The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 23, 1923, Page 7

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~ 14 PRISONERS — EXPECT STORMY | SHOT IN. RIOT DAY IN HOUSE 100 Take Part in Maryland) New Bills Align Opposing Prison Battle Factions BALTIMORE, Md, Jan 1 .—T branch of the eaday's Fourteen prisoners were shot prisoners revolted at the rt lays more or less of weareetinn meeting. Bille definitely The fight ng the opposing factions were ced, The raged from the breakfast most tmpor measure sub Bone of unt 10 a m The guards used ative Scie hace Whe sets which provides that the fig submitted by corporations for with chairs and clubs. ng purposes shall be open len. hora ty assessors for One bundred prisoners, part in the riot, were finally sub. dued and are in confinement The guants were led during the battle by Warten William H. ford. tax-levying - ‘The committee on medicine, den: tistry, pure food and drugs wna to Lank-| report Tuesday on @ measure deal ing with the of barbers. This bill stipulates thone eligible to ractice of trade and includes Councilmen Go to number of provisions relative to Olympia as Lobby Carroll, B. L Erickson, of leensing hystea! health and nens of barbers. The Beeler Narcotic bill, which would make the possession of drugs i anv prima facie evidence of intent to counct! legislative committee, be reported. cut with left for Olympia Tuesday morning | tne recommendation that it pass, ac to act as a lobby at the state legis: | cording to the com lature. As a result of an opinion | mittee’ to referred Dy Corporation Counsel Thomas J.|-This measure has been # sthened L, Kennedy, who ruled that funds|to a great appropriated for expenses of a un: ot! lobby at the capital would t legally expended, the men are pay- Councilmen John ¥ 4 Oliver T. members of which it wa extent by amend and w eat influence in curbing the ¢ drugs ing to members of the committee Another making it @ gross misdemeanor for any person fo make @ false statement regarding ownership of an auto which he or she intends to #ell or have repaired, was to be Introduced in the house by Representative Olson of Pierce. This bill fs introduced for the pro- tection of dar dealers and garage men. BATTLE RAGES OVER SUBSIDY OLYMPIA, Jan. me of the Ditterest floor battles of the present seaston of the senate was predicted for Tuesday morning over senate jotnt memortal No. 2, urging con- grees to pass the ship subsidy bill. The memorial was introduced las week by Senators Adamson of Sr mish and Hastings of King, and was expected to be referred from the com mittee on memorials Tuesday morn. ing Senator George Christenson, demo- rat, was primed to lead the attack against the memorial and was backed by several of the members who have to date shown a decided tendency to insurge from the “old guard.” Opposition to the memorial was also being Mined up tn the house tn case It should pass the senate. I have a « vale accord. measure ‘OU can get a tire that’s called a pneu- matic—probablyhasair in it, too—and maybe buy it pretty cheap. But you shouldn’t expect from it the long eco- nomical, trouble-free mileage you are sure to get from a Goodyear Cord Truck Tire. $1,000 Is Stolen From Prison Guard PORTLAND, Jan. 23-—J. H. Den ning, prison guard from MecNetl's tal and federal penitentiary, here for a short vacation, retired last night in | Mle hotel bedroom with a headache woke up with both gone, he told the ‘esciaes police, The who and how has not ee Sa tate ave been eatahlished aniey Nelson | —— an, Say ave LONDON, Jan. 23.—Leading Eng | lish sporting writers assert that the United States, Sweden and Norway Flashes ENTERS DIVORCE BILL WASHIN( tion designed to TONy Jan, 28 p hasty and fool in the Legisin tah marring divorce Capper, Kangas bill known as the and divorce law mendment, te a law FLEE FROM FLAMES CHICAGO, Jan, 2 Mrs. Edith er MeCorn Chicago 10: ite were forced when the Moc h today. The fire with only @ alight lows. fire extinguished threatened by THIEVES RAID VAULT CHICAGO, Jan today raided the laney & Murphy, former saloonkeep. ers, and escaped with 600 bonded wh ued at § MARINES PROBE BOOZE QUANTICO, Va., Tan, 23.—A thoro tion inte notivities of big rdered to THighjackers™ quor vault of De cases of Butler, us Hquor arine and un tilness to five others 7 HURT IN CAR CRASH CHICAGO, Jan, 23.—Se when two t nm The tor of the cars to the aide n persons ere early toda he impact carried one clear of the ra walk near GARY CITIZENS ACCUSED GARY, Ind., Jan, 23.—Stxty-neven citixens of Lake county, ranging from the mayor of Gary down to for eign workers of the South Side, were relea n bonds In © & gigantic Mquor conspire nday With eight indict till to be nerved, United St y shals were out early trying to roun¢ nection with up the stragglers Nolan’s Successor Being Chosen Today BAN FRANCI », Jan. 23.—San Francisco at the po teday to name a jecensor to the late Congre John I. Nolan, labor leader In the house. Seven candidates were In the race, including Mra Mas Nolan, widow of the late congressman, who sought siection on : ne out the pol hb her husband Inaugurated Others were | George Kidwell, farmeriabor par lty: Fred U, Weiss, who opposes blue laws; Clarence A. Henning, demo. jerat; M. J. MeGuire, labor man | Opposes Asiatic immigration and/ voters were man | probibition; Edwin G, Rath, member | Will be able to pay any more [of the board of supervisors; W. E | Von Krakau, anti-prohibttionist. and $1,000 in bills. This morning he| Services Tuesday for Aged Veteran Funeral services for Horace Byron | Clemans, civil war veteran, who died | Sunday at his home tn Foster, Wash. | were to be held at 12:30 Tuesday, at the Cremation Society of Wash Ito avenge the GIRL ASSASSIN NOT REGRETFUL She Kills Paris Editor When Other Man Escapes BY JOHN PARIS Mile DE GANDt Ps royalist editor attac American Amba Myron Altho the Herrick whe girl wounded her An attempt at vicide, . weak in| detectives garding th grenade to the American em basay Mile, Berton's pared with handwriting was that on the cover of perfume box in which the bomb exploded in the embanny ® encaned. Ambas: nding an employe, w hreatening Herrick at the attaek, also were compared ‘The shooting of M. Plateau letters writer aador time of non (SLAIN GIRL MOTHER NAMES “MAN IN CASE” She Whispers Accusation at Daughter’s Funeral ered inte offered by the) eral secretary of L’Action Francaise, | monarchist organ, was not premod ttated, Mile, Berton dis She bad intended to kill Deputy Leon Daudet, son of the famous author, © prominent royalist, she declared. After repeated attempts to lure Daudet to a rendexvoun had fatled, Mile. the p Berton went to th per owned by the by shooting the editor 1 the communtste 1 did my duty,” was her only mesaage Assassination of the royalist edt rouned passions of the "Came band of monarchist sym pathizers and anthreds, and the tat ter stormed thru Pu late attempting to ral the communist dally death of Pilate Hasty mobilization of gendarmes broke up the demonstration [WeRE’s woRE ABOUT GERMANY STARTS ON PAGE ONE in street sat night Humantte work under bayon: A report from Aac said the | ‘ Belgians had arrested Financial Dt- | rector Sembach and his assistant, | Fritzi Mann, attractive of the officers made public 4 gathered murderer made it haa tacts they bh regaming the velopments of an important nature | might be expected | Minn Mann's funeral was mont dramatic, Not more than 20 per sonm, all former friends or relatives of the dead girl, attended Mra. Mann stood with bowed head bewide the canket as Rabb! Maxwell N. Dubin read the simple funeral service, Suddenly she stepped for ward, bent over the white-clad body of her daughter and man's name He has No word | hardly ano and intimated de whispered a thin," spoken to the sobbed her, tan had the been packed © of Fritsd Mann when re hurrying away to Intent clue to the person who ma’ way, respon done was earth on this of the been, In some for the death, RESIGNATIONS "ARE EXTORTED Floggers Force Officials to| Leave Jobs HARRISON, Ark. 23.—Mu nicipal officers, favorable to the “cit izens’ committee” which has con- |trolied Northern Arkansas for the . will replace Mayor J. L. farshal Parr and Council. | who resigned last night The resignations were offered fol-| lowing pressure of the “citizens’ |committes” which seized contro! | when suspension of operations of | the Missouri and North Arkansas whereupon the Cirmen office teres | young dancer, of Long Beach) ratiroad was threatened because of struck. A dinpatch raid that an from Aix La Chapelle American officer was rear of the Belgian headquarters. ‘The officer was not hit and the as wallant escaped. NO MORE CASH, SAYS GERMANY BERLIN, Jan. 28.—Germany today notified the allies tt ia doubtful tf reparations for the present, owing to economic chaes resulting from French occupation of the Ruhr. NEW PROTEST BY GERMANY WASHINGTON, Jan. 23. — Ger. many today again protested to the world against French and Belgian oo fare now the foremost athietic nations | ington eatablivhment, Burial wan to |cupation of the Ruhr. of the world. THE / CHEVALI INTERNATIONAL The World’s Worst Weekly For the World’s Best People nd Engileh—goen to the greatest statesmen of every land on earth, LOVE WILL CONQUER ALI. Cirentation Imited to 700,000. Publiwhed in German, French _PERMANENT TOPICS DISCUSSED ee UNT’S RAPIER | WEEK'S BROADSIDE otthita Sass eee ec! OF PROPAGANDA EXPLAINED this new paper now. With its lesson, | “Love Alone Will Conquer All” This paper lives to crush all wrong. Peopie killed in conflict since the world began, 1,500,000,000, 000,000—the trouble alone to bury them ought to be a lesson under | your feet = (Continued on Page 16) GETTING BY WITH HIS HARD OLD EYE (Continued on Pages 3, 4, 5) ONLY A (Continued on Page 2) (Continued on Page 7) EUROPEANS MAKE HISTORY LOST | WHEREVER | (Continued on Page 3) LOVE'S LAURELS {MAKE HIM | | | (Continued on Page 9) | (Continued on Page 4) be in Mount Pleasant cemetery | ALL PAPIER—NO | (Continued on Page 12) FASCINATING FINANCES (Continued on Page 6) | LIKE YOU, YOUNG MAN Yearly subscription $2 worth of select 50 to instant popular FREE TO. YO wubseribers, with § musleal selections CHEVAL | \ { DU BARRY CONTRIBUTES |wentative McKinney, Formal notes are being delivered to the French, Fritish, Italian and Belgian governments in the capitals of thowe countries, protesting against the action of occupation and in forcing German officials of the af fected regions to work against the German government, the United Prens learns in diplomatic quarters here. ‘The specific complaint ts lodged against orders of the interallied Rhineland comminsion which directs German officials who collect customs and other revenue to turn this money over to the forces of occupa tion or the allies generally 'FIVE BILLS GO BEFORE HOUSE) OLYMPIA, Jan. 28.—Five bills tn troduced and reported out by com. mittees Monday claimed the bulk of the attention of the lawmakers tn the lower branch of the state legis: lature House bill No. 40, introduced by Representative Bassett, of Spokane, stated that no auto Icense shall be {need unless the applicant shall fur. nish evidence that pre the car have been paid. Houne bill No. 41 provides that all bonds issued by counties, cities towns, school districts, municipal cor porations, port districts and metro politan park districts shall be in em rial form. ‘The establishment of a Puyallup game preserve in provided In house bill No. 42, Introduced by Repre of Pierce. House bill No. 43 contains a Joker which enables berry growers to sell bushes without a permit from the at rector of agriculture. House bill No. 44 reported by the committee on medicine and re- lates to the proper labeling of drugs nd canned goods. BE Raisin Pie Neighborhood bake shops and large modern bakeries in your town are baking raisin pies for you that will delight your men folks and save bak- ing at home, oun taxes on Your grocer or a bake shop will deliver a delicious one. Try one. They are mak- ing them with— Sun-Maid Raisins Had Your leon Today? jand San Diego, Cal., whose lbody was discovered ocean beach near Torrey Pines. The police are en- deavoring to find her slayer. princeton || HERE’S MORE ABOUT | _AMUNDSEN STARTS ON PAGE ONE last July until this coming June Hammer expected to return to Se attle in December but became {ll London and returned to Ham- where he has been under care of spectalints He Is expected to leave Burope within « few days and come back to Seattle, vin New York. Here he will communicate with Amund jnen by wireless and cable and pre pare whatever Amundsen wishes. And what of the Maude? Seven days on a hell-ehip, each night etx months long, each day six months long, cooped up within the narrow confines of the schooner, buffeted by fey gnlen, tonned by cracking, grind. Ing ice floes, with a foot or no of tough wood between them an@ death. Old-time Alaskans will tell you that two men, alone in a cabin during « winter, will grow to hate each other, will sleep on thelr weapons and be ready to murder each other with the monotony of It. Will flaming passions break loose on the Maude and destroy the mem- bers of the crew? Will the huge toe jenkes cave in the sides of the ship like egguhells? Or will they win thru until Amundsen or the Arctic ice releases them on the other side of the world, free to return to elvilization? } answer, But Dr. Matthew, knowing personally Capt. Oscar Wisting, com mander of the Maude; Dr. H, U Sverdrup, expedition scientist, and the other members of the picked crew, believes they will triumph. United States Representative From | Ohio, Seventh District | YOUNG Irishman, try, met his brother—a green immigrant — at the dock, On the way home stopped at with whom the so-| phisticated broth: | er was acquaint “What's that green frult on the stand?” he asked the grocer | “ Persimmons, " the merehant replied; “fine when| they're ripe, but those are green. Here, I'll give you a few. Put ‘em in your pockets and take ‘em homo and let ‘em ripen. But don't eat ‘em | | ne | ‘he immigrant boy couldn't wait, | | Slyly he took « mmon out of his pocket a block or two from the grocery, bit into it | A moment afterward he touched his brother on the arm “Tim,” he said, with some diffi jeulty, “is there anything T ought to say to you? “why said ‘Tim. | do you ask me that? “Because,” said the immigrant boy | with a wry face, “if there is, it's got | to be quick, because I’m—I'm closin’ | up!” 1 dunno,” “Why | half-| shot at by an unknown person inthe {buried in the sand of the| rejoins them | That in a question that fate must | allk magnate some years a reat-|New Year's day during dent in this coun.| has failed after three weel they | have been claimed by the sea. the| trace of store of a grocer| ever been found. ed. | he had starved when they disobeyed bridge burnings and other out- breaks. | While the change was being made! here, @ mass meeting, called by the | conatituted officials at reka Springs, pledged support to the “citt | zens’ committee” and warned strik | ng rafiroad workers against holding meetings. | The state legislature at Little! | Rock will continue the probe of the lynching of E. C. Gregor and flogging of a score of other strikers | by the mob which assembled here a week mmo. |PRIMARY BILL UP IN IDAHO BOIRE, Idaho, Jan. 33.—A direct primary bill, sponsored by the Ada county delegation and the republican members from Boundary, Jefferson and Bear Lake counties, was intro-| |duced Monday morning tn the house ‘The measure provides for a state wide nominating election for all con-| greasional, staf®, district and county | offices; a non-political judiciary; reg- \ietration of electors under oath by party affiliation; a state platform jconvention, composed of party can didates and committees, and nom- |Inating committee for parties not | eligible to hold a primary election. The bill repealing the $50 tobacco |tax, passed by the 16th legisiature, was passed by the house this morn- | ing. The bill giving the governor | power to fill vacancies in the legis: | jature also was passed by the house. | eens ts or | | |Robs Benefactors | of Cash and Watch Monday night he appeared as a! |worn and weary traveler, starving | and broke, Tuesday he was being |sought as the man who robbed his | benefactors, Joseph Patrick and C. A. Johnson, of $60 and a gold watch. gry stranger Monday night, after he |had, unknown to Patrick, robbed | | Johnson of his watch. Patrick also | awoke to find the stranger gone and likewine his $60. Chinese Magnate Is Recovering) Stricken with appendicitis while in | Seattle en route to the silk expost- | tion at New York, Pao Yang, Chinese was reported recover: | Ing rapidly following an operation at | the Virginia Mason hospital Tuesday. | Think Boat’s Crew | Perished in Ocean | Search for three men who ven- tured on Juan de Fuca strait on storm of dill gence by coast guard cutters. It/ is feared the men, W. L. Hunsaker, 417 18th ave, N., and P, O'Neill and Herman Barkus of the Perry hotel, the boat, the 480K, ha: MILAN, Jan, 28.—Carlo Penzoti was killed and eaten by dogs which him. KU KLUX CONDEMNED BY MAN WHO WROTE “CLANSMAN” STORY NEW YORK, Jan. 23.—"We have already reached the point of riot and bloodshed, and unless this thing Is throttled promptly we are In sight of martial la: Thomas Dixon, author of “The Clansman,” declared in a denun: ciation of the modern K. K, K here last night Speaking before the American Unity league, Dixon, who im mortalized the Southern Klan of civil war reconstruction days, de: dbed the modern organization's proseription of the negro race un: der conditions of modern life as ‘utterly uncalled for, stupid and inhuman.” FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET New Tweed Suits For Spring Make Their Appearance at $50.00 S new in cut as befits }] their position as the first Tweeds of the new season, these Suits have many features to com- mend them. The very low one-side fastening gives a dou- ble-breasted effect and permits the wearing of almost as many differ ent types of blouses as does a sweater. ‘Tailored with precision im every soft finished tweeda in herringbone and invisible atripe effects ond mixtures—in graye tans and gray-blues, Sizes for | women and misses—price@ at |] at i" 850.00. 16-Button Kid Gloves $6.50 Pair MPORTED Kid Gloves, overseam sewn, with Paris point stitchings, in Black, Brown, |} Beaver and White—$6.50 pair. a detail, from Philippine Gowns and Envelopes $1.95 — EACH Exceptional Values NTIRELY hand-made and hand-embroid- ered are these garments of fine white nainsook, with hand - embroidered floral designs and hand- scalloping. , Gowns and Chemises of unusual fineness and Wi broidery than is usual at this ce—$1. : more embroidery is a price—$1 BS. Satin Negligee Slippers $2.50 Pair “T)ANIEL GREEN” Slippers, of quilted Satin, with leather soles and heels, and trimmed with silk pompons. BLACK ROSE COPENHAGEN BLUE —priced at $2.50 pair. a ‘ “CAMPUS MAID”—Specialized “Conservative Footwear for College Girls and Business Won in Pumps, Oxfords and High-Cut Boots. —yirse “The Range That Revolutionizes Gas Range Cookery” “VULCAN SMOOTHTOP” § Cookery Demonstration Every Day This Week 10 to 12:30—2 to 4 (Except Thursday—Morning Only) Auditorium, Fifth Floor FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET

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