The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 5, 1921, Page 7

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THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1921, THROAT CUT © SHOTS FLYIN [CANTU REVOLT BY MAD MAN AUTO PURSUIT) I$ UNDER WAY was taken to the prison hospital and 59 stitches taken in his throat. Lang was a “trusty” at the prison, having been sent up for a short term for part of town, The! »k the fugitives at 1 at The two officers were in a prowler garrison from La Puerta after quer rilla fighting mte yesterday Reports reaching here sald that Ta Jue acrom the border! N from San Dk was prepared today for an attempted seizure of the town or for a revolutiogary outbreak | by Cantu sympathizers there. bed. York der by the two officers. The de: ke | Attractive New Springtime Showing ered as marking an attempt to Cantu, former governor of of Mexico. OUR WIFE WOULD HAVE TO PIN ON A WHOLE NEWSPAPER YAKIMA, Revolutionists drove the fed wre | Convict Arnstein in Bond Robbery The jury returned a ver: | dick of guilty hour’s deliberation. | bringing some of the stolen securt The uprising is generally consid. | ties into the district Attorneys f Lower | tice of an app California under Carranza, president | the court was asked to fix bond for) the defendants. THE SEATTLE STAR May 6 George | above note Latona hotel, tery, after | ntry ehnine, First he forgery from Olympia. Wagner was|car. Their attention was first at WASHINGTON, May 6.—Jules! ‘The poison wna convicted in Seattle of robbery, but | tracted to the other machine when | 2one was killed in yesterday's fiht-| “Nickey”) Arnstein, David W, Sulll | tor Daoust, b F at the time of tho attack was aw#®-|it drove by them at a terrific pace. but several members of the) van, Nick Cohn, Norman 8. Bowles! throat with € ing transportation to the asylum for When the police car caught up| rrigon, as well as several) and W, W. Pmsterday were found | no Ka ‘on, the insane at Medical Lake. |with their auto, Mason and Belding ints, were wounded. A} gulity here Nto yesterday for con-|at the hotel, heart He had secreted the knife with /are alleged to have legped out and ntu Heutenant was said t0| spiracy in connection with the mil which he slashed Lang under his|ran. They were caught in short or led the attacking fore |Hondoliar Liberty bond robbery in| Daoust, after less than an to city bospits box containing ts were charged with the defense gave no- | al for a new trial and ot live. This Week at the Cheasty Store of 66 e 9? ° Kuppenheimer’” Suits in the Blue Serge and Unfinished Worsted Fabrics and Light Gray and Brown shades in Tweeds, at prices— $45, $50 and $55. Many different mod- els to Satisfy both the ultra and conservative taste. Special exhibit of these particular suits will be in place in our show windows Friday. . Many extra special values now offered in every department of this “quality” store. $33.00 for choice of a nice selection of Men’s and Young Men’s Spring Suits, worth on to- day’s market up to $55.00. ope ee ot $6.50, $7.00, $7.50 and Be » ain baliss tee * $8.00 soft hats. “Lewis’” Sea Island 3 paits for $1.00 fer | Come Unicn Suits. 95¢ and $1.60 for choice assorted lot of regular of two new and very and quality at saving prices. —AT $5.95 stra —AT $5.95 and 1%-inch military heels, HEEL PUMPS, $7.45 Light brown calf with 50e “Shawknit” and | rich lines of Silk Neck- perforated vamp, “Cooper’s” Sox. wear. quarter and straps; Goodyear welt sole and Cuban heels, yr" Z This is an instrument as perfect in tone quality, beauty and construction as a human hand and mind can make it. Only 5 ft. 914 inches in length, it produces BUSH & LANE GRAND Basement Store Second and Madison Unusual Shoe Specials IN THE BASEMENT STORE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY An opportunity to secure the so desirable Military and Cuban heel pumps and oxfords of Turrell style MILITARY HEEL PUMPS Stylish nat brown kid pumps with one strap and two buttons, attractively perforated around vamp, and quarter, with Goodyear welt sole and le heel lining; 1%4-inch military heels. MILITARY HEEL OXFORDS Light and dark brown calf and black kid oxfords, blucher style with. smart tip; Goodyear welt sole MODISH TWO-STRAP CUBAN MEN’S BLACK CALF OXFORDS—AT $7.45 Smart ball strap style with perforations on toes, ball strap and quarter; Goodyear welt sole and “Wingfoot” rubber heels. Oatmeal Paper, 30 inches wide. Kitchen Papers, regular price 20c to 40c. Sale According to Be a wife and two d Miland, living in Dakota. suicidal attempt . Left mtranded by tween Auburn night. the sheriff's office. will recover, Poanenaion Mra. With year-old brother, dinappeared. } jed her time trouble was,” day mornin plied, ‘Mama? too much for her. living. | of her worry about hi | father ts dead. girl strolled down | tite. Hin bring death, |wumed was not | ities at the hospital had ave, and ad his and called police Motorcycle Patrolman Frank Bert rand was detailed and sent Daoust Hertrand found a 0 strychnine tablets {I's Lake, North | deprived of the opportunity |Lonely ter Mother; Attempts Suicide! her mother since | last October, Irene Arnell, 17, pretty | Auburn girl, grieved over the dinap- pearance until she took poison while | wandering alone along the road be and Algona, five miles from her home, Wednesday She was found a few minutes Inter lying unconscious on the road by an automobilist, who reported at once to The girl taken to a hospital at Auburn, Mins Arnel! had teen the object of wearch of peace officers thruout the county for nearly 24 hours be-| been erroneously informed that his| fore she was found. She disappeared early Tuesday morning. known to have had polson in her ‘The girl, accorting to her aunt, Denton Burke, with whom she was living, had shed her usual sunny disposition for one of moroseness and despondency since her mother. left without warning six months ago the mother Mine Arneil's 13 Wilbur Arneil, also “When I naw her grieving, T ask ‘and again what the Mra. Burke said Thure "ahd she always re- “She went to work tn Seattle for ® private*family, but the burden was I took her into my home, where she has since been “It is true that she was recently | married and her love affair developed linto a tangle, but L know she had forgotten all about that in the face er mother, | “Her mother’s dimppeaarnce has ‘been advertised in newspapers thru- lout the country without result.” | Mra, Burke's theory is that the the Auburn in @ melancholy mood after | having brooded over taking her own road Exhausted after hours of wander. sc. and hugging her sorrow, |finaily took the potion intended to The quantity she con suffictent, author way. She was COMPLAINS OF STRIKE HALTS DEATH'S DELAY, 3 SHIPS HERE | <_< | Mrown, hardware merchant | insane Prisoner Attacks |Police Overtake Pair After| Insurrection on in Lower | comes down town every morning 1) Man Takes Poison; Writes|One California and Two| - with numbers of © pieces o Trusty at Pen Exciting Chase California || paper pinned to the left lapel of Suicide Note Alaska Sailings Held Up his coat ; | | leaping on the back of the man Driving at a reckless speed over BAN DINGO, Cal, May 6.—May) : eben, rages in -_ the “1 am laying here waiting for| Reflecting the situation in Wash | downtown streets at midnight, Frank |, Sots BR EAP jonaren! wife knows doa This solebn to 6a jow to| ington, PD. C., where their representa eee ee eee ees eee a ok “ie " wanchiniats Se eae eee Denrenmanes Heiser Ghe wants him to make certain one Ring ences to vill @ Haven,| rave failed so far to reach an Joseph Wagner, a convict at the! joiding 26. inspector, were overtak. |*h¢ Esteban tu revolution In|] purchases for her or to deliver |! iit it doen not neem to act. 1 tryed|4&Teement, ship operators and nea state penitentiary, slashed his bene! on and arrest y Patrolmen F. A.| Lower California under way. messages, For each purchase or 1/4, wik a lady in to selling mea a| men Beattle were deadlocked factor’s throat from ear to ear with Wise and E Covell, after the lat | Cantu insurrectos were in ponies mensage = pins a of paper Teun, but she would not do it without | Thursd in the controversy or a butcher knife early Wednesday | ter had fired several shots sion of La Puerta, Lower California, || 0” his coat lapel | r that he |) a permit. I think I am insane, | the re wage seale which the morning, accordin, : wep Belding i# charged with driving| 45 ies south of fan Diego, thin|| aieeoree ty I certainly know what I am doing, | *hipping board is attempting to put &, according to a report reach: ) wine drunk. Mason is accused of | * FO All George has to do is to count Pic twin cts retty diney and | into effect ing the sheriff's office here today disorderly conduct morning, according to advices from || the pleces of paper * ra ingyen Locally, the chief. difficulty, from Robert Lang, the injured man, 1 nearly a mile over | Tecate, 40 miles south of the border. Joon J.T 46, wrote the! the operators’ standpoint, is their in y Thursday in the Mat swallowed evidently too slow suse he slashed hin rafter writing the another roomer groans, climbed in over the transom, found jin the room, together with an empty| chairman of the shipping board, to compensate in part for the elimina tion bottle that had contained strychnine Daoust is in precarious condition. | ve Bertrand no reason | hin act when he regained con-| aclourness in the hospital rand, Daoust has| Nothing to do with nd Bertrand understands that | tra pay. | the wife had been married agnin. It| is probable that some phase of hin |¢lalm that the shipping board, in its] marital difficulties had made Daoust| extremity for seamen, despondent and driven him to the was She Her from she Paints PRICES hoo Wall Paper We purchased 120,000 rolls of Wall Paper at 25c on the dollar and will offer the same for sale Friday, May 6. Not over 50 rolls of one pattern to a customer. Gilt Parlor and Hall Papers, regular 50c, 60c, a tone as large and pure as most Concert Grands. Any living room 12x24 can T5c. Sale price.......... eeeseeees 20 to B2¢ accommodate such an instrument Bedroom Papers, regular price 25c to 60c. As the | Sale price..... veacesdidkobaes toss MAO MOE .aeeee T5¢ to 85¢ The name “Bush & coctr a a8 Our five reine of na Years | price..... onesdeserdedevens -. B¢ to 22¢ antee of unsurpassed excellence. Its against defective workmanship and | Tarnis ile P. regular price 55e to 70c. fame extends over years and has been nee is as Strong as the Rock of | py eg Minny Paper, 2OeIae Iie ; 2 .25¢ to 35¢ it. ribraltar. | “aad al iat on a Moire Ceiling, regular price 25c. Sale price....12¢ At this time it is extremely advantageous to buy. Special terms on these Grand Pianos this month. Your Upright taken in exchange and liberal allowance made. Call Main 3587. WE CARRY NO STENCIL PIANOS EVERY INSTRUMENT A STANDARD MAKE + futslaw Pion | Manufacturers Wholesale 1519 Third Avenue =~ Retail ae FE) Seattle’s Largest Wal Paper Store 1921 Second Avenue Regular $3.75 Paint. Our price. ..+.-.+-..82.06 Calcimine, full 5-lb. package. Our price.......58¢ = WesternWall Paper (Co. The Hotel Washington Is Across From Us JNNUUAAUUUACU NUTT | he had no difficulty in getting a job | | Marine Engineers’ National Benevo- | drawn up between railroad employes ability to sign up en ors, Other members of the crew are obtainable orted, but at least thre | nels are held up today becaus petent men cannot be found to man the engine room. | THREE SHIPS TIKD UP HERE The steamships Alameda and City of Seattle, which were due to wall yesterday for Alaska, are tied up in port, as also is the steamship Admiral Dewey, on the California run. a The plan of Admiral Benson, |}! f overtime pay by instituting a f bonuses based on econom- | jon, does not meet with It is pointed out that y members of the crew have the actual run and would thus be to earn | ning of the ship, Members of the Sailors’ union) is accepting | aliens readily, whereas the policy of the board has always been that of “American ships for Americans only.” | | RUSSIAN SATLOR | TELLS HIS TROUBLES j Albert Kerensky, a 21-year-old Russian saflor, told The Star that yesterday. Kerensky was unable to get on an American ship in San/ Francisco, and came to Seattle, ar-| riving yesterday. He went to the shipping board office, he says, and | told them he wanted a ship. “Have you taken out first eltizen. | ship papers?” Kerensky says he was) auked, “No,” he replied, ing to.” “Have you © seaman’s passport?” Kerensky told them no, for he bad | “but I am will Passport was pot good. “All right, we'll give you a fob,” Kerensky sage he was told, and was | placed as oiler on the steamship West Jappa. When the young Russian found, according to his statement, a crowd of “young boys—not sailors," in the fo'c'sie, and was apprined that he had to supply his own blankets and mess kit, as well as get no over- time, he walked off the ship. eee Marine Strike Is Not Yet Settled WASHINGTON, May 5.—Negotia- tions between the government and the leaders of the striking seamen to- day were completely at a standstill. “As far as the unions are concern- 4 the negotiations are ended,” said President William §. Brown of the Jent aasociation. At the office of Secretary of Labor Davis it was said no plans had been made for any conference for at least | two days. eee Building Trades in Portland Talk Peace PORTLAND, May 5.—Peace in the building trades wage dispute loomed as an immediate probability here to- day, following announcement by the Building Construction Employers’ as- sociation that it would abide by find. ings recently returned by a special mediation board. All unions in the building trades council, with the exception of the| |bricklayers, have agreed to accept the mediation verdict, which ordered 4 10 per cent reduction. eee URGES NO WAGE CUT CHICAGO, May 5.—B. M. Jewell asked the United States railroad la- bor board today not to order cuts in | Wages of comon labor until a new set of working agreements could be| and employers. De Valera and Craig Hold Conference DUBLIN, May 6.