The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 6, 1920, Page 8

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hristian Science Suit Won by Publishing Board BOSTON, Mass trustees of Publishing Socicty Sault against the Board of Directors Mirectors from Hociety, The Public at tia = At the same More won his suit Ment as a member directors. Pohn Frederick Dodge. Master, found that the dir Ho legal risht to remove Rowlands from the board tees and that the charges Rim were not sufficient tn made in good faith, It was held that the directors had ©) St to discharge Dittmore a even if they had the pow Bons assigned were insufficient 4 made in good faith The suit involved interpretation “Of two deeds of trust made by M Mary Baker Eddy, founder of | Church. The first, made or “tember 1, 1892, gave to four tees, to bo known as the “Christian | era railroads Board of Directors” with powers, the land upon which powers, the : Girl Dislocates Mot! Church was later erect ° | The other, date Janwary ss, Jaw Reading Paper ave to the three tru SAN PRANCISCO, Mareh ¢.—Miss of the Christian Egan walked into the park Society upon certain; emergency hospital with a foolish | and irrevertable trusts|srin yesterday and handed @he fol the promotion of the interests| lowing note to Dr. C. Silverman Christian Science and required I dislocated my jaw while reading . of the net profits to the) the morning paper at breakfast, and of the Mother Church, |! can’t talk | Whe suit was precipitated #in| Dr. Silverman gave her jaw a 1919, when the board of wiggle, and her face is norma) again. | Z Dittmore dissenting, at tempted tq dismiss Rowlands. After | Woting to do this, the board passed : resolution which, after re ; certain charges purported to| ‘dismiss Dittmore. The three true) Immediately brought suit to re the members of thé board of| from interfering with the} 7 tety the action of Dittm and to declare board ileal brought \ of Mareh Christian today Chris ‘The | publishing the Later t de won ° wuit the board reinstatement ain the} gal and # ne with | was made/Name Rail Mento | Confer With Hines NEW YORK, March 6 I Witt Cuyler and the standi ” mittee of the American Association ! Executives late ter the that will Director General Hines s and! working condi mployes. ‘They are Delaware & Hudson Raltimore & 1 Auantic t I 5 ratlw adjustment | A New bureau of n roads formerly of A. W holm, Chicago, Minn x and J Walker bureau of information of Kast ® ing m, today time pitt John V. for re of the by tate 1 “1 ° special | rs had as of Railway ye day named committee confer with to a thos Lamont of trus againat law cuss wal s of rail Rates, Blaser Brown, 1 Ont w W. Higgio bureau No York Cent nformation, Coa y Lind P, Neal, Southeaate Strickland & Northwestern Paul muel Chi the tr AD Bt Omaha. th jot guilty jeral offic THE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, MARCH 6, 1 Pleads Guilty to Robbing ‘Poor Box” vivagcan TB agro rote y TeRoy was senten Judge = Mitchell in the i Heart |W 1 by} Gittiam | entiary March 6~ of the the earth, Ww It may airlonn in fin DAYTON, ¢ be that expl vold, miles above inhed for Maj." Tt The major conactounnens achieving the | world's altitud wd of 36,020 feet when he renewed his vow to ascend 40,000 or 45,0 if he lived. MRS. SCHRO HAVE SOMETHING I Mre will thing to say about it The aviater’s wife has stoutly to wisted that she had no fears for her higband, but as she nurses him back to health after his perilous expert frost-blinded and “drowning” in an atmosphere free from oxyeen Mew. ohroeder is thinking some grave thoughts “My husband's friends in the fly ink game have told me how he de pended on my courage,” said Mrs. Schroeder. “I have always said that 1 never worried; that I have com lplete faith in his judgment and ability “L have } which sometimes affiic flyers, and I wonder whether # thing of the kind is likely to come flyer'n wife, Last summer, Thursday to fifteen years Walla Watla Sacr at was caught in the act in ebureh | Military Po ice Make Opium Raid DES MOINES, Ia, March 6 Military of Camp Dodge, co operating with civil authorities, yor raided a house here and re cocaine and hine val $15,000, which, it was was stolen from the bs Camp Dodge early this rrons were arrested names were withheld t Schroeder have police terday covere ued claimed, hospital Po ence, Two their year but American ‘Aviators Return From Mexico DOUGLAS, Aria, March 6.—Lieu tenants U and Wolfe, the Amer aviators who landed in Mexico ks ago, and held by the Na authorities pending investigation, arrived here yesterday train. Thelr airplane was not re leased, they said. Jury Out All Night, fight, 1 was Decides He’s Guilty | the aay ne mate the altitude reo: After being out afl night, a verdict /ord, I was excited and anxious, but was returned by the jury |it is only since I have been at his Friday morning in the case of Alonso | bedside, thinking, that I have real Hankins, arrested recently by fed-|ixed the risks he runs. re for operating a still in| “My husband is careful not to dis of the federal prohibition |cuss any of the dangers of altitude flying in my presence, but I pick wher fean rd of the yellow streak ® the bravest sever were mart |when he was trying for the trans! atlantic but flight, I was a bit worried, violation jaw. The Long Lane’s Turning | —BY.. Hallie Erminie Rives Copyright, 1917, by Dodd, Mead & Co. a (Continued From Our Last Issue.) | Governor.” said the lawyer, “I bes to present my client, whone cause I} have so poorly represented.” Harry bowed. “My counsel did wonders,” he said, “but the day of miracies is past.” ‘The reply waa simple enough, but the governor unconsciously looked his surprise. Here was a man who had been arrested as a house-breaker jand who, caught in the very act, Rad shot a man down, Yet he found it! suddenly credible, ae Mason had de clared, that the man was no ordinary burglar, was, indeed, a gentleman. But there were gentlemen thieves “You will not consider this an. in |truston, I hope,” he said. “My friend here was anxious that I should see you. He haw been deeply concerned in your case.” | “fe ie a pleasure,” Harry replied simply. “He has been put to con [siderable pains, in which there is | very little credit, I am afraid.” | “His interest,” the governor went lon, “as he haa awured mo, arises from a conviction that there ts some | hidden element in the affair that, if it had been brought out, might have put 4 different face upon it.” Harry did not answer. “You have a good reason, I take }it, for maintaining the silence as to | yourself which my friend here finds so difficult?” “The very best,” said Harry grimly The governor mused a’ moment “You will pardon me, I am sure, if * STARTING SUNDAY SUNDAY, MONDAY AND TUESDAY BILLED HORTON? fhe door was open and “mo clue could be found Startling Mystery With a Notable Cast “Sure Cure” ‘Capital Comedy Ford Weekly | i sid Favorite +S ee Star IN “THE ISLE OF CONQUEST” A Typical Tropical Story of Love and Romance I ask you one other question. you ever been tn prison?” N said Marry “Have you committed crime in the past? rebellion againat the fute that had #0 enmenhed her, Why should Craig ]have ever seen and desired her? Yet, had that been so, her father’s “As the law counts it, no.” name would have been ruined! That, He looked the governor steadily tn | at least, had not befallen. It only the eyes as he #poke, and the other,/she had not written that note to a keen judge of men, felt a strange Harry! Inctination to believe, But there was! So ate reflected, not knowing that nothing that could save Harry pow. |that fateful note itself had been the 7. |key {o unother series of incidents Some miles beyond the akirt of the |which had wrought for her salvation city, on the dusty highway, stood a/ My that note, abe told herself, she vast wall of stone, built four-equare. |had thrust his love from her, Would Fronting the road was a great barred /anything less than the whole truth gate. This opened on a narrow,| bring it back? And, in anyveane, if paved court at one side, whose door) «he did not tell a the whole was marked with the word “War | Would she ever be safe in that love? den | Por Crane could betray her if he re Retore this door the next after-| gained” his faculties, There was that noon Harry Sevier stood with allost night when she had been be sheriff. ‘Well, Warden,” said the| lieved to be at her aunt’s—a dropped sheriff, “I've brought you another|stitch in time's weave which might |boarder. Here's his papers.” junravel the whole! If he recovered, The other examined the documenta {Craig would hold her happiness in “All right,” he sald briefly, and mo-|his graxp as surely as he had once |tloned the new arrival to enter. {held her father’s honor. When Harry emerged be wore) A baleful thought thrust Iteelf into ‘trousers and jacket with horizontal| her mind: If Craig would only die! stripes of black and yellowish gray— _ bee the badge of the convict. And, in the upper office, a trusty, who acted | TOMACH FELT as clerk, was filling in on an indexed jeard the physical measurements | which, with the number he wore on ja leather #trap about hie upper arm, conatituted the formula by which hereafter waa to be known the man amell and taste are all ¥ ‘for good digestion and the njoyment of food, but enjoyment in eating for the that matter may look, taste or | . re od hia foo who had once been Harry Sevior. In the center of the great walled | apace reared a circular structure of wick. His conductor led Harry to a! Sight compartment on the lower tier and hecessar uniocked an iron door, “Thin in| fullest yours, 239," he said. | Harry entered, For a moment he did not nee that another figure, in the laame dingy stripes, aat on the edge |*mell, Indigestion pains, gas and of the narrow bunk aleeplonanens will follow, Indiges The occupant rose slowly and|tion is one of the very common stared hard a¢ the newcomer, Then |4¥mptoms of an anemic or bloodless he uttered a howl! of evil mirth and| condition. Increased quantities of recognition. biood are drawn to the stomach dur. “Smoke of the devil” he shouted.|ing digestion. If the blood is weak “If it ain't the youngster me and|the digestive processes are incom- | Towler had behind the portiary! Ho |plete, and pain, nervousness and a ho! I saw by the papers they'd nab-| bloated, suffocating feeling are in bed you. And th think the geener | vital le. swore it was you that plugged him!| It follows that tf the condition of They didn't get me—not that time!|the blood is improved digestion will I'd be out still if I hadn't tried to|be benefited and the distress will | lift a reticule on a street car. It was |end. Proof of the value of this my record that did it for me then. | treatment is found in the experience Well, we're pals, now, old horse!" of Mrs. John Lee, of No, $10 South Paddy the Prick! Harry sickened | Seventeenth street, Omaha, Neb. At this added twist of fate, “My blood was very weak and 1 eee tried for a long time to find the Echo, meantime, had become so|Tight medicine,” Mra. Lee said, when }frail in health that her father, fear. |*@" at her home recently, “I suf. ing she wan going into a decline, had fered terrible pains in my stomach sent her to Burope in care of a fam.|@fter each meal and my food stayed ily friend, Mrs. Spotiswoode, in my stomach for hours in an undi As the days had gone by and|sested state. Gas formed and I had Harry had not returned, worry over |*Pells of suffocation and it seemed |what she had seen in his office out-|@# though I wouldn't be able to get weighed her fear of being discov | another breath. Sometimes my Jered as the woman who had been in| *tomach felt though it was oi |Craig’s brary the night of the shoot |fire. My nerves were unstrung and ling. For the newspapers had made|I couldn't sleep on account of the |much of the mysterious “woman in distress, In the morning I was little the case” whom Craig had sworn he | better and often just dragged myself jdid not know. Craig himself had| around until forced to lie down, never recovered either memory or| “After several preparations had speech. The woupd in his head had! failed to help mé I heard about Dr resulted in @ partial paralysis, which,| Williams’ Pink Pillé and began the so rumor had it, was incurable treatment. In a few days I was con | Eeho sat, one perfect afternoon,|Vinced that I had found the right lon the terrace of the Hotel Splendid |remedy at last. The stomach distress ice. [became lews severe and I seemed to he past months had been pavked| have more strength. Continued with new sights and sounds, There| treatment resulted had been the ocean passage, ajrecovery. I can leisurely motor trip thru England,|now without suffering. I sleep well shopping and theatre-going in Paris | and no longer ve headaches. jand then a final fortnight on the Ri-|nerves are in fine shape Dr vie From the first day at sea,| Williams’ Pink Pills proved the very | Echo, with all her power, had striven | thing for me and I shall never again to thrust pain and apprehension from|be without them. My eat a good meal too tion and they have helped him.” Your own druggist can supply you |with Dr, Williams’ Pipk Pills or you, heart ached always with its|can order direct froff the Dr. Wil burden. Across the fairest scenes |liams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N the ghosts, uncalled, would thrust|Y., postpaid, on receipt of price, 60 selves, and in her rain a mock-|cents per box. Write for the free ing voice would whisper: booklet, “What to Eat and How to “fven if Harry comes back you! Kat.” can never tell him. For if you told| — him the truth, would he believe you? The letters for which you made that visit, even if you could show them, are ashes now. And even If he be- Heved in the neceasity that drove you to win them from Craig, what might he imagine had been the price? You know what the world would think; he would think the same thing! You were in Craig's house, alone, that | midnight—and you will never dare tell him. Can you say to him: “It was I who Wag,in Cameron Craig's library! I wae the mysterious woman \the police were searching for—t, whorn you loved’ (/)'! / : ‘The aneering voices were whisper- ing in her ear tonight. There welled scenes she had partially succeded But, tho the acute strain and distress ,the piteous terror, had dull Mont entral SAF Conventent Location E DEPOSIT BOXES B41 to $30 Per Year. Title Trust Go. ynd at Cole atalen to and AD sizom, bia eteab ife May Stop Schroeder From New Altitude Flight Have up in her with fresh force the aching | there | Main in my eomplete | My; | husband has | her mind and amid new arld varying|taken the pills on my recommenda-} tup hints here and there, and I know) what may happen next time. IT hate his career, and perhaps bi ‘oan argue me out of my fears, but by the time he i# ready to fly again} he will realize that my are not made of steel wire, even tho his are.” to xpoit \Nenws Raupleyes Now Own Paper’s Stock | SALT LAKE CITY, March 6—In corporation, of an investment com. pany hast perfected by a group of employes of the Télegram, an even’ ing newspaper, and announcement made that employes had purchased & one-fourth Interest in in addition to $12,600 worth of bonds. All stock In the Telegram is now Jowned by men who work on th paper, Fred Goodcell ts president | and Emmett Fuller secretary of the new employes’ investment company | ¥F RAL SERVICES for) | Charles Ceetl Snyder, U-yearold high nchool senior, who died Thursday at Seattle General hospital from influ will be held at the family home, | Ninth ave, W., at 140 p.m Interment will be in Mount cemetery enna | a417 Sunday. | Aw it came to her, she felt her face | |blush, and she shrank, feeling that | a wicked thing had found lodgment| jin her soul; but it came again and | again. A little group of people who had | arrived that morning had li from the dining room and now were seated | about one ef the small tables on the |terrace drinking thelr coffee—two | men, one elderly, one younger, © handsome worhan and a girl They lcontinued the conversation begun in-| |nide—evidently @ discunsion of some lone who had been on the train, All Jat once the Indy touched the speaker | | benide her on the arm. | | “Hush!" she cautioned. “There he Echo saw is, now!” Giancing around, | wheeled chair was being pushed ont |the far end of the terrace, A man sat in it, huddled In a steamer rug. | “In be married?” asked the lady, | after a paune | | “No,” replied the elderty man. | |“The men with him are a nurw and) la mecretary. They may he is very rich.” "Poor fellow she exclaimed. here are they taking him?” | “To Hungary, 1 believe, There's celebrated authority on brain-| in Budapest, It's « for- lorn hope, I imagine.” | “L don’t know,” said the younger |man, lighting a cigaret. “They do | marvelous things nowadays. And.) anyway, if it fails, it can't be any worse for the patient Aa it in, he has no mind at all—no speech, no! memory, nothing! The lady looked toward the! wheeled-chair. “How was the injury caused?” sho asked, interestedly | “He was shot." mid the elderly | man. “Shot by a burglar. 1 remem. ber reading of it in the newspapers lat the mel | Beho started. A little tremor ran) over her, She rose from her seat land walked along the terrace, quite | to the end, where stood the wheeled: | HERS Reduce your doctor ilies by keeping aiweys on bhand— | VICKS | “Your BopveuAnD~ = 30. 80F ja eurgery | Springtime Displays of Distinctive Millinery t The Bon Marche Third Floor So much That is the woman On & bench nearby an attend-jher father. |merang to her! chair. ant was immersed in a newspaper ‘Then she turned and looked at the| you have loved!” pallid, vacuous face above the| His life, with ite multiple ambi steamer rug |tions, ite hopes and striving» Yer—it was Cameron Cra: |love—had been spilled like water into |nand; there remained only the uscless | | vensel, empty and dishonored | | All these months Paddy the Brick | had been his cell-mate. By day in} that rumbled with the During those months Harry's vis ible life had been turning tp an end-|the shop, |lens cycle Of new-gained habit that | cls ruled the huge conglomerate of which |they were he was but a single atom. marched shoulder to breast in the And, as the bitter days dragged by, |loathed lockatep, they sat side by | & jSealous specter smiled its cruel | side at dinner and supper, and the} smile at him. liron bunks on which they slept—| “She! {t aneered. “She for whom |Harry on the upper one—were but a| you risked and suffered so much!|few feet apart, She cared for you—yes, But she; There were times when masry| cares a thousand times more for her|feared he was going insane. Brood: | place in the world’s opinion. Why, |ing over his own condition as well as | she would have married Craig—mar.|the fact that he had failed an inno-| ried him!—rather than face a resur-|cent man caused him to lose sight rected shame from a story affecting | of the probability that his victim was! its | undoubted! crimes before, since. reputation |Of the desperate criminal type and |always had been; that if he had hap | pened to be innecent in the specifie instance when Harry failed him, he had been guilty of minor just as he had: been (Continued in Our Next Issue) 294 SAV EXNUE | wllila oS Ee OAD Prt Brevee on sara ALASKA BLDG, Our Home Member Federal Bank M q CHERRY . SIREE T. din 1947 SSS win N When we moved into our present location fn 1905 we had this much room and our deposits wer $3,433,544.03 Our deposits grew so rapidly that in 1912 we bad to in crease the size of our room to here, Deposits then $9,924,969.85 % In 1917 we were forced to add this additional Deposits then $12,262,330.12 space, YZ And now, with $17,691,490.64 in deposits, our banking room covers nearly all of the first floor of the Alaska Building, as shown by this plan, IZZIE, ee Zi ry, TA ? ‘Braine SODPTEPILBLDTE. i WLUzZqazZZz eZ A FEE LL Ll Ge

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