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( EePodbed passengers THURSDAY, OCTORER #1, 1970. SHOOT MAN (PosoN canoy sent acrREss | nN HOLDUP OF COACH Passengers on New York Central Train Are Lined Up by Robbers BUFFALO, N. Y,, Oct. 1 Dandits, firing revolvers into t an New York frainman ‘The Yards the pl foach Were marched ‘ two of the m eatening them With revolvers, while the third man @earched clothing and looked under Billews for money and watches Thirty minutes, after the holdup Police arrested John Depka and Stan By Depka, brothers. They were nto the train coach and identi: | Pom by the ‘parsengera, the police | ——& A, WEEK — | Women Hear Dakota) Plan of Education! A mass meeting of women was to | Peggy O'Neill, the actress, has returned to her place in the Dba hela at 2 p.m today, in the auay|C@8t Of the Savoy theatre, London, and declares her illness forium adjoining the Press club, about a month ago was due to an attempt to poison her. She th ave. and University st. A. A-| says a box of chocolates was sent to her dressing room anony- oes are ee fe apenk mously. She ate some of the candy and was taken seriously | the existing educational laws wate. ey a ee a il, One choc olate was given to a pet dog, w which soon died, A STARTLING SALE OF Cord and Fabvic T 1K pe Ribbed (ese Ribbed Yabrto Plain Fabr® GREATLY REDUCED PRICES BECAUSE of popular preference for “non-skid” treads the Brunswick-Balke-Collender Co. is discontinuing the three treads here illustrated. This applies to both cord and fabric tires. Cut prices on these famous Jong mileage tires start im- mediately. Reduced prices apply only while present stock lasts. Size Plain or Ribbed Fabric ° 80x38 tt B0x31% . 82x31. . 31x4 32x4 33x4 * B4x4 B2x41% . 83x41 B4x414 . B5x4Vo 836x414 35x5 Above prices are subject to War Tax. These Tires carry the famous Bruns- wick “unlimited mileage guarantee.” ae “COMPAN mr Re ead Phone Elliott 1419 DRIVE IN FOR SERVICE THE SEATTLE STAR HERE'S MORE ABOUT ‘FOR COX for political advantage, But still it ines BENJAMIN'S CANDID. STAND? If you agree, then I hereby defy you and challenge you to find oyt or to point out exactly where your candidate stands on thin isnue (Pause thru the to give time for Ben to look files for Mr, Harding's Now I further challenge you and dety you to that Mr. Harding iy not a Redgor, a trimmer and a Wigeling political opportunist, And while the referee is counting off the seconds I wish to give my reasons why the league is | vital ineue, and why Mr. Cox, stand ing. firmly as ite supporter, hae placed himeelf definitely on the side of world progrena. Ry world progrean I mean greater happiness, contentment, enlighten ment of men and women and ahil | dren everywhere The league, as an terme, means | more than the aligning or not signing of a covenant It means more than the tmue of war and peace, of sorrow and happ) news, of death and life. WHAT THE LEEGONATIONS | MEANS TO ED It means more than the quention whether President Wilson, tn throw. ing the full weight of his clear think ling personality into the Paria peace conference, took too much authority inte bis own hands sue ShaM America place selfish rights, | | property rights, rights of the ea and} | the laffd and the air, above human welfare in every land? Shall America, holding fteelf aloof, row fat on the blood of ma, or etand by smugty emt of the world ls burn feed and Jother na while the ing? Sha Amerton trad the world tn accummlating wealth and tn making itwelf secure, or shall tt lead the | world in the service ft can give to) |lift up these nations which are torn lor famished or oppressed, and place | | them on their feet? | ANYWAY, THE LEEGONATIONS 18 A FACT When all the bed and good things maid about President Wilson have | been forgotten, this one thing will | be remembered: ‘The League of Nations ts # Pact, vouched for by three-fourths of the nations of the world Bverything that the handful of nations outside of it—America, Germany, Turkey, Hungary, Russia, Austria and Bul garia—can do, can pot stop it from (es a fact It is @ fact becanse the most en- lightened nations of the world have retogniaed in it a guigepost in « wort are ec waste Tiennenty: ts substitution ef peaceful co-operation among nations for the rule of selfish rights and aggrandisement by the sword. They have recognized that it offers, no matter how feebly, a bea con Nght and an ideal for a dis cordant world to follow, When Senator,Harding turns his back on a fact of this magnitude, or hedged about it, he deserves to be deaerted by those forward seeing men who already have left his side to join the Inevitable march of prog ress. For when he turns away from such a fact, what may the American people expect of him at home? Will he pot beat about the bush, hedge, or turn his back, likewise, on the call for higher welfare of men and women and children at home? May we not expect, likewise, that he will, if elected, turn a deat ear to the needa of everyday Americans in their homes, their shops and facto- ries, placing property rights of indi viduals and interests above the com- mon good? It in unbelievable to me Chiat the people of the United States of Amer lon, after their struggles for real democracy, after giving thelr song in battle for it, after their encrifices to place America In the leadership of wervice, would knowingly renounce even a part of what has been gained in the year 1921, Only by the trickery of lnading political pirates can it be dona And if it le done, woe betide the trick- asters when thetr treachery is out. The strength of Gov. Cox and his party today lies tn the fact that he iy standing on a t Fact, which his bitterest opponents cannot re fute, That fact in the league of na- tions. You may try to get around it; you may try to digregard it; you may try to becloud it; but atill it ré maina, pricking the conscience of America until it Is recognized. You may fire when you are ready Ben, Only beware not to mention William Howard Taft. I'm loaded to the muzzle on that guy. — 6. A WEEK — Carleton’s Widow Wins Pension Fight Mrs. Edna Haskell Carleton, widow of Police Sergeant Guy L. Carleton. and her child, are entitled to a police pension. ‘This wae the ruling of Judge A. W Frater yesterday afternoon, revers ing the police pension board, which held that Carleton, at the time he was killed, was not on duty and, for that reason, his widow was not en titled to compennation. Carleton was shot to death by Po: Hoeman Charles Roselius while motoring with Rowellus’ Wife. Tried | for murder, Rosellus was acquitted regently. — 8, A. WEEK —~ North Park Club to Hear Carlyon Debate} A debate will be held at 8 tonight by the North Park Improvement club on the Carlyon bill, with C. H. Shield, president of the Washington State Good Roads association, for it, and C, L. Wartell of the American Asso ciation of Engineers opposing it. | 8. A. WEEK —— lyve_ay ° Girl’s Disappearance | s | Is Now Explained @CHICAGO, Oct. 2%1.—Disappear- ance of Miss Margaret McDougall, artist, was solved with an announce. ment by her ea Jobn D. MebDouw gall, wealthy bre , that he had re ceived a special letter from her, stat \ ing the wae living near Loa Angeles, Miss MaCDougait vanished last 7 First reports were she had eloped. Later it was believed she Cox-Harding Debate °*; For us it means, above all, thts te |)... had been murdered, and posses were searching for her body when her \ brother received the letter, . _ buuorrow. FREDERICK & NELSON FOR HARDING FIFTH AVENUE A ND PINE STREET io k mule, or fell Into a canal in hie He thinks tn a atraight line. wants orderly, quiet kind of goin DOWNSTAIRS STORE | A Group of Jersey Suits Reduced $16.75 OMEN who know the all- round usefulness of this type of Suit will welcome this opportun- ity to secure one at a saving. They are of an especially good quality Jersey, patch- pocketed and belted in sports style, and offer choice of Dark-green, Copenhagen, Chinese Blue, Brown, Purple, Gray and Tan. Sizes for women and misses. —THE DOWNSTAIRS 200 Boys’ Coverall Suits REDUCED TO $2.95 FRIDAY T HIS price represents a substantial reduction from the former price of these Suits. For manual training, and other work, and for play wear, too, these roomy, staunchly-made garments are a great.protection to a boy’s cloth- ing. n't want you and 1 bubblin in the water, Ho's that kind, of a man, “COX A BOVISTH lad, He's wing powder Ladies’ Aid the boy who putadth in the ventilator at tb meeting. He thrift. If nobody'll « fight him, he'll « o' pun ’ i} He ean yell like @ lion | #) and yip like a coyote. He not only can, but does, He'd rather bark his shine and rip hie pants going up over a jagged clitt|#| walk of a mile around it Put him in charge of your old ship, and he'll guarantee four yearn of jamboree. t met there any av won't take you any farther th Harding. But he'll get you th It all depends on what kind Rip you want, whether you vot Harding or Cox ‘The republicans think you want « ride that'll give you a chance to at the scenery, and they offer you a jlower rate, The democrats have ac and excitement to offer at a} a ruckus than & quarter w STORE icket male's open until Nov. I'm going with Harding. A. WEEK — MANIAC SLAYER OF GIRL FLEES, SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 21 Maniac was sought by the police fe day in their attempts to bring to justice the man who murdered Mrs Ruby Alien, of Mobile, yesterday Two men identified the body of the firt found murdered in the Knicker bocker yesterday afternoon as that) of Mra. Allen, One of the men was/ William T. Diggins, chauffeur, alno| from Mobile, who said he had known the pretty young woman tn the Southern city. He was deeply af- tected when he viewed the body. Police arrived at the theory that the murder wan done by some maniacal strangier after they had conferred with detectives from Pied mont, Cal, who have been working for two months, more or lena quietly, | on the murder of Mire Ulla Carlson, Piedmont housemaid, who was strangied to death. —-& A WEEK HUSBAND KILLS MAN WITH WIFE CINCINNATI, Ohio, Oct t1-— Howard Philltpa, 34, part owner of & chain of qatent bakeries in Chto, Indiana and Kentucky, was instant ly killed last night at Newport, Ky. near here, by J. B. Murray, 34, Evansville, Ind, hie former partner. Phillips was with Murray's wife when-the shooting occurred. Following the shooting Murray en. tered a taxi, drove to Newport police headquarters and, laying “his auto matic on the desk, said to the officer in charge: “There tt im Y Just shot « man. He broke up my home.” The principals In the tragety, ac cording to police, formerly Uved at Maquoketa, Iowa, Mra. Murray's eult for divorce on the grounds of cruelty is pending in Kentucky. Her husband, according a his attorney, sought a reconcilia Als, here, They are of khaki twill, double-stitch- ed throughout, with four front pockets and two back pockets. Sizes 12 to 16 years. Reduced to $2.95. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE ‘A Purchase of 340 Pairs of Misses’ Shoes In Two Low-priced Groups: $4.45 an $5.45 150 Pairs at $4.45 Pair Tan Calf, Smoked Calf and Black Kid Lace Shoes on spring heel last, with good oak-tanned leather soles; sizes 12 to 2 190 Pairs at $5.45 Pair Misses’ Tan Calf Lace Shoes with sewed soles and rubber heels; vari- ous widths, and sizes 12 to 2, —s A Weer Priced low at $5.45 pair, ORDER POLES OUT OF MINSK WARSAW, Oct. 21.—Polish troops which occupied Minsk tn defiance of orders have been comrnanded to with. draw, the government announced today. Soviet troops have compelied the Poles to group some forces near the center of the former line, the state ment said. Gen. Pilsudsky announced as a re ward for his soldiers he had asked the government divide recon quered lands among them. It was reported here 76 Ukrainians had been ordered executed in Odessa when Bolshevist authorittes learned of an alleged Ukrainian, plot. 8. A. WEEK Sleeth Is Not Lost; Friend Gets Word PORTLAND, Oct. 21,.—Dana Sieeth is not lost in the woods, and has not met with an accident, according to a met with an ac John Logan, a called up tho which Sleeth formerly was editor, “Sloeth left on a trip to write nows articles and editorial observations,” | he said. “I Rave heard from him since he left, and I am sure he is unaware that his wife and his office have not. He will be greatly sur prised to know he is reported ‘lost in the woods.’ Yesterday sheriff's offices and for est rangers in northern Oregon had been asked to search for the missing Journalist. —8. A. WEEK —— Maybe He’d Even Take the Job, Too) Services of an architect would be of material advantage to King county in laying out the new avia-{ tion field at Sand Point, according to a letter to the county commission: | ers from Carl F, Gould of Bebb &| Gould, architects at 1005 Securities building -—THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Cut Glass Water Sets $2.50 UST 36 of these low-priced Sets for Friday’s selling. Feat- uring the conventional star cutting pictured and a pleasing grape design. Beautifully cut and exceptionally low priced for Pitcher with six Tum- blers at $2.50 A Featured Value: 4-piece Aluminum Cooking Set $3.00 HANDY and compact set con- sisting of Five-quart Convex Kettle, with two-quart perforated pan to be used in the kettle for steaming, and two-quart cereal pan, which converts the kettle into a dou- ble boiler when desired. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Electric Table Lamps $12.50 EVERAL designs in these handsome Met- al Lamps, one in old- brass finish, as - pic- tured, with dome shade showing amber glass panels. Fitted with pull chain and sothet for one light. Exceptional value at $12.50. An exceptionally low price for the four-piece set, $3.00. Other Aluminum Utensils at Very Low Prices —all of pure aluminum, with sub- stantial riveted handles; extra well- finished throughout. One-quart Lipped Saucepan, 65¢. One-and-a-half-quart Lipped Sauce pan, 95¢. Two-quart Lipped Saucepan, $1.05. Three-quart Lipped Saucepan, $1.35. Four-quart Lipped Saucepan, $1.50, ‘ Five-quart Covered Convex Kettle, $1.95. -—THE DOWNSTAIRS STORS Serving Trays, $1.95 Unusual Value AS sketched, Mahogany- finish Tray with inlay effect un- der glass—measuring 17x11 .inches; at $1.95. 8. A, WERK Sunday School Meet Opened Here Today! Sunday school experts from the! Methodist board of Chicago will take | part in the Sunday school conven: | tion, which to open in University Methodist Episcopal church at 2 p. m. today, Tho institute closes to-| \ Housewares Section, THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORD