on $250,000 worth of| Prior to making the fileht, Cad.) stomach relievers in| If you value yuur watch, let| improvements at League Island) den signed papers releasing Barnes | They cost very little at| Haynes repair it. Near Liberty| Park. The city will erect a number/and Watkins from all responsibility | theatre —Advertisement. |of new buildings in the park. in case of failure, Ger. Elmer, Berkeley, Cal; Lieut. Over- ton Walsh, Lieut. Richard M. Grif- fith and Lieut. Edward P. Bruck, of Los Angeles. Attached to battery A, of the 348th, was Lieut. James B. Goodfellow, 603 Valley st. Seattle, and attached to battery E was Lieut. The highest degree of protection for bank depositors is afforded by the Washington Bank Depositors Guaranty Fund, so it is but logical that the largest savings bank in the Pacific Northwest should assure complete protection for all deposits, and absolutely~ guarantee their safety through membership in this wisely administered fund. It is a source of great pleasure and pride to the Scandina- vian American Bank that it was one of the first Washing- ton banks to provide its depositors with this feature of genuine security for their money. 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