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PAGE 12 MURDER OF WIFE LAID Jail Awaiting Grand Jury Probe of Brutal Crime COLONIAL BEACH, Va., Oct. 1.— The brutal murder of Mrs. Roger D. Eastlake, mother of four children, to @ay was charged jointly to her hus band, a naval petty officer, gpd Miss | Sarah B. Knox, of Baltimofe, by a coroner's fury. ‘The mutilated body of Mrs. East lake was discovered in her home here. Near by were found a bloody hatchet, which police believe was used in the murder, and a blood stained revolver. Eastlake and Miss Kix are now} fn Westmoreland county jail, at Mont Fose, awaiting action by a ergnd dury. HERE MORE ABOUT MAH Unioh? ‘There ts He wrote the lette of Lake Jim's little joke. on the train going Bast in Montana No m over yet has lived who can plan a crime of the magnitude of this and keep bis plan straight.” No wig was found in the trunk Dolly went to the apartment and wrote to her brother waters somewhere There will be when the missus dis her wig. I gotsthe crown, Ho-ho!" ‘There was sister's joke to her brother. She had found Kate's wis, jbut did she send it on to St ul? No, Kate Mahoney was dead and didin’t need It.” When Patterson concluded, Judge |Ronald asked the Jury if they wished a before hearing Defense }Counsel Schwellenbach, Even Juror Emi! Johnson, who had been sick [night before last, said he was anx }ious to go ahead with the case. Schwellenbach then began his ar gument with the plea to the jury not to hang Mahoney. | “The state would have you be Neve,” said Schwellenbach, “that the body they found in the trunk that great disappointment overs the loss of recess Knox aroused residents here Mrs. astiake ‘nad Sar gen hers jbody of Kate Mahoney. Ladies and She claims she slept the night be- | fentiemen of the jury, I don't know Pore in @ house about 10 yards from | Wh put that body out there in the the Mastiake home. The husband| Water. I am not asking you to be- Mays his wife was alive when he/Heve Charley Tennant put it there Went to work about 6 o'clock I can hardly believe tt myself, but ie revolver and a raincoat with |the body in the trunk was not the Blood splotches were found in un ety 6 of little, boyishshaped Kato where Miss Knox p'thoney.” Na seliate Kedartais HEARD; Evidence also was found. say, that instruments used | MAHONEY STRETCHES Mrs. Eastlake were washed| The crowd tn the court ftoom kitchen sink in the Eastlake | Stirred. Whispers were heard from Miss Knox asserts she saw |€Very corner of the room. Mahoney run from the Eastlake home /*tretched his arms and legs and @bout 6 o'clock. yoment “The body in the trunk was only |slightly decomposed, Hlenbach, “and they were able to get lonly their own experts to say it had been In the water several weeks. “It is remarkable that Alvin Jor. genson, the expressman, recalls the trip he made in hauling the trunk from the Mahoney apartment that night of April 16. Of all the other STARTS ON PAGE ONE trunks he hauled and all the other) to Bae tact casertn, vene places he went, he remembers noth: | buy . ing, it he recalls that tri = from $15 to $25, and rulers, jig = & board, pencils, pens and} “when did he recall it? Not until| amounting to at least $19 | atior he had been talked to by Capt. x ‘Then books and material for) Tennant and the detective depart- the courses are added to this | mont “What kind of a mind has this [RCIAL STUDENT man Jorgenson? It is the mind of a| D THE BUMPS man who, thru the power of #1 commercial student is little |/gestion, can be made to say any- HERE’S MORE ABOUT FEES pew |was taken from Lake Union ts the | | There were many conjectures about THE 5-CENT FARE | “They had been tetiing him that! 4 Councilmen Committed to j aul summer " (4 | Immediate Reduction STARTS ON PAGE 1 ONEY can do is take} “Then Tennant and Py liken’ left him in the room with Douglas, | | telling him that if he had a prope jaition to make, he could make Dougias as Douglas was He trusted Douglas | didn't trust Charlie Tennant and don't think he trusted Patterson He didn’t trust those two, With four Mt} as favoring the | fare, the mov He|is growing str 1} While practic a Gcent far councilmen « a return to a mitt oent car to to secure lower fares | box, daily | iy everybody wants fear that abandonment of the 8% cent tariff will place the “In 10 minutes they returned| burden of running the railway on and Douglas told them Jim had/ general taxation keeping many }asked merely if he was gcing to| from supporting the movement | insist on the death penalty Now, The four counciimen who declare |do you call that a confession, or; that fares should be reduced tm joven an admission? No. mediately are Oliver T, Erickson, ©. | “Do you see what Charile Ten.