The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 8, 1920, Page 7

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F NEAR TEXAS if Difficult for President-Elect to Avoid Crowds Demand- ing Sunday Speeches BY RAYMOND CLAPPER ON BOARD HARDING'S sPr CIAL, En Route to Point Isabel, ‘Tex., Nov. §.—After 48 hours’ contin. uous travel, President-Elect Warren G. Harding was nearing the south ermmost tip of Texas today, where he ‘Wi spend ten days fishing and goif- ing, His special train was due to @rrive at Brownsville at 11:30 a. m ‘There the party will take automo Biles for the 20-mile ride to Point Isa- Del, on Laguna de La Madre, an inlet f the Gulf of Mexico. Politics, office seekers and al ity matters will be taboo. _ Senator Harding's daily program rl be fishing half of each day and : ¢- ing the other halt. res oT AVOID KING Despite Harding's effort to avoid ches en route, he has made a dos already, Tt was difficult for Harding to keep ‘Within the Sabbath propricties, so in sistent were the Texas throngs at c¥- | @fy station. Many apparently mo od ‘Sy of automobiles covered with Dright red clay of Pastern Texas. Mexicans with broad sombreros ‘Were much in evidence around the 4 Advisers close to Harting believe with American lead- which begins at Marion as soon the senator is back from his vaca- ‘Rion, will deal with the questions of Internationa! court, built around Hague tribunal, and a supple association of nations which Would be organized largely for the of conference. Decisions of the conference would be in the form confer with leading Ameri. even before taking office, and has arranged to do this ag a time. ing Measure, #0 that he can go office with his international el if it it if minutes passed. Then Lucy th ei tee 3 is ¢ formula to follow. these thin Mist to make me make it good Sheck. I'll pay. ‘ee her one of a dozen. “Yea, that's it,” she confessed. pocket and drew out 11 more. them out between his fingers. “Yes, all of them! fective! Well, I've told you. formula. fective replied: with me.” gending her to jail, for Lucy another office 2 e entrance and made formula well, for this If the lady your face, or jumps out of window, or faints in your arma, case the lady did Her eyes é gave me a bad check,” said the detective, “and the store is “In this it?" asked Herbert, show- He reached into his inner coat “And these?’ he asked, spreading Oh, I see pow what you are. You're a de- you going to do with me?” The taay sobbed violently, according to And according te formula, the de- “Take you to headquarters. Come FORMULA really doesn't end there. The rest of it is that lady had money to cover her forgeries; the checks were destroyed; - the merchants refused to prosecute, ‘And perhaps that was better than oe HERE’S MORE ABOUT SHEWA LEVINE STARTS ON PAGE ONE | || HERE IS MORE OF THIEVES STARTS ON PAGE ONE gold beads, @ gold pin and a fountain have gone on with itt pen, | The Rabbi Louwtsch’s tall, athletic ened a | ‘The third robbery tn that block | Heure straightened, hie dark features ae home of GM, White, The Jewish women who had been | @841 17th ave, N. K, He sald his little, The Jemln women wee nin the | that two man were trying to get_into 2: re i c ° 1 child tho basement with a pasckey, They (Kitchen, were allent. ‘The chi whining for a caraway cake stop saw her and ran away. | | SB [Ped with her mouth agar Mrs. J. Brand, 836 W. 67th st./ in the moment's stillness T could contributed a gold nugget worth | aimost imagine to be present the $60, taken from the house while the) gnswertng spirit of the girl who had Brand family was moving in, | cone to her uncle's home in Boston M, V, Foss, 2228 N. 45th, also con-jand by the hideous simplicity of tributed a nugget, highly prised by) hanging herself with a stripped | him because it was shaped like the bedsheet, escaped from the disap- | United States. H. B Nelwon, Manzantta hotel, | 1607 First ave, had stolen from his trousers while he slept. potntments and complexities her too-ready candor ‘had created, Rabbi Louwisch broke the tension by @ movement of weariness and Peter Galleet, Yesler, lost a) degpair. suit and a razor worth $4. “It is the olf against the new,” F. B. Martine, 6256 19th ave. N. EB.) he anid. ! said his house was thoroly ransacked | and $4.50 in cash. a fountain pen and }@ silver pencil were taken. COMES HOME; FINDS WINDOW JIMMIED C. C. Cawsey, 325 Kinnear Place, reported his wife came home and found the window fimmied. Fearing to go in, she called the police “The orthodox against a type of |so-called modernism that I feel would ruin the world.” INVOLVE DOUBLE | MORAL STANDARD | “Then it comes down to the age old question of the single or double |moral code? Men—" I looked levelty at the handsome Rabbi, Motoreyele Officer Frank Bertrand “may lead what they call ‘ man's found the house had been entered, | fife,’ but the girl who dares ‘kins Dut said the thief evidently had been | and telt—* | — away. Nothing was) “I might have even forstven the en. thing she so lightly told me," he! Walter Pullen, 1310 Denny Way,! slowly answered, “but ashe did not lost a stickptn, $15 In cash, @ suit tell it REPENTANTLY. | and an overcoat. . “It was a part of her code of Mra. A. J. Stark, 1101 23rd ave.|tving. A year hence—two yeare—| reported the theft of @ pair of and what would our life have been? trousers, & skirt and $25. Yoo-tt te different—it HAS to be SUSPECT SHOT; different with a woman, & man's wife, the mother of children. MAY BE BANK “My very soul revolts against the | ROBBER ideas she had for teaching children While 0. C. Johnson, who was shot by Park Patrolman F. H. Stocks in Weodland park earty Monday, lies in the city hospital painfully, but not seriously wounded, police are making an attempt to connect Johnson with the robbery of a bank in Everett Friday noon A can of Diack stove polish, found in the auto, is the cine which may not be. “Rut she might have been happy with some one elsa I intended to try and help her. I was working to find her position ‘te tench “HER EDUCATION SUPERIOR TO MINE” “Shewa’s ancestry was of the best. She used to laugh at my Hebrew, “Her father and uncle were rab bin, They taught me. I loved them. And I loved Shewa and would never bring myself—tn all these 10 years to my the word that would bind me “ tines I was of Johnson's use of the park as a daytime garage, he decided to lay in any children—heral No-—dt could |]) Her edveation was superior to mine | THE SEATTLE STAR PAGE T FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE A ND PINE STREET DOWNSTAIRS STORE The Purchase, at a Concession, of ~ 850 Children’s Tub Frocks 50c On Sale Tuesday Sizes 2 to 6 Years Results in Extraordinary Values at O UNUSUAL for this price, from every standpoint, that many mothers will want to choose several of these little frocks. They are of , “Plaid and Checked Gingham Cotton Suiting Cotton Poplin Plain Chambray Percale —trimmed with cross-stitch and French- knot embroidery, buttons, scalloping, lac- ing and shirring. On Sale Tuesday at 50c. Pink, Green, Blue and Tan predominate; sizes 2 to 6 years. 14 Styles, 6 as Pictured —ene pownsrains stone Uncommonly Good Value in Crepe de Chine and Pongee Waists, $4.95 Economies in Bedding and Towels Featured for Tuesday, in the Downstairs Store wait for Johnson. With Stocks and| looking Rabbi Louwisch must have Park Patrolman W. J. Moore, Davia|been smiled upon by many pleasing waited until 12:30 a m. Sonday,|maidens Fine of eye and straight of when Johnson approached the auto,| nose he is, with @ jet mustache and z Hs eiskbe? The auto which Johnson was uxing| Tis" Of J°7- thing is none of his fault, No mat ter what the wild women of this ‘hood try to do--tynehing or -—we are his friends and will rabtt exys he ts heartaick and broken by his violent «x- its the mob that attacked auto|>im and the anxious weeks preced- it Mon-|ing, but that he will “not think of marriage for a long—a@ very long— SHIP IS BURNED; FEAR BOY LOST MOVIE THEATRE. |Damage of $250,000 Sus- FOOLS ROBBER tained in Dock Fire Because the victim of @ daring) perALIMA, Cal, Nov. &—One possession of $2,100 Monday and the| Which destroyed the steamer Gold, robber had « sack ef used Coliseum |sether with the wharf at which perp g the vessel was lying, and did other H. C. Ro! of the damage totaling quarter million ae bertson, treasurer dollars. Coliseum theatre, drove up tn front Fifteen persons, all members of of the Liberty theatre, First ave./the crew, were aboard the Gold near Pike st. in company with Rob- when the fire broke out Many Seo ecaypeny vr ied ag tigger reached safety by leaping and swim- b % hi to deposit the day's receipts from| "he iagt, seen of the minsing boy, the Coliseum, totaling $2,100, at the | according to Captain Harris G, Ref = reece te company in the! of the Gold, he was running from room to room arousing sleepers and From among the crowd on the! giving the alarm of fire. It was be- sidewalk the robber stepped out, ap-| lieved he either was drowned or was proached the auto from the street! trapped aboard the ship and burned side, and, after ordering Robertson|to death. His home was said to bo linside the theatre, demanded of| San Francisco. | Cameron: Two terrific explosions, believed to “Hand over the paper. I’ve got| have been of fuel oil, #pread the you now.” flames to the Santa Rosa and Pota- Cameron reached to the floor of|1uma Railway company's warehouse the auto and handed the bandit a|0® the wharf. It was totally destroyed sack containing the worthless used with its contents, which included tickets, leaving untouched the money quantities of merchandise, which had bag. just arrived from San Francisco. From the warehouse the fire While hundreds who had fust spread to eight freight cars on emerged from the movie house|tracks adjoining and they were rubbed their eyes and wondered! burned, whether they were seeing a drama of the screen, the robber backed up | the middle of First ave. to Pine st. with his revolver in handy position, and disappeared. The Coliseum theatre was held up by two men the night df August 18. Two employes were trussed to chairs and the robbers escaped with $515. Undismayed by Road Measure’s Defeat Undismayed by the defeat of the Logger Hit by Auto Is Instantly Killed Beattie authorities were Investi- gating Monday the automobile acci- dent in which Fritz Larson, logger was instantly killed Sunday after noon nea® Enumclaw, Larson, ac cording to Alvin Davis, driver of the car that struck him, jumped into danger when he tried to avoid an- other automobile. Davis, who is a son of James D. Davis, of Tacoma, superintendent of the Ozark mine, Carlyon road bill, C. H. Shields, 4) near Enumclaw, is being held, charge of the campaign of the Aemabphaueshe suis Washington State Good Roady as | BEGINNING DNESDAY, a wociation to pass the bill, declares:| collection of rare Japanese art prints voters recognize the \import- of good roads, They simply|the Seattle Fine Arts society. oo ms thy mil) be Lene 1a be “lmit such a treaty has been proposed, will be on display in the galleries of| Asiatica, will not be taken seriously The|by the state department, believes value in these Blouses — the heavy quality of their silks, PRICES so attractively low that even long-deferred purchases will be ARE FUL ’ | made now—and at an important saving. Reperes | especially, will 170 Sheets 30 Pairs of Plaid appreciate the { $1.75 and $1.90 Seamless, bleached sheets of firmly- woven muslin— Blankets, Special $4.95 Fleecy Cotton Blankets of good weight and soft texture, featuring 116 in 81x90-inch size, at $1.65, Pink, Blue, Gray and Tan plaids; their appealing 64 in 81x99-inch size, at $1.85. size 66x80 inches; special, $4.95. styles and their careful making, 93 Bath Towels Special 48c Fioffy-surfaced Turkish Bath Tow els of good quality; size 22x42 inches; special, 48¢. TREATY WOULD BE JAP VICTORY port Plan to Give Nippo- nese Full Rights BY A. L. BRADFORD WASHINGTON, Nov. 8.—~A treaty under which Japanese would be ¢x- empted from American laws discrim- inatory to Asiatics is being consid: ered at the state department, it was reported here today. Buch a pact would be ene way of | mecting the Japanese protests) against the new California law pro- hibiting ownership of land by Jap- anese and other Asiatica, Nogotia- tions as a result of this protest have been in progress for some weeks. A treaty naturally would nullify all provisions of state laws contrary to its provisions. While neither the state department nor the Japanese embassy would ad 600 Barber Towels, 10c These small-size Towels are very handy for many uses in the home; size 1314x25 inches; 10¢. —TUE DOWNSTAIRS STORE GERMAN REDS RAMBUNCTIOUS Demand a Lot of Things in Wordy Session ‘There are amart moéets with ofiar, exffs anf fremip~ Goring edged with narrow eelf plaiting; backéastenia> styled, vestee effects, and others—in Coral Gray Navy Black F —at a very low price—$4.95._rrg nowsstarassToRm r He Tricked British; Now Under Arrest DUBLIN, Nov. 8—Patrick Mahon, Sinn Fein leader, who tricked the British government into deporting his substitute four years ago, is un- der arrest bere today. Mahon was righthand man for Mike Collins, reputed commander of the Sinn Fein army and one of the BY CARL D. GROAT .,__| leaders in the 1916 uprising. At that BERLIN, Nov. 7.—Roaring Red| time he was sentenced to six months battle hymns and preaching inflam-|!9 prison and deportation. Another | matory doctrines, 2,000 communists| Sinn Feiner substituted for Mahon man, | held @ demonstration tn the Lust- PREACHER WANTED TO KICK VISITING PASTOR OUT OF THE PULPIT VANCOUVER, B. C, Nov. 8.— Dr. Henry F. Cope, Chicago, preached in the First Baptist church here yesterday morning. De. Gabriel MoGuira pastor of the church, apologized for the questions of doctrine. “I felt like kicking him out of the pulpit,” said Dr, MoGuire later in the day to @ congregation that applauded him. He added, “I am going to apologize to this congregation for allowing this preacher tagged with a Chicago dogres, to enter the pulpit of this church.” | garten here today. Despite the fiery | speeches and the threatening songs, he demonstration was peaceable Speakers advocated the seizure of | factories, ennceliation of debts and cancellation of war bonds held by the entente. The Soviet was praised and capitalism condemned. Workers had been called upon to arm for ob- servance of the anniversary of the Russian revolution. The communists, carrying red flags and wearing the Soviet tn- signia, paraded to the Lustgarten in picturesque lines. A strong cordon of police surrounded government buildings, but the parade turned off into side streets before reaching that section. Enlisted men in the United States army, who were officers during the war, will wear a cuff braid of forest green. AT] WT Ht UA | Wty Japanese Exclusion League “I have every reason to believe that Secretary of State Colby ir friendly with CaNfornia’s views,” eaid Chambers, “And even if the treaty were presented I have every reason to believe that the senate would refuse to ratify tt “The Japanese havea habftof ask- ing for more than they expect to get, merely as @ basis for negotla tions.” it is understood to have been con | gidered in the negotiations, which are | being conducted by Roland 8. Mor- |ris, American ambassador to Tokyo, and Ambassador Shidehara, the |mikado's envoy here. ‘The drafting lof such a pact hag not begun and neither has the United States offered the proposed treaty to Japan. Preai- dent Wilson and Secretary of State Colby are understood not yet to have decided on the plan. WOULD GRANT LAND RIGHTS ‘As now being considered the treaty |would guarantee to Japanese sub- | jects In this country the same land rights given to most foreigners here, it was said. The treaty now under considera tion, if passed, would exempt Jap- aneso from the present California law and the Webb measure, -which | Brat prohibited ownership of land, and all other such laws in other states, PORTLAND, Ore—Right Rev Adelthelm Odermatt, O, 8. B., dead. FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET DOWNSTAIRS STORE “Whispering” record here! This ing success is now out as a Victor record, with “The Japanese Sandman” on reverse side. Both by Paul Whiteman’s orchestra— 85¢ “Tired of Me” and “Td Love to Fall Asleep and r The amendment being drafted to Galvanized Ash Can Wake up in My Mammy’s Arms"— 85e “Pll Be With You in Apple Blossom Time” and Tripoli” (On the Shores of Tripoli)— 85e Avalon” and “Just Like a Gypsy” medley and “Best Ever Medley,” both by orchestra— $1.35 ViGrolas $25 to $1500. Convenient payment terms Sherman Glay & Go. which Japan voluntarily undertook to restrict immigration, are now be Heved to be practically completed. ‘These amendments are understood to make the restrictions against Jap- anese immigration absolute. Should the treaty now betng re- ported considered be agreed upon at the state department the ratification of the senate would be necessary, It probably would be opposed there, eee THINKS TREATY PLAN WON’T BE $3.75 S PICTURED, strongly - rein- forced Ash Can of heavy gal- vanized iron, with raised bottom and fit-over cover, Stands 2614 inches high and measures 18 inches in diameter, Unusually low-priced at $3.75. a CARRIED THRU COAL (HODS,: 509 Third Avenue at Pine Street SACRAMENTO, Cal, Nov, 8—A Substantial Black Japanned SEATTLE. treaty exempting Japanese from Coal Hods in 15-, 16- and 17 American ‘awe discriminatory to inch sizes. Extra good value at 50¢. & Chambers, obaizman of the

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