The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 10, 1922, Page 7

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“7 : , . FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 10. 1922, STAR Seeks Throne <a THE SEATTLE KNOCKS MAN ( NICK CARTER ON THE JoB ) WORK INNAVY | YARDS HALTED. Mg = nnn | . ” | s moe a4 Thousands of Workers Are : Released * | WASTTINGTON, Feb. 16—1mme- | . a | diate reduction in the number of em. | “e / |ployes at all savy yarde and sta | — |tions where naval construction ts in} " , : His Commands Disobeyed, Coe Sus aoe tee ‘ eretary of the Navy Denby, : Bandit Turns Slugger This action follows the onter te suet by President Harding and x and Escapes Denby for an immediate coaaation ‘ot . lonsodiadt | construction work on 14 big battle. | . Commanded to epen the safe by a ships and battle cruisers as the re | Qandit, who threatened his life with mult of the arms conference naval : @p automatic pistol Thursday night, Umitation treaty Melville Duncan of the Duncan | Several thousand .employen will be a leather Findings Co, 318 Second affected by the order, which directa | ave. S. told the man he could not (that all men not needed because of . open the safe that he had forgotten the order suspending construction be | : combination. With an oath, the given leave “without pay.” it swung his revolver, striking Dumean across the bead with the ‘butt. Knocking Mim unconscious, The «man then ran Crom the shop and es The order not only affects yards | |where the ships are actually under | leonstruction, but other yards where! uns, armor plate and other parts of Versels are being made. It will affect men at Philadetphia, New York, Mare Inland and Norfolk navy yards, where big seacraft are | under construction, and the Roston and Charleston yards, where armor | plate and other equipment are under | construction. | p.m. and was just preparing to go | home. He recovered consciousness | ly afterward and told the police, | are searching for the man Fri eee ESCAPE JAIL Bremerton Yards Won't Be Affected | BREMERTON, Feb. 10—The| Puget Sound navy yard will not be 3, he a ee ee ’ affected by the navy department's onder reducing navy yard forces| : sonanele thrnout the country, Rear Admiral | Oregon Fugitives Elude Pur- John A. Hoogewerft, commandant of suing P the 18th vaval district, declared yeu | ‘This order, he mid, appties only to | ® Cor | those yards where capital ships, due| ‘ ‘ instructions to shoot on si; ’ +) Ort at Parity armed passes: weibacdns any sepsemsent: toe wane cares Grand Duke Cyril Viadi- ing the country around Eugene ton, Mare Inland, tie believes, ix the Miovitch has been chosen by : ae ae eee See ee enly yard on th ast affected. the monarchist congress |. early this morning. , which met in Belgrade asa ‘The fugitives are believed te Rum Hounds Trail jeandidate for the Russian Won ten the bh ond a pisos Carload of | th fled from the jail, and a pitched arload of Scotch throne. battle is expected if they are E.T. Sawyer, 73-year-old author of the famed Nick| The pungent aroma of Scotch whis aoe snag ee pone desperate | Carter detective tales, who now has retired to a little country )*Y Sites to the novtrile ot Beret LEAVE WOREE, Kan. loa } characters were ameng fiap agg 4 . ; % & ‘Newton and Patroiman J, Me- martial held here acquitted Ve those who escaped. place in San Jose, Cal., where he raises chickens and te NS | Carty Thursday night, cousing them |Von Romath, of sadstenione, ee | Searchers believe that the prison.| ts garden, to follow an automobile for several the first alleged draft evader to stand | headed up the Mackenzie} SAN JOSE. Cal, Feb, 10—“What much light on the guilty ones, Biack-jmek® 10 Ninth ave. and Union at | would Nick Carter, detective hero of| mailers in the past of Taylor's life) )neY found two sacks, they said, in your thrillers, have doce in a mys !as well as the drug peddlers who have |‘2° Tear seat. The mcks contained tery such as faces the police in the|been mentioned, would become ein-|7* GUrte of wet goods. 1. Wyard, Wittiam D. Taylor murder myster). | ister figures. Also a man out of the |4*t¥er of the car, was jailed on bourse Bugene T. Sawyer, aged author of Kiondike would seem to be impil.|CD8Ee". He was rolensed on $750) the famous th tales and how re-| cuted. pean Friday. tired to a country place near here, | “Well, to rush this story to 3 | ——— smiled at the question, wrinkled his! trial in thin state, 33 to be 80. ‘lems ft. mine fires, FREDERICK — & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET ‘(DOWNSTAIRS STORE “Wizard” Polish Mops and Dust Cloths . FEATURED IN THE HOUSEWARES SHOW learned the identity of a man, not | a movie actor, who was jealous | of the dead man's one-time atten | tions to a girt he loved, } “Of course none of these things In| {ikety to happen, for f am telling of | a Nick Carter version. The abduction would have been staged to keep the} | plot moving. Frut were Nick Carter | more of @ modernist he would still! place much faith in what stories the missing valet could tell.” eee IS DEFENDED responds with no name yet NEW YORK, Feb. 10.--Samuel tioned in the case, He attaches little | Goldwyn, prewident of the Goldwyn importance to the visit of a movie | Pictures corporation, in a statement | star a short time before the murder, | characterised the report that motion | figuring that people of the movies picture producers are attempting to! are unconventional and not unaceus | sippress the true facts in the Taylor | tomed to such visita. cage an “too absurd to warrant com. “He does, however, attach much| ment, were it not that many thou- importance ‘to the disappearance of mands of people will read this report the ex-valet, but cannot be led to|and believe it, as they have belleved believe that this type of man would/|other false stories publistd about have committed the crime. To give | the motion picture tnd R the case ® thrill it in learned that the| “The moving picture industry som. valet has been abducted by certain | prises a population greater than that persons who want him out of the of almost any city fn the world way because he knows too much re Goldwyn mid. “No city ever gotr garding Taylor's enemies and pri- thru the year without many rearet- vate life, and might be able to throw |table happeningm. It is as unjust ——— to say that the moving pictures need | ‘cleaning up as to speak of cleaning | |up the United States. The good and jhelpful things the industry is doing | |for the betterment of the world are | never chronicled on the front pages, bat let anybody connected with the || movies get into trouble and not only | jhe, but the whole industry ts in the headlines for many days.” ore Steamers Watched | for Trace of Sands | rary tee ‘ful il our people than among people in the Jewelry business or the meat pack- ing business. The public must not gondemn the great maas of the movie! ie because of a few outlaws. Our! Steat industry, which ts closer to the people than any other, cannot be blasted and Its people condemned as hop fiends and degenerates because of the Arbuckle and Taylor scandals. Did the Stillman ease condemn bank- ; MOVIE MURDE STARTS ON PAGE ONE “I bave read an article recommend. ing that Hollywood be burned. Here valet, Ganan we what I think of Hollywood: 1 am| am DO TAYior Bnd (pe ty wah setiously thinking of building a honae | * Taylor, and had “suspicions” as to there and going there to live with my whe killea the director. gon and daughter. I want movie| © 1, " t : teens tet aaneie tie tay neta nderwood was taken a train Wad seten ‘nak > ng stana for| *t the request of Los Angeles author-| 1O$ ANGELES. Feb. 10.—Armed the scandalous few. They stick out |‘! ns Sper ae the handwriting of tke a thumb. And wel chop off| , “%0 have caught a big one,” Un-| raward F. Sands, ex-valet and secre lat gaan teen” oP OES | derwood told Deputy Sheriff Cartwon,|tary of William Desmond Taylor, i who took him from the train. Ad-jstain film director, officials were HE “Wizard” Booth tn the Housewares Show is literally lined with improved styles in Floor Mops, Hand Dusters, Dust Cloths, Floor Wax, Wall Dusters, Wizard Polish and Carpet Sweeping Compounds—all produced with the idea of making sweeping and dust- ing easier and more efficient. Wizard Large Polish Mop, $1.25 treated and ready for use, with adjustable handle. WIZARD DUST MOPS, HERE’S MORE ABOUT - va viees to authorities here raid Under-|acanning passenger liste of xteamers $1.50, $1.75 and $2.25 PASTOR OKEHS wood disappeared from Los Angeles |that have cleared port bere during (i a eh oe a couple of days after the Taylor|{the past week, i} WIZARD POLISH Working from the pomsthie tne! that Sands, who ts sought in conneo- tion with the murder, might have! taken passage on an outgoing venel, | authorities got busy on that angle of |f}| the case, } Soldiers stationed here with the! Pavific fleet also were appealed to in an effort to indentify Sands as the | man who is reported to have enlisted atone time under the name of Ed. |ward Fitzgerald Snyder. HOLLYWOOD |" eee 108 ANGELES, Feb. 19.—"T often STO! Y Wonder why the people of the coun-| try are lees interested in the many ¢ fred things that are happening. in OF SUSPECT Hollywood, rather than the unfortu- N Rate occurrences in the lives of a few eae - tema * 0% movie people," sald Rev. Neale Dodd, | i “ronekn for aliered embesnlement |from a local traction company, was Pastor of the Episcopal church, St. Mary of the Angels, in an exclusive |. gcquainted with William D. Tay: jlor or with the numerous movie MOPS, $1.50 and $2.25. WIZARD INSTITUTION POLISH MOP, 14-inch size, WIZARD DUST MOP HEADS, 75c and $1.00. WIZARD HANDLE DUSTERS, 75e, $1.00 and $1.25. WIZARD DUST CLOTHS, 25¢ and 50c. bottle, 30c; 12-ounce, 60c; quart size, $1.25; half- gallon size, $2.00; gallon size, $3.00. WIZARD WALL DUSTERS, 14-inch size, $1.50; 16- inch size, $2.00, WIZARD CARPET-SWEEPING COMPOUND, | ounce size, 25c; 42-ounce size, 50c. | WIZARD FLOOR WAX, 514-ounce can, 85c; 1-pint | can, 75¢; 1-quart can, $1.50. 16- statements size, 75c; 32-ounce size, $1.40, WIZARD FLOOR WAXER AND POLISHER, with can of wax, $4.00. Interview with a United Press corre- pendent celebrities mentioned in the Taylor “First I want to thank the United | °° gta Underwood's statements | Provs for the privilege it has extend-| 14 the contrary, it was believed here. | ITY ed in asking me to teil the world; «1 never heard of the man,” said that Hollywood in not as bad as the! ss.nel Normand, denying dixpatches Average citizen believes,” the pastor | quoting Underwood as saying he had of “the little church around the cor-| recently attended a “party” at Tay ner,” a8 the house of worship 18 | jor's home which Miss Normand and | on See paeint vigorously, ; others attended. Others branded Un- ane i Jn unately, we have had, n| derwood's alle: an 000 the past few months, a chain of et php pete who want |Brooded Over $11, Loss pleasant circumstances which, while! him on the embezsiement charge in Bank Crash Here they did rot bappen in Hollywood | piaced no faith in his reported con- ae Proper, invwived the names of many| nection with the murder Case. a {dents of tbe film colony, | “Underwood checked out of a local! Brooding over the lows of $11,000 “The lant/was the terrible murder|potel here Sunday night, leaving|!n the crash of the Scandinavian of one of our best-liked members,|gome of his pertonal effects behind,| American bank here, Joseph Clark, William Desmond Taylor, ‘The day | fie was in the habit of drinking heav- | 9, a city water department pipe fit Housewares Section, THE DOWNSTAIRS STORY the murder was discovered, papers| ly, hotel attaches said. | ter, committed suicide Thursday night thruout the country laid the affair! eee haling gas in his hom 6 At Hollywood's door, Mr. Taylor did Yalo ave, N. The aged man was Not live in Hollywood, an a matter of Kick Rotters Out, found by his step-son, W. B. Randal, fe he ly marten nore "the'ac |. Says D. W. Griffith |," wisn sitos ever ses | | GlassSugars and Creamers jackie affair did not happen in Hol- E saupat c . ps move. fywood, but some 560 mile away, in|, CINCINNATI, Feb. 10-—"If rot-| Clark had elosed all the doors, but . Ban Francisco. The shooting of Pant | tets 8% into the moving be had left a window open. He had Special CPair a Kramer, another director, a faw | @ustry, they gg ogee digg |Previously told hia wife not to walt | days previous, did not take piace in ;*%!4 pi AB re ogi | up for him, as he was working, He OLONIAL - STYLE 1 Ad da American . i . a prtivweed.' Pan industry io to great, the] 5 “Ne (© Rave acted quetely trom Sugars and Cream- the time that he lost hin life savingw in the collapse of the bank. was alro in il alth. The body sken to the Bonney- ers, as pictured, of clear, thick glass, priced ex- ceptionally-low at 35¢ business too vital and too important Ito be stopped by them, Ministers sometimes get into scrapes—-I think there bave been five wtibin the las Clark Father and Son Are Convicted of Fraud | Watson Unde x company, after 4. TORONTO, Web, 10.—Nathang@sren- two weeks, but that does not mean | Coron, ’. H. Corson had made an sade a ner and bin son, Meyer Brenner, deal-|any disgrace to the Christian re- - TH pow NSTAIRS ers in foreign exchange, were found |ligion neta y in mperior court last night of} “The rotters ahould be kicked out « to defraud creditors of|of the business. Sooner or later thoy they company out of $700,000, will be” Earliest known almanac is dated 4200. B.C, g One person to every seven tives! | | om or oom of oo» cect tes baw fala ) WIZARD FURNITURE AND MOP POLISH, 4-ounce ‘| WIZARD LIQUID WAX, 8-ounce size, 50c; 16-ounce | | | | } | | | | FREDERICK & NELSON ¥IFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET A New Group of Jersey Suits Is Divided Between Notch-collar and Tuxedo Styles $10.50 ‘AFTER a morning’s marketing, a round of golf or a tramp in the country, the Jersey Suit is apt to be as spruce:and unwrinkled as new—and for day-in-and-day-out wear it is hard to surpass. The new arrivals feature regulation jacket styles with notch collar, as pictured, also Tux- edo models, in heather mixtures of brown, blue and tan. Sizes 16 to 44. Uncommonly good value at $10.50. New Cloth Jumper Frocks Featuring Good Materials and Good Workmanship at a Very Low Price: $4.95 .-DIFFERENT .cos- tume with every blouse that¢s worn with them is possible with these Jumper Frocks — as popular for this rea- son as for their youth- ful style. Featured in— Cherry Taffeta with Cellophane $10.00 Velveteens Jerseys form this jaunty new Tri Hat, thin bright taffeta is Serge eatine deftly Jaid in folds and caught| some with back-collar, in s chic sidebow, and the up- some collariess, some turned brim is crossed by braid trimmed and a number with lacing at neck as suggested in the sketch. Choice of Jade, Rust, Taupe, Navy, Brown, Fawn and Gray, also subdued check pat- terns. Sizes 16 to 42. Good value at $4.95. rows of cellophane in cherry and taupe. Price $10.00. Wrap Turbans of Sat, Hats of frosgrain ribbons and closefitung affaires of cire saUn also spread the mes ange of Spring, with their flower-like colorings, and their pew trimming effects-7$5.00, $740 and $10.00. —THE DOWNSTAIRG STORE 250 Prs. of Boys’ Black Calf Shoes Special $1.85 —lace style as pictured —on English-style last —thick leather soles. —sizes 1 to 6. Clever Trimming Touches in Men’s Madras Shirts $1.50 OOD quality Madras Shirts in various color combinations of Blue, Lav- Tub Frocks for Schoolgirls $1.30 ASTEFUL combina- ++ tions of plain and plaid ginghams — edges ender, Green and Tan. of rick-rack braid, bright Sizes 14 to 17. Price pipings, embroidery and $1.50. pearl buttons give these frocks quite a mother- made air. Two of the styles are shown in the sketch, and there are many .others, just as attractive—sizes 7 to 14 years. Low- priced at $1.30. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Men’s Lisle Hose 25c Pair Men’s Cotton Lisle Hose with double heel, sole and toe, in Black, Cordovan, Gray, Blue and Tan; sizes 914 to 1114; at 25¢ pair. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Boys’ Two-Trouser Suits $8.75 LP HESE Two-Trouser Suits for Boys are tailored of good quality Suitings in Brown and Blue checks, Brown mixtures, and light Gray mixtures. The coats are made in belted styles, some with yoke and plaits, and the trousers are fully lined. Price $8.75. . Boys’ Caps 85c Boys’ Caps in Brown, Boys’ Percale Shirts, 85c These Percale Shirts have attached collar and are cut amply full. Shown in striped effects, sizes 124% to 14, low-priced at 85¢. lined and made with plaited fullness at back. Sizes 634 to 714. Price 85¢. =—THE DOWNSTAIRS STORB PAGE 7 —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE © Tan, Green and Gray, fully

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