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DES GONG OVER FALLS IN BARREL! {Englishman Victim -of Own “Device-in.Attempt to Tide Treacherous Waters July 12. whe e last! + NIAGARA FALLS, N }—The body of Charles 5 | gambled with death here for t ; time yesterd when he went over! Horseshoe falls of Niagura in a bar j Fel, was still. unrecovered early to inch long and two feet seven and the interior cial Which was said ply for eight hours ‘was intended to take up the car Bonic.gas from his lungs. | ‘The barrel was entered thru a | Barrow 4 head, © Which was close phens after |7 © he crawied inside. The barrel was | * MAIL PLANE IS Pa thi Dov weentuahsinmeteeciepedoradneteneecttnae esmaae eth eee ee —— en | HE DIED IN 164-FOOT PLUNGE IN A BARREL | TWO MEN LOST /Steamer Lake Frampton Is | Sunk Off Atlantic City | NEW YORK, July 12—Two mem |bers of the crew of the |#teamer were lont pany announced they wire! ” menage from ors, of the Lake two mem ) oller and a mine mrd the nt the meanage. n0 Lake Frampton, «-eteel -ves Southern Pacific offices here from and that her bow was bent. The Comus was due to dock at 3 six hours after the regularly HOLD 3BOYS =" AS BURGLARS::: ime. FORCED TO LAND ‘Three 1%yearold boys are held tn 4 the city jail accused of looting the Christopherson dairy, 1600 N Morgan Beeler and Adr wero arr beam and registered 4,160 tons | wan valued at $800,000 Forced, by engine trouble, to make landing on the Harbor Island tide ats after hopping off from efferson park Sunday mroning, for first air mail trip from Seattle to/ in an attempt to go over the Ss STCPHENS | Where Stephens met death J.Jof the survivors of the IN COLLISION nad. She The meamge from Captain Mid-| | doe failed to my what had become Lake THE SEATTLE STAR THE BON MARCHE RGAIN BASEMENT Ba An Entire Store Is Being Sold Out at About Wholesale Prices il —The entire outfit of a well-known dry goods merchant in a One-half inches ameter pues Rerer ened | ontain P.M. Middoe. The captain tee! hoops we ae toe |said the Comus struck the Lake ome an et Your It was equipped w lights Frampton in a headon collision! | Share of the Good Things ' |} —The stock consists principally of: ° Men’s Shoes Sweaters Knit Underwear Bathing Suits Men’s Work Clothes ‘The barrel which Steph en route from. New Orleans to . em) as his own or j i ; atesthe attempt was hie own, |7orK Comus was damaged, eo|f| ~~Moved bodily to the Bargain Basement to be sold af about Haesian.cak. It was nix fect lcording to a meesage reaching the {| Wholesale prices. f : day. \ : eel, carrying a ow of 37 men. hans -was a barber=o was und from New Yor 0 Ner - / Lewery He oni Sark only 300 folk ‘ ‘in ‘Coat carryion 146 near-by town ; with the barrel passengers and a crew of 76, —Bought for spot cash at a lowrate on the dollar Inside the barrel were sets of} i Stept ped woul TEAMER MU erie the trecwnde 19 io | RESCUES SURVIVORS Child ‘ B S m ove e falls. oss ee: | . * The Lake Frampto ope Bron oer te ae was Ignition Trouble Delays ‘Caught Looting Cash Regis-|.a1'vy' tne wen inn Brean ren’s Buster Brown Stockings eight hours. ; ; : company for the United States ’ ° fEetreet to ura ight hours, In Yakima Flight ter, Police Say chipping beard. Tt as built. ta Women’s Shoes Boys’ and Girls’ Shoes | 1918, waa 241 feet long, 433 feet) DP air tight and water tight. The door | ¥*kima. I bh I. Ehrlichman | falls in a barrel. Rush and Frampton, but it was assumed that Men 8 s iene it w >: cand y Was compe to postpone the Might atop Ae a when the policenfen say they caught) they were taken aboard the Comus ai til Monday, after working all Sun. hem rifling the cash register at the! The © “ Stephens, ju efore he started | 9" j - ne Comus made @ record fo : : ° Riis tragic ‘plunge said: “Tam not |, *fternoon on his motor. | dairy (is tip trem New Orlsans in one And many other lines of reliable merchandise. | the least bit nervous. I expect to h of mail, received earty| Arront of Alfred Alexander followed | of its earliest trips after being ng from Superintend-| EL at his home, 2143 N. 62d st. on in-| launched at Newport News tn 1899 in Bristol. ‘The barrel dropped over the 164 foot cataract and was smashed on the rocks. “ Stephens was the third person in « 29 years to attempt the stunt. 