The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 18, 1922, Page 7

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DAY, AUGUST 18, 1922. FT ALL NIGHT SOUND; SAVED Dodge Ships in Dark Until Resoued night fed with terror on the wateraoof Puget sound, dodm ghostly steamstipe that plowed hetr tiny craft, was-the experi. ef two Seattle youths, Jack | t, 9, 4809 Ferdinand st, and Lance, 11, 4984)4dth ave: S., aw Capt! G. Wimrter of harbor eat No. 1, who rescued! them Friday S two bore went adrift fm a owned by Normess! Holland, | of Jack, late Thurtay night Wired gradualty into the main ot Sound steamsh{n travel, | for hours dodged death by the ust’ of fractions, unset by the | Hof the pameing ships } trying to sfgnal a passing | . John fell into the Sound, rapidly becoming exhausted | strugstes when Jack, harvoically Dis own iife, pulled him out tiny launch, without Jights, ty sighted riear the Bel) 9th . atid the Harber patrol boat gent to the rescue. The boys gent home, little thie worse for and pollos jolted in # city. h Friday for Benjamin F. 23, scum, alleged to have d the Pierce home at the to dotectives, numerous theftt may Se charged to BF, Oansn, 204 Mair xt. report Pritinty that ett, 6321 Ninth ave. N. E., bdurgiafized the pltice, taking and other yaluables. P. Moriarty, 358 18th ave. that his 1920 mode! Oakland car was stolen Thursday from Fourth ave. and Spring $1,000 Price for Hair of King Atig, 18.—A locket cori- 7) 7 =| PLYMOUTH SHOE CO. 1509 Fourth Avenue _ Near Pike Street a A PAIR We offer for one week , 360 pairs of Ladies’ Fall Style Patent Pumps with ‘gray combination quar- + $6.00 value at the price of $4.85 pair. style in the all- LADIES’ COMFORT SLIPPERS 365 pairs of Ladies’ g Comfy Slip- pers, all the new colors. 72, SHE STARTS ON SEV w \ Married Con- federate veteran, 1865 E SEATTLE STAR CLAIM FRAUD: IN| Robber Wins by | ENTH HONEYMOON! Married 'e veteran | }man giving the name of J, C. Bilis | Mra. Mary Ann Sanders, seven times a bride, and the marriage costumes she has worn, since 1845. BEACVOTR, At 72 Mrs. on her sevomth Her sevent® spouse by W. 8. Sanders, Confederate yeteran of the civil war. ‘People ax me why I married at fils advanced aq." she says, “My Atiewer in that people are not up powed to live alone, Then why not marry, regerdiess af your age?” “Six of my sevea marriages have My atcret? Just (him: Be loving and kind and considerate and devoted to your husband. Most husbands will " ee | MER MARRIAGE COSTUMES 1863——White wine, six-yard wkirt, 1876—dtriped percaie, belted and plain. 1883—Just plain calico. 1885—A high-necked, ong sleeved | Darque. worsted, very plain. 1912—White shirtwaist, black Mra. Sanders «as first married at | 15 to Robert H. Marrison, 27, Confed- erate veteran. That was in 1566. Pour years later he died. A year later the widow, now a girl Of 20, married A. Ih. Moorehoune, 24, who also had fought in the Confeder. ate forces. She became the mother or 10 children, After 13 years ot) married life Moorchoure died of ty phold fever. A your later, at 33, she married Denies Senator Was | Wittlam Newald, German farmer, 10 yours Ner junior, Newald died of pneumonia a yeer tater, Having been « widow one year, she married E. ¥. Hartwell, a planter, 12 years youngér th: She | tived happily with Mart § years. Two childre: . Then Har well and * of the children were wain in a feud, Mra. Sanders’ fifth marriage was at the age of 52. Her husband, Jo sepha Howard, another Confederate veteran, wae 66, Differences be tween hushand and wife arose, and | the marriage ended in divoree, | At 62 Mra. Sanders married Bd MoGeheo, only 2%. McGehee dtea, | Making Mrs, Sanders a widow for the fifth time, | “T can't say which of my hae bands 1 loved the most,” Mrs. Sanders say. “They were all goed men, save one. Mr, Sanders ty Kindly and affeetionate, and I kenow we shall be very happy.” | COL. HUSTON TO in Bootlegging Plot HEAD VETERANS CHICAGO, Aug. 18.—doseph A. senater’s name in any way with illegal Maaor deals. Tatro, after being ter, mentioned the seemed “the biggest caso inthe Uatied States,” which would connect up with McKinley and his secretary, Chester Wil- This was denied by the investiga tor, whe declared he had never mer tioned the name of the senator or hie secretary. Nolan and other investigators de. discharged, | clared that not one bit of evidence called newspaper men te his honte| had been uncovered by any goverh and displayed correspondence he had) ment investigator which would show exchanged with David Nolan, head/that McKinley or Willoughby rev: | ever, in any manner, violated of the department of internal enue. In « letter from Nolan, the inves tigator wag adousegd of having made charges cofinecting the name of McKinley with the attempted re. moval Of 1,400 cases Of Nquor trom & Chicago warehouse. Tatro, according to Nolan's let- Legion Wants President to Fire Sister! WASHINGTON, Aug, 14.—Resolu- | tons of protest acainst the continu: ance in the government service of Mre. Caroline Marding Votaw, sister of President Harding, and 12 other women whose husbands also are In the employ of the government were adopted here by American Legion post No. 1. The Legionnaires claimed one job in a family was enough, and that the women’s places should be given to ¢x-service men. Mrs, Votaw fe head of the tndus- trial service seotion of the veterans’ bureau, at $5,000 a year, while her husband is superintendent of pris ons, at $4,000, the Legion asserted. $1.25 A Pair LAST CALL — 69c a Pair Ladies’ White Canvas Oxfords and broken sizes. Reg- 3 $5.00 to $7.00 val- ‘Wes. Take them at 69¢ pair. had the law. Tatro, on his discharge, was hired by BH. ©. Claybaugh, spe cial investigator now probing se tions of Chicago federal officials, including specifically the office of United States District Attorney Clyne. ‘ Tommy Milton, Auto Racer Has Son LO8 ANGELES, Aug. 14.—Tommy Milton, renowned racing driver, to- day had resigned the pilot's seat th his family, and was acting aa me. chanician to a one-day-old son The future speed king was born yesterday at the Angelus hospital here. 1,140 Marks for $1 Is Now Low Record LONDON, Aug. 14.—In a sharp decline to the lowest point on ree ora, German marks were quote day at 6,100 to the pound sterling or approximately 1,140 to the dollar. | 1 Mack Sennett fueg for divoree frvin Henry Sage Wells, whom she married in 1918 She guys he beats hi 4, — Marvel Ron, A to} motion picture star, | jElection of Officers to Be Held Today With election of officers for the coming year slated as the big event lof the day, delegates to the 22rd an hual national Convention of Veterans \of Foreign Wars were preparing Frt- lday to condlude their sessions here Col. Tillinghast Huston, of New [engineers in France, it wae belteved jhad @ clear field for the office of rinehiet, His the only name placed in fomination for jthe supreme officer at & committee |movting held in the city ¢ounelt jchambers Thursday night, Other hominations were: Andrew Hawking, Minneapolis, senior vice commander-in-chief; Charleg Dodson, ortotk, Va., and Marry L. Mitsinger jand A. W. Gibson, both of Pennayt |¥ania, junior view rin jen Capt. J. 1, Joyce, New | Quartermaster general; Mal. Re Btart Allyn, New York, judge te te general Maloney, New }York, surge P J. Philips Anchults, T na, chaplain | The names of Robert G. Woodside, retiring commander-in-chief, and jJohn Walker Portland, |were placed in nomination aa mem jbers of the exec committee. |eommand was comman tive Col, Masten is a well known figure | in tw the national sporting world. He part owner of the New York unkees, and has @ long record of brilliant eering achievements to jhis cred. He was one of the cof: sulting e ore Who raised the bat- P Maine. th t | of Thirsday’s semston ce We ea resolution asking th | announced intention to dixpose of the |hational soldiers’ bonus bill immedi jately after the tariff bill was con eluded be adhered to, The fact that the bonus measure bas beén pending for more than three years now was cited. The veterans also went on récord by resolution as protesting the use in Many public sohooIM of hixtorion that "4 ¢ or ignore our nation's founders, falsify the cause of the revolution and the war of 1812, and discredit the statement of grievances made in the Declaration of Inde pendence,” The resolution recommends that an investigation of the histories In use In schools thruout the country be taken up and a report made thru U® Veterans of Foreign Wars Americani. zation committee. Two Candidates to Give Up Campaigns Two candidates for county com misstoner withdrew from the race Friday and their names wore atricken by County Auditor D, B, Ferguson Mrs. Edith Bowles decided she would not run as a candidate from |the Mirwt district, and P, M. Ellis of Auburn, eandidate from the Second jdistriot, aid Wkewine WINDSOR, Ontario. Miss Jean ette Dodson, 24, shot in left lung by wife of Harry Patton, with whom be gitended the Windsor races, | York, commanding officer of the 16th | ide telegraphed to} | } ) } | INSURANCE CASE Man Called Dead Two Years Arrested in Northwest Identified a» Hiwell MH. Aibritton, wealthy automobile dealer of Bir. mingham, Ala., who was supposed to have been drowned two years ago, «| wan being taken from Tacoma to the Southern city Friday to face alleged Money shortages, while police thru out the Pacific Northwest atarching for his woman companion who disappeared, Klis, or Albritton, waa arrested Wednesday, at Hoquiam, The wom an fled, taking with her, it I» be lieved, a considerable sum of money that the man fy said to have obtained by cashing forged checks In Ala bama. Albritton’s disappearance caused Much comment at the time, His an- tomobdile was found in @ river, but his body never was recovered, New tives are now in litigation over their attempt to collect $105,000 insurance. The arrest wax made after officials | and private de ives had trailed the missing man across the continent. were Says Coolidge Not Fitted for U.S. President' Most fitted as the legal advisor or chairman of the board of @ manu- facturing or t sportation eorporn tion, Vice President Calvin 8. Cool idge would not fii! the bill should for- tune call upon him to step into the shoes of President Harding. ‘This tw the conclusion reached by Prot. John Edwin Ayer, M. V. (nean. ing master of vitosephy), who took occasion to study the vice president at close range during his stay tn Seattle. “LT would have been pleased to make & few mensurements of Vice President Coolidge’s bend,” Prot. Ayers said YWriday, “tut my observa. tion of him showed that he la eka | some of the requirements for the job | of preaident. Me should do fairly) well as president of the senate, and} wil better af an advisor of the +, cabinet, “Hie thinking processes are of the alkall type, very slow, and hig deep. set eyes show @ poorly developed organ @f langudyes, Only long prac tee at the bar enables him to speak well and clearly, tho very slow, what he has prepared for.” Pref. Ayers finds Cooltdges crantom only of moderate nize, while hia nose indicates keen, penetrating observation that misses nothing, He | Stephen's B. Aid of Modesty | of His Victim burglar from imearceration in the etty bastilo here, HELP), 1uRDER! Stephens awoke at an carly hour} and saw thru the gloom of his hotel |) room a tall figure climbing over bls | transom. j Me patiently watted until the yees- | man dropped his No. 14's on the floor | and then sprang from bed and se | cured @ haiffeloon on the fcotpad's| windptpe. { Stephens had his adversary choked | into subminsion after 10 minutes of pummeling, and led him to the stairs | to eummon the police, By BP wept Suddenly the robber broke loose and with a whoop fled down the staircase, Stephens gave chase. Dewn Couch gt. they raced, neck and neck. And then a button popped Btephens was forced to stop and se. Cure his loose nether garment in one hand. Me dived in an ash barrel and yelled for help. O-o! Kisses to Be Sold by a Girl in Seattle |finds that the viee president can rea-| Gay what you winh, there ts some. | | 1 ; |diers red-handed | | son deeply and philosophically. “The top forehead ta not full fn proportion.” Prof. Ayers sald, “and hew is where he is #0 commonly mis. understood. While his social nature, As shown in the lower back head, fa | finely developed. expecially in friend. ship, Die insleg into buman nature, of infuttion, In the front top ta net #0 well developed, and he does not. readily senses thought of other people and so he does not have the gift of popularity among the rank and file of the people.” BOOZE FOUND IN RAID ON HOTEL Breaking into what t# said by them to be one of the largest booxe rings in the elty, federal prohibition agents faided the New Avon hotel, 606 See ond ave. and arrested Hugo Beroiter Erol Hoffman and Bernard Ward Thursday night Officers assert that saflorn were | in the act of purchasing whisky when the arrests were mado. Ward t# anid to be manager of the Rainier Taxi company, while Bereiter and Hoffman are employes at the notel More than 100 quarts of whidky were seited, rounded up from caches | In even rooms. “Thin place has been an eyesore to | civic decency,” one of the officers | who made the arrests declared Fri day “We have known that sailors wore freely supplied with liquor at the New Avon for some ‘time, but walted until we could catch the ped. | | The hotel has become so widely) known a® & fesort for thirety sailors one sallor ts alleged to have told officers, that some of the seamen werd denied shoredeave in Seattle [ Canada, thing alluring about the warm, lus cious Kast, 4 Perhaps, that ls why Mise Neolla Menard ts looking forward to doing ® thriving business at the Oriental Fiesta Fridey evening at White Con- ter. Yor Mins Menard te going to sel Oriental kisses—the kind that made King Soiomon marry 600 thmest Whether the kisses will be the kind that makes the world go round ls a eeeret-—only to be divulged when the intending purchaser has laid his money on the counter, But, oh, the blissful anticipation! The other principal events of the evening will be a pageant fn three episodes, depicting a Jewish Pass over, Senate Eliminates Retaliatory Duties WASHINGTON, Aug, 18--The senate struck out the provision of the tariff DIN whieh set up retalia- tory duties s@ainst tmpertations of wood pulp and newsprint paper from Woman, 103, Boasts Smoking 40 Years COLCHESTER, Png, Atg Mra. Hannah Peters, at the a 103, boasts that she has been amoker for 40 years. ot a \Bees by Aleghians Honey Is Going Up AMSTERDAM, Aug. 18 A large consig ent of Duteh bees was sent to England by airplane to replenish Scottish hives MELBOURNE.—American schoon. because of their affinity for this Harry Pfeil and Theo. Pennington Tenor and soprano with the pany in the roles of “Nanki Poo” and “Yum and Sullivan's gem of gems,‘ politan theater, starting Sunde, Henrietta reported to be wrecked on one of Bilice group islands in Pa cific ocean, Crew reported saved. American Light Opera com- wm” in Gilbert} ‘The Mikado,” at the Metro- Y, August 20th, - _ FREDERICK & NE LSON STORE 288 Pairs | Misses’ and Children’s $1.95 $2 ~ Sizes 6 to 8, $1.95. Sizes 81% to Sizes 1114 t 1 o ERVICEABLE School pairs of knickerbockers. $8.95, Boys’ Caps in Brown, Green and Gray mix- tures; sizes o* to 7%; priced at $1.25. $1 with band top finish standard make. Sizes 15 medium-weight knit arsa Patent Leather Pumps UNUSUALLY LOW-PRICED 25 $2.75 LACK Patent Strap Pumps for children to wear for “best” occasions offered at unusually at- tractive prices. In the style pictured with two- button fastenings. 1, $2.25. 2, Ta78. THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Boys’ 2-knicker Suits $8.95 Suits of Brown and Gray mixtures with yoke back and inverted plait. Two Sizes 7 to 16; low-priced at ’ Madras Blouses with high neck and long sleeves; sizes 6 to 16, —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE “Samples” of Women’s Athletic Union Suits 25 Au STYLE Union Suits of soft muslin, or lace edge, ribbon draw- string and dainty ribbon shoulder straps. In pink and white; sizes 38 to 44, priced at $1.25. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Men’s Night Shirts, 95c Well-tailored Night Shirts of good-quality muslin, to 18, low-priced at 95¢. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Men’s Knit Sweater Coats $3.45 ROWN, Blue and Green heather weaves in Men’s jersey Sweater Coats for —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE golf, motor or utility wear. Sizes 36 to 46; $3.45. nd Creamers ’ SPECIAL 65c PAIR Medium-size Sugars and Creamers of clear glass, cut in Star, Gri or Floral patterns (Grape design sketched), special, 65¢ pair. rie nowNsTams srore Nude Sun-Bather Caught by Police MATLOCK, Eng, Aug. 18-—Be cause he disrobed in a field and took a three-hour sun-bath, Eric Lewes whs arrested. PARIS, Aug. 18--French acten- tists have found that the degth of many fine trees on streets whore aw. Dope Smugglers Are A * Now Using Airplane PARIS, Aug. 18.—-A great part of the cocaine smuggied from Germany into France is believed to come in airplanes which cross the frontier at night. tomobile traffie ts heavy is due ta fumes from the motors. FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVE — JE A ND PINE STREET sae: Children’s “Acrobat’’ Shoes “No Tacks or Nail. last the Why “Acrobats” | == Are Better "a 1—Flevible, tough, all- leather sole, comfort- able the first day toorn, 2--No tacks, nails or ata ples used in “Acro- bats”"—cannot hurt the feet, scratch floora or mar furniture, 5—No filling between the soles to get lumpy— all-leather sole wears evenly, 4—Insole cannot work loose, roll up or wrinkle—has a smooth surface that stays flat, CROBAT SHOES are built room for growing feet and just port. s to Chafe or Tear” on a scientifically designed that provides plenty of toc- right degree of ankle sup- They are made from especially-tanned flexible leathers that will not “scuff up” easily. ACROBAT LACED SHOES with double welt soles, in leathers as follows: Brown Bear, sizes 7 to 8 $3.75; 8% to 11, $4.50; 11% to 13, $5.25. Smoked Horse, sizes 6 to 8, $3.75; 8% to 11, $4.50, Mahogany Lotus Calf, sizes 6 to 8, $8.75; 8% to 11, $4.75; 11% to 13%, $6.60, SMALL Boys’ JUNIOR CRUISER SHOBS, Blucher style, with double welt sole, in Brown Bear leather, sises 9 to 2, $5.00 pair, BAREFOOT SANDALS in Smoked Horse and Brown Bear, sizes 5 (ohildren‘s) to 2 (mieses’), reduced to $2.45, Firat Floor

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