The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 16, 1921, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SEATTLE STAR MARRIAGES if PRINCIPALS IN CULT suir | HE FORCED ON GIRLS OF 16 ae Scandalous Allegations Are Made Against Head of | 7 Religious Colony will CHICAGO, April 16 . who shall live in secret until a is brought against me, Which shall bring it into court.” | So phopbesied Holy Purnel! in his book, “The Star of Rethiehem.” which outlines the be | Nefs of the long hatred religious cult} of the House of David at penton | Harbor, Mich. | The phophecy will be fulfilled In Chicago Monday, when charges wil he made against him tn the suit of Mrs. Hilda Manse! for the annulment of her marriage to Russell 1. Han- | gel, into which she says Purnell} forced her. | MOTHER TO TELL, OF CONNECTION WITH CULT Mrs, Isabella Pritchard, mother of Hilda Hansel, expects to testify In} court concern with the cult Fifteen years ago Mrs. Pritchard | ecame a convert and left her home | fm Melbourne, Australia, with her two daughters, Hilda and Rena, then 22 and 14, to enter the colony | Mrs. Pritchard says that 4 all her possessions of the House of David, because th © | colony is co-operative. Thereafter, she says, she and her| @aughters endured many hardships, until finally they fled. In the colony, Mra Pritchard al Jeges, she and her daughters were subjected to artuous toil and al lowed little food and scanty cloth | Purnell she says, who calls him self “A Second Gabriel,” rules the colony, punishing those who dis. obey his commands According to the three women. children growing up in the colony are graduated from various duties | fo the House of David. There ia, | Mrs. Prichard said) great rejoicing | when the 16 yearSid girls go there. ¥ But, she alleges, Hoty Benjamin | wore the girls to secrecy so that| No word should escape as to what |r took place within. “There were some 50 or 60 girls at the House of David,” said Mra. Pritchard. ‘@ “My girls thought that I approved ‘ef anything that Holy Benjamin did, But I did not know what was taking| Jlace at his house. “When Benjamin was warned | ‘Phat officials were to make investi | some girls were imme ly married off to men they ‘t even spoken to.” Mrs. Pritchard left the colony in Weptember, 1919, with her daugh-| “ters. Rena’s husband also came with ‘them, but Hilda's husband remained. Hilda states that she never lived ‘with Hansel as his wife, for men| mand women have separate quarters ft the colony, and {t is because of This that she hopes to win an an- Dulment. Whether Hansel will contest the guilt is In doubt. However, every charge made against Purnell and This asnociates ts denied in full at ‘the colony. Mrs. Hilda Hansel and her husband, Ru | long-haired member of the House of David, who, she says, she married under compulsion. 'NO VOTE NEEDED \U, S, LOSES IN ON SCHOOL LEW SALMON CASE {So Rules Attorney General Submiesion to the people of the! mills for school |government lost its premier case of | for local levy of 125 J the kind when Federal Judge BE. | purposes will not be necessary, At! ruled Friday tn answer to the ques tion submitted by Malcolm Dougias, attorney of King coum The attorney general mills of the proposed levy are for retirement they will have to be levied by the commissioners school board will be within its lim. | it of 10 mills, On questions concerning possible | poll tax exempti the prosecuting attorney of Spo- the attorney general that neo one between 21 and 60 years old, not even militia men, are exempt. Cases of actors ang ac! tresses will have to be getermhined | p, individually as to whether they are residents of the state, ‘Hunch From Heaven’ | Led Him to Stills| San Francisco, and other places. TACOMA, April 16.--That he VANCOUVER, B. C—Testimony of two newspaper reporters, who bat in on a meeting of the Knights of Columbus here recently, resulted fn commitment of Osmond Thomas utterances. Henry Pearce, 1108 Myrtle was hurt by falling the sack backache and made my kid dizziness disappeared, too.” “hunch from Warren, prominent four men were convicted yesterday! that, acting upon his Grattan Esmonde, Sinn Fein envoyy| he ‘visited the places operated by to assize court for alleged seditious | the defendants, drank their liquor, nd brought his evidence to court.stump pullers, annoying kidney ills. Myrtle Street Cloverdale Street down with a he 4 right over m ny times when settled in my kidneys and ca amall of my_ bac and nights 1 was 1 tred ea They gave me energy and toned up my #yatem.” Doan’s Kidney Every Druggist Has Doan’s, 60c a Box—Foster-Milburn Co., ey Chemists, Buffalo, N. Y. Condemned Fish to Belte« Given to Owners After months of preparation the Cushman held Saturday for the de fendant in the Northern Packing |peak | Company's contest of condemna edings against in question was brought down from Juneau last Sep tember. Investigators from the U 8. food and drug testa, upon the st sth of which the entre ehipment was ordered condemned In federal court. Many thousands of cases of salmon have been thus kept from the trade. The | usual procedure has been for the owners to recondition the salmon » submitted BY | for animal food or to use It for fer |tilizer, ‘This has been found to be & costly business. For the first time tn the local court condemnation proceedings were fought when the Northern acking Co. one of the amallest jconcerns in the business, contested | he forfeiture, The government went to much ex 9) pense in pushing the case, bringing witnesses from Washington, D. C, Judge Cushman held that the per centage of salmon unfit for food was too small to warrant condemn. | ling the whole. | It will be returned to the owners, | W. A. Extus and J. T. Hansen, and} | sold, pring find you tired and achy? RE you dragging along from day to day with a lame, achy back? Do the early weeks of spring find you all tired out, weak and lacking am- * bition for the day’s work? Does every lit- tle task bring those'stabbing pains that keep you nervous and unstrung? Then Tells a Stor” jose no time finding out what’s wrong. Your back doesn’t ache without a cause and usually it is weak kidneys or overwork may have slowed up your kidneys and left poisons in your blood that shouldn’t be there. That, then, is why you have those all-day backaches and sudden pains, headaches, dizzy spells and other get worse! Use Doan’s Kidney Pills. They have helped thousands and should help you. Ask your neighbor! : These Are Seattle Cases: ee Street Fred M. Onawald, retire neer, B&th at eal with w alwaye fe it wtite wr Cloverdale at t cold it usually stless and obtained y and could I backach PROPOSES CITY SLOGAN AFTER SIBERIA “Well Fed, gry for Business” What's the matter with Seattle? What's wrong We made so much money the war that it ie a littie hard to must underst sep ng} “In Har hia tale of gloom in the ¢ |must be nilenced. TIME NOT Ver FOR LEADER Any man who wu When the time for proved biinself a cap on his own a travels about I've come across pe lowing letter to UL. Hansel, a}, ) know what I mean jo cited the exper na | CONDUCTED at 8. Mary's church he other day,” Dr. this came man came to me we ng a erin and in wecyent onfided that he had Jui ja new car, and fairly rad: at a : “T had an ineptration last night.” . but Hungry for 1,459 cases of | neee™ Bareew Flapjack Inventor Arrives Capt. Fred Anderson, of the Sal vation Army, inventor of the whee barrow Mapjack griddle in the front Une trenches In France, may set hia) wheelbarrow to work In this city to he declared Friday | DEATHS after a week of acquaintance with ratories made ald the needy, Ife came here to take charge of Malvation Army Temple Corps No. 4 and is daily telling reminiscences of the war on Sixth ave., and Union streeta |men in the St. Mihiel drive and haw| Rice Janes MH. 38. his original wheelbarrow here, between Pike Going Camping? ‘These days jure| Wade. Anna EE, Seattle Going camping? If| Hewitt, Wilmer Clyde, Seattle the great out-ofdoors. | you should #e@ the exhibit of » | onree, Ragmoné Za. Seattle equipment staged . Rainier} The exhibit has been extended to} Dentists and farmers are proctteat | next Wednesday night. Dally from . A cold, strain Don’t let the trouble Mr. Onwald added Pills |p permanent.” ‘SAYS JAPS ARE | Trying to Get Control, Avers| Fur Buyer STARTS TODAY “Partners | What t Japan doing in Siberia? Japanese soldiers are to be seer everywhere there What are they doing? Nobody knowa, These questions are brought to fenttle by James Rosenberger, American fur buyer, who has just returned from a two-year tour of Manchuria and Russia in pursuit of hie business | Rosenberger anewers his own juerion by potnting out that Japan| is seeking by every means at her| ai to gain control of Siberia he saya, “which ts a division point on Siberian lratiway, Japan has two troops of soldiers, She has more in Viadl From the Novel by . |vostok. She in buying all the land : she can in Harbin, But she doesn't J. C. Lincoin ontrol it—yet." A In Viadivostok and other cities. 2 Rosenberger says, Japan has great Hodkinson warehouses stored with tons .of food Release and other supplics Rumors are urrent, he saya, that there ts to be |a new revolution aga the Jap anere this spring. DEMANDS OF COURT THAT HIS STILL BE GIVEN BACK TO HIM timing that dry squad agents emtered his home against his will seized a still and other evi making, C. C t for the re y. Caswell t ruling in fed 0 the effect that un lets & search warrant is first ob tained officers may not search a man's home for liquor. FUNERAL SERVICES WERE wturday morning Fuce, 39, who died Providence hospital employe of the mmunicipe (Vital Statistics) BIRTHS snington, Thomas, $17% Fighth . D. IL, 1600 Navenhe blvd A. J, 2049 E Laurethurst, - This well-known drama tells the story of a grap- »ple for life beneath the ocean waves and the sink- ing of a full-rigged ship without the loss of one of its thrilling dramatic moments. The intense action of the play follows the characters to the very bottom Clark. Barah J. 74, 1839 1th ave. | of the ocean, where, by the aid of a new and most Rasaxer, Mary FR. 12. 1730 18th avg. | modern method of undersea photography, some of | isk wee teen tl the most marvelous scenes ever enacted are filmed. in. Nancy, 62, 4204 Burke ave Ariny, Jotin Se Th, Dilter motel. | This drama has no rivals among stories of the sea. | Wright. 1, 1413 Summit ave ~ 610% Eighth &. girl. | yeta, M, 121 Maynard ave, girk | |atbere, August, 69, 2208 N. 39th. Clark, Barah J 1879 16th ave. ney, James, 78 y, Elizabeth, Th, 132A Ninth | i i MARRIAGE LICEN: ES | ing Camping? | MARRIAGE, LICENSES) THE PROGRAM INCLUDES: Shea, am, Seattle IRMA FALVEY ON OUR HOPE-JONES WURLITZER PLAYING “MISERERE,” From II Trovatore Martin, Ruth Elizabeth, Seattle Bw Stella KH, Seattle | Meta rt, Dewey Wo Seattle. . TOPICS OF THE DAY “HIS DIZZY DAY” Wit of the Press Selected Two-Part Comedy FOX NEWS |, Robert D., Seattle,..Legal | World Events Performances Start at 11 A. M. Daily , Sarah M., Beattle.... Legal} Maneen, Peder W.. Seattic.....Legal Dolan. Emma, Seattle +++ Legal MATZENAUER World's Greatest Contraite Anstating Artists CHARLES CARVER BASSO FRANK LAFORGE Composer-Pianist - APRIL 18 Many thousands of dollars money leave Seattle For a juicy steak. dat’ 8. ~advertivenna let's go to Washington Star Prices: Sie, $1.10, (including W SEATS ON SALE NOW AMUSEMENTS _ ani the uu MALTEY at the Women’s Edu- cational Exhibit for Washington Manufacturers April 19-23 ARENA ADMISSION FREE opovovopopojopoyo| RECENTLY It isn't always the man who talks itney fight uss) Suggests Bill for made to wuhiost. the contribution plgte than a cis | ns sing the American Tnstitute | [B)| esisature a bill outtining a system ty] o of hard-surfaced highways thruout | tonic Eatonie and I can traly say it seaypul Ella Smith. i by taking up and ont a aoe ic eeiee more owe on| System of Highways a. to same restrictions as gineers Friday night, sug Says New Jersey my life. It te the best Acid stomach canses awfal m! acidity “hema area prevent go copper cent makes more noise on} Lieutenant Governor W. J. Coyle, 4 probably. han poneoneeee fects teat thy aaith ve SOL \ y rie like M “I was nearly dead until I medicine ever made,” writes Mi v1, | which Eatonic quickly rid digestion. A tablet taken after me PALaee wiPf AND His Gr w | brings quick relief. Keeps the sto j ach slthy and helps to roieviad many ills so liable to arise from cess acid. Don’t suffer from stom miseries when you can a big b of Eatonic for a tri with yo Gruggist’s guarantee. —Advertisem sansasssaszu0e aan OTEL BUT Second WE HAVE ADDED 1,500 VW BOXES TO OUR MODERN SAFETY DEPOSIT VAULTS, Come and examine our equipment for the safekeeping of bonds and other valuable papers, Entrance, corner Second t Pike st, ES SAVINGS Is so soothing and cooling for baby’s tender skin after a bath with Cuticura Soap. Semple Rosh Pree by Mall. Address: “Outignra Lad BANK A Re MRAM H Wrice for our interestino free bc Swift Specific Co Dept B Atlan 4 ee bint and Nag

Other pages from this issue: