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SOUTHARD SENTENCE ON MONDAY Convicted Woman Hears Her Fate From Jury With- out Show of Emotion TWIN Mrs, Lyda band poisoner, FALLS, Idaho, Southard, Nov, 6. alleged today awaited passing of sentence following her conviction | late yesterday on a charge of second degree murder. Sentence will be passed Monday Mrs, Southard was convicted of having poisoned E. F. Meyer, her fourth husband. The verdict was! returned yesterday afternoon approximately 20 hours’ deliberation. | tho ‘specifically | her} Mrs. Southard, charged with having poisoned fourth husband, Edward F. Meyer in order to obtain his property and insurance, was also accused by the state of Living poisoned her three previous husbands, Robert C. Doo ley, William G. MecHaffie and Har. lin C. Lewis, and her brother-indaw, Edward Dooley The motive, the state alleged, was the same in each case—the desi-e to obtain insurance, The convicted woman took the verdict yesterday without manifest: | ing any noticeable emotion. Slightly | she sat in stern} paler than usual, gaze of the court as she has for nearly six weeks listening to testi. mony trying to prove that she had murdered four husbands and a brother-in-law. “We are satisfied with the ver. dict, attorneys to the United Press last night. When questioned further he said: “We will ask for a new trial; if we fail to get this, we will appeal the case to the supreme court. Un der the law the verdict will permit! of bail for our client, if the court sees fit to give it.” Had the jury returned a verdict of not gullty the alleged polsoner of husbands would have been immedi- ately rearrested. She would have been charged with the murder of Harlan C. Lewis, hre third husband, who di@@at Billings, Mont., July 6, 1919. for her arrest on the charge of hav. Ing, peleoned Lewis was ready for | vervice. She would have been held in the! county jail in Twin Falls until requis: | ition papers could have been secured corer sehen | governor of Idaho. COAL MINERS TO | RETURN TO JOBS 35,000 Expected to Be Back at Work Monday CHICAGO, Se 5.—-Thirty-five thousand coal miners on strike in the | Centra) district against the chick off | system injunction are expected to re- turn to Be by Monday, qnaice | action by the United States cir- court of appeals. court now has the writ issued by Judge A. B. Anderson, in Indian- pte under consideration. Tran- script of all the evidence and argu- ments presented in the Indianapolis He court will be studied by the judges; prior to November 16, when a hear. ing will be held, Fe - court-ordered enforcement of | injunction shall be held in abey- ance pending the appeal. ‘This ruling was hailed as a victory | by union officials, who regarded the| infunetion as a death blow to all or- ganized labor in the event it was up- held. Mine operators were not so opti. Mistic. They believed the court's ac- tion metely postponed the showdown, and that if there was to be a strike, it would be better to get it over with immediately. In case the Anderson injunction is upheld finally, and operators are or- | dered to refuse to collect union dues from the workmen by withholding the assessments from their pay, there is no doubt but that there will be a general strike in the minds of either the ®perators or the union chiefs, “The miners will lay down their picks in case this injunction is made permanent,” William A. Glasgow, an attorney for the union, stated. s2e Union Threatens Striking Miners PITTSBURG, Kan., Nov. Striking miners in southern Kan. sas were today given 10 days ‘0 return to work or be ousted from the United Mine Workers of America in orders issued by George Peck, acting president of the dis- trict. About 9,000 miners remain on strike and are operating a “rump” union as a protest against jailing of Alexander Howat, suspended district president, for violating the industrial court law. § Unions Order Men to Keep at Work SPRINGFIELD, Ul, Nov, President John L. Lewis of the Unit- ed Mine workers, today wired al! district presidents of the organiza tion to keep their men at work until @ final decision ia announced by the operators as to whether they will! abolish the “check off” system. Southwestern Road Is Planning Merger WASHINGTON, Nov. 5—The El Paso & Southwestern Railroad com- pany today asked the interstate com- merce commission for authority to ac- quire by purchase of stock and other- wise control the Arizona & New Mexico railway. They also asked for permission. to issue $3,500,000 of short terra notes for the purchase of stocks and bonds of the Arizona & New Mexicd railway. In proportion to its automobiles, More motorisis were killed in Dela- ware last year than in any other state We hus | nnounced one of the defense | ‘The warrant) to Paris. Count de Percival. HERE’S MORE ABOUT } will you? ‘At this place we really should mention one or two other notables who are becoming a part of the show MUTTS COME FROM EVERYWHERE | Mutts are coming from every- | where. They swarm in, and we | need help. We need a business manager. Ah of which explains why Frank Webster, office man- ager of The Star, has been ap- } pointed as euch. 8. B. Groff, cartoonist, will be among those present Thursday afternoon and evening to sketch 1 Star Office, Seattle. Please enter my dog Dog Show to be held ing, November 10, for benefit of ; THE MUTT SHOW (name of Mutt) at Crystal Pool, Thursday afternoon and even- Miss Therese Strother, Baltimore society girl, is moving She's a countess now, for she recently married) STARTS ON PAGE 1 life-size portraits of the purps in all their glory. Dr. W. A. Jarquise, veterinary, has offered his services to the show, “Also,” says Dr. Jarquixs, “any of the kids who want ad vice concerning their mutts pre vious to the big event are at liberty to call on me. Tell them to phone Eliiott 4274, or to call At 1015 Howell st.” And so the show goes on. Boy and girls, at the end of all this is an’ application—an appii- cation for entrance to Mutt Dog show. Fido wants to go to the party. Sign up! | TO MUTT DOG SHOW EDITOR, in the Mutt Community Chest. (Street) (Boys ind girls: It, doesn't cost anything to enter your Mutt, and he might win a prize. No “high-toned” dogs allowed—just fuil- MADALYNNE’S ~ PLANS CHANGE | Attorneys Withdraw Motion to Dismiss Charge | BY FRANK H, BARTHOLOMEW LOS ANGELES, Nov. Obenchain today asked |Judge Reeve for. permission to | withdraw the motion to dismiss the pee of murdering J. Belton Ken- nedy against hig beautiful divorced wife, Madalynne. Obenchain said that the decision had been reached at a conference between himself and Charles Erb- stein, also of defense counsel. Erbstein had made the original motion, basing it on the technical point of law that Madalynne had not been brought to trial within sixty days after indictment, as re- jauired by the criminal code, Deputy District Attorney Charles |W. Fricke objected to granting per- | mission for withdrawal. “We protest against any matter pertaining to the Kennedy murder! cases being settled out of court,” he aid, Judge Reeve suspended decision on Obenchain’s request m. Monday. STILL IS FOUND IN LAKE WATERS : Two Brothers Arrested by Police and Federal Men Raiding two boathouses, near Fre- mont, at 612-16 Blewett st., federal jand police officers Friday night and Saturday morning recovered parts of @ still hidden under water, seized two gas launches valued at $4,000, and ‘arrested Ray Foote and W. C. Foote, brothers, The still, arresting officers said, |had been dismantied and the parts attached to strings and lowered in jseven feet of water. On one of the launches was found a quantity of mash, kept warm by a large lantern. jOn the other boat was a gallon of | moonshine. Both the men arrested, who have \been in court previously on liquor charges, are held in city jail Satur- day, while both state and federal charges are being prepared against them. It was recalled that. a woman died at one of these boathouses several months ago under. mysterious ofr. cumstances, At the time it was be- bad moonshine, Magnolia Club Will Hear Chest Talkers Speakers for the Community Chest fund will addregs the Mag- nolla Improvement club at 8 p. m, Monday in the Presbyterian church at Klondike and W, Plymouth ats. The seme speakers will talk later in the same evening at St, Auburn ball 5.—Raiph | Superior | until 10 a./ Heved she died from the effects of 'REWARD PAID IN ' BRUMFIELD CASE: {Seattle Express Firm Gets : $100 of Amount ROSEBURG, Nov. 5~—-One thou sund dollars of Douglas county money today went into the jeans of sundry individuals who contrib- uted to the capture of Dr, Richard M. Brumfield, now awaiting execu- tion in Salem for the murder of Dennis Russell, The county court offered $1,000 for the murderer's capture, while) the state offered another $1,000./ | Tale latter reward will await the; convening of the legislature for ap- proval. Of the county's money, Inspectors Richardson and Waugh, Northwest Mounted Police, who actually ar- jrested Brumfield near Calgary, jAlta., received $700. The Myrtle Creek express office, near here, split $100 between two employes, They gave information leading to the din- covery of the express package con- |taining the pink silk skirt. The Seattle express offige, which held the famous package, and no- [tified Roseburg authorities that Brumfield had wired for it, got $100, while J. H. Hogan, Roseburg brake. {man, who testified concerning | Brumfield’s movements the day of the murder, received the last $100. ‘The state's reward probably will be apportioned in about the same percentages. Seattle Advertised by Peruvian Papers Seattle is today the best advertised American city in Peru, Newspapers received by the Cham. ber of Commerce from J. M. Macedo, this city’s representative at Lima, jeet forth in detail Seattle's advan- jtages as n manufacturing and ship- ping depot. Such journals as “El Comercial” and “La Prensa”, devote columns to | Seattle's wonderful harbor and the resources of the surrounding coun- |try. Oné issue shows pictures of the {lumber ing industry, Snoqualmie | Falls and other scenes. ‘This city is referred to a% a manufacturing cen- ter of 360,000 population. Seattle has a full exhibit at the Peruvian Centennial exposition, which began in September, and now, with the exposition closed, this city’s Aisplay ts continuing under the di- rection of Mr. Macedo, It was or- ganized and sent under the direction of the Northwest Products bureau of the chamber, Seattle was the only Pacific Coast city thus advertised, Man Mysteriously ~~ Slain Is Identified Coroner W. H. Corson continued his investigation Saturday into the death of a min found Friday on | Sixth ave,, between Columbia and Cherry sts, The dead man was identified Saturday as William Quirk, Identification wax made by Rey. F. EB. Dark, pastor of Taber nacle Baptist church, CHINESE DELEGATION BY WM. | WASHD | Chinese 1 will net come to the Paectfi ference with port folion packed with excessive de mands, Dr. W. W foreign min Yen HAS SEVEN DEMANDS | ‘npectal inter, told me in an interview just before I left Peking China will not insist upon spe. cifics, but will endeavor to have laid | down certain broad principles safe ‘guarding her political and territorial integrity Shantung, Manchuria, Mongolia and kindred topics will not be used by as dir questions to be settled at the conference, but rather as ving what must Inevitably happen if tho old order | of things ts perpetuated. It is Dr. Yen's idea that if the Pacific powers can agree on the gulding principles he expects to sub {mit to them, injust like Shan: | tung will rectify themselves The main points in China's case at the conference will be 1, Insistence on the open door, | America’s policy with regard to the | Bart since 1900. | 2 The abolition of “special | spheres” of influence claimed by dif ferent nations. 3 Control of her own resources, | natural and artificial, including rail ways Operating within her own borders. 4. Non-recognition of any treaty between foreign powers which in- fringes on her sovereignty | EQUAL TREATMENT (OF CHINAMEN 5. ual treatment before the |law of Chinese citizens. 6. A scheme for the gradual jabolition of extra territoriality 7. A “Pacific court of arbitra- Ition,” or kindred plan for settling such disput may arise between the powers interested in the Far | | Fast in the future. Dr Yen ante | e1me pounding away detail when a question of principle is in volved. Ybviously,” policy of the open door pounded by the American s#ecretar of state, John Hay, is really put into effect in China, there ean be privile « in Manchuria or anywhere elae for any particular na tion, “If no nation ts to have a ee of influence’ on Chin ie no need to argue th matter. Shantung returns to China uncondit considers it a ono the * pro told me, “if fal Shan utot aphere there tung cally ally “If it te agreed that China should have control of her resources and that no forelgn government should be in A position to refuse China the use of a railway thru Chinese ter ritory, questions like the South Man churian railway, owned by Japan, disa py RETAIN tk SOVEREIGNTY And no it goes “As to consular jurisdiction in China, we will not\ask its immediate abolition. Nor will we endeavor to fix precisely the terms of years it is to continue in effect “Still, China desires to retain her sovereignty, and #o will suggest the eventual removal of extra-territort ality—at some time in the future | when China shall have perfected her judicial system, 1 don't amy 10 years, 15 years, 20 years hence—tt all | depends. “Another thing 1 for presentation at the confere am preparing ein a plan for a Pacific court of arbi trath Shanghat. This special court would han such disputes ax might tween Pacific powers, and w conflict in any court, but rather supplement it and emven ite labora to wit, at nay, arise be uid not way with the world WOMEN TO URGE | DISARMAMENT! a | \Start Move to Stir Public; | Opinion | : | BY CARL D. GROAT : WASHI ‘TON 5.—Millions of club women the nation over will! be urged the next féw day» to stir| |public opinion to ite depths in sup: |port of the arme limitation confer ence, | A clreular with this appeal, asking |whether the nation wants “war or | peace: wanity or insanity; life or Jdeath.” has been forwarded to the organizations of the General Federa- tion of Women’s clubs by President | | Mrs, Thomas G, Winter, Minneapolis, | who is also a member of the confer ence advisory council. This circular, asking the clubs to let President Harding and the sena- tors know where these women stand, has the approval of the White House and state department. Mra, Winter ts no Utopian dream- She told the United Preas in an Interview today that she hopes for but does not believe arma Leben can be scrapped completely In fact, she added, “Pacificts are try- |ing’ hard to queer the whole confer- lence by saying they will demand complete disarmament. I don't be-| lieve that can be done now; it can| only come when the world reaches | ke stake where it needs no police.” Mrs, Winter views pessimistically |the world’s future if thin conference fails, | “If we lose our moral sense and |adopt the idea of utter frightfulness \for & new war—touching even non- combatants—then Germany has been |victorious by putting across her | philosophy— —& philosophy of terror lwhich we at the outset of the war held tntolerybig* ahe declared, i ‘jinntiilacetndine Blab HERE’S MORE ABOUT | ASSASSIN | || STARTS ON PAGE ONE |} ee Kimmochi Saionji, former premier and leader of the Setyu-Kai party, was the most probable choice as Harw’s successor, Marquis Saionji, on three different | oceasions when ministeries have fallen, has occupied the position of} temporary premier. Baron Shimpet Goto, former min-| lister of foreig: affairs and long! prominent in Japanese politice, was! j considered a second choice. It was generally admitted that! there was increasing uncertainty as to whether the Selyu-Kal party, of| which Hara was a member, would | be able to maintain control of the government. The will of Premier Hara, which bas been made public, directed that a small, plain slab bearing only his | name be the only mark of his final resting place. It forbids explicitly the mention} on his tomb of any of the honors | and titles which he held or of his| accomplishments, Hara had a premonition that he would be assassinated, it was! learned today. He told friends re- cently that he feared a violent death at the hands of some assailant. ‘Tht fugeral of the dead prerhier will be held November 11 at Morio- | ka, his birthplace, in the northeast ern part of Japan. The body will leave Tokyo No- {vember 7 on a special train for Morioka, “Japan's foreign and national poll- cles cannot be changed,” Count Uchida declared in a statement to- —the first he has made since be- jcoming premier pro tem, | Leaders of all factions in Japanese polities, however, expressed fear of a serious internal poliiteal crisis, They insist, however, that it will be only domestic and will not affect fundamental politics at home or | abroad. | Prince Yamagata and other leaders |were reported today hurrying to Tokyo for a conference. The Japanese press was unanimous in its declaration that the nation has suffered an irreparable loss in the death of Premier Hara, Some papers declare that his death has suddenly rendered the future uncertain, } limit |certain definite limits, | Unitea HERE’S MORE ABOUT TELEPHONES STARTS ON PAGE ONE the peak load calle in half—with 4& corresponding failure of service to the telephone user AUTOMATICS MAY FAIL That the automatic system may result in a complete fail- ure, is pointed out by Reeves, “The duty resting on the tele phone company is to install a cy tem that will work after install ment,” he said, “not one that mere- ly secures approval before instal- lation upon some theory or prophecy | that it may work.” Automatic devices to be used by the telephone company are of u new type, according to the com-| pany officials, In his veto of the council ordi- nance abolishing several important poaltiong in the public utilities de- partment, Mayor Caldwell pointed out that the surrender of the city's/ Juriadiction may leave the way open to the Installation of the automatic phone system on 4 meas ured banks. AMERICA TO SET DISARMING PACE Will Present Offer to Limit U. S. Navy WASHINGTON, Nov. United States will offer to set the pace for the rest of fhe world in disarming. At the ‘coming arms oe ap this government will present generous and far-reaching offer to the American navy within It will thus 1 & policy expressed to the Press today by a member of the American delegation as “re moving the armament beam from our own eyes before we ask our neighbors to remove the mote from thetrs.”* The American delegation is now preparing the American offer, to gether with the general pi for World armament limitation While detalis of the offer are being closely guarded | against publicity, it can be stated that they will, if put into effect, mean a more substantial reduction in expenditures for naval armament than many of the most optimistic have hoped for, Neither the American jthe general world-wide been completely worked navy department submitted in tail all the facts and figures needed for constructing! workable projects of armament limitation, In general, it is possible to state the disposition of the American del- egates has been to outline a pro- gram that really stops the race for world naval supremacy without leaving any nation with an unfair advantage. The prevent strength of the lead- ing navies and their prospective strength upon completion of build. ing programs already authorized were both used by the experts in outlining the program Members of the senate who were shown, in confidence, some of the preliminary €alculations, said every indication pointed to the proposing by this government of “a program that will test the faith and per. haps the courage of the world’s statesmen.” Vets’ Rummage Sale Nearing Conclusion Saturday and Monday are the last days of the rummage sale being con. ducted at 1900 Sixth ave, for the benefit of the disabled war veterans in hospitals of Western Washing- ton, enuncl American plan plan out, nor has The RAL, SERVICES for FU Mrs, Fronia, Lytle, who died Friday at her home, 1120 15th ave. will be held Sunday at 2 p. m, at St Mark's Episcopal church, 5.—The | leulously low in comparison. WELL, HURRY THE CHILDREN BE LATE For ScHooL' YOU POKE AROUND ALL MORNING! up! WILL The Great . American Home | ~ DAD HAD NoBopy -To | GET READY BUT HimseLF- < The day of the 5-cent loaf is gone, | never to return, according to W. Hutchinson, secretary-treasurer of the National Baking Co., and prest- dent of the Washington Association of the Baking Industry Hutchinson made this statement today in replying to queries as to | why bread prices had not gone down |along with the return of wheat to a} pre-war level “Even if wheat were to fall |#iderably below the present figu he said, “it would mean no material reduction in bread prices—because flour is by no means the most jm. portant item in the cost of a loaf.” f At the present time, Hutchinson Gectlared, every bakery in Seattle is! losing money—a condition, he says, to come. “Under these circumstances,” he | if the price of bread can ever be Teduced very materially, Certainly it will never go back fo + nickel a loat. that we are giving the public far better bread than it ever had be-| fore—and quality costs money. The | public\ would never permit a return to the archale, insanitary conditions under which the 5-cent loaf was pro- | duced, “But then Seattle really isn’t in such a bad way when {t comes to bread. The latest government re port shows that the average retatl price here is 9.9 cents for a pound loat—which is a good deal less than | most of the other cities are paying. | And this in face of the fact that Se-| attle bakeries pay as high «a wage! scale as any other city on the Coast —possibly the highest mn the coun try. Portland and Spokane, for in- stance, pay a scale which seems rid- “You can get a fair conception of just how big this labor item is thru the fact that our average weekly wage is $48.47—aa against from $22 “| Premier of Ulster Sees Lloyd George BY ED L. KEEN | LONDON, Nov. 5.—Premier Crat Ulster, conferred with Lioy George here today on the proposed | conference on peace settlement in Ireland, After the conference Craig clared he had arranged that wl de peace negotiations, “all our repre sentatives will attend the meeting.” Meanwhile, he said, “nothing is} to be settled behind our backs.” | Sir Robert Horne, chancellor the exchequer, and Austin Cham: | berlain, leader of the conservative | party, visited Lloyd George while he was conferring with Craig. iy Irish Break Pact and Loot Arsenal BELFAST, Nov. 5.—In violation of the Irish trust, armed men, sup: posedly Sinn Feiners, today raided the police barracks at Kesch, locked the constables in cells and seized the contents of the arsenal, Rifles, am: munition and bombs were carried away in motor cars, Cafe Men Jailed | for Selling Rum SAN FRANCISCO, Noy. 5.—Al bert C. Morrison, manager of the Techau Tavern, a well-known San Francise afe, was yesterday sen- tenced to six months’ imprisonment by Federal Judge Dooling on a charge of maintaining a place where liquor was sold, A similar sentence was given to V. Lechardi, who was charged joint- ly in the indictment with Morrison, The attorneys for the two men immediately announced that an ap- peal would be taken from the ver: dict, Ball was set at $4,000 0 each. Woman Sentenced on Booze Charge Ethel Wilcox, proprietor of the Glenn hotel, 2306% First ave. who was recently convicted of selling booze to dry squad men, received sentence Saturday of 60 days in the county jail and a fine of $260. This sentence is a virtual confirma tion of the decision of Justice Cy C. Dalton, from which ‘ourt” the appeal was carried to supébior cour | asserted, matic ropathic fevers; tism; a Day ot 5-Cent Loaf \CHIGAGOHAILS Is Gone in Seattle MARSHA | to $25 In the days of the 5-cent loaf.” Hutchinson deglared that every | lens Employes | Given fi pound which his own bakery sells | - means a net loss of .16 of a cent. proof of this statement, he quoted the following figures, showing just where In| CHICAGO. day in His Ho Nov. every penny goes in the manufacture; Foch was given the reo of a pound of bread: Wages . Flour Other ingredients Paper . Overhead Total .. The average seliing price for a pound, he said, was 8% cents for the same period that these figures cover. “As a matter of fact,” Hutchinson “there has been a consid- which cannot be remedied for months | erable reduction in the price of bread, in spite of the fact that we are losing money today. continued, “it is extremely doubtful |ing pound loaves for 10 cents and pound.and.a-half loaves at 14—whole- ‘The present wholesale prices are 8% cents and 12%. A “I might add in passing that flour “The reason for this is simply | t kept pace with wheat in the | football game Was on the par raises it | when the party arrived. wale. matter of reductions. hasn't even dropped as much as the price of bread. Highly price we paid for flour was $7.96,!chanics working for the |witle this year it ranges from $6.80 | government get 1,000,000 to to $7 HUMAN BAKE OVE The Strongest Indorsement of the Growing the Human Bake Oven in Combatting the Ills of Is to Be Found in the Many Grateful Letters Pouring in Almost Daily to Doctor Loughney. IF YOU ARE A SUFFERER FROM ANY FORM OF DISORDER READ THIS CAREFULLY Ulster’s interests aré ched in the} THE MEDIUM OF interests are reached in the | TMM ov EATING Acute and gout; or Study carefully the following list of diseases that are MOST FAVOR. ABLY 1 LIEVED BY SUPERHEATED DRY AIR AS ADMINISTERED THRU FLUED rheuma chronic articular rheuma- infectious rheumatism, joints if fibrous; stiffness following splint and cast tures and dislocation: obesity, lumbago, acute and chronic nephritis; phiebitis, swollen writer's cramp; golf leg; puffy, limbs; housemaid’ tennis and baseball neurastheni if functiona’ sure; sprains and strains; cold and sweating feet; acute or chronic syno vitis; ankylosis, if fibrous; labored heart action $ 0262 0243 | med conqueror by Chicago t !dreds of thousands of p the Pennsylvania 0083 | lined the streets leading 0633 | station when the general 0220 = allied armies in France ———- | Indianapolis. ¥ $0841 All city employes were holiday. Gov. In 1920 we were sell- Foch. In fact, In 1920 the average nkilled rubies monthly. DR. LOUGHNEY’S adhesion: erene; ritis; pleurit! Bright's CED AND RB-| appetite; dred ailments. THE HUMAN AND CORRECTIVE chronic gout; rheu- ism; arthritis following NOTE.—Dr, fixed 405 Olive st, malnutrition; 9 a.m dropsical, watery, | 12 only. knew arm; toxemia; bnormal blood pres: | All at } treatment of = | those offices. muscuiar pains of flat f varicose ulcers; sciatica: neuralgia, If you are suffering from these troubles, whether chronic, even though you tried various other forms | ment and medicines without Bp realty arthritis traumatic neu- | it will pay you to call at Dr infectious | DY'S offices for a’ thorough # nation and dingnosis of your: Loughney’s Oven treatment offices are} Times Bldg. Dr. Loughney | ed by competent lady nurses, | to 6 p. m. Telephone Main the totally invalided or cases are treated in Dr. L Bake Oven Sanitarium In cases which can offices at 405 Olive st., Dempsey-Carpentie WORLD HEAVYWEIGHT. CHAMPIONSHIP BATTL Now Showing at INTER GI FIRST SHOW Obey That Impulse— RIGHT AWAY—TODAY SEE THE “RINGSIDE” MOTION PICTURES OF THE GREAT 10 A. M. THE Schoo! children crowded park, where the first off from the heads of the state a | government took place. _ Len Small, Maver) | Hale Thompson and 6 | were on the program The degree of doctor of Is j conferred on the guest by versity of Chicago, & ereat of visitors for the Ohio State- 5. ailments; faulty elimination 1 metabolism; poor circulation; ll insomnia; net asthma, bronchitis, pleurisy 4 Seattle, Write literature and references. Jas. Q. Clemn