—"President” Eamonn De Valera and Sir James Craig, Ulsterite leader, have been in formal conference, it was learned here today, The conversations were believed to have been in regard to the forthcoming elections and the possibility of Sinn Fein acceptance of the government plan for establishing two parliaments tn Ireland. Sir James is scheduled to become the first premier of North Ireland when home rule becomes effective. La Guerre Is Not Fini for Soldats La guerre is not fini for the sol- date at Cushman hospital, Rainier- Noble post No. 1, American Legion, ig busy furnishing the war heroes with entertainment, books, cigarets and other dainties, but the general public has been busy with other things. You can leave good things for the wounded and sick veterans to eat, smoke or read at the Rainier- Noble post headquarters in the Stu- art building. Canadian Actress Is Granted Divorce an actor, on the grounds of cruelty. Dairy Wagon Driver Is Shot Thru Heart LONDON, Ma: Margaret Ban-| CHICAGO, May 5.—James Mo. | found the driver dead in his wagon, nerman, Cana ctress, has been | Donough, sole support of six brothers| Police are working on the tht granted a divorce from Pat Somerset, | and si “4 was shot thru the heart) that one of McDonough’s rivals early t MaDonobeh; an employe of a dairy | Side belle, did the shooting, FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET DOWNSTAIRS STORE| A New Chon of 100 Jersey Suits Featured Friday, at an Extraordinarily-low Price $10.00 ‘THE IRE’S double serv ice to be had from these suits, for the jack- ets are designed so that they may be worn as sep arate coats with plaited sports skirts. Choice of Green, Blue and Brown mixtures; sizes for wom en and misses. Values worth a special visit to the Downstairs Store—$10.00. More Sports Skirts Have Arrived in light and dark strip- ings and plaids, in which black, navy, rose, pink and light-blue are p nent. The striking effects so well-liked for wear with sports jackets and sweaters, in Serge, 7 80, nd 1 and Velour — $7. $9.50, $10.00 and $12. 75. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Laces in Favored Types For Use in Spring Sewing BABY TORCHON EDGES, especially effective ine baby clothes, 14 nee wide, 7¢ yard. TORCHON LACES, % to 1 inch wide, 10¢ yard 1% inches wide, 121¢¢ yard; heavier edges, 1 t 1 inch wide, 10¢ yard. HEAVY FILET-PATTERN LACES for table runners and chemise-tops, 4 inches wide, 18¢ yard. 4 FILET-PATTERN BANDS for undergarment trim ming, 4 inches wide, 18¢ yard. FINE NET-TOP LACES with dainty lace edge, in ~ widths from 41% to 9 inches; especially effective on negligees and for making neckwear, 50¢ yard. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE A New Model Oxford at $5. 50 —in which the current fashion for shorter vamps and broader toes makes for comfort. In Blucher model, as pictured, of soft black vici kid, with walk- ing heel. Sizes 31% to 8 Price $5.50 pair. q TWO-STRAP BLACK KID SLIPPERS with hand- turned soles and medium military heels, for street hs and house wear; sizes 314 to 8, $4.50 pair. BLACK KID ONE-STRAP HOUSE SLIPPERS with | hand-turned soles and low heels; sizes 314 to 8, $4.00 pair. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE — Windsor | ies 4 Attractivel fuente R wear with middy, | Peter Pan collars and sailor-collar blouses, these Ties give a debon- air touch. SATIN WINDSOR TIES | in pink, green and | white, 25¢. SATIN TIES in cardi-~ nal, navy, green, scar let and black, 40¢. PLAID TIES in striking » color - combinations, | Jaun BLUE DENIM PLAY OVERALLS 15¢ Bright Red Trim 40¢ each. 1-to 8- year sizes LARGE PLAID TIES, | + THIRD FLOOR 55¢ each. “SECOND FLOOR DOSOURS STORE TRIANGULAR MIDDY. TIES in navy, black, scarlet, cardinal and — green, $1.00, —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE company, was delivering milk on | be South Side route. Neighbors heard two shots \the hand of Thelma Shomo, Sequim Mayor and Editor Make Record PORT ANGE May 5,—Hats off to William D. We local editor, and Mayor J. 8. Bugge, of Sequim. At 9:15 a, m. yesterday they took a train here for Port Townsend, board- ed a steamer for Seattle, motored to Kent, flew to Sequim in Frank a Munter’s airplane, and motored back arriving at 515 p.m. It's a av The first novel published in Amer. ica was “The Power of Sympathy,” by Mrs, Sarah W. A. Morton, in 1789, MALT AND OTHER SUPPLIES jPacific Bottlers Supply Co. | WHY PAY MORE? Quart Cans . (24 Lbs.) 5 2 Quart Cans 1.00} . ALL LEADING BRANDS BUY DIRECT FROM HEADQUARTERS OCCIDENTAL} _ 30

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