The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 8, 1922, Page 4

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)

PAGE 4 ' POINDEXTER MARINE SELLS U. S. FLEET TO CHINESE 4 SAN FRANCISC, March & es “Private Hoppe,” United States Marine corps, is being sought by government seoree service of ficlala, it has been learned, on charges of selling the United - States Asiatic fleet to Chinese evolutionists for $10,000, selling 10,000 mythical O, D, shirts to the Russian army in Viadivostok for $500 gold, of wearing the full uniform of an admiral, and of desertion. Hoppe” is said to have deserted in Viadivoatok after forging discharge papers and ob taining bis full pay and allow ances, OF ANANIAS Sty ieee | i B ts 1000 Per Cent in Pre- | Varication League, Says Arkansas Senator 'PRESIDENT PUTS SPIKE IN BONUS Veto Threat Upsets Plans for Compensation BY LAURENCE M, BENEDICT WASHINGTON, March §.—The soldier bonus situation in congress was again in a state of confusion to day, altho republican members of the ways and means committes have agreed on a compensation measure. The few words which President Harding let drop to newspaper men THE SEATTLE STAR HIS IMITATOR CRUDE SO CHARLIE CHAPLIN ASKS COURT TO ACT LO& ANGELES, March & Chariie Chaplin is going to be & bury He has started suing bia alleged imitators. Chaplin ts the plaintiff in a suit on file in superior court here to. day, requesting an injunction pro hibiting the Western Weatures Productions from releasing two comedies it has just completed and 10 more it ts anserted to have under wey Chaplin alleen that these com- edien star an actor who attempts to imitate his world-famous com tume and mannerisms, and who is billed at “Charlie Aplin,” Chaplin's famous costume ts gravely deseribed in detail in the court records, “A decrepit derby, ill-fitting vest, tlrhtfitting coat, trousers and shoes much too large for the wearer, Also a flexible cane which thin plaintiff ts wont to swing while acting,” is the legal phrase- ology of it Chaptin makes some unkind re. marks about Aplin in the course of his complaint. Aplin, It is asserted, does the pinintiff “irreparable injury” by roing right ahead and acting “in 4 crude and inartintic manner.” WASHINGTON, March & — | it is wondering how Miles Poindexter’s con: are receiving the news | the signal distinction whicty Just been conferred upon representative—his unani — Movs election to that exclusive feclal organization, the Ananias jat the White Mouse yesterday, fram ing what many regarded formal notion that he would veto the certift Mare Island Yard jeate Plan bonus if t ls passed by con: Will Be Retained | «~~ has thrown the entire bonus question back on the rocks of uncer | WASHINGTON, March & Oper® | tainty—exactly where it haa been for tion of the navy yard at Mare Island. | dhe lagt two montha ‘ornia, will not be discontinued, ‘The house bonus framers today act , y ord t Tee eee rnee fun, | Were anxiously seeking private word aang 7 . from the é@xeoutive as to just what by said in « letter today to Chairman been elected to at folks have been elected to) vr of the house military affairs|D® meant when he pm that he GlUb since the George Washing | ities “stands pat” on the préposition of . “nales tax or no bonus.” Style of politics became passe | im few have been honored |” Some of the congressmen believed @S enthusiastic a reception 4% /advertising and “other legitimate! i. tne president intended it to d the name of the senior | purposes.” as Poindexter sald, was) cicry indicate his disapproval of the Memes eenticn janswered by Caraway by Inserting & | neasure introduced yesterday paying The senator's election followed | portion of the testimony before the | ONION ol the certificate method. | made in the senate Sat- | Michigan court, In which a supporter | "C0 however, ~ chong ta by Senator Caraway, ef lof Newberry admitted he bad spent) oni, Saabs Laanwerth, so ot who declared that his | 4400 in buying liquor and olgars, ow | 7 & t legislator batted 1000 per [iensihly to secure votes for the re- oe eh esahraa aie oe an A NS AMERICA eee Wee meant nothing of the kind. | tent in the prevarication league therefore, Nis eligibility | aq “What the president really said,” | ISOLATED CASES | Longworth told the United Pree to | Britisher Says Nippon May Evade Treaty Ananias club could not be After citing other instances of this/ day, “waa that he stands exactly character, Caraway said: “These are| where he haa always stood—that is not isolated cases, The record teems that if the bonus has to be financed, with them. Men by the hundreds | it must be financed by a anies tax were corrupted with money, If such| The present bonus bill requires no expenditures can be classified ae eb | financing at the present time, and [ther advertising of other legitima there is no reason to believe the —- NEW YORK, March §.—Japan must be watched clostly or she will evade the terms of the Washington arms conference agreement, build a big navy and attack America, A. Hall Skelton, Caraway referred in particular to 4 written by Poindexter to one is constituents in explanation of "Bis vote on the Newberry case, The had been read into the con nal record. 2D TO WIDE DE, HE SAYS body . sald Caraway, senators © voted “to ratify hase” of his seat by Senator are entitied to the widest in explaining and apologizing i ituents, “but when these ts are inserted in the record Bought to be incorporated as a of the record of the Newberry they should not go unchal ‘The Arkansas senator said that Poindexter’s expenses, I ask the apologists who) president will oppose it.” voted for Senator Newberry to tell us| Others heid Marding meant to ex: under which head to classify them.”| preas his opposition to the loan plan Another statement made by Poin-/in the bill, dexter that “the incentive whieh in- Among the most ardent of the fluenced the republicans in this ¢f-| bonus advocates In the house there fort was to offset the tremendous pub | arose today a demand that the bonus} of Auckland, N. Z, warned in an licity carried on at perhaps 10 times! be parsed immediately, regnrdiess of| Interview, the expense of the republican cam-| what the president's attitude may be, Skelton, a member of the New Zea- paign by Mr. Ford thru hie var! but the majority of the more ex-/)a partlament, is en route from Paris business agencies,” was denied by | perienced legislators were plainly in-|to his home, Caraway. After declaring again that |clined toward taking things slow for! He attended the Trish race confer the expenses were incurred by the!@ day or two until the situation; ence in Paria and fought against Newberrys and not by republicans, | straightened out. pledging all Irishmen thruout the | Caraway said == — empire to fight for an Irish republic, | “The senator from Washington contending the whites should pre- licnows the evidence discloses inst Cashier Arrested nerve their unity against the Came Henry Ford never spent one doliar in tal menace. his campaign for the senate, Even as Embezzler If Japan attacks America, he pre. first ot the 11 statements | Newberry’s attorneys abandoned the| DENVER, Colo, March §.--Willl®| aired ahe would be supported by In Caraway denied was to the contention that any money had been|P. Troy, 26, cashier of @ Chica®9 | ai, and China. that Newberry remained in| spent by Ford or his friends.” jbank, and his wife, Peesy, 2% were! siiack in the Pacific, the British em York thruout both the primary! The charge made by Poindexter in| @rrested today on a Rock Inland) yi. wit tine up with the United general’ elections and that he his letter that Ford was “a pacifist, train from Chicago it came to 4/ tates, Skelton declared. The Mttle attention to what was had opposed the effort to bring the | stop in the Union station, nese ancault would be almed at Amer on in Michigan.” war to @ victorious conclusion, was| Troy is wanted in Chicago for the |. ria sald, because Japan cov ‘The Arkansas senator then con-| in tavor of a compromine peace, and | alleged emimzalement of $16,000 from American possessions in the d a statemént that the money | who had secured the military exemp. | hia employers, according to a tele |p... it in the Newberry campaign | tion of his son” was answered by| «ram from Chief of Police Fitemor by the republicans, asse: Caraway by inserting in the record | ris at Chicago. Practically every dollar of it| the military records of Ford and his| Troy made no denial of the charge, from the Newberry family. | son and that of Senator Newberry | bat insisted his wife was In no way) this money was expended on‘ without comment, implicated. HERE’S MORE ABOUT TREATY STARTS ON PAGE ONE | YY failure of the conference, Let | ‘The work of the arms conference ts only an experiment, Lodge raid, | “But I have faith,” he added, “to I believe that the better instincts of [mankind are all with us in the ef |fort. If we continue to preach sus | picion and hatred of other nations; if we decline to deal with them and be |ieve they are all actuated by the baseat of motives, nothing can ever be done. The United States has never per {]| mitted faiture or defeat to be written lin her history, She will not permit it now." | Polition did not enter Uberations of the American |Uon, Lodge said. Democratic circles buzzed to day with gossip concerning re ports which were “permitted” to leak out thag former President Wilson, wishing the treaty reject- ed, was co-operating with Sena- tor Borah instead of with demo cratic senators, Democrats in- sisted they bad no word from Wilson. According to lobby gow sip, Joseph P. Tumulty, Wilson's former secretary, and Bernard M. Baruch have been go-be- tweens, keeping Borah informed on Wilson's attitude and furnish ing the Idaho senator material for opposing the treaty, eee tnto the de delera WASHINGTON, tor Borah emphatic Washington dispatches of a preas as. sociation other than the United Press stating that he had received a letter from Woodrow Wilson, outlining objections the former president was said to hold against the four-power Pacific treaty March § —Sena liy denied today Wilson,” Borah said, “Neither do 1 know that he has written a letter setting forth his attitude on this treaty.” COAL STRIKE NEAR REALITY WASHINGTON, March 8. —~ Hope of averting the nation-wide coal strike faded materlally today with Clearance Sale of Hart Schaffner & Marx Suits and Overcoats — Ends Saturday failure of the operators to respond to the suggestion of President Hard ng that the warring parties moet in conferen before the walkout sched. uled for April 1 Secretary of Labor Davis, who in sued the invitations, declared he had made “progress,” but tacitly con. fesned the conference was far from @ reality. It is believed the operators have fatled to respond to the sug: gestions, which were sent out nearly two weeks ago. Collegians Attend Men’s Style Show Throngs of university men, garbed in new tweed: and accompanied by co-eds who outdid even the men in enthusiasm for style, visited the men's fashion show at the Hotel Washington on college night, Tues- day evening. Mannequins high stepped, bowed and flirted ont lapels in tune with the atraing of the string orchestra, The mannequins will give the final exhibition Wednes day night REHEARSAL parts in “Elijat riven here by the will be held next Tuesday at 7:45 p. m, at the Masonic club rooms. Rehearsals for the chorus are to be held Mondays and Fridays at the First Methodist church, ‘OR the dramatic the oratorio to be Knights Templar, ‘Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes Shop Corner Second and Seneca | In event of such an| “I have not had a letter from Mr.) Famous Woman | Sourdough Is'| Visiting Here Ba sive they are.”’ | | | | Mrs. Harriet S. Pullen —Proto by Price & Carter f Balt Photographers | Mrs, Harriet 8. Pullen, Skagway most celebrated woman, who in " entered Alaska with four children, a team of horses and $7, is in Seattle jbuying provisions to accommodate the mummer trade at Skagway's “Pullen House.” Back in "97 when Mra, Pullen, beft & widow with her brood of four at Cape Flattery, decided to go to the |Bkagway region, she understood thoroly just two things—how to man- age horses and how to cook, | “And so I decided first of all, sare Pullen, “to haul freight & day and stayed with the work till the spring of ‘#8, when I dullt my first restaurant in Alaska.” ater thin Skagway pio- neer rented that resort, now famous | Chine. jall over the world as the “Pullen Hours.” and five years later pur chased It for her own. Mra. Pullen knows both the strag gies and the beauty of Alaska. &) witnessed the killing of “Soap: Smith, and hie gambling outfit i+ now among her collection of curios The two sone of Mra. Pullen. Roya and Dan, are grad of the Unt |versity of Washington, and are j&ne wn for their distinguished service lduring the war | Mra. Pullen ts epoken of at length jin the book of Chartotte Cameron. “A Chechaco in Alaska and Yukon.” Girls’ Middies $3.95 All-wool Flannel Mid- dies in two styles—with ALLEGED FORGER CHIEF ARRESTED Accused by the police of being the head of a forgery ring on the Pacificl| and without the yoke, coast, C. BE. Smith, allas “Airbrake” . + i Smith. 28, was held in the eity jai{and trimmed with white silk braiding and white or red stars on the col- ilar. Sizes 10 to 18. Note: A Wednesday by Detectives Mark Hub- bard and W. B. Person. Srnith was arrested at Lowman & Hanford’s when be attempted to cash & $200 cheek in payment for 8200 worth of office furniture. The clerk became suspicious and called the po Hee. The check aa made out on a Santa Ana, Cal, bank, where Smith te said to have a confederate. Nearly every city on the coast i leald to have issued warrants for Smith's arrest on forgery charges. Smith is said to be a parole violator from the Oregon state enero preonabdl |] 10, pair 19¢. and will probably be returned there. Mmith has served two prison termes for forgery HERE’S MORE ABOUT MRS. OSBORN STARTS ON PAGE ONE 1,200 pairs of Women's with straps and buttons. years, each 25¢. uty Prosecuting Attorney John Car i hd and meas Attorney | tops, Sizes 34 to 38, each 15¢. Maicolm Douglas. | ‘The strong preponderance of a jury for acquittal was considered al] black. Sizes 5 to 11—3 piendid victory for Mim Susan ©.) Hohmann, Mrs, Osborn‘'s attorney, as this h first criminal ca since graduating from the Univer sity of Washington law school, a year ago. | “L would just lke to know | Who the woman was who held out for conviction,” Miss Hoh- | mann declared after the jury was discharged. “Think of it, & woman holding out against a woman.” Mrs. Osborn was charged with causing the death last October of| jan infant waif, Helen Maric Wilson, |left in her care. It was alleged by the state that the child died from| injurtes received when Mrs. Osborn truck it and threw it acrom the room. ‘ ‘The state's case was based sal Y, MARCH 8, 1922. THE BON MARCHE RGAIN BASEMENT It’s an every day occurrence in The Bargain Basement to hear some one say: ‘‘What good looking new spring clothes, and how inexpen- ~ New Wool Street Dresses 50 Dresses, 5 Styles, in stitchery, binding and pipings, and with embroidered crepe de Chine sleeves, these dresses of wool style and short sleeves, are good values at the low price. ), $14.89 ‘Long-Line’ Dresses for “Stouts Dresses for Large Women, Sizes 36 to 44 Coat-style Dresses and those with the long-line effects formed with flowing pan- els and clever braiding. Poiret twill and serge materials—the sleeves are long or three-quarter—many of the dresses have the vests of beige or Mohawk crepe de In all the popular demands for spring, both fabric and straw. flowers, feathers, fruits. The colors are in the new high shades and the conserv- lative brown, navy and black. odd lots. With hemmed or ribbed tops. In black, white and cordovan. Bargains in Underwear Children’s Knitted Waists reinforced Women's Swiss Ribbed Vests with low necks and sleeveless, Boys’ and Girls’ medium and heavy ribbed Cotton Stockings, in Men's Canvas Gloves, sample line, medium and light weights, 2 for 25¢; each 15¢. Sample Mittens, canvas and Canton Flannel, pair 10¢. Women’s Kid House Slippers Women’s Two-strap Slippers, made on a comfortable last, with hand-turned soles and medium heels. Sizes 244 to 8. IN FRAUD CASE $3.75 Navy and Tan Trimmed with colored silk poplin, in the slip-over Sizes 16 to 38. Smart Spring Hats $2.95 Trimmed with A Jobber’s Lot of CORSETS $1.00 54 Corsets in sizes 20 to 28, in the white or flesh coutil—many styles, both for the light and heavy figure. sl CORSETS $1.50 Flesh or white coutil in the brocade or plain coutil. Some are front lace—other styles are the elastic gir- die, medium, high and low bust. Sizes 22 to 40. Not all sizes in all styles. Jobber’s Cleanup of Hosiery 19c a Pair Cotton Hosiery, including jobbers’ samples and other Sizes 8144 Women’s Union Suits, fine ribbed, low neck, sleeveless style— white and pink. Sizes 36 to 38, each 39¢. Men's medium-weight Cotton Socks, good quality, in gray and cordovan. Sizes 10 to 1114, 2 for 25¢; pair 15¢. 17c Sizes 2 to 12 with crochet pairs for FOG. ....csccccscccecceccrecsees $2.95 High Blood Pressure Great Menace Many people have high blood prea- ARINES JAILED |IVi"'FOR FIGHTING! MANAGUA, caragve, March 8. | Twenty Unite States marines were | under sentence here today to serve 7 is eight years each for engaging Ma-|#Ure and do not Know it until it ts te unsupported testimony of Nor-| Teking the stand in his own be-| clght. y ee teen flaht December #.|$00 late. Strokes are generally the man Storm, a i half shortly after the government | agua police In a fg -| direct result of high bic < Seattle newspaper. man, who testified that he saw Mrs. Osborn beating the baby was being rowed on Lake Union near the Osborn boathouse after dark on the night of September had rested its Dye land fraud suit case, Oliver M. Sparks while he |codefendant in the famous Sparks: | —__ x denied in fed- | eral court Tuesaay that he had any | rs each and h. covered time ent is given, high bi |'Three others got 10 Uhree more 12 years es sure can be relieved. Th sa ero |place on Third ave., just across the ry |street from the poatoffice, whe you can have your blood pressure taken without charge by an ex Btorm described he n off worthle: do} government doctor, Call at the Port Storm deseribed how he saw intent to palm off worthless land on of Health today, 1327 Third Avenue. loged cruelty thru the lighted win-|prospective purchasers Advertisement dow in the boathouse. mot RN < With George Dye, BE. € Hart mt and Charles A. Sparks, Oliver M FOR ® Ispe harged by the govern-| |w. k. Hat Put in w. k,|Sparks '* charged by the govern | SPECIAL |Ring by a w. k. Man some 12.000 acres of Skagit river | | tidelands, claiming it to be highly.| | Another of the wellknown hata {delands,, | | wan thrown into the well-known | hvidence has been introduced by | ring by a well-known candidate 4), prosecution to show that compe. . “g 4 | Wednesday morning. H. 8, Turner, trey renineces had reported againat | Humphreys’ “Seventy-seven” || Braised Short Ribs of Beef, Brown real esiate dealer, filed his formal «he project, and that the defendants |for Grip, Influenza, Cough, Sore|| Potatoes, Broad and Butter, Cottes |declaration ef candidacy, nee tala Throat and all Colds. nt Keep handy, carry in your pocket, \Italian Journalis Shoe Shaceinamane to Talk in Seattle Made Bank Director | On a tour of the United States in |the interest of the Thomas J. Thorsen, president Italian National the Washington Shoe Manufactur Association for War Consumptives, company, and a member of the Signor Guido Podrecea, former mem. cific Northwest Products committee, ber of the Italian parliament and a was elected a director of the noted journalist, tle March 17. On March 19 he will deliver a lee. ture here on “Italy's Part in the World War.” will arrive in Seat: National bank of S¢ afternoon, With M tion the to 1, Union attle at a special meeting of the stockholders Tuesday Thorsen's elec: directorate is increased take a dos “40” |] In the following INDUCES || COLEGROVE SLEEP Restaurants No narcotic. Strietiy Homeopathic. Price 300 and $1, at drug ate or went on receipt of price. or C.O. D, parcel pont Humphreys’ Homeo. Medicine Co, 156 of ing Pa |] BGYPTIAN KITC | 1524 Third A SPECIAL FrooD sHOP | William’ #4, New York, Medical book 0 Pike St. free, | } |

Other pages from this issue: