Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
“Dress Well—Never Miss the Money” and All-Wool Plaid-Back OVERCOATS 30°35°40°45 cael / Pant Suits Girl Barred HE s MORE SCANDAL’ Because She AMONG BANKERS Miss Jennie Corffa PEABODY, Mase.. Nov. 3.—If girls At the high the school here want to need do is put om knickers. Mise Jennie Corffa, is-yearcok sophomore, tried it She had just come from Springfieh, Mass. where the girts wore what they plrased But Principal Willard W. Wood man, head of the school here, barred her on sccount of her costume. The girl complied with bie onter, it heme and got dressed tn a ekirt j that } “Kalelers are far more decent }than seme of the Sapper costumes, The old-fashioned skirt, by reason | ort one. But she still betieves of ite wuatirectiveness and lack of comfort, te & relic of bygone days.” Notes on Business ‘The Juneau sawmill has booked orders for 4,000,000 feet of timber to the plans recently received at the |Alaska department of the Chamber of Commerce, the Jumeau mill ex Wore Knicks, eet @ Gay off from school al they | be delivered in China. According to} pects to operate from April 1 until Novernber 1, next year, employing | approximately 75 men i eee Again of more than 6,000,000 hoard measure feet in timber sales im the Tongass National forest for Joly, August and September, thie year, over the same period of 1921, ts reported from forest service bead quarters at Juneau. During. thet quarter this year « total of 6,823,100 feet were sold as compared with 1, 114,700 feet for the sume quarter in 1921. The sale of timber in the! Tongass forest during the present calendar year indicates a consider able improverment in the timber ip dustry in Southeastern Alaska over 19a1. Wanted Cave Man; |OneEye,3 Tails, | Draws a Jellyfish} Horns, What Is It?| PATCHOGUE, NY. Nov. & BAYONNE, 6. J. Nov. & Me™ | Clarence Seaman, @ railroad collector, see { Katherine Kopak, 19, who left {scooped out of shallow water near) Mr. Fred W. Bradley, president of | home, her husbana and her 2-year- jthe shore at Blue Point, just east of the Alaska Juneau and Treadwell | Gié son, war seized by © Bayonne 6*-! Patchogue, « pecullar-looking fish | Gold Mining companies, on his recent | tective in Jersey City om ® Chars?) of the sea-robin variety. The freak. tour to these properties announced | of shanéoument and taken before Ke-| which Lived only a few hours after |that indications were never as good corder Cain jbetng caught, resembled a toad ininor the outlook of the Alaska “Why did you run away from your | color, was about four inches long by | Juneau as bright. He stated that the | Rome? Your hustand was good to|three wide, with two little fins, one | company plans to handle about §,000 | Jou and you love your baby, Gent \ on each aide of ts plump body tons daily, or 256,000 tons regularly, | Jou?” inquired the fudge. It had only one eye, om the left! cer month. i “When 1 married my bushand Ti gde of ite broad catlike or owl- eee | was under the impression he was Of | shaped head, but had three tallx. the| © wr Bolte of Anchorage has re. | the caveman type and I have discov-| middie one, about three-quarters of opened his hariware business in a red he is nothing mere then « Jelly |an inch long. being the biggest. ltine new two-story building, offering fish.” replied Mrs Korak She said) its body was covered with pro-|¢.oc0 square feet of floor space for she wanted « husband whe would |trugimg cone-shaped pliable horns éiaplay purposes. | beat her occasionally at least. jabout a third of am inch long. When/ “ee | ‘Turning to Mra Kopak. the jadee/naid in the hand it spat out audibly! y © port, who has just completed g while curling ite human-shaped lips) mit “You go home to your bushant and i in « rowdy-like fashion and re ee athvchtiredhachyrad ‘the, Tongass Na. t your baby and be rpasnens "pose ap ® | the air, from which it soon filled UP/tiona: forest, reports that of the 2¢ Ree ee ete ek bara | te the shave of @ ball, when it floated | rosects visited this season, four prof are not satisfied, come age “Fr \Mghtty om the water like @ toy bal-| 1.4. were discovered capable of be again end TT) send you loon ing utilized In forest development. ——————— ta 0 wv . ¥ acd osu tart! Poregato=s farmers are ment Dat in Go See may vary in height/numerous in the sorth central isach was assembled. The four new tneb © tent 6% | states There are few in the South. | sites discovered are Blue take and execpt im Tenas. | Takatz lake, both on Beranof island; | anna Punchbowl lake, at Rudyard bay on Behm canal, about $00 miles from Ketehikan, and Mink bay, at ‘Boca, de Quaéra j It im eatimated that the Takats lake site can be developed economi cally to produce from 10.900 to 13,606 horsepower; Punchbowl lake, trem 4,000 to 10,000; Mink bay, from 7.000 to 8.000 horsepower. The Takatz lnke and Kusnyki bay sites, the lat ter surveyed last year, are £0 located thet they may be combined with the Warm Springs bay site, according to | Mr. Dort, so that an aggregate of | from 25,009 to 20,000 horsepower can | be brought tm et that point Robert A. Zellar has been appoint-| 4 forest supervisor of the Tongass; National forest to succeed ©. T. Gardner, resigned. Mr. Zailar will | make his headquarters at Ketchikan Without giant. «@ 4 fet i being man Hi McCormick Gland Operation The Chicago surgeon who operated on Harold F. McCormick, Chicago multi-millionaire, is re- puted to have received as high as $100,000 for his few minutes of surgical skill. At the recent medi- cal convention in Chicago, Dr. Roy Upham, Presi- dent of the Homeopathic Institute of America, Claimed that better reeulte could bave been obtained by hay- ing the tient eat jands. Dr. Upham explained that the is glands of young and healthy animals can be prepared so that froy can’ totakon oy mouth like any other Feweay Railroad Managers Such « preparation is now o Glandogen compound of sh Are Scarce Article, heaitiy Conveniently pre - ve teins ott dower able at the Baral Drvg Stores, § BRISBANE, Nov Attempt ‘or (ree ipterceting booklet Premier Barwell of South Australia | to find a superintendent for the state | railways bave all failed. He says that $25,000-a-yeas mk ace VOY scarce. \Ends Life by Tying . erly D. Harris Brings: Charge Against Wife | — / NEw YORK, Now 8—al most as sensational as the Stillman jdivoree seundal, which afforded Gothamites salacious gossip for over & year and finally boosted Jafnes A. iitman out of the president's chair the National City bank, ts the divorce suit of Beverly D, Harris, former vice president of this same | Rockefetier inatitution. | After living in apparent happiness | tor yeara Harris suddely brought sult against his wife, declaring she hed | deceived him as to her birth He charged that, ingtead of being the daughter of a prominent Memphis man, she came from “sommon ntock and for two yeare was the “kept | woman” of @ notorious gambler of [that city. Harris testified that he-was Intro- duced to the woman who is now his wife as Klaine Lee in Houston, Texas by Congressman McLemore. The lat ter told Harris she wae a daughter of Stacker Loe, river steambot magnate and niece of EM Rayner, represented to him as holding « high position the business and social life of Mem Dh He sald he discovered later he was not the danghter of Btacker Lae, that she was no relation to Ray | ner, but his woman, and further that | Rayner was a professtonal gambler. TELLS OF DOUBTS | HE ENTERTAINED In his subsequent doubt over his | wife's réal paternity he admitted he | had considered the poasthility she was the daughter of Zetta Lee, dencribed |to him as an cetoroen of considerable | beauty who formerty conducted e dis- lor der r e in Memphia In o¢ etion ef Harris’ charges the strongest witness was Eugene Ft] | Avery, who testified he formerty kept} | photographic supply store In Mem- | phis, that he had known Reyner for {15 years to be @ notorious gambler, | t between 1910 and. 1912 Rayn upled the two cs ab photographic atore with Ella Lee and that this Ella Lee is now Mra Rev-/| erly D. Harris, “How do you know Ella Lee and) Mra. Harris are the mame? ‘he was/ asked on cross examination. tn her hotel here last Thursday,” he re- ied, “and there I recomnized her and talked to her. I told her I was the [man who kept the «fore below her |for two years in Memphis and she | eo “Oh, then you are the kedak man’* [ACCUSES WIFE OF INFEDILITY ‘The second witness war put on the for Harris “that only was Mra. | Harrie a commen women before she | married hy but J enaned to be one m she has never that ax recently as last May she was with « man at « Memphis hotel even after this ltiga- tion had been started.~ | The witness, a negro walter, fam Campbell, testified that on the morn- mg of May 6, he served breakfast to Mre. Harris and an unidentified man | breakfast check for a grape frutt, | Tolls, tem and cereal, signed “B.D. | Harri” “She signed that.” he snié. Dectston as to divorce has net heen rendered. but Justice Bplegeiberg hes ruled that Harris must pay his wife $3.500 alimony arrears and $1,000 a month. Recanee Harrts admitted, however | be knew tn March or April, 1811, his | wife was not the daughter of Stacker Lee nor the mice of Rayner, and bad been tnfermed of the other |charges axsinat hie wife's character, { Justics Splegeibers ruted he could not | plead his wife's alleged past an a de. fense. Self to Wild Horse LAKNED, Kan, Nov. 2-—-A J. Umberger, 45, a farmer, committed wuteide by tying @ rope around -hin neck and fastening the other end to the collar of « hors, which he entened and forced to run from | the farn, The animal Gragged Um-| berger out om an open field, where Mra, Umberger witnessed the trag- way. Efforts to catch the fightened horse fatled and it was some time before it returned to the barn, dragging Um- berger's lifeless form. The horse was said by Mra Umberger to be unman- ageable. i Sisters, wives of brothers, become mothers on the same tday. Mrs. George McCurdy (left) and Mrs. William Me- |Curdy (right) are shown with the “twin” arrivale. families live in Hoboken, N. AR eoboee” PER PAIR Few celebrities cram so much = B work, study and fun into every 4| NEVER KEADS BCENARIOS | PROM THE OUTSIDE Blass 7 te 13 TLE STAR IT IS ALL IN THE FAMILY ‘Clock Must Step Lively | to Keep U p With Chaplin BY JACK JUNGMEYER ‘The clock that can keep pace with | Piteh for an hour, Chartie Chaplin's slithering feet and/ skipping wide and handsom: hours, Once around the dial with him ts jae diverting @ performance as ever “I went to Mra Harris’ room at/>¢ pet cinating personality. unique folbles, striking individuality jim toll and diversions, and « char . acter Index as qound as a 10,009.) portan werd biography satin) | 1 ‘The day begins tm his pal Chaplin bachelor hills where he lives with three man-| , servants, and where at— $90—He yawns and blinks Very|~knocks” as carefully as the J stand to show. secording to attorney | much as he dors in the movies cand o:16 tn gown horn-rim spectacion on his ane dozen every O45—Takes first of three @afly devises his gags and comedy bust baths, cach an elaborate ceremony Des as be putters around the set; of comfort, shaving with & safety ¢liminates, adds, tries out a dozen razor minus a mirror, while he's In ideas: shoots the scene from a score a ee clothes his seeretary.| with a synopsis, a continuity sheet, © keep up with the valet has laid out, Sartorial prog-|& prepared story or @ cue; some Comedian is about all in, se at— rene vivid of @ color to fit his mood. satin, wearing a different one mearty | to morning.) | $20—Breakinst gerved tn bed by) Arkansaw. [the butler—¢nii [ring and fruit, with ham and eggs funny for two hours at the hotel, and he then identified «| it ceaaiae hungry * opera sung at top lung power. (The | tall nearest yarts away) FIREPLACE, PAINTINGS, ot if roses for next summer ghoul4 be Gone VICTROLA IN ROOM $20—Is thoroly inapected and ay ante the ih fallen from trees and bushes. The poaire 1100—Summons chauffeur and! manipulated py chiropractor for any Washington bureac has compiled for you frem official souress drives to studio, | poasibie strain on spine or injury to everything you need to know In order to have a beautiful rose 114S—Reviews film production of| bones in falls or strenuous stunts. garden, rose hedge, or lawn and border ef roses for next summer, Previous day tn projection room| Capac & canter on his horse, It telle what «pectes and varieties to select, all about soll and with critical comment listens to sug-|~ trie.” pron roses: arbor trellis, roses gestions he seldom follows; ordert| S:45—Second bath of the day at ier waweeten povge gin Whether pg one rose van retakes If necessary, and gives im studio after discarding makeup. | 4) erty this bulletin will be ef value to you. And whether you Mrvctions for the day on the lot. | Water sigzling hot. Plays with | aor (> piant now or next pring, you should send for this bab 114$—-Starte to put on well-known | soap. Sings operettas Gets ideas letin, which t free to Star readers, Fill out carefully the coupon rug funke-up loose vest studio dressing room with fireplace, davenport, paintings and victroia, and proceeds to court} & comic 1290—In “made up,” to accompaniment of Kreisier and Hoeifetz on Victrola, more immersed pursuit of funny idea than in| music. 12 make-up and proceeds to lot or loc BOOKS AFTER MIDNIGHT tion. 12:30—Works s FORMERLY THE JOHN LINDH Co. Quality Overcoats Men and Young Fellows Made from real fine Woolens—Every one of them styled to the minute—Belts all-around—Raglan shoulders—in all the newest color effects; and our prices—really they'll surprise you. — $20 to $35 QUALITY SUITS $20 to $40 JOHNSON-WILMOT 1123 Third Ave. Corner Seneca Street Fermerly JOHN LINDH CO. U.S. ARMY MARCHING Another allotment of 300 pairs of those remarkable Army Marching Shoes just received—On Sale, starting tomorrow morning, at $4.95 Both J. moustache, cane and brain for wp 120—Calls lunch. Eats with meke- Uck high | on in a Hollywood restaurant; 6 |& bow! ef soup, cup of tea, and pie mind hb 790—Quickly scans his mail, rang- ing from 206 t 2.000 letters a day, picking out only envelopes he thinks contain important or interesting in- formation. His secretary reads all business letters, and if regarded tm- reseals them, notes “opened by mistake” and with perfectly mien bands them back to into’ films, revealing a fas odd We guarantee these shoes for 6 months of hard wear, Made for U. S. War Department at a cost of $6.34 per pair. Biggest Buying Snap you'll find this season anywheft! habite, home of the Hollywood | “345 Reads what the world thinks 4 says of him thru Gaily collec ton of preas clippings. Reads the ite pe 220-—More work for feet, Grossing | and brain. and| %:45-—Time out to ome, be| tinguished visitor fr lows. Has an 4| whote en with celebrity so latter stk andj cen x ‘em dead in the old home wn 235—Ditto, another celebrity from Propped if pillows cane crepe de chine entertain dis- om the newspepers. (ile lounging robes of $20—Resumes work of being Chaplin is {Bie own author, star and director; toast, Kippered ber. . clock that has tts hands full trying bever * works ee of different angles; nitvened with arias from | times spends days on one bit of de- “and has never read a escenario enitted from the outside, | HAS A “SCIRO™ TO } KEEP KINKS OUT OF BACK — house & 300 neighbor's ROSES FOR ot shoes, agey pants,| from splashing water, slippery soap, derby and moustache in @oulful song. itz red| 645—Makes sure Japanese cook and butier have everything in readiness for dinner for six—always jsix at dinner, for some obscure reason. 890—Impromptu charades or tab- leau in which guests participate. Charlie's a fiend for charades. Doesn't care for cards, billiards or |the usual parlor diversions. —Captures ides, completes | BURIES HIMSELF IN below: hunch stocking feet, half Plays violin left-handed 10:90—Goes to ballroom of popular feet, hands, ¢Y€#.) hotel to watch friends dance Is ———, “me? stepper himeelf, but seldem | dances, preferring table talk on any under the sun with his cronies. o—Home again, James! The (closed car this time, 12:40—Third and final bath of the day. | 124%—Dons hernrim «pecs and |foxy bed robe and buries himself tn ja book on finance, philosophy, art or politics. 14S—Heeords rudimentary hunch for comedy in dictaphone which al- |ways stands at his bedside, Next |day this will be typed and filed for [future reference. Many dreams of the little hours have thus been pre- served in wax. By this time the old grandfather This Will Ward Off And Break Up Colds Jest a tesspecnial of De. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin removes the congestion ANY FAMILY MAY TRY IT PRES fool At fC coenel two im inpstsonen the greatest that people as of the least ty the fi UH : i vei [ : aif rd [ congestion. only way to Crary small ie | ie in your Fd such as in the Pema fB| are rum end to break up fevers and exercieg more; eat more fatty _ Dr. Caldwell's hs J Poe foods; drink four to six glasses of © Cre — water a day; heep the head cool, namely Bp hy Mg) the feet warm, the bowels open. to oe be yo y You are also less liable to colds Sitar it, Before you if your system is free from the resort to cold remedies contain- intealees poset of coneteasion, {fe narcotics Way. 0 Segmpeent at wih ao Weel Shel via eed tke oot Dies | ; Marjorie Smith, Toronto’s| lentrant in the recent At- \lantic City beauty pageant, i will wed a mechanic. She is} : ipod gh yey Soaag ser tpen oo CALDWELLS | posal of a New York million-| BH c nD [pena + She family laxative