The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 29, 1920, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

RMER WIFE TO TOMMY MILTON | FACE GUN TRIAL WINS CAR votes Ms Agnes Hunter Charged Does 50 Miles in 26:52.40 _ With Shooting Ex-Husband | on Los Angeles Speedway ¢ 2- LOS ANGELES, March 2%.—With yerage speed of 111.8 miles Mra. \ divorced wife of av v t meet Tommy Milton, driving a Due Wiliam M. Hunter, wealthy Los AM | onhore won the third and Aoi Beles and Texas off man, Will be pe of the th Placed on triad here today at the Los An With assault with intent to commit |“ ; Re tim tor the 6 minutes neconds Mra, Hunter shot and seriously Art Klein, in g Puegeot rounded her former husband in the first heat, averaging 110.8 miles an abby of a local hotel last Nevember | hour, and Jimmy Murphy, Duesen Ms Tecee Wenter is sald to have re. Sere, Averaging 110.3 miles, won the peatedly refused to give her & more second heat 2 nee Wheral allowance for the support of A pee o wan herself and their S-yearold son among 14 starters The shooting occurred just four Gave after tunter hein sity, who Chinese Notables Asked to Speak was with him at the time. The couple left San Francisco on Mitcember 7 and have not been heard| Td Huen Hung, former president from since, the police said of China, Hsiong Hat Ling, former Altho efforts have been made by | Premier of China, and Paul P. Whit the © find Hun who is 4 U. S trade commissioner to ies a wien have beeminvited to address local China etub, SAN PRANC TSCO, March an at ee 50-mile auto sprints len speedway yester for the 60 miles was charged won the divided wanted as a witness for the prosecu. | China, Yon, hia whereabout have not been ‘The trial will proceed without the principal complaining Witness, according to Assistant Dis trict Attorney Friedman, who will di | Feet the prosecution. —_—_ NEW YORK.—Steamer arrives with £2,000,000 worth of gold, to be used in payment of interest on Anglo-French bonds FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET DOWNSTAIRS STORE | | 4-piece Aluminum Cooking Set, $2.50 ogpatl and compact Combination Set, consisting of Convex Kettle with steamer and cereal cooker which serve to convert the kettle into a steam cooker or double boiler. The cereal cooker may also be used separately for cooking and baking. A convenient Set for any household, but particularly desirable for light housekeeping. As pictured, Six-quart Kettle with cover, and two 2- quart pans, excellent value at $2.50. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Aluminum Rice Boiler Extra-good Value at $1.75 HIS Rice ‘Boiler is of pure aluminum, in two-quart size, with retinned steel handles and fit-in cover which fits either utensil so that they may be used separately when not forming a double-boiler—#1.75. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Household Brooms Special 65c EDIUM-WEIGHT BROOMS of good quality broom corn, four-sewed for extra service, and fitted with long varnished wood handles. Special 65¢. Ho —THE DOW The New Perfection Oil Cookstove Offers a Quick and Cleanly Way of Preparing Meals HE. long blue chimney burner of the New Perfection turns every drop of kerosene oil into clean, intense cook- ing heat, which is regulated as de- sired by a turn of a hand wheel. The flame is always visible through the mica doors, and always stays at the point set. The Perfection Oil Cookstove is especially valuable to city-dwellers as an auxiliary to the coal-range—for quick cooking and baking, for thére is no expense at- tached to its upkeep except for actual fuel consumed— in the summer home and in the country it takes the —Stove Section, THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE. | Lapland | Joseph Dell and James Laather tn “TWO HELDIN | AUTO THEFTS R LUNCHBON. What will Mother} and find hungry “ma yor 4 ohitdren if she hame all may comes folks and But I don't Grandmother “1 don't mother!” Tut! mother LIKE * walled David. LIKE custard, walled Peggy. tut! tut! said Grand “Why if I told you what little folks I know had for their dinner one day you would think thin a meal fit for a king.” Tell us, Grandmother — tell ua!" begger the children, “Is ita spinach, And and some it Is @ true story, and tt happened not very far from here and right in a place where you have been many a time with Father and Mother in the car. “There were no nice smooth walks up thru these hills then only Indian traiia and a few rouet dirt and bumpy log roads. There were no towns, either, all through o try, but Just here and there a new, new little village with queer Little homes built of logs or | rough wide boards, And when people wanted groceries there) were no stores in some of the vil lagen and if the flour gave out or | © the sugar or the salt or the bacon or the tea, then somebody had to walk all thru the still deep woods for miles and miles, just following the little trail the Indians had made and crossing the streams on | logs; meeting no one on the way but saucy chipmunks and grey! squirrels and wiggling little snakes and SOMETIMES a fat biack bear, eating salnton berries: “Well, one day the Mother of these children looked in her cup: board and, ike Old Mother Hub ee killed, | CHICAGO.—W, MeManus jured, when locomotive boiler on ¢ M. & St. P. freight train explodes. ~ Hood’s Sarsaparilla | Makes Food | Taste Good | | Creates an Appetite Aids Digestion Purifies the Blood | Promotes assimilation #0 as to se- eure full nutritive value of food, | and to give strength to the whole system. A well-known Justice of the Peace in Indiana says Hood ‘s| | Sarsapari in made ‘‘food taste! | good,’? as after taking three bot- | tles he eats three hearty meals day, works hard and sleeps well. It © Hy help you to do this. Fifty) years’ phenomenal sales prove its! merit. Prepared by edue: pharmacists. Get a bottle toda PTTL tr ie with Dotty, Bob magn wishing kinds of adventures in and fishes. dog. among your friends. You get one printed bright ehloes freewith every large sized loaf of becaune let the bent > them, pers Boys and Girls AKE A TRIP AROUND THE WORLD lamp. They have their curious and interesting animals, It’s lots of fun starting a collec tion of Dotty, Bob and Trix carde—there are 48 cards in all. When you get all of them you have = complete account of the adven- tures of these two little If you get two of a kind you can trade Start now and see who can get a whole set firat Dotty, Bob and Trix Cards . Start Tomorrow With : ButterNut HOLSUM These are the breads that ¢ the beat mat is, tender Ask Your Grocer for Seattle ae = thet a MARCTT 29, 1920. she found that it was bare She went out into the little clearing which they called a yard and looked the ping one of her six henw had laid her an ege—but no eg at neata, ho “Then she looked at the rows of little new vegetables in her lit Ue new garden, but there were only Uny green shoots coming out of the ground—nothing big enough to cook. “Then she went to the little stable, for the ¢ rough whieh was all re te which the. Father was to bring home aa soon as he could, and there in the corner aut a nice big bag of wheat and & nice big bag not all fixed up. ¥ A—Jjunt plain, hard grain Kind one feede to hormen cows and things, atill in the big sacks then Mother filled her with the grains, and ng as if rhe had « Joke on somebody, she hurried into the house, Then she made a hot fire In the stove and spread all the grain out In shallow dripping pans and roasted it a nice brown, put it in & bik kettle and filled the kettle with water and all morning wh Father worked in the big t clearing land for the field, andy and Molly were mak- «a playhouse, the grain boiled and bolled. Bo when they all ame in to dinner the Mother said: ‘Now there isn't any bread and ther eisn't any tea-—nor a thing but soup. Bo they all pat Jown and they ate and ate that up til no and everybody fo one could gucsa what kind t was tll the Mother told them.” Grandmother laughed as she finished the atory, and sald: “And 1 know all about it, for I w the Mother w de the soup the chil- eat our : tell us ans other story. tomorrow about Sandy and Molly—a truly one?” Yes, tomorrow 1 will tell you sbout Molly and the cougar.” eet, S. F. Police Believe They) Have Bold Robbers SAN FRANCISCO, March 29. William Hensley and Ernest Schaef. fer, who were arrested early today as suspects in connection with eral robberies on auto row yeaterday, are in jail today, tem porartly held on @ charge of vagran cy fey The two men, each of whom car ried a 34 automatic pistol when arrested, claim to have come from Detroit recently. Police believe bagged the men responsible for nu merous holdup» jobs which have occurred recently. PARIS. Honda and stocks worth $0,000,000 crowns, found in pons aston of Polish customs official, said to be intended for use of Bolshoviat propaganda in Central Burope. LOB AN’ 68, pioneer of appoplexy. LES.