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” a7 sil * es \ re 5 ; -_ FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1929. GASSED AS Fumes From Burning Cedar Knock Out Fire Fighters at Ballard Overcome by smoke while fighting @ fire at the Campbell Shingle Mill, 24th ave. N. W. anc lishole ave, ‘Thursday night, Capt. HM. EB. Rob efts, of Engine Company No, 18, Ballard, was in serious condition at Providence hospital Friday, He will Pecover. Twelve other firemen were | B¥ercome but are fully recovered. Fire damage totalled $1,000, THIRTEEN FALL AS DOOR IS OPENED The fire started at $57 p.m. in a @ty Kiln. ‘The doors of the kiln were Closed to smother the gmouldering @Mbers. At 10 p.m, the doors were Shened and & detail of firemen stood dy to wash in with a hose and Sompletety quench what remained of | the biaze. | When the door was opened, a gust | damp cedar smoke swirled into | tr faces. Thirteen men dropped. Be men were taken station and to thelr company quarters, but Capt. Roberts’ con ition was deemed so serious that he Was removed to the hospital, IX COMPANIES PALLED OUT Six companies were called to the, re before it was finally extin- Spontaneous combustian ts | to Ballard po to he the cause of the fire. | In addition to Capt. Roberts, the ing six firemen were overcome. im Chief P. B. Tyler and the ne nd truckmen: G. | Bi . Ed Ford. 8 B F. L. Williams, J. Cook, H. New Woman to Congress Will | Help Kiddies BE, Okla, Nov. 5.—Leg- for the improvement of con- ‘women, Indians, children, soldiers and laborers will be aim of Miss Alice M. Robertson, | woman elected to congress in '# elections. | ‘Miss Robertson, 66 years old, re wasn't considered as having chance to be elected and was by all her friends. “They thought I didn’t have a ee,” said Miss Robertson. “They | money against me, I warned) but they wouldn't take the| . Now they are sorry, and I sorry for them, too.” | fia here, claimed she won, her elec- thru classifie ads in Muskogee newspapers, the campaign she placed ads in all the papers here. The t indicated they were about cafeteria. In the body of the ‘were paragraphs with “heart-to- talks on the political situa- BL vsstary at Mies Retertese wos of the fact that she had been I get in congress I shall on legislation affecting the soldiers and the working »” ahe told the United Press to-| Robertson was appointed post- tr here by President Roosevelt | im 1901. Her election makes her the! ee ‘woman to be elected to con-| The first was Jeanette Rankin Montana. Both are repu Drastic Reductions : on all | Suits, Coats Wrapsand Gowns A Special Purchase of SuitsandCoats of the highest type, including many im- : models, priced far below the value of 1510 Second Ave. dust Above Pike “MILLBURNS THE SEATTLE STAR HOLDUP MAN HERE IS MORE OF CYNTHIA GREY From North Slow Hopes of Alaskans that the afr plane holds solution of their ancient STARTS ON PAGE ONE to live in and do bustne The letter arrived ore WIth & boy quite steady, and the he| troubles in securing more rapid de ler, Maybe some aviator had the mis her of his engagom y of mail than the prosent meth: | sive in his pocket t f freighting it from Seattle do} ° Hot seem Well founded, if the record |Brakeman Is Killed | of the first airplane letter sent trom Nome to the Chamber of Commerve hore is typloal Brakeman Qp August 25 the Nome Chamber cule CENTRALIA, Nov ©. A, Russell, en of the Oregon ve * ef Commerce, thru Thoruif Leh: | A. Russell, employe of the Urwin abe reads A FRE mann, ite president, sent this “air-| \ Bro sngggh yew The you certainly not | plane” letter to the local comfmercia jay, He was killed wh Very much in love with bis flanees, | body car overturned at Kalama yesterday or he would not indulge in kissin: “Phe Nome Chamber of Commerce | UDINE him benes - gee “good night. and ATW | extends greetings to Seattle, Let's! DETROIT.—Three messengers of timental practices.” Your) ai, boost this into a regular service.| Detroit savings bank robbed of $20 ‘ atten: Tt would make Alaska a better place! 000 by masked bandits : & not . “become interested, will later | treat ber as he is treating his fiane At any rate, whoever loses his would not much, my estimation, lose Question No 10 what & time « Invite your friend to shows until rour foot heals, ax you would prob | ably not enjoy an evening at a dance} unless you could partake in that pleasant pastime, You both have many years befgre you in which you may danee, and your friend will eer tainly not want you to lay yourself Hable to more injury on account of | a few dances. If the girl does not wish to give up her dance evenings, stay hway until you are physically able to dance without pain. AUTO ROLLS BACK ON HIM When Dr, Michael Schootman, 34, of 882 Liberty Court, tried to pust} his auto info position to roll down hl on Washington st, betwee Fourth and Fifth aves, the autoly rolled backward and pinned him be tween it and another auto. He was treated at city hospital for injuries | to the thich and chest, Smallpox Again Is Sweeping Unalaska| Another epidemic of smallpox is threatening the natives of the istand of Unalaska, according to word re. colved by W. T. Lopp, chief of the Alaska division of the U. 8. bureau of | education. Twenty-nine cases of the! dread disease have already been re-! ported. | ‘The Const guard cutter Unalga and the steamer Saturn are said to be en route to the island with medical re-| lek. Arm Broken When , His Horse Kicks Kicked by his horse when his wag. ‘on way hit by the auto of Benjamin Pritn, negro, of 2455 Day st., at Sixth ave. S and Jackson st, Thursday night, Ben August, 508 224 ave, re ceived a fractured arm. He was treated at city hoepital, August was) thrown from the wagon. The horse also kicked @ dent in the fender of the auto of Issac Barch, 211 25th ave. 5. He Spreads Radical Bills; Is Arrested Becaune, ft is alleged, he dixpensed | handbilis advertixing @ celebration in| honor of the Rusaiap revolution, T, J.| Cassidy, 17, wag in the city jail Frt-/ day. He was arrested by Seret. P. F.} Keefe of red squad at First ave | and Pik Women’s and Misses’ Coats and Wraps Special—$24.50 Here is a group of coats at a price remarkably low—both from the standpoint of quality and style. The wrap sketched at left is one of the smartest styles of the season—trimmed with heavy wool embroidery; large cape collar. | Sealine Fur Collars are a feature of other models—elaborated with heavy stitching and large buttons. The colors shown in this group: Brown, Navy, Deer, Nanking, Beaver and P Black SECOND AT PINE SHOE BARGAINS Downstairs at Turrell’s Over 400 Pairs of Ladies’ Low and High Shoes at $7.40 Included are brown and black calfskin and black kidskin military heel low shoes; black kidskin high shoes with leather and covered French heels; patent leather shoes with covered French heels, and black kid- ee heel shoes with gray cloth tops. Sizes 2 to 9; widths AAA to E MEN’S SHOES 107 Pairs at $5.80 Brown and black calfskin English last lace ‘ shoes; black calfskin button shoes, and black calfskin button shoes with gray suede tops. Sizes 814 to 12; widths A to E. BAKERSFIELD, Cal. — Gordon | Ostrovaki fined $500 for slanghtering cattle without inspection. Also Chippewa Special unlined work shoes, sizes 6 to 11, at $4.80. It pays’ to trade in this department. ° Downstairs at Turrell’s Second Avenue and Madison Street | pany. FITZWILLIAM, N, , Nov. 6 as Boxcar Overturns | \'«'" wr waa bela up by robbed |Fesented the payroll of the Woodbury was walking from the PAGE 9 JAP HURLED | Prince of Wales Broke; Annuity Is Proposed (POPULATION IS GETS PAYROLL] LOW IN NORTH) :2%-"-"""3| QUT OF AUTO, — |Paymaster Gives Up $1,200! Many More Dogs Than Poo-|| 2"yrovon! rr'an’somuny simias | Mysteriously Attacked; Is| The human population of the bar- | to that reertved years ago by his to Masked Man ple, Cénsus Taker Finds | Thrown from Speeding Car | Police were baffi Friday tn thete Tirnest Woodbury. paymaster of the)ren lands inside the Arctic Circle tn investigation into the myst as H , | sault of 8. Kawamoto, Mil » how Granite .vodapany per cent under that of the dox| poets Poy rr cg pes pet a masked man and | population, atreet at Wall st. ‘Thursday, after te ing hurled from a speeding auto, 1 his brief momente of } 4 to tell police | in the | conscious oe . and only & per cent of Logger Is Crushed weet tM ateGuie teenies | to Death by Timber George Beatle, 36, lorrer, of Cedar | was fatally crushed Thuore | of $1,200. The money ret com: | report of J. H. McGuire, superinten- | dent of the ka division of the U. Northwest district of Kawamoto, in 8. bureau | Valley me ret Ww an he struc 1 ne ate » by ° as anmault had been recetved, toward the quar-| McGuire in tn Seattle after com. |® "use tii ett Mi vo | - - ed ; ; Sree bP eke arene eee a theiieae Mortha er under. |PAny'a yards. | Beatin widow, Mrs.) Mouse Destroyed by i revolver, who demanded the money taken . were a rv e hin vat - at Ov OV 4 and Woodbury, being unarmed, OMY his dog team and an Ewkimo|*UT¥ive him | an erheated St bed j compibed = - se » : a | guide — pgm gerne saad | While 1. L. Dawes, 10347 64th ava. Asks $35,000 for | Pamagen of $95,000 ror the death | Masked Bandits Rob |:: of Ke by an Everett Wentlake ave, N. and Halladay Jare asked by Ro , , was in his woodshed Thursday} | The total population in his aistrict/ Three Independents of 3,146, MeGuire found to be divided | | ae w 266; Kakimo, | Husband’s Death|*"" "et | o rs splitting wood for his stove, the stove Successful in North became overneated and set fire tol e house, destroying i, Damage was $3,500. Indian Arrested for | Theft of Gold Watch Accused of stealing a gold watch, nife from M. B. Jone, 81% en Johnson, Indian epublican and three independ | rs have been elected ter-| } representatives from the Sec ond district on the Seward Peninsula, Alaska, according to slow returns now coming in. The republican In Holt, former mayor of Nome. independenst are: Judge O. D. | ch an, Charles Brown and Victor | Yo dwerd Kenadom, killed July 6 Interurban | Bank Men of $20,000, DETROIT, Nov, 5--Police had failed to fin day the four masked bandits who robbed three messengers jet the Detroit State Savings bank '¢ 20,000 yonterday car at at. | ona ( r Re THE ENEMY Closes Friday Night ** * Saturday brings the impressive pic- ture which is break- ing all New York, Chicago and Los Angeles records— SECOND NEAR SENECA Tomorrow morning at 11—a motion picture as big as anything you have ever seen—replete with thrills—a powerful play of life after death and its relation to those left behind— i eeabe : ie A Sprait Moves with THE Rapipity or THoucut