The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 10, 1923, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

CUPID FOLLOWS OLD BRUIN’S PRACTICE DURING THE WINTER Too A, April his robe | Is Prohibiti 10.=-Shortly be eae fis Dan ¢ Lat nd en re go to the dogs slated h the example of the about hie business te rds of Richard | Whether bh taken hard winter, | man, county license ibly he wa for future verified. t is that business about three moi vast hag been on the rocks in Ta ar r use, but Certain for arro this cannot be vi the § and chalked up a ¥ for the day, € the undenied arrival of spring are beth rumored to have had an in fivence. Editor's Note: This is the fourth and last article of a series n law, the writer on the prohibit discussing the su ct from a Some of his apply to Seat ity’s proximity tional point of yrew conclusions do ni te, owing to th to Cana Robert B. Hesketh For Re-election as Councilman “Bob” Hesketh | fully and impartially all the time while in city council. Has voted consistently for all progressive and constructive legislation. A friend of city-owned utilities service, Satis- faction and Co-operation” is his slogan. Vote for Hesketh. support. as served the people faith- the He is worthy of your PAID ADVERTISEMENT SECOND AVENUE AT PIKE STREET PRICE BULLETIN For Wednesday and Thursday CRISCO 1b. can 14:lb, Db. Ib, can.. f--& oe can FINEST CREAMERY Butter —price guaranteed for Wednesday and Lb. 48c WHITE 6Bars 25¢ LOG CABIN SYRUP Every Pound Guaranteed SOAP —a fine laundry soap, made of cocoanut oil. White King Washing Machine Soap Pkg. 1246 —for every household use. MEDIUM CAN .. ., 50c .99c Prices the same at all“our Seattle Stores, MAIN DOWNTOWN STORE 85 PIKE STREKT—OUTLOOK MARKET —LARGE CAN « —with or machine. without a Package, washing AZ%¢, -- Berit “Princess” oe leave Seattle Daily for Vancouver and Victoria, B, G, Colman Dock, foot of Marion Street. | Fares from Seattle to Victoria Fares from Seattle to Vancouver $4.25 One Way $8.50 Round Trip (Continuoun passage each way, 40-day limit) $7.75 Special Round Trip (No Stopover Victoria—10-Day ‘ $9.9 $5.40 Round Trip (0-Day Limit) $4.00 Week-End Fare (Going Saturday or Sunday, return limit the following Mon- Lim! 0 Round Trip (Stopover at Victo 30. hb ope b wietoria, 30-Day The Day Boat for Victoria and Vancouver Daily, ut 9:00 A, M, The Night Boat for Vancouver Direct, Dally at 11:30 P, M, CITY TICKET OFFICE, 608 SECOND AVENUE Telep| MAIn OAT H.W dy Stirdee, General Agent THE SEATTLE Here's LAUGHING on Law Succeeding? FOR AME Short declared that he was of the! the systematic We'll See w ho Laughs Last, Tho | BY ©, ©, LYON } | WASHINGTON, April 10. whisky that the average bootlegger is ng off on s these day's in 80 rotten and dangerous that hundreds of thousands drinking men are climbing on the water wagon | thru self-pre | Tw The his custom r pro hibition are | Ladin, are nd are for their otting an example BOOTLEGGER 18 CONSIDERED ChOOK | The tlegner is so thor. | the crook averuge fentified with ix class th ome to in} t even his cu t seeing him ri " fine automobiles and livi on the proceeds of hi ut a luxury crooked oper- | ations. A, man who Is count most of the in me the | i one successful lens Want n was lamenting to other day “I'm not was a year a big a let of ¢ pusinens Was p selling half the booxe I o as he told me. know two or three of y old stomers who have quit buying m you because your stuff has be- me so rotten they're afraid to drink 1 told him. | he replied. | thing as p Most of my goods Bahamas, There are whisky it it the} > even with tw stomers,” jut what am I to do?” sky any more from c y've taken a quart of 7 cut and doctored it nts to five or atx tuff 1 sell rk c Ain But I sell the best I As to the growing re pro} hibition. we had a striking Incident that In Washington the other day LAW BANQUET 18 CAL orr * A law fraternity was having a big} banquet In honor of a jum of the supreme court of the United States and the invitations that went out to | the members made It very plain that | they could “bring your own liquor.” | Four or five years ago the frat banquets were very wet affairs | But this time, any number of the members wrote In declining to attend if drinking was to be permitted. Any number of them sald, in effect, “We are sworn to uphold the law, not to violate it.” And the banquet. at the last min- ute, was declared off! To my mind, this shows the way the wind Is blowing among people generally. | 1 believe that as public sentiment! quart w omy bot nd on them. n get | in favor of law enforcement grows, the Judges of our courts will become and more harsh with the boot leggera and prohibition enforcement officials will become more zealous to do thelr duty | But there'll always be some boot lexging in spite of all the laws that panned against it, just a» there'll always be stealing and mur ders. SAYS LAW TO BE ENFORCED rectors and divisional chiefs, coupled with personal surveys of conditions can be me in various country nections ¢ expectations of progres enforce- justify my in the ment of nation-wide prohibition, Reducing the ot thru safeguarding Ilicit withdrawals has checked trafficking in bonded liquors, while the application of the padlock provision has provén most effective and will be continued dur-} ing the present year with renewed | activity SMUGGLING PROBLEM | NEARS SOLUTION | “Concentration of bonded whisky In & smaller number of bonded ware- houses hi r “i not only in ne curity against alleged thefta, but ba ked economy in rentain. | id with ‘ tax they amounted ved systems prencription source supply made for m During year 1 drawals aggregated gallons, while in 19 nly 16,290,4 Impr permit 5,805 ¢ forms and nave reduced this clans of vio- to a minimum, while the ations smuggling problem, thru ¢ with officials of border governmen’ control. trained | o-operation * sub-chaner and motor-boat and concerted activity of agents, is nearing solution. “The death-knell of home-brewing and Mlicit distilling has been sounded, thru application of old Internal rev- enue taxes and penalties on property ore, “Most reassuring ts the spirit of tn- creased activity on the part of dis- trict attorneys thruout the country which, In connection with concurrent action by state officials, will make it pomible for the federal authorities and federal agents to devote attention to interstate violations, smugsiing| and conspiracy cases in general. “The problem of enforcement. backed by an aroused citizenshtp, 19/ working itself out in a fashion gener- | ally gratifying.” Seattle Will Be Seen by Night as Well as by Day Tourists, Will Find On Cities in the Worid If visiting tourists can’t seo every thing they want to In the daytime, the city lighting department is going to make it possible for them to com plote thelr inspectign of Seattle by night, judging from the plans out lined before the tourist committee of | the Chamber of Commerce by Super: | intendent J, D. Ross, at the commit: tee's weekly meeting yesterday at the Butler hotel. Mr, Roes ts chairman of the lighting and decorations com- mittee of the general tourist commit- te The department is working out a special flood lighting system for the fiiumination of downtown buildings, | and will furnish current to building | owners at an extremely jow rate, Also, the city itself may employ flood lighting for some of the downtown canyon streets. Colored lighting ef fects also are a possibility, and the combination of flood lighting with the colored lights will give the visit- or an impression to carry away with him, Seattle is now the best-lighted city in the world, according to Mr Ross, and the new plans will make it even more brilliant at night. ILLUMINATE WELCOME ARCHES The city will illuminate the wel- come arches which the Kiwanis club plans to erect at the highway en: trances to the city. A great electric sign is to be erected at the entrance | to Woodland park, and flood lighting will be employed at the community | house at the auto tourist camp, A | spectal plan of lighting for the inte. | rior of the community houre will be installed, which will make it the bent- lighted community house at any auto tourist camp {n America, | Chief of Police Beveryns told the committee that the police department | will co-operate in every way with the Chamber of Commorce toward making the stay of the tourist plans: ant this summer. Every officer, par- tloularly of the traffic aquad, will be carefully coached and Instructed to | extend to the tourist every courtesy, | They will be prepared to answor all questions, D. W. Henderson, of the streot jrallway department, told the commit. fee of his recent Eastern trip, draw. ing a contrast between the Kind of by Mother, Girl Kills Self LO8 ANGELES, Cal, April 10, | After staying away from home over night for the first time in her life, | | Pretty Lillian Williams, 16, rogetved | a rebuke from her mother, When the latter returned home from a [shopping tour she found her daugh- ter dead in a -chalr, Tho gas Jota wore open, e of the Best Lighted’ weather Seattle in enjoying and the kind he encountered on his journey. which ranged from merely disagree. able thru blizzards and snow to temperature of 17 below at Minneap: olin, Hesketh Due for a Busy Evening Two meetings the same evening in widely separated sections of Seattle will cause Councliman Robert B. Hesketh to show '‘some speed’ Tues-| day night, Hesketh {a to speak at| | |the Rainier Valley Commercial club| for nearly 20 at Columbia City and later will speak at the Whittler Heights Im- provement club in the North End. Hesketh, who is a candidate to sue. ceed himself, spoke at the Common. | wealth club Monday night and at the Labor temple “ROSE BUD” “Rosebud,” the official Chamber of Commerce Rose Week represent ative, with her guardians and chap: erons, was the guest of the 100 Per Cent club at luncheon Tuesday Wednesday she in to be the guest at the weekly luncheon of the Ki- wants club. The same afternoon her party is to be escorted by George C. Wheeler, president of the board of park com:niasioners, to Woodland park for an inspection tour of the two-ncre rose garden plot. The most spectacular entertain ment in behalf of “Rosebud” so far was held Monday night when her party was escorted to the Columbia theater by the Moose lodge drum corps. H. J. Leamy, Jack Ince and 8. W. Woollery, of the corps, were in charge, GAS DROPS ONE CENT IN SEATTLE AND AT ALL POINTS ON COAST Gavoline dropped one cent Senttle Tuesday, Both the Standard Oil and As. sociated off companies announce the drop, atating ist in so doing they are complying with orders received from thely respective headquarters in San Franet Neither declare they have been kiven a reason for the reduced price ‘ Gasoline now sells at a market price of 21 cents, Inclusive of 1 cent war tax, The drop has heen const. wide. in cane, a oo Jing ® decision from HERE'S MORE ABOUT WAGE LAW STARTS ON PAGE 1 only show the need tional amendment to cover the wa, Question, but tt will also show the need for organization.” NATION-WIDE DRIVE MENT | for @ constitu. opinion that @ nation-wide palgn would result immedi fostering an amendment to the c tution to establish for all time the right of women to demand a mini mum wage, The Washington State Federation of Labor will back any such movement and will aid 6 wom | en‘s organization tn any local cam-| paign, he declared ‘The garment workers, the laundry workers, and the waitresses all are organized In Bedttle, Short nad. shop girls will be the ones to suffer the most from the annulment of the law. Thene girls, however, will aided in every manner by the organ ized workers to gain « living wage, he said. FACTORY GIRL WILL SUFFER Says Y. W. Worker BY DOKOTHY Factory and » for $12 a week and living poorer outlying districts, silk-stockinged employe if the Washington #! © law for women is re Minn Marie Bernard of A. employment bureau, DAVIDSON working in the not maree! 1 puffer min te mum aed, the ¥ Tuenday It nom! is hard predict what and mora) straits they will raid Miss Bernard. “The minimum wage and the eight hour not rtrictly en- | forced now in many of the smaller factories, and the repesl of the former would necensitate evening | work in many instances.” INEXPERIENCED GIRLS HIRED ‘There emp to to ven,” law day are are a yers who hire at $12 a week them a soon as they said, Thin t Ifable to the employer, but has for the working In mont canon receives no her family. Her only in to carry hee fight be labor commission but the won, would not result in 4 large enough increase to pay the trind fees, Stenographers and store employes are money, according to Miss Bernard. mlary ie $14 or $15 week with 6 per cent of the sales im department stores. In larger fac tories It is possible for an employe with six or seven years’ experience to make 0 mw week at piece work. WILL COMBAT LOWER WAGES WASHINGTON, April 10.—To pre vent wholesale reduction of women's Wages in the 14 states affected by number of factory inexperienced the raine Bernard re to be rous dina result help omeba fore the department | the supreme court's decision on the District of Columbia minimum wage law, a conference of women work ers will shortly be called in Wash ington by the Natianal Women's Trade Union league. Mins Ethel M. Smith, secretary of the organization, in announcing plans for the conferences, naid that In addition to combatting wage cuts, the women would discuss moans of “humanixing either the courts or the constitution.” Invitations will be sent out at once to the ¥. W. C. A, the Con- sumers' league, the W. C. T. U., the i | Gtris’ Friendly society, the National Council of Jewish Women, the Na tional League of Women Voters, the National Council of Catholic Wom- en, the National Congress of Mothers and Parent-Teachers’ asso clations and other organizations, to rend representatives to the national protest meeting, Miss Smith said to day “The women of the country have seen two child Igbor Jaws invall- dated and now the minimum wage law, for which they have worked ears to put on the statute books,” Miss Smith said, “Their other statute, the Sheppard- Towner maternity law, is aleo awalt- thin same mu. preme court with the least possible encouragement, now that the court, with Its new personnel, has added another decision which leaves out of | consideration the social point of view, the public Interest and, in fact, the human element, “By its decision the court again puts human labor on the basis of @ commodity and the labor contract on the basls of barter and sale, not have gone backward olsively.” WOULD REVISE CONSTITUTION DES MOINES, lowa, April 10.— “The constitution and the supreme court must be brought up to date,” women leaders of the country here today declared in commenting on the court's decision holding the min- imum wage act for the District of Columbia unconstitutional, The Constitution must be revised in order to aliow enactment of laws Protecting working children as well as working women, delegaten to the national convention of the league of women voters declared, Julia Lathrop, former head of the ohildren's bureau of the department of labor, and Mrs, Mlorence Kelley, of the consumers’ league, stated the women of the country must ontline A program of revising the national charter to fit the needa of modern industrial developments, “The Constitution Is a product of the eighteenth century and must be modernized,” Miss Lathrop de: clared, The women were undeclded wheth: or it would be boat to revine the entire constitution, "Tt might be wine to call a eon: stitutional convention and revine the entire basic law," Mra, Kolley anid, “altho needed changes could also be made thru the present system of amondment.'s more de: receiving good) Tt could | The | Stenographers Well Paid,| a: | TACOMA THEFT of Grocery Company Charged with | looting of thousands of dollars worth of commodities from the firm for which they were work ing, two trusted employes of the Ta- na Grocery company, with two al- lowed accomplices, were placed under arrest on charges of grand larceny by deputy sheriffs last night Those arrested are Ma manager clerk; P. Mitchell, Officials of the company said Tues- | day morning that evidence uncov-| ered indicate that Laieckenotte and Hows, each of whom hold respon sible ponitions ard had been in the employ of the company for 10 years, | have disponed of thousands of dollars’ TACOMA, April 10. ueckenotte, 32, city salen F. BR, Hows, 9, #hipping Rockey, 28, and ¥, 8 worth of merchandise in & manner) he intended bringing Irgal action to} which prevented detection until the| pilfering grew to large proportions. | The arrests mark the culmination | of an investigation instituted several weeks ago by Assistant Prosecutor Leo Teats, when compiaint was made to him that the wareho: f the wholesale company were being pil-| fer | at the lant of February officials of the Tacoma Grocery company found that invoices of the contentn of their warehouses failed