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Al SA. a | PP | ~ couraged ex-service men were fed | Shot Was fired.” “High School Youths » @d. “The Taming of the Shrew” ¥ at the Hotel Butler. MONDAY, qe DAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1921. PUEUTENANT (20% = accuse oF woRoex) KILLED IN AUTOCRASH Walter F. Bonnell Is Acci- dent Victim in Collision Near Camp Lewis Thrown into a ditch Automobile overturned Msion with another car Walter F. Bonnell, 30, was Instantly killed near Camp early Sunday morning. Bon Was the son of Mr. and Mra B. Bonnell, 2812 EF. Madison st He had been assigned to the recruit ) educational center as an | According to A, B. Baker, coma shipyard worker, driver of t ear which struck Bonnell, t young officer's car siczagged intt the accident on the wet paveme @s it approached the entrance American park Sergeant Mack, Fourth military po! *PARy, corroborated the statement. > Thru the rear view of his mirror. 200 feet ahead, Capt. Ma Gutant of the recruit « Seenter, saw the accident tured and rushed the dying ficer to the army hospital, Hon hell died on the way, Physicians fave the cause as concussion of the brain. Bonnell was bern in North Da kota. He was brought here by his parents and attended Longfel- ~ low grammar school, Broadway ‘ high gehoo! and the state © | @t Pullman, taking a agriculture at the tution. . his Lieut almost Lewts when in a CECIL BURKETT BOY FACES GALLOWS the armistice was signed with the gun just before and fust | to be disposed of as are other charges | 100 Veterans Get after the shooting of delinquency F Fre ick, it appears, was at the But Prose ‘ood—Want Work: toy of & pois in the Burkett yard! that the in One wundred hunery and dis.| inspecting a martin house when the in cases of murder or treason. |Jury may recommend life imurine ment death penalty in all murder cases. But W. J. Reed Burkett family Frederick and 1 were cleaning out bat on the evide We were taking the He entered the coast artinery | corps, Nationa! Guard, in 1915 and @uring the war was made a sec end lieutenant after attending a training school. He had been made @ first lieutenant and was waiting st Camp Upton to embark when Starts On Page 1 Here's More About ACCUSED BOY'S give the ACCOUNT OF SHOOTING at Cecil telle the story this way:| and cheered Sunday at @rans’ hotel, 1003 First They were grateful for the but they mostly want work You have a spare job, phone Sess. the ave Vet- 8. food, | it Main | the martin house lout straw that attorney for the aay he will “go to the boy is tell ng the truth and the facts will free | sparrows bad | jin" carried into it. | ‘The trial wit “My rifle was leaning against itis| cuca cout ot side of the house. Knox “1 was taking some of the straw) (Copyright, 1 by Newspaper One thousand saw Shakespeare’s|into the house to burn it. | Enterprise Association) ‘Shrew roundly and soundly tamed| “I had not seen Bennie. And I —-- when Franklin Ngh ‘School present-| couldn't see the gun from where I £ of, pd brsseage’ Heel |Municipal League to the school auditorium, Saturday) “I heard a shot anda yell. t/ Talk City Manager dropped the straw and ran around |. ~ p. CTO gras gag the corner_of the house. The special committee of the Only Republicans in Jobs, Is Request| “Bennie was running and the gun | Municipal league, appointed by Prost was on the ground. dent James T. Lawler to tnvestiqnte “I picked up the gun and took it |“ qualifications of the counciimanle Resotutions requesting republi. | nd the straw into the bouse, jeandidates. will report t the league | ” elected to state and county| DIDN'T KNOW | Seestay neow.eh BARE. cafe, the | ‘ffices to appoint only republicans fo positions that are open were passed Saturday at a meeting of B IE WAS SHOT {new meeting place of the league. ENN Robert Howes is chalrman of the state committeemen, county chair. men and prominent party workers be held before the/ Starke county at} Tame Raging Woman aoe Wise etn thee committee, The other members are: 1 J. L, Baldwin, H.C. Force, P. V. jane seb cegpaiand mother and we went/ nick and Chas. J. Ryan. A feature jo of the meeting Tuenday, stated Law- i —_ bonne grams! thee = ler, will be the vote of the member. bor was dragging it away n ship onthe report of its civil service trigger got caught in some weeds) committee favoring the manager and fired it. form of government for Seattle. The v8 Bi rink t have any quarrel with | public is invited to the luncheon jennie | meetin Bon Waren a. Harding ym we Sue > Pip toe ocean Aen. _ Delph Watartey aight, and tn Beattie |225 no eg ti the 19th annual Lincoln Day banquet | SWAY from home at the time of the of the Young Men's Republican clubj ODOR i. son of a merchant was opened amid e storm of applause | 116 had two sikters and one brother at the Crystal Pool auditorium, | ne OTHER CHILDREN WILL BE WITNESSES One of these, 6-year-old Clara, says Cecil threatened to kill her and Ben NEW MENU ven-year-old Alfred, too, telis ts. Boston Baked Beans ... Bennie’s parents may that Mexican Beans 10¢ said just before ‘he dled. Macaroni and Cheese ....15¢ Cecil Burkett shet me." Home-Made Pies, per cut .10¢ killed Bennie, and he did it gyn the tragedy victim's fe arp pan He ought to hang for it and Cold Meat and Cheese to see that he does.” Hot Hamburger 15¢ il says: “I didn't do it, and Hot Cakes and Syrup ...20¢ |j, they kill for kilt ner 2 3 Doughnuts and Coffeo .15¢ ion has me for killing a boy Best Coffee in | And Cecil's mother verifies her Seattle 5c } son's story “Harding in Florida Opens Banquet Here} WILLIAMSON, W. Va. state policemen fired on in Mingo]! jeounty. Return volley and kill gun man | Four | -15¢ -10¢ I'm not afraid to go to trial. How PUBLIC FAVORS [Proceedings }lawe of the United Sta | JUVENILE COURT When the grand jury returned its | indictment, the public voic the criticiam that it would have beer better to have referred the whole ter to the judge of juvenile court, ALBERT HANSEN REMOVAL SALE 1010 SECOND AVENUE 20% to 33 3% DIAMONDS, JEWELRY WRIST WATCHES SILVER WARES OF THE, FINEST QUALITY HOYT’S 322 Pike St, at Fourth WE NEVER CLOSE EXCEPT CERTAIN EXCLUSIVE LINES AND CONTRACT GOODS 1010 SECOND AVENUE NEAR MADISON On Our Screen Tonight First and Exclusive Motion Pictures of the Olympic J Forest Reserv Tornado Disaster —_— | district Taken by Jacobs, the Liberty’s Spe- cial Cinematog- rapher. |favor of a THE WOULD IMPEACH FEDERAL JUDGE: Are ae Landis Welty . Landis, Welty charged. impeachment because 4 the duties of bis » a natie nized baseball offices by nullify the proce of the Ch f the Judgement of $240,000 ot © defunct Fede all for alleged v laws, the is subject to he has loote mal art The Landis Inge againat mem. r for or ling of the two tends bers ano esmmnan referred without de © the judiciary mittee in accordance with tution AN INVESTIGATION IS MANDATORY An tny the constl ry. If the committee opinion that there Is suf impeachment If the hment ence for 1 to the hi the urges, Welty nemaw Moun and I tmpeach maid K tain Landis for mi neanors harge mid Kenesaw Mountain Lan SoM tuties for another gainful occt not mnected therewith. ond—For using hi office as district Judge of the United States tue disputed which might come into his court, as pr 1 by the « before the cinlaturen ea of the Union to pes state laws to prevent gam baseball instead of discharging duties as district Judge of | States Fourth—For accepting the post ‘tion as chief arbitrator of disputes in baseball associations at a salary af $42,500 por annum, while atternpt ing to discharge the duties az a dis trict Judge of the United which tends to nullify the effect of the judgment of the supreme cour of the District lumbla and the baseball gashbilng ndietments pending in the ertminal urta of Cook ity, Iilinola, SAYS HE INJURES NATIONAL SPORT “Fitth—-For injuring the national sport of baseball by permitting the use of hin office as district judge of the United States, because the im hird——Fo SEATTLE judgeship | weeks at the ho White Sox and | 1875 ned | bin | | | tigation by the committees United | 4 States, | ot >| jHogan are two students of the col pression will prevail that gnembltng| and other illeg&l acts In baseball will not be punished tn the open forum. an other cases. “Wherefore mid Kenesaw Mountain Landis was and is guilty of minbe havior, ax such Judge, and of high | crimes and misdemeanor# in office.” KEEP FIT WEEK? MAKEIT A YEAR! :: Special Good Health Pro-! grams Featured Are you “fith™ Do you start for work in the morning, blood ting!ing, & wong in your heart, full of pep and fit Or do you drag downstairs, eyes only half opened, your head feeling like a dusty, year-before-last turnip and your feet leaden? YOU are not ad liver, flabby muscles, blood re too high, too much fat, eat much—no exerciae. You can’t be efficient or succensful snless you're fit, boosters of the Keep Fit week program point out Keep fit in to emphasize the tm portance of physical training If you've ever noticed the «park ing eyes and pink cheeks of “tired business men after they've had a round in the gymnasium, topped off with an tey-cold shower bath, know that keeping fit is a | thing. Special keep fit programs are being featured this week at the various achools, at the universit churches and in Boy Scout, Fire Girls and civic club mee It's under the auspices of the Scat jtle Education society, at Camp Cusaaitle Girls Remember Vets Seattle Campfire girls the dis abled war veterans at rnment hospitals at Port Townsend « valen tine party Saturday candy and cookies and show. The Puget Sound company transported the girls free of charge. Seek to Shut Barber Shops Upon Sunday ALBANY, ‘N. Y., Feb. 14.—The first Sunday blue law hag reached the New York legislature. It would “shaveless” Sunday, re pealing the law permitting barber shops in New York city to stay open juntil 1 o’clock Sunday afternoon ‘Tho 22 Years Old He Was Just Baby |! INDON, Feb. 14—A doctor hold inquest on Edward ¢ le who died from natural causes, sfid that the man was an adult in size, but a baby in speech His thymus gland wae in the same as that of,a child He had 4 his baby teeth and had ‘ow in front LA ing 2 Brimble, ‘All-Jewish Theatre for London, Plan Feb. 14 London will Neh playhouse It will “es in the center of the theatrical and will be ed next Only h tf in the Jewish month Yiddish lang will be given TACOMA ttenfield, 31) killed by n Wh good #0 room. P, Wheat, 60, cher, and wif ‘ound shot to ps ath, | culture, rn I! | ton, | joyful that you're alive? Then you're | STAR WM, F, M'COMBS FIRES STARTE SERIOUSLY ILL’ IN MANCHESTER Started | Physicians Fear He Will Not Sinn Fein Blamed for De- Recover struction Campaign « to hi ~ who aba in afflicted Phynte physi! countr tarted nine fires in Manc The losses in the of} and chemical fac great, watchmen prom of Nin winter here, |the fire department. In in his law office here have a watehman upe ng they |which fired at him without result Five suspects were 4 shortly MeCombs was born December 26, |after the fires had been extinguished at Hamburg, Ark., where he ee r believed each fire was arly education, He is a gradu: | started by @ separate gang of from ate of Prin and Harvard, tak: two or three men each, In each in ing his law atter, He red the factories Kan practic n closed for the mediately to net w exactly where clans today, Met heart trouble death might Mot rubber. were not with ans sald come any time ‘iombs has been il) for several one inst me nce A tate mm a given up hope of his recovery nald, came arreste Hee as tho they they were to oper In Ireland an unusual number of weekend encounters Were reported, but without the .usual casualties One constable was killed near Swords when his patrol was am: bushed. Three cadets were wound ed at Macroom when @ large num ber of men bombed and fired upon e|thelr quarters « fire Williams he* had attained nager of Woodrow Wilson's ft presidential campaign, Mr. and Mrs McCombs separated later He was chairman of the national democratic committee from 1912 1916, refusing, in the meantime offer of the ambasma He is a member of Bar associatio# and nu a |SINN FEINERS Give Blood to Save |SEIZE PLANE Life of Prisoner, AND BRITISHER To nave the life of T. Mizakawa,}| CORK, Feb. 14—Sinn Felners Japanese prisoner in th jail, | have captured and burned a British Fujiwara, J iM. Kan pairplar kidnaping the aviator, it aka, ~ok at the jail, gave | was ned today, when offic their bieod for transfusion Sunday. | p were ered Mizakawa is reported much im: |¢ na and Kilfannane proved. | The aviator was captured near |Kilfannane, The military tmmedi Caldwell’ 8 Veto Was | lately ixsued an ultimatum demand Too Late—Perhaps) hours ling the flyer's return within 48 A farm houre at Ballinavereena Walter F n by the to disregarded. Soldiers ordered amittee mereanats at Killfannane to vacate well's veto their stores, in preparation for fur- *|ther reprinals. 4 nhooting of two soldiers at le on January 24 was ged today by the destruction of ve houses there, keepers in Kilfanrfane at obeyed the warning, taking as h of their stocks as the soldiers it, conveying them to pri cen, ‘Three-Year-Old Girl | Crosses the Country r young lady of only three years Peery 25 and 26. Fe tee & cross-country raleean | trip when she arrived here Satur- jday night. She ts the three-year old daughter of J. H. Mitchener, of Seattle. Her mother is ill at South Bend, Ind, and could not accompany her. Miss A. Harrison, who was coming here from Chi. cago, agreed to look out for the | young traveler, Erickson Will Talk of Three-Cent Fare “Pian for a ThreeCent Fare” witli be Councilman Oliver T. Erick son's talk to the Commonwealth club, at Good Eats cafeteria to ‘night at 7 o'clock. France American merous ve punty panene, a also whether Mayor srdinance amending the wo far an it applies tol m jcture and other theatres came late. The veto, received Febru ary 4, in said to have been due Feb ruary 3 - ‘ Forestry Students to Be at Conference William Schwiesow Elwood and ge of forestry at the university at Berkeley, Cal Lectures at “U” on Italian Culture Continuing his lectures on Italian Prot, Raffaello Pic ot the University of Pina, 1 will Arliver lectures at the university till Wednesday. [Seattle Man Heads Horticulturists | R T. Reid, of Seattin was chosen president of the Western Washington Horticultural asnocia- Ppl be close of its conven Angeles Saturday. FREDERICK DOWESINIRS STORE by A New Group of 100 Trimmed Hats Offering Very Good Values at $5.00 Tuesday HE foremost styles of the new season are in this new shipme nt — narrow-brim, soft- crown Sailors, Turbans with drooping sash- ends, Silk-crown Hats with straw brims and many others, in a wealth of new colors: Tangerine, Iris-blue, Jade, Rust and the more familiar colors, also navy, brown and black. The Values Are Suggested in the Hats Pictured: Hat At Right—Sailor combin- verine ing green Crepe de tarigerine Chine and navy straw, banded with green rib- bon and trimmed with flat nosegay of flowers $5.00, Unusually good values at $5.00. THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE At Left combining Tagal braid navy taffeta, with straw pin @or ornament—$5.00. Tam-like and $35 and enc ‘Health Clown Will calling in) was burned when the ultimatum was, Arctic Club Solves Street Car Problem In a farcical Impersonation of ety! ciimen and other city officials,” of theArctic club attempt: od to wolve the street car problem at their Lincoln day celebration Satur day night. At the end of the session the matter was put over until some future date, amid uproarious laugh- ter Other features of the entertain- nt were furnished by the Bun- girls and Levy's orchestra, wan served at 6:20 p m. and a buffet supper at 12:20 a. m, with George Olson, memiber of the club, aa | master of ceremonies FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET Two Men Threaten Girl, Rob Laundry | Two cleaned “the ¢ drawer in N. Kenesheke’s laundry | gor at Auburn after leveling a gun at Kenesheke's 18-year-old Saturday night, They aped in an automobile. Quit City Schools attle school kids will bid re ful farewell Thursday to Chew Chew, the health eb by amusing method: them health lens He's going to th who ha been giving for month country schools In Vivid Colorings AILY embroidered in yarn and floss, effee- tively braided or with pat- ent leather belt, these new arrivals offer many varia- tions of smock styles. Of linene or beach cloth, in fac Ea Conethagen, | quoise, Tan, veg Mais and White. 14 | to 20 and 36 to 6 Very attractive at $1.75. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE New Tub Frocks for Little Tots, $1.95 values Fae tla high-waist- ed and prettily em- broidered in darning stitch, these little Dresses in their bright colorings of Delft and yellow are as gay as Spring flowers. Fashioned of soft-finished cotton pongee, in sizes 2 to 6 years; one style as sketched. Equally attractive are Dresses of checked gingham, with collars and cuffs of plain chambray. Sizes 2 to 6 years. Priced at $1.85. _sue pownstarn® STORE. New Jersey Silk Petticoats at $3.95 T= JERSEY SILK is particularly good quality, with deep flounces accordion plaited. The Petti- coats feature very smart color combinations in com jj nection with peacock, rose, orange, bisque, rust, — i purple and navy—$3.95. ; AT $3.95— New Taffeta Petticoats with tucked flounce aa elastic band at waistline—in emerald, rose, taupe, | Copenhagen, gold, brown, navy and blacR—$3.95._ —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE | sheen ‘A New Model in Women’s Cotton Crepe Kimonos, $3.25 NOVEL butterfl sleeves are fea in these New Kimonos of cotton crepe, — choice of pein ‘ coral, light-blue, Bre lavender a" wistaria, |} with plain-color and satin ribbon ae $3.25. In figured crepe, Empire- style Kimonos with elastic at high waistline, trimming of satin bands and _ piping. Choice of pink, rose, light- blue, dark-blue and gray in combination with contrasting color—$3.25. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE PP ts PR Silver-plated Teaspoons Set of Six Special 95c HESE are the William Rogers’ Spoons, silver- plated on white metal, with plain satin-finish handle and bright bowl. Special, set of six, 95¢. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE