The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 26, 1919, Page 2

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eAYING taken the s treatment, with directions, the champeen felt strong enough to Japanese edition today, nalism, particuls ought to be inter Japanese invasion. ly glandular advertising regularity and as per American paper stagger forth with its Students of. jour- American — students, ted in this new phase of nny Was Obliging Chap, elped ’Em Get Married, and verything! Gave ’Em Lift) ‘was the most unkindest cut of Mr, and Mrs. Benjamin Jacob 1616 Seventh ave. tell the world. But to begin at the beginning; Benjamin met Mise Clara Rideout superior 50 per cent, at Tacoma Monday. The witnesses were Mr Mrs. Harry Denny, ¢ Returning to Seattle for the hyme- Beal eats at the Hotel Butler, the Very naturally invited the to participate. ‘The big feed was arranged and 4 dy was strong for it with the ton of Denny. Denny said tm it business would detain him but he would join the party at the Butler tater. A gay time was had by all Mor ¥ might, but when the bride and Ss ALL GONE accompanied by the Dennys, to the Jacobson habitat Joy turned to Dead sea fruit. Roll Was Gone 0f $560 which had reposed in 's trunk was conspicu: total and complete ab- “It @rrived in the shape of Mo- Patrolmen Walter Dench aN. P. Anderson. cops’ Investigation led them to ‘Mr. and Mrs. Harry Denny to “Heard you were at my place look- for Denny,” Bonner said. “He |know how much there i; haven't counted it.” | ‘There was $600 in the roll Ronner |turned over to the police, but there has been no explanation by Denny | why he gave the money to Bonner or | whore it came from, according to the | police ‘The Jacobsons met the Dennys sev | oral weeks ago ‘Pained Heart | Throbs Today, Wane | | Booze Is Lost Somewhere in Seattle there beats & pained heart this Wednesday and | the contents of three quarts of good | Thanksgiving whisky are trickling, jor have trickled, Into the sewers | which lead to Elliott bay The unidentified man, with the | pained heart, also has a number of | painful body and head bruises, for he was, as we would say in the veo | nacular, “knocked for a goal” by «| Bothell stage late Tuesday night. accident occurred at Garfield and Eastlake ave. The man, the bottles, stepped unsteadily from a northbound street car and wabbled Into the path of the stare. B. G. Huber, who reported the acct- t] dent Wednesday morning to the po- | tee, declared that he pleaded with his victim to be allowed to take him to the hospital. “Nothing doing.” sputtered the in- jured man, sadly surveying the wreck of three perfectly good bottles of liquor, “Maybe my name is Graves and maybe it is Lacy, you should worry. I'm not hurt, but I hate like h—1 to lowe the booze.” Whereupon he went his dizzy way up crooked Garfield ave. CALIFORNIA LIMITED HITS FREIGHT TRAIN FORT MADISON, Towa, Nov. 26.— (United Press.)—One person was fa tally injured and more than a dozen others were hurt when Santa Fe Cal- ffornia Limited No, 1 collided with a freight train on a bridge over the Mississippi river here téday. Despite the terrific impact, none of the cars of either train left the bridge Instead of connecting with the mouth, a whales breathing appa WILL DEPORT He’s. Going Back to Birth- place of Bolshevism WASHINGTON, D. C. Nov. 26.— (Gy United Prese)—Alexander Berk mann, who came to the United| States from Ryeia about 35 years | ago to preach anarchy, is going back to the land of Bolshevism. Orders for Berkmann’s deportation, insued by the department of labor, jare now fn the hands of the imi gration authorities at New York and} he will be on his way back to his native land as soon as steamahip passage can be arranged. His com panion in the advocacy of violence, Emma Goldman, also born in Rus sia, May woo be sent back * leo. Berkmann's conviction for | structing the progres# of the war by} | urging young men not to register for jaelective service, which was upheld by the supreme court, was respor sible for his deportation, ‘SAY JENKINS IS. A, BERKMANN HONORABLE MAN / [that his wealth and financial stand: | }ing are such that the charge ts pro ob-| Ciples, hin friends» say. Friends Are Indignant Over| Reports From Mexico HANFORD, Cal, Nov. 26-—-Bust fens associates of W. O. Jenkins, the American consular agent now being | held by the Mexican government at Puebla, Mexico, for trial, preeum- ably for having connived with the bandits who abducted him, to obtain | part of the $150,000 ransom, are in-| dignant at the treatment accorded | him and the charges against him. | Hix father and associates claim | posterous in view of the sum that! would be obtained by #uch o trane-| action. Ho is a man of high prin | His financial integrity ts unquestioned by those w know him and have had buat transactions with him and his kins owns five separate hee in Kings county, all valu CRUSHING THEM OUT ORDER MALONE OFF THE STAND ls Accused ‘of Insulting the Attorney-General NEW YORK, Nov. 26-(United Prees)—The Lusk legislative investi gating committees today refused to aliow Dudley Fiel4 Malone, prom- inent New York attorney and former collector of the Port of New York, |to complete his voluntary testimony before the committee, During a tumultuous semsion of | the committes, which had been hear ling testimony of Ludwig C. A. K. Martens, “ambassador” from the soviet government of Russia, Assem- biyman MoGiiligott ordered Malone off the stand, after Assistant Attor- ney General Charles B, Newton had accused Malone of attempting to in sult the committeemen. Malone appeared before the com- mittee and asked to be allowed to make a statement which, he said, was due him, following testimony given yesterday by Martens, who wald Malone had accepted $1,000 for Those Who Have Good Teeth Have Much To Be Thankful for For a good set of teeth is indeed a priceless possession. But unfortunately those who are so blessed are very, very few. Nearly everyone at some time or another is sure to. have something wrong with their teeth. And the trouble is that they don’t always know it. One of the most dangerous forms of tooth trouble is abscesses around the roots. A tooth may be abscessed and sending its stream of deadly poison into the system every minute of the day and still appear on the outside to be a perfectly healthy and normal tooth. It may not hurt or give you the slight- est inconvenience and still it may easily be far more dangerous to your health than a tooth which is entirely decayed on the outside. If you have any trouble that does not seem to respond to regular treatment as it should, it MAY be your teeth. And since there is that chance it will be very much worth your while to find out for certain and have the bad tooth put into a healthy condition or re- moved altogether. Stomach Trouble Nose Trouble ; Eye Trouble Throat Trouble i Ear Trouble Rheumatism Spinal Trouble i These are just a few of the diseases which are now known to very often” be caused by abscessed teeth. The only way to be sure about ype teeth is to consult an expert dentist. | His experience and knowledge will enable him to quickly detect the trouble if there is any. : Every dentist in this office is a dentist of the highest standing in his ” rofession. Every one of them is a duated registered dentist who has _ is certificate from the state dental d Nay 2 right on the wall in” front of his dental chair, in plain sight of all. This means that he knows — his business thoroly—that he has spent months of hard study under com- petent instructors learning the profession of dentistry thoroly. 5 It means that when you come to this office you are sure to get dental service that is intelligent and of ‘the highest class obtainable anywhere. FREE EXAMINATION We invite you to call and let one of our experts give your teeth a thoro + examination. He will tell you quickly if your teeth need attention and. also just what the cost will be if work is found necessary. A This examination and estimate won’t cost you a cent, nor will it place you under any obligations whatever to have work done unless you want it.” But for your own ‘sake—for the sake of Fpl health and efficiency and your chances of success, we urge that you do not delay this important mat- DR. L. &. CLARK ter. Regal Dental Office: DR. L. R. CLARK, Manager 1405 Third Avenue N. W. Corner Third and U In Every Respect Seattle's Dentists Disgonally Across the Street Frem the Povteffice. Be Sure to Get to the Right Place LADY ATTENDANTS ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES According to the Hindu belief, the world still has 426,959 years to exist in this evening and left this|ratus opens thru the back of the! im the cash register. Don't head. yerty and most of it highly mp d, totaling 466 acres, valued at & conservative estimate at $125, | 000, While on « visit hero last sum: |mer to hin parents, he purchased a legal advice given the “soviet am- bassador.” Malone wag sworn and accorded | the privilege of testifying as a “vol- untery witness.” He had nt fin- DON’T MISS THIS BIG THANKSGIVING BILL Matinees, 2:30 Nights, 7:15, 9:15 STARRIN' THIRD —A cholce residence aite in Lon Angeles, for which he paid $45,000, He has vast business and ranch holdings In Mexico, which his relatives here ext) | | mate to be worth several million | | dovare ND —~ MADISON Jenkins has been In Mexico for the past twelve years : |Would Pigeonhole Continuous Performance Thanksgiving Day A TASTY THANKS- GIVING DISH— FULL OF PEP AND GINGER, WITH OODLES OF FUN SUCH Is— Oue” 1” JOSCAR GERARD & LEW WHITE “OLE OLSON” FAMOUS SWEDISH COMEDIAN “ABIE KABIBBLE” NEW BILL NEXT SA NOTED HEBREW COMEDIA RDAY Treaty of Peace WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov, 26— Plans to pigeonhole the peace treaty indefinitely by keeping congress busy on domestic Iegisiation are being made by a number of republican senators, it was loarned today, Quick action on the Lodge resolution to declare the war at an end is said to be part of this program. Senators are planning this course on the assumption that the country is sick of the treaty fieht and wants speedy action on vital domestic ques- cede Cee dsc Pleads Guilty to Assaulting Brown When James Burns, marine en. | gineer, on trial charged with assault | Brown Jur | court Tuesday he | degree in the first ¢ on Everard L, 6 hb ‘dd the testimony of Brown in Judge Everett Smith's immediately plead. ed guilty to os It in the second Burns is aid to have asked Brown for a $2 loan, and when it was refused, to have shot Burns in the face. The shooting took at Brown's jome, 1215 it. Sentence was deferred place E. Spring |\Woman Struck by Auto on Crossing Mra. J, W. MeCture, 36, 15 W. Holden st., is suffering a fractur leg in the efty hospital Wednesday as the result of n automobile acel- dent at Second ave. and Pike st. when she was struck by a machine driven by George Fourth ave, The «a and Stev ident rt st ‘Tuesd: | night as Mrs, McClure stepped ac Second ave. not when the traffic sien was set for pedestrians to cross | this str |CHUBCHMEN ASKING FOR AID TO COAL STRIKERS NEW YORK, Nov far coal miners againat Protection “exploita- by the Operators was asked in| rt of the Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America after 1 review of the coal strike situation. The report was addressed to the fed eral government As taflucnen a should be ta iw prescribe ak= j {announced his candidacy He has amansed | | his present fortune there. W. Herbert, Dawson hotel, | ,|duestion of recognition,” ished his first sentence, before New- ton eprang to his feet and shouted to him to stop, | Starts a Scene Malone had started his statement with: “I come as a taxpayer, a citi-| zen and a member of the bar, to de-| nounce the immoral, cowardly and| | un-American conduct of this investi: | | @ation by your counsel and the at-/| torney general—.” | “Walt a moment. You must not continue these remarks,” shouted wton, hin face flushed. | fou have no right to interrupt. |Onty the chairman has. If what I say ts not true, the committee has full right to examine the facts,” re | | turned Malone. Assemblyman McGilligott: “You could at least be polite to the at |torney general. Your attitude ts dis. |courteous to the committee.” Malone: “The attorney general in. sinuated in questioning Martens yee- terday that I had misused political influence, and I now demand an op- portunity to explain the true facts.” Newton: “A courtesy was extend- Malone in making the statement. The manner in which he started showed he did not want to’ explain, jbut to insult the committee.” | MeGilligott to Malone: “Leave the |stand, You are here to agitate and not to explain.” “I am not agitated, termined,” retorted Malone. Say ‘s Determined four opening statement does not nt further courtesy, Please down,” shouted McGilligott. | “I insist I be given a hearing, 1 |have already given a statement to |the press,” said Malone | ve had enough of you,” | LeGilligott. ‘ou will hear more out of me| re it is over, if you continue these these insinuations,” shouted Mafone, as he quit the stand and left the room | After he had been refused a hear- ling, Malone told newspapermen that ions are now under way in Copenhagen between representatives of at Britain and Litvinoff, soviet representative, “regarding the but de FIND STOLEN LOCKET IN POCKET OF BAKER The adage that an evildoer will eventually come to a sad end was ified Wednesday morning at the jeity Jail when Frank Murphy, 33, a baker, was arrested on a drunk charge hen searched, a tocket stolen n Officer J. O, Neal's locker sev- weeks ago, was found in Mur phy’s possession, ‘The charge was immediately changed and Murphy is being held on an open one, pending police investigation of his Possession of the locket HAVENOR IS CAND) N |, Lowa, Ni ~At- neral H, M. Havenor today | for gov-} ernor, JAILBREAKER ~ SERVING. TIME Will Be Rearrested on Re- lease From Prison Arthur Woods, long wanted here for participation in a sensational county jail break {in 1917, is now serving @ sentence in Folsom prison, California, and is about to be re leaned, it was learned Wednesday at the office of Prosecutor Fred Brown, Woods will be brought back here fer trial on charges of being an habitual criminal, the penalty for which is life imprisonment, Deputy Prosecutor John Carmody said. Five other county jail prisonors escaped with Woods August 18, 1917, by overpowering Deputy Sheriff Allen Stark, then jailer, They were armed with a gun and knife that had been smuggled into the jail Two were later captured. Woods and a companion were rounded up near Renton by Deputy Sheriff Ed Hughes. Hughes hand- cuffed Woods and turned his back to attend to the other captive Woods brought the heavy handeuft down on Hughes’ head, knocking him down, and the two escaped after @ revolver battle. One of the fugitives, who has not beert seen since, is E. G. Brown, charged with the murder on Julp 1, 1917, of Sam Klumph, at 2300% Hogan's all GROOM, 76, BRIDE, 60, ON HONEYMOON TRIP Seventy#ix years old and the grandfather of two Seattle young women, Samuel Allen Bushman, civil war veteran and deputy county clerk, was honeymooning Wedngs- day at Hallér lake with his bride, formerly Miss Estelle Cole, 60, a Worthington, Mass., school teacher, They were married Tuesday night at the residence of Rev. J. D. O, 7 BILLY GOAT IS ARRESTED A billy goat, a gray one, accord. ing to Patrolman Tom Hartnett's description of him, was captured morning on Western ave, by the officer to whom the re- port is accredited, The goat was parked in the Manly stables, 2008 Western ave, and may be reclaimed by the own- ers upon culling at the stable. The goat, upon being arrested, did not attempt to avoid the officer, but accompanied the minion of the law . P ko buy Boldt’s French pas: ry. town, 913 2d ave, C.| meeting of the Association of Uni- Uptown, 1411 3d ave.; down: | 50 PER CENT RAISE ASKED That’s What Alumni Want for “U” Professors The teaching staff at the Univer- sity of Washington will receive a 50 per cent Increase In salary beginning | January 1, 1920, if plans embodied | in a@ resqjution passed Tuesday at a versity of bears fruit. Members of the alumni association met Tuosday evening and pledged themselves to do everything in their power to obtain adequate salaries for the varsity tutors. William J. Coyle, president of the alymni association; | T. J. L. Kennedy, first assistant cor- poration counsel; Dr, Don H. Palmer and Walter G. McLean, comprising @ special committee from the alumni, ansured the teachers’ association that they would bend every energy to the! end that adequate salaries shall be paid to varsity instructors. The cost of living has increased 90 per cent in Seattle since 1914, while faculty salaries have remained sta- tionary, it was reported by a special committee, Gardeners, mechanics, watchmen and other taborers employed on the campus have received salary in- creases, but not the faculty. The average yearly wage of 28 in- structors at the “U" is only $1,648, the committee points out. Washington Teachers| LONDON, Nov, 26.—A leech lived three weeks in a man's windpipe and was still alive when extracted by a surgeon. BLOOD POISONING Hamlin’s Wizard O11 a Safe First Ald | Treatment How often lockjaw and blood poisoning result from the neglect of slight scratch or little cut! Ham. 's Wizard Oil is a safe and effec- tive first aid treatment. It is a pow- erful antiseptic and should be ap- plied immediately to wounds of this kind to preverft danger of infection, It is soothing and healing and quickly drives out pain and inflam. mation in cases of sprains, bruises, cuts, burns, bites and stings. Just as | reliable, too, for stiff Meck, sore feet, cold sores, canker sores, earache and | toothache. | Get it from druggists for 30 cents, | If not satisfied, return the bottle and! wet your money back. | constipated dr have Just try Wizard Liver | Whips, pleasant little pink pills, 30 | cents. “Guaranteed,—Advertisement, ‘SEEK HUSBANI i. FOR DESERTIO 16 Seattle Children Are Without Support Prosecuting Attorney Fred © Brown dispatched a letter to G nor Louis F. Hart Wed urging the establishment of a fund to be used to bring this state husbands who desert wives and children, Ab and non-support, the charge against runaway husbands, is @ demeanor, and according to it is nearly impossible to those charged wit m n back for trial. The fund covering extradition pense is hardly large enough to care of felons and for that the governor is loath to money returning those accused misdemeanors, 3 “A separate fund should be ed to bring back wife Col. C. C. Dalton, divorce says, “as many men desert and escape to other states, KI they will not be returned if Sixteen Seattle children tically fatherless Wednesday result of alleged wife desertion | two husbands. One of the fatl Roy H. Bullis, has been ti Missoula, Mont., and will be b here to face trial. The other fatl John H, Duffner, 707 N. Tist has not been located. Pi In the meantime Mrs. Jessie Bullis and Mrs. Mary Duffner struggling along as best they Each has eight children, rangi tween the ages of three months 14 years. Bullis is charged with deserting’ wife February 15, leaving the fantl of eight on her hands, They been cared for by the Theodora h since Bullis lett. He is also in Tacoma for alleged emb ment. Duffner, who has not been loc is alleged to have abandoned § wife June 15, 1918. He also elght children behind him, hf LONDON, Nov. 26.—While Old, aged 50, was walking from Limehouse home to Bow to © & certificate of her father's which occurred the day p she dropped dead, Registered Denstist mace ts oes say N Df! and personal J. Brown's Oskbe ene : ae ry ORR “TORT

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