to check with their purchases and sales reo-| A private investigation made but no proof of theft could be found Enlisting the help of the county authe a trap was set for em ployes suspected of being responsthle for the disappearance of the goods. | The investigation pointed to a well- | planned campaign of theft and aale| of groceries of all kinds by # small ring of employes, who, one by*one, had “go! the inside.” Since the rine in wugar, it ts said, the lomnen of sugar have been extremely heavy Lueckenotte wan released on $5,000 bail furnished by six friends sho ords ern are in custody tn the county jail VETS OF GRAY | HOLD REUNION, | NEW ORLEANS, La, April 10.—| | oper TUESDAY, APRIL 10 1923. ATTACKS JAP SUSPECTS HELD) LEASE METHOD Charge Systematic Looting | Kelley Says Tindall Rents Colvin Sa | Evading Alien Law Editor The #tar. to Nipponese Attacking the Japanese invasion, Hugo Kelley, secretary to Mayor & win J. Brown, denounced business men who itase property to Japs, de ring that one Of the most effective waya of checking the Japanese men tee in for Americans to cease leaxing lands or bulldings to them. hk speech was made before the Nepubdlican club at Meeve's cafeteria Monday neon Kelley directed his attack at Coun climan Philip Tindall, declaring that part of the Tindall estate, consisting of triangular building at Pike Place market is leaned to at Aifferent Japanese, some of whom 6 cafe and the others mar amt nlx hot nt Councilman Tindall, who was pres. ont, answered the attack, saying that oust the Japanese, and expected to have them out of there by next No vember, “The lease was made pertod when my mother, as executrix of the estate, was seriously il, and 1 could not oppone It then, but I am going to break it now,” Tindall said BETTER DAYS FOR INVENTOR Patent Offices Ready to Take Quicker Action WASHINGTON, April 10 days are ahead for American invent ors, says the United States patent office, which {s making headway against the flood of patent applica tions, Last year the patent bureau was 76,000 applications behind in its| were notified of his arrest. The oth. | *tion. This year the number is re-| (a) duced to 70,000. Delay in acting on patent applications has been reduced from 14 to 12 montha. The patent office hopes to reduce | the congestion stil! more, but is ham pered by lack of help. Altho the bu au ts more than self-supporting, congress requires that earnings be turned over to the treasury each | | during a| Better | JAP CHARGES ARE REFUTED ys Tindall Ip Nop In answer tack on Co wher to Hugo Kelley's unciiman Philip a he charges Mr, Tiodall wigg nalneerity in his entiJa pa ou flight, on the ground thet ag « tate of which he is one of the hey [han nome Japanem tenants, I beg may that fo my enpactty @b deputy roseculing aitorney, charged wey |{sforcement of the alien land few, | ave several times been Mr. Tindall, who how stated thy facts to me fully and soughe aid in invoking the allem land ley |' wet rid of these tenants | 1 have advised him that the lp jin question does not &DDIY to thy class of pu commercial but I know that Mr. Tindall tag always Seainat they leanes and done ali in hie power 1 have them annulled. proten YING D. COLVIN, Chiet Deputy Prosecuting Attormy, 3,000 HEAR — EAGLE BAND | More than 3,000 persons sttentas |the Eagles’ band concert given unde the direction of Henry Damwkl, at thy Caglew’ auditorium at Seventh anf Union st., Monday night. Mine Abbie Koward, soprano; Wilbur C, Wests, |man, violinist, and Archie A. Bog. enor, gave several mused | numbers | The following program was giver March—"Let's Go’ ‘ ie | Marche Sieve "Wedding of the Rose Soprano Boll (a) “Dawn” (bv) “Morning” : Miss Abbie How Belection—'"Mile Modiste”, Vielor Herken, i Solo—Firet Movement trom Concerto in D Minor, -..00 Wilbur C. Westerman 4 “Down South”—~American Sketch + Mrddleten | (v) Hatter Beery” Party Waltz... (#) “La Palorm (b) “The Glow Worm’ Bol Vest! La Giubbe” (from “Partie ect") (b) "On the Road te Mas Archie Invasjon of New Orleans by Confed-| year, instead of using them to hire |Overture—“Il Guarany”. erate war with the veterans was on today, | “boys” of '€0 trooping in| from all directions | The old warriors were swarming streets and hotel lobbies, swapping | battle stories and warming up for| the official opening of the 33rd an-| nual reunion tomorrow, Fully 10,000 are expected to be} here tonight. One sturdy veteran | George W. Sheeram, of Barnesvilie, Ga., made the trip on foot. The| old fighter left Barnesville March 8. Five specia) trains of Virginians are coming In, Tennessee and Texas are sending large delegations, The “boye” are eating during the encampment in a special mess hall. They refuse to compete with the hustling patrons of lunch roome, A corps of automobiles has been placed at their disposal by local citi zens who are entertaining lavishly, Priest Surrenders on Federal Charge! DENVER, Colo. April 10.—Rev.| Walter A. Gree, Catholic priest, formerly of the Shrine of St. Anne at Arvado, Colo, surrendered to federal officers here yesterday after he had been sought since March 20 on @ technical charge of forgery of liquor permits Following his surrender, Father Grace was arraigned before United States Comminsioner Foot and pleaded not guilty to the charge. He was released on 00 bond. Tt wna alleged that Father Grace forged the name of Sister Germaine, mother superior of the Home for the Aged here, to IMquor permits and that the whisky never reached CONGRESSMAN TO COME HERE Hon. L. C, Dyer, congressman from Missouri, will arrive in Se- attle about May 1 from Washing ton, D. C, on a lecture tour of the Pacific coast and will speak on the subject of increased American: Chinese trade as outlined in the China Trade act of which he ts the author and which was passed by congress. Congressman Dyer’a visit is being sponsored by the China Club pf Se- attle and the Chamber of *Com- merce. He will also apeak in Port- land and San Francisco. “Seattle is most vitally Interested in the development of American. Chinese trade and should set the pace in this attempt to benefit Pacific coast shippers,” said Dyer| in a lecture to the China club re cently, The China Trade act relieves American concerns operating in China from the payment of income taxes in accord with the polloy of} Huropean countries toward — their concerns Harding May Favor . Sweeping Tax Cut WASHINGTON, April 10.—Preal. dent Harding would recommend a cut in taxes all along the line if it i decided that a revision of tho tax law is advisable, {1 was an: nounced today at the White House, Secretary Mellon's suggestion to out surtaxen from 60 to 26 per cent was discussed at today's cabinet mooting, but it was made plain that the president did not favor ® reduction of merely the higher taxes, It way sald, however, that it is yet too early to announce what recommendations — regarding faxes will be made to the now congress by the president, Tries to Beat 55 Hour Dance Record CLEVELAND, 0, April 10-A Cleveland girl started dancing today to beat the record of 50 hours and 2 minutes hung up by Alma Cummings in New York last nlght, Misa Helene Mayor, 21, made the etart at O46 a.m, Her danoing part: ner at the start, Bob Williams, will dance as long aH she docs—if he can, more help, The present state of con gestion is a hangover from the war time period, when the patent office wan deluged with inventions, American inventors have been at a disadvantage recently, due to the fact that conventions with foreign countries provide that applications registered in foreign countries were filed here as of the same date as granted abroad, Fast action on pat- ent applications in Germany occa sionally deprived the American In- ventor of patents he was entitled to by prior Invention. Nasty reports of “leaks” of ideas submitted to the United States pat- ent bureau for patents which, while pending, were rushed thru a foreign patent office, caused icials to take action to end this vantage to American inventors. Foreign appli- cations must waft their natural or der now, Officials deny that there were “leaks” in the United States patent bureau, SUZZALLO ILL AT BANQUET Dr. Henry Surzallo, president of the University of Washington, was unable to deliver an address at the banquet Monday night at Tacoma given by the A. V. Love Drygoods Co., owing to an attack of what was at first believed to be ptomaine pols- oning, which setzed him before the rogram. Dr. Suzzallo was taken to the In- terurban by one of the guests at the banquet. Tuesday he was back at work and declared that he was mere- ly suffering from car sickness. LIPSTICK BAN RULED LEGAL LITTLE ROCK, Ark., April 10. ‘The now famous “lipstick case” has been definitely ended thra a de- cision of the Arkansas supreme court, which upholds the regulatio: of school boards in prohibiting the us of lipstick, powder, and rouge by girl students. Miss Pearl Pugsley, a gh school student, of Knobel, Ark, was ex- pelled because she refused to obey the ban on powdering her nose, ‘With the ald of her purents, she started suit and the proceedings at- tracted attention thruout the nation. Her father died soon after the case was started and asked his wife and daughter to fight the cam to the end, Police Seize One of Crudest Stills of crudest stills ever found wa ized by the poliee ary squad Monday night in a raid on the home of Abe Rdlund, 4812 Myr tle st. Some moonshine was also taken, and Edlund was charged with violating the city liquor laws. California Hits at Ku Klux Klan SACRAMENTO, Cal, April 10 One the By & vote of 47 to 15 the assembly | g, today passed a bill prohibiting the wearing of masks in public places except at social ovents, The measure is aimed at the Ku Klux Klan, TOELLNER TO SPEAK August Toellner, candidate at the coming port and city elections, will address a meeting of the John R. Taylor encampment of the Spanish: American War Yoterans tonight. Toollner will xpeak on the servieos of colored troops in all wara of the United States, The meeting will be held at the Masonic hall at 2lat ave, und Jofferson at, HIT BY STRECT CAR While walking along the side of the Weatlake street car tracks Mon: day afternoon, Mrs, Myrtle McKee, 2764 Westlake avo, Ny was struck by @ Phinney car and severely bruised, She was taken to the city hospital for attention and released (0 or home WOULD ADD: LAKE BEA’ The Lake bouievand bea committee, created for the perme of working for the permanent tas ° tification of the boulevard whid e- circles Lake Washington, was opt ized Monday night at a meeting of representatives of Seattle civic or- ganiztions and of several Lake Washington communttien at the of fice of the Automobile elub of Wash- ington. Another meeting of the committee will be held later this month, which a report probably will be pre wented by a committee containing recommendations regarding the rieties of trees and shrubs to ¥ planted. H. M. Simmons, president ef & Northwest Paper Box Co, who” | resented the Seattle Rotary clibé the meeting, was chosen tempo chairman; J. H. Wester, mayor? Kirkland, vie@ chairman, and WE Chambers of the Automobile clit | Washington, secretary. The co-operation of every comm | nity on the lake, and of many crt organizations {n Seattle, in plastit & tree and shrub border along tt entire length of the lake. boulern will be sought by the committee. Al will be represented on the commit tee. POLICE SQUAD WEIGHTY ONE If weight counts for anything, police baseball team now in training for the summer season, will champions of the United States anf possibly of the universe, it was pre dicted Tuesday, cane ee The spring tryouts held at Walla Walla playfield unéet the direction of Ir weight honors with Damm and Officer Bill Bay windows were in everywhere as the cops gracefully about the diamond, ing wicked curves and buseball belt as big as wagon tongues. “It's a_ cinch,” fae Brea said as he watch q darlings at work, “that there wot! be a team on the Coast with nerve to dispute a decision favorit the police team. Illegal Use of Mail Is | concern, \ time ago by a federal the mornin see was aed impaneling the jury, The defendants are cage wt using the mails to promote ae of stock in a concern eit corporated for the purpese | we ufacturing gold from & seoret 2 “The grand jury indtetmen charge that, at Bal heh 30, 1920, the two M the ma‘ls, endeavored to secure vestors In the companys which represented as belng ; sound, q. ‘al ‘ at no time was oe oe Would Not wag League C April 40.—Prett WASHINGTON, Apt tie the dent Harding do \ United States ax directly getting the league of nations thro ship and representation in House today, de that the Unit Pes veaniod ax enterie “py the back door’ thru Tcourt, as hus

Other pages from this issue: