The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 10, 1923, Page 1

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ting which imple) “y= pens cua saan Unsettled tonight and Sunday; prabadly fog Sunday a. Moderate southeast winds, Temperature Last 34 Hours Maximum, 45, Minimum, 38, Today noon, 43. The Newspaper With the Biggest Circulation in Washington The Seattle Star Entered as Second Claas Matter May 2, 1699, at the Postoffice at Beattie, Wash,, under the Act of Congress March 3, 1879, Per Yomr. by Mall, $3,60 VOL, 25, NO, 222. SEATTLE, WASH., § SATURDAY, NOVE MBER 10, 1923. "TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE, WASHINGTON, Noy. 10.—Mrs. Cal- vin Coolidge has just finished her fall shopping. She has bought her ward- robe for the most interesting winter of her life thus far—the White House social season. The label “Made in Paris,” so dear to the feminine heart, holds not a bit of lure for Mrs. Coolidge. Her is a “Made in America” wardrobe thru- out. The proprietor of one of Washing- ton’s exclusive shops, where Mrs, Cool- idge bought her winter wardrobe, says she is “keen” on American-made clothes. In fact, she insisted on hav- Howdy, folks! Monday is Ar- mistice day. Just five years ago today we wero eating “canned ARMISTICE UNITES BROTHERS ®s.coottse Buys Winter Wardrobe ing American-made clothes. And he added she showed “refinement of good judgment” in her selections, The “first lady” has been shopping quietly since early fall. Now the ward- robe is all bought, from gloves to evening frocks. Mrs. Coolidge’s purchases include everything, from cloth dresses for day- time wear, to decollete ones for the formal evening functions at which she will be hostess. “Contrary to the custom of most White House mistresses, Mrs. Coolidge went to the store to make her pur- chases instead of having garments sent to her for selection. Willie.” We're still eating it. eee Ba Guerre ts not yet over. We're still wearing the woolen wristlets, sweaters and sox that were knit for us by maiden aunts, We're living in apartment houses. see What has becume of the old-fash- foned mother who sent her son inj} the trenches a hot-water bottle? eee During Father and Som week,” no son should use language that is Hable | to sbock his father. eee e POME Lashes to lashes, Dust to dust, If she puckers her lips, In heaven we'll trust! eee Gentus {s not without its penalties. Sooner or later they all go to New York. Some critics ask where our star ng army is. Eesy. In the str cars, eee ‘The ordinary woman wants her shoes to 47k small outside and be large insid. |. “Armistice day” probably means more to these two young German-born men than to) Three women were badly " most of us. Speaking about endurancd—how |! J aoect the summer fip that refuses to|tcan forces, while his brother, Erich, 23 (right), was operating a machine gun under|biles collided at First ave. During the world war, Gerhard R. Last, 28 (left), fought with the Amer-| injured when tio automo- BERLIN, Nov. Wilhelm, heir to the Hohen- govecnaseut's ‘rilnlstecl anki ee: zollern throne, die? | the Prussian eagle standard. During the last year, however, they became reunited in| and University st. Saturday} Gemany and t é gare Se | Seattle and are working together to make a permanent home for themselves in the land of | morning. The driver of one moter cua this What this world needs ts res-| 44:7 adoption. Insets show them as they appeared in the uniforms of their respective| of the cars, H. A. Russ | taurant pies that are divided nto} £2712 Fourth . ir| aay four parts. | armies. of 27 ourth ave., was jail- y: eee him into a massage or a shampoo. | | vet Ice Cream Co., was coming down | EX-CROWN PRINCE RETURNS WILL EXECUTE 50 HUNGARIAN CHIEFS DRIVER JAILED ROVAL EXILE MONARCHISTS AFTER CRASH! IN GERMANY! Three Persons Are| Friedrich Wilhelm Startling Penalty | Injured in Down) Js permitted to| Is Announced in 4 Town Collision Leave Holland Budapest Strife HUSKIES cna “10.—Friedrich BUDAPEST, Nov, 10—The has reentered is traveling by rastle at Oels, leading _ politicians, including Count Apponyi, were slated for Il, 24,] Silesia, it was stated here to execution, it was revealed here today. No details were avall- ed after the accident on a Accompanied by his adjutant, able, It is presumed the start- the former crown prince, armed ling denouement in the troubled of the German government, result of the royalist plot, which Tigres or timecathng ke | OPEN ACTION IN [Both Germans, But One F ought for) remiss ing. | with a passport vised by order | history of the nation came as & @ vas Kaiser, Other for America | First ave, ata fast rate of speed, ac-| {esd vanity towsed his estate. | Deputy Ulain h In ord j Prince wit Across DIRGE PATHETIQUE | GAS RATE CASE ording toa Ww. Wylie, 3 Collectors called | | M 1 hospital and was there|®¥¢ 8. W. who tried with Around today BY u ELAND HANNU | spital and mobile to avoid the truck qx ‘ago, two German-born 0 Armistice was signed, And carted off : ss Russell's teuck w noth: | Src Anti were enemies, bound by 11, 1918. Later he was Our weekly pay er auto and apparer skidded on of allegiance to lay aside fam- | back to aid in putting down the revo- / in ‘i eee hs of allegiance to Ia ; the street, damp with fog, coming up) '* Rear Brosh sent Seattle’s Complaint Goes tol lily thes and fly at each other's 1g in Berlin. 4 President Coolidge has issued a State Board linroats ta the Geath grapple of the + test united in,| the hill o n Rail vat n proclamatio: | by he {wise road and at later | Munich, ac great World war ay archist uprisin he crashed into Wylie’s auto, wr i ing it. Wyle was unhurt, but his wife | was severery injured. She was tak en to the city hosp! from shock and bruis car, Wylie sa: ‘© width of t to observe the festival of Thanksgiv-}| ing. ewart st, and side at the lumber ° Ww, SoRIn Sea sin! How can we? We haven't enough| Fitzgerald, Seattle’s compisint + Arminine » Gag Stetson-Post , Lumber to buy the pin feathers off) to the state department of pub- | naa crnpany, 3100.38, Margioal why? And > « sap eee lic works against service and ation |) Gite ceifen © areosation’ day r aoparated, either . > 8 Lightin; hip Sunday morn. 1E1 Gee. 09 MAYS 200 1S SOE 29 ce eh te a A | German Lutheran Zion name her new bungalow “All Inn.” company, was forwarded by g Le Corporation Counsel T. J. L. France is slowly going dry, says! Kennedy Inte Friday. lecturer. Can we say the same of| ales: bce thie aoonghetint our country | see Jullege that gas is inferior in qual jgned by Acting Mayor C. B. | reunited in the land of preparing to col al, suffering he Wylie | was knocked the] street by the im-| ning, Gerhard R will be slumbering from a hard | chureh nd dreaming ‘And Erich is making great prog-| the American language, a slang. resting “Mrs, Andrew Huntley, 2230. 4ist | ave. 8. W. and her mother, who} were riding In Wylle's car, also were | are ever {t is| Druished and shaken up . They were | and unsung,| treated at the city hospital and tak 1 are|¢n home vs Motorcycle Officer G. C. Jensen| accor ful present ear nile snubbers are|ity, high in price and uncertain, All the automo not on the axles. Some of them sit|hut i¢ i4 maintained that the entire thie ite,| vel er Hl in the back seat | t ‘ . gas s gono| Witnessed the accident and immedi. | ee |plant and eqiipment of the ga In’ the |stely arrested Russell on a charge of | Vazaii ‘There is a wild rumor afloat that |°°™ is antiquated, expensive, | " Euro. She driving. He was unable to @ man was seen on Second a es-|unsafe and inadequate | Pe = ap her D ball | terday wearing a derby hat. “The Seattle Lighting company is| re r a cae cout | exact many thousand of doll , Pvata AMBITION | es _ Little Homer Brew, Jr. saw a| per um from je people o boy German nd sent 1 and | black-eagled ‘ | A few months more and Germany another hundred thousand of dwart at a vaudeville show the other | attic night, and now he says he wants to| com be a midget when he grows up. pl swep' ho cent a he red 4 ruddy-skinned aaa soni lonely Dutch island which has been|] car suddenly disappeared, despite At a seance held at the}, ‘ 1 Ertet tice 4 i his home. He made the trip to the/ his watchful eye, and Bridges Metropolitan evening, Dr. |, " rm f His | ‘ , » Police War on Drivers Who | mainiaed by be || sent a call for help from every Eddy says he will produce spirits at! two. were killed in|), wo sisters living in the P | proceeded in an auto}] substation in th Several will. attle ainst the ta | Endanger Lives 1 chauffeur. Behind fol-|]| motorcycle officers were suspe ) Put your orders in early, boys! " he fore ’ the another car with luggage and/| oq of taking the ear for a joke, piacere! other ng st the atubborn ee A extra gasoline. It is understood that ¢ 1 ’ J A iver ho but all of them denied it The Actors in New York are talking of | down sof area? | eee eee ; Missing Crippled le con brie Burgomaster Kolt of Wieringen rode|] ijeense number of the car. is striking. If they do, they won't play | pensive e operate.” a nes iri "he i ' ; the Boy Returns Home at uc cars without) (Turn to Last Page, Column 1) |} 90406, and they won't work. | t Is made against Rule , fn sé He RL rage Afte lights in the dense fc howed re. otleggers are becoming greedy. | state department Of WOFKE | at born but. HOW itieen of Hie | Ove? hou cults £ aturd with earl cna y are in aduiteratin ne - t idle ice blotter | sit 4 alcohal with che ap Ga Uitiger [eas om ” standard of the John Heva, t & be pt aa ae Sl ihial tos weeping for her tv ons Jost in his home i r ten s 5 be n ths eased h GOSH, WE CAN HARDLY wart: || * aamnette taka service of the ci {ped tears e boy w i A 7 ; al_ mote (men ' et George came home Monday aft | the men! nt a of nd ‘ows of worry from from differe precin gre one recipes ane > of four months. He is wear-| action complaint hid Hes vin thewhavedbouts 66 } ht ing cars W lights along the - kinds s and sweets at tne salir wnitrm, "Will try and et] dat ing {ita Beye’ evl- Locher oaec cline ee eens nother, frantle with | hiehy n condemned by| Released, But May Be Ex- It at_you want for more pa siroded A Ven | dots £40 fate the nd e to locate |Sorgt. F Fuqua, tra chief t . tal 3, ft (O.) ¥lag. new fears were added to her sorrow » Io 6 a, tre . | parties rtainments, for Du Pont, famous scientist, predicts Sard, ithe» American sony hed oon The hu ax interrupted when the | f and as a res pectal order ‘ || are » home candy maker, it will hi nthetio- 1664: Why net? We atl a. Mindaael i Bass came home. He was crippled |haye been issued to curb the prac LONDON, Noy. 10.—General if you have never tried, it will tell ady have synthetic gin. USED CARS batet khakl cats ago, when. t i from | tice |B Lu lendorff is liable to be Send for it by clipping off th one's Cf his adopted hor tittle | 1 1 back and| Drive 1 only one headlight rimartinled and expelled fron fully and mailing sail food’ will “some. TODAY — ditties, TAS true (Dreaking both army Atta te detlina a nany because of his part in tatents in the form of small|| 4 on tio ot eX cael | to: here eoutty, protabl od t yello peeding has | {he abortive monarchist revolt in t 6 have enoug phigh Ais : - hen. the hat téa FERR Y I E A hown a decic then tie Bavaria, the Daily Express sa‘d | aOR RET ESRI ET STS rou trying to eat peas? Want Ad _ ona might meet the bat 1 JuEViV ATLA vent of the fo he dange today Paria Candy Editor, Washington B oe became an obsession 7 > TY \of Ading on mad , 1322 New York Ave., Tod Definition: Peas are They had euch other since HELD BINDING [fhasss smootn 1 BERLIN, Noy, 19.—With Ba sahetd ‘ bi 1922 CHEVROLE Po are ; Hider. the Pris ‘ / rs Ghataois under martial law, Gen, ‘ R t and r 5 iS d . & pone gel ree Lundendorff released on fiv ents in loose postage st aera f sal ah a waits D } wn an| Minister Sought nd Adolph Hitler a fusi t at 4 4 i y 7 sit vernment was . ‘ ie Erich r I on Check Charge en” gh lank yeit Noine:. ..<.0s sauatevsoes ae Tp and to the office, where came had is 9 les oth REL DINE Cal (Torn to Last P Column 1) ce m " he 76 D had. be tl R. Kent,. Vv arrived Street and No DA ‘ ; 1 a week in Shasta coun CLOSE BOOZE HOTEL $ : ly mer er eived an offer of ; charge... of) Meioatat s: RANBAB: GOLDY Ne ), k me f m0 : nd The } tel ordered act ner; Ge 1 : he Wont ¢ rah Cal mgt €4 | padiocked a day toda mer, with & group of ; : rompany, tnt left soon, and we: tad } P 0 with a T ral court because of (Print you! name a D. Landon to Al King’s, where we did ; r ro bind rh heck in! ign violatic I wateh = moh jong game, but Lord! I bars J a . ‘ r ‘ t n N 4 1 ean make nothing of It. And so to home. Ert t tfering from ef part und cannot be | Ta : 1 pr y int coun 1 ASS )\ of service t the oz force ‘oken ept mutual consent, id to have lived under ‘ A a ee frontjer and pro- has been unearthed here. have 1, term western to. the of Consent Is Given prince, has returned to Germany, ing to announcement today by the Vazdias news agency. | STOLEN FROM FRONT He crossed the German fron- ter at noon, flus ending his long | OF POLICE STATION he fled at the conclusion of AY TO thieves added insult to world war five years ago. | rned that the German and Dutch} ] new seven-po family into exile, Fried he crown | a charge of plottl el all the] volt in Hungary. It is alleged t of the national % follow the Ba Ula the recent mon. rian ro; ist coup by ment, His pls Nov. 10— lice barracks. POLICEMAN’S AUTO to whieh coun injury — Sature morning ncy stated {t had|] When somebody stole a brand enger Paige auto- governments last week end consent-|]| mobile from the police station. ed to the return of the former crown|| The auto is owned by Patrolman ase at prince to his fatherland Robert Bridg how On the eve of the anniversary of Bridges drove the car to the sew f the armistice which ended the war|| police station Saturday morning mbers of the Hohenzol-|| and parked {t on the street, just” h Wil en, the|| could keep his e: under his window, where he on it. The before the flames could be extin-), © guished. She was taken to the Ee | hospital where it is feared that nee condition {s critical. been arrested on | fie} monarchist re- ny, from the| Fourteen alleged —accomplices| tern part. Oels| Were arrested, including Titus Popu- but is about 200] 14, said to be the editor of an Ameri- miles from Berlin and 3800 from} © newspaper n, a member] tent with merely, beating the Gris assembly, planned to | zlies. upsetting the Hungarian govern- an included ‘placing ma- chine guns in windows of neighbor. to Wilhelm’s Move } ing tiouses and firing upon the po- AMSTERDAM, Friedrich Wilhelm, former crown | FRAT LEE TINY 3 ai BROTHER RESCUES SISTERI ‘Clothing Burned: From Her Body; | Child’s Screams. Bring Help Falling headlong into a fire on a — city garbage dump near her home” Saturday morning, Annie Bailey, 5- year-old daughter of Mich! Bailey, 2025 Tenth ave. 8, was badly burned! about the body before she was res-_ cued by her brother, Charles, aged 7). and another boy, who were playing” nearby. The child was playing about thi dump shortly before noon and had” ventured too close to the fire. She stumbled and fell. into it. Her screams of agony attracted the two” boys, who ran to the spot and dragged her from the fire. The girl’ | clothing was burned from her body) ¥ GRIZZLIES AND Montana's little band of football warriors was to throw Itself de- fiantly at Enoch Bagshaw’s Wash ington team at the University © stadium this afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. The Grizzlies from Missoula, altho light, are fighters, and have promised” to give their heavier rivals a tough afternoon’s session on the stadium Coach Bagshaw, mindful of Call. fornia’s experience last Saturday | against Nevada, a second rate team, ~ is starting his regulars, and makes no bones in saying that his men are going to do their best and not be con Coach Jimmy Stewart of Montana, a former Pittsburg university foot bal) star, declared Saturday morning: that his men were ready to give ev+ erything they had against Washing. ton. He said that he realized Wash- — ington was one of the strongest, if not the strongest, teams on the 7 Coast, but this would only make his men try all the harder. A sweet memory to every Mon- tanan is the decisive victory that the — (Turn to Last Page, Coturin 3) MAN HELD IS REFUSED BAIL - Because of the fact that he jump-= ed ball at Portland some time ago Ray Cook, alias Ray Noonan, was refused the customary bail when he was given a hearing on & | charge of dealing in dope before U. 8. Commissioner H. S. Elliott Frise day. Cook was prepared with @ certified check for $2,500, the usual ball requirement in such cases, but the commissioner placed his at | $5,000. An examination of private ac- count books of Cook showed that 7] the alleged peddler has banked on the average of $100 a day during his recent activities in Seattle. HOME-MADE CANDIES The candy booklet just prepared by our Washington buread : and full directions on how to make 130 different directed to the candy editor at our Washington Washington, D. C. I want « copy of the “Candy Booklet” and inciose herewith and address carefu home. the holiday season, for winter tinte presents to friend From fudges plete in every respect. If you p you to make better candies; you how. e coupon below, filling it out care jureau, The Seattle Star, tamps for same,

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