The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 20, 1921, Page 2

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3 more days of this JULY SALE you surely should take advan of one “of se few remaining JULY SALE days to purchase all the homefurnfishings you are in Need of—buy at JULY SALE prices, “Your Credit Is Good!” —a sample JULY SALE value a phenomenal steel bed value— ban in on ge nie Ci $1225 this excellent offering of high-grade steel 618.75 beds, at exceedingly low prices; beds are in IVORY. or VERNIS MARTIN finish; full width or in 3 Mf 3 in. widths; inch continuous posts with Linch filters; ex. eetly as pictured; regular price $18.75; special for thie JULY SALE: l« ' Mystery Girl Is Return Your Second Found in Denver} Poll Tax Statement 20.—Potiee and) “If any person who has paid his in foe today continued poll tax gets a notice, all he has to f efforts to establish the identity | 40 ts to send the notice back to this @n apparently well-educated and; Office, after writing the number of young woman who was taken | his receipt on the back of it,” Sher county hospital here a week | iff ~ a cd ta eaid Wednesday inconscious condition. She | Morning. County Treasurer William A. : white inkor, brot NORFOLK, Va, July 20.— The bombing tests scheduled for today off to unsettled weather. Word of post- ponetment was flashed to the army Te jand navy airplanes just as they were after being | preparing to bomb the former Ger man battleship Ostfriesland. Professor Budlong _ Puts Tanlac to Test PROF. C. J. BUDLON G, Manchester, N. H. “It's an actual fact, I'm in good) ing headaches and hardly knew what health fag the first time in thirty |sleep was, My suffering had almost 1 owe my present splendid | made a complete nervous wreck of condition to Tanlac. and nothing | rhe, and I was so weak V wasn't | One of the two women fallway Prtsidents in tho world, Mra. Piiebo KE. Clark of Nashville, Tenn, is visiting her cousin, Mrs. A. M. Thomas, 150 Pros | Pret st, Sentile, Mrs. Clark's railroad t not a transcontinental route, to be sure, but it is all of 20 miles long, which ig Jugt eight miles longer than Mra Motta J. Erieson’s line, the Amador | Central railway in southern Galt fornia | Mre. Clark became president of cl & North ern railway tn 1914, succeeding to that office upon the death of her husband, George A. Clark, | She had served an apprenticeship to fit her for those duties, having been made vice-president of the line early in. the saine year, To meet Mrs. Clark in Beattie you would never associate her with & masculine job, somehow. She bas mofe than her share of feminine Attractiveness and gentle manners, LEARNED RAILROADING FROM HER HUSBAND | dhe frankly acknowledges that she had no tratning in railroading, except—and here her brown eyes as she proudly says, “You see, I had |the absolute confidence of my hus jband, and in looking over his rec lords and papers I did net find an jimeorans thing that he had not Kentucky & told me.” The Tennessee, | Northern railway was built in 1908-10 from Livingston, the 100-yearold jcounty seat of Overton county, Ten- Neases, to Algood, 100 miles east of | Nashville, and it connects with the Tennessee Central. It carries tim- ber from the Cumberland mountains and makes up in business what it Mixed trains are \train—and Madam President ehuck- |les over the motor train, for she took a White motor truck and sub tituted car wheels for ordinary jones, put a new body upon it ind old! a truck is camouflaged into an honest-to-goodness train. Fifty to 55 men are employed on they would work, were taking the white pickers’ jobs. The Chamber of Commerce promptly passed a resolution stating that while plenty of white they were entitled to the jobs. This apparently was not strong enough for the white laborers, who took the case into their own hands with the resultant jshine and her vivid face lights up) THE WOMAN RAILROAD “I'e00” Conina PRESIDENT HERE Popular Musical Comedy Road’s Only 20 Miles Long, But It’s Successful—and So Is She! this raliroad and the line never yet hap bad « strike, “But.” says the lady, “we try to play fair,” She believes in profic sharing. At Christman time tach employe re calves @ bonus of 10 per cant of his year’s earnings. ‘The attitude of officials has been that Of codpePation, The Manage ment held the places of the men who went into war service ahd there was a time when things Became pretty wertoun, During the War profits fell off alarmingty, Then officials and the higher paid men volunteered to cut their wagea Yes, that actnally happened! The first months _ Mra Clark was in jee, the world war tyzed the export buniness and the little railroad went through a Valley Forge winter, Mrs, Clark personally bore the losses as long as whe could and then called a meet ing of the bondholders. After a long conference these men gave their president @ vote of confidence and volunteered to stand the loses themsetves for another eight montha But, at the end of eight months there were no losses to make good. ‘The bondholders had given her her chance and she had made geod. would not be, but Mf. Clark has bean tied and wot been found “T'm_a bad egg, boys,” anid Lester Kent, 32, who was arrested Tuveday night, parading up Yesler way at Occidental ave. Mourixhing A heavy to jail and relieved him of his artil- lery. Kent was thoroly saturated when arrented. STARTS ON PAGE 1 borers were available tions. Trouble has been brewing all week since the influx of the Japanese began, and the continued hiring of Japanese by sev- AUTOISTS REPORT FILLED WITH in preference ‘to higher-priced the matter to a head. ROADS ARE FLEEING: JAPS Word of the midnight deportation Spread quickly .| morning among Javanese. ii ellen wes anova a short time scarceiy an Oriental was in sight. Only a few 7 who have leases and are working their own land to be seen. Autoists the Japanese. * sulate. BARON HAYASHI STATES PACIFIC QUESTION O. K. WASHINGTON, July 20.—Japan!many things which might be consid will accept the American invitation for a discussion of the Pacific ques tion in the coming disarmament conference here, if she is assured that the scope of this discussion will be définitely outlined before the tual meeting, according to authori- tative Japanese quarters today. eee BY LLOYD ALLEN (Copyright, 1921, by United Press) Shantung settlements for a conference of the powers in them, Baron Hayashi, ambassador to Great lelared today in an interview. Stating that he was expressing his SACRAMENTO, Cal., July 20.— Investigation of baseballs shipped 1 arriving here today report fleeing Japanese on Hampton Roads were postponed, due | roads in all directions from Turlock. About 60 white laborers took part in the deportation of No violence has been reported. Twelve of the Japanese were deported from a number of shacks here. The others were rounded up on four ranches within a radius of four miles from the town, * SAN FRANCISCO, July 20.—Until an investigation of) the facts surrounding the deportation of 68 Japanese labor- ers from the Turlock district is made, no action will be taken, according to the Japanese consulate here. i The consulate stated that it has thus far received only pub- lished reports of the affair, and that no direct protests had reached it from the Japanese refugees who are reported flee- ing in every direction from the Turfock district. In case of formal protests being lodged with the consulate it is probable that the affair will be taken up by the Japanese embassy in Washington, it was intimated at the local con- » | menta. LONDON, July 20—-The Yap an@ be brought up as part of the ‘Pacific are accom-) question’ already have . been dealt Plished facty and there is no need | with by the Versailles treaty. } counection with the proposed Wash- | Shantung, Yap, New Guinea and so ington disarmament parley to revise forth, if raised, might result in a Japanese | general conference on matters that Britain, de-/have the status of accomplished The ambassador discussed the link-| ‘The ambasendor doctured tt wns ing of the “Pacific question” with | his opinion that @ practical solution the conference on disartr ent. of all problems would be possible Personal opinion, he declared that! principle already decided.” ILLEGAL JAP BASEBALLS SEIZED IN SACRAMENTO this jate, Within * ed under the general topic of the Pacific question” already have been settled by the Versailles treaty. He reiterated Japan's hearty will ingness to discuss limitation of arma- “What is the ‘Pacific queation'?” he asked. “What is to be discussed? “That is the whole thing In a nut- shell. Matters that possibly might “It ls clear that such matters as facts.” without “interfering with matters of inspector was watching a band of smal! boys playing baseball. One of Correct Apparel for Women 300 Charming New Washable Frocks Specially Featured at $18.50 Regular Values $22.50, $25.00 and Up to $39.75 Savoring of smart New York and favored East- ern resorts are these sheer, new arrivals, just unpacked and on display for the first time begin- Sometimes i Go cure of musical comedies, oe stands out 80 brilliantly separates itself naturally from most o, the others, and audiences never get it confused with differ- ent entertainments in discussing it. This is said to be the case with “Irene,” the musical comedy which opens at the Metropolitan Sunday, July 24. The pretty young lady pictured above is Margaret Pidgin, one of the delightful entertainers with the company. Wanted: A Divorce! Being the Adventures of a Girl Reporter, Posing as Mrs. Casper Cassidy, Who Seeks to Break the Mar- riage Ties With Her Husband. By Wanda Von Kettler Tt really wan difficult to make Casper over again, after creating him by Gegrees in the form of a di versified brute, But when on the Bwe, Pink, White and Pale Blue. went on to say, “I don't ere that you've got any grounds for divorce. Uh-—how long @i4 you know him murdered OREGON DEATH [Sse FL you were married?” & month,” I told him. i g E 5 eet fe “i sti z E ¢ HERS F i! entered the office just op posite the ele vator and was Misa von Kettler average nize and his face was dec. orated with horn-rimmed speca, eee “Well,” he sald, scowling tnviting- ly, “what are YOU here for? What a’ you been up to? Which set me thinking Ta found my friend, the enemy. And if he hadn't started off the party with that kind of a bang, Cas per might still have been of anything within the realm of! brutishness. But I firured it would be awful to have this lawyer down | approxima size as the pair he sold to Russell, but he was not able to swear they were the same pair. “I know my husband is dead. He FOR LOST BABY deed, ‘With baby Carmetia Coratoto, 8-/.54 ‘again. “He couldn't.” yearold daughter of Charies Cora:| Mrs. Brumfield adheres to her be. tolo, a rancher, lost in the denae/lief that not only did her husband ‘on the Whole family, #o decided that | woods near Bryant, Snohomish coun. |Pt murder Russell but that Russell if his sweet disposition and mine |ty, early Tuesday, Bherlff Matt Stan (Murdered Brumfield for money he couldn't jibe, he'd better bé pally/wich announced ‘this morning that/“®S known to have had on his per. with Casper. |nis four bloodhounds were still too|*09. She declared th her testimony Besides, I rather suspected that he! young to be used in the search, | ‘Mat the body found under Brum. had erawied into his bearcoat for| Dynamite and Lightning, famous| “id's auto is that of het husband my rpecial benefit—he didn’t look ax| bloodhound used in previous hunts, |®"4 fot that of Russell and that the if he was naturally that way—and| were sold some months ago, Star|~ I thought #inee he'd taken the wich aald. trouble to get into it, I'd better let him peed it, The woods around Arlington were | Jabiage with the tofches of searchers last night. The Arlington company |of the National Guard was called out jto aid the hunt for the lost child More than 200 men and women were engaged in thé all-night seatch. “1 want a divorce,” I told him. “My husband won't Jet me go ‘out as much as I fke.” “Huh,” he commented; “per. haps it isn’t good for you to go out as much as you like.” Which I considered a very good | beginning, and continued, “I like to) Corns Will Go while you sleep—if you do this DRAPE go out a lot, and just because I'm| . " Apply Blue-jay to a married to ® man, that’s no reason || Children’s Home Stores Co, corn tonight—the Houid why I should stay home with him, | 604 Union St. the plaster, itis done i de ite i Look fot the Draper Children’s OSES TS aeuie oo wi Fin Miersinard Home Brand Candies and Break a moment. nal is eyes al re ’ vi to fathom the blackness of my soul Redes. ae Fee eee The corn ache willend; and the vacuum of my head, he good to yout” “Oh, yes,” 1 said, “as far as good. “Ien't We want YOU to know that you can get your shoe repair, cleaning and pressing, groceries, the removal of the corn will begin. ness goes.” laundry work, new dresses and “Ho never struck yout sewing of all kinda, — Hour by hour Blue-jay Wipeke serene: ah viv will gently undermine “Cloodneas, no!" that corn, In alittle while “Supported yout | coun Will locesn aad "Oh, yes—until three months ago the J DR. Hi. T. HARVEY (Ex-President Michigan State Board Dental Examiners: when we broke up.” Long silence. come out. else,” was the emphatic statement of Prof. J, K, Budiong, well-known and highly respested citize® of Manches- ter, N. H., residing at 42 School st, worth a nickel as far as work was into this country from Japan is go neerned. I thought my troubles ing to be conducted by the state de had @ life-long grip on me and was pertment of agriculture, following about as discouraged as a man ever the seizure of a quantity of base- | the number struck the ball with guch | force aa to tear open the cover. The | Inspector picked up the rematna and interested In somebody else, “No,” I insisted, “I haven't any use for men—I'm thru. Cas- Slow tapping of pencfl on desk. > The way is easy, gentle, All aboutyou are people omnia Dental Su eure and ecientific. A fe- delighted with the Bluejay ia baPtegon | Diagnostician mous chemist perfected it. method. Find out what Strangely, he didnt seem to think Pyorrhea Specialist Alaboretory of world-wide they know about it. Try it ad even ieotpaion See Tube tel smenen "teen eee fepute prepares it Highest Order of Restoration , Work Done Examination and Hsthnate Free tonight. “Practically all my life I had had rheumatism, and when I say rheuma tiem I mean every word of it, It ‘Wag ali Over my body, and especially bad in my feet and legs, and there were times when I couldn't get from my bed to my chair without help. And from the time I was a boy I couldn’t sit down and eat a good meal without being in misery lerwards, and I would have terrible pains ‘around my heart and frequent at- tacks of palpitation and dizziness, Tt hasn't an equal.” “I had a stubborn case of conatipa- sold in Seattle by Bar. ubled awfully with blind- tell’s Drug Stores.—Advertisement. | gets, } “Well, before I had finished my first bottle of Tanlac, I realized it was different from anything I ever tried, It sulted my case exactly. And now, for almost the first time since I can remember, I can eat anything I want and digest it, I haven't an ache or a pain and have gained fit. teen pounds in weight. 1 just feel good all over and am full of life and energy these days. Everywhere I go |balis in Bakersfield thie week by the Bakersficld county horticulture inspector, The inspector discovered that the baseballs made in Japan are stuffed with cotton hulls, which are contra- band in this state. If infected the hulls might cause a blight on Call- fornia’s cotton crop. It is possible that the hulls contain th boll weevil or boll “worm, ding to Bronte A, Reynolds, of the state agricultural department. The discovery of the violation of Quarantine laws was made while the cotton | the discovery followed, An appeal has been made to the federal department of agriculture. The national government will ascer- tain what Japanése port the base balls were shipped from and seck to prevent a spread of any cotton Gis- ease in this state. If the contraband hulls had hot been discovered, serious havoc might have resulted In this state's cotton districts, it fe declared. The entire consignment of Jnp- anese baseballs to’ Bakersfield was welzed, Plaster or Liquid Blue-jay The Scientific Corn Ender per Cassidy——" “Oh,” he said, “so that’s your name. Sounds as if it might have been a pitched battle all right.” please End other foot troubles feet in, MERE STE a Te ber ea Ee Feet 504-12 Eitel Building SECOND AND PIKE SEATTLE Which remark didn’t me in the least, 1 would have him understand that Casper and I never stooped to anything so BAUER @ BLACK ed 2 cote nace and Chicago NewYork Toronto plano stools. ar ferences were tnbeled! Inno, Way. with Matorsof BAB Sesto Srsioal | EXER Conbicales ther Sn anything domestic, ' eee “It's just like this,” the lawyer

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