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sewin ,8p ELLY GPRINGHEL, | ’ E have seldom indulged in superlatives. Kelly quality has been so well established that it hasn't been necessary. Today, Kellys are. better than ever, but their price has been. materialiy lowered. Exhaustion of war-priced material and economies made pos- sible in the new Cumberland Plant have brought down costs and this saving is being passed along to the user. Now you can buy Kellys for the same prices you will have to pay for other tires that have always sold for less. * Kelly Cords are made in two types: the Kant-Slip Tread which offers a resis- tance to wet, slippery streets that makes _ skidding next toimpossible, and the sturdy Block and Button Tread. Both are long mileage tires and sell for the same price. * 1412 Ninth Ave. Seattle, Wash. O.UO WINTERS jx EAR PDE schoolmates, Harry Meadows, commits suicide. —<<——$<——_____. For French pastry look up Bolét's. s how lon ‘Advertisement, Announcement To all my friends and olf cus- tomers: I have opened a new More in my own building, et 1014 Pine Street, and wii sell Gov- d@rnment Paints and General Merchandise at lowest prices. MIKE COHEN 1016 PINE STREET Between Terry and Boren Aves. Batablished since 1906 “Square Deal te Al” Milure d- Ni med, Ask Your Grocer or Druggist for the New Rainier Malt and Hops Syrup No Boiling, No Straining SEATTLE FRUIT JUICE & SYRUP CO. SOLE DISTRIBUTORS MAIN 4618 TWO STORES 217 Spring St. and 1401), First Ave. Corner Union Complete , fn Ieself Caps Any Size Bottle *C-B-CO" saves ‘all your old bottles, ‘Thousands use and recommend the “CB-CO” BOTTLE CAPPER Easy to: ite, Compactly made— Rothing to break or some out oforder, Self Adjusting. Automat! For Sele by All Leading Dealers. Mid. by Comstock-Bolton Co., K. C., Mo- Wholesale Distributors: LA ( SPRINGFIELD, Mo—Afraid of | wont 45 TAXI MAN SLUGS HIS PASSENGER Hurls Him From Car, Robs Him, Speeds Away Search for a taxi driver who Tues day night Was seen to slug a paw senger and throw his body from the {automobile at Third ave, and Olive st, failed to locate him Wednesday Olaf Koppen, laborer, the victim ot the alleged “taxt bandit,” was) taken to olty hospital and later ar jrested on a charge of being drunk He told police Wednesday morning |that he had entered the taxi at Third jave, and Union st. Tuesday afternoon land ordered the driver to take him to Minor ave, and Olive at driver, Koppen declared, pursuaded him to go with him to @ bootlegging joint, where he met three men and a girl He had with him $150 in cash, which was taken Koppen alleges to police that he lost consciousness and remembers | lnothing further until he received a stunning blow on the head. . Mra, A. Forman, 209 1. Olive at and D. O, Mood, 1415 BE, Republic at, declared to police that late Tues day night th saw a large Winton taxicab draw up to the curb, the driver slugging the passenger over the head and throwing him from the car to the curb, The driver then sped away, they sald Koppen waa released from fall Wednesday morning. PEACE PORTAL IS DEDICATED; 10,000 Spectators at Inter- national Border One hundr years of peace be tween Canada and America were commemorated Tuesday with the dedication of the peace portal on the boundary line at Blaine, when 10,000|/from a bettie of prussl countries, siand, Bel m, France and the United States, and heard the messages from repre sentatives of each country. Samuel! Hill, Seattle capitalist and good road builder, thru whose work the portal was erected, presided over the chremonies. Among the speakers were Premier Jobn Oliver of British Columbia: former Gov, Oswald West of Oregon, Lieut. Gov. Willtam J Washington, Frank Terrace of Ort! Na, and Thomas Burke of Seattle. During the ceremony a small piece of wood from the Mayflower, be previously biemed by Mercier of Be' . plece from the Beaver, the steamship to touch a Puget sound port more than 100 years ago, were interred in the masdary of the portal. Says Demand for Horses Increases DENVER, Sept. 7—The demand for draft horses ts increasing de spite the popularity of moter truck automobiles and tractors, accordin to a report by the Horse Assocl tion of America, submitted to the American Veterinary Medical asso @ation tn national convention here. Dr. A. Kinsley, Kansas City, Mo. elected president of the assoct- ation, and Dr. J. F. McKenna, Fresno, Cal., first vies president. ¥pectators stood beneath the flags of he four of THE are Sis and want to Get » od and Ke MM, wri er liter tells Wate an y this nown and wonderful new ge relief to so many ‘rom Constipation, Kheu- ry Gout, Neurttis, Degne Gay and night, receiving the continuoualy Into | for four handsome solid silver trophy oo nd the next thing re getting well Batled it ts haips you know you Sold on @ t are thonoughiy sa ing yo fore the appliance ts ‘ours. Nothing to do but wear it. No trouble or expense, and the most ful fact about Hiance t it In old ao re ¢ that within the reach 1, both righ and poor, No matter how bad your allment f, standing, we will be 4 to have you try it at our For full information write to- day—not tomorrow, pennies Ap- a 78 Bradbu ¥ Bidg., Los tf —Adver me A Remarkable Home Treatment Given by One Who Had It 7 sont w ind Bub-Ac such @ pitiful condition has never ri turned. 1 hate given it to @ number wbe wore teruibly atfiieted, even, bed them hi Paine Like Lightning! ig Through M, ry sufferer from any ular and sub-acute oroven itself to be that long-looked rid of auch . you May send Dollar, but ir money ain? Why au mn relief ie thus Don't delay. Write Durston The! Coyte of) THE SEATTLE STAR FATHER Everett EVERETT, Wash,, Sept. 7.—Son testified against father here today when Raynord Durand, University of | Washington student, took the stand wainst De, W. 8, Durand, brilliant | surgeon, on trial for insanity, and de soribéd alleged hallucinations that had wrecked their family lif | Young Durand’s testimony was the mort damaging so far advanced in \the trial. THOUGHT TOBACCO AND CIGARETS POISONED In @ low volce the boy described |how his father had first showed signa of mental derangement about a month and a half ago, He told of |the fear that bis mother suffered | from the doctor's queer delusions. That his fi had refused to ac cept claprs and cigarets from him, be Meving they were poisoned, was as- serted by young Durand, “Coming back to Everett from Se jattle, we we in dread that my father would attack my mother in the machine, He continually heaped abuse upon. her and cursed her most of the way,” young Durand said. “When we reached Everett my jbrother left the machine at Provt dence hospital and telephoned to the police, Two plain clothes men met ‘SON TESTIFIES HIS IS INSANE Tells of Alleged Strange Actions’ of Doctor Commerce, wae one of the first wit nesaes called by the state, He was fa fellow passenger on the vessel re turning from an Francisco, SAID THINGS NO GENTLEMAN WOULD SAY “rT Durand seemed in a highly nervous condition,” he declared, “He said things to his wife, then, that no gentleman in bf right mind would say. His behavior was to er ratic that Mra, Durand and her little | daughter were forced to seek. pro- tection from the captain of the ship.” Alfred Taro, chief of the Everett fire department, stated that the phy siclan, had given him a valuable dia mond ring, which had been secreted in hie shoe. Taro refused to state that he con- uidered the physician insane, declar. ing that he looked as if he were “on | the verge of & mental and physical breakdow! The name of Tom Hartley, one of | the wealthiest mill owners in Ever. ett, was brought Into the case when Ernest Durand, @ nephew, asserted that Dr. Durand believed that his wife was trying to poison him with | prussic acid so that she could marry Hartiey. Hartiey ts a brother of Roland H. us at our home and took father into custody. “Before this I had made a dash for tather'y revolver, I was fright ened that he might attempt to shoot mother.” The boy also testified that his father naw strange pictures on the walls of hie cell after hin arrest and that he stuffed the windows and crevices with excelsior to prevent “poison gases” from reaching him. THOUGHT WIFE HID POISON IN HAIR ‘That Dr. Durand believed that his wife was attempting to poison him cl hidden tn her hair was the testimony this morning of Ernest Durand, a nephew of the physician Dr. Durand, a captain tn the U. #. army during the world war, and ono of the most popular doctors here for the past 20 years, went on trial Tuce day on charges of insanity preferred | by hia wife. That the defenre would allege that Dr, Durand’s condition wan due to} prohibition Hquor, and possibly nar cotios, was Indicated in the gruelling cross-examipation of the at wit newses by Attorney Stanley Padden of Seattle, Padden charged that Dr. Durand | had been shanghaled on his arrival in Seattle from San City of Destiny, whe reated and thrown into a filthy and unsanitary cell in the county Jail. Prosecuting Attorney Thomas A told the jury that Dr. Durand was suffering from delusions that) hia wife was attempting to poison him with some subtie perfume, which also enabled her to change form and become Invisib! SAY HE THREATENED TO KILL HIS WIFE j about le | broken, Hartiey, candidate for governor at the last election. Several witnesses testified thet Dr. Jurand seemed to fear poisoning, and that be coated himself with tobacco juice as a protective meas ure. FEARFUL JAIL | CONDITIONS DESCRIBED Feaiful conditions in the county Jail were described by several eye witnesses, who stayed with Dr Durand when he was Imprisoned on | the lower floor of the county build tng “The cel! was not fit for a hog to sleep in,” declared P. H. Gilfoll ‘There was a rotten, dead smell the place and the Moor was filthy beyond deacription.” And John Kavanaugh, a telephone triclan, who also stayed with Dr. Durand, sald that he was unable to eat anything on account of the hor-| | nib! stench. “There was a whirring nolse of machinery, a smeli of deodorants in the ceil and the filth was piled high in the corners of the cell, apparently the refuse of months,” he said. Vanaugh declared thet the doo nore seemed to have heen that he hed a gash over his right eye, and that his wrist war sprained “That came from being manhandled in the Jail,” Dr. Durand shouted. Who wouldn't be nervous in a cell like that, after a bad beating, and) when he had Just been dragged from | his family and thrown into jail with out @ warrant?” ADMITS HE FOUGHT WITH DR. DURAND Arthur Johnson, county jailer, ad mitted that he hed been forced to fight with the physician, but de clared that It was necessary. He de clared that he had placed the doctor tor Witnesses testified Tuesday that!in the padded cell for an hour that the surgeon had threatened to kill his wife on their trip up from | California the first week in August. Dr, Durand sat beside his attorney during the trial, and occasionally cross-examined the witnesses or ad dreased the judge in his own behaif. He was carefully dressed, and spoke in a crisp, confident voice. A tow foot away sat his wife, little daughter and two grown-up fons. The older of the boys is @ student at the University of Washington, while the younger was manager last year of the champlonahip Everett high school football team. Arthur R. Priest, head of the civic bureau of the Seattle Chamber of Trophy Cups for Window Trimmers Trimmers of window displays, i: Which will be the leading feature of the Seattle Fall Fashion Fete to be held September 12, 18 and 14 by the da retail stores of Seattle, will compete cups, offered for the best dressed windows displayed during the fete. The four cups are the product of ® Seattle manufacturing jeweler and were placed on display y day afternoon in the display window of | Pig’n Whistle, were they will re, main until awarded to the winning store: Incendiary Fire Damages Town ANDER, Wis, Sept. 7.— endiary origin destroyed the yards of the Larson Lumber company at Jeffrin today and dam aged other property, but thé village, threatened with destruction, war saved when fire apparatus from Rhinelander reached the scene. The flames, starting last night, de stroyed 3,500,000 feet of hardwood lumber with a loss of $200,000. eee Amusement Park in East Is Lost ATLANTIC CITY, N, J,, Sept. 7.— Fire today swept Rendezvous park, one of the amusement places of At lantic City. The losw is estimated at $160,000. ‘Two firemen were Injured, one ae riously. Both men, William Pearce and John Brown, were caught under @ falin, M, Henry Ford Will Consult Weeks DETROIT, Mich., Sept. 7.—Ifenry Tord today announced the neoept ance vf the invitation of Secretary lot War Weokg that he go to Wash- ington to discuss the proposal ford |has submitted for the purchase of the Muscle Shoals plant. | ord, {t was learned, is going to Washington prepared to fight thom wiho have attacked his offer. i\Fuji Fined $200; Man, Not Mountain Name of the sacred mountain! 8. Fuji anene, was fined $200 In fed- morning. Dr, Durand was tried on a similar charge eight years ago and ac quitted. During the Intermiasions of the e dozens of prominent Everett Citizens rushed forward and tendered the physician thelr confidence. The city in divided on the question of Dr, Durand’s sanity. HERE’S MORE ABOUT GRAND JURY STARTS ON. PAGE ONE Wo try to avoid it. But we have no Proper place to hold them. We should have.” Judge King Dykeman outlined his new program as follows; “Twill hear fneanity cases on Mon- Wednesday and Friday morn. ings.” he said. “Absolutely I will sit In every hearing, and all thru the) hearing. ro far as possible. Hearings Will be held in the Jury room of my court, with the door open. it Usually best not to make such hear. ings public, for the benefit of the defendant, = THINKS THERE'S LITTLE “RAILROADING” “Are rational rsons ever rafl roaded to an asylum? Well, I always keep a lookout for \wo things. First, a family row; 4, is a husband trying to put his Wife away Yes, they do try it, but I dbn't belleve they get away with it vety often—not if the Judge tak Perdonal interest in the case and tries to get at the facta. “Then again, there is\the man who fas been drunk on moonshine. He may be perfectly sober, but for sev. eral days afterward he ta, as a mat: ter of fact, temporarily insane. I generally send them, if Ihave the least doubt, to the county, hospital for a 30-day period, “What we ought to have, in my opinion, is a psychiatric commission to handle these cares. Say two alien- and a judge, to do nothing else. And every judge ought to be required by law to visit at lenst once a year every Institution to which he commits men or women—and at public) ex- pense, We have to pay our own ex- penses now, and who ts going | to spend his salary traveling around on what Is really—or = be—official business?” In addition to snake canes, Judge Dykeman will handle probate juve nile court casen, leral court Tuesday for alleged booze \law violation Airplanes are being used in con. nection with fishing on a large scale, TRAIN HELD UP; Engineer 1s Bludgeoned and Porter Wounded TEXARKANA, Ark bandita, who held up Sept. 7 | Pour Kansas City Southern passenger train No. here and Bloomberg, | between looted a mali coach after knocking the engineer unconscious a porter and gashombing clerks, were sought by posnes by sheriffs and deputies today wounding mail led joar was robbed of everything of | value, but they were unable to esti mate the amount of the loot. HERE’S MORE ABOUT GARDNER STARTS ON PAGE ONE 20-20 carbines and’escaped the en filade unscathed, is considered mir- aculous by prison authoritie “Roy Gardner was @ fool,” sald ‘arden Maloney. “Had he be haved himself in here he wouldn't | have had to spend his whole life on [this island, Fle was not sentenced to 60 years’ imprisonment, as is gen erally supposed, He wan sent up for 25 years for robbery of a South ern Pacific mall train dear Rose- | ville, Cal “atter serving elght years and | four months with good behavior, he would have been eligible to be pa roled “But now he hasn't h, yen, re alwi |W a chance. he will be caught. They ys caught, sooner ar later.” BE PUT DARK HOLE If Gardner is captured he be placed in the “dark ho! the prison, That means solitary confinement. The old timers call it “Siberia.” With the exception of a small |rection of land, the entire Island bas been combed oy the guards, | wis are now worn owt from lack of sleep. Mony of then 144 their firet jaleep today efter two nights and a Mz. eapng thee the Senet The bandit was’ dressed in the prison garb at the time of his escape, The bluish grey, similar |to the color of @ postman’s uniform, fa much harder to pick up in the brush than the old stripes which | were abandoned years ago, veteran | guards aay. | MeNell island Nes In Puget sount 10 miles southwest of the business center of Tacoma @nd about three miles from the towrmof Stellacoom, on the mainiand south of tila city ‘The Island ts separated from the eastern tmfiniand | by the sound, about three and a‘ half miles wide. and from the western mainiand by Pitt passage, & narrow, shallow Pe aapaatie only @ half-mile wide at its narrowest point. To the south | Wes Anderson taland. ‘There is an abundance of fruit and vegetables on the {sland farms outside of the government reserva- tion, which would afford Gardner food for several weeks, prison of ficialn state. THINKS GARDNER NOT WOUNDED Warden Maloney discounta, the theory that Gardner was wounded in Wis Might. Mrs, Charles Savage and Mrs. R T. Bixby, who live several hundred yards distapt from the prison, re ported they saw the bandit fall. | They did not see him rise again but when the guards arrived they could find no trace of him nor was there any biood to strengthen [the theory that he had been hit. Many of the 700 ranchers on the island think it possible that Gard ner haa already reached the main- land. It would by been possible for him to have swam across Pitt passage at low tide, they think ‘There are numerous small boats which the bandit could have appro- priated for his use, but none have been reported missing. Despite bis crimes, Gardiner was well Mked at the prison both by the prisoners and officials, it was sald. Thruout all hie adventures and escapes, he has never fired @& shot, altho on previous occasions he has been armed. Assistance in the expected by Warden Maloney the postal department and the Southern Pacific railroad, The railroad company provided several men in the bunt for the bandit around Castle Rock, last June, when he escaped from a speeding train while on his way to the peni- tentiary. ‘Use of soldiers from Camp Lewis to thoroly search the island at one time was also being considered to- day. The 12 square miles of MeNell island are split with ravines and covered with almost tmpenetrable brush and timber, There are nu- merous caves, gulleys and fallen trees which would provide a hiding place for the bandit. The prison guards thought last night they had Gardner cornered in a wooded tract. Special guards were placed along the edges of this tract and other guards patrolled back and forth thru the brush, Two parties of guards, proceeding as noiselessly possible, nearly came toy rin the thicket. Both patrols were about to bpen fire when \they recognized each other, manhunt was from You cant help but like them! are DIFFERENT They are GOOD ( CIGARETTES GAS BOMB USED and| | Postoffice authorities maid the mail| Special for $1 ide variety of plain combinations. All cut goo large sizes, Special Price Basement If You Would Dress Smartly for Less — The Special Price Basement’s the Place Thursday 400 Aprons Coverall, Bungalow and Dress Styles 95 Organdie trimmed ginghams—Gingham and per- cale combinations—Jumper dresses of Kyrtle cloth nd-embroidered muslin aprons. colors, plaids, stripes and d and full. Medium and 200 New Autumn Skirts Only $7.95 Pleated, striped Prunella cloth skirts in shadow ~ and ombre stripes in autumn shades of blue, brown, green and black and white. Sizes 26 to 34 waist measure. Just In! A new lot of Jersey Jackets in the much-wanted sizes—40, 42 and 44. Navy, brown and black. Priced $5.95. GRAIN BEGINS FLOWING HERE 5,000,000 Bushels to Pass| J Thru This Port Initial grain shipments that are ex- pected to total 6,000,000 bushels this season were expected to arrive in S@- attle Wednesday, ‘ ‘Tht contract whereby Seattle han- dies this vast amount of grain signed Tuesday by J. A. Pease, senting Eastern capitalists, and W. T. Christensen, president of the port of Seattle commission. "© Already, Pease announced, 2,500,- 000 bushels of wheat have been pur- chased. Tht wheat will come from Southern Idaho and Eastern Oregon, It is expected that Pease's contract for handling of 5,000,000 bushels of grain will be equaled by other ship- ments, making a grand total of 10,- 900,000 bushels of grain to pass thru the port commission terminals this year, BACKACHE OF WOMEN ‘The back is often called the main- spring of & woman's life. What can she do, where can she go, 80 long as/ that deadly backache saps every par- ticle of her strength and ambition? She cannot walk, she cannot stand, her housework is a burden, or the Jong hours behind the counter, in the office or factory are crushing. She is miserable, ‘The cause is many times some derangement of her sys tem, and backache is a common symptom. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Compound is a reliable remedy, for backache, as for more than forty years it has been relieving women of America from the ailments which often cause it.—Advertisement. ke Steamer Solduc, leaving | alten’ Deck at midnight. dally Sonnecting at Port Angeles for SINGER'S TAVERN | Lake Creacent Hair Curling Troubles Are Over—Read This! ve you heard about the neweat Keep thé hair in curl? If not, b means, cut out these simple Olreetions, and. try this wonderful method. Procure a new tooth brush and a few ounces of plain quid alt. | on !juat before doing it up. You will be ie toniahed when you find you ch lovely waves and curls pear altogether natural, in+ atead of having been artificially ace q of all, the wavineas will last much longer than it would otherwis (Your hair, of course, wi more “body” and fluffines where the dryingy singeing, iron is used, It WIL appear glossier | and livelier, for sitmering has proved equally desirable ressing ne the hair, Wt rind it’ pleasant.t use, and {t will leave no. aticky, greasy or atreaky trace. KAR:R NEW YORK.—Federal agents 15,000 cases whisky, valued at $1 000. It is gro es git been jtained from warehou thru forged Sceegy —_———— For French Pastry look up pe Advertisement. ARE MRE YOU A ¢ A GOPH: « Doubtless if you are @ su from indi tion, you have al tried pancreatin, cha drugs and vari you know the your trouble in even ‘give relie But before giving up hope and clding you are @ chronic Just try the effect of a little Batt cases do -not the ordinary ‘donate, Bitrate or mil pure Risurated | Mag , you can obtain om practi- — cally an. oe gist in ‘outer pore 3 ed_or ‘orm. ake’ teaspoonful of the pa r r two compressed tablets with a tle water after your next me see What a difference this makent will instantly neutralize the dan ous, harmful id in the st which now causes_your food to ment sour, making flatulence, heartburn and or heavy, himpy = fe at teem to follow most ever: “You will find that provided take & little Bisurated Magnes: mediately after a meal, you ct Almost gnything and enjoy it wil out anger of pain or discome fort to follow and moreover, the cons | tinued use of the bisurated magn ‘cannot jajure bs stomach in \) way so lon, there are any sympe! toms of held indigestion.—Adver tinea | | ment, e ve 3 What Causes Skin Troubles? | si che fiery, eninge are‘due sol orders of the blood. For ial Booklet te ie Sigua! ‘nevions without ahicaee write Chief Medical Advisor, 5.5.5,Co.. Dep't 433, 1 Atlanta, Gas, at your druggist. 62.00 per be: ~ “AR-RU Comrs WV. Tecoma, Wash.