The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 4, 1923, Page 16

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_THE SEATTLE STAR __ | RAINS DOLLARS Peggy Allenby Here Again CONSIDER NEW “SNAKE BITID ALIBI r AILS OVER EMPIRE! Wife of “Bob” Armstrong HOTEL PROJECT. ae TE GOULD FORTUNE “RADIO DOCTOR" oa HTING | ~SPLITBY WILL. NOT ACCEPTED Children of First Wife Widow All Share New Plans Involve Added |; Room and More Money and University Head Says Dr. Abrams Has no Backing Downpour Assures bhiiser} Crops This Year SPOKANE, Ju t ’ 1 ‘ raining y y lar bills That vo Urday from the flees of farm from danke n farming conditions While the seventenths of Wal the downpe Mays is taken as an i the dry 3 ended. Weatherman even w to submit ¢ Possibly this & definite end of & four or five year 4 Weather bureau rece there is a tende Years hereabout to b @M approximatély equal Wet ygars A bumper whe op is practical. ° . ant ty assured in wh pland Empire One a | the general rains of the last @ays, and this will add to the Guitural wealth amounts all the way from over a million do The total fa ‘Was 1:89 inches. The record for amour ‘was set on 7, 1888, inches. The next highes Fecord is May 19 eee, 7 rooms ommur ng W u furms and tt . $1,bo estimate the sive the spell , Bill Hart to Give 1 Saddle at Rodeo |, m OGAN, Wash A Bill | Of and Hart actor to th ride July today An AD anne fam Will be © bent all June 4 atem ato further fo 43 cowpuncher” om | which appea will to the not uwarded redeo to be financial of th ided at Fife two new andation ner estimated F . he y Want Ads bring your pros t “ t 4 to the Une them -|{mportant Values for June Sales of White Big special purchases at low prices; material reductions on many regular lines, combined with The Bon Marche’s policy to sell at low cash prices—bring these most important values. conside nditure of $3,7 number ation »,000 with d complete ad of will have re 50, nm for expenses inate 600. bond & P * Friday's 24-hour re a fifth largest for the years s great Spokane fire, which earlier data. It is 1.60 in “Farmers have been we \cently as to whether cutting of the ‘forest had reduced premanently the amount of rain in this region,” @er said. “Some of them have @xpressed fears that the dry weath ‘er of the past several years meant a return to desert conditions. "It looks to me now as if forests Raye nothing to do with it, and na Ture turns on the watertap wher she gets ready. This certainly 01 fo reassure those farmers thought the Inland Empire headed for aridity.” - Re-elect Short 2 as Federation Head | Results of the election of officers Of the State Federation of Labor Shows William M. Short to be re | elected president with a poll of » 4.749 votes. Other officers elected are; Ida Parberry, vice pre Of the first district: A. W. Johnson, » Vice president of the a dis-| piriet; C. 1. Gallant, vice president |" ies chase, edition fet of the third district; W. L. Brackin " . my that Leo Ditrichste = feed, vice president of the fourth truth. She. has {hi if on having alw “Raters vf es formes For the wife of Bob | leading ladies it is possible to find.” » Wi President of the fifth di» — ocupation the d 00 in Allenb A Peggy wand t cont BY WANDA VON KETTLER 1 Y ALLENBY Bot Armstrong, is back ave uthorixed bu’ wif sed, to be raised b: nd Peg ter tained extenasl stay in the city The young y during ke ress expreswd her friend husband" was in Seatt 4 for the ‘in “The in Seattle Key- v short | © meeting of Monday ative committee will report to the board of which will meet Tuesday inemlay to act upon the pro- submitted. Fol noon, exec wing the its Pegay remember part she played Man Who Came Ba last November, “Boby membered for the part “the man." He is a a a4 of the June White Sales 600 Shadow-Proof Costume Slips! Batiste and Imported Sateen Costume Slips $ 2 50 The batiste made with very lacy effects, hard for mar together “a awfully explained. “Managers don't like and I've discovered that in our of married life. T t doesn’t help Audience Graduation igen A list of sug- *\ gestions Tor gifts suitable as gradua- tion remem- brances for June 4 girl or lad. with = LIQUOR ISSUE IN FIRST RANK Politicians Realize Prohibi- tion Leads in Campaign who » isn’t thie trip wo years e man. box was She hatein’s lead: ing lady in “The Purple Mask," |which opened it t the Metropolitan. the Monday mo still somewhat sie office run four-da Friend nd \ tistock at Milwaukee, As fe with Le is now playing the Davidson Wis. Miss Pe Ditrich vious day’s travel performance, I t nette, brown her apartment ington. t up stra y's sppearance in. Well, tha! for his leading at the Hetel Wash o Sraenen: ct BY LAWRI and the sateen in strictly tailored style. iport and siiky r sunt CE MARTIN dent htful feature of the lace effect is the repetition of the top motif on the 20. inch hem. Regular and extra sizes. Tailored Slips $1.00 Made from firm cotton of good quality, in tailored style, with embroidery trim- WASHINGTON tary s Mellon's rum sece just got to wake posely made as drastic as nhow-down ed from Miss Pegsy to force a mm on the whole quéstion of enforcement, on land Jooks, priced from $1.15 to much to do. jand Mellon's regulations form the cli- water Booklets, leather and novelty bindings, priced 50¢ up trict; J. M. Belanger, vice president Of the sixth district; Henry Arends, “vies president of the seventh dis-| ; Was a Grandmother When But 29 Years | OAKLAND, Cal, June 4.—Mrs. C. H. Jagoe was represented today as Onkland’s competitor in the “young. | €st grandmother” contest. She is aged 33 and has three grandchildren, aged from 4 years to 20 months. She is the mother of six children, the two oldest of whom | are married. The youngest is aged Mrs, Jagoe lives on a ranch near KC lL injure | Bastls auto | Fores | day, 39. ave. leg w 39 ave, 39 that 39 \39 | kupe, jured an au way. minor injuries § Feinberg, 12 2415 Irving #' 1923 Record of Pedestrians Hit by Automobiles | A. Eastwood, lew ave., a wh she str ake and Allison st driven by F. G. Waske t Park, —Harold Landaas, 65th st., and Marion st. as aria 1 a ‘Alene, Saturday. Shafer, Idaho, rece turday w to driven b: N., at h truck by an 15th ave, and tlie ave. + D. Jenkins, jake ave., reported had struck an unkn Sis he jy Mazen, 9, of 1221 Yes- was soverely jured Saturday near her home by an auto driven by Frank Mills, Wash, 939 cut about Douglas, N. wa y when ke and Pine st. by Stinson, 2010 West —R. Drummond, ave. N., reported 108 8. 9-4 Clarence 00 of Edmonds, when both w uto driven by Robert . Sunday, For the Woman ew o “Loves to Sew” heed “by the work basket of the wo- tp tho loves to sew. You will find of Wiss Sewing Scissors. And, ven ad not, she will tell you her brought her up on them.” ed Jjoyed the f faithful, generations of women have en- friendly companionship ‘of Wiss Scissors. They cut with marvelous ease when they ate new; and whe: ate old, they cut like new! ny they For sale wherever good cutlery is sold. WIS SHEARS SCISSORS penark, NJ. Since 1848 2940) was seriously it was reported Satur- 1106 FE. was knocked down | ed at 2 an unidentified driver at First| noon, Maltby, Second struck rar driv- Sunda. that his car hed struck and injured & small child at 13th ave. and Pines orence Sam- were severely in- © run down by Hagen, } on Marginal | ‘They were taken to the county STATE PARK TO BE DEDICATED Is First Purchased | by Washington OLYMPIA, June 4 purchased by th Washington, an area of 35 acres on jthe Navy Yard highway, eight miles jeast of Union City, i# to be dedicat. o'clock next Saturday after- under the auspices of the |Tract ‘The first n6 state of His | Clifford L. Babcock, state treasurer, Coeur | and chairman of the committee. The ived | brief ceremonies will be open to the he| public, which is urged by the com: |mittee to take the opportunity of. n {fered by the occasion to get their | |acquainted with what the state Is st-| doing to secure and preserve outing | - | places own| The new park is still without a Japanese woman at Second ave. and | name, but one will be chosen in ad. Union st. vance of the dedication. It has heen under state control for nearly year, and considerable work done during the summer of 1922 in| jdeveloping camping and picnic places there, The purchase was j completed this spring, following leg- the |!slative action to remove the limita. tion on park purchases imposed by | the state park act of 1921 lake| The total of state parks of 20] |acres or more is now eight, These 13th {are Moran state park, on Orcas {s-| y |land, containing 2,900 acres; Larra- bee s park, on the Chuckanut drive, 20 acres; Deception Pass state rk, on the Pacific highway, a short distance south of Chehalis, acres; William H. Crawford state park, in Pend Oreille county, 40 acres; an unnamed park in Grays Harbor county, near Hoquiam, 320 acres; another unnamed park of 30) acres a mile northwest of Enum- r, recently given to the state by - He aah and the new park on | Hood canal. | | Bootleggers * Are Hard Hit Monday was distinctly indigo for |five liquor violators who appeared Elin federal court for sentence. Fines g totaling $1,000 and jail terms ag: uting one year and two months meted out by Judge Jeremiah in-| nd “ Hull and Russell Utley each sentenced to serve six |months in the county jail and pay a fine of $1 on charges of violating @ the prohibition act and maintaining 4 nuisance, They gave notice of | appeal. Chester C. Winkler was fined $500 and Alvin Anderson drew a term of 60 daya in the county jail following thelr conviction on liquor violation charges. Andy Simonson g Waa fined $500 on the same charge. C, W. Fracher plead guilty to stealing navy property from Brom: erton, Sentence was deferred, Woman, 60 Years Old, Is Arrested b| OAKLAND, Cal, June 4.—Onk fy land police today held a 60-year.old i woman charged with burgla She was found, police reported, jclimbing in the window of a garage, | “I was going in after my show," lke explained, when asked w hy she Hi was barefooted, \ The woman refused to give her ji nuino or tlk to officers, w state parks committee, gecording to| max of a series of events that go} to make rum the biggest domestic! and international issue before the American government and peopie.| Domestic politics, foreign trade, in-| ternational relations, all revolve now} |around the question of prohibition | jand its enforcement, Not since| | slavery has any issue so dominated. | Politicians of both parties haye| abandonéd all hope that the issue) can be avoided in 1924 | New York's repeal of the state jenforcement law emphosizes the split in the democratic party over prohibition. Mellon's regulations re veal a division in the republican party. Mellon is a wet in his sym- pathiow. | Ho feels that congress went be- yond the 18th amendment when it passed the Volstead law. He favors liberalization of the enforcement act. By making his regulations on j the supreme court's Interpretation of that act so drastic and rigid as to |threaten serious international com: plications he has forced congress to/ consider whether to stand on exist-| ing stringent provisions, or to modi-| fy those affecting foreign ships. | Goy. Al Smith of New York in-| |tensified a domestic iste by sign-| ing the repeal of the state enforce- | ment law, Ho put up to the fed-/ eral government—wi will have| to put it up to congress—the ques-| tion of making prohibition effective thru the federal courts, He tore | the Ud off the question in domestic polities. | | But Mellon went much further. His ‘regulations flew in the face of| seven of the leading maritime na-| tions whose laws require their ships to carry liquor, some of them in rations for the crows, At the very ffme when another branch of the government is launching a plan to extend foreign trade and capture | new forelgn markets, Mellon strikes! | blow at American commerce and | raises a new international issue, Mellon and Smith are equally the | mouthpieces of those forces in the nation that demand immediate re- laxation of prohibition. They havo made the question paramount, Here and There Princess Anastasia of Greece, for- | merly Mrs, Leeds, is returning to London. The Plumas house, bullt in 1853 destroyed by fire at Quincy, Cal., Sunday, Fire on freighter William A, Me. Kenney ts put out after damage of | $150,000 has been caused, see Gross receipts of the Seattle post: office jumped $27,457 last month over the same period a year ago, see Mrs. Frances Hunt Latham, plo» neer King county! school teacher, died at the home of her daughter, | 1022 E, 66th st,, Saturdy, wee Postmaster General New, who is coming to Seattle for the post. masters’ convention, wit! be invited to speak to American Legion, ove ‘Teachers from Canada w of Seattle schools Saturday, eee re Bucsts | The Tioneer association of tho State of Washington will hold ita annual reunion Wednesday at Pio. neer hall, Seattle, . Univer of Washington The "Get Together day will te held Graduation Cards, S¢@ to 25¢. Fountain Pens, $2.50 to $13.50. Eversharp and Shaeffer Pencil, $1.00 to 35.00. Gift Stationery, 1- 69¢ to $2.50. Loone-leaf Photograph Albums, $3.50. No, 2 Brownle Cameras, $2.50. No, 2A Brownie Cameras, 