The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 17, 1923, Page 7

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WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1928. VET CHARGED WITH BIGAMY Garrett MH. Osburn, war veteran Was charged with bigamy, late @ay, when Lois Irwin Osburn and Mattie M the prosecute Osburn 8 office complained to that th The affair complicated when It de doth married to Osburn was further Veloped that ¢ violent nd bi yaburn had been mak ing ged Digumous activi thes were uncovered! when the t Wives went to see tm the county jail, w he a charge of ¢ Osburn in was arrested tlake ave. w tigated two pist dsburn married Lois Irwin vember, 1917, and married Mattle M . according t formation supplied Deputy F Eugene Meacham by the two shote in January PASTOR STEALS GAS ARNSBOROUGH, England, Jan A warrant charging Rev. D. B. James with stealing gas was sworn out here. The minister had fied when service was attempted rE The peace of good digestion will abide with us forever when cannon are made into knives to Spread the bread of the worldwith The Healthful Spread 1002 Westinke, North of Pine Remedies for Men Women 116 Yeoier Way. Main 4399 bis J. LYSOUND CHINESE MEDICENE CO, S19 Third Ave., Seattle, Wash, Phone Main 6352 Pipe—FURNACE—Pipelens With Satisfaction Guaranteed No obligation on your part to have one of our engineers call and give you an estimate, McGOWAN BROS. 808 PIKE MAIN 6319 Take Fast Steamers at Colman Dock Wednesday, Friday Bunday, 1) 4 Katre trip Bat, & Bun, 920 PM. Paesenger Fare, 0¢ Round Trip Navy Yard Route Colman Dock Cynthia Grey: * Some Girls of 18 Mere Children Law Raising Legal Age of Girls From 18 to 21 Would Solve Many | Difficult Problems, Thinks Mother Opinion? BY CYNTHIA GREY lio legislators are of the Washington maidens will no longer reach their legal major the young men ity at age of 18, but mus Following is some more comn Dear Miss Grey: I am‘a busy mother, but just a few lines to commend you upon taking up the matter of the legal age of gir! It is a fine thing We should be thankful that the day of women legislators has arrived, especially should us mothers feel that w it. Mrs. Jessie B. Kastner, state representative from Piere introduced the bill to change the legal age of girls from 18 to 21, has proved how very much in need we are of the feminine mind in lawmaking. To prove my statements, I will just give a little example: A girl in our neighborhood was a county, who same mind that What Is Your wait un he same a ent on the subject Gustar humorist the greate lovely girl, good, never went out nights and stayed late, but upon reaching her 18th. w be br birthday, which according to law made her legal age, she be- nt joyriding, ete., and upon be- ing censured or talked to by her father and mother, would immediately pack her things and leave home will be Time and time again the parents had pleaded with her; spent hundreds of dollars to try to satisfy her and wanted ' came wild, attended dances, w her to stay home, but without ent by mien CB. m. lore. ail. She would always re- mind them that she was of age and that they would not have any more to say as to her actions This poor mother has just arisen from a sick bed, where she has been confined for two weeks because of her daugh The girl, altho 18 and considered a wom law, is just a mere child at heart ter’s conduct. tainly solve that problem. are ' nt by manual training raining? aining mean stem of whereby pw are in crafts, as carpentry tc, for dova, and nd household duties What ta my and by tra Manwa girls aining—-a ach for instruc or more hand crafts; design ensate for the extinction of appren eee eahip When did city deliveries’ of mail j begin? In what cities? City deliveries as they extat today began on July 1, 1863, in the follow. ing cities: New York city, Brooklyn Albany, Troy and Utica, New York Philadelphia, Allegheny, Reading and Lancaster, Pa.; Boston, Lowell, New Bedford, Salem and Worcester, Mass St. Louis, Mo.; Washington, D. C Baltimore, Md; Cincinnati and | Cleveland, Ohio; Louisville, K | Providence, R. 1; Jersey CU | Trenton, N. J Manchester, 4. Hartford and New Haven, Conn; and Wilmington, Det eee If an article ts patented in the! United States but not in foreign | |countries could anyone manufacture | it for sule in forelgn countries? 1H Yes, but the article could net be What is the highest official record of eggs laid by a Rhode Island red hen? Two hundred and forty-nine in one vear, eee Which fs the hardiest ‘turkey, the bronze, the Bourbon Red, or the White Holland? Of the three mentioned, the bronze te the hardiest. \ eee ' Is it true that Indians never attack | at night? According togthe United States bureau of American ethnology, the favorite time for an Indian attack |was just defore dawn, that is, while jit was still dark but dawn getting | close. | How many silver dollars are tn cir |culation in the United States? | On December 1, 1928, there were | 60,761 A829. | eee | Where did the wild horses of the Western plains come from? | The chief progenitors of thete horses were probably the horses used | by Ferdinand De Soto near the Texas | border | see How may a bill become law over | the veto of the president? | If tt 4s passed over the veto by 4 | two-thirds vote in both house and | senate. eee | What fs meant by ao | tive”? One who adheres to existing inati- tutions and 4s opposed to radical | measures. Egan Will Hear Veterans’ Pleas John T. Egan, special contact rep | resentative of the federal veterans bureau, has been assigned to attend |nine district conferences which are | to be held in various parts of the |state by American Legion officials during the two weeks beginning January 20. He will hear grievances | of disabled war veteranr relative to | thelr compensation cialms, and will | also assist veterans to reinstate their war risk insurance. One of the con ferences will be held in Seattle Janu ary 21 “conserva \George Revelle Is | Out of Hospital Thomas P. district: ator. ney, wna relieved to learn, Wednon- day, that {njurtes of his brother, George H. Revelle, who was taken to | @ hospital at Sheboygan, Mich., fol lowing a severe fall Sunday, were ex aggerated in first reports. George Revelle sustained a sprained shoul der and in now out of the hospital $1,000 Given for | Sand Point Hangar | An appropriation of $1,000 to erect jan arm hangar at Sand Point was auth board county co coun the labor | | of building the hangar, with the gov ernment supplying materials, Revelle, nay n by 20 yeu Such a law would cer- A MOTHER " construction w The Social Welfare league, Central building Marion at % eal m3 Third ave. and in sending out a 8 0. thing need apparel for ck ret and n" i hare anr in the closet becoming moth <0 eaten, while there are people in the city shivering for want of it If you can spare will be muc will leave it butlding. Thy CYNTHIA GREY anything tt ated if you » 243 Central appres atr Washingt Player to the 1,400 Elk FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET THE 'NOTED ARTIST IN RADIO SKIT Fonandern Guatay Fonandern and voca part of ar adio dcanted KDZE, of between 16 balinds and humorous which For 4 from the act he 4 o stage here. He ts no ar | 30 New Building on ; Wilkes Tract)» ; be be ed by the Wilkes ‘The Mrs man, was announced Tuesday dustnens bic er building wit od be one of the finest | t Elks’ Lodge Will ertise State! the Nation's Sum Adv xigen of the nation SEATTLE STAR ‘MOVIE DIVORCE | CASE REVEALED Gilbert-Joy Marriage Like That of Valentino PAGE 7 IRATE PACKERS PROTEST RULING Discrimination Charged 8 Salmon Concerns t the ble packing n given control ground im Kid Ambitions (No. 9) L. O. Shrader, Council Committee Clerk HEN 1, O, Bt | clerk of the in his early rader, committee city counct , LOB AD imbued with an ambition to bec With a property settlement to & great statesman and speech maker Jack and ft and Olivia Burreli Gilbert, bt wed this bent to the extent | of acquiring an education io law at and are rn Alaska, mer wife, another alleged “mar the University f ‘ n been revenieod, | he an companies politician ntine” he Joy, Famous P nd Mrs, Gt tar, in the “rece the fry having been married to the! uy the actor at Tijuana, Mexico, on Janu 4, 192 obtat au two weeks after Olivia | cynical came while tolling In @ Afognak district of the The independent fish t the Alaska Packers? nd the Northwestern have beer * of the new rem haa looutory de inter | Kodta wind with the the tng farmer could clothing in one onnful last hin family 20 5 in the shad Gilbert and Oltvia Burrell, a beau titul in 1918 after ® whirlwind courtship. {Ibert was then doing amall bits in he movies od six months and then Olivia wen’ home to her 4 ater unable to sup > men has k complaint r to be he believed t asked that Minsinnipp! girl, were married s, he invariably ve, and be unable to| ner enever of drouth der ing wpeect ching Co, is now 1 led the earlier ambition Ph r his w hington, D.C, to opraphers t agninst the regulations. He not permitted Burglars Ransack FORMER COP ‘and that tt tid of op onal United States secret dervice bu « e k Packing Co. and eeveral e with smaller The marriage only Inet me bis way," noted Swedish nor aint mother waa t, will “present exceptionally rogram which pane AD ornter Siar Batt Pho Wednesda the ompany is Since more success haa come to him, Gilbert hag been paying $160 a month, He haa just the| cluded paying hin former granted a final de 1922. Gilbert has wired Mine Joy, is now working on « ploture York city, and plans are being made nony As Boon Am but this, it ts she obtain and her eget 1, former ttle po ttle carpenter fed in wife « rm has pre-| total presenting nfre concerns © Weds he awoke to find his 7 ria Hamlin «t., burglarized « »! . onan eturne Pe | ransacked. The thieves had entered | chix sur, the house thru an open window, tak foo linc ing $18 cash, a gold watch with a ail-| many montha ver fob and a $1 piece with an eagle |” stathewnon The existence of a woman burglar reau, wae another 1 Hee must p lee Ot ker’s court for verdicts Business Bureau Directors Nam forgan, of Frederick & Cc. Carpenter, of wal wick’s, and W. I, Rh of the Rhodes company, have ~'named to comprise a nomi committee which is to select @ | of directors for the local better nese bureau, from among the business men of the clty, The pointments were made Tuesday a | meeting of the Seattle ui club, in the L. C. Smith Bulli @PPear* | restaurant, to which all sul e to the fund that enpperts the Petts business bureau were Invited. i 1 on “Truth in the Ad 1 was made by Ki one of the largest injuries returned in axked $31,000 for in ved when Mra. Viola Olm wife of the for pm when drt at Bist suffered a which he claims The accident occurred juries rece the plot of | Maret Frank Olson, jr., . . fs reported that his home nad bed of a quantity of woman's cloth ing. Feminine heel prints made by & rubber overshoe were found In the N, M. Car and new five Arrest Witness on Charge of Perjury | William Bautsch was charged with perjury in an information filed on Wednesday in sperior court. | Hautsch was arrested after he had ified in @ dtvoree actic Judge Everett Smith which he dented having ated with his IT-yearold step Mra. A daughter, Madelyn Meredith. Judge Smith brought the complaint agrinet | h Bautach a4 a remult night utterances on the witness stand fractured totally inca pacitated him December Attorney hard | ssathewsor a mag martes at ? Vanderveer for t there Gee Murray, W Mrs. Car Passing nigist nection betwee n before | burs a and de ore an the $17,000 the entire December a diamond ring and a ¢ 2 watel A police turned on Janu Winner, 1314 Second ave. robbed of $50 cash, w in her She discovered the loss Wed on in com: | wr he to! D perm was APPLE TREES BUSY LINCOLN, England, 17 Little E times this has| Associated Advertising Clubs World apple tree at tham blossomed three of the man’s {f'n plan fontered by Charles F. Man. ing, of Fiverett, ts adopted by the mber of Commerce publicity bu The plan entaiin the sending igen every remus. | of m letter to each of th 20 dayn by one of the Elks thin mtate, FREDERICK & NELSON - FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET ortined lodges of The Children’s 'DOWNSTAIRS STORE| Own Barber Shop is such a delightful to bring little girls High-grade Cowhide Traveling Bags Special, $15.00 N extremely low price for Bags so high-grade in They are in 18-inch size, full every particular. boys, when curly locks a little too long. Especially when come on any of the five Gays in the week but SATURDAY; for Saturday is such a very busy day there are often long waits that can be avoided on the ot five days. —The Children's Own Shop, Fifth Floor i they leather lined, with hand-sewed frames and reinforced sewed-on corners, In rich brown catches as pictured. shade, fitted Special $15.00. Polaire Coatings At $2.95 to $4.00 Yard There is a wealth of inspiration for new Spring Coats, in attractive new Polaire coating materials. Shown in plain tan and brown shades, with a few pleasing plaid effects. Width 56 inches. Moderately to $4.00 yard. THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Women’s Extra-size Bathrobes, $4.25 Attractive-patterned Beacon cloth, in dark Red and Brown, Purple and Navy shades, fashions these Bathrobes for women of full-figure. Trimming effects are developed in satin ribbon and edgings. Sizes 46 to 52. Low- priced, at $4.; THE DOWNSTAIRS STORF Women’s Artificial Silk Bloomers $2.50 Women’s artificial silk Bloomers, in pink shade, with elastic waistband and knee. Sizes 7 and 8, at $2.50 pair THE DOWNSTAIR: Women’s Artificial Silk Vests $1.35 Women’s artificial silk Vests, in pink shade, with bodice top, ribbon shoulder straps and draw string. Sizes 38 to 44, at $1.35 each. THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Children’s Outing Flannel Sleeping Suits 50c Children’s Sleeping Suits of warm, comfy Outing Flannel, in dainty pink and blue striped pattern In style that buttons down front; has long sleeves, and feet. to 8 years, cut amply full. 50¢ Sizes % Low-priced, at with patent slide priced, at $2.95 ORE suit. THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Featured Values in” Bath Towels 50c and 75¢ HESE are dow thread-weave Tu Towels of substantial ture, priced to afford tractive savings: age Section. Loge THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Normandy Coating At $6.50 Yard The rich lustrous finish and soft, drapy quality of this fabric are spe- cially adapted to making fine coats and capes. A new shipment offers Navy, Brown and Black, in 54-inch width; attractively priced, at $6.50 yard. THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE New Morning Dresses Cheerful and Bright, Will Radiate Hap- piness Wherever They May Go! —with jacquard border in blue or rose, woven with — space for initial or mone gram, size 24x46, 7T5@. —with band border of re@ or blue, size 23x43 inches, 5O¢ cach. —Aisle Table, First "THESE crisp new Apron - Frocks will de- light the woman who is seeking a num- ber of pretty House Dresses at a moderate price! Women’s Wool-and-Cotton Stockings At $1.00 Pair Women’s brown-heather Stockings, in wool-and-cotton weave; drop-stitch effect in front, seamed back, hemmed top and reinforced heel and toe. Sizes 814 to 1014¢—$1.00 pair. THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Sketched From Left to Right: AT $1.95: Quaint old Calico pattesna, in small flowered offects, trim med with plain-color Chambray-Gingham = and Rick Rack. The Cap is included at this low price C—AT 81.95: Small Plaid Ginghams, in Pink, Blue, Black, Yellow and White combinations, made with four set-in panels, and many rows of etitched folds. AT $1.95: Plain color Gingham Frock with con trasting panels and set-in motifs at shoulder. Neck, sleeves and hemline bound in contrasting gingham. sido trimmed with appli are Pink, Laven qued motifs, hand-made, der, Alice and Copen of bright ¢ 1 Ging hagen Blues. hams. —s D—AT $2.95: Chambray- Gingham combined with Percale fashions this at- tractive Apron- Frock, with large pockets at the Colors ond Floor Brushed-wool Scarfs $3.50 An attractive Brushed-wool Scarf adds a gay bit of color to the busi- ness, college or sports costume, and serves utility purposes as well. Mix- tures of brown and gray, brown and tan, green and tan and maroon and gray shades. Size 19x72 inches, with 10-inch fringe, moderately priced, at 50. THE DOWNSTAIR Children’s Stockings OYS' COTTON STOCKINGS, — medium-weight extra spliced | heel and toem in Black and — Cordovan, sizes 6 to 11%, 5O@ pair. In the Men’s Furnishings Section: 300 Knitted Silk Ties At an Extremely Low Price $1.65 T is due to a special purchase that this un- usually low price is quoted on these high- grade Knit Silk Ties—of the well-known Fashionknit make. CHILDREN'S FINE- RIB- RED HOSE, in lisle, triple-knee, seamless foot, in Cordovan, sizes 6 to 10, BO¢ pair. TORE e Sox In Sport Effects JUNIOR SPORTS SOX, English style, all-wool, in Heather, Camel or Black, with novelty cuff top, sizes 5% to 8, $1.25 and $1.50 pair. CHILDREN'S — ENGLISH SPORTS SOX, in Blue or Brown Heather mixtures, with Tan, Blue and Brown Bizes 8 to $2.50 pair. —Firat Floor Imported Lacquered Serving Trays At 95c Bach Lacquered Serving Trays, in plain green with gilt edges, and reddish- brown with attractive Oriental decora tion in relief, gold-enamel and color. in effects, including Sizes: 1614x10 and 17x11 inches. grenadines, and in good patterns and col- checked : tops. Attractively low-priced, at 95¢ each. Special $1.65, 10, THEE DOWNSTAIRS STORE -First Floor several desirable orings.

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