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Section Two SEATTI WASH. The Seattle Star |= ""»)- EDNESDAY, APRIL WOMAN CRIME WAVE STARTLES EAST WOMEN WHO RECENTLY SLEW fi patehed a note tals protesting pupation o fthe Rh RANCE MOBILIZES TROOPS FOR ACTION /Further Moves Into Germany to Come if Neutral Zone Is Not Evacuated | WASHINGTON, April 7.—The United States, Great Britain and Italy are now negotiating with France to arrive at a definite policy in connection with the French advance into Germany, was stated at the state depart it today. President Wilson by understood the whole matter before to be directing the atth the United Stataes thru Colby. PD have and mide of BY HENRY Woop PARIS, April 7.—The first Phase of French occupation of German Rhine cities in retatia tien for what the French consid- er Germany's violation of the treaty of Versailles thru sending reichwehr troops into the neutral zene to put down the Ruhr rebel- Hon, had been completed today. At the German embassy it was said it the Berlin government had ¢ to the various « against French © cities. Tt was announced officially French had occupied Homburg. The olor today flew over Frankfort, t, Hanau, Homburg and ‘The second phase, it was learned. I be still further occupation if the district is not evacuated by nm troops. Preparation for the French move, should it be ry, was under way in the n of Nancy. diers on leave were recalled Tegiments, it was learned scheduled to leave for an un- destination on Thursday ‘ARY ACTIVITY INCREASING At Luneville the cavalry called in it had loaned the peasants for tural uses. The French Rhine arrived at Hanau early today Press today generally declared ny should not be permitted to & single soldier in the neutral after April 10, as provided in ‘Protocol was pointed out an arrangement made for policing this dls ‘The next step, the newspapers r should be negotiation of agreement with Germany permit adequate police troops. | order prevailed thruout the ied zone last night, according Bavices to the foreign office. The ble change was the replacing the German field gray uniform that of the French poilu. AAvices indicated complete obedi- by the German population to De Goutte's proclamation of oc ton. Officials of the German delegation denied the French move would te withdrawal of the reischs- | from the Ruhr district. They the Teuton troops would “unt the red revolt was| 1 crushed ve of France's ities irrespect selaure of eGrman The offi fe pro by to the allies orwinary the ¢ They seasion of © vigorous rr dan extra ellor Muel J in Berlin yew ecide the Ger # cabinet was t terday man course of action Thus far the I ently had failed to produce the dra matic effect upon Germay which had been expected by the German delega tion here patches from thruout Germay ted the people, while angry quiet A member of the German delega tion here admitted that he had re alized Sunday that France intended to carry out her threat. He said the Bertin government ordered with drawal of German garrisons in the occupied cities before the French ar rive afternoon to bh move appar ind were bitterly double-de Germans accused ch of ng. e has reversed her th cupation move FRENCH ELATEL OVER FOCH ORDER The French public was elated over Marshal Foch’s move. The result of the movement across the Rhine has been to increase the military Prestige greatly © Was & growing tendency President Wilson for the itude. Many obser ac the president of giving the Germans the very encouragement which resulted in their sending troops into tie neutral zone in what the French consider absolute defi ance of the peace treaty. At the foreign office, the German move was blamed on a general “lack Of firmness by the allies “No single nation, It was said, could be held re sponsible. Germay said, the Fr ors to jer ers foreign office evidently thought the allies would yield again, just as they did im their demand for surrender of the Teuton war guilty and extradition of | the former kaiser. But, it was intimated, France prepared to stand alone, if necessary to carry out the peace treaty Say Meat Prices Will Soar Again CHICAGO, April 7.