—Elmer Apperson automobile maker, dies and Trix, and their all strange countries with birds “kiddies” and their jain are put Berfectly baked ¢ Large 1 Zi je oe a ea Gn oe ae | here! here they may have and safecracking *\“Maytime” Is Fragrant of Youth and Spring There may have been musical plays more attractive, refreshing and de Highttul th “Maytime,” which re turned to Metropolitan ‘Sunday ght for gement, but reviewer remember Known throughout Northwest as the Bo | | | | | the a week's oF does not It time is diMeult to speak of “May without ex ration, It i# so} free from the faults that mar | ayn Of the kind and se quaint 4 tuneful and fragrant Youth 1 Spring that it completely dis arms criticiam. In presenting the play the second time to Seattle the producers have rivaled the original cast. The few changes that have been made In the personnel have not injured the per-| formance of the play ‘Maytin is delightfully sung by Carolyn Thompson, who created the principal role, and by Melvin Stokes as the romantic lover! Willlam Nor- ris, the veteran comedian, extracts more humor from the role of Mat thew Van Zandt, who bas a habit ‘of matrimony, than was originally jwritten into the part Not a little of the charm of the Rida Johnson Young play in attribu |table to the splendid specialties that Jare introduced, notably thone of Nina \Ve allert and Arthur Albro, Two amall |character parts, those of Angelica jand Armintrude, are delightfully acted by Virginia Heffron and Patsy jde Forent “Maytime” has been the most pop- ular musical play ever produced in this country, It ts» another blow to thone Broadway producers who stil vo that the p wants cheap ality and coarse humor. eee entirely mont 1 EST THAN Gene 4% 6% 42% 5% 42% 4>% 4=% 4=% 4% Due ba MOORE Went to the Moore with a wore eye, leracked Up and an attack of morn ing after Saturday night blues Sun day afternoon, The blues and pore leye were quickly cured by the girls jand the laughs, It's a credit to the |levity of the show to say the lip is warre than ever. | Wilbur Mack leads tn “Two In |Company.” The vehicle is a frothy jthing, full of Nght laughs, with Mack making the crowd, while 1 fronson and Mary Allen are pany.” Guff predominates in “And Son The wayward son outguffa the mil Honaire father and marries the steno Howard Smith. True 8 James, Mildred Marker and Charles Harris get some good clean laughs. Bandy Shaw, kilts, knees and plaids does things a la Harry Lau der and gots a big hand. As “The Flying Torpedoes” at the end of a crom-pieee on the top of an Eifel tower affair, the Mirano brothers do scene neat acrobatics. Charles How ard in @ lollipop hound. due to pro- hibition. With Donald Roberts and Vietoria Gale, he keeps the risibility of the audience topmost Colored opera by Shelton Brooks, song writer and pianist, and Horace George, jazz clarionetist. is a win. ner. Rita Mario waves the baton as leader of nine musicians, mostly girls, The susaneyed violinist is en peetaly good. PALACE MIP Hight Black Dots, a double quar. | tette of colored men and women, pro- | Vide the new bill which opened at the Palace Hip yesterday with an| abundance of singing, dancing and | laughable talk. Their vehicle ta| called “Celebrating Day in Tonnes. | see” and pro opportunity for | om City City City Due F Due : | CANADIAN BONDS | Provinceof Saskatchewan Due July 1, 1923 Denominations, £100-£500 Province of Manitoba Denominations, $1,000 Province of British Col. Due July 1, 1926 Denominations, $1,000 Province of British Col. Due July 2, 1939 Denominations, $1,000 Due June 2, 1923 Denominations, $1,000 Due December 15, 1923 Denominations, £100 Denominations, £100 City of Victoria Denominations, $1,000 City of Victoria Due July 1, 1923 Denominations, $1,000 the nd Where Safety THESE SECURITIES PAY HIGHER INTER- ANY OTHER INVESTMENT SO WELL SAFEGUARDED ral Obligations TO YIELD 1 47 April 1, 1925 TO YIELD TO YIELD TO YIELD of Vancouver TO YIELD of Vancouver TO YIELD of Vancouver ebruary 1, 1923 July 21, 1923 Se ie ies ies no SS Bs |much negro wit and for the demon stration of the individual merit of each artist as a dancer in a whirl wind finale } Then there is a pretty girl, Pemgy Vincent, whose story-telling is inter rupted by the contagious laughter! of a big chap tn the audience whose sense of humor meema exceptionally well developed. When invelmled onto the stage, his awkwardne 4 talk cause much merriment Jack Russell and Melle Titus ap- | pear in a clever skit, “At the Drug store.” The Barra Sisthrs are pretty girls who possens delightful voices Decidedly out of the ordinary § the performance of Toatie Reckless and Charles Arley, the former a| pretty girl whose #trength belies her | GOVERNMENT ESTABLISHED 1902 JOHNE.PRICE & @ MGNISIPAL RS) CORPORATION SECOND AVE., COR. COLUMBIA ST.. SEATTLE frail physique and who performa|— ! any clever on Roma nen Mantis ote tenes as ‘Burglary Charge a alts er e ing | | play with Charles Ray as the star cv" 2 BLOOMINGTON, iL, March 29.— pgp ents cin ernen |Love may laugh at locksmiths, but} BEEN e Ot ee ee aa Arn nthe | ment of tron bars and jail cell > . cag ‘om-| ‘This was brought home to Miss edy company “Too Many Husbands.” | xettie Dorothy Irie and Lowell H ‘The fun all takes piace tn a police Milla, prominent In society les of court on a Monday morning with | Central Illinois, when the latter was Lew White as the judge pro-tem, | arrested the day before the marriage | and Robert Lorenzo as the |prated. He was accused of being a attorney for the defense, while Frt| trincipal in the robbery of the bank | pore policeman gets Mansfield two years ago, an oo | sear of humor out of his part. Lew | currence which has always been | Fssaee wave ——. shrouded in mystery Protesting his innocence, Per, eee Sentay the Piatt county where he was held until) a the court ’ ‘ at Oscar audience t| Mill was jail at en to afternoon little opportunity to do! sronticel anything by laugh with a number | friends could furnish $5,000 bail. He rapid mucesesion, Bean HT, as g|tun buried tack. to, hie, weecing} * &lnancee, who was ready to marry os arming individual, on a charge of| nim, even with the charge of bur igomy nearly disrupts the court.| cry hanging over him, But the while Pauline Arthur, Floy Ward! Eire gather, George C. Irle of Cham and Monty Montgomery as the re |i iien, neremptorily forbade the union maining culmrits supply the re | uti the defendant was formally mainder of the comedy iearted Ress Hill pute her dong lirls If You Ever Get Married,” Jin great style. Mies Hit! in this num-| “Lifer ” Puts Blame ber demonstr « her eaplendid capa on Toting o’ Gun bilities as comedienne of first rank. | | Blanche has a pretty offering| POSTON, Mass, March “All with the girls while Pauline Arthur|my trouble came from carrying a] | pleased with a jazzy selection.| gun, 1 had no business having it,” Robert Lorenzo has a catchy Span-| aid Joseph Sammarco, 22-year-old | ji#h number in “Down Barcelona | sjayer of Patrolman W. G. Clancy, as Way,” while Oscar Gerard has a) po left for Charlestown prison to humorous and unique offering with | start serving a life sentence as pen Lew White jaity for the crime, over ie eee WILKES Bargains, dry goods, and love are the ingredients of a corking good shaw at the Wilkes theatre this week, The offering in Charles Klein's notable production, “Ma geric Jane title shoplifting Pepper Morgan, as Maggeie, role, Joe Holbrook mirer, is convincingly portrayed by |Alexis Luce, The chief comedy characters are Howard Russel, in |the role of a Hebrew merchant and | | Julia Elmendorf, as Hattie the shop | girt j Jane Darwell has a difficult role lin Ada Darkin, professional shop lifted, but she portrays it ably, Oth. | rs in the production are Fanchon Pverhart, Mary ‘Th nan Sea vey, Henry Hall, Feusier | Clifford Dunstan, Jobn Nickerson Addison Pitt, Ren Erwa Helen | Rourke, Nina Moise and Dene Snow- den has the her ad. IBERTY MARKET Pike and Liberty Theatre Norman Long Chase Ends _| Doctors Recommend in Man’s Arrest) Bon-Opto for the Eyes CHICAGO, March 29.—After a six) years’ search during which the trail/ Physicians and eye specialists pre- led across a dozen states, Meredith, former freight agent for|@dy in the treatment of eye t the Chicago, Milwaukee & St, Paul|@nd to strengthen eyedght ‘Sold. railroad at Libertyville was arrested | Under money refund guarintes in Westchester, Pa,, and brought | drumsists back to Waukegan, near Chicago, | SHOES WEAR OnE for trial | Meredith was indic When you walk in comfor, ds take ockings. “A. package of AM : Foot-Base, the antiseptic charge shake inte the shoes and s the St bath, give rt and county grand jury of embezzling $20,000 from Paul railroad 000 MILES, Dr. Forbes, alleged forger, is t at Green River, Utah, on information furnished by Capt 'T. B, Foster, Seattle secret service chief. ' under ar in the morning. Sold everywher TRY STAR WANT ADS) Are You Proof Against Misfortune? NO ONE IS. The most prosperous today, may be in financial difficulties tomorrow. The one wise and certain way to provide against that day is to Save a Regular Amount from Your Salary Now! By saving here you are assured absolute Security with substantial dividends. One Dol- lar makes you a member of this strong Finan. cial Insutunon with hundreds of Seattle’s most prosperous Savers. START TODAY {Resource es Now Over Four Million Dollars ] PUGET SOUND SAVINGS and LOAN ASSOCIATION Where Pike Street Crosses Third Joseph E.| Scribe Bon-Opto as a sale home. rom a

Other pages from this issue: