The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 10, 1921, Page 12

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' Jat « joint seesion of the house THE SEATTLE STAR Harding’s Election vac SCHOOL BILL, (GOs AD LITTLE SERGEANT) FIND MURDER —{JILTED, BOY (REFUSE CUT IN |'Zardings Keston, a\"ca" ay OF YEAR AGO TRIES TO DIE RAILWAY WAGE =". fics srocact ots & oo dns | Roonevelt were canvassed. Body, Head Smashed, in| Swallows Poison, but At-|U. s. Labor Board Turns - | Brush Near Des Moines Attempt Is Failure Down Request THE BON MARCHE EDUCATORS a TOR GAIN BASEMEN | the body of a man who, authorities | suicidal intent, because of a quarrel | Staten Fudlroad Labor board today n° x aay, was undoubtedly murdered, was | with 4 sweetheart, Raymond Bhel.| rejected the appeal of the Associa found In the brush off the T |high line road, six miles south of ave, &, was in city hospital Thurs | me Des Moines Wednesday day, He will recover ing agreements and also refuned to In et was a monogram! ‘The girl, whone jilting drove Mbal- | authorize a cut in wages of raliroad characters that|tron to attempting to take his own | laborers. neda, Inventiga | life, is Shirley Sunday, according to “It is obvious that the board can- | anese named | Sheltren's friend, bert Madison, of not assume without evidence of the appeared from the viein | 4033 16th ave. 8 justness and reasonaldoenem of the nmer | Sheltren told Madison Wednenday | ivreements, rules r Willis If, Corson found a/afiernoon that he and the girl had| tong in effect on hole in the skull and decided that a/quarreied, Sheltren meted queer, of December |revolver butt or a hammer was prob | Madison sud. He went home with jably used in the killing. | Madison late Wednesday night. ‘Th The bedy was discovered by | »t in fro f Madison's hou Charles Weating, longshoreman, and | « « while. T. W. Compton, 1621 Seventh ave., | Madison mid that he was! when they went into the woods in| going in and retire, Sheltren pulled a mearch of wood to be used in repair | snail phial from his pocket and 1 ing thelr automobile |hastily drank the contents. He was jon 0} - ~ - Jaffected within « few minutes, Madi |runctions of this b ’ | § |non notified police and Bheltren waa lfrustmte the purposes of the trans | j taken to city hospital. | portation act *olice ha 4 Shirt Poll aay that inquiry at Shirley hoard muat also deny the re | | Sunday's home, at 311 Blaine st. re ; a [that whe knew nothing of the affair, | Wager ip unskilled lalor be applied to After boing knocked down by the|The girl Is 20, The mother said that |/ my A vin te ota con auto of Dr. J. B. Eagioson, Mra,|Sheltren had been calling on her). win ite hearings on the n Sarah MoGuire, 63, of 1717 B. ‘Thom. daughter occasionally, acgording to | (Dis, NU Ok aes ~ . died in Minor hospital shortly | Police employes’ side of the case. The rail © last midnight, road executives have completed the tent « ee at Brontuey | MODERN ENOCH ARDEN | | ?"snen tation of their cane | ‘The decision of the board was an- | juire stepped from behind || TAKES RIVAL’S NAME. ||nounced soon after it convened ur and waa ntruck by the | Railroad owners have conspired to | of Dr. Bagieson's auto. | TQ REGAIN HAPPINESS jwreck union Iabor in an effort to| jeoon rushed her to Minor tore t ut o 5 n CRIPPLE CREEK, Colo, Feb, 4! restore to capital ‘autoc yma | tren, 26, chimney sweep, of 439 26th | tion of Railway Executives for im of national work Burrows Supports, Others | ' Criticize Measure at Night Meeting The Things You Need at Lower Prices To bring you the things you want and need at lower-than-usual prices is the aim of the Bargain Basement. And that it does so is attested by the rapidly increasing number of its patrons. Keep your eye on our daily advertisements for real bar- gains—or, better still, walk through the Base- ment every chance you get. It will well repay you! * OLYMPIA, Feb, 10.—That the pro- New school code is viewed with | deep and dark suspicion in many | # Quarters was evident at the open Bearing held on the educational bill) Mast night. | BIDDEN PURPOSES | | | 1 working condi reomenta, m constitute Ju 4 working conditions allroad parties to the ie.” the t make such ARE ALLEGED ) The hidden objects of the bill, ac- _ GoMing to these opponents are | © 1. The stripping of al! power from | ‘Mra. Josephine Corlias Preston, pres. | ‘ONE state superintendent of schools, "by making her subservient to a state board of education. % The rentoval of the board of} Wigher education and the substitution 0f laymen, unschooled in modern ed <Meational methods. %. Shifting a large part of the w@chool tax burden from the poorer to the richer school districts. + 4. Adoption of the 30-10 plan of taxation, whereby the state will as» ee Ne oe gaat nme of the r Hundreds of boys remember how pretty Hazel Brooks, ore ee a 2 the little sergeant,” fought influenza at Camp Kearney, Cal.,| « park TO SUPPLANT CODE and again at Camp Beauregard, La. Now “the little sergeant” | \ett te At the public hearing last night be. | ts near death in a Los Angeles hospital and every day hun-| ?* A New Shipment of Silk Georgette WAISTS at $4.89 Brings Styles and Colors of Unusual Beauty We were in luck to get these handsome cements and would hear the fore the joint educational committee. | dreds of telegrams and calls come from the Yanks she| hors ae vrs reported the eccl-|1 19 Taking the name of his wife's || of the workers, B. M HH Waists for you at this price! Such colors as the principal speaker on behalf of the| nursed and who have heard of her critical illness. | He was released on his personal|| 04 husband, William Zeinen- || dent of the turquoise, flesh, tomato, rose, bisque, gray, ‘bi was A. 8. Burrows, superintend ent of schools of King county and is today known as William Prof. || !#bor, eh | Mra. MoGulrelp skull was fractured. 1 ¢ chairman of the board that framed wh pip tie appropriation TARR D Bhs Wan tien eather 04.3... Been. |1 ot and © simarcies to his for. || the labor board 7 the new code. ce °. | nai a va @ mer wife, after an absence of : Burrows declared that the main ob-| The bill makes it unlawful for an ft ly, chemint in the city engineers of ? 4 =. Pricatt © q nearly 20 yearn. Of the bill is to equalize the bur- | officer to exceed his appropriation. lene Raa Reh Nag lage Whtie sabnien tien ecieine BOY ENDS LIFE % of education in the state. He} ee He am |] evening in Cripple Creek, Zetwen- |) “aid that many districts in the state | Labor Will Attack 9 |] Benne was slugeed and robbed. || | “fe unable to properly educate their rs pa For 12 years he was a victim of || ‘children uncer present conditions. Hart’s Civil Code} Charged with having passed on/ amnenia, and wandered over the || } | | William Kern, of Cheney, another . . the postmistress at Edison, Wash.,| United States, whil 4 | OLYMPIA, Feb, 10.—Suit to tent | States, while hin wife and via ‘ I the commissioners, stated that in| 4. Constitutionality of the Hart civil five $5 federal reserve notes that | family awaited his return. WOODLAWN, Cal, Feb. 10-—Se Ti of the counties of the state it was ’ cause he had been sent home from code De rl ee! Ultam | ° Eight ‘ears ago he mo EE 40 SAF Gob: 00-1 Mn | ees rite cree oa, Wcrme [Ne Bat altered’ gp:an to make, Chom : fo he recovered |! choot for swearing, John Henry henne, Colorado's Enoch Arden, ||!0" of th ———— ee recon sunset, terra cotta and many others. Made with circular or square necks and richly trimmed = silk floss or beads or heavy silk raid. Most of them are in overblouse style, tie- back effect, and have short sleeves with hem- stitched edges. Sizes to 46. Short, president of the State Federa-|annear as twenties, A. F. Morgan, his memory in a Lon Angeles How. ‘ Hawk, 13, threw himerlf in front of Seite untrained fe gH onmgaanel marie pe perpen Ball for Ole #. Larwon, set at $100,-/] pital. On his return to Denver, Tags : B. S y S ( ) TReuben Jones, secretary of the | poe eee een ie bill yesterday /Miae T. P. Morgan, was held in King |900 when the former president of the || Zeisenhenne learned hia wife, || * Southern Pacific train at Zamora e Sare fou Jee Yur yesterday afternoon, and was decap- itated. | The boy's father ts Willlam Hawk, | ‘| Beattie ‘yay wards syd azainst| afternoon, jcounty jail Thuraday defunct i andinavian apertven Siskin him dead, had married ‘the code le d red val he 3 | bank of Tacoma was arrested at his Villiam Protfit Not wishing to ‘The principal object of attack will| Morgan was arrested tn the Ev ishing “40 plan of taxation, Introduced by | ae oe | be - Seattle home Wednesday, was re || mar the happiness of the couple, Taffeta and Tricotine emergency clause, whic! pre- 0 ie 7 dhe last legisinture, had proved a| De the emergency clause, which Dis lerett postoffice Wednesday, when he | 41.7.4 to $35,000 by the Pierve county || Zeisenhenne did not explain to ||/t7ack Wa dll Hava snot eostly experiment. | weheure. jappeared to cash a money order for | superior court Wednesday night them his peculiar dinappearance || The 444 previously been threat | ‘Mrs. Preston, state superintendent | ee. |$87.40 that he had drawn the day| He could not furninh the amount. || or his recovery from loas of mem. ||*2%, With confinement in a reform D 1 Of schools, declared that the proposed | py I d . 1 |before at Edison in favor of “T. P./ Larson is charged with embezzlement || ory. school for using profanity. | a le change in the school system was un- lot on Industria |Morgan, Everett.” | of $60,000. When Proffitt died friends not. fied Zaisenheane, whores ia cor ||Italy Willing to a ate Officials to | Sees he cues te Create Coaek Talk Disarmament Budget System Bill All Less Than Three Weeks Old the arrest by notifying Portoffice Insurance Charged! The Edison portmistress notte | S ti nonin al dr Lege soe joa Inspector Swenson here, Vv ° St R ° immediately and was reunited to || Filed im House | ‘r= ntts tntustrat tneurance 1p parang raid oes at aienites| OLY ee ee eae ens || “Mnaeahense. dectared vo toot || OME, Pet: 1¢-ialy ta conf 7 ors Te a = $15.00 have a | as the chi made last night ~ er nate * ms participate in a disarmament con > " SOLYMPIA, Feb. 10.—Sponsored|ty" william Short president of the| "00% Rear Tacoma, ficials left here today for the Olym.|| the name of Proffitt because his ||ference, 1 was told at the foreign een received within the last three weeks is by Representative George F. Meach- te Federation of Labor. ; . a" Tea ple peninsula to make an investiga. || two sons had adopted that name. || o¢tica today. gy gerks Seattle Firms in tion of the Gamage wrought in that 1 klsh. péflelel. Gectereh hie cous ‘hey ager ne oe Short secased orgasiaation hensive} giaection by the recent storms. t be ted on t * over 2 Population was 0 doo: section * ; ry can be counted on to answer any ier cm fm the house yester@ay. pha hig hance lo * heraitting (OT ‘Know Your State |_ Included in the party are Gov, summons which may be sent out by | "The bill applies only to Seattle. Under the terms of the proposed the mayor would be permit- SS week being observed at Ellensburg | State Highway Commirmioner Allen, | — a discussed in detail previous to a to veto individual items or the} NEWARK, N. J. —Probibition offt-|as part of the statewide movement| Fire Warden Pape and RR. 1.) Brookline, Mass. is the largest formal call for the meeting, it was in {ts entirety, At the present |cers seize wine at dinner given in|to encourage support for Pacific! Fromme, supervisor of the Olympic|town in the world administered |stated that Italy's naval policy is he is compelied either to reject' honor of Mayor C. P. Gillen. Northwest manufacturers. forest renerve. under the town meeting system. | proof positive of their late styles and smart seasonableness. And the values we can safely leave to your own good judgment, as the quality is certainly there. They’re real bargains at the price, and well worth your inspection. FORMER STUDENTS of the Unt veraity of Chicago were addreaned Hart, State Treasurer Babcock. | phursday noon by Professor Herbert | President-elect Harding. Geatrial Seesomens Wales. resented at the “Know Your State*|State Land Commissioner Savidee,| 1, Willett, of their alma mater, Altho the situation could not be} } therd to compete with the state in-| Numerous Seattle firms are rep | i strictly protective A Jobber’s Overlot he Women’s Coats at $25.00 A Remarkable “Economy Friday” Event Handsome Velours in Browns, Navy and Tan Shades. In all sizes from 16 to 42. Wrappy and straight line styles. Many full silk lined. All splendidly tailored. COAT SECTION— SECOND FLOOR 35- and 36-Inch Plain and Fancy Silks and Silk Mixtures , $1.95 Yd. A big lot of Silks to be disposed of on Economy Friday at $1.95 a yard. Some dandy values in the lot—included are: Plaids, Messalines, Linings, Kimono Silks, Plain and Changeable Taffetas The majority are all silk, but a few are silk and cotton mixed in best colorings, such as gray, black, blue, rose, white, tan, fancies and others. THIRD FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE A Jobber’s Lot of Patent Leather and Kid Pumps $4.95 Pr. A jobber’s surplus stock of Pumps, bought to such advantage that we can say $4.95 a pair for Economy Friday. Black or White Kid and Black Patent Leather Pumps Made with light-weight turned soles, plain toes and covered Louis heels—some with buckles, oth- ers with small ornaments. UPPER MAIN FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE Economy Friday Fifteen Captivating Styles in Taffeta, Tricotine and Tricolette DRESSES AT $22.50 Every Single Dress a Super-Value at the Price In Midnight Blue, Navy Blue and Brown Trimmed With Snatches of Bright Color—Sizes From 16 to 44 DRESS SECTION—SECOND FLOOR | iyrrn ean to its really remarkable opportunities to save, Economy Friday has assumed an im- portant place in many a Seattle woman's financial scheme. And every department in this big store is striv- ing to win her favor by offering better and better economies by lowering prices and by purchasing special lots which can be sold for less. One thing is certain—Economy Friday is well named! Cartain Marquisette 27 c Women’s Cotton 25 CPr Reduced to Yard Hose Reduced to WOMEN’S KIMONOS AND Silk Blouses Reduced Odd Lots of Boys’ Wearabl . n e repens wate ED ate bevel Broken Lines of Higher Priced Hose LINGERIE REDUCED to $2.95 Ea. Half Price Mar +key i Malan gad taal re. Pisce Cotton Stockings specially 2 FORMERLY $5.75 TO $7.50 Economy Friday finds Boys’ Wi duese’ for Economy Friday to 27¢ a prc age Cua taetins kg 24 Kimonos Silk Crepe de Chine Silk Crepe de Chine Blouses, and a _ ables at half price and ‘lene—here ai yard—6 inches wide, finished with med tops in black and white anos Reduced to Envelope Chemises few Georgette Crepe Blouses—splendid some of the items included: : selvedge. 814, 9 and 91% only. $1.00 $1.95 values, but not all styles in the lot. —Boys’ Rain Coats reduced to $2.25. FOURTH FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE UPPER MAIN FLOOR~THE BON MARCHE Well made, of crepe Just 60 of these Silk ey and low neck style, ruffle and —Boys’ Leather Belts reduced to 75¢. — es ide ao ey 3 pct lace trimmed—white and flesh only. —Boys’ Collars reduced to 121g¢. F id E 5 4 a aa ae ae seit ee SECOND FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE —Boys’ black and white Fa saietie Books 25 Cc riday Economies From the $1.00 each. for Friday to $1.95, : Blouses reduced ‘to S6i. Corset Shop 13 Corduroy Robes Flannelette Gowns Odd Lots of Shoes Reduced OTHER BARGAINS FOR BOYS ARE A sale of 1,800 Books, __rastic-top Pink Broche Corsets at $2.45 Reduced to Reduced to —Little Gent’s patent leather Shoes; —Boys’ Corduroy Pants, sizes 9 to 16 | F including fiction of all —Pink American Lady Corsets rednet ae ‘$1 95. $3.95 50c rascptee f ‘ i , —Boy /Gulntek ome educed to : kinds—many in original —Pink Jersey Silk Bandeaux and Nemo Jespul Corduroy Robes, for- 26 Gowns in this lot Shosor etoee Sik a oo $3.00. i cai ase tNC. bindings—some are war A piegeyne reduced to $1.25. merly sold at $6.95 and of flannelette, in blue Infants’ fir step Shoes; sizes 2 to —Boys’ Shirts of madras reduced to books—a wide variety of Frei bi negaryes and Brassieres reduced to 75¢. $8.95. In wistaria, Co- and white and pink and 6; pair $1.95, titles to suit every taste. is duced tb Bie.” of good quality rubber, re- penhagen and pink. white stripes. —Women’s satin and fabric Spats re- even Boys’ Suits reduced to $7.50. LOWER MAIN FLOOR " SECOND FLOOR—THI BON MARCHE SECOND FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE duced to $1.95. x* Boys’ Suits reduced to $15.00. UPPER MAIN FLOOR—THE BON MARCHE BOYS’ SECTION—UPPER MAIN FLOOR 18 Damaged Wash i Boilers a $1.00 Dress Ginghams | ] 5c Yd , Tin and copper-bottom Wash Boilers—d: i Special at J . mended. in Et an Pn area zee Wot anally [e4 26- and 27-inch Gingham in plaids, checks and stripes— HARDWARE SECTION-UNION STREET BASEMENT ESTABLISHED 1990 lengths to 20 vans. sr kine” eens iar Laie

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