4 Mrs. Annie Edson Taylor made the fump successfully in a barrel in 1901, | 3 as did Bobby Learh the same year SMUGGELRS KILL * | - \ BAN PEDRO, July 12 —Attempt-| | tng to-halt.an automobile believed to Bhave been driven by smugglers, Al- fonso G. Bernard, United States tm- _ gigration officer, was run down and Killed near Campo yesterday. | With Henry Y. Hackett, also an} ‘Immigration official, Bernard was _ stationed on the San Diego Imperial Yond Hackett and. as the car neared | he also, called to the driver to halt. According to Hackett, the man at the wheel suddenly swerved his machine nd ran into Bernard and then sped Ehrlichman worked all afternoon gn the motor tYakima Monday afternoon, and will make a return flight at an early| FEDERAL AGENT | Warren at the postoffice Third ave. & and was carried to Jefferson After trouble ler why, Pilot Ehrlich n took the alr shortly before noon, | 1 almost immediately be | the | jon trouble which Mechaniclan 5. | nan, turned over to him by the/ W. Miller Alreraft corporation, | 5, formation furnished by the two boys} The first arrested first. Al | When the two policemen stepped tn | India company | behind the boys as they tinkered with] “Lake Frampton rammed the register, Hrown in alleged to have had covered lowered vat station, Life-Termers "Escape Ca- nadian Cells ah river, F wn qu drawn a rev jhim, and B gun, Rush says Oller and fireman missing HARLAND BR. MARIS, 52, sales. Heeler and Brown had filled thetr cigarets when NEW WESTMINSTER, B.C. uly 12.—Efforts have so far been unsuccessful to le the two life Pilot Eh ‘ <h [term prisoners, Vanhorst and Mon damage asm led to reach | timiaro, who escaped from the Do minion penitentiary Saturday night. The two men, reganied ax deaper- ate criminals on both sides of the Ip ternational line, made their escape by scaling a 30-foot wall, after saw ing thru the bars of their cell pockets with gum and arrested, police may Three Injured in Auto Collision Alfred Twedt, 139 26th ave & Mra. Ole Landaas, 1715 25th ave. > and Mins Edith Twedt were ree ave. He is survived by his widow Mra, Hattie Maris; two sons, John 8 an arland R. Maris, jr mother, Mr. and Mra, John M arin, and & winter, Mra. RL. Wood and, all of Seattle, INJURED BY CAR, A fountain pen with an peeding Auto Crushes U.i/ MAN NEEDS JOB || | vannoret wives ote Je when mo [Ten an Auto driven by Tyredt cold: | OM sae avention for health en §. Officer AS A WATCHMAN || zee sort murcerea 0 Jazaneos Soe Sten eines ate [these fisherman on the Gulf of Georgia, and held off a posse for two weeks in the fastnesses of Vancouver island Friedlander and Dr. Center, rabbis in We'll Say They’re Dempsey’s Mother Is Wet in ew Jersey Granted Divorce ||) “The biggest Plece of mockery! garr LAKE CITY, Utah, July 12.| that ever disgraced the legislative) rg tiyrum Dempeey, mother of 25th ave. and EB. Madison at, Sunday morning, Young wan booked by or | HT dor of Lieut. C. G. Carr, head of the} traffic squad. John Stauber, 1021 Siath ave. N. needs a job, Ho-was injured-on-May-tt, he enye, by a street car which ap proached from behind him as he stooped to remove @ plank from the track, Stauber» head was eut and hie skull fractured. He |) was taken to the city hospital and then to hia home, where he drunk when they voted for the measure, and others were comfort ably tngied. ad The Jerseyites number 66, and they are traveling in three private | They are the last ue | nonsupport | Puts Out Fire at. Safety Building Fire tn the public tent. He would like to get @ job as a night watchman or some similar work. If anyone has such a job or knows where one is to be had Stauber’s phone number is Queen Anne 1198 cars. eafety building word received of the jexander in mid by | disaster waa the following measage |from Captain Powers to the West and |wunk by the Comus at 3:30 a, im. man for the Brewington Case Coy died Saturday at his home, 615 Boren his father indi | TheBonMarché More of Those Smart Eton Dresses at $16.95 One of the Most seer Styles Introduced in Many a ear . —Popular because they’re smart and just about the right kind of a dress for Seattle climate—handy and practical—can be worn as a dress or suit. —Made. of nice quality navy serge and tricotine with accordion pleated skirts and bright ribbon sashes. ESTABLISHED 1890 Bighway, stopping all autos in their|| has been confined until yester- || halls of congress,” is the WAY) Jack Dempery, champion heavy: |}! see gearch for Chinese smugglers. day. Judge John J. MeGovern, of New-| weight pugilist, was granted a di-| gat ‘6 A machine swung around a curve| Stauber worked t the ship. || ark, characterizes the Volstead act. | woree from Hyrum Dempeey here VY St high speed. Hackett called forthe | yards for a year and a half and MeGovern, who arrived here Sun: | saturd. Mra, Dempsey said Jack ® ar to halt. The driver turned toward || the injury to his head now pre | day with the New Jersey dele: | had rted her for many years, the officer. A quick jump saved him.|| vents his doing any work that || tion from San Francisco, declared /and she was granted the divorce u en S Oo S=— Bernard was stationed 200 feet be-|| requires stooping to a great ex- || that many of the congressmen wery| from her husband on the ground of ||| é to a Half Less ooo“ or = —, mien SY Pea gugece «5gRn BEYSESS SE Thousands of yards of plain and fancy weaves in 3- to 20-yard lengths. Uon to pase thru Seattle on their! was put out Sunday rw PS i ig tiekin Winaran he Cc lcen, ea ee “Tl take ’em all,” said our silk buyer, as he cleared the cut pieces from every table in one |} | amelied the amoxe and found an awn Terma was a resident of San DI-| Mrs. Levy Buried Beside Husband — ————— | The Throats | Mra. Esther Levy, mother of Bu G siti a Si 1 2 Freak Banquet | gene Levy, proprietor of Levy's Or | (aasoline ©) ale * of Veterans Wednesday Night of the biggest silk concerns in the country. He got them at a mighty low price—so low that we're able to save you from 25 to 50 per cent on good, everyday silks—the kind most of us want. % It was a-sizable purchase—about 10,000 yards all told—and we’ve divided it into three big groups. - «* and will return. home by way of Conada. ing ablaze on the third Moor. | in § . Was buried Sunday | in San Francisco, beside the body of |the arrival of the tanker Drake here | will celebrate le day, July 14 | pheum, who died Wedneaday at her | in Portland Now) seats= reer nggesiseg Airsies, 2 Are Parched home = PORTLAND, Ore, July 12.—With| French consul, acting as toastmaster BIRMINGHAM, Ala, July 12. by which their Birmingham to name the first , wh valry between C fo and Birming ham was s0 close the orators went wild. “Gentlemen,” Mountain dew pared to it cognac is ter; vermouth pales vin rouge and vin blan for chasers.” But today Birmingham dusty as the back of a is dry came just off the desert. | | | Accused of Auto | * Theft, Arrested | Accused of stealing Ro- | Mano’s auto from Ninth nd Gene ave. | Aubrey Lev seas | Bugene Ls home in Se real estate here. her husband, Aaron Levy. Numerous friends and relatives at- | Bitterness for the alleged treachery | tended the ceremony. Mra. Levy had “dud-|been an active worker in philan tle since Seattle attorney, and| She had made her 1889 and heid|h | yesterday, Standard Oil company ser vito stations resumed sale of gaso- line, after being closed for 24 houra While the other companies did not run entirely out of gasoline, their When a woman tugs at a man's ings it's likely to pucker his strings. P compara from Shey Sunty ‘sz [Now—Ain't That a Man for Yuh? —By Grove lo Alabama, and we’ al “—. EAR Sire— a 7 a \ be cone SAY — E IN ANGWER AT WE CAN - NOT exre : wht + Your CREDIT INS AND IF— TD YOURS OF THE at Blanc's cafe, 509 Third eave ALL GET THEIR PAY ‘The census taker entered a large garage in Louisville. |Holdsieck f:om starboard to port Louisines. | “"Bout half of ‘em,” said he | Motor Life. Fe. #50008 PVE OS 19 NOT PAID BY taffetas and colored moire silks. ND with Silks like these going at $2.25 moire and Shantung silks. Cut Pieces of 36-inch Fancy Silks $1.65 Yd. Striking values in Fancy Silks in such a variety that you are sure to find - won, the first “Rainbow divi-|snropy. Sho in survived by three| supply was so low that strict ration-| “How many people are working something you want. Included are fancy Tussahs, fancy moires, self plaid. NT fee Whi, oall'G. Genvecttion. |; esas pn Bessie cern ee Cthepmataie. (ialield ‘Vil. tines poplins, shirting tub silks, fancy printed satin de chine, plain and striped Cut Pieces of 36-inch Plain Silks $1.95 Yd. Plain colored Silks, also some two-toned—but all beauties, and extra good values at $1.95 a yard. Plain satins, plain colored taffetas, two-tone Cut Pieces of 36-in. Plaids and Stripes $2.25 Yd. You will get more for your money than you have had for a leng time a yard. Cut lengths of satins and taffe- tas in plaids and stripes, tub crepes, shirting silks, waisting silks, fancy FABRIC FLOOR (THIRD) - Ser Hepneertee? PEPaeeserTe% 9 MEME EEESeEE ‘4 w ed rs w th ena 7 = | A Clearance o etal Bag Tops Patrolmen W. J. Jones and 3| e ° a Odd Dinnerware wo eae : a a a PRICED FROM 5c TO 95¢ EACH PRICES ASKED . Guest of Consul | Decorated and plain white semi-porcelain Dinnerware A special purchase brought these Bag e F. A. Pezt, deddlioe doona | Te odds and ends of former open-stock patterns and imper- Tops to us, and we pass the savings on to au Peru and first. Peruvian diplomat | fect pieces. In the lot you will find: you—Bag Tops that sell ordinarily at twice see gen | Dinner Plates 10c and 25 SM Diiteed. gilt or alley fink ee wah J) M. Macedo, ¥ GOOD THING Vegetable Dishes, 25c & 50c Oxidized, gilt or silver finish, in a num- b Bie te on. bis way a y Vasey der Ai on Meat Platters, 35c and 95c __ ber of designs, in two lots. They sure are ° Francisco, AND SAW You — Covered Dishes, 50c and 95c dandies. i Sunday Burglar Tea Saucers, 5c each LOT ONE LOT TWO s Breaks a Record Fruit Saucers, 8c each = Bag Tops—Special Bag Tops—Special : 5 i kesal’ whe shattéred on Tea Cups, 10c each 8 £ ops—dpecia : 43 Mice who entered the home of Tea Plates, 10c ‘ : sidewalk. A $250 Victrola an 100 nee SHOPPING BOOTHS— UPPED ; Other records comprised the lot | At these extremely ® NG HS—UPPER MAIN FLOOR Sgyememane: seas | low prices we will be Eee Aah" auabie to make [Ribbon . ; Saturday, at the hom Ja: deliveries. ® alf P Meense, chiet clerk in ace \ FOURTH FLOOR Remnants rice q ment, and his sister, 3 Harper, 7316 54th av d Pa Hundreds 3 Washington. More than 100 persons Ribbons—in png ok inetna hs" tale = healthy children, price. BOOTHS—UPPER MAIN FLOOR