The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 4, 1922, Page 1

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WEATHER Tonight and Friday, showers; moderate southerly winds Temperature Last 24 Hours um, 54, Minimum, 49. Today noon, 53. ee c-Si i Now that the we say with | General Grant, “Let us have | peace!” | eee But, at that, we still believe there's & voter born every minute cee Did anyone ever discover what Charter Amendment No. 1 was all’ about? j Perhape IN GERMANY fecal “Dr. E. J. Brown, mayor-tlect, will POLICE ARE INVESTIGATING Re that as it may, Mre 1. M. Hurt, | € to a moiety note this week, is! ing Mra RU. Blood at itot Springs, Va. this w . Until Is Cleared Up BY A. L. BRADFORD SHINGTON, May 4—Or have been issued by the war department, delaying the sailing of » part of the American troops on the Rhine until June 17, it was learned today. ‘This action has been taken in response to the allied and Ger- man representations that « con tingent of the American forces bo retained in Germany for a while, By 1924 Seattle bootleggers will be} The troops whose departure has almost strong enough to have their| been delayed constitute two battal own candidate for mayor—or did) tons of the Eighth Infantry, which, they? with auxiliaries, will aggregate about | | 1,000 ofricers and men. | These troops were to have sailed | tor home this month. One battalion of the Eighth infantry, however, will all this month, in accordance with the original schedule. . A Seattle traffic cop was fired for Mirting. an officer! girls just couldn't resist All the world’s a stage, and a lot of us husbands have only think parts. zs ———————— LI'L GEE GEE, TH’ OFFICE VAMP, SEZ: Daddy's singing usually sounds werse than baby's eryin; ] | | i = I've lost my taste for carrots, Tomatoes, spuds and PPPPPP, In fact my tastes are different, Than when I went over CCCCCC. I am not like some fellow Who think they're very YYYYYY, I seem to crave for something For which I'll trade my III. — yes easy uation probably will be cleared some Vhat is it can | what. It tan’t coffee, milk or soup j Previous plans were to have the Or any kind of TTTTTT— : But if vow yo nila ch last American soldier out of Ger My soul will yell: “At EEEEEE!”|™2n¥ before July Frantic appeals have isea made to see this government that the American Sign a ween y iovad meat | flag be kept flying on te Jthine | These are the main reasour eee re gees 1. The allies are anxious that ay Se " os a an unified entente front be maintained before Germany, with the prestige inat would be afforded by the Ameriean flag. 2. Germany is faced with an almost certain threat of French occupation of the Ruhr valley if she fails to continae her repara- tions payments the end of this month, as Is now expected. ‘There 1,600 Amer- }ican troops in Germany. | er Germany will meet tions payment and the Europe: her repara nit Mary had a little wine; She got it from a stranger. The watchful doctors still decline To say she’s out of danger. | | We can't understand why yor | is given credit for inventing the talk- ing machine when the Bible telis us| woman came ae man's rib. are now about Poulsbo Contrib writes In to ark how to sell used automobiles. We don't know what the dope is but we| Lewis and Davis to have an idea that chloroform might Talk With Harding’ help some. | eee | j i fi WASHINGTON, May 4—John L | AOE) SSIS. THAR | Lewin, president of the United Mine ] Dy. B.S. Brows Workers, and Secretary of Labor te qhantes maper, | Davis are to call on President Hard. Bome people are pleased ing late toda; And some don't care. It ie understood that at this con - lterence President Harding's plan for WALLA WALLA.—Maximum aal. | ending the ec ike and for bring aries for teachers cut from $1,890 to|ing an end to industrial troubles in $1,800 a year for high school teach-|the industry will be discussed. Be e and from $1,640 to $1,550 for|fore the White House grade, Lewis conferred with Davis 1 str ecccccece eee eecce PPOSM you had been married just three weeks. Suppone your husband went out for an evening. Suppose your plato friend asked to come over and eat the dinner you had prepa for your husband, What would you #ay ‘This situe tion arises in the new serial story which The Star offers in the bellef that it will intereat everyone who ia, to be, married. Be sure to read gy OUR FIRST YEAR BY A BRIDE Starting as a feature man yes or no? or hopes Today on Page 11 Entered as Second Clase Matter May AMERICAN TROOPS, TO STAY ON RHINE |Added Starter in McCormick Wedding Race Rumors Now Link Name| of Mother With Her Swiss Adviser leave Friday for his ranch near! +" Prosser."—The Star. 0 - Gon! ie iy aiready starting to| WO Battalions Or-| take vacation trips! dered to Stay) Situation | By June 17 it will be known wheth- | CHICAGO, May 4--An added starter appeared today in the matrimonial race of the Harold McCormickJohn D, Rocke feller tamilion The name of Mra. Edith Rocke feller McCormick, divorced wife of Harold, was coupled with that of Edward Kreon, @wiss, her per gona) friend and adviser In this reported romance of the daughter of the world’s rich est man and her “business mar ager,” cupid has continued to deal strange cards which brought widespread attention to the love game of the house of MeCor- mick ‘Two other matches In the fam- fly with prospects of marria, soon are Harold F. McCormick and Gan. na Waleska, Polish dancing star. Mathilde McCormick, i¢year-. O14 daughter of the family, and Max Oner, Swiss livery stable proprietor. Krenn blushed furtousty and siggied hysterically when asked, in his luxurious apartment at the Drake hotel, about the ru mored engagement to Mra, Mo Cormick, but he wouldn't deny !t Mathilde’s father, who first approved the match with Oxer, ts now understood to be against it Whether the first victory over Oner was won thru financial preasure could not be determined Ip any event, Mathiide’s plans to sal! for Europe to join her fiance been dinrupted several times and no definite date for the sailing has been set Harold McCormick, here with | hin daughters, refused to com. ment on reports of his coming marriage to Ganna Walska. He anid he had absolutely no inter | have ext in the divorce which the op- era star In obtaining from Alex. | ander Smith Cochran, but agreed that Gann. derful wornan CHINA INVADER FAILS TO WIN Forecast Defeat for Chang Tso Lin Wiaska was a “won } HAI, May 4.—Dissension tn anks of Sun Yat Sen's Canton forces ar the refusal of @ mutinous officer to lead an expedition from the elty today ved to forecast defeat for Chang Tso Lin in the civil now raging around Peking | Sun Yat Sen has ordered an expe dition to march north against Wu Pei Fu, but Gen. Cheung Chiung Ming refused to harass the central was be commander, He dec ed Wu to bea patriot, fighting the battle of China against Japane domination { Robbed of Sun Yat Sen's ansist 9 Lin's speedy defeat BABE RUTH IS OPERATED ON) NEW YORK, May 4.—Babe Ruth, swat king of baseball, waa operated | on at St. Vincent's hospital for ton silitis this morning. This bulletin | temued: “He is doing fine as wan expected. The operation was suc coastul.” Anxious to get rid of the tonsils that have been bothering him since last fall, with as much speed as possible, Ruth asked the hospital staff to “do it right away” when he arrived at the hospital, Mis wishes were complied with and he was taken at once into the operating room. | In another section of the house the nwat King’s wife was being prepared for # werioun this afters noon, Her famous husband gave thi edict that he must he able to be at her bedside when the operation was finished, and the surgeons toid bim operation |there was no doubt that he would be i] in condition, | Broun C. | Army. THE STAR IS ELECTED SEATTLE’S MOST POPULAR NEWSPAPER BY 15,000 PLURALITY ISSUE WARRANT FOR DAVIS CAR CO. HEAD! On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise The Seattle Star SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, MAY 4, 1922. PLEDGES FOR UCREW TRIP NOW $2,273 Push Campaign to! Attain Goal of; $7,500 by. Next| Saturday H Adevertunidy $2273 had raised up to noon Thursday by the alumni committee in charge of obtaining total pledges of 57,500 to defray the expenses of sending tho University of Wash: ington crew East to participate In the Poughkrepsio regatta, Only two and « half days remain in which to complete the fund and Beck, chairman of the cam-| paign committee, lares the suc | ceas of the committee's efforts will) depend upon more general giving on} the part of Seattle and the atate, 500 by Saturday night.” ts the} Jcampaign slogan, and approximately | }$5.200 must be raised between new! nd that ume. The following pledges have been made since Wednesday noon, accord ing tO & report made by the general) committee H. C. Henry, $250; Unl-; | versity alumni, $180; Cascade Ath letic club boxing fans, $170; Rotary b, $107.25; Ford auto dealers, $100; ine Bowles, $50. Hatch, $10; Walter Galbraith B. Bted- man, $25; Bebb & ¢ Cres cent Manufacturing , $25; 100 Per Cent club, $11.55; Hatton- Oliver company, $10; Victor H. Eh fendah!, $50; FE. J. Mathews, $10; Prescott Onkes, $10; Hervey Lindley, ' Herbert Witherspoon, $15; Hef. | fernan Engine Works, $25; Admiral! line, $50, and M. F. Backus, $50. Total, $1,273.90. Previously acknowk | edged, $1,000, Grand total, $2,278.00. “This in the first year since [ have |been coaching when I felt the crew ought to go East to compete at Poughkeepsie,” sald Ed Leader. row: | ing coach, at a meeting of Washing: | ton alumni In the L. C. Smith Build ing restaurant Wednesday noon The only time for ug to compete ts ) we have a crew of outstanding | We have such a crew thin| { I believe tf we go back we will| make a creditable showing for Wash. maton and the Northwest,” sald Capt |Mike Murph “We will do our ut} |most to win first place.” Mary Pickford to Aid Salvation Army | LOS ANGELES, May 4.—Mary Pickford today announced that she had accepted the chairmanship of a committee of screen ebrities to take an active part in the 1922 spring campaign for funds for the Salvation The drive will be held May 7-15. | You Can Save A substantial sum in very short time on things that you have to buy. How? By reading the Advertis- ing Columns of The Star carefully from day to day, and tak- ing advantage of the bargain opportunities you will find there Start today—RIGHT NOW. Read the ads carefully and thoroly. | | | \ | | 1599, at the Postoffiee at Eeattin Wash, under the Act of Congress March 8, 1579. tee of the Chamber of Commerce} Stuart wolene The imitation on firearms, which! furnished the programs for the en-|_%¢ national P.T. A. convention — j both the state and the defense have | tertainment. will open Monday for a three-day th, th tan andthe defen hae! erainmen Seite Minen ties es | TOTAL VOTE been the ony preventive of open j Hemel president arrived from Wor Some of the principals tn the most |Soldier Bonus Again | gates, bitter feuds growing out of the Wert Put Up to Harding |, **. © Arthur Varney, of Yakima, | Complete returns of the city elecs | ite witnesses to prevent encounters | court. fields last summer, haa conferred | today, elect Edwin J. Brown Thursday: with the prosecution at Harpers| The journey from Mexico City took “Please permit me to extend to || | Ferry four aa you my congratulations on your |/LOrd French Lands to the United States. PPPPA LAA LAD LLL 1b | shes t teal hn Maced Per Year, by Mail, 6 to 09 TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE Hig h School Boosts Northwest Products Pupils Present Novel Play on Subject CHARGE ® complaint in Police Sustlee John B. Gore don’s court Thursday by Prose — cuting Attorney Malcolm Ins, 8 warrant was issued for arrest of J. M. Finley, of the Davis Car Co., falne advertising. tained $90,000 stock in the Davis Car Co, tation, For several months past the tions of the Davis firm have der investigation by the ness bureau. George 8. Kahin, atts ney for the bureau, mes 1 Hammer, deputy prosecu ney, have in their ponent a amount of evidence. The complaint filed Thureday ¥g based upon a transaction tn | L. F. Wyman, 835 78th st. N | vested $2,200 in the Davis Car, Wyman ts said to have been newspaper advert! August 14, 1921. this advertisement {ft stated that a large amount of ern capital had been {back the Davis firm and that |concern would shortly begin | facture of “Totem” automobiles |m large scale, No such f.nancial |sistance had been secured, |cutor Douglas charges. So far as could be determined, the only Eastern persons inter- ested in the Davis Car Co. were salesmen who had been Imported to conduct a stock selling cam- — paign, Douglas asserts. The Davis Car Co. was tocorpere f jated in 1914 and has Leen reot [several times since. It is now cap ae {talized at $1,000,000. i In spite of the large claims about quantity production made by the |company in its ads, Deputy Prose cutor Hammer says that only five” cars have been built by the company’ 0 far as he can determie, Sof these, he says, are equipped with, jrear doors, 1324 Alaska — rae Catherine Jones, author of Northwest Products play, produced at Lincoln high school) Thursday. ‘TROOPS GUARD MINERS’ TRIAL State’s Witnesses Threaten —Photo Pt & Carter, Mtar Staff Photographers 100 AT TACOMA P.-T. A. SESSION, State Branch Opening Its ° eee Five hundred parents and visiting high school principals, in addition to the entire student body and faculty attended a “Northwest Products as sembly” Thursday at Lincoln high school. The principal feature was a play, expecially written for the occasion by Catherine Jones, a pupil at Lincoln. BS George F. Burton, | pbuilding, attorney for Wyman, ts the Prosecuting witness against Finley, Another charge in whe com- Harry L. Delts was stage director a] a plaint is based upon the fact bo Rok managed the costumes. hin nae iy factor ne isdn, cies ‘ BY PAUL R. MALLON The school orchestra, directed by| TACOMA, May 4——More than 700] /™ ‘on ti sp Pg CHARLESTOWN, W. Va., May 4.|/Ernest H. Worth, and the Interbay delegates were expected to register| ae many acres. In reality, lant consists -Bioody fist fights among witnesses {kindergarten orchestra, led by Miss Building es er i pasty here today for the 12th annual meet- 1e4 the Marie Gordon, played during the as ¥ fe 1 mee’ for the state today threaten loamaune ing of the State Parent-Teacher asso-| Finley, who has been a Seattle Already strained peace prevailing at} punch was served in the school | lation and National Mothers’ con-|Tesident for many years, 1s sald te the miners’ treason trials here, |cafeteria and the afternoon was spent | grees |e in Chicago at the prosont time, He is a former trusiee of the Seats the First Methodist / tie Ad club, and was president of | Episcopal chureh are expected to last | the Finley Adv: ertising agency in the ithree days. An additional squad of state troops | inspecting exhibits by the radio club | 1 and the chemistry department. The Northwest Products commit: Sessions at ts on its way here, following severa hotel, street and pool room brawls tion were certified by the city comp= troller Thursday state president, ts directing the con- The @0l-| vention activities this week | Mrs, Victor Malstrom, of Tacoma, jheads the general committee on ar- rangements, Eleven thousand daffodils, and |” WASHINGTON, May 4 |dier bonus bill was again put up to Virginia mine ware are they never forget the past Two witnesses last night fought In Ape asennad a ty | President Harding today SON OS SOR, eee, eee Republican members of the senate |the proprietor ran screaming into tee ct. One boy witheas then | finance committee authorized Senator en bivendety : ey | McCumber, chairman, to submit the | o¢ here, They will be cane ed by the city council at 7 p,m. Friday, after which they will become | the official records of the city, The vote is as follows: the gift . wn ish : Brown 40,394, Landon 28,450, Care ataggered out, his clothing splotched os “ | George Lawlor, transferred the 40, 5 with blood, Both fighters quickly pega is i “uf nea = ve bill) church auditorium {nto a veritable | TOU 39,907, ‘Terry 39,273, Landes disappeared and the police were not |! "26 pre css , whether he. wit; |foWer garden for the visitors. Paper | 56.498, Miracle 34,748, Blain 2 26,018, notified. jcelving word as to whether he will yoqodendrons, state flower of the PRAY: veto the revised measure, Ip MeCumber will see Harding as soon | As possible. The state Is preserving the utmost A secrecy regarding the movements of | . Were presented to the dele- Wants 50-50 Split on Kids and Money REDDING, Cal, May 4—Mre Am [nie Maude Chase today filed sult for divorce from her husband, o to split 50-50 with him on both chile | dren and community property, The children number 12. She wants custody of the smallest six, The community property consists of two horses. She asks half, POM nrrsmre vot || DOUGLAS SENDS HIS CONGRATULATIONS TO 9 IGT TORE, pony. ¢umeletion) | MAYOR-ELECT GROWN | . > mneahes giyearvold son, Harry Mixolair mult! 1 pega ne. ch Meanchey! | |] attorney, sent the following let: millionaire oi] magnate, arrived here|| ter of congratulation to Mayor. with old-time enemies on the streets here. They are being kept at Har. pers Ferry, seven miles away, until just before they are to appear in Wins Long Race to Bedside of His Boy! It was learned that Don Chafin, former sheriff of Logan county, whose death was sought by some} miners in the march into the coal Imagist Poet Wed by Isadora Duncan) MOSCOW, May 4--Isadora Dun- ean, famous dancer, was married) here yesterday to Serge Eznin, Rus- sian “imagist” poet, 27 years old, Plans of the prosecution are to bring him here next week in an au tomobile, under heavy guard, to have him testify, and then rush him out of town. Great Britain's external debt Is now more than $4,600,000,000, nearly all election as mayor of Seattle. “You may count on my hearty co-operation In every proper effort along that line of work having to do with law enforcement, “I trust that we may work in harmony for a safer, better and in East for Visit NEW YORK, May 4.—Fiel’ Man shal Lord French, who commanded the British expeditionary forces at the outbreak of the worl] war and who was later viceroy of Uelond, am rived here today aboard the White Star liner Hompr'~ cleaner community é

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