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PREACHER Says He Intends to 0 Thru Government ~ Hearing Like a Man BY R. J. GIBBONS PASSAIC, N. J., March 30.—With ‘the date of his trial on a charge of Wiolating the Mann act lows than a Month away, Rev, Cornelius H. Den wel has come out of the seclusion in which he wrapped himself after being “Ousted by his church, to make a pub statement. ‘XS HE WILL SEK THING THRU ‘going to see this thing thru| end like © man," he said. SPSL that to the world, and say that | for what I did.” _ Densel, a on November 12, 1920, with Trina Hanenberg, 26-year Member of his church choir, The ‘Were found together in Buffalo later. 5 loved him,” said the girl, who Be called upon by the govern: to testify against him next She was busy hanging clothes Each day while in Buffalo I looked for the to come that would = Bs Ff ix é 3 & i H [ ii ii & & 2 & g & Sa : : g 3 z | ! i gk i 5 g ag 3 { i 4 ot fil eM] | s E good,” says Miss “What is money when and your good her husband him,” she enys. st, Monday night, police expected to golve a case that fias been thoroly baffling in all its details, Possibility that the machine might conceal a body is admitted by police. ‘The position of the auto would in- @icate that it might have been driven into the water by accident. It is Just off a turn in the road. Marka show plainly where it scraped along the side of a fish house fn falling. | It fs upright on its four wheels. It can barely be discerned at extreme low water. A Great Northern railway ferrick Was scheduled to lift the wrecked machine late Wednesday. Police will try to determine numbers or other identification marks on the auto and in that way check ite own- ership. Another theory advanced by offi. cers is that the auto was driven into the bay to collect the insurance on it. __ JAPANESE DENY LANSING CHARGE TOKYO, March 29.—(Delayed.)— The Japanese foreign office, thru Delegate Sakino, who represented Japan at the Versailles peace con- ference, today declared that two of the conferences, said in advices here to have been described by Robert lansing, former secretary of state, in his book on the peace conference, were never held. The conferences referred to were said to have been between Lansing and Japanese delegates. The foreign office, it was stated, may issue a formal denial. Cincinnati Bars i 4 Henry Ford Paper \ i CINCINNATI, Ohio, March 20—~ | AS ordinance barring Henry Ford's Nectar paper from being sold on incinnati streets because of ite articles against the Jews. Paddy, bring home some of Boldt’s French pastry.—Advertisement. 11 years pastor of the | t Netherlands church here, | The city council today passed an| - church, ASK MILLIONS FOR ARID LAND Westerners to Petition Next Congress “WASHINGTON, March 30 the Western States Reclamation a» | sociation will ask it to pass bills for the advancement from the public) treasury of $250,000,000 for the recia- mation of arid and semiarid lands) in the West. The billa, which ab| ready have been drawn, will be in- troduced in the senate by Senator | Charles L. McNary, of Oregon, and) im the house by Representative Ad dison T. Smith, of Idaho, It is urged by the advocates of the proposed legislation that there is no ‘use to which the federal government can put its money which will return more in economic results than this. At recent prices of agricultural prod. | ucts, several of the Western irriga-| ton projects have been producing in| a single year crop values far in ex come of the entire cost of the project. ‘The /reciamation plan calls for the repayment of the $250,000,000 within | ten years, but the repayments are| expected to be kept in a revolving | fund for reclamation work until the entire irrigable area in the United) States has been brought under irri-| U.S, HOSPITAL SITE UP TODAY King county's offer of 300 acres at The Willows as part of a site for the establishment of one of the five hospitals for former service men, for which $18,600,000 has been appro: | printed, was to be. presented Wednes- day by E. F. Blaine, vice president of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce, to the U. 8. public health service committee on hospitalization and} representatives of the surgeon-gener. al's office and the treasury depart-| ment, meeting in Washington, D. C. The county proposes that the gov-| ernment buy the adjacent 700 acres| needed for the project, on which op- tions have already Been obtained. CLERK ACCUSED ‘STEALING $6000 TACOMA, March 30—James Per. jonto, 25, clerk employed in the | United States internal revenue of- | fice here, was to be given a prelimin- lary hearing today on charge of em-| bezzling $6,000 in government funds. He will be held for the federal grand | jury. | Peronto was arrested on a warrant issued by Assistant United States | District Attorney John M. Boyle, Jr. The alleged embezzlement came to light during the course of a period. ical inspection of a nts, and Per. | onto admitted that he had taken the | |money, aceording to David J. Will |fams, collector of internal revenue. | Williams said the total of th leged thefts would reach $11,37 but ‘that Peronto had made good a por tion of the missing money when con- fronted with the charges, | Tells Rotarians of Skagit Project) Chas, Morse was scheduled to ad-| dress the Rotary club on the Skagit river project at the club's weekly luncheon in the Masonic club rooms Wednesda noon Plans for Safety week wi also to be considered, Trucks Needed for Millionaires’ Club A truck or two for an hour or} two, That's a daily need of the Million. laires’ club, 98 Main at. That's where | jobless men can get a two-bit meal for & conta. There are some dona tion# waiting out for a truck to carry them in. Phone Main 6026, Miss Trina Hanenberg, former chorister, and Rev. Cor- ‘nelius H. Densel, former -pastor of First PRINCIPALS IN TRIAL | (__ PRINCIPALS IN TRIAL __) ON Netherlands . RENE VIVIANI IN WASHINGTON Envoy of France on Diplo- » matic Errand WASHINGTON, March 30. ~Rene in Washington today ready to di» every conceivable question which | may bear upon the relations of the ited States and France. Viviani comes aa an envoy ex- traordinary carrying authority from his government to Yoke French policy on any inmue which may be wugeested by President Harding, Secretary Hughes or members of the senate foreign relations committes. Vivian ts ready to tell President Harting how far France is willing to go In “modifying the league.” Be fore coming to Washington, it in learned, Vivian! held a long confer. ence In New York with Colonel) George Harvey, recently upon as ambassador to London and considered one of the bitterest antl longue men connected with the ad ministration. | Altho the two leading mubjecta at hand are the league of nations and | finances, members .of the mission | made it plain that Viviant ts em. powered to open the whole question | of Franco-American relations from | every angle. BLOWUP CAUSED | BY FIREWORKS | CHICAGO, March 30.—Outlaw fire. | | works caused the blast that buried) eight persons to death and seriously | injured 50, preliminary investigation | showed today. Blame for the explosion, which oo curred yesterday in the tenement} district of “Little Italy,” was placed squarely on the firm of Singer &| Schaffer. i; | William Singer and Nathan Schaf-|]) fer, the partners, sought by police. are now being They dixappeared immediately after the blast { The firm, according to police, han | been warned several times against making fireworks on their premises The store of Singer & Schaffer is next door to the Joseph Weil Paper company, which wad wrecked by the explosion. | AMNESTY ORDER | MAY BE ISSUED, WASHINGTON, March $0.—At- torney General Daugherty is con sidering making recommendations on the question of a general am- nesty for all political prisoners, he | post @ letter. | Margaret could not explain, Charlotte |muddenly ran across the street, GIRL 1S KILLED BY STREET CAR Dragged 40 Feet, Dies in- stantly Darting across Boston st, into the path of a strest car which whe did not notice, Charlotte McFarland, 6, Youngest daughter of Mr, and Mra. (. A. MeFartand, 2002 Nob Hill ave, was instantly Killed at 4:25 p.m. Tuenday. The accident oodurred be- tween Parst ave, N. and Warren ave. Charlotte, her sister Margaret, 11, and brother Fred, 3, were walking along Boston st. on their way to For some reason which Bhe van into the side of the car, was knocked down and run over by the rear track : The motorman heard Margw seream, and stopped the car after dragging the body of the little girl 40 feet, BALLOON BLOWS UP; NINE HURT Soldiers Seriously Burned in Explosion LOS ANGELES, March 10.—Nine men from the Arcadia balloon school are in the post hospital at Ross feild today suffering from serious burns sustained late yerterday, when their balloon exploded near Ramona, Lieut, George Watte waa in the basket when @ steel cable holding the huge bag snapped close to the winch. After rising to 9,000 foet, Watts succeeded in bringing the bal- loon down to within 1,200 feet of earth, then leaving it and making a safo landing in & parachute. The nine injured were members of a detachment dispatched to recov or the balloon when it came to earth. As it hit the ground ft exploded, hurting the nine soldiers to the ground and burning all of them. Watts had landed some dintance away and was not hurt. All of those burned, including a Heutenant, three sergeants and five privates, are ex pected to recover. eee Search Swamp for Five Balloonists PENSACOLA, Fla, March 30, Search for the five aeronauta mine ing in a naval balioon since March 22, shifted today to the vicinity of When congress reconvenes, April 11, | Viviant, former Fgench premier, was | Apaichicola, Mla, where a fisher. man reported having heard strange | cuss with the American government ¢ries coming from an impaasmble | Capt. A. P. Ankeny in the same par wwamp. The fishermen declared that the cries sounded Uke several men shouting to attract attention, Former Lieutenant Sentenced to Cell PORTLAND, March 20—-Robert Dougtas, former Meutenant in the *pruce division stationed at Vancou- ver, Wash, waa sentenced to 13 months on McNeil's Island, in fed. eral court here yesterday, following hin indictment by the grand jury decided [OM @ charge of obtaining $750 under | Harry J. Murray, 1626 Fourth ave. false pretenses from a girl student at Oregon agricultural college. MRS, SCHAEFER ASKS DIVORCE Seeks Freedom From Banker Now Convict Divorce from Paul Schaefer, form er Seattle banker, ie asked by Mra. Piva Schaefer, of 4746 Brooklyn ave., in the superior court today on the ground that her husband ts @ con viet. fichaoter was sent to the peniten tiary February 10 following hin con- feasion and plea of guilty of em: bessling money from the North Side State bank, of which he was teller, to loan to bootleggers, Mrs. Schaefer's bill of complaint recites that they were married on| September 27, 1917, that they have no children or community property and that she does not wish for all mony. She asks that her maiden name, Eva M. O'Neil, be restored to her, At the time the bank was closed by state authorities and before her | husband's arrest, it became known | that the home life of the Schaefers | was not altogether tranquil Mre, | Schacter's move for a divorce even | then would not have been @ surprise Subsequent investigation of Schae- | ter’s banking affairs, after his de parture for the penitentiary, dix closed that considerable speculation in German marks was carried on at the bank, Several of the bank's! clients complained that they had bought and paid for German money | that was never delivered, | Owing to the loone methods of handling loans to persons in the whisky smuggling business the bank | became widely known as the “Hout, | | legwers” bank. ‘SEN, ANKENY PASSES AWAY | Dies at His Home in Walla, Walla WALLA WALLA, March 20. | Last rites for Levi Ankeny, former ,U. B senator, farmer, banker and pioneer, will be held in his home here at 2 o'clock Thursday after noon. He died yesterday from rheurma.- tam. He had been ill several weeks. | Ankeny was reputed to be the wealthiest man in this locality. At) fone time he owned 20,000 acres of | | wheat land here. He was 77 years old. Croming the plains in 1850 his) father died. He wae adopted by | ty. The family settied in Yambill county, Oregon, and later went to Portiand where the adopted boy Went to school. He married Mian Jennie Nesmith. daughter of another ploncer, in 1867. She died « year ago, Four children survive them. Motor Cop’s Knee Hurt; Bike Hits Car Motorcycle Patrolman Frank Glad. win received @ bruised ieft knee when his cycle hit an auto driven by at Fourth ave. and Stewart at, Tues day afternoon, THE BO DARGAIN New Bargains Every Day All Seasonable---All Dependable All at Lower Prices Splendid New Styles in Spring said today. We If he decides on such action the case of Eugene V. will be included with others and not treated separately as was orig inally Daugherty’s intention. | Daugherty said his deoision would not be made until he has had time to confer with members of the «en ate judiciary committee, which is considering a resolution for a gen | eral amnesty and it Is ponsible that he may withhold action until eon gress has registered its opinion on this measure. Acquit Brakeman Debs probably ,}| Straw Sai Just about the smartest hats you’ve seen this season—and look at the price! Rough braids, flat or roll brims—in black, navy, golden brown, gray, Harding blue, with fo or contrasting color. of Dope Charges | J. A. Fleisham, brakeman on the Great Northern railway, was acquit ted of dope charges by a federal jury Tuesday afternoon, Freisham, with Ed Larue, another employe of the road, and Mrs. Larue, were ar. rested last December in connection with a $40,000 cache of smoking opium found in the King st. station by a federal prohibition nt. The Larues were released some time ago. MRS. CORA C, MATHEWS, died Tuesday at the daughter, Mra. George 80th st. Funeral arrangements are being completed by the Order of the | Kastern Star, 67, “‘Seconds’’ of Women’s Cotton Hose 15c a Pair Fine quality, medium-weight Cotton Stock- | ings with seamless feet. In brown, gray and | other good colors. Sizes 814 to 10. N MARCHE at $15.00 Taffetas, Crepe de Chines Canton Crepes, Messalines Tricolettes and Tricotines In Many Colors—Sizes 16 to 42 Swagger New BASEMEN Dresses lors $2.95 leaf green and, Mrs. Ided silk bands in self for the TheBonMarché Spring Styles in Half Hose Kiddies Well-dressed children are wearing the attractive Half Hose in white and colors that are to be such favorites for summer. Cotton Half Hose 35c a Pair Roll-topped Half Hose of mer- cerized cotton, in plain colors with striped tops, or in white with col- ored tops. Sizes 5 to 914, and priced at 85¢ a pair, or 3 pairs for $1.00. Lisle Half Hose 50c a Pair Fine, soft quality mercerized | lisle Half Hose with roll tops. Shown in plain white or in plain colors with striped tops. Sizes 5 to 91. Roman Striped Half Hose 75c a Pair Brown, Navy or Romper Blue Lisle Half Hose with roll tops in gay Roman stripes. —Phoenix plain or drop-stitch Lisle Half Hose in black, white or brown—60c. cuipREn’s STOCKING SECTION—UPPER MAIN FLOOR Three New, Picturesque Aprons at $1.95 APPEAR ON APRON THURSDAY The Apron pic- tured is one of the best models of the season— in blue, pink, tan or rose linene— trimmed with floral _cretonne in contrasting colors. Also Aprons of gingham, bound with contrasting colors— trimmed with French knots and side ties — and still others in fichu effect, with white sash ties and white ruffles, iets « SECOND FLOOR ‘ Girls’ New Crepe Dresses at $2.95 EASY TO WASH—REQUIRE LITTLE IRONING What could be more practical for spring and summer wear for girls than these Crepe Dresses— so easy to keep fresh and neat to put on, and at the same time dressy looking. Straight line models with sash ties — held in by fancy te hee with white pique and collar and cuffs. DAUGHTER'S SHOP—SECOND FLOOR Spring Style Savingsin Smart -Coats and Wraps at $49.50, $59.50, $69.50 % AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES FOR GARMENTS OF SUCH HIGH QUALITY In the Season’s Favored Materials ‘ and Most Desirable Colors Grasp This Opportunity Quickly! Cotton Remnants One-Fourth Less Odd lengths of Percales, Ginghams, Devonshire Cloth, Romper Cloth, Challies, Crepes and White Goods— lengths from 2 to 5 yards, at one-fourth less. —Unbleached Sheeting, 76 inches wide, lengths to 10 yards, at 40c a yard. —Hope Muslin, yard wide, remnants to 10 yards—yard, 15c. FABRIC FLOOR—(THIRD) FOOD SHOP ATTRACTIONS Hot English Scones 5c Baked in Our New Electric Oven’ We have just installed this new elec- tric oven, where we will bake sconed right in plain sight. Delicious hot Scones, filled with but- ter and strawberry jam—bc each. A Sale of Canned Fruits It does not pay to do your canning at home with the low prices on fruits at tha Ban Marche. PUYALLUP BRAND FRUIT Nos. 2 and 214 cans, 4 cans 95¢. No. 1 cans, 7 for $1.00, Det Monte Slice ‘Pineapple and Melba Peaches, 214-size cans, 4 cans for $1.10; 1 can 29¢. A slight extra charge if you wish them delivered, DELICATESSEN OFFERS —Choice Kippered Salmon, fresh daily, Thursday at 27¢ lb. ~—Bon Marche Mayonnaise, made of best ingredients, 40¢ lb, —Paul’s famous Apple Butter, 14¢ Ib. UPPER MAIN FLOOR-—THE BON MARCHE Expert Advice on Nemo Corsets BY MRS. A. L. CRAIG—A NEW YOR! CORSET SPECIALIST She comes to us from the Nemo Hy Fashion Institute—to help you with your ec troubles—and tell you which’ model of the Nemo Kopservice is best suited to your individual figure. Consultation Free SECOND FLOOR—THE BON MARCHB st FOR A WELL-KEPT LAWN YOU NEED / “Henley’s”—the mowers with a utation of giving long and satisf: service—made with best mech skill of high grade materials. a seen pore Lawn Mower ~ “Henley” in bearing Mo’ |W 8-inch drive wheel and 8 cutting 12-inch Mowers .. 14-inch Mowers . 16-inch Mowers ..... Rainbow Lawn Mae Php POR na Lawn . wi steel bearings—8' in wheel and four cutting blades, 12-inch Mowers ......$11. 14-inch Mowers . $12, 16-inch Mowers . $1: UNION STREET BASEMENT re ernest mee eae hacrce