The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 30, 1921, Page 12

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hia RL SFT we WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 30, 1921. JE MARECHAL VISITED SPOKANE Countryme” Give Foch Big Ovation By E. P. Chalcraft One of the most profound and im pressive greetings that Marshal Fock received during hig stay in Seattle was accorded him when the allied commander wan welcomed tn Lincoin park, near Broadway high sehool, by the Fre h people of Seattle A crowd estimated at 6,000 Tine” the curb for a block each way at Pine «t. and“11th ave. when the marshals car arrived at Lincoln park, In addition to hig fellow-eountry. men, Foch was greeted by hundred@ of students from the Browiway high school and the Minor gra4_ school, CROWDS THREATEN * TO ENGUL¥ PARTY The ceremonies were simple and ~ brief. When the marshal's car was halt- ed in front of the bust of himself modeled by Alonzo Victor Lewis, Seattle sculptor, Foch descended to the ground and was immediately aur. rounded by the pressing th With great difficulty, the erowd kept from engulfing the official par ty by Police Chief Searing, W. BR. Jer- rell, chief of the government secret service, and @ score or more of their THE SEATTLE STAR When I Last — Saw Foch By Jack Hall All week long the crowds had been HERE'S MORE ABOUT STARTS | ON PAGE 1 | | those of “general of the army,” held Ho is proud of his train erew, be | by Gen, Pershing, and of “admiral | cause, during hix tour of Amertea, | of the navy,” vacant rince the death they have thus far conformed to} of Admiral Dewey, ‘The plain ranks schedule with splitwecond exactness. | of neral” and “admiral” are a bg below that of marshal. The Interpreter ore When you interview Foch, you ask your questions of! ong the glittering Comte de Chambrun, who, in turn, dere on Marehall| monee relief, asks the generalisaimo, whe replies! iooh'y breast was an American |it wan not the | to the comte, who transmits the Fe /decoration—the distinguished service | Balfour, Hughes and Kato ussing Way to Dis- | niy to you |medal, While outrant by both | P The comte in the great-grandson of the congressional eal of honer and i a that pose of Treaty | the Marquie de Lafayette, the Lamy-| ing distinguished ne cross, this| Armistice Sunday in Paris was the -— ette who visited America many years | . is the highest American decoration aeehel <eelelidtde 04: bl te BY A. L. BRADFORD ago and welded the bond that has| ht can be awarded anyone ry he formal celebration of fint-d AGepyriant, 1921, by the United Prose) | o the two republics | i’ laity In the American service |@uerre. In the morning the Te Deum § WASHINGTON, Nov. 30, — The lthe only exceptions to the rule being | We" eune at Notre Dame, the same ] esiogs his only master—for a lifetime “ % | « ANGLO-JAP | ALLIANCE! pouring into Parix from every of France, The trains were jammed with p There expression on th only that of im but wan one Marshal | Decorations splouous r face medals and ¢ Gg Les Riorons Olvasrias 20s Lrare-nat Peace had come, Jubilant, earaplitting 6 limes, : Mennace / feted Ae Po Toke amu ee of easy victory wan too p for uestion of disposing of the Anglo Jin the case of the Alllew “unknown | T° Deum that echoed thru the an. Japanese alliance has been taken up }soldiers,” who were given the con. | i eee ae ae irleann the United gremional medal of honor, Foeh's! ere cnet Celeeaten we ys a wearing of the D, 8, M.—which, of | NEARLY 5,000 PROPLE ee ener end -tapan, | course, is only one of hundreds of | ATTENDED SERVICE ‘was understood on high authority to medals that have been Nearly 6,000 French people day. him-—was recognized ax ed the mask of thankegiving Tht . to the country volces stirred the numberless faded qutetion te being considered = flagn of victory high on the arched tn conference between the “big | “Maree™ of the Washington parley— | | ‘Hughes, Balfour and Kato—in con he is visit ithe 8 SUEY | 7 ‘och in Pantheon | was born in Washington, and under-| Among the portraits appearing in jstands English quite as well ax;the Pantheon de Guerre The comte, ta 4 *, In accordance with the program »ped out, the statue was to have n unveiled and at the same time | Marshal Foch was to have been pre- sented with flowers by six little French children. Due to the erow@ 4 ing of the impetuous throng, the prow gram was far from orderly, however, | Instead of being formal, the cere- mony was extremely informal, Standing there among his own peo ple, his scarlet cap with heavy gold braid gleaming duly in the drizzle, © surrounded by hundreds of waving ~ American and French colors, the marshal smiled and spoke rapidly in French The six children, pressed close to Foch by the throng behind, stepped on his boots and clung to him for. support. Each in turn presented ti flowere, and each in turn was ki on both cheeks by the marshal, Oc- casionally he lifted one of them on high for the crowd to see, FOCH’S GREETING TO HIS COUNTRYMEN “s Foch's greeting to his countrymen ~~ “My dear brothers and sisters, T am so glad to greet you here. Your spirit of welcome touches me deeply, — For these flowers and this I thank you.” i” Whatever else the marshal maj have said was lost in the clamor that arose, Foch walked a few paces down ti street to where his car had been moved, climbed in and was rapidly whirled away to the University of Washington. ‘The effect produced on the They carried stream-| ing French people by the ve f a Rertana, ta vite = Commenr on voir ot) Ree 40 Paysage. Here is the Spokesman-Review's “French artist's” impressions of the scenes) of yesterday when the French generalissimo and his party paid their official) call to Eastern Washington. “ ; he In 1911 he was given command of In 1912 he was promoted to the com: | mand of the Elghth army corps, and | Was soon after transferred to com mand of the 20th corp quarters at Nancy, wh found him. From this time on his history ix well known Before Paris, where, under Joffre, his command jammed back the on-| slaught of the first German advance; in cutting off the German attempts to reach the Channel porte; at the Rattle of the Somme conference, advo- tri-partite understand. Feplace the AngloJapanese al- mce shortly before the opening of conference. Whether it is Bal- or Kato who has now brought ‘Question Is still uncertain. the AngloJapanese alliance taken up and especially is ‘discussed jointly with the ques of limitation of naval armaments in the iH pill Rut it was no note trb umph, of vengeance, that they . struck Again me the wad, " Reetion with discussions to arrive at fey Banal gy peng EE. merosment sg ved errs ng, Soe ‘| ‘That afternoon in the Place de Ia ip an i “pera “ | French, He ts accompanying Foch | Paris, that of Marshal Fooh o°¢t | Goncorde the allied troops were t ne po Penge dispute upon | diplomatic adviser, If you ask a) Dies a prominent place. ‘This reat! march down the Champs Elysees wn iP Ls PON | suestion it would not be diplomatic! painting, 400 feet long and HUN) past the reviewing atand full of the may come to a final Shows | comte so advines the great F oh: | structed frame, ts France's pletorial there to receive the A at the meeting of the naval) nian, and you are told nothing, toot |resume of the work! war. It con | firave from the people of Hrance ae See: Five gl yrs sweet, tains more than 5,000 portraits! The black shroud still « the ‘gohan iy led that ¢ ed | But if the question is proper and of war heroes, Carrier Relleuse and |statue of Strasbourg—veiled since | Would reach no agreement)... ccneralisaimo ix permitted to re! hin 18 associated artists were four|the Germans seized the town in S. J im words that aptly convey in idiom | eid. with the avengers of that earlier di» atic English the marshal’s French. | . aster. indicated, would agree oe wi Tri-Colors Worn Tralvedthe Wrend, Mesbaeded ‘asian 80} ber cent ratio of the Hughes the Trink Thoxe little French flags being | Spads) dove to the bottom of the if the United States is Trinkets lworn by the populace today | Obelisk, «werved overhead an > A meres ey He Sareetations were distributed at the depot five| Pacific. have been showered upon Marshal) minutes before the marshal's arrival, | Serial combat GENERALS GREET three” the