The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 1, 1924, Page 11

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See Their Lads From Arctic W: Before, Find Ne First City istes, Never ‘‘Outside” w Clothes Trying In the first stiff collars, have ever worn, Andrew and toria Land, in the Arctic, ofxthe city. fae silk shirts and neckties they Jorden Klinenberg, from Vic- set out Friday to see the sights A Star photographer caught them as they were ng the Frye hotel, all set for the big time. —Photo by REPORTER and cameraman from The Star were pressed into duty.as yalets at the Frye hotel, Fri day, when Cap Klinenberg, vir- tual monarch of Victoria tand, and his two growing sons discovered dif ficulties In manipulating silk shirts, triek cuff links, stiff collars and knitted ties. The Kiinenbergs arrived tn Seattle this week. The «: outside” for 16 y drew, 19, nor Jorden, 16, has seen civilization before. Captain Klinen- berg rules over Victoria land, which is considerably larger than the state of Washington, by virtue of being the only white resident. He is here for a pleasure trip and to dispose of & stock of valuable furs. CLOTHING AND “EXTRAS” PUZZLE NORTHERNERS The boys were wrestling with thelr new shirts when the newspapermen arrived. The mysteries attendant upon attaching studs to collar bands, es to collars and collars to shirta o¥ed t60 rauch for them and an appeal for help was sent out. ‘The stiff newness of their clothing | ALMA KATZEN Valedictorian Of ‘the Twenty-ninth Annual Graduating Class 6f Wilson's Modern Business College The graduating exercises will be held in the Masonic Temple, Pine Street and Har- vard Avenue, Friday evening, February 1. Over two hun- @red students will receive their diplomas, Mr. J. ©. Herbsman will deliver the addréss to the class. Mr. Lioyd Spencer will speak, and Mr. W. G. G. Benway will act as the presiding officer. The public ts cordially in- vited. Exercises free. TACOMA BOAT CHANGE Starting Februmry 4, the Tacoma boat will leave Seattle at 10 p. m. dally instead of 9 p. m, New Schedule Effective February 4 Leaves Colman Dock Daily 7,9, 11 A. M. 1, 3. 5,7, 10 P. M. PUGET SOUND NAVIGATION COMPANY COLMAN DOCK MA in-3993 Price & Carter, Star Mtaff Photographers jdidn} make @ great. bit with the boys, but they bore ap bravely as they set out with their father to see the sights. Last night show the “ boys and ‘thelr to thetr first Friday they are visiting other theaters, making shopping tours and seeing the city. Captain Klinenberg Is conferring while here with army and navy offi- cers, giving the mdata concer | his country and conditions in connec | tom with the proposed Arctic flight | this spring. JITS REPLACE CITY CAR LINE | Akron; Fight Fares AKRON, Ohlo, Feb, —1—Jitney| busses replaced streetcars in Akron | today. T. J. Savage, city” buss boss” di- jrected the first fleet of 126 fitneys. Akron's 25-year‘traction line fran- | chise providing a 6-cent fare, expired at midnight. . The railway company [refused to renewed tho agreement, | holding out for anew franchise pro | viding @ 7-cent fare, | ‘This the city declined to accept, and care service stopped just as soon | fig street cars could get back to their| barns after completing their final runs, shortly aftur midnight. Henry Ford, thru his. friendship | |for Harvey Firestone, Akron rubber manufacturer, came to the city’s aid with 60 sedans rushed here from De- | trott. Approximately 1,000 Northern Ohjo| [Traction employes were thrown out [ot work b ythe suspension. | The flet of busven which started | proved inadequate in the firsh rush ‘morning. Hundreds were forced to walk. /MAGNUS TOLD | WASHINGTON, Feb. 1.—Senator |Magnus Johnson is expected to make a public apology today to |Edgar Markham, St. Paul news- | caper correspondent, whom Johnson jattacked in the senate press gallery | yesterday | Johnson will apologize if he ac cepts advice to be given him today lby more experienced senators, In- | cluding members of the senate rules |committes, to whom a protest jagainst his action was made. Aside from the merits of his con- troversy with Markham over the accuracy of a dispatch sent to his paper concerning Johnson, senators jsald Johnson should not have | voleed his abusive criticism in the | press. gallery, but should have sum- | moned Markham to bis office or en- | tered protest In the Congressional | Record against the correspondent's | dispatches. Appeals Dope Term TACOMA, Feb. 1-—Notice of ap- peal has been filed against a four. yeor sentence given by Federal Judge E. E. Cushman to William H. Stubbe, former policeman, Stubbs wan convicted on two nercotic | counts, Dope valued at $5,000 was taken in a°yaid on-his hotel, accord- ing to testimony. QUITE FUR “Oh, constable; I feel so funny, “What's the matter madam? Have you vertigo?” “Oh, constable; about miles. acateibourne Punch, two Ford Comes to Rescue of| | service shortly after the cars stopped | of workers going to their jobs this| TO APOLOGIZE! LOVE LETTERS READ IN COURT Soft Drink King Battles Divorcee’s Contest CREATIN agalnet multiay Cont read tove notes written on ¢ blue and soctety and th » ileal aged most asand wor te fr ed plans for obtaining from Adolphe Rocquet a sked Candler’s whether to pay $12,000 so Rocquet could contest the sult | Other portions of these letters tell of the loneliness in Reno while | extablisht legal residence and asking Candler to advertain whet an uncontested divorce ts recogn! jin Geo: oreta, | chamber Draws New Totals NEIGHBORS OF RL BANDIT | With subscriptions reported yeater i ee | BOUS QUIZZED, AIDS HOLDUP v7) Women on Stand Tell of Valley Banker Relieved of srtising ©°¢) Mercer Island Murder $1,000 by Armed Men a by Bandits again were activo Thursday night. ‘Three automo bile bandits robbed a bank caaly fer of $1,000, 2 bob-haired girl in company with a male bandit held up a young woman, and a man bandit entered a home and robbed s woman of §20, The vow. neatly dressed, as with a young man tt old up Mins B. K ohn st, taking her purse a: caxh, 1 holdup occured at 11th a Thomas st., at 1 a.'m. whild Miss Kellison was on her way home. T. 8, Toy |cashier of t _ abort bank, at Cc uM He pat of $1,000 tra}{ Smith knock In the Thursday afternoon Boos h and then sa ws the tmoney, with $4,000 thru the Miss another ber The Ho thought | had killed Boos.’ » Bhe Smith's from the iss Furness told Orleans fod woman divorce which the a subseq uc w pre. capitalist ng ms, on tourist promoti of ( pouno} mmeree for president, annour nt, Lengthy and cross Adolph | opened the | quest: r ning examination of neighbors B Friday M business | » firms | pledges b meetings for unteered to call ais whose turned 1 but 75 men will cor until the fund is com | ‘Those who made subse: Thursday were w . Hofius Co. on Mercer Island, sension of the murder trial | Bailey, charged with killing Smith at the Boos ranch on | . 1923, Lucy Furness, who gave bh renidence eng t 100 yards * i from the Boos home, told of a con-| at Btillwe Sea: on tawrants, J hwy F%ROC- | versation she had with Bailey when : factariane, Holland |i. met hin n entate, E ho Fuir & pe Nati — ue making lete | May Mins Co. Steel B K And Peirce, red on on the ven hoars afte ) B ow $3 in _ al nal beat EIU ms raid, time veo president and ° Rainier Valley State s robbed armed men Kilbourne & Mact » Alarm Falk & Co., ys Tnion Fufness Smith door,” Supply Co. he lth & Lewis, F, W, Keen, Standard 1 | Pacific Outfitting Co. jous Products Ci Ke age, W, EB. Morford, P before It of the! Jeet Ae fury. | “It was covered with a sheet, but lone ot th neighbors lifted the cov. ering and I saw the body.” ' An attempt by Defense Attorney 14 D, Martin to discredit her test! |mony featured the appearance of Mrs. R. C. Linder on the stand toe: nen eee ied that of Miss “HIGH FINANCE” Oriental Rug Deal Brings > ae eee I ever heard,” Grief to Accused Man ; Kenneth Linder, 12-year-old son of Mra, Lin followed her to the HOUSTON, Tex. Feb, 1—High|stand. Shortly after he had test! |financing by. Mohared Harb, 26,|fied, and Attorney Martin had ended today with his arrest here for|opened cross-examination, 4 recess Loulsville authorities. “When taken|was announced by Judge J. into custody Harb had $25,000 in| Ronald. y cash in his pockets and $35,000 worth} ‘The boy said he had heard shots of Ortentad raga and silks in his pos-/anq acreams at the time of the session. killing, while he was wading tn tho Harb ordered the merchandise on lake. credit from a New York importer, Jaccording to detectivkex, He then | went to Louisville, where it is! «Worthle 3”” Land |charged he obtained @ $16,000 loan |from a bank on goods he had pur- Offered Settlers WASHINGTON, Feb. 1. — Secre- | chased on credit. The goods were or- dered boxed and placed. in storage fede the note was paid. When the| ‘Fy of the Interior Work today or- note came duc and the bank opencd | “ered 46,000 ncres of public Iand da th boxes they were found filled with | 84M Bernardino county, California, thrown open to. homestead entry. * Filing date for the tracts will be | trash. announced later by tho registrar of the land office at Los Angeles. Ex-| he demoer: plan fs made re- An American astronomer. claims | geryic ill be given a 90-day|!f ¢ p Ito have discovered five additional |. Acosta ont sin tages “Y | tronctive, as proposed by Represen- | Preperence |tative Gorner, of Texas. |moons revolving around our earth.|° ‘the land in described as “third und Th! eGeidll todas: ste Os This looks to us like an advertising |gourth rate and generally untit for iv Bed galt dd cortaetatas dBase fekirec dodge on the part of a bootlegger— | treasury estimates on the Garner part of otlesmer— | quitivation o grazing purposes.” ay Feria |Passing Show, London, es proporal were made public. Garner sa moved yesterday to apply his plan MIGHT HELP SOME LITERARY REVENGE to last year's income taxes by the Pending the elimination of grade-|’ An unsuccessful candidate at the | Passage of a resolution crossings, the locorcotive designers! recent general eelction has composed | Comparative tables sent to Gerner might at least replace the aunti-|a poem on his defeat ls of |by Secretary Mellon show the pet ed cow.catcher with some ‘ort | this sort are surc unsporta- | tx reduction under the Garner plan 4 4 of automobile mit—Boston Herald.|manike—Passing Show, London vould be $387; Molen in sal ba of a reads ° Mellon plan, savings to taxpayers under both plans would be on In. comes under $5,000. payers wolud save $142.000,000 un- |der the democratic plan and $66, 000,000 under the Mellon plan. | Father s Murder Case “Goat” RRIDGETON, N. J. Feb. 1— “They had to put somebody in fall for killing my Emma and they de- cided to make me the goat,” Thomp- json Dickson, chareed with murder ing his Jo-year-old daughter last September, sald today as he con- tinued to defy the efforts of de. tectives to force him to confess the crime, Theodore Roberts Is Seriously Il PITTSBURG, Feb. 1.— Theodore Roberts, the actor, has developed pneumonia his physicians announced today, Roberts was taken {II about seven weeks ago while on a vaude- ville trip. His trouble then was kid- ney stones. “He ig holding his own, however,” his doctors announced. naw en body him, auto the other driv the bandit 7 as tal feene rove to. Rainier ave, and . where the robbery took by was blindfolded and his tied behind The robbers escaped, leaving him the T police fafied to locate © men. A. Heney chec the th Mrs home, 12 morning a bedi her. uth Davis was asleep in her Hanford st., early Fri when « bandit en’ om window and took $20 from rhe same man committed a Ang to Mrs. Davis. George Wilcox, Travelers’ hotel. waa robbed at Third ave. and Main at. by two bandits. One of the men jgrabbed him from behind and. held him while the other man took $5 |from Wilcox. GARNER'S TAX PLAN OUTLINE | Democratic “Reduction Will Net $347,000,000 Saving WASHING’ Jers would save ‘ON, Feb. 1.—Taxpay- $347,000,000 on taxes | SPIRITUAL MANIFESTATIONS to be paid this year on 1923 Incomes SPEAKING OF BEAUTIES French. Deputies Support Poincare PARIS, Feb. 1—The chamber of deputies today adopted a measure expressing confidence In the govern: ment in connection with the finan. Mrs. Margaret Lambertus of Glendale, L. I., is shown here with her prize-winning entry at the Waldorf Chow conferred d thru | similar robbery a month ago, accord- | The «mall tax. | VATIC AN i eS S| 1 the degree of cardinal on MELLON HALTS SECURITY SALE Banks’ Plea on Withdrawal of Savings Answered WASHINGTON, Feb. 1.—Western banks forced the treasury depart ment to halt the sale of Its treasury | savings certificates thru postoffices in 17 Western states, it was! learned here today Sale of certificates has been completely suspended at the offices | by order of Postmaster General } Mellon to tes to remove temptation to led to from depositors the withdraw fi ds fi thelr vaults for trunsfer into the certificates | y argued that if the Givections| and other deposits to the t securities could be stopped more money would b fl-| able to ease the acute credit situa-| tion in the West. | Tho Mellon was not that the certificates were factor In the situation w to order thelr sale stopped he states affected are North Da- | kota, South Dakota, Minnesota, ¥ | Missour!, Kans braska, Texas, Arkansas, Colc Wyoming, Utah, New Mexico, Idah Arizona and Montana, SEATTLE AD. IS OUTLINED The first advertisement in the 1924 campaign of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce was approved Thursday afternoon, and will be sent to na- tional magazines in the next few days, The advertisements will tell about Seattle and Western Wasting- ton, and will appear in April num- bers of seven magazines having a jcombined reader audience of 20 mil- | ions. The magazines already chosen are the Saturday Evening Post, World's Work and Review of Reviews; four others are to recetve final confirma- jtion. The magazine campaign will be followed by advertisements in ight metropolitan papers with a combined circulation of elght mil: | lions | ‘The prominent feature of the first | advertisement 1s a photograph of Se- attle taken from Queen Anne, with Mr. Rainier in the background. In | order to get a satisfactory {ilustration 30 different pictures were taken, the one chosen having required an expos- | ure of 16 seconds. BROWN STARTS SPEECH TOUR Ballard residents were prepared Friday to turn out and give Mayor Brown a welcome home reception at | |8 p. m. In Eagles’ hall, 5414 Ballard ave., where he is to open his cam- paign in Northwest Seattle, Tele. |phone inquiries and responses to Mayor Brown's headquarters, 221 |Lyon bullding, indicated that the hall will be filled to’ capacity, The mayor will also speak at Steiner's hall at Interbay: Mayor Brown will make two ad. dresses Saturday night, speaking at 8 p.m. at Carpenters’ hall, West Seattle, and at the Southwest Im- provement club building in Youngs- |town. Monday night the mayor will speak at the Alk! community club houge and at*the Gatewood |hall. From two to three meetings | will be attended by thé mayor each | | night next week. Friday afternoon Mayor Brown | and Police Chief W. B. Severyns addressed a meeting of the Wom- en's Brown-for-Mayor club at the | American Legion club, 509 Third! ave. At the same hall Thursday | night he addressed a large gather: | ing of his precinct workers. convinced | consin, lowa, his back.| | Victoria Gyros to Install New Head The Victoria chapter of Interna- tional Gyro clubs will formally in- stall nowly elected officers Satur day, February 2, with Jesse M. Warren, past president of the Seat- tle club and = governor .for the! Northwest district, presiding as in- | stalling officer. Several Seattle Gyros will accompany Governor | Warren on the trip to the British | Columbia city, More than 800,000,000 envelopes are used annually in the distribu- show, New York city. “Sun Yat Sen” is the Chow's name, if you please, cial program of Premier Poinucare. The vote was 375 to 207, tion of United States government mail, 0. | County |The ret minutes ~ of your time pays for this ‘46° Diamond average worker mykes with ev tick of the watch, B your pay for 15 minutes @ day, you will soon pay for a beautiful Diamond Ring lke t Ring deliver down payment, ve genuine Nl prices Diamond all from $25 hat you can 4 upon. Prices @ par with other stores. Terms to purse inter. rged. Pay a dol- lar down. Bring In the Old—tTa'e Out the New unas Avil // that are on high cls Those who are f enough to poss monds, but have s Dia them in can in green pl the or thout sapphire trimmings, same easy Welsfield of $1 down $l a wee Your old-style wedding ring can be covered with platinum or 18-karat white gold and carved to match your new sige Mall Orders Given Prompt Attention WEISFL.ID & GOLDBERG ream Seattle’s Credit Jewelers 302 Union St. ewocn cane 310 Pike St. AT YOUR SERVICE “If Sam Weisfield Can't Repair Your Watch, Throw It Av (Copyright) ‘City Candidates 3 DOOMED MEN Are Club’s Guests) PD PR PRISON George A. Bundy, J. C. Berens, Mrs, Bertha Barnhart, Elmer F.| LITTLE ROCK, Ark, Feb. 1— Conner, candidates for the three. | Three gunmen and murderers, await- ing electrocution at the state peni- yearterm tn the city council, and|tentiary here, escaped today. They Glen 8. Corkery, W. T. Campbell, | overpowered and kidnaped Warden B, Léeser, A. Flagg, |Hamp Martin, fleeing in hig auto- | mobile, | The warden entered the “death” |cell to talk to the prisoners—Emory Connell, Joe Sullivan and Eulos Sul- livan—when the three attacked him. | They were armed with revolyers a . shotguns, which had been smuggi Dartnall cafeteria, Saturday.noone| tity the prison. ‘They Dubdled the aining 10 councilmante can-| warden Into his own auto “ad made didates will be afforded’ an oppor-| their escape past prison guards. tunity to appear befére the club February 9, while the majoralty! The miscelleanous columns in the ndidates will address the club on| Want ads may have something of aturday, February 16. interest to you. Turn to them now. Pe aa 40¢ | George vhite, candidates for the second- year term, will be the speakers at the weekly meeting of the King Democratic club at the “Dress Weil—Never Miss the Money” {OTHESS CREDy a ¥ iy o Annual Clearance Sale Reduced Prices on Big Value Garments $5.00 sees Overcoats $5.00 2-Pants SUITS |, DOWN — All- wool materials — su- coats in practically ev perior quality Worsteds,} pattern end aigla, made Tweeds, Pencil Stripes,} yp jin all the season’s Herringbones, Set ges and id-l Cashmeres. Finest work- ta ee manship—and real style. $30 to $45 Price— $5.00 Down and $25, $35, $45 Convenient Terms Cash or Charge AND PAY AS YOU Bring $5.00 and Take Your Choice of Any WEAR—A LITTLE AT A TIME {29 AWEEK Or $5.00 a Month Will Keep You Well Dressed at All Times Open a Clothing Account With Us : 1427 FIFTH AVENUE Between Pike and Union Streets

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