The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 10, 1920, Page 4

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PAGE 4 ARREST MAN IN [Women Battle Over * DIVORCE CASE Reno Authorities Charge F. W. Weaver With Perjury LOS ANGELES, April 10.—A ai voroe ‘tangle whore external facts parallel the Mary PickfortOwen Moore ease, came to light taday when Floyd W. Weaver was arrest ed here on @ felony warrant charg ing perjury, sworn to by Justice 8 C. Poster of Reno. It is charged Weaver committed perjury when he swere to an aft davit that he intended making Reno his permanent residence. Soon after his wife, who new lives in Oakland, was «ranted a diveree, tt is charged Weaver took up bis residence in Los Angeles and mar ried again, Authorities here believe the ar rest of Weaver is the result of the general investigation into Nevada divorce court pracedure. Booze Nooze | Nab Barber and Woman for Having Moonshine Mra. Anna Jobnsen and Vinoent Dimure, barber, arrested at a Roy st. gottage by federal prohibition agents, were bound over to the grand jury en $500 bail each by Commis | sioner Bowman Friday. They are charged with possession ef moon- shine. “Not Where We're From, But Where We're Going ing’? Securely bandeuffed in pairs, they on thelr way to the county jail A} dozen men there were, beth brown and white, found guilty in federal | M other Wins court Moat of them were moon jsion of Tyearold Nanette Steele shiners. They were escorted by Deputy United States Marahals Colls-| gan, Waters and Brooks It was @ solemn pilxrimage But appearances are sometimes de b procession passed by, “Why, I didn’t know they allowed Japs on the juries now- adays™” And even the most calloused crook May pocwras a saving sense of humor, for when a small boy piped up with. “Hey, where're you all comin’ from?” one of the gang replied sardonically, “It ain't where we're comin’ from | ‘that counts, sonny, it's where we're favor of the construction of | free port on the islands of Sand. | / | * * Child Court Decree TTLE STAR—SATURDAY, APRIL 10, 1920. ar Seattle ba ea es ee 21 IN bedtime came again, together of afl our grandsons and ‘ceey and David could| they shall have a great fight, one hardly wait for Mother to begin | against the other, and if the because you remember she was | Walla Walla brothers shall throw going to tell them the story she|down all the Chifook brothers had read about the Legend of the | then hall the judge cut off the Chinook Wind, And Chis in the | heads of those brothers who have legend fatien and the winds shall for. Ong ago, when this country | *rer Mew esta mut if the Cnt was very new and very ook Hi wie then shall the jud theré lived 10 brothers. iive of Ay BF ER them lived on Great river and | © were caljed Chinook And the other fie lived at Walla Walla, which means “meeting of the|—-then, he maid waters.” pour ahem “th brothers te wi o sreend and thet And all thetr grandparents | would keep them trem talline lived at Umatilla, the place of Put the Walla Walias put the too ws * * By Mabel Cleland Page 'HICOST PROBE IS INTERRUPTED Government’s Anti-Profiteer- | ing Campaign Set Back | PUEBLA, Col, April 10.—The ted Jeral government's gati-profiteering | campaign was badly crippled here) today as @ result of injunctions ted by United States District | eo Robert KB. Lewis blocking & «rand jury probe into alli sive prices for coal and wearing ap parel Kxpreasing the opinion that seo tions of the Lover act are unconats tutional Judge Lewis also beld that retailers were entitled to ell goods priced at their value rather than at a certain “reasonable” margin above actual cont. Increment on any old tock due to 4 rising market was pri | vate property, the court held, and in fixing a selling price a merchant |may get the benefit of much inere Serieys Farm —" Back to the Battlefielg “Mickey” O'Connor Returns and Fj hi War Over—Conversationally ts the “Mickey” O'Connor, former Star re Press correspondent and later city editor of the Gt Jand Press, went to war from Cleveland ang wounded while serving with Company D, 26th Inf, was | He returned recently as a civilian to seek the grave of an officer of his company on a desolate hillside hg where in France.” And in the week of the thi junc versary of America’s entry into the war he is a _ ex-doughboys how it seems to be “Back on the Battle. field.” This is the sixth of seven articles, B BY CHARLES W. O'CONNOR was! Vormer Sergeant, Co, D, 26th Infantry with mi “SOMEWUEIUE IN FRANCE”—jcame vn (fy Mail)~"At 6:25 a. m., Bet 4, the} whuret Wh 8 parte action, regiment jumped oft behind a rolling| After that moving out gy today be barrage from & line just in front of |break in the wire ent head fo the ¢ \ahead, er So reads a line tn the adjutant’s|there, |) drifted now, They were all| 0? Iset, #0 ali the Chinest brothers ‘or t Faineny fn ment. story of the 26th Infantry’s opera-|for two hours-—waiti jants and very, very quar: |in4 the Walle Welles welnennnas United States District Attorney tions when the American First Di-| Then the roar of ovr gun partmer Felsome, Sometimes they fought |they sould be and they would steal || Harry B. Tedrow had sought to #ub-| vision went into the Meuse Argonne |—the shells falling short, fried today * queng themasives, he Sve Ware | Oey Galieien ens ah oe mit to the grand jury evidence of | drive in October, 1918, \ny On our left—the ame! gmake @ Wallas, then when thelr great iio) ’ oe vor ‘rofits ranging from 60 to 200 per| The story came back to me over |artillery fire, right into wee Ames arma flew about and they struck | hut the youngest Chinook had left cent above actual cost. there in France, standing in 4 bitter! And the mob scene—the mag Represe at each other, their arma would eet eer and when he grew up he patie _ oe win the road, near Berieux Farm. |forward in the gray fom, the bd got into seach the clouds and stir ‘them |Tal' ge and’ gestser the ehans I had returned as a civilian, after the blinding flashes, th falling the rea’ up and the wind would blow | Watles because more than a year, to the fields over Thru the day—and up to bal Brother cold—cold, and great snowflakes which I had advanced with Co. J) of |when there was « litte steam Lee det would and the sivers would the 26th in those wild October days |and on again the next day, ang er one me orn ieee eh — a “p Great River and he ot 1918, | Bext— " bad break would nearly perish he cok’ lg OF trees and threw them Somewhere over there, at the foot) “The casualties wore heavy; u Teen when they sven Gred (ian be BODIE of « slope, 1 was to seek a small the report. MS ty erodes they would lie down and aslrep 1 stake that marked the grave of an) a dn port on and everything would be etill i — officer of Co. D. Stil standing th And frosen and white. , Unearthed in Lava Beds—|°"*where's ticintontainet™ T asked «| sectinontarme, t vomereaeyims hee And about that time the Ché |. 1 " Beside Head French lad, who came along on hix company hod gone in thereeaat, weed in nook brothers would wake up| rat but the Ofth || Earrings esiae Hea |bicyele, an { stood there in the road.|men and had come out pri h.j.) Crm and were warm, 90 when | relied ziehoue aise: aorine | oidinine |looking for jandmarks. ike other compantes— Ot Boot, | | thelr great arme stirred up the |...) Yr, von Bg a SANTA FR, SN. M. Aprit 10-~Av-| “You're im it!” he answered, and) ee eral Pa clouds the winds blew warm and | sai ty sed me one shall be [| thentically proved to have been |pointed to the little group of ruined) The ruins of Eclistontaime the great snow drifte melted and | ae | cook wen [overwhelmed in a pre-historic vol | bulldings at the crossroad. many memories for me. bal the ico went out of the brovke| On" ice paraest aniy at jeanic eruption, the skeletons of a| 80 this was the village near which | (Concluded Mondays . and Nees bar | all bs hag rad pa always just on the mountal boy and a girl unearthed in the vol-|our battalion had filed in the night paateanates Ld : =: Geodeg VE Oe ee canic bedlands near San Rafael, of Oct. 1—It didn't seem so jong ago Nanette Steele, over whom tio mothers fought, and whol] "2" 1 aa he al eM were brought to Santa Ve and ere) Long sleepless days and nights Smokers Strike ute: age Phew ° grandparen country > n ' | thone, waiting for the on order * was awarded by Judge Ronald to the real mother, Mrs. Elva | wyatitia bela @ counct and they | wala.’ being prepared _i ‘whinmnant: to) eee vaeniar oe Smee eee Against lating Vol : ee ae a » | "The akeletothe were found in a|® 4ay, in the evening, and there was| LONDON, April 10—Ay aoe “This te not wel leends warm. tle rat 4 | a nothing do but lie in the foxholes | against the recently marched up the street in double file,| Elva Mifken Voll, laundry work: been transplanted from the stone Getting sur owe Kind of weather sean’ | "nite stone house, In a gc od sate! ind wait,” eaye the adjutent’s etory.|6f tobacco 138 clerks af the sanity and Jennie Torgerson, wife of &/ ages, or wilds of & savage country. qe teehee of preservation As eae One | yet tor each enidies whe lay there,|and records office af Ker ben years. ey atte Aeypaeg gmap servers Bnaag scape | pen aoe of this ovhlte house among | Witing, many things bappened cided they will go withoyt had ee in superior court Friday for posses |emotion of moetheriove blared up | ‘ Every day we'd lie fiat and watch |for a month. + night af and threw aside all restraint. j the lava bede has loné been a tra ee Boske ok hené—and And the Mrs. Voll claimed the child as hers) The judge saw two women's souls dition and expeditions from Wast> | wonder where pag Rl nt pop a r ’ rapidly by nature. Mra, Torgerson based jaid bare. He judged, His judg ington have in vain sought it for) Monee moe Golf Practice Now Swift sa her claim oo au adoption. jmemt to final e i NORTH DI B FOR DEBS yee, rs rtiatty buried in| And all the time the shells, gas Hotel Wi Cellar accordit ‘The two mothers threw aside all| In a decision that reached down . hornt hetee sree ve 7 buried 1” |and H. E., and everything else, came e) ine City bor : - reserve as they fought with the in ee a ‘Sor eiyg omg ge pny) -— _ Frill wie whizzing over, hitting too close. One| NEW YORK. April 1h—Pamsy for one dear lady Was nate child jealoury God first gave | stone of mother love, Judge 1 enon landed just a few fards from bat-|0ld wine cellars of the , Benn itatNanstte-golden ‘pair | Ronald provisionally awarded Nan-| Will Be Candidate for Coun- | University of California Men coverea with « tnick yellow plaster, (Anand Just & few Yards from bat-| it sie & converte ‘no pt | = Wou and unshaken eyes—wondered what/ette to her natural mother, Mra t Commissioner 0 anize the hair of girl being well pre lpany P. Cc. ” ter shop. Frank a papi val rc Eimersofi H. Carrico ve pe Davide the gute bend two| wonae i ade yas wf soe sacra She: p DES Nanette, being young, didn’t know ttorney Emerson rep —_— —_— " " were two that when woman lowes, ahe loves | Tesented Mra. Voll and CC. Curtis] Irving M. Clark, attorney, will be| BIERKELEY, Cal, April 10—/ large turquoise earrings. The body W. Dun passionately, Be it man or child | and John Gallagher, Mra. Torgerson. |, candidate for county comminsioner Debs for President club was formed|had bean covered witth fur or ead, a her witimate affection falle on, it| The Voile live at 309 Aloba ot from the north district on the repub | today by students of the University | feathers. cal cone ALL centers there, | 4 8 lican Ucket. Clark 4 * C snzoried be Mg agnins ne the same > & bullet On the foundation stone ef mothe 2 of Yale university and the University | it to organize as the student sup . resul 1.08 Sine Sounds \Brewer Writes Odd | Wisnincwn sie bas Veen Teal porters of Sohnaon and Mover have San Diego Gets an | Mrs. D Eva sewer. * | King count, 1906, and done, the Debs toda ful Ai didn’t eee aig ater talatone was Epitaph for Self — won Boar HF magh Hunts sram be oye ye: cr thay Btw Eye’ of craft Dent Fail to Ge Out Temorrow and Seo a LF age born, She divorced him and mar-| TONDON April 10—Col, Winch | point for the past seven yearn, No. 9653, at the United States peni.| SAN DIEGO, April 10.—This city! himself, ried Milliken. He was a dape fiend agg i ellged ear yp ag onrm Of) In 1916, Clark attended the mit |tentiary, at Auanta, Ga. |Delieves it established new air. Ar onn Half- pro Large eg fy na on gga limes at a dinner aa a suitable epi |‘zy training + gg har Bana ba \ ceonmaa as st eetas suave: suai be epuetad & inal N te with Me Seepesen, Pise® | taph for himenit om en cenmaatian tela come becswnd Seoreas sae 108 ama we Calas a Sas tomar Dirteteba, tree bal. Just north of the city limite—%6th and Woodland Park 4m anc ‘or An © ‘ ¢ ¢ man’s 9 Sag Mrs, Milliken secured her second | OT", Winch the brewer, Hee Warled | iis" tn ceticern’ renerve COrpE: he | veraiey ot Catewraies send 700 aren | inom “seaetal ceaplanes, -penpenger PA > ong Lake car to Kaufman's station, walk or take Sag an pre ed ty Mee sesh gga na coveunt of peysical dclecta, "| ulate you upon your splendid testi |ecout patro! planes | Man on ground all day to show property. f Hiram . teat November Mre Milliken map| M#™ = heaven he hope about te June, 1917 Clark went oversea |™Ony for American ideals, Anglo Interurban and EDMONDS bus also pass Argonne where ried beso Vol. He = fea G he nen eS ee ee nad | 84500 traditions and international Mayor Volunteers PRICES—$490 AND UP hoses and kind supported her. erman Seed: served several months @s a rolunteer | ~~ into her heart caine the longing to Rebuild France = French army along fA, wy! May yl themaelves to Sweep Streets| 15 per cent down, balance $15 per month « Maj. have Nanette ence more. as s aahces [Chemin dea Dames front. When the| foe Debs tor President. MIDDLETOWN, Conn.—Mayor R.| City water, lights, telephone and fine school et ARGONNE, —_ Thru years the destre had been anna ee nig fov'l ts, 8. army took over that services.) gape OF HALLER pbuilding, geo-|M. Cox will head @ company of vol: | NO CITY TAXES. ON BRICK HIGHWAL Pays DR, FE. &. BECKETT, pioneer Se stified. atte physician, died Friday evening | of corebral hemorrhage. The body in| at Butterworth & Sons’, pending fu. neral arrangements. All Women Should See “WOMAN” LEGITIMATE OCCUPATION OF MAN'S MIND IS WOMAN” and sentiments spectator that it lures him into a state of dreamy for- getfulness of himself and the little world i he has been living. p With An All Star Cast Here is a play so en- trancing to the eye and so beguiling to the thoughts If You Would Know Women See “WOMAN” | ; SSS... i | A201 Third Ave, . Now it broke loose aa ” floodtide in & narrows, | ‘The courtroom lent an air of vivid | contrast to the struggie of mother love. It was as tho the struggie had | devastated regions of France a the delivery of live stock, tity of seed of the finest quality, col. lected in Germany, and has promised! iieq Cross, where he continued to quan. entered the service of the American | serve until May, 1919. Clark served | purchase are well under way. First Time Shown in Seattle MAURICE TOURNEUR’ Creator of “The Blue Bird,” “Sporting Life,” of the In which “The Life Line,” “Treasure Island” and other successes, presents his greatest production— “The Whip,” aa a volunteer with the Red paying bis own expenses, Pedestrians Hit by Autos 301 This Year Frederick Stimpeng, 16, Hamil ton Arms apartments, was thken to Providence hoepital, after be ing knocked down by an auto driven by F. C, Kilphouse, 4832 35th ave, S. W. at Broadway and %. Mercer wt. Friday, Stimpson was badly cut about the head and body, Pedestrians Hit by Autor) This Year David Keewick, 1121 Stewart st, struck an unidentified man with his auto at First ave. 8, and Holgate at. Friday. The man sustained leg and body bruises. Pedestrians rate 308 This Year Mins Anna Perinch, 1224 Woller at., was knocked down and badly bruised by the auto driven by H, V. O'Nell, of Renton, at 12th ave, 8. and Weller st. Friday. Pedestrians Hit by Autos 304 This Year Frank Breslich, 1415 KE. Oltve at., was scared to death when his automobile hit John Abbott, 76,421 Pike st. Friday, and rushed the old gentleman to the hospital toute de muit, as the smoldiers would sy. City hospital physi- clans declared the man uninjured, but slightly peeviah. Pedestrians» Hit by Autos 305 This Year R. N, Young, 7638 19th ave. N, W.. reported to the police Satur. day of having struck a %yearold boy with his automobile at Fourth ave, and B, McGraw st Friday, The lad waa not burt. ACCUSED OF THEFT of clothing, John Poncetti, H. B. Anderson and ¥. J, De Culs were held by the policg Saturday, TRUSS TORTUKS Can be eliminated wearing 2 Luad’ Up lui port, Ww ive trial to prove ite superior. 4. LUNDBERG Co, Beattlia the! clark was again rejected Im the! onq ave j | and Columbia st., to the Title physical examination, and be then | rrust Co. is reported in real entate circles. Officials of the trust com-| cause, at @ recent special election, a |pany admit that negotiations for its| proposition to appropriate money 5 fey HE unteer street cleaners to clean the ‘Mtrects, The action in necessary be street work was defeated ME REST PHOTG JAMES G 8 SMASHING TALE OF ADVENTURE, ROMANCE, RED-BLOODED LAND WHERE ONLY THE STRONG SURVIVE “THE SILVER HORDE” Renick-Watrous Co, 3034 Marien Bleck. Phone Main 1%, RE AT LAST! THE STORY YOU'VE ALWAYS WANTED TO SEE IN PICTURES— ACTION IN THE NORTH, THE Cherry Malotte and Boyd, Mildred and Big George, Willis Marsh, the Indian Constantine and his sister Chakawana with her . half-breed child—Rex Beach’s fascinating chat- acters brought to life! SEATTLE—the gateway to Alaska—figures prominently in this story, many scenes being shown. CLEMMER MUSIC— LIBORIOUS HAUPTMAN, playing— “Meditation” .......0....¢-++++++Bach-Gounod “Venetiati Moon” ....... Director,

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