|B. Fitexeraid, John B. Carroll |nant did in this case? He framed) Lou Cohen. }the defendant, Jim Mateney. Ho| They point out that excessive fares }put into his mouth words that/4re keeping thousands dally from | would make seem he was the downtown shopping district | feasing “High street car fares are hurting “Why did they pick on Jimmy Ma-| Seattle, not only Seattle business, but honey? Simply because he had been| her whole civic life," Cohen declared released on parole. They had got} Students of the street car problem him watched, and they wanted to|POint out that the old private com |keep him there for the rest of his| P@ny pald out nearly $600,000 a year life. jin franchi#® and property taxes for | DOESN'T KNOW WHERE beet ¥ eh 7 a ~ ating the lines, | MRS. MAHONEY I8 . # able to make a profit “I don't know where Kate Ma-|“* 2:7 Per cent on tho 5.cent fare, ANTI-BEER BILL }left her tn St. Paul. I'm not going |to say anyone murdered her. On the other hand I am not golng to say she WASHINGTON, Oct. 1,—Senate wots today decided to talk the anti beer bill to death. is alive. ome day thin mystery may be A score of wht senators, led by | Broussard, of Louisiana, met and de leleared up. We are here asking for a falr trial—a reasonable considera cAtarian at seen | tormined to block the bill by a fill When court opened today Patter. | buster |ished, had its five-hour inning, and| Prosecutor Douglas, closing for the jease to the jury at 6 o'clock this| count evening. oh and it con tion.” Schwellenback then repeated his appeal that the fury return its ver diet ') favor of defendant, and court son stil! had one hour to conclude| The Measure may be revived next in. Judge Ronald had limited the | Seaton. but the wets are confident argument to five hours to each aide, | 't 18 dead ae far as this seasion ts The defense, when Patterson fin. | ©neerned. state, had two hours to talk. Court opened at 9 o'clock. Bach lattorney expected to talk the full jallotted time. This would give the |G was arrested Friday on a W%e of using the mails in a heme to defraud by collecting high the verdict. Opinion was evenly dif tees in locating clients on alleged vided tn the courtroom—that the Yf | government lands, This is the fifth dict would be a faa one; a the | arrest in land defraud indictments re. Jury would be slow to deel he pris- turned by the recent federal grand oner’s fai jury. ims began ‘argument at oe Dm. ;, followt 4 ude’ tara Ae, ries | ¥¢|Kidnaped Step-Son, ny ewe gullty of first deeree| Charge Against Man off this year than the enet- | thing For typewriting, a special) “The trunk that Jorgenson hauled ‘Of $10 has been levied, more |from the Mahoney apartment that the rental of a machine from |day was a trunk filled with Naas. F commercial agency. For all|that some man had been makjp* courses charges are made |one of Mrs, Mahoney's a and syllabus sheets. | REVIEWS TESTIMON ‘the army takes a crack at |/REGARDING NIGH Ran tay wy to Gus Johnson, the party at the was on Friday anon the Saturday Eig in nents.” he was from Portland? Why now registered under the name ‘Brown? Why is he practically in “ne custody of detectives? “I tell you, ladies and gentlemen GNE |lor the jury, that Johnson knows more about the disa) of Mrs. Mahoney than he is willing to taken an exact: | admit. fan o there you are.| “His actions, to say the least, have ly thing to do—and what I |been peculiar, He came here all tho the council will do—is to go/way from Minnesota to protect him and put the line into opera. | self. into these murder _ Afiet him go scot-free, and it SNe” etaretas whither ‘eel Seattle and Tacoma police are try. depgh—* |ing to locate Roy Gilmore and his Pail penalty be inflicted. |atepson, Marvin Nolte, 9, whom Git RY STARTS WITH alleged to have kidnaped In | 7H WEDDING RING Friday afternoon as the lad | “We start tn this story, that you've left his schoolhouse. | Mstened to, with the wedding ring,”| The complaint was made to Seattle sald Patterson. “You learn that even! police by Mra. Florence Gilmore, before the wedding a witness in this | Antiers hotel, Fourth ave. and Ugion case brought together this defendant | at, Friday night. Mra. Gilmore said and his victim.” her husband had called her to More than once @uring his re-|Tacoma, saying he was in serious marks Patterson obviously referred | trouble, He asked for money, she al- to Mrs, Dolores Johnson, sister of |legen, and, being refused, kidnaped the defendant, who, on the witnes®|the child later, stand, had refused to answer a Contractor Injured question for fear of incriminating in Auto Collision herself. “On the 10th of February,” Pat- Goerig, 408 17th ave. N., a badiy cut on the terson continued, “Jamey B. Ma honey took as his wife Mrs. Kate ee Raley coer neck when his auto collided with « truck Friday afternoon. Goesig was taken to city hospital. His car was badly damaged. “Consider that practically all you've heard about in this case ANDIS GONNA SEE THE SERIES more is | Tacoma eccurred in 60 days. Why? “So that not a cent of her money could be dissipated be fore this defendant got his fin- SEATTLE STAR anhiet HERE’S MORE ABOUT SOUTHARD STARTS ON PAGE ONE Trueblood has broken his ning of the trial shoulders his firet time noe the « rwed and visage pathetically touched with sad. nossa, ‘Trueblood, a well liked and re spected rancher elder in the church, a man whose honesty and up- rightness « unquestioned, is sitting daily by the side of the daughter who is the state of poisoning four her w and her t after she left the little ranch house of parents, miles out of Twin and ut in the world “We o not believe our daughter could have committed all these erimes they charge her with. “She always such a sweet sunny girl about the house, with never a sign of a bad disposition “Knowing her as we did when she lived with us, we can't believe that she is anything but innocent “Of course the family feels very keenly having the eyes of the coun try on us and one of eur children in this way. “We have always been humble peo ple, who lived quiet lives, and who have always tried to be honest and to live according to Christian princi pies.” Trueblood ts» the father of eight children, of whom Mrs, Southard, 28, iw the fourth, The eldest is a man of 35, and the youngest in a boy of 7 There are four boys and four girls in the family “Of course,” continued the olf man, “I realize that the public bag, right to look into anythingewha 1 be Hove It's best thatrit should all be out In the pey “nd altho the news: paper notorigty has been felt very deeply by Mx, I realize that the news paper*® “have a right to, and really Sho¥fid, keep the people informed “AM I ask of the court and news papers ts that they play fair and that they do not act unjustly. I do not want to ask any special favors for Lyda, but I do not want her to be at a disadvantage at the trial.” WOMAN FIGHTS - OFF THUG HERE Attacked as she was returning home Friday Wht, Mra. C, Blanch ard, 608 W. 63rd st. was knocked down and brutally beaten by a thug. Mra. Blanchard struggled with the man and succeeded in encaping after her screams had attracted help from passing persons. The thug fled. Police from the Hallard prectnet were dispatched and after a search lof the neighborhood, arrested Clar Jence Cariton, 42, and took him to cen. } tral police headquarters, but later re | leased him 'Dies From Sfroke, | . Working on House While working on one of his houses, 162 14th ave, Friday after. | noon, John Schafers, 57, a returned seafaring man, was suddenly strick- en with heart disease and died tmme- diately. Schafers had been suffer ing from heart trouble for several years, declared his physician, Dr, C. BE. Guthrie, Friday. '2 Alleged Robbers of Bank Are Sought Two alleged bank robbers are |sought by Seattle police Saturday, |following telegraphic tnformation from the Log Angeles chief of police. |"Gloomy Gus" Schrader, 29, and aceuned by husband by brother-in her a tow went was He was afraid that he might) and then have the courts de- @ whether it’s legal. not legal, then the city what It's up against, and e to. the legislature and have Recessary jaws enacted. y event, the contention of : farfetched to me. | opinion is based on the fact the city's charter simply gives to operate ‘railways.’ But, statute was written in 1897, when nobody had ever form of motor ppears to me ioality. of the blanket giving the city its rights, th to prove to me that the put intended giving the broad- tat powers to the municipality, as lated that the city could op- railways ‘above, upon or un- ith the ground.’” ly ts equally convinced of the ness of opposition to the par- Proposition of a Cowen Park he said, “grows at of the claim of the residents of sections of the city that Cowen x wants special transportation | leg: This is not a fact. | “Cowen park merely wants some ition—something which the elty has an obligation to furnish it, | uch as it took over the street f lines and abolished the jitneys, ‘We naturally prefer a motor bus | @eFvice—but that isn’t the point. | “It has been brought out at be such a long haul that it could not be operat- it could make , then, should the ctiy pay three or four times a» much ae it would cost to es'ablish a ice to put ina line that could only system's deficit?” R-R-R! BLACK! GIRL BANDITS FRANCISCO, Oct. 1.—Look for a female Raffles and girl ts this winter. was the warning sounded to- Miss Orcella Rexford, color “Black is a stimulus to crime,” Rexford declared. “And 1 be- the black garments prescribed Fashion for women's gowns ‘winter will result in a crime be dragged charges. That is why he was will- ing to betray his old friend Jim Ma- honey and the woman that for 10 years he had fondly called Mother Mahoney. “A perjurer ts bad enough, but a man who would perjure himself to convict a friend of murder is blacker than Judas Iscartot. TESTIMONY ON DATE IS RIDICULOUS “Johnson's attempt to show that the New Baker party was not held on the night of the alleged murder is as ridiculous as the statement that Mahoney deliberately planned to hide his dead wife's body in the depths of Lake Union. “When Mahoney, on Wednesday afternoon, went out to Lake Union to make arrangements to hire a row- boat, he did not try to conceal his identity or his real name. When he called up the Seattle Transfer company to get them to haul a trunk out to the university he gave his own name, James E. Mahoney. “If Jim Mahoney had carefully and in cold blood planned this mur- der, as the prosecutor contends, do you think he would have given his own name—do you think made all these arrangements with no attempt whatsoever at concealment. “De you think that this would have been the procedure of a cold- blooded, calculating murderer such jas the state has tried to make Mahoney appear? “Let us turn now to the power of attorney which the prosecution says Mahoney or someone closely con nected with him, forged so that Mahoney could obtain control over his aged bride’s property. “I don't know who signed that power of attorney. If we knew we might know who really was at the bottom of the plot to murder Kate Mahoney.” “Now we come,” said Schwellen- bach,” to the last phase of the they say is the ‘confession’ of Jim Mahoney “You will remember that Jim was arrested on the 22nd of May. On the 24th of May, they ted drag ging the lake. Jim Mahoney was in the city jail. He kept in volitary confinement several days. He was then taken to the county jail. Day by day he war brought down to Captain Tennant’s office and told that if they found a body, Walla and hanged. THEY FOUND BODY WHERE TENNANT SAID was for a body—just where Charles Tennant said they would, “They brought Jim down fer hours. And what did pick out of all that ‘These few sentences that will sweep the United he said: testimony of the prosecution—what he'd be taken to Walla “Then on August 8th, they found and kept him there and talked to’ him they in the gers on it. “On Saturday night, April 16, about 6 o'clock, she and the defend ant sat down to dinner. Neighbors who saw them and talked with them learned that it would prob- ably be their last meal together there. “AND SO SHE WENT ON HER HONEYMOON” “What did she have at that last meal? It was something that stilled her tongue, and the voice of Kate Mahoney, who was always talking, talking, talking, was heard no more. And, so, she went on her honey- moon!” Patterson then traced the move ments of Mahoney on his trip to St. Paul and back, and pointed out how, according to plans carefully thought out long beforehand, the defendant had worked to cover up his tracks and avert suxpicion, “Captain of Detectives Tennant had practically all the evidence you [have Mstened to in this case in his hands before he arrested Jim Maho- ney. Then” he sent for his. “Well, Jim,’ said Tennant, T haven't seen you for quite a while.’ « “‘No. But, captain, what am I brought down bere for?’ “Why, Jim, I don’t know. dim, where's your wife?” “It was just a natural ques tion, the most natural question in the world to ask a man who had been lately married. And, as if without care on earth, Jim answered: “‘Oh, she's back East. I went to St. Paul with her, then had to come back. She went on with some friends, a lady she met on the train and her son’ “Heard from her Tennant asked, “ ‘Sure, I've got mall from her right along. A letter from Chi- cago, a card from Chattanooga. She wrote me again from Key West. And I got a letter from her on Grand Casino stationery, from Havana. Don’t know whether the Grand Casino is a hotel or what.’ “ ‘Well, Jim, did she have some travelers’ checks?” “Oh, sure, she had money.’ “"Did you ever cash any of them for her?’ Iatoty?” hed a couple for , dim, we've got some here that you cashed in Seattle before you left for St. Paul, to buy a couple of suits of clothes, How about that?’ “You better talk to my law- oni ‘And Ji | he coul “We found closed up. He knew answer. the trunk with | Jorgenson handle on one end. CHICAGO, Oct, 1.—Judge K. M,|"The Owl” Tommy Griffin, 36, are Landis bélleves the baseball commis. |*uspected of being implicated In the sioner is entitled to see the world’s Tobbery of the Huntington State the! body in it, and the only person who ever handled that trunk was Alvin He knew what kind of | testimony? | trunk it was, that it had a broken | And he says the whole ‘course of that conversation, | trunk in the morgue is the same trunk ‘he carried to Lake Union and put series, T am going to see every | game, but I will have to break up my vacation to do it,” the judge said. ETAMPS, Oct. a Frenchman, set a new world's specd record when he won the Deutech cup in the airplane races here today. He traveled 180 miles in 1 hour, 4 min- utes and 391-6 seconds, in a boat for the defendant. And he says the defendant is the man who went with him that night. “You think that was the body of Kate Mahoney, don’t you?" Patterson paused and scanned the faces in the jury box, “Who says it isn't?” he went on. “A fireman, who saw Kate Mahoney on the street. That's the kind of evi den hey offer-a fireman who ‘0, I don’t think that’s Kate Mahoney's body.’ “Did he look at the face of tha: body? No, the features were gone. Did he look at the feet? No. The hand? No. “But the people who knew Kate Mahoney best, her rela tives, her friends, that little old lady, Mrs. Papineau, who knew her for years and talked with her almost every day, they said the body was Kate Mahoney’s. Was Mrs. Papineau prejudiced against the defendant? No. She sald she knows that hand was the hand of Kate Mahoney. And when she sits in that witness chair and knows that on her word a man may hang, Mrs. Papineau would never say that, unless she was sure.” Matinees, 2130 Grand Opera riking « Balance” , General Adminsion: KANE, MOREY & MOORE NEXT WEEK—Juanita Ha bank of Los Angeles recently, in |which $43,000 was secured by masked bandits. | “Buddy” Martin and “Jimmy” Ry- an, two of the bandits who held up |Leland Higbee, bank mensenger, re cently at Second ave, and Spring st. |were aiso implicated in the robbery of the Los Angeles bank, according to police. Martin and Ryan were captured a few weeks ago by Sheriff Matt Starwich in a raid on their West Seattic rendezvous. 20 Are Injured : ‘ in Train Crash CHICAGO, Oct. 1—Twenty per. fons were injured, five seriously, | when elevated trains crashed on the | Oak Park elevated, here, today. A speeding express train crashed into | the rear of another train, | * 60 Per Cent Gain : in Church Members In a report to the Seattle Federa- tion of Churches, Rev, H. I. Chat’ ton declared that six of the principal Protestant denominations in the city | have gained an average of 60 per |cent in membership during the last decade, while the city has gained jonly 38 per cent in population. The report also states a great gain in the Sunday schools, BENEFIT CONCERT PLANNED A benefit concert for the relief fund of the Friends Service commit tee in their child-feeding in Germany and Austria, will be given Friday night at the Odd Fellows’ temple, PANTAGES 7 Matinee Nights, 7 and 0 Spectacle LITTLE CARUSO & CO. Presenting in a Novel Manner WALTON & BRANT one Fee Song Cycle REKOMA oa Marvesters of Laughter HERBERT & ‘NORTH “Original Noi PANTAGESCOPE Feature Comedy enne” Matinees, 25c. Nights, 400 a—NKEAT WEEK ARBUCKLE GIVES ANOTHER PARTY | SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1921. | ‘20 TELL BOARD ~ CITY TAX CUT IS 4.7 MILLS ABOUT ASYLUME “Welcome Home” Affair in| Fitzgerald's Promised Re-| Probe in Tacoma Thursday” Los Angeles Mansion ANGELES Oct, 1—Rumors Hollywood film colony tration Fatty | ival | with | ring Holly film stare It waa, Los thru the ay that the demo Arbuckle eived up yesterday was a stag hired “supen" doing th his gossip originated at the | wood hotel wh many |make their headquarters hotly denied by friends of the come dian out on $ ball Jecharged with causing the death of | Virginia Rappe | {| Fatty’s arrival in Los Angeles has, | jin fact, caused a sharp division the ranks of the movie ple favor Arbuckle, others denounce him. Meanwhile Arbuckle ts remaining jin the seclusion of his W. Adams at. maasion, He was not alone, how-| His friends thronged to the house | In addition to his wife, Minta Dur. fee Arbuckle. “Buster” merly Natalie Talmage, Slim Sum. merville, Eileen Percy, Hank Mann, Mra, Walter St. John, Director Eddie Cline and other film celebrities, Arbuckle’s anxiety to avoid the Umelight did not prevent him from | admitting newspaper men and ppesy photographers to the house ip large numbers. __ The beem of flashlights resounded | thru the. corridors ‘he mous Players-Lasky Inter. | exts, holders of Fatty’s movie con tract, refused to make n statement | whether the contracts would be can: | celled, It was understood no action would be taken until after Arbuckle’s | trial. who is 000 ever thowe present Included: | Fatty Must Face Booze Prosecution) SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 1.—More hornets to buzz around the head of Roscoe Arbuckle, comedian, now un. der charges of manslaughter in con- ection with the death of Virginia Rappe, movie star, were set loose today. Robert H. McCormick, special as sistant United States attorney gen- Leral, was responsible for Arbuckle's latest difficulties, MeCormick declared that as a re sult of evide: produced before the! federal grand jury late yesterday, he proposed to prosecute Arbuckle for violation of the prohibition law. McCormick claimed that he had located ‘the parties who retailed the | liquor to Arbuckle, and they also) would be prosecuted ‘This wan the chief development tn Arbuckle’s case here. District At torney Mathew Brady and his assist ants sald that they were preparing to take, during the coming week, | steps toward bringing Arbuckle to trial, None of the state's witnesses could be found In fan Francisco today and it was admitted that the state was doing what it could to keep them out Keaton and his bride, for- | — duction Beaten Seattle will spend next y 1,200,000 lens than it did this y 4 reduction of more than one-sixth The tax lpvy ordinance was com pleted Friday by the finance commit | tee and will be presented to the coun 11 for adoption at its meeting Mon day afternoon. Drastic cuts in all departmental extimates have resulted in a reduc tion of 4,7 mills less than this year C. B. Fitageraid, chairman of the council finance committee, promised early last summer that next year’s budget would be cut $1,000,000 and the tax levy reduced by 4% mills. By paring to the bone, the counell was able to better even this mark Final figures show the total amount to be levied for in 1922 to be $6,419,442 as against 11,005 in 1921. Upon an assessed valuation of $244,960,000, this gives an average tux levy of 26.88 mills, 40.76 milis in 1921 as against 6) ‘ls | Resumes Here in 10 Days” More than 20 witnesses had b |heard by the board investi inefficiene special gating |e Jwhen it adjourr brutality and harges at the state insane asylume™ here Friday after! after a two-day session, Vormer si and Stef patients at Woolley and relatives of thosel ment at the instite the bulk of the wit: now tion nennes under formed The commission will convene again in Tacoma Thursday morn ng. Later 4 meeting will be held in Bellingham.4 At a meeting of th committee tt 10 days in Seattle, the meme are particularly anxious to hew «sand former employes of the hoen Is for the insane, Chair- |man R. B. Hesketh declared, PPORTUNITY TARWANTADS™ about | bers je mph Fs e MISS BRIGHT, 1604 4th, cor. Pine jane for advanced pupils. ed ME who make their mark in the world are make yourself if you are a pert with pour 4a you trade them for nent value? And, above cumulati Think! of touch with anyone who might be interested. Efforts Made to Force Coal Down WASHINGTON, Oct. 1,—Efforta were being made by committees of the national employment conference today to force down the price of coal | and to prevent higher prices when winter Increases the demand. A® yet no concrete plan of action has been evolved, but government figures indicts that unless some steps are taken @ coal shortage with “famine prices” may come with an | increased industrial activity and the usual winter demands. Coal produce tion so far thia year is the lowest since 1909. THE CORNISH SCHOOL DRAMA MUSIC DANCE Roy Street at Harvard THE NORMAL DEPARTMENT CALVIN BRAINERD CADY Formerly of Teachers’ College Columbia University New York City October 3 Opene Classes for Private Teachers of Music anf Teachers tn the Public Schools Private Instruction in Piano and Harmony OH! BOY! ANNOUNCEMENT On account of a great number of people living out of town having been unable to get OH! BOY! and write in time for their letters to reach us by Saturday, October 1, the contest will be carried on one more week, al! letters to be in our office, 325 Lumber Exchange Building, by Saturday, October Sth, If you cannot get OH! BOY! at your neighborhood grover's, call Main 1719, and we will see that you are supplied. Union Soap Company 325 Lumber Exchange “No More Death” “The End of the World” Physiologically Considered Hear Dr. Geo. W. Carey of Los Angeles, Sunday, 3 a m and 8 p. m. at the MONTELIUS MUSIC HALL Third and University 2 FREE LECTURES Come and Get the Secret of Health and Success traders: know how pein to farthest. Now, ask. trader. Do you! too easily? Do of perma- are you ac- dollars so, you can trade? -How can finan. to be you beeen Established Thirty-one Years The Most Talked of Woman in the World Helen Keller Blind—Deaf—and Formerly Dumb Assisted by ANNE SULLIVAN MACY—Her Teacher and Lifelong Friend MEL KLEE Just a Laugh BOB LA. SALLE. “Songs, Stories and Steps” MARJORIE BARRACK “Girl Violinist” THE GELLIS Les Artistes Classiques GEORGE and MAY LA FEVRE 12 o’Clock at the Masque Ball HARRY J. CONLEY “RICE AND OLD SHOES” With NAOMI RAY. By Grace Ryan Topics of the Day—Kinograms—Aesop’s Fables—Concert Orchestra Holidays PRICES Nisht—25e to 1, except Saturday, Sunday and * and 0c, except Sunday und Holidays