The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 26, 1922, Page 7

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- ot « aT FT FT a4aesceet er ees ¥ “FRIDAY, MAY 2 WAR THREA IS WARNING OF PREMIER Lloyd George Says Humanity Is Not Yet Free From Peril of Strife BY ED L. KREN LONDON, May 26.—The world still is threatened with war, Lioyd George declared in a speech at the Hotel} Cecil today. The premier castigated the critics of Genoa. Speaking at a luncheon tendered dy his supporters in parliament, Lieyd George began with an attack upon those who had “made more dif ficult the work of the economic con: ference.” “When these critics demonstrated their joy and satisfaction at every prediction of failure and evinced gloom and wrath at every prediction possible success, I coud! not help t conclude the wish was father to thought,” he exclaimed. Lioyd George then took up Brit ain’s position at Genoa. Having mo- bilixed something like nine and a Ralf million for war, he said Great Fritain was entitled to have some- thing to say when peace was estab- lished. es “Neither Britain nor the world of humanity is yet out of danger,” the premier said. “There are perils near our coasts ‘end inside the iimits of our island,” Lioyd George declared. “Therefore We must continue a spirit of co operation until the last of these perils was vanished.” ‘This was cheered as an Indication | the premier had determined to hold together his coalition government. Great Britain today actepted and approved Lioyd George's apology for Genoa. The overwhelming vote of confi-| @ence which the Welshman won from the house of commons yesterday, after $0 minutes of brilliant oratory, f was reflected by public opinion and | * press comment today. The vote was 235 to 26. Attacks upon Licyd George and hit policies at the Genoa conference were made, but on party lines. The country as a whole, after listening to its premier’s word picture of the Russian threat to civilization, has Voted him another chance to meet the menace at The Hague. | | | (Starts on Page 1) ave. In yachting clothes, when all they will see of the bounding billows is Hobart Bosworth in a deck Londen film. And don't forget the lads is golfing suits who think that i & links ls & young cougar eee ‘The Star awards a prize for the Dest definition of a gentleman. A gentleman, we submit, is a man ‘who lets you pour out your own @rink. 1 cee i Home Prew’s Ray of Hope: No ew Can Stop Raisins From Acting Naturally. v4 eee We have cafeterias and groce- terias, why not bootleggeterias? Why not, Hortense? Because when | you finished making your purchases | Jou Wouldn't be able to carry them | out of the store. HERE'S MORE ABOUT LEGATE DE mobile above the fender, one of them bloody, The whole Seattle police de partment was on edge Friday as Coroner W, HL Corson's inquest the inquest drew near a close, Sensational testimony which was brought out Thursday ander the merciless grilling of Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Patter. son —vestimony involving offi. cers in graft and corruption— Was expected to presage a tre moadous shakeup in the force, Particalarly in view of the feet that Mayorelect E.J. Brown was | one of the Interested spectators at the investigation, The most important Thursday's seasion was Police Sergt. Piclow Patterson brought out the fact! that the three fired bullets found at} witness at} jthe scene of the murder had all begn | finding of the body fired from a .3$caliber Smith & Wes son revolver: Suddenly Patterson turned to Pie low and barked “What kind of a gun do you tenes The inquest room was quiet as a/ rave. Everyone seemed to hold his breate as, after a moment's hestia- tion, Piclow responded quietlyy “L carry a 38-caliber Smith & Wee son.” It was also brought out, however that Legate himself had carried @ similar weapon Patters questions revealed the fact that Pielow was unable to pre sent any witnesses to testify to his whereabout between 12:30 a. m. and 2a. m_ of March 17, the period during | which Legate is believed to bave been | slain, Refore the nergeant took the stand, Patterson warned him that anything) he might say could be used aguinst him and that he could refuse to tes tify if he so desired. Pielow was the only witness so warned | Piclow had been previously ao | cused by former Detective W. E.| Worsham and other witnesses of) participation in graft and double dealings in the underworld district around 12th ave, and Jackson st. Pielow told the following story of his whereabouts on that night: He met Patrolman Tom Walsh and Legate at § p. m. at 12th and Jackson and immediately left them, | saying he was “going out on the hill” Pielow traced his movements closely up until 11:30 p.m, when ne| | went to the Smith Building restau-| rant and stayed there uaptil mid night. ‘Then he went back to 12th and Jackson and took a Yesler cabie| car to 30th and Yesler, where he sald he expected to find one of his officers,” bat just mised bim. | Piclow wandered about the district until 2 a m, then walked back from Washington st. to 12th ave. where he found Walsh phoning head quarters, asking for himself. They | discovered Legate was missing, und | started a search which resulted in| the finding of the body. Sensational points brought out | thru Pielow’s testimony inclad- | ed the assertion that after Pie | low and Legate had been sus. | pended for two weeks for fail. | ure to report disorderly houses | on their beat, he had been told by Inspector Hans Damm, “If you boys have ever done any- thing wrong you have been pun ished. Let bygones be bygones. You are going back with a clean slate.” Neither officer was Instructed to keep his beat clean, it wna testified. Worsham had told the jury Previously that = year ago Em manuel A. Weis had been the victim of = frameup on boore charges in the Main st. garage, and that Pielow, Legate and Patrolman €. LL. Bryant had planted a gallon of moonshine | in the garage, sent a colored | man in with a bottle on bjs hip, | and when he came out arrested | him and charged Weits with selling the liquor. Weitz was struck that he knew anything but a jhe had seen, the courtroom was| The ship is fitted up primarily with a view to solid com- | electrified by Mra. M Sterk.|fort for the members of the crew—whenever they have who called out to Fulkerson, tn 8) 1oicure @ } . | loud voice, “Keep your face straight|/@lsure enough to enjoy it, [and tell the truth | Justice. | owner of the Beacon hotel, told Wor |the Maud drifted around north of Russia and Siberia, but sham that “the boys” were collec money from bad characters and that | geant. of the conditions around 12th and m ” * > Jackson, while they were discussing | “Ord,” the Maud was forced to put in at Nome in 1920. other things, THE SEATTLE STAR STARTS | | HERE'S STARTS PAGE 1] | ABOUT vine of times in the face and had both eyes discolored, His cuse was tried in feder rt, where he * aequitted alleged p, according to the evi was the result of bad and jealousy between and the officers, Wor- sham said Legate admitted that -in Norwegian, of 2 ” “Not a number of bulky packages marked X course—“Not to be opened until December 2 to be opened until December 25, 1923,” and : They're Christmas presents! Enough of them to last for seven years, the gift of the girls of Norway. When the girls learned about the expedition they de- cided that they'd have to see that the explorers were re- olga but | membered at Christmas times. And, as no parcel post route cinaien, himself was not km |to the North Pole has been established as yet, they had to Pielow absolutely denied the get together enough presents to.last for seven Christmases. | charges, and in fact denied every So all the girls in Norway got together months ago and |! th which had been previously) started making gifts—just like the American girls did dur- testified to, During the aft | the inquest was tarked. with cen,| ia the world war, for the men in the trenches, sical etety| GLRLS GAVE PRESENTS OF WEARING APPAREL and often questioned the witnesses. | | As Patrolman Glen Fulkerson left) Most of the presents are wearing apparel of one kind or another—knitted things, largely, mufflers, and gloves, and the stand after tontifying to the ni denying what, helmets, and the like. ” | _ There's a big central cabin amidships, flanked on either|]) Coroner Corson then «poke to side with the men’s staterooms, the galley and the big radio | her and she said she was Lecate’® set—the wireless apparatus, incidentally, is one of the|}! sister, and that all she wanted was shin's biggest assets, as it will keep the explorers linked | When Pielow took the stand Mra.| With the rest of the world thruout the trip; the first time Stark leaned forward with her eyes/in history that this has been possible on such an expedition. | — gyre | = —_ Per Foca In the central cabin there’s a big phonograph—this also pie’ aelllea Poe had pe donated by the girls of Norway, who evidently shake just Legate to collect money from dif. 48 Mean an ankle as do their American sisters—and an even ferent disorderly houses, He de-/larger one is on its way from Thomas Edison. nied that disorderiy women hed) One of the principal decorations is a huge silver tobacco Seana tk en Nain at. |Jar, the gift of the king and queen of Norway, whose pic- acrows the street from the garage.|tures hang on the wall, behind the head of the general din- He denied ever having had trow ing table. ble with Welts or Mim Weits, He) ‘Tobacco, by the way, is another commodity which has sald do bad nothing to do with! been loaded aboard the ship in wholesale quantities. Im- Weits's arrest on liquor charges ry r rf and believed It was a perfectly/Agine enough cigars, cigarets and pipe tobacco to last 10 honest transaction, He told the|men seven years! jury that Legate was in the habit of drinking and that his first thought, when he entered the garage and saw Legate’s feet stick ing out of the car, was that the! officer was drunk. He told of shaking Legate and trying to awaken him. Walsh had previously testified that Pielow did not touch the body, Pielow denied the state- ment of Mrs Legate that be had gone to her home after the All this must sound as if the Maud was a sort ef Santa Claus ship—but, as a matter of fact, that is far from being the case. For the expedition is primarily scientific, and so, of course, scientific apparatus is really the most important part of the cargo. And there’s a world of such apparatus. Most of ft has been supplied by the Norwegian government, but important contributions have been made by the Carnegie institution and the Smithsonian institution of this country. The bulkiest articles are the two airplanes—one big all- kilting and had queationed her jmetal “ship” and little Curtiss Oriole. These planes, the as to how much her husband | first to be taken on an Arctic expedition, are expected to aid had told her of conditions on | materially in the collection of hitherto unobtainable scientific the beat, |data in the frozen reaches at the top of the world. moat Impartant to, be introduced | NORWEGIAN ARMY. AND NAVY FURNISH FLYERS far by Lady Willie Forbus, counsel | Mra. Legate. He mid he had) known Lagate for eight years and| ‘The planes will be operated by two flyers, one detailed ee ent te et tin /from the Norwegian army air service and the other from apres ge agen . |the Norwegian navy. Lieut. Oskar Umdahl is the naval avi- He told of trouble between (ator, while Lieut. Odd Dah! represents the army. Weitz and the three officers, He | It is not a polar expedition—altho it is highly possible also told of jealousy over Mrs that the Maud will touch at the North Pole (if this happens it will be the first time in history that any man has at- Weitz. He said Welte had ac | cused Legate with being too | i : nan friendly with his wife and that j|tained both the North and the South Pole)—it is purely following the murder he took jscientific. The objects are threefold—metallurgical, oceano- Weitz before Capt. Tennant for | oranhical and terrestial magnetism. The result of the data bem ge later released. Wor | Collected is expected to be of incalculable benefit to all hu- sham sald that it was common |manity, as well as to scientists, as it will have a marked egh we peleanen were using j ettect on, weather prediction and other matters which di- je Main st, garage ass boot | rectly or indirectly affect everyone. lereing center it nat he didn’t | The trip itself began in 1918, the object being to “float George Samic, 1007% Weber «t,/ around the top of the world.” Starting from Christiania, then disaster overtook it. The breaking of propellers and Legate waa collecting for the ser-|the destruction of the morale of certain members of the jcrew made it impossible for the expedition to continue, so, Worsham said that Samic told him | after drifting nearly half way “around the top of the All the world is familiar with the rest of the story. How Samic was to be called as « wit- the ship was finally towed down to Seattle while Amundsen peda Friday. Bi scan ig. hema Peg oe to epics new men for his crew, arrange ¥ *|for new supplies and order necessary repairs. eee ee Now, after months of delay, he is ready to start out again, Among the odd birds of Austratia} and the Maud will leave Seattle June 1, prepared to com- are the biack swan, the tyre bird./plete the long drift originally planned. the honeysucker and the brush tur) ‘The yoyage on which the Maud is about to embark is To Be Featur Saturday at “Button-On” and “Middy” ‘The fabrics are selected TRICOTINES LINENE black middy tie. red Sizes range from 214 the special offering, Saturday, at $3.35. FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET A Special Purchase of 300 Boys’ High-Grade Tub Suits $3.35 It Is Unusual to Find Suits of This Character Offered at Anything Near as Low a Price The styles (as the sketch suggests) follow the most approved tendencies in designs. qualities of POPLINS CHAMBRAYS , to 10 years. Th —in solid colors and in combination effects, tastefully braided and finished with A Remarkably Attractive Price sin _. across an absolutely uncharted space—the great Polar Basin, “] never traversed by man in all history. It is hundreds of j | miles north of the Northwest passage, which Amuntsen successfully negotiated after hundreds of brave men had given up their lives in attempting to follow. |MAUD WILL TAKE COURSE '||\WHERE OTHERS WERE WRECKED | No one knows what will be encountered on the tri J/only reason that scientists are sure there is a clear passage ‘| is the fact that ships, wrecked on the coast of Northwest ||| Siberia have since been. found, unmanned derelicts, on the Atlantic side. The Maud will take the same course that these unfor- tunate ships have followed—and in very much the same way. Once in the Polar Basin, Amundsen will simply permit the vessel to drift, depending on the current which he krows must be there to curry him across to the Atlantic |] | seaboard. | It is possible that he may discover a new and vast conti- nent in the course of his expedition, as there are many scientists who believe that to the North of the explored region of Greenland is a great body of land which rivals in size the continent of North America. Because of the plan of action upon which Capt. Amund- sen has decided, the Maud was constructed along lines dif- ferent from those of any other ship. She is unusually “beamy” and the bottom is so round that, if surrounded by ice, she will be lifted out of the water instead of being crushed, as the ordinary ship woyld be. Not only the scientific equipment aboard, but the ship itself as well, is said to be the very finest that has ever been prepared for an Arctic or Antarctic expedition. Only three of the members of Amundsen’s crew accom- panied him in the original expedition when he set out in 1918—Capt. O. Wisting, of the Norwegian navy, who is skip- per; Dr. H. U. Sverdrup, scientist, and D. N. Olonkin, engi- neer. Wisting was with Amundsen, by the way, when he} discovered the South Pole, ' Mathilde May Decide to Oser | con- legal choice because of being under age The other children chose their father. On her own petition, Paul Corkell, prevent her marrying McCormick's formal will without went | Best TWILLS information obtainable ree hundred garments in larnong the McCormick. circle of| probate judge, named Harold McCor | friends here wan that Mathilde| mick as her guardian ~—Third Floor | to utilize the “way| Under Swiss law, a girl.under 18 would prefer Jout” and have her father withhold | who desires to marry must first ob- | tain the consent of her parents or his consent guardian. In ease Mathilde's love for Oner | &F take place. cooled, as has been reported many times recently and she did not wish| “GIVE AND TAKE” NEXT WEEK \| Sunday Eve., at 8 Sharp The New York Winter Garden's Reject Love of Hostler PASSING Seattle theatergoers. Note. the practically sotd out for the en- gagement before the first per- formance. ASTOUNDING PRICES: Nights, 50e to $2.50. (Decoration Day), Saturday Matinee,’ 5oe to $2.06. FIFTH AVENUE—PINE [DOWNSTAIRS STORE Tweed and Jersey Suits For Business and Outing Wear, $7.25 to $21.75 THIN this modest price-range, the Down- stairs Store offers delight- ful choosing in the practi- cal Tweed and Jersey Suits, some with knickerbockers that make them practically two outfits in one, for the jacket may be worn with skirt for town, or with knickerbockers for outing and sports. Choice of Gray, Tan, Brown, Rose, Green and Purple Tweed Suits in sizes 14, 16, 18 and 20 years, $7.25. Jersey Suits, sizes 36 and 38, $10.00. Tweed Suits with knicker- beckers, sizes 16 to 38, $16.50 and $21.75. THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE ‘ > Play Suits for Active Youngsters $1.25 and $1.50 UAINT Peg-top Pldy Suits, as sketched, in blue denim and khaki, with red pipings, novelty but- tons and stitchings. Sizes 1 to 8 years, at $1.25; sizes 10 and 12 years, at $1.50, —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Blue Serges for Little Fellows oi ES (¢-) bi f J \ oe OTHERS aan will welcome } mr ; such a low price f] on Suits of such ' worth-while qual- na ane ity. They are v \\ Middy and Oliver f mt Twist styles, as suggested in the H sketch; also, Bal- 1 " z kan models, with id —_ | whe sleeve eniblems, 3 and braiding. in gold, white and black. Of good quality serge, and well-tailored. Sizes 4 to 8 years. Exceptional value at $5.50. Little Fellows’ Straw Hats, in black and brown. Sizes 634 to 67%, $1.25. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Marquisette and Scrim Curtains Special 95c¢ Pair AX opportunity to curtain Summer cottages and bungalows at little cost. The Marquisette Curtains are of sheer weave, 31 inches wide by 82 inches long, finished with 2-inch hem—white, cream and ecru—special 95¢ pair. The Scrim Curtains, in white, cream and ecru, meas- ure 33 inches wide and 80 inches long, and are fin- ished with 2-inch hem—special 95¢ pair. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE FREDERICK & NELSON STREET—SIXTH AVENUE Gay Sports Scarfs, $2.95 N_ attractive assort- ment of Fiber Silk Scarfs, in 2-yard length, with heavy fringe. In Jade, Orchid, Tan, Gray, Brown and Red, priced at $2.95. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Children’s Union Suits, 25c HILDREN’S Fine- ribbed Union Suits, in low-neck, sleeveless and knee-length style; beaded finish at neck, with tape draw string, and lace around edge and knee. Sizes 4 to 8 years, 25¢. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Boys’ Union Suits, 50c OYS’ Fine-ribbed Union Suits, in high- neck, wing-sleeve and knee-length style, sizes 26 to 34, priced low at S0¢. —THE DOWNSTAIRS 8TO! New Patent Leather Pumps $2.50 and $2.95 ISSES’ and Children’s Patent Leather Pumps, as sketched, with wide two-button instep strap and rubber heels. Sizes 814 to 11, $2.50; 1114 to 2, $2.95 pair. Mary Jane Pumps the same prices. CHILDREN’S BAREFOOT SANDALS, in Tan or Smoked color, sizes 5 to 8 $1.15; 8% to 11, $1.35; 11% tw & $1.45 pair. GROWING GIRLS PATENT. |} LEATHER SANDALS, with two-buckle fastening and novel cutout patterns, sizes 2% to 7, widths B, C and D, 84.50 pair. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORB Infants’ Soft- soled Shoes, 50c EATHER Shoes, in tan and black only, but- ton style, in sizes 1, 2 and 3. Very low-priced at 50¢ pair. —Infants’ Wear Section, THE DOWNSTAIRS Men’s Shirts $1.15 ENEROUSLY - PRO- PORTIONED, well- tailored Shirts in Percale, Rep and Cotton Twill, sizes 14 to 17, priced at- tractively-low at $1.15. MEN'S BATHING SUITS with striped trimmings, in various color combinations, sizes 34 to 46, 95¢ to $4.00. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE the belief that the marriage ‘will nev. | The saillng was first arranged for | the early part of April and has been set off every few days, until now Ma- to marry now, she could find refuge | thilde admits she doesn't know when in the guardianship. The fact that Mathilde has long de- ferred sailing to Europe to meet Oser since announcement of the engage. ment was first made has confirmed in the minds of many friends here she will leave, 11 p. m. to 5 a. m. was ordered today thruout the six counties of Ulster. Anyone out of doors between these hours must account for himself, or herself, or be locked up. TEETH EXTRACTION FREE DAILY -* METROPOLITAN ALL WEEK KOLB AND DILL Matinee Saturda: SEATS NOW! For the Opening First Time in Seattle Our whalebone plate, which does jnot cover the roof of the mouth if |you have two or more teeth, Natural Rubber, set of $6 00 . teeth... . & perfect re Most Stupendous Revue Gum 1 production of the human gum, set te . $10.00 CHICAGO, May 26.—A “Way out"! When MeCormick was divorced a} OE iaices was provided today for Mathilde| year ago from the daughter of GOLD CROWN McCormick from her engagement] John D, Rockefeller, the court de eh wigeted | BRIDGEWORK to marry Max Ouer, Swiss horse-| | on sees to marty Ms cided the children could choose | Willie end Eugene Howard A eS Ea URE as 8 a8 Appointment of Harold F, MeCor-| Which parent they ehose to live | 26 Colossal | Bc ones 2900 Cos- [recommended by our early custo- mick, millionaire president of the| with, othe World's | mers, whose work is still giving good GALATEA CLOTH International Harvester company,| Altho Mathilde preferred her Pasttivety the soit fleatistaction, ut 4 as guardian of the 17-year-old girl, father, she was unable*to make a Glittering, Gigantic and All work guaranteed for 15 years. 5 tly Attraction Ever Offered to Examinations free. OHIO DENTISTS 207 University St. Opposite Fraser-Paterson Co, In all cities played by “Passing Show,” seats were Pop. Mat. Tuesday b0e to $1.50, BELFAST, May 26.—Curfew from! Following closely upon issuance | this order, one man was killed and four wounded in street fighting. —__—_>. 'f| Your Guests Know Good Tea— Many of them use TREE TEA Exclusively in their own homes. | | |

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