question of a tri-par- eS at “ ary to Seattle | : ALLIED COMMANDER 5 thatthe hs = F Se A Ae al wicidiniaaieds understanding—not an alliance | 4 wildcat from Montana american | Leave Robes Behind A «tir in the reviewing stand eo N the United States, Japan| pegionnaires, | An the King county judges were! The generals of the Allied fore “ee ” hd | oi atgat Britain, to take the place | “A pox of corncob pipes from the | present this morning as members of rea renc olatier ve ry ace ingloJapanese pact, has been | doughboys of Missourt the reception committee, They left| was entering the little enclosure tol review the steel-helmeted troops! oe ee persuade him from the French weed, | . * 3% that had fought for La Patrie authority one the deleg@ | which the A. E. F. unanimously vou) Bi f . When the little gray figure oe. e sessctlea'en!| 2,70 it of Orient stepped to the front a great shout} Marshal Foch, “the great French-| ° mae oe bean Drousht | A scorpion imbedded in glass, A little bit of Orientaliom assisted man,” strange as it may seem, ien't\the 13th division at Chaumont un e co me A pearl stickpin. jin this morning's celebration. Four!ancient Paris. General Foch, sav- a Frenchman at all Golden keys of all the large citles| hundred Chinese and Japanese |ior of Paris, savior of France, sav He is not of French blood. BY 8. B. GROFF of the country. youngsters, pupils at the Main st./jor of civilization! He is a Basque Beneath the weeping skies, thou- sands of happy citizens packed ment of cavalry. | Fourth ave,, between Main and Jack-| shouting crowd, Foch, marshal of ple inhabiting the Pyrenees moun with head) pourth ave. and filled windows, root. | An Indian warclub. | son «ts, and there, ax Marshal Pooh | Fy oe, looked down on his beloved |tains, partly in France and partly in A huge gold bowl—something he | rode by, waved Chinese and Japanese |troops and there was just one ex: Spain. | Marshal Foch rode by. With one ac cord they willed the air with al agra vor _— — | ers and American flags, The group) en face—immenae, gigantic, pathetic Pyrenees, on August 440851 mighty cheer, waving umbrellas, | A thousand and one other memen-| was led by Miss Bernice Katherine |relief that the sacrificed of his peo-| Hin education began at Rodeg and toes. Welch and Miss J, Mahon, instruc: | ple were overt Saint-Etienne, At Mets he prepared Thousands of men stood with t heads uncovered in the rain as Foch capacious RB a to onrihg eel eee “I knew Marshal Foch the minute he entered in 1871 parsed | Aiape Seephns. of triendihtp. | Admiral Is First 1 saw him walking in Verwuilien,"| As a student he had remarkable mys Eddie Hunt, report clerk at/talent for geometry and logic He where his han | school children lined the walk and | dling of F h troops brought him | wtood patiently waiting for a glimpse additional renown—all these things | of the visitor. pathetic note of Immense, gigantic | hinges the success of the coM-| 6. ine generaliasimo to answer, the|in circular form in a speclally On| great generals of the wi Rhe “big threo” would have to/ 11. ‘the comte translates the answer | years in completing the picture. 1870; but the great avenue was lined British —sembofficial Here are some of the gifts that plunged into the wildest vagaries o! Already in these conferences of the | Foch since he started on his itiner: | stood up. Their commander-in-chiet | Span masa | prune rece |e Sk TD Is No F h t All Joins Hands Ss IVO Frenchman a reverberated thru the astrecta of Enough swords to outfit a regt | school, laid claim to the sidewalk at But high above the ewaying. He comes of a sturdy race of peo the W8l/ tops and flowed into the street as can still use in France. lanterns, red, white and blue #tream-| pression on his tired, weatherheat-| He was born in Tarbes, flagn and hats. i Tt will require a special ship of | tory in the school, oe for the Keole Polytechnique, which Below Yesler way, 1,000 Japanese | as wrought with the Just Soldiers The first person to greet Marshal! police headquarters. “I recognized devoured the campaigns of Bona significance. A former doughboy, with one arm |Fech 8% he reached the top of the/him from his pictures, and I'd have | parte purpose of the conference—/ by « cane, approached near enough j to Marshal Foch to say something t the observance of the general | » a gone and one unsteady leg supported | staire at the station was Admiral/known him anyway as he is the! During the 25 years following he! Hoogewerff, commandant of the 13th jnaval district. Admiral Hoogowerff, the gene is 4k ‘deen jwith his personal aide, Capt. F. E.| oa) howlermedest man in France.” |pexsed thru several garrisons ax ar Hunt was a member of the Amert.|tillery officer, kept studying, and in n artillery, stationed in La-|187& was promoted to a captaincy led to his appointment as chief-of- staff on the retirement of Joffre in 1916. | It was not, however, until the Ger.) "Ray For] Bas. amie vous! | Woon i | of their beloved marshal was | spiritual im its reverence. Heads on white hair and black. As of the Pacific and the Far) prench. | Ridgely, and other members of his! Courtine, and had gone to Versaiilen| In 1884 he was admitted to the| mans had broken Russia in 1918 and! © seems to mean the virtual of Anglo-American-Japan- 2 , eee a : 4 yd George View ¥ CARL D. GROAT [ASHINGTON, Nov. 30.—Lioyd will come to Washington an appeal to America to waken the onrushing calamity in Eu- to aid, his friends here today. |. While Lloyd George will not seek _ to inject the subject into the arms ont Proper, he will ask substantially, “What are going to do about it?” “Have fo interest in the matter, and My as it may touch you may even go 0 far as to sug- a@ system whereby Germany virtually pawn itself to Amer-| » with Britain going surety. ‘will strive to show that Amer. cannot end until the finan- economic stagnation of Eu- been relieved. East is inevitable unless England, Russia and Japan & speedy agreement on the tal Program. M. Leo Kemeneff, director of famine relief, de in an interview with the Press, here, today. “It may come next spring—per- aps not until next year—but it will he said. e- ny to Send . Mission to America BERLIN, Nov. 30.—Germany will Mission of industrials, bank- and agriculturists to America to German economic problema financiers there, it was an. p today. Dr. Joseph Wirth, German chan- eellor, is expected to appoint the _ Members of the commission tomor. row. be eee : Capital Ships Up ~.. to Arms Delegates ise ‘ASHINGTON, Nov, 30.—Naval “experts of the United States, Japan and Great Britain, at a meeting to- day, decided to refer back to the prin- cipal delegates the question of the capital ship ratio controversy be tween this country and Japan, ‘This, in effect, breaks the deadlock between the United States and on this issue, and places the of reaching an agreement in the of Secretary of State Hughes, Il Baron Kato and Arthur J. ur, leading delegates of the countries. ae * 3 ‘ . Chiaa and Mexico ALES, Sonora, Mex., Nov. 30. : E. Palivicini, representing * the federal government, and Chinese ‘Minister Guang Kitzen are framing _ & new Mexico-Chinese treaty, to be- come effective January 1, according i A snappy young officer, In just-as- | bad French, informed the doughboy | that the marshal already had become | bored to death with such unneces- sary remarks, Foch’s alert ear had heard both doughboy and officer, and he spoke| up quickly: | “My comrades,” he said, “never | bore me. Whatever a soldier has to say on any subject in the world al- ways hag interest for me, for, after jal, that is the basis of comrade. ship.” . ‘ Students in Uniform University service men joined | with the other veterans of Seattle | in honoring Marshal Foch by wear: ling their uniforms. Special sections in Meany hall were reserved for) the service men at the Foch assem | bly. Out-of-Town Guests | } Delegations from outof-town cham. | bers of commerce were requested to | view the parade from a specially | roped off inclosure at Fifth ave. and | Olive st. This adjoins Marshal Foch’s | reviewing stand. Among organiza tions accepting the invitation of the Seattle chamber to send delegates are | Kent, Everett, Prosser, North Bend | and Bremerton. . ee 5 Highest Rank | Marshal Foch has the distinction | of holding the most exalted military rank which any nation can confer nm one of its subjects, Other tries have ranks that correspond to it—but none that surpass it. And there is a certain romantic giamor | whieh attaches to being a “marshal lof France” that no other rank can 1s Tuer FORM? Asee semvn | naw Mes 7, men! 4 | quite equal. The marshals of Naw | poleon commonly boasted that they | had rather be a marshal of France | than king of any other country. | The only ranks in the American service which correspond to it are staff, stood first : in the receiving | for examination for a commission on ine. October 13, 1918, With a party in- cluding Winston Churchill, President Poincare of France, Clemenceau and! General Pershing, Foch stepped fram Delays Trial Foch’s visit to Seattle adnan a doer in the trial of "Dolly the auto and walked to the palace Johnson, sister of James E, Mahon-|4unt stopped and watched them. " $ & ee ey. Judge Otis Brinker, a member of the morning's reception commit of The Star edi " torial ntaff almost saw Foch 0 o'clock rather then 920. “ov, Peak maces “I was at the same school that . a. adunted the French general, "George Channig mid “Tt was at Cameramen Chew tie artivery school at Samur. Foch Hard to my whether the cameras|learned how to ride at the cavalry or the gum snapped the loudest when | school there. But I didn’t. I learned Marshal Foch stepped to the #treet| how to fall off a horse with the from the depot. Every blessed movie |smaliest porsible injury to myself.” man stationed behind the long row Sam Groff, who was shining brass of cameras marked time by energet-|in Josephus’ navy at the time Foch leally chewing gum. was leading the Allies to victory, Real F. bck Samp ‘s “I never saw the Marshal because ‘Two boys in khaki produced a cam- I never maw dry land--if you could | call France a dry land.” era as the marshal’s auto rolled away from the depot. Ear! Morris, 1170 Republican st., saw Marshal Foch above Amiens on “Now you snap me,” said the first. “then I'll snap you. And we'll call the Western front In the summer of 1918. The generalinsimo of the allied it ‘Where Foch stood five minutes before?” . Two members forces was going thru about 12 kilo- meters behind the lines in the Brit lah sector “I was first sergeant, Co, R, 12th gineers, at that time,” Morris| said, “but later I saw Foch a num ber of times in Paris during the! peace conference at Versaities, I was! then a ‘shayetail’ in the transporte tion office, having charge of troops ‘on leave into Aix les Bains and the Alps. High Hats Shine Among other things to shine at the reception was the councils’ high hats. eee From the ©..W. depot to Lincoin park and from the park to the uni- versity the streets were lined with little children waiting to see the hero of the Marne go by In little groups they stood, each kiddie with an American flag in her hand, and as the simpie unpreten tious figure in blue drove past in his big car, the faces of the children lighted up and they waved their flags in the rain. . ‘Two other members of the Seattle |police force saw Foch near the battle jlines, Lieut. Harry O’Brien and Pa ltrolman Glen Norris, who were then jmembers of t Fifth division and the First division, reepectively, were at Chaumont, American headquar ters, shortly before the signing of the armistice With |Foch appe a building on an inspection tour, as |O’Brien and Norris were snatching a puff from a cigarette, “We didn't The great Marshal Foch appeared In Seattle today, forehead high, nose straight and finely cut, eyes gray blue and direct, surmounted by a French army cap encrusted with gold—a sincere friend, a snappy sol- dier on a delicately diplomatic mis- sion, the cementing of comradeship between America and France. Foch speaks little. When he does he stands motioniess: . His tone is one of authority and conviction. eee Penn State football squad and coaches were the guests of the uni versity at the Foch assembly in Meany hall Wednesday morning General Pershing, Marshal red around the carner of |throw away those precious pills.” American Captured in Chile Is Safe WASHINGTON # Nov. 30.—Donald McBean, the Armour & Co. © en tative who was captured by bandits Marshal Foch slept soundly eight hours last night, on the train that | brought him from Spokane today. He did not come out of his state- | room until after the electric engine | that pulled the party thru the Cas- cades had been dropped and a steam | locomotive replaced it, near seattle. | Methodically, he dressed and ate| his usual breakfast—coffee and a/ rolj. “The best part of my meal,” he said, “is a good cigar.” Traveling with him is Gen. Des- ticker, a thin-faced, dark, sharp-eyea officer, his chief of staff; Comte de _ to wireless advices here today from Mexico City, ‘The existing treaty ex. ‘ then, under notice served by government intends to adopt More stringent policy of restrict- Chinese immigration“in the new it was stated officially. Chambrun, his diplomatic representa. tive; Dr. Andre, his physician during the war and since; Col, Frank Par- ker, U, & A., and Capt. Rene L'Ho- pital, hig aides; Lieut, de Soubeyran, his confidential secretary, and, Col. Francis Drake, past commander of the Department of France, American Best of Foch’s Dinner Is Good Cigar, He Says last week in Chile, is safe, according to a dispateh received at the state de partment today dent Harding, King Albert of Bel gium &nd the Prince of Wales. The 1 train that has carried | the marshal across the continent has been in charge of former A, EB. |members nearly all the way quently engin fireman a ducte have been men in overse | uniform. As the train pulled out of the Cas: | Legion, of With the American Legion party accompanying sthe marshal a Hanford MeNider, national com mander; Raymond 0. Brackett, vice commander; Col. Franklin D'Olier, past, commander; Alton 'T, Roberts,|°ade* this morning one of | the chairman of the Legion national Marshal's bagi oven ya committee; Col, James A, Drain, com.| Wonderful than the Alps!’ mander District of Columbia; Col. gy : John D, Markey, national executive committeeman; Capt. C. KE. McCul lough, in charge of transportation, Pennsylvania railroad; Capt. J. M. Loughborough, in Charge of informa- tion; Miles Mecabill, U, 8. secret service; Harl A. Meyers, American Legion News service, and Richard Seelye Jones, editor “Stars and Stripes.” MeCahill, the marshal's secret service body guard, is one of the head men of the service in Wash- ington, D. C. MeCahill has had the distinction of touring this couatry with former President Wilson, Presi- | 1 con 4 al Motion pictures of Marshal Foch’s visit in Seattle will be shown to- night at the LIBERTY |rent back to the line. | bail, | Coroner W Ecole de Guerre (war college) as a student Twelve years later, as a major, he returned to the Ecole de Guerre as an instructor, There he taught the doctrine of war as it was put into practice by himself and other French commanders in the greatest conflict of the world. In 1901 Foch was suddenly, re moved from his professorship and He was then & leutenant-colonel In 1907 he became a brigadier general. He commanded the Fifth corps at Orleans arf@ was later trans ferred back to the war college ax its commandant. HERE’S MORE ABOUT FOCH AT U STARTS ON PAGE ONE Washington.” M. Vacher-Corbiere, French con sul in Seattle, introduced the mar shal to the five women to be dec orated. Then came the presenta tion of the degree of Doctor of Laws President Sugzalio conferred the honorary degree that made the mar- shal of France an alumnus of the university. He said “Upon you, Ferdinand Foch, profound scholar in military science, devout marshal of the armies of France, victorious commander of the allied armies and glorious defender of our ci ilization, I confer in the na of the regents and faculty of this university, the honorary degree of Doctor of Laws.” Aged and Crippled Man Thief Victim Three havily armed and masked auto bandits Tuesday night held up to mind seeing Foch,"|and robbed John Brotseh, 70, crip-| says O'Brien, “but hated to have to|pled owner of the Wallace oil station | at with Th v 64 Beacon ave. and excaped $90 in cash, the day's receipts. robbery was not reported until inesday, as Brotsch was #0 i Jalarmed by the thugs’ threats 0/724 kill him that he feared to inform the police, Aged Man Dies of Injuries by Auto Loula Lawrence, 7 Moon Bottling Works st, died in city t from injuries r struck by an auto driven by V Harvey, 6317 39th ave. 8, afternoon Harvey is held in city jail without pending an investigation by H, Core 715 Charles 1 Wednesday, when he was K Bieber: wensstee nara ee FOCH FOLLOWS TRAIL EXPLORED BY FRENCH Marshal Foch came to Seattle today thru a country explored by Frenchmen three centuries ago, a former French possession called Louisiana, bought by the United States from France—that coun- try lying west of the Mississippi and east of the Rocky, then known ‘as the Shining mountains, Should the generalissimo care claim that our own state of ashington was once the prop: erty of France, none could hon estly dispute him, France, Spain and England once, all three, said the Northwest belonged to them, t , owner of the | Tuesday | |huried her armies from the East | |againet the allied line on the West jern front that Foch arose shoulders above every other allied commander 2 | and, for his supremacy as 4 strate: | gist, a thinker as well as a doer, was given supreme command of all the| allied armies in France. | | It was @ critical moment. The re-| ers and flags of France and Ameri- newed German offensive was a ter-|ca, some of them holding Japanese rifig attack that left part of the Brit-/ lanterns. As Foch passed they raised | iets army broken. Foch stepped in. | their voices in a song that was al The Germans struck again, and most drowned by the cheers of the again the British line was amashed.| People who raced thru the streets, French divisions seemed to drop out | keeping pace with the general, of the skies into the breach. Amer! | SOLDIER LIFTS HIS cans crashed forward, Hell broke) WIFE ABOVE CROWDS Hoose, Foch had won. As Foch got into his auto at the CERO TT ——~| station a soldier lifted his wife above | 1921 Recurd of \\ick wm cc mgeien Pedestrians Hit by Automobiles he said, “but I'll see that you do.” The woman laughed and cheered and waved her green umbrella, As the party passed Yesler way a woman holding a baby broke thru 71 — Miss Louise Yacke! | 29th rave, N., died in Provi- dence hospital as a result of being struck down as she left a street car at 29th ave. and BE. Madison st, Tues the crowd and got as near as pos- sible, She held the baby aloft and jday night, by an auto driven by |Fred A. Almy, 2128 43rd ave. N. shouted: | 720: lL. Lawrence, 72, 716 “1 want the baby to see the marshal, for he probably never will again.” At the station a man who had had the foresight to provide himself with ‘Charles st. died in y hos. pital Wednesday, following an acci dent at Fifth ave. 8. and Dearborn ave, Tuesday. Lawrence was struck by V, BE. Harvey, 6317 49th ave. 8.,| THERE GOES 7 MARSHAL FOOSHY and sustained severe shock and a dislocated hip, causing his death. [ wwHooPs!! 1721 Miss E. Christman, Ritz | hotel, suffered a broken arm | when run down at Belmont a ; % BiY, and | = | Pine st., Tuesday by Carroll Hughes, |a box from which he might see over | 1729 Boylwton ave., in the rain. She | the erowd took pity on a cripple who| was taken home. stood nearby and gave up his place 72 An unknown man suffered | to him. cuts about the head when | ITALIAN AND CHINESE struck at Harvard aye. and Union |JOIN IN TRIBUTE jst. by Fred Carley, 104 First ave. 8! An Italian on a garbage wagon |‘Tuesday, He was treated at Minor | grow up to the curb at Fourth ave. | hospital and sent home and James st. to let the procession 723 A Swinehurd, 222 Belmont | pass, and as Foch came by he leaped ave, N., was bruised when | kn mont ave. upon his cart and, waving his arms, ed down at Howell st. and Bel. | shouted Italian praises. by Robert Patterson, 208 A Allison st., Monday —Fred® Spick, nie | eo) — “hinese barber so far for got himself in the excitement of the moment that rushed from his Fourth ave. barber shop and waved his scissors while he cheered in Chinese. A man who stood on a window sill at the depot fell from his perch try- ing to get a better view of the marshal, A group of American and Cana- dian soldiers standing near the de. pot stood silently at attention as the marshal passed, & flowers, and eahe in turn was kissed street was a little gray-haired lady carrying a rain-soaked umbrella, She was excited, she waved her umbrella and struck a policeman in front of! |Bereaved Father at [her “totn were too happy to take * 2] | any notice of the accident, Burch Murder Trial! Bie Bane: cls ANGELES. Nov. 20-—Jonn P| Spokane Puts On Foch High Jinks the stand in superior court today as the first witness against Arthur C.]° 0 MMAR Burch, dapper collegian, whom the |, SPOKANE, Nov, 30, — Marshal state ‘alleges shot Kennedy's son|Foch was entertained here at a din- | Belton to death for love of Made: |e? Riven at the Davenport hotel last | tyne Ohéiteatn. night, ‘The general was not tired out F by fulsome oratory, Instead, a “high Jinks” was staged for his benef DIES AFTER FAL “Miss Spokane,” the girl whe Was Thomas Walden, longshoreman, is;represented this city at conventions | dead Wednesday, following a fall/and pilgrimages of the Ad club, ap. | down a hatehway on & scow at the| peared in full Indian regalia to wel- Union Pacific docks, Monday, Wal-|come the general, She is now Mrs. den died in Providence hospital, from | Walter Shiels, wife of the former! @ fractured skull. According to his| University of Washington football | companions, Walden slipped while | captain, going down the steps, He formerly lived at the Dix hotel, He leaves a brother in Ireland, 908 Bighth ave,, Was apparently unhurt when struck at Fifth ave. and Madi. | son st., Monday, by Ralph Gemmill, 102 W. 48rd st 1725 d Zalloceo, 1608 Ninth | ave. §., according to the po- jlice report, swore at Samuel Benson, 215 1. Jefferson st. after being jstruck and dragged at Sixth ave. 8 and Charles st., Sunday, Zalloceo told police he would have shot Ben |son if he had had a gun, and said he “ought to be hanged.” | One-fitth of the medical students in London are women were bared. The rain poured alike stepped out of his car, smiled fe waved his hand, a fervent exc e » “BY GEORGE, THE FRENCHMAN shouting as caught sight of the scarlet and Children tugging their u skirts begged to be lifted up to ‘Their pleas went unheeded. Two persons were officially ored at the Lincoln park tion. Frank Bonnell, 2601 EB. G st., formerly in the United St navy, bore the American Flanking him in front of the of Foch stood Clovis Chaffir, infantryman, who held aloft the cial French Legion fiag of Seattle, penetra sats eel They're little sisters for 1 The Star found homes a weeks ago, when their Beatrice and Genevieve are well |” provided for now—but the - ily's troubles aren't over. E ‘There are four other children in the family—and the unfortunate | parents now find that they can’t support them, either, Two are staying with their grandmother, but no home can be found for the others—two boys, one §, the other 10, So now the parents have ap- pealed to The Star for a tempo- rary home for these two, They just want to put the boys some- where unti] they can get back on their feet—for a year, maybe, After that they'll want to bring [> ‘em back home, “Take Us Back,” . Brides ST, MARIES, Idaho, Nov. 30.—One of the most touching incidents on the trip of Marshal Foch here today when three French brides, overcome with hom on seeing their honored fellow tryman, pleaded with the allied com: mander to take them back to France with him, Foch, departing for the moment from his rule not to shake hands im public, Kindly admonished the girls to bonor their husbands and be loyal: to“their new home. The three war brides were Mra, Joseph Bouchea, Mrs, Ira Warren and Mrs, Charles Kolb, Who Listens to You? Think before you advertise. Just who is going to read your advertisement and how many? Where do the people live? If your ad appears In The Star you will reach the 4 ple who ilve right hese. the city. ‘ The Seattle Star in | circulation, You may phone rad to the Classified department, A courteous, pleasant-voiced ad taker will receive your ad and see that it is inserted under the proper classification,

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