—Meat and food | prices will soar to higher Irvels as| &@ result of a strike of several thou | sind switchmen on railroads here, | packers predicted today. They say that livestock receipts have been cut from 50,000 head daily to less than| 10,009. The receipts yesterday amounted | to §,000 head, as compared with 54,000 two weeks ago. The ployes at the stockyards out of work. | Before doing anything that | youare ashamed of, be sure all your neigh-| bors are several blocks away member CLE SAM GIVES FREE SCHOLARSHIPS ited States Marin “Earn While You Learn” Courses Hereafter young men enlisting in | Marine Corps will rn to be soldiers, they may go regularly to duated as an expert automobile hanic, chauffeur, plumber, or not. Not only that, but 4 States Government puts at Gisposal its tremendous influ- with employers in satisfactor- placing the U. 8. Marine Corps tute graduate in a well-paying young man who is facing the Problem of making a living fle working his way through sh school, college or trade school 1d welcome the opportunity lorded by the Marine Corps Inati- te. By this plan he is not only bled to gain the education he res, but at the same time— Lead a healthful, body-bullding door life, receive free board, thing, lodging and medical a nce—thus leaving his pay for ket money” or for a snug account. To the average “red-blooded” American, the Marine Corpe, Ite adventurous, if: its opportunity for t ng and always proved ring. When to th ince of a good education— Well, it makes a long apprentice or weary hours at a look rather unat- ive by comparison. The Marine Institate ‘The U. 8. Marine Institute, which fair to become as famous as the 3} Academy at Annapolis, or Military Academy at West is already well under way Marine post at Quantico, Hundreds of young men are en- ed in courses that range from ding, writing and simple arith- ie to such subjects as higher hematics and journalism. & man comes into the Marine hardly able to sign his nam can gain & grammar school ed Hon and continue to learn to the it of h bility and the length his enlistment. Among the open to the Marine are el tary and advanced Englis thematics in practically all its inches, French, Spanish, stenog- y and clerical work, automo- mechanics, horsemanship and of horses in sickn and not on'y | masonry, carpentry, electrical m: but, if they | chanics, plumbing, blacksmithin, Corps School Has health, forestry, concrete and brick | house painting, band music, draft- | ing, journalism, cooking and bak- | ing, etc, ete. ‘The instructors are not only competent teachers, but eminently . and are the teacher of Spi corporal, who is a law graduate of & foreign university, and a former public school teacher, Many of the trade schools are in charge of in- structors who are graduates of Annapolis, Massachusetts Tech. Stevens Institute, Colorado Schooi | of Mines, and other leading institu- tions. Others have received their training in such great industri corporations as the General Elec- tric Company, the Standard Oil Company, the Baldwin Locomotive | Works, and s0 on. All ‘students enrolled in the | Marine Institute courses rece! thelr instruction on an average of three hours for five afternoons each week, all purely military training being confined to the morning hours. The evenings may be devoted to study, reading, or the various camp recreations, such ai the fi movie shows or the pool tables. ‘We hear a great deal about “col- Jere life.” but it is extremely doubtful if any of our Institutions of learning afford more opportu- nity for pleasant companionship with real goog fellows than does the Marine Corps. For this branch of service attracts the sort of a man who has the makings of a “g004 fellow.” Few colleges o offer any better facilities for ball, football, boxing, swimm and other athletic sports—all unde the direction of competent trainers and coaches. And no school, unless it is military institution of the first nk, can approacn the Marine Corps in giving a man that nelf- reliance, alertness and qualities of leadership which military training | affords | If you are even slightly tnter | ested, don’t hesitate to call at st Marine Recruiting OMfee. You wilt | | hook! U. S. Marine Corps Recruiting Office 101 Yesler Way, Seattle, Wash. strike bag thrown 10,000 em| | thon | Foreign Min | Wiesbaden has been com | tifie Pearl O'Dell (lower right), O'Dell, Rochester, N. Y., confessed that she helped her hu |band beat Edward Kneip to death with a heavy file. says Kneip had wronged her. deserted place, the woman. handcuffed to a tre She is awaiting trial. Mrs. Mittie Jester Cumming (lower left), f |load of bullets into the body of S. Gordon Cumming, because ‘., "*\he threatened to take away their child. j minute bride” of Cumming, a prominent lawyer of Virginia, toters” vy “Midnight Maud” Being Sought as 18-year-old bride of James The was lured toa victim She was the “ten- Cumming married the woman to give the child a name and immediately divorced her. She has not yet been tried. Mrs. Claire Madeleine Nienstedt of Brooklyn (above), shot her three children, killing one, when she learned in Detroit |that the man she had come to marry had married another woman. Alienists said she to trial. BRITISH INTERN CLEMENCEAU IS 2,000 HUN REDS Supreme Council to Con- sider German Situation LONDON, April The supreme council will meet in London tomor row to consider the German situa it was announced today Prime Great Britain Minister M Lioyd George of Cambon of France r Seialoia of Italy jon of Greece; Baron Chinda of Jap Berthelot of France; Earl Curzon and Andrew Bonar Law of Great Britain will at tend the meeting Lord Derby returned to Paris night. It was understood he had in structions to maintain an attitude of benevolent neutPall toward France. Premier Veniz n: Genera ant . LONDON, April 7 pation of Offenbach. French occu Homburg and leted, an Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Berlin said today ° LONDON April More than 2,000 troops of the defeated German mmunist army have fled into the British zone of occupation, whi the interned, a dispatch from ere were | Coblenz said today was insane, and she never came ILL IN EGYPT “The Tiger” Is Improving Slowly and Is Feeble LONDON, April 7 former Georges Clem ot hitia at Cairo encean premier France, has been ill with bron Ey pt. where he spent part of his vacation since bis return from Luxor & dispatch here today said. The “Tiger and was wan improving slowly very feeble, to according the dispatch Some uneasiness was felt condition. over his Clemencean left Marseilles for a acation trip in Exyp' after his defeat for the presidency of France | Johnson to Make Drive in Nebraska NEW YORK, April 1.—Senator Hiram Johnson, after completing his New Jersey campaign this week will leave Nebraska, where he will make a drive for that state's 16 delegates. The Nebraska primar jes will be held April 20 and the New Jersey primaries April 27. The ‘latter state delegates: for has 28 Bisbee Wines Tiventened, | They Testify Before Jury BY M. D. TRACY TOMBSTONE, tho 20 rts approximately to testify to timidation during preceded the deportations. It i ex pected this line of evidence, which is designed to lay a basis for the tr duction of evidence of an tional I. W. W completed this week For the has much the idual miner the pickets to them Mfs, Alice rooming house the strike, t Two months before found five sticks of dynamite with fuses, in the room of 1 stranger who was in her house few days, she sald had notified the April 7.—Al examined at # nension of the Bisbee attorneys said today 60 remain to be called alleged threats and in the strike which Ariz., witnesses were ay ns trial ro alleged na conspiracy, will be most part, this evidence sarne tone, with indi te as to what and strikers did or said tifying Richards, who operated at Bisbee just prior stified late yesterday the strike she fitted for She said one night, eluded the ing the night with him, she continued. William Jewell, miner, told of a conversation he with a man known to him as “Slim,” who, Jewell police, but the stranger n uniden: | mainin she | y had watched the room all | had | head was called to the stand and tes officers and escaped dur-| tified her husband had been threat taking the dynamite | | declared, was said to he knew happen, @ regular route betwe Denver, Butte atthe Francisco, and knew what ing on.” The strike Slim something ise he n Bis bee und San was go conversation by a few rding to German, carried an I and cursed the United fusely WOMAN TEL THREAT Mrs. Bertha Eastland Tex., pretty testified in the trial yesterday that she had been threatened during the strike which preceded the deportation. Mrs, Butler said operated rooming house in Bisbee during t strike, She testified a woman whe she did not know told her if she preeeded Jewell Jewel Ww. W States days, rn ard pro Ss Butler 1 demure of a and beaten to death by cxcapea | fired a revolver JOHNSON AHEAD ‘TWO KILLED BY 43,000 VOTES © MOTOR CARS Maintains Big Lead Over Auto Driver. Captured After Wood in Michigan Speeding Away = IRL BURGLARS AND THUGS LEAD GANGS Lucinda Case, 61 715 Ns and Mrs, Lorena Johnson, int were dead aoc Mre ot 44th DETROIT ned ot the |49, of 8 ave W es on the from Monday victims auto Chief of Expert Housebreakers NEW rential primary turne from f Case, whose husband, Osner Yo burglar mmitted by cer of Port Gamble, juries when struck Gus Peterson, she alighted Fremont ave. r pl, Tuesday evening, Pe alleged to have driven on, but was caught and held for police :. Hammons, 6723 Sycamore i He who is employed in laim department of the munick commandeered a passing vertake Petrson died in Lakeside howph Apri Crimes by 1 Str Case, was a pic fatal in. er for ahead common t | ear and bh Murders. being oc are wom Maud’ lars who re Idups There Mid auto driven by 49th ar at lea at., 2 4 of wank he be bbed " ght r number democ Edward mes night “This is an age of er ing their Joh of pre and are ha Jere part in number of mu D. Quacke clalist, “Wor os of mer A t being the mental they are crease, authorities umons, men| when women w 6 « ernor Fred M. War ead former Mayor Detroit, by for t are pal railwa living the not surpriving th of equally skillful « and it in| "con” games ormer passed ' y g| ne tinued . Marx Mr ta Peterson was wuto driven by W. M. Pease, of Turner & Western ave. wholesalers, ruck Mra, Johnson at Fifth ave. and Pike st. She died in the city ompital at 1a. m. Wednesday, Pease to have been driving slowly. 1 his vision was obscured by par 4,000 equals mer are becom yeegwomer Case riminals republican na STUDENTS PREDICTED ERA FOR LONG TIME minologints G. 0, P, SLATE ~ NAMED INN, Y, man held in jail on am An n of Ward Pease, Socialist Mager Wins Milwaukee MILWAUKEE, April D. W t ma of Milwaukee yeaterda of uder feminin for a long tim Fifty jan ma years London 4 that mer od, w He men lived and ¢ te That 1D tisan tick y | He sal would has occurred When I continued. what Quackent ung nk rain for cit for treasurer and ape ma b left jeman comptr apparent argins hardest ar Seattle Russians to Get Passports ttle Russians, who have been een yealing for passports to sail for Home t prgotte jet Russia, will be permitted to Unde one tones ' « t , t 5 r ablic the United States, Permits " and instructions are on the way here Washington according to Im- Commissioner Henry M. girle never th lidates men at t . cs ¢ narrow r # gained the Quacke 7 y to from migration the White. vtary re ‘aimed Minnesota Demos Go Uninstructed MINNEAPOLIS, April 7—Minne delegates to democratic na- tional convention at San Francisco will go uninstructed. The state onvention last night voted down @ position to instruct the delegates 48 a unit in the convention, jette headquarters eub © slate a womar the same WOMEN ROK MAN AND : bout ‘ et car ESCAPE IN ALTOMOBILE .. . There femir a nicipal owner system by a nota's 2 is no bt of th Mayor Cowgill Is K. C. Choice Again 5° KANSAS CITY, M April 7. t of the dem: | ted y bout te re ears a to vote “Midr = KNOCKED DOWN by a piece of 2,000| falling steel at the Castle foundry, First ave. S. and Connecticut st, Joseph Granger, 43, 1614 Bellevue ave., sustained broken jaw and pos \ sible fractured skull Tuesday. ongrea: ma jor my Two of & gang today go Cowgtll’s 000, Cowgill organization, UR 9TH SHOP © IN SEATTLE near! ated | ma jority of Her she has eluded pur bert Hoover m Ww ated men are ates being New Yor J. J. WHITE, Manager MANUEL SAINZ, Chef Chauncey Wright Restaurants Company hes to Announce the Opening of Their Restaurant and Bakery Service Room in the Waldorf Hotel Building, Seventh Avenue and Pike Street TOMORROW | Thursday, April 8th Nineteen hundred twenty Wi As Newcomers in This Locality, We Feel That a Mutual Friendship and Neighborly Feeling Will Develop opened her dining room to men re-| at work, burned. Mrs, Buttler was the first woman witness called Just before noon Mrs, Lena White ened during the strike “I was scared to death, ly admitted She wid a striker had cursed the flag in hor presence. she frank er place would be | and So Remain for All Time Close Relationship, We Desire to Express Our Sincere Appreciation In Anticipation of This Yours very truly, Hazen J. Titus, resident.