The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 8, 1924, Page 7

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)

TUESDAY, JANUARY COULDN'T BLUFF SORORITY GIRLS Vyravie to Entertain Ensigns, They'll Be Guests Instead En route around the world on a training cruise, 75 French ensigns will arrive in Eitiott bay Wednesday afternoon on the sixstack Freneh erutser Jeanne d’Are, Which will Capt. de Saint Satvy and his 20 officers will be the guests of the Chamber of Commerce at a dinner at Six hundred French sallormen will be welcomed to the city and the ensigns—from present indications will stay aboard and try to make the beat of it, Sorority girls of the University of Washington had planned a reception and dansant for the embryo admin ala, Dut a message from Cuptain de Saint Salvy declared orders do not permit the ensigns to accept the tn. vitation seems that the San Francisco made ft so nr debutantes pleasant recently that most of the ensigna were loath to report back aboard the Jeanne d'Are, the orders iting. layor Edwin J. Brown and @ re ption party including French Con- sul Cy Vacher-Corbiere, Commodore the American Legion, Capt. J. 8. Gtb- wants and W. G. Herron are sched. ulde to board the cruiser on its ar rival and extend a welcome from Se attle, The firtst maidens of the University of Washington now plan to ‘‘take Mohamet to the mountain’* by following the mayor’s party and allowing the 75 restricted ensigns to stage a reception for them on the ship. There will be tree street car rides, free theater tickets and free auto- Mobile tours about the city for the during the one-day stay here. Train Bandit Gets $100 From Dinner CHICAGO, Jan. %~A bandit, ap- Parently unassisted, held up and Tobbed James J. Collins, dining ear conductor on Rock Island train No. 10, of $100 as It was entering the Chicago terminas ast night. The bandit found Collins alone in the dining car, beat him over the head with the butt of a revolver, took the $100 and fired several shots into the ceiling as he swung the station, robber could be from the train nea: No trace of the MR. J. C, HERBSMAN Executive Seoretary Seatile China Club will speak on FOREIGN TRADE ITS POSSIBILITIES AND OPPORTUNITIES at Wilson's Modern Business College Wednesday Evening January 9 at 3 o'clock Mr. Herbsman of the most interest- speakers in is one ing and inspiring Beattie. Mr. Emanuel Kusta commercial attache of the ines, will speak on “The of the Bureau of For Domestic Commerce.” t first-hand informa the great possibilities that this Mr. BR. M. Ratledge director foreign trade M also «peak course Wednesday Evening at 8 o'clock Bank for Savings in Seattle Deposits received on or before January 10th will be credited with interest from January Ist. Capital $400,000 Pine Street at 4th Ave. the Rainier club Wednesday night’) D. M. Wood, U. 8. N. Ralph Hall of) son, EB, J. Friedlander, Maj, Paul Ed.) 00 French sailors and their officers | 1924, Girl's Memory, Lost in _ Smoke Clouds, Returns | Miss Cora Major, of Gig Harbor, Again Discovers Identity After al hours of quiet " ' et sleep hor home while officers of the city in the city hospital, Monday night, | were searching for her : jo, etrt vietim of amnesia, found Mon:| Lying ill in @ local aanitarlum, the lien paler hee Ue child is slowly returning to normalcy {Seater hen * jesday} and last night for tho first time wan Ps adagsod Femembered her {den-| able to recognize reativen. | “I'm glad to get back, ‘or HAME, she sald, is Cora Major, | smiling up at her aunt, The family phystelan was recog Sho is a Atyoarold student in Bta- nized and specialists hoped that today @ium high, at Tacoma, Her parents, Mr. and Mrs, BE. L. Major, live at they would be able to ask the girl some questions which may reveal Gig Harbor. The girl baffed police and phyal-| What happened to her during her clans for several hours Monday even: | /sppearance, The mother, Mrs. Constance Bal ing. Sho was discovered muttering four, singer, x at her bedside, Uninteltigibly and repeating the pames of “Cora,” “Corinne” and MAB m5 OPRAH “Dora.” Miss Normand’s Gun-Chaut- feur Refused Bail LOS ANGELES, Jan. §—Denied bail until Courtland 8. Dines, his ;¥ictim, is out of the hospital, plans for the preliminary hearing of Hor- ace A. Greer, chauffeur for M&bel Norwand, actress, charged with shooting Dines, were held in abey: ance today, Officers would neither release ‘Tho heavy clouds of smoke, she | @Teer on bond nor tell him when his | said, curled up around her, In that | Preliminary hearing would be held. moment something seemed to snap | It depends on Dines’ condition, and in ber head, she said. She lost ron-| nis physicians assert they do not sciousness of everything. All she| . knew was that sho was wandering |*POW Just when he will be able to about the streets, with a splitting | eave the hospital. |pain in her head. Dines {9 recovering steadily, ac | A curious thing happened, she | cording to hospital reports, but serv. said, when she attended a movie, |ice of subpoenas upon either him or showing a Mary Pickford flim. She | Miss Normand has not been permit: Uked the picture. Before the at-/ ted. tack of amnesia she never had seen| Attorney Clarence B. Conlin, rep. ja Pickford film, and had always|resenting Greer, announced that he had a pecuilar aversion to the/will seek to have his client's bail THE SEATT | HONORED 6 0 sald, For hours hospital physicians and Police tried in vain to bring her mem: ory back, but she apparently had | forgotten everything, Shortly after midnight the girl} awoke from a deep, sound slumber, | She brushed her eyes, Then she ex claimed, “Where am I?" When hurses told her she was in the hos pital she sald that she had been vis- ting a sister in Conway, near Ever- ett. She was returning to Tacoma Monday morning. On arriving at Seattle she took her suitcase to the Colman dock, where she checked tt, She was coming back over the bridge at the foot of Marion st. when she saw a train passing underneath, MOKE CLOUDS CAUSE LOSS OF MEMORY David Whitcomb, the choice of the nominating committee of the Chamber of Commerce for president of the body, likely will be elect- ed without opposition. Photo by Bushnell WHITCOMB WILL HEAD CHAMBER! | Nominating Committee to | actress. reduced to at least $2,500. It la now} Make Report Today Miss Major will be returned to/ set at $10,000, ao | Tacoma Tuesday morning. Phy-/ t Miss Normand, unable to The nominating committee the Seattle Chamber of Commerce was} to report to the boerd of trustees Monday the namo of David Whit- comb, of the Arcade Building & Realty Co., as {ts unanimous choice for president to succeed Frank} iw house. After the board !s for | mally advised of the nominating Thomas will Whitcomb siclans say she has completely re-| | covered. "ANOTHER GIRL LOSES MEMORY |° LO8 ANGELES, Jan. 6. mind clearing gradually, today ex! e her bed, following an opera. on for acute appendicitis, is wor-| 1 a to prohibit ex. | bition of her pictures, was admit: | d today by her attorney, Mil Cohen has been in almost ily conference with the actreas, With her| 894 intimated she may make anoth appeal to the theater-going public cted to be able to question |'0 withhold judgment until all the paar ite arold Evelyn Balfour|cta in the New Years shooting regarding whereabouts during |@ffair are known {the 48 hours she was absent from 7 | Victim of Flames ‘CHINA BANDITS | .Sexed.by Mailman’ KIDNAP WOMAN ing in Mames, Arthur eider, 24, | |No Further Word of Ameri 2 choice Be physicians | © and th 37 new tr |@ copy of which will be maile jeach member of the chamber. balloting is then done in secret As Mr. Whitcomb has no oppost-| hin is and hing but the formalities of the iawn remains to be attended to. An impression has gone out that! an entire new board of trustees has been selected, while as a ‘matter of | fact but 37 are to be named, the fol. |lowing 15 remaining as holdovers e of two vice ‘untees on the offic The| election conceded by: ran down a Denver street yester- | day, yelling frantically for help. | Ed Matthews, negro mail carrier jand amateur football and baseball player, made a flying tackle for the | human threw him to the/ : . aah , | Judge Thornas Burke, Judge &. J,! cans in Besieged City street, tore is clothing off apd/ coaiwick, Josiah Coiling, Judgs| “ pr hog - George Donworth, F. A. Ernat, D. E. PEKIN, Jan. §—3Maj. John Ma-| Schneier casent fire nen tur-| prederick, Joshua Green, T. J. Harde. | gruder and Capt, Woodrow Wood-|pair shop exploded, covering him |™&® R. J. Kinnear, J. D. Lowman, | lpridge proceeded today to the Ho-|with the burning Mquid. He ts in| # er: at gcc poe | e o- | the hospita: cal | : ‘ : ° wan province, to seek the wher | Seoattion hospital, in a critical) 8. Boyna, Frank Water-| abouts of Juline Kilen, woman cai : lo Hemphill, W. J. Muc-| tive of the Chinese bandits, who h Jonald and A. G. Taft. completely disappeared. i ° : | When last sen, Mrs. kien was! Chicago Union War! mounted on a white horse, towering] CHICA Jan. &—Fearing fur-| high above the squat figuros of the | ther tm Chicago's labor bandita, who swarmed about her on ch last night resulted in one county : Ii . . I |PoliceonGuardin | A HERE’S MORE ABCUT COP FIRED STARTS ON PAGE 1 war, w foot ag they led her steed away over | death and the wounding of two, po | the | The woman was captured when the bandits raided a mission and shot several foreigners, tmpris Hee mobili meeting ized today to guard union laces, | John Gilmore |*"Lat me have the moonshine, too," | | | was shot to death ural Iron Workers’ he said, “the others'd yell like nd John rs eriously | . s been heard | int John Dunne was seriously | ste y only got $20 and let you ven h wounded in a gun battle just outaide| i.” ene moon" y of Batang.|the doors of the Bridge and Btruc-|""e> ‘i hare for.) “There won't be any party for union while a |eigners, including 10 Americans, are| meeting was in progress. Both were |™°_2°¥:" s 7 yas “you've got |reported surrounded by brigands. said to have been leaders in one| VCrytNing 7 had e | |_ News travels ato from th) faction in the organization SAYS COP TOLD HER | | Szechuan provinces, | nications are carried b; where commu. |TO GET HIM Liquor | Hubn, sho sald, insisted that she} y junks down *f9 Mrs. Cassutt was not held |the river | Wife 8 Dream of |pay him $10 on the 19th of every] When their automobile crashed ——_—_—— | rue | month, and in addition, wanted her|into a pole Monday afternoon, Mr.| Ross to Talk on | Death Comes T - Cl to furnish liquor hit She/and Mrs. H. E. Waltridge, 19 W. | P a, IAN ae hap abt, F 3-\told him she would have to buy|Thomas st, were thrown againnt the | Skagit at School » ab MLA Whe tenes | | windshield. ‘They were badly cut and 1 D 1 ; he nlte oetated ttt | “I don't care, but get st for me,"| bruised by the broken glass | supertnt ‘ cr a lie at cathe for eat naid he replied ©. 8. Btice, 319 29th ave., drove his trated talk on the Pacer d | loft him at Fremont and re-|car into a lamp post, wrecking the project before the f pear Fung Tahlen. Several) turned to her home. Huhn had alcar and injuring himself about the { vement club, § p. i) card, with the inacription,| nead and body | the Webster school i Sidee) had notiaias oe J, Muhn, federal prohibition) “Mrs, Elleabeth_ Parker, 7618 improvements for ith said oie had dreamed! on and — showed ©} Aurora ave, was knocked down on | park and the ¢ night that her husband was ire neld. Het: ear-old|the Fremont bridge by an automo:| course will follow wit killed fighting off a horde of|@ushter was @ witness to the af-/nie driven by J. P. Linstead, 6017 clo delegations partictpat at fair, and corroborated her mother’alo7y, aye, N. E. She was badly fiestas _ - | to Chlet Severyns. | betlesd. Huhn was accused of extortion) wn. Ww. Marston, 1053’ E. Thomas | iG ee eee eee ned hia | tt, collided with another machine. ; AND proved, so Soverynn ordered hi eS mip i Tonight 477 Week | transferred to Georgetown precinet.|¥° ™ sorte Heid FORTUNE GALLO’S | The office has Mayor He other ears. two r for two for | Brown's dr SAN CARLO OPERA COMPANY |was also driver H jforce January He was THE FOLLOWING OPERAS suspended twi glect of duty Tonight—AIDA_ ; Jand was dismissed once. for drink Spenees Cre DS UAM- —_—, Jing in a house of disrepute. Hel esday —MADAME BUT fond | retired twice for physical disabil-| if ity, returning cach time: | Evening) CAVALLERIA & CL JENTIFIES HUHN / |MAN WHO GOT MONEY Mra, Rus: ed Hu night as the man who sho aken the money from her. Ht Is the Club Your Rival? And does he “rave” FAUST -MARTHA (Mat- TROVATOR A fOr thelr violation | running booze in from Canada. 4 |! which Carmen Up-or Down--to Date, as H. Brew Sees It Critie Homer Puts Opera Into Plain Speech So All May Understand 6 who wit- i night of | CARMEN (downing a dipper moonshine) of Don getta fresh weeth were unable to lines of the | ™®, youbigatift! noted opera, omer G. Trew, famous DON JO8E—Buhikon! mustenl eritie und veterinary wure sa mimplified version (Enter Escamillo, the bull-fighter.) ESCAMILLO—Ha! You hara da beega bum. The first scene shows a public him with his chili con carne. They square in Seville, are separated.) | A Spanish totem CARMEN (shoepishly)—He mada pole looms con- me whata I am today; [ hope heesa wpicuously in the satecstiod! ACT Iv. (This is the famous bull-fight scene. As the curtain rises, several Fil- ets Mignons are browsing on the foreground, Enter & group of peas. ant girls singing, “Oh wer're @ couple of Bowery Girls, Oeetano Tomm: ae 4 ed : a Don Jose sward outside the a : arena, tended by Girls." Now go on with the story. | Nats Douche who {8 playing DON JOBE (a prohibition official in the Pyrenees):—Justa leetle a kees, a leetio a nmile.... CARMEN (a hot baby)—Ma dada’s gone away, an’ I don'ta know where. an‘ I don'ta know whenh,... (She throws a bright-colored Gor- gonzola over her shoulder and looks at him coyly.) DON JOSE: Keasa da pappa! CARMEN; (con molten passton{) You gotta sea da mama everya night, or you can’ta see mama a-tall! ACT Il. ESCAMILLO ( bull-fighter)—I killa da bull; I thrown da bull... CARMEN—My hero! ESCAMILLO—Gooda-bye. you at church. (Exit) (Enters Don Jose. Carmen tempta| him to join her gang, which is busy| At} this moment, three of Matt Star-| wich's deputies dash in. Carmen and) Don Jose escape to the mountains, where they immediately begin work on a 600-gallon still. her in the back.) ACT II, CARMEN (dying)—Datsa da curse DON JOSE—Kuttit, chocolate drop! hof an a Zaint saraaparilia! ‘ —I willa killa da bull! CARMEN (coyly}—Come, come, I lova you on-hely, come, hero, mine! (Escamiilo enters the are after punching the time-clock at the door.) DON JOBE (entering quietly, seizes Carmen)—I'ma your sheik! I'ma your sheik! CARMEN—Hey, watsa mat? You trya to maka da jack-hans houta me? DON JOBE (passionately)—Sweeta oll-can, I loave you! CARMEN —Gttta way from me, Halitosis! DON JOBE (plaintively)—I got da blues, 1 got da great, big, wide-eyed Halitosis bloo-hoo-hoos! CARMEN—You got da blues, blues, Halitosis bloo-hoe-hoos. DON JOSE (enraged)—I k: (He draws a hot tamale an I seen ‘TEN HURT HERE MEXICO REBELS AS AUTOS SKID LOSE OIL TOWN Three Firemen Injured en, De La Huerta Forces Move Route to Blaze Out of Tuxpam Port caused accidents! BY FREDERICK G. NEUMEIER injured, |(United Press Staff Correspondent) MEXICO CITY, Jan. 8—Tuxpan, important ofl port in the state of pate aaa 2 pas Vera Crus, was evacuated Monday hospital, when a fire department |"Y Tebel troops of Adolfo De La | Huerta, according to government ad- vices, Slippery streets 10 people were two Monday evening. The most spectacular crash o¢-} Providence | hose truck, dashing to a fire, swery- ed to ayold @ small automobile and crashed into a tree. Driver Alex F,| Federal troops are advancing to oc Anderson recelyed serious injuries | cupy the city. There was no confilct to the back, legs and arms. Pipe| Government reports said masy man Albert B, Colburn wan badly | rebels deserted, so that the number oe oe og Syained and body, | remaining was insufficinent to hold a peman e | Ms |Tuxpam. Many rebel desertions in severely cut about the legs. ro All three of the firemen were |‘ #tate of Morelos also are reported hurled to the pavement when the big 9, s. : What’s in the Air fire truck crashed Into the tree. y were taken inside the hospital ‘TUESDAY, JANUARY 8 KFHR—1:30 to 3 p. m.; 7:30 to for treatment While mixing mortar in the street at Boston st. and Federal ave., Rob- 8:30 p. m. KFJC—2:20 p. m.; 4 to 4:20 p. m.; 7 to 7:30 p. m.; 8:80 p. 9 ert Vereide, 42, of 415 Fifth ave., was) struck by a car driven by George P. True, 417 82nd ave, Verelde was ee m.; taken to St. Luke’s hospital, with 3 internal injuries and possible con ate rete m. cussion of the brain. nae : a to 30 p. m. 3Y- >. m JEWELER’S WIFE | ; HITS WOMAN Mra. Thomas J. Caasutt, wife of Thomas J, Cassutt, Seattle jeweler, was summoned to the police station Monday night, three hours after she had hit an unide! ified woman at Terry ave, and Pike st. Mrs. Cassutt did not stop her car after the accl- dent, but eald that she did not know sho had hit the woman, police said. The victim accident disap- peared and had not reported Tuesday COME I of Despondent Tacoman Slays Self With Gun TACOMA, Jan. 8.-~A letter in the A hands of the Pierce county coroner today explains t icide of Calvert Richardson, 66. Richardson was/ found dead in his home, with a re. volver in his hand. The note said he had been ii 1 despaired of recov:| - ery. He was divorced recently HERE’S MORE ABOUT | (on Jowe, enraged, tries to stab) “Hot Lips” on his Spanish catarrh.)| ESCAMILLO (drawing his ukase) FREDERICK & NELSON | PRICED TO | by Police Chief Severyns. The chief | avers the popular officer wasn't quite | particular enough about appearing Sandell was, | for duty on time, | motorists day, absent | 4 from his post at Second and Pike.| Westminster hall is 240 feet long He has been suspended for five days | by 67 feet wide. FREDERICK & NELSON Officer Sandell Is Taktng a Layoff | Traffic Officer A noticed [ | | | | | TAFFETA Is Featured in the Displays of New Hats at $7.50 oe in changeable, plain and faille weaves dominates this showing of smart new Hats at $7.50. And the influence of a new mode is noted in upturned and roll brims. that support a variety of new crowns. Some attractive styles have straw facings. Among the trimming effects are feather flowers, ostrich, cloth flowers, fancy pins, flower garlands and brilliant motifs. Navy blue, gray, changeable effects and the still- favored brown tones. At $7.50. —DOWNSTAIRS STORE New Dress Fabrics 44-inch Wool Serge At $1.50 Yard CARLET, cardinal red, brown, Navy blue and black Wool Serge in a quality appropriate for dresses and skirts. At $1.50. 44-INCH WOOL FRENCH SERGE in gray, old rose, cardinal red, brown, Navy blue $1 65 . e | and black. Yard... 50-INCH WOOL STORM SERGE in brown, Navy Yard 54-INCH WOOL FRENCH SERGE in gray, brown and Navy blue. ie $2.50 Yard 40-INCH SATIN CHARMEUSE-in soft, lustrous fin- ish. In ivory-white, pink, peach, old rose, beige, silver, jade, henna, Sorrento and Navy blue, brown and black. is $2 50 Yard». 3:4 —DOWNSTAIRS STORE | PLETE HOMEFURNISHERS NTERIOR DECORATORS Featured Offering of SIZE WILTON RUGS AFFORD | UNUSUAL SAVINGS Carlo Peront, Chiet Conductor }was in a group of atx men. The at al Matinees about the salad dres Jother three men whom Mra, Russell | SINCLAIR | WEDNESDAY—SATURDAY ing the club chef clares were with the policeman are STARTS ON PAGE 1 | unk n. They were not in the auto PRR ANNO TTS makes? Just serve when the money changed hands, as ALL NEXT WEEK they were following in another ‘Thomas Fisk, was averted by BEG NNING GOLD MEDAL chine, according to the woman's | friends in a lobby of a local hotel. weeray SUNDAY, JAN. 13 statement O'Phelan is alleged to have passed HESE Rugs re , . aise - romarks to the effect that “Fisk i Pe AUGUSTUS PITOU, INC Mayonnaise Li Li is feathering his nest th this case our new-seasor - ji Iquor License Fisk is counsel for tho defense. the best-known mi } The Perfect Salad Dressing | Laws Are Upheld Fisk resented the remark, declar-: e i ; : WASHINGTON. Jan. &oThe au.[in& it untrue, O'Phelan then de Four sizes are inv on Ambrosia Salad tonight, wa Seen ‘ ! ; ia Mw lolared he'd “shoot anyone who do, , preme court has held that the 18th |°#! : t . ~ and hear him say: his ainesdment and the Volatead act|called hima liar.” dared | ESUVENATIO: Beats the Club all hollow.” | aia not render state or local lquor |t9 cay out hie threat. | Fries 4-6x7-6: nin AmbrosiaSalad: Mixcubes | veiling ticenue lawn inoperative, and {intervened and the two men were | of £ Sunkist O: bi It ony cou! onvicted taken apart 6x9: twely of Sunkist Oranges, bana- hat persons could be convicted i OF AUNT MARY nas (thinly sliced), halved | violation of ticense tnws A minutes Inter Olan MAIL ORDERS NOW white grapes with GOLD | ee eet telinatt for falling ta {auestioned the interest that state|{{ 9: PRICES— MEDAL: MAYONNAISE. | Ponnt sy nte to geil facat in| Senator W. W. Conner hes In. the 9x12: nine Nighis—0e to $2 fie ee pemereeey wks | Allegheny county, Maryland Sinclair case. Ci told O'Phelan | Bargain Wed hesh grated cocoanut. Serve Molinari's defense was that the|that he was a friend of ult | TY in crisp lettuce leaves, |national prohibition act made localjand that any remarks cc be | le ned to and li. | settle 1 an appropriate way THE BEST FOODS, Ine. | conse or trade inet and| The two were separated by a Ath Ave. at 23rd St., New York City therefore he could not be punished! quaintances and t matter was! Jropped. 8-3x10-6: fourteen Worsted Wilton Rugs, reduced to $11§ present patterns that will not be included in 1 lines. They are the product of several of lis. All are of first-grade worsted quality. volved, as follows: e Worsted Wilton Rugs, reduced to $46.50. e Worsted Wilton Rugs, reduced to $79.00. 50. Worsted Wilton Rugs, reduced to $1 (Third Floor)

Other pages from this issue: