Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
I we ___ THE SEATTLE STAR FATHER Of \@xvcapy wanr THis Huppy?|"“BOB” FARLEY Mike’ ‘400 MASSACRED/HUH! SKELETON TWO MEN SLAIN FATHER OF (xy Lav wane Tes HUBBY? Mikes dea, py" URD FORGE FOR MUSEUM?) ON REST Tm IS RELEASED, SEVEN Wil inBackRow 'Women and Children Are Bones of Indian Relic; Not’ Found Dead in Cottages Burned in Church | Murder Mystery Proprietor of White Horse! Tavern Exonerated | BY JACK CARBERRY, Weapon aE MATAMORES, Mexico, | — | Robert C, Parley, proprietor of the | 31--"Mor Bale-—1,100 Me PARIS, Aug. 31--After shooting | Bones of an Indian found in a sha) SANTA CRUZ, Cal., Aug, PS rtpengad ate : forma, tel eipped. the men in a party of 400 Armenians. | iow grave, covered with bark, in| lice were mystified today oygg. ‘quiet little White Horse tavern, farmn, uly equip os Wenls od hates Sestead women y Write or wire Mike Doyle, care of | peyond the county line on the North N é wi rh 4% 4 | Went Beattie, disclosing what was at murders of Theodore Bchmnide, —— | greak Vastives, and bia waiter, | ML uuckhora Bar, Matamormy |e one grog piomysh od tg first believed a murder mystery, wil /Newinan, and George 0 Wife Plans. to Raise Money, | Jem O'Connell, arrested Monday In|] atike Doyle, mloonman here, is || #tantinople maid today, |keum, Dr. Willis 11. Corson, chilet |S” Tlie ranch. Bodien f D; ‘ Mi i i | | econnection with the shooting of || seriously considering running ads |) e deputy coroner, said today | were found in « cottage or Daughter’s Musical James H Bergstedt, are officially |} lke that in American papers. | | Women in Hawaii | ‘The skeleton, remarkably well pre. | Johnson, near Garfield park, i Not that ike rs ne | ow . oO} . Education tree men ‘Tuesday ranches, but that he believes he || Rush to Register tian) yearn oe ee ee ee touna, * “Mention a ‘< Re | | Both Parley and O'Connell were | will have them, noon. | HONOLULU, T. H.,Aug. 39. ‘eo! Seacempettelaciniemneiiiliiikiie ro eh See es. Gothen | | returned their bail money by the de'] Doyle in forming ® syndicate NOLULU, T, H., ; F | » woven children, wants to vl! her hus fective department when it waal] here to buy up the farme given layed)—Hundrede of women entran: 1Q-Year-Old Girl |He Sees K i “ |. & young and nome relative 3 } Panchs Vill lati in © ‘ y the national woman's su * be of Hetty Green, hy lottery {i j shown that Marley did the shooting ior ies ain. Gee te teate Hurt in Bakery! AS Paper ¢ Py How would unmarried in self defense. |] Under the “unconditional sur || tration booths today to register for| Caroline Protexter, 10, jost the tipa| Ketchikan fe going to tt women of Seattic and the Bergstedt in maid to have grown || render” terms made by Villa to || the coming territorial election. It! of the first two fingers of her right|center of a flourishing paper chance of winning him | angry when his unweldome atten. | President Adolfo de la Hurta, || Was estimated 10,000 women in the| hand in a dough-mixing machine in| industry, according to Edi tl may, Derk chance ? | Hons towards a girl at the roadhoune || each of bin men recetves a farm, || lands had been enfranchised by the| the Occidental bakery. She is the| Morrissey, publisher of the 7 ‘This unusual “Atatdmeee aad tn were spurned, and he drew @ knife,|| fully equipped, together with a || “mendment, They cannot vote for|daughter of Mrs. C. C, Protexter,| kan Chronicle, who is at the te ity reached “The Star today from | threatening to cut all within cut-|| year’s pay in advance, Villa him: 2015 Bighth ave. be ockland, Plymouth county, Mas, | ting distance, Farley's bullet struck | seif, in addition to his farm, gets a « 20 Salles Erees Boston, “the home of |the knife and knocked it from his|| 52,000,000 in gold for bis sur n the Russell family, | hand. The bullet was deflected and || render. v NEEDS $100,000 FOR | passed thru the fleshy part of his “Show me a Mexican with a DEBTS AND SCHOOLING | thigh, || year's pay in his pocket, and a o Tm a letter Mrs. Russell frankly City hospital physicians probed for | farm, who will be contented to & states that she needs about $100,600 the bullet Monday afternoon. Ne | way on that farm and I'll show to pay their debte and educate their charges have been placed against!| you a miracle,” mays Doyle, n pa a children, One daughter, Lillian, she Bergstedt as yet. Disorderly person “Why, & man with $50, a Stet writes, has a wonderful voice. charges were placed against J son hat and a pair of duck pants s “I wish to educate her in music,” Campbell and T. P, Sample, hia com: |] can take over the best piece of h the mother says in her note, “whic “a | a . Ny | Panions, |] land in the state of Coahuila,” he is impossible on my husband's in 7 : — says, “Furthermore,” he adds, School Again a come.” “ | n> || “I'm the boy that's going to Her letter continues: ¥ z do it.” nn pe ; s | oe Tam quite sure there are wealthy 7 KILLED DURING Doyt has already = received yi women whe would he. gad to bey LiF ‘ + pidentene fraut 04 ‘Vila teen cans resse p In a man of Mr. BaenK's he, cuties , : @ ROW iN RESORT they will sell him thelr farms, he as he has the personality and appea: be ance of the most dignified gentle nays © man, 5 feet 10 inches in height: n arc e 0 es weight, 170 pounds, light ue | " wen aunt, fine fost Chicago Clerk Is Slain: by! A Cow, Too May q And Just the type of man that ap | Wyoming Man ’ (J ‘or the boys know where the clothes peale to & woman, a blue blooded e : » American and a distant relative of oy te Get Bit Rough can be purchased that can be played in § the late Hetty Green. CHICAGO, Aug. 21.—A roadhoune i . b ee nn ean eet Se ¥ é without showing the rough usage. ‘ OF SMALL MEANS CHANCE b | shooting of Past Brows, 38, Chi Once in While And mothers know that at the Bon ‘ tery, or raffle, | eaxo clerk, Stack, weal 7 ai 1 dee sive on oon of smatt real estate man of Lander, Wyo. De) geattie firemen have Jong had a| Marche they get better clothes for their ‘ means an equal chance with her tectives working on the mysterious) reoutation for magnaminty of heart|{| MmOney—clothes that will last and look shooting of Howard B. 3 | : t 3 cr gue Brera am gel Niles, Ill. yesterday, heard the ahots| "hen it came to rescuing dumb ant-|f Well under the wear given by the aver- ¢ limes oc tow Sek, Boon, Pier in Kelly's bungalow inn and rushed| mals from places of discomfort and) i) age active rough and tumble schoolboy. “t bergh and Chicago, who are forever she “| quickly enough to seize most of | embarrassment. : pn ren oe MeO Cart Russell, Mrs. Lillian Russell and one of their| the party. And so Lieut. C. Noble Urch, truck 9 “t part with him for no other) children, : = company No, 7, in company with a Bo Sch | Ca ; A ‘ ‘ ty ae T desire and T feel that 1 am ———|Cabinet Man at | number of his command, essayed the ozen ys Core) ps ¢ doing an injury to keep him drudg- Reclamation Meet? |'* ° **ipmate to & placid mitch ing and not be able to live properly ot | OOW mired in the muck near Tenth ¢ he is adapted for. He Jobn Barton Payne, secretary of a ; een Manet copies tar f . the interior, and Director Arthur P. @¥¢. & &nd Massachusetts st, Mon- 4 a ae oven ¢ Davis or Engineer F. 2. Weymouth, | 447 : Alle o Uni en ree! a “Hie ms willing to £0 on lottery for Read How It Mended ::: United Sates reciamation |, A rope wee fastened to the crite HH ey aa medium and heavy weight materials in brown, gray, green, wervice, are expected here a parte, wi jenan' 4 jue ani in. . | gee heneratgedigierretge dhe sap og ber 16 and 17 to attend the Western | Mented the operation by twisting the These caps are mad: NS ewe 5 be confined to the white race in nor- ee Give te, Uae atin etter Gee ps are le from our short ends of men’s suitings and overcoatings. « on ce SNE mes eens 96 the ? Prantiin TrOller, national. eam:| Success, witif the exception of a few That explains the low price. ~- meenweessZItS OCNLOO LL AT OTL ratniee et ine’ Amerscan Lanion: has |Priet Moments that Lzeut Uren neg |] They are made with unbreakable visor. Sizes 6% to 714, 4 named Frank R. Jeffroy, department | feted to let go his hold on the cow's The Beanie Cap is here, too, in all the sch 4 ¢ @ wonderful man. 1 was thinking of * , in ie 00! made of tall, P trying Paris, France, but America| COVELO, Cal, Aug. 31—When | the last moment, had to be retrieved | commander for Washington, to be PO Aaa blecked felt, seamed and taped, to hold its shape—75c; with leather at a first is my motto. Miss Violet Beck, schoo! teacher in| from the old swimmin’ hole seven| his representative at the congress.| Ureh dove pg and visor—$1.00. ‘ a t “Providing you ean handle the| this isolated mountain hamlet, found| miles away to which he had fled as| The Chamber cf Commerce has ab| thru the mud He was sluiced off at 2 ‘ , 4 above proposition you may send a|that the “three aches” were inter-|to « friend in need. ready received word that 276 dele | »*#dquartera Or maybe he likes a Hat—Boys’ Cloth Hats in rah rah style or Fedora, in i representative and Mr. Russell and| fering seriously with acquirement of/21 CHILDREN gates from various parts of the Weat ° that turn up or down, in good-loo mixtures in gray, brown, green. t myself, will, make out necessary | the “three Ra” among her charges,| ARE OPERATED ON will attend, Nearly 2,000 are ex-| Marjory Took a Sizes 6% to 7%. Priced from $2.00 to $4.00. ! ‘ ' papers at once. Hoping you will not | she didn’t say, “I'm paid to teach"! 1 seis Jom marching bravetyto the | Pt Brodie; She Los ‘ , ‘ or take this letter as a|*Md let it go at that. table. to nave 5 t , ‘ ‘await an early reply.” She had a notion that © tencher! ~s04s tor a few minutes Marjory Wells, 808 Fourth ave. e : a weil an the moral and wnental| acters hands from heck, pans ianh Wr pase bs fen Raver orauro j cal as well as the moral and mental | (tors Hands fr night, and her puree ie $600 lighter Vv s a : 4 | welfare of her pupils. taother’ anid, “thd Tuesday morning. Dry equad officers : me ARRANGES CLINIC FOR harm come to got @ bottle of whisky and four bot. t ALL HER YOUNGSTERS ‘And a0 it went all day, 2 ties of beer, while Marjory got a or ea Ss mn arran to go to -—— ————_—. H /AL clinic for the wholesale overhauling | of more secinur ime M le Skids There is nothing quite so good to lookat and at the same time so well worth the ‘ is a and physical repair of Covelo’s| hours the elders gained «nee nan . otorcyc e , money when it comes to standing wear, as a Corduroy Suit. 1 To.Be in Command Till Gen.) sounerierr—s step which bas sped ception of what it and Injures Rider Coats made with plain back and front, all ‘round belt, breast and slash : 1 eee ee ene ie hogan wit | haalthy and learned the fundamental | Jack Lane, 40, is in the city The knickers are full lined, with taped seams, belt loops and button at the knees. ‘ Muir Arrives So Pan na sacle ts" Wika con Seren. while many of the|for luxuries ot sieeet advertising| hospital Tueaday with a broken right Sizes 7 to 16. ’ el od ight otherwise ness light! & leg, suffered when his metoreycie ; SAPS ee oe meal te secx’ task was to| Rue have been attended to, were| ‘The order was a result of the|siidded at the intersection of Occ). Suits in all-wool materials, with extra knickers, are priced at $15.00 and $20.00. § Officer of the recruiting dis- the te i eae fesratied of Mending and strengthened. power shortage in Northern Califor-| dental ave. and Washington #t., Mon- BOYS’ CLOTHING SHOP—UPPER MAIN FLOOR i army gain agerveny = tan tene om Some of the cases were free, some | nia, due to a lack of water for bydro-| day night. Lane js a brakeman on = " en 2. i trict of Beattie a “4 oe pes ae tsa Ds <a tee wd electric planta, San Franciso in the Northern Pacific, and lives at si epee: camp at present and until the ar rival of Maj. Gen. John L. Muir, now in command “of the Fort Leaven- worth service schools, he will be in command of the entire Fourth divis- fon. He is a veteran of numerous campaigns and served as regimental and later brigade commander in the ’ fighting along the Aisne and the Marne during the World War. He took part in the battle of St. Mihiel and the Meuse-Argonne drive. He is succeeded here by Lieut. Col Oliver Hart Dockery, Sr. BARBERS FIX PEACE TERMS Everything Lovely; Strike Is Avoided; Prices Same? The threatened strike of journey. men barbers, following a disagree. ment with the Master Barbers’ asso. ciation over a wage increase, was avoided and differences settled at a conference of representatives of both siden yesterday afternoon. An agreement was reached under whieh union barbers will receive a guarantee of $27 a week, with 60 per cent of all receipts in excess of $40, an increase of $5 per week over the gid scale. Their origin: was for a guarantee of $1 per cent of the receipta in excess of $45 and an eight-hour day. Under the new scale the hours will remain the same, nine hours a day, except Saturday, which will be 11 hours. A conference of master barbers after the settlement resulted in an announcement that no increase in barber prices is to be made at pres ent. $330,000 Is Loss in Alaska Cannery Fire A loss, estimated at $330,000, was suffered from the destruction of the modern salmon cannery of the G W. Hume company of Seattle, which wan destroyed by fire in the Ketch tkan district Saturday night. It was the third plant to be consumed by flames in that district in the last three weeks. The fire was from an unknown canse. News of the fire was cabled by J. 8. Hume, of Seat tle, Northwest manager of the com pany, who is spending the season in Alaska, and reached the offices of the company here yesterday, the value of all diamonds mined ice men beran to take it is @bout $2,000,000,000, — and quick death from disease as a| matter of course, and who had the traditional fear of the surgeon's knife. It meant bringing a medical expert from @ far city, and the nerving of | a community to face the dreadful) mystery, of the operating room; the | cajoling of parents as well ay chil | dren, | COME INTO TOWN FROM FAR AND NEAR But the folk of the Covelo district |) had confidence in their school! ma’am, and #0 they came when the| fateful day arrived, parents heart- ening each other and the youngsters as they drove, walked and rode into town from near and far. ‘They gathered in the white, clean home of Mrs. Jim Hurt, with its im- provised operating table and volun- teer nurses, a solemn crowd of few words but high faith; mothers heat- ing water and blankets, fathers gulp- | ing behind fuming pipes out under the walnut tree, and the kiddies whimpering a little as they were| stripped for examination and the! healihg incisions. One boy took the anaesthetic stolidly because of a promise of ice cream afterward. A girl hushed her whine at the prospect of being al- lowed to run barefoot when it was over, Clare Spurlock, weakening at Wife Follows Suit; Also Shoots Self BREMERTON, Aug. 31.—Accord- ing to advices received here today Mrs. Sue Mary Haley, widow of the ate Lieut. James Haley, formerly in| charge of the yard drafting room, shot herself thru the head at. her home at Santa Ana Monday. Lieut. Haley killed himself in Los | Angeles on June 30 following a long | period of ill health. It is believed! his wife shot herself because of her| grief. The Haleys left Bremerton on April i. | Gunners Ranged for Hot Battle! “Hearts Aflame” mignt be the title | to the married romance of the Gun ners, of Prosser, Mrs, Grant Gunner filed a sult for! divorce last week, charging her hus-| band with cruelty and nonsupport. Monday Gunner retaliated with a} crows-complaint, in which he alleged | that his wife had been married six | | times, Two of-her husbands, he re- | {i} cited, are dead, ‘Three were divorced. And now, he adds, she is seeking to divorce him, ij The Gunners each ask the court te, cast-iron divorce— t first. A million trees have already been planted by the Jews in Palestine in their efforts to reforest that land eluded in the of B25 Stewart #t, THE BON IBa MARCHE RGAIN BASEMENT They're Here— Ready for Your Selection The New Autumn Coats. at $17.50 to $29.50 [Please Read Those Prices Again] The newest Autumn styles are represented in this showing of fine Fall and Winter Coats. Note the big cape collars of self material, as well as those of Sealette or kit Coney. All are belted models, some with long fringed ends that tie, sash-like, at the front. Some are full silk lined others are lined only to the waist. Plaits in great variety are featured in the backs of these smart coats. The materials are Silvertones, Goldtones, Velours, Kerseys and Fancy Mixtures, all in the newest Autumn Women’s and Misses’ All-Wool Sweaters : at $3.95 There are several styles in Slip-on Sweaters at this price, everyone all wool, and they feature novelty weaves of various kinds. The color range in- cludes Turquoise, Coral, China Blue, penne. Blue and Old Rose. Sizes 36 colorings. 720 Pairs of Children’s Cotton Stockings, Pair 25c They're fast black, of fine-ribbed cotton, with seamless elastic legs, and come in all sizes from 6 to 914, Here’s your chance to get good School Stockings at a sure-enough bar- gain price. Don’t miss it! School Again Girls’ New School Wash Dresses $2.95 There's a surprising novelty found in one-of the new- est Wash Dresses for girls. i Tucked away out of sight after school hours is a bib effect attached to the front panel of the dress. This may be buttoned to either shoulder and forms a bib with place for hankie and pencils and an apron with room enough for a tablet. attractive novelty pockets, This dress also has two trimmed with smocking. In heavy quality Peter Pan cloth in China blue, scarlet, green and pink. Sizes 6 to 14 years. DAUGHTER SHOP—SECOND FLOOR. Smart Tams and Scarfs for the School Girl Wool Tams are to be popular this Fall for general school wear—shown in brushed effects and with college | po sehen colors and nifty pompon on the top or side— wool, fringed and trimmed with stripes, in good widths Wool Scarfs of brush and serviceable colorings—$1.95 to $6.50. SWEATER SECTION—SECOND ‘FLOOR Good Shoes to Walk the Path of Knowledge Growing Girls’ Schocl Shoes of brown calf with cravenette top to match, with durable welt sole and one-inch heels—sizes 214 to 8—$8.00. Growing Girls’ Shoes of black calf with heavy, lasting sole, sensible heel, and medium vamp; sizes 214 to 714—$6.75. GROWING GIRLS’ SHOR SHOP—UPPER MAIN FLOOR Madras r Shirting 45c Yard Durable Madras Shirting from 80 to 36 inches wide, comes in 2- to 6-yard lengths. You may choose from a variety of light colors in figured and striped patterns. FABRIC FLOOR (THIRD) Sas New Tungsten Lamps at 26c These are brand new Lamps) —NOT refilled. They have’ strong filaments of drawn wire.” —25- and 40-watt sizes. Limil of five to a customer, and none) delivered. : HARDWARE SECTION—FOURTH | FLOOR 4