83.60. A g004 selection of Address Books, Autograph Albums, 60¢, Gift Mottoes, $1.25. and iquire boxes, tints, to $1.00 50¢. Both strap Special Prices on Student Calling Cards and 100 cards: In script, $2.50 In solid type, $3.00 In shaded type, $4.00 Upper Main Floor—The Bon Marche Gift for the June Bride Luncheon and Breakfast Sets Nothing is nicer for a bride to recelve than dainty, useful linens for her table, and these aro adorable new sets, made from halflinen and linen crash, consisting of a cloth and four small napkins, White, with pink or blue border, kins, $6.75. Linen crash, beautifully scalloped in green, gold, old rone or blue, with 4 napkins, at $4.00. The same, embroidered, $4.50. White, all linen, with 4 napkins, $4.95. Third Floor—The Bon Marche trimmed. A plate Lovely made and 4 nap- June White Sale of ~ Embroidery Edges 19¢ Splendid quality long cloth, worked tn eyelet patterns and finished with firm scallops; 4-inch widths. Also Sinch Swiss cdges, Upper Main Floor—The Bon Marche In the Sport Shop Where the newest >P smartest in sport toggery is carefully chosen, and effectively displayed for your inspection. And priced for your immediate enjoyment! * Swagger Tweed Suits $24.75 Tweeds in clear field colors, and jaunty pin- checked woolens. Novel Sport Coats $24.75 Expressing every jaunty mood of sports wear, Second Floor—The Bon Marche Domestics 25c Sateen—Heavy, serviceable quality; 2,000 tyards, white and pink; yard wide; yard, 25e, Bleached Indian Head—1,000 yards, a yard wide; lengths to 10 yards; 26, Dress Ginghams—50 pieces, good quality, 32 inches wide, plaids, checks, plain styles; yard 2 in black, in Be. Fabric Floor—Third—The Bon Marche The new, easy way to finish your floors. The‘Old English’ Waxer-Polisher Applies the wax, then polishes the floor, Factory representative will bo at our storo all this week to show you how easy it Is to keep your floors looking nice— with an “Old English” Waxer and Polisher. During this demonstration 1-lb, Can “Old English” Wax 69c Union Street Basement—The Bon Marche Fine Batiste Slips $1.75 made from sheer batiste, Pure Silk Slips $5.95 | and. detuelly trimmed; shadow-proof hems, ming; 20-inch hem. Full-Cut Slips $1.50 Cotton, trimmed with lace and embroid- ery. An excellent value; 20-inch hem. Regular and extra sizes, Sheer Batiste Slips $1.95 Trimmed both front and back with inset medallions and fine, strong laces; 20-inch hems. Imported Sateen Slips $2.95 An especially fine quality of Imported Sateen and Satinella, made in tailored styles, with 20-inch hems. Second Floor—The Bon Marche shoulders, attractively and bullt-up beautifully | 20-inch | de chine, June White Sale COTTONS! —LINENS! SSIS 34- and 36-In. White Oxfords 25c | | 1x2 4-inch Bleached Huck Towels, Lengths to 10 yards. 10c. 30-Inch White Flaxon, Yard 19¢ 22x44. Lengths to 10 yards. 90¢ 42-Inch Imported Voile 75c $1.00 42-Inch Imported Voile 79¢ | 36-Inch Bleached Muslin, Yd. 20c | Printed Cotton Challie, Yd. 15¢ | Lengths to 10 yards, 36-In. Unbleached Muslin, Yd. 15c Lengths up to 10 yards. $2-Inch Poplin Shirting 8ic 86-inch Long Cloth, 10-yard bolts, | 17x34-inch Bleached Huck Towels, $2.25, $2.50, $2.75 bolt. | 18-inch Crash Toweling, 10c. 14x18-in. Crash Towels, 3 for 25c. | E x40-inch Turkish Towels, 25c. -inch Turkish Towels, 30c. | 70-inch All-Linen Damask, $1.75 70-inch All-Linen Damask, $2.35. All-Linen Damask reduced to $2.95. | $5.25 Pattern Cloths, $4.00. $3.50 Linen Cloths, $2.95. 17x33-inch All-Linen Towels, 49c. 16-Inch Linen Toweling 19¢ sake <36-inch Turkish Towels, 20c. Third Floor—The Bon Marche Dainty as their wearers— Girls’ Organdie and Voile Frocks $2.95 For particular misses of 6 to 14. So summery and pretty are these frocks of dotted figured voile. With deep, square collars of organdie, hand embroidery—. short sleeves, tucks in skirt, deep hem and sash. Also plain shades of organdie trimmed with sheer white em- broidery. Girls’ Guimpe ‘Waists 95c to $3.95 Voile, in pink, blue, sal- mon, orchid, white. Girls’ Skirts $2.95 Pongee, with plaited Cotton Eponge Suspen- ruffle on lay-down collar | der Skirts in rose and tan. and down front. Also Serge Middy Skirts Barred dimity in white, | with box-plaited front and with checked gingham | side plaits. Fastened to trimmings. | Waist—sizes 6 to 14 years. Second Floor—The Bon Marche

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