The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 23, 1921, Page 10

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TH SEATTL TAR WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23. 199) WREAK BiG DAMAGE Scores of Families Driven From Their Homes in Northwest One boy was drowned, scores of fam. “Mies Were driven from their home Daiidings were wrecked, crops ruined and a vast amount of live stock lost in the freshet that continued Wednes day thruout the Northwest. ‘Locally, weather conditions hap. Pity adjusted themselves Tuesday might in a manner thwarting dam ge here for a time, at least _ Cessation of the drenching down of rain, followed by a light in the mountains, probably tly retarded the flood waters prevent serious results close to ‘OC GREAT UN OTHER TIONS OF NORTHWEST But in other parts of the-state and Oregon the havoc wrought was h forks of the Santiam river, overflowed their banks and farmers and their families to f ground, Ten miles north of ny Mr. and Mrs. Fred Crowl, Pyearold daughter and Mr. sister were rescued utterly past ect ‘They had been driven from their into a tree, where they had re- in the branches lightly clad 24 hours. d to flee for his life when BSantiam surged about his home, Curl, 18, was caught in the and swirled against a tele- pole, which he climbed only fall back from exhaustion later. was drowned, | | REMOVING THE INTOXICANT no NEBBE ILL Lose MY TASTE FoR The STUFF IN ~~ Liner on Pacific | RANCISCO, Noy, % | valued at more than | 000, stored In special mot vaults on the transpacifie tiner Sonoma, was stolen while the | veasel was on the high seas, it | Was learned today, | | ‘The Sonoma arrived here yes torday from Sydney, Australia, The money had been stored in spe jolat tanks with supposedly burglar f locks, When the tanks were wned yerterday the money, which contained in five boxes, was |round to be gone Inver ion showed that the flocks had been filed off. The five boxes had been removed, Hoxes ithe exact duplicate of those removed | were then placed on the tanks again |by the robbers, thus pre | suspicion being enung any roused until the | veenel arrived here, as an ins of the ship's vault was mad \day by those in charge. The keys the riginal locks fitted the substitutes exactly The bullion was fened from Australian banks to the Interna | tionaltional Banking corporation, jcording to Fredeiick 8. Samuels, general manager of the line Aw s00n as the joan was discovered ‘aptain of Detectives Dur . Was immediately called, He ar A with several detectives and the a was searched frem stem to nh without reeult, The entire per. 1 of the Sonoma was ques tioned Three officers of the vessel had keys, a¢eording to ¢ | They were the captain, the first effi nd the purser |riv ver HHion is landed from a vensel immedi Jately upon its arrival, Extreme se lereey surroun }facts surrounding the mystery only became known today Just when the robbery took place te unknown but Captain Matheson ts Small boats were sent to the Mood. ‘and many families, marooned on voofs, carried to safety. CK SWEPT OFF, ! CROPS UPROOTED was swept away. Crops Many valleys thruout Northwest ‘were uprooted. | @ livery stable collapsed under t of snow saturated with grain storehouses went down. were stampeded. Chehalis river is reported over he Cowlitz river is running high and | Kelso bridge, flooding the pile and cofferdam. are not bed, weather sharks that a resumption of the still threatening, may easily er damage than if the had continued unimpeded by S READY TO THE ALARM are tramping the valleys of Duwamish, Snoqualmie and tivers ready to sound the if those rivers leave their torm warnings, ordered up along coast by the weather bureau , continued to fly Wednesday, ships offshore while the southwest gale persists. "Telegraph and telephone Unes, for ‘Most part. have been repaired. ‘communication Wednesday uninterrupted. Mail service is almost normal. eee DY’S BODY from the Sound, where perished after the wreck of Ed- Hubbard's seaplane Sunday night. body of C. W. Bandy, Seattle in, was being prepared for bur Wednesday at the Butter- th mortuary. ‘The body was found at low tide by two boys, Harold Larson Knut Grotelle, within a few hun- feet of the place where the _ Blane was wrecked. Angry Waters i in Oregon Receding PORTLAND, Nov. 23.—Oregon today was preparing tomorrow's spirit of the day to flavor the tur: | key. ‘The storm which has raged thru the Columbia river and Willamette sections for four terrible days on the wane, now and sleet which the countryside and oe traffic and wire communi- Pane first train to arrive intact| from the ice-bound Columbia gorge ‘Was safe in the sheds today. dt was No. 17, of the Union Pacific, stalled nee Saturday night at Pridai Veil) district from Crabtree and Jeffer- | is banks and still rising. At Keleo | DUND IN SOUND Tuesday afternoon on Bainbridge} Thanksgiving feast with the real) falls, 20 miles cast of Portland Passengers reported little suffer. ing. Some anxiety is still felt for Spokane, Portland and Seattle trains stalled on the north bank line, near | Cooks and Roosevelt i] Raiiroad officials tonight thought Passengers from these trains would teach the city some time today. No Aefinite word has been received con- cerning their weifare. In the Willamette valley, where the Willamette and Santiam rivers have wreaked untold damage, flood waters are receding, leaving a heavy coating of mud and vast wastes of tanged driftwood and snarled wires in their wake. Marooned families were being re- leased from a score of dangerous sit uations, and an effort was being Made to check a possible loxs of life, Reserve Officers to Meet Saturday Reserve army officers in Seattle and men interested in joining their Tanks are being urged to attend an organization meeting at the Chamber of Commerce ussembly hall Satur. day, at & p.m, ‘The call is being issued by Maj. Herbert W. Meyers, at the request of rallgd the 96th district reserve di. ol, Perran Whitworth, chief of * HERE’S MORE ABOUT ARMS MEET STARTS ON PAGE ONE Walla Walla six greenhouses | ments, stick together and call an in stant halt, showing that they, at least, intend to live up to beth the At Sunnyside several barns} spirit and letter of the agreements, | they can maintain the peace of the| world indefinitely. If they fall to adopt this attitude, the naval agreement and all th other benefits of the conference will be merely postponed Such a conclusion, therefore, would | conditions in the vicinity of/jeave the question of peace or war in the hands of the United States and the British inmyire, Hope to ‘Minimize Horrors of War BY LAWRENCE MARTIN WASHINGTON, Nov, 24—Out of the arms conference may come pro- posals that the nations unite to minimize the horrors of war, if they cannot entirely prevent it. The American advisory committee appointed by President Harding to assist the American delegation was today et upon various sugges: tions which may bring this question before the conference. Abolition of submarines or limita- tion of their size; use of poison gan and chemicals in war; the bombing | of cities and the development and use of new weapors were among the questions submitted to sub-com- Mittees of the advisory committee. The suggestion has been made un- officially and informally that at the conclusion of its program the arms conference might well consider revia- of the rules of war, so that if conflicts do occur in future they may be leas terrible instead of more so. In this connection it was pointed ‘out today by an American naval offi- cer that developments in aircraft, chemical warfare, construction of de structive bombs and other enginery of war are continuing on the busin of lessons learned in the lost and that even if armies were limite the next war, should one occur, might well be more destructive than the last. ar Britain Planning | forced suspension of work on the be short-tived and war will prove to} | | | Bigger Naval Cut) BY CHARLES M. MeCANN LONDON, Nov. 23.—-A further step And, Lo! 1¢ BULLE Was Mister J.Mahoney |Commun ity Chest Button} Distinguishes Him From Jail Mates By Hal Armstrong HE jailer’s heavy key jangled in the lock. A small man en tered the dim corridor. From somewhere out of the gray, som ber gloom behind the « bars came a sound of feet shuf. filne over polished steel. A voice xpoke Are you the guy we #ent ee ete t for fea.” anewered the small man. . “Well.” said the voloe huskily “we ain't got much in here, but we thought we'd send for you. How much does it take to get & button?” yne dotlor.” “Hel! All I got ie 98 cents Hey! Who's got two cents? Bill, you got two cents you'll lend me? No?" Another yoice, farther back in the deep shadows * * * “I got two cents, Here” * © © Two bits of metal tinkled musically skid ding across the steel area be. tween cells * * * “Thanks, Joe. That makes a dollar. Here, mi» ter, 's the money. Some of the other boys put in what they had. Altogether it’s $1.48. Here. ‘tis 1 get the button.” A long, white, heavy arm, with # small hand like a worm an's, reached out thru the bars and dropped the jangling change into the litt®e man's palm. He placed the money in his pocket, wrote a receipt, handed receipt and « button back thru the bars, methodically. The jail er's key rattled, the door clanged Back in the gloom of his cell James Mahoney, condemned murderer, was pinning on his shirt a button of the Community Chest that said, “Here's my hand.” in naval retrenchment—in accord) Roy Gardner’ 's Trial with the movement for limitation of | armament—is planned by the British | government, it was learned today Sweeping reductions in personne! of the royal navy are said to include the demotion of 60 captains and 240) | commanders. and clearer weather re-| © Most of those demoted were pro- moted during the war, The Northcliffe papers are de-| manding abrogation of the Anglo- Japanese alliance, which, it is claimed, is detrimental to China, prejudicial to, Anglo-American rela tions, unpopular in the British 4 minions, and even harmful to Jap oe n.! Says Germany Not Planning New War)! BY CARL D. GROAT (Copyriaht, 1923, by the United Prowse.) WASHINGTON, r many is ready guarantees “to an international tribunal” to alle ars ofa Nov. Edmund Thermann here to open the German embassy and ultimately to become ite coun. selor, expressed this ax his belief to. Germany, desiring an undis turbed opportunity to work without recurrent threats yof oveupation the Ruhr region and elsewhere, would make these guarantees in any | suitable form the rest of the world demands, according to Thermann's view. The new German representative & young, clean-cut man of Saxon- Thuringian stock, bearing no duel cuts or other earmarks which th North German affects—-mnde it clear he could not and would not answer | Premier Briand’s statement about | rmany, *- Part of Jap. Tis to Stay in Siberia HONOLL Noy, 23.~Japan will Bot withdraw all he to furnish further | {on the Santa ¥ (der that Herman In ment reward for vietion” of persons atte rifle the mails, it was announced fro the ninth arm |sion of the proce jaccording to the Japs Undisturbed by Hughes Demands Kirkland, was fined $150 in federal press of J is abe Started in Arizona PHOPNIX, Ariz, Nov, 23.—The \ grand and trial juries were ordered leonvened in federal to consider action « ner, bandit, for the i bery of @ Santa Fe mail resulted in hig capture diner pes Par has two 25 year | | sentences standing against previous robberies. He is to be tried | charge wolely in or lied, mail| n-| rk, may receive the $5,000 gove “capture and c Siberia unleds the Russo-Japanese conference at Daiten reaches an agreement Hlives and property in Sibert ing to a cable from | by newspaper here. Japan has announced that she will withdraw her ith wrmy division Siberia early in December, but y division will remain |" ding the conclu. | é airen, | Fy olin} given $9 tings ut Daren. Fined $150 for Rum [on de safeguarding ‘okyo, receive the Jiji, the Japanese langu Viadivostok pe cab BY CLARENCE DUBOSE TOKYO, Noy, 24. by American Secretary of State | Hughes’ insistence on adoption of the 60 per cent naval strength ratio pro- | posed for Nippon in his original reed tation program, Conviction is general here that ul- timately ag on @ satisfactory Ington conference ement will be re ‘The carth'’s orbit around the su t 460,000,000 miles—the dig. troops from tance the carth travels éach year, urt here today | net Roy Gard. tempted rob ar, which him for npting to! Japanese accord The people and pan remain undisturbed | hed | We HP a to by the Wash. | of labor lined to believe that the locks ‘ were broken before the vessel ar rived in Honolulu, and that the bul lion was landed from the vessel there ! Captain J. H. ‘Trark, commander A [of the vessel, maid today: “It te difficult to believe that any evar tel Wellies matame members of my own crew would failed to step an escaping bur- glor who bad twisted from the stip of A Anderson, proprictor of the Kmpress hotel, 1100% Third « just as Motoreyele Patrolman C. G.@tanley arrived in answer to & summons. dence thus far gathered, however. moms to indicate that the job tn} volves a considerable number of would have been difficult for even & «mall number of men to have jemuggied so weighty a treasure The burglar was armed, according |away in so short a time, to say to Anderson, who said be surprised | nothing ‘et enervent i aa the man in the act of prowling @) mst. personal, op room and grappled with him. job was committed on the high seas Holding his captive, he called PO lierore we reached Honolulu. There lice, When Stanley came up the]i, every indication that it was plan thief wrisgied toons and fled, with! ied by persons very familiar with Stanley and several roomers in pur-ling ship, who knew before we | suit reached Sydney that we were to tak |. ‘The burglar te Geveritied a0: being |. seg shipment of bullion aboard & short thickeet man, wearing [shabby clothes. {Two Ribs Broken BURCH MURDER as Autos Collide K. H. Shamek, 2429 12th ave. W.. suffered two fractured ribs when | thrown against the side of hiv car/ BY FRANK MH. BARTHOLOMEW Tuesday night, when the machine} !O8 ANGELES, Nov. 23.—Arthur | collided with one driven by George |C. Bureh, charged with the slaying Cook, 1814 Runnynide ave. at Wear} ot J. Belton Kennedy, wili eat his lake and Fifth « {Thanksgiving day dinner in his cell at the county jail with the vision of 12 persons outlined in his mind \F ormer Detective "These 13, wornes and, men, whone | ' hands hold the dice that shall be Faces Check Charge 1). 30 Nf, imprisonment Accused of attempting to passline insane asylum or freedom, will Worthless ghecks on a store at 12th | | jaye. 8. and Bailey st, P. B. Blake, | 48, @ former private detective, was in | Superior Judge Reeve adjou |for the Thanksgiving holida: Indications are that women will court city jail Wednesday on an open charge. Blake was arrested Tuesday | comprise the majority of the jury. hight by Sergt. L. M. Miller, These women are for the most part | housewives: Box Car Thief Held Hecause Burch is alleged to have been insane for the last three years, | Guilty of Murder) iccring to tis attorneys, he wit PORTLAND, Nov. %.—The jury|not take the stand in hig own de- in the case of Dan Casey, charged | fense with murder, returned a verdict of | murder in the first degree here this CHEST ‘WORKERS morning | Casey's trial was brought to a close | yesterday Casey was charged with killing etic agent, who thwarted Caney’ ipt to loot box cars in}, With more than sti to the Albina freight yards lus be rained to. fill a pe nethe mer. Chost, workers for the fund tried a | Phillips was mortally wounded ina} new tack Wednesday and opened runuing gun fight as Casey, with a{booths in downtown hotels, stores companion, attempted to escape, |and office buildings. The booths — will be in operation from 11 a. m . to 6 p. m. every day for the rest |Revelle and Bliss {2 wor and it i honed. that Leave to See Hart! 2 effort with send the cam- Thomas P. Revelle, United suites |ise over the top by Sunday district attorney, und fee te up| Booths ure located at the follow Bliss, head of the White Cross, went |'% Places |to Olympia, Wednesday to comter| Bartell’s drug store, Second ave. jwith Gov. Hart on the narcutic con [and Union st; Bon Marche: Savoy | ference in Sentite em Thotel; Cheasty’s, Second ave. and Seneca st.; American Bank building; Union National Bank building; L. Single Turk Weighs Jc. Smith building; ‘Augustine. Liundquist-Lilly Thirty-nine pqunds of turkey—al|and Pike st,; ne bird! Joshua Green building; Postoffice, ‘. . E, 59th xt, rejand Fr ck & Nelson's ceived the bird from Oklahoma Wed.| Community Chest — officials |nesday, All the 1 nd their |Nounced Wednesday that incomp | Near and distant relatives will be col. | reports showed a total of $510,009.49 | lected to make away with the fowl, |up to Monday night. It was hoped that ‘Tuesday's reports, together {Woman Fined $200 with Monday totals that have not yet been announced, would add on Liquor Charge $100,000 to this figure. | Emma Stone was fined $200 by |. While Seattle's campaign was lag |Judge Jeremiah Neterer in the U. & reports were received showing | |district court ‘Tuesday when ohelCleveland’s and Minneapolis’ Con aded guilty to a liquor charge|™UNIty Chests practically — filled, hind: har Cleveland had raised $3,713,000 ot} its $4,000,000 quot Minneap: | 78 per | | total Statute Violati ; * Found gulity of Pred sprnayarg Ireland Delegates jeral Hquor law# Frank Bonsell, of Talk With Premier LONDON, Nov. 24,—'The Irish delegates met Premier Lloyd George and his advisers in an informal econ. COST OF LIVING IN (Pan ulnal ate court Tuesday, SEATTLE GOES DOWN | |tne mectine aocicemnnt, inwued after | \“intormal converaation” and con tained no announcement of the is ues disoussed, Seattle's cost of living is 16.6 ber cent less now than it waa in according to figures by the United States From May, + to September, 1991, the de. Firm Acquitted of | ‘cent. ‘The ex Bird-Law Violation timates are based upon six staple C. C, Berg, Ine, 1419 First ave. ns of expenKe—food, clothing, j States federal court Tuesday of viow lating the migratory bird laws. n Marthe: | mpany officals. | Under ordinary ciroumstances bul- | dd the theft during | yenterday’s investigation and the} conspire to loot the veasel, The evi-| fon is that, the | probably be «worn in tonight before | Kyer’s, First ave, and Columbia Thirty-Nine Pounds}... sinitary) musket bint nee + |In this and certain other differences Jia 000 THEFT DEFENSE OPENS JURY DISMISSED VETERANS WIN ONBOARD SHIP FCR ARBUCKLE INOSBORNCASE 2 CONCESSIONS Pro Meeting at “U” | Gold Bullion Is Stolen From;Sudden Closing by State Fails to Agree on Child Slay- Action Comes as Surprise HY M.D. TRACY ing Charge After being out for nearly | SAN FRANCIS Nov, 23.~-The | hour in the trial of Mra. 1 defense in the ease of Kon (Fatty) Onborn, charged with n ughter | Arbuckle, charged with manslaughter 4 resulle of the death of infant |in connection with the death of Vir- Helen Marie Wilson, were unable to |cinia Kappe, wax planning today to|agres and were dixcharged at 10 p wit-|m, Tuesday by Buperior Judge Calvin 18. Hall Nar defense” got} of its strongest jurors held for wequittal and way late Yeaterday when the conviction, it was learned ¢ suddenly cloned its cane aguinst afterward, This is the same ratio wed comedian, The closing | that was held when the jury first re came a8 a surprine A numbereof ported deadlock at 4 p. m. ar witnenees whose testimony was re.|to be discharged, Judge Hall at th garded as highly important at the; time refused the request, and sent coroner's Inquest, the preliminary ex-|the jury back to deliberate further amination and before the grand jury| Tye case ended suddenly T were not called morning when Deputy Pr | Mrs. Bambina Maude Delmont,| Attorney John BD, Carmody complaining witness, was one of both wid ating, walyed hin those who was not called by the! address to the jury, Attorne inte She will not be called by the | Mam D. Martin, defense punsel, then defenne, McNab indicated. | waived his argument, and thus the ‘The prosecution's action in closing | case went directly to the jury, -#t| \ite case without warning failed to| 1008 a. m jtake Arbuckie's counsel by surprine, | laeeaaee venuer whan once ana em Osborn Must y Face Jury Again vened this morning Arbuckle came into court today in| yy. |the midst of un almost unparalieted | again for manslaughter in connec jarray of legal and expert advisers.| ii, with the death of 9-month-old | In addition, he wan flanked by #Ome) iii. Atarie Wild F ipeenrry oe jof the biggest of the movie million-| Ol a “Wednesday by Deputy fires,’ who watched with clone atten eee eee ee iy. follow tion every step in the drama which | re me tae ee the font, jury |the morality of their Industry ix on | 20K tlt iter. ‘The date for the ie court convened the room) amg Aan a be set in superior | bussed with conversation, It was tike|COUrt Saturday, ‘a scene at a movie reunion. Many be friends thronged around Arbuckle, greeting him most cordially. His | wife, Minta Durfee, was the center i lillie HERE’S MORE ABOUT BOND SALE STARTS ON PAGE ONE lof another gaily chattering group, | land the movie magnates and actors | sitting around the walls were busy | shaking hands, clapping backs and | Koasiping about the indentry % publicity, Caldwell said, “it will, in my (Copyright, 1921, by the United Press @&ed bond steal. | WASHINGTON, Nov. 23 Germany's next move. Premier Briand’s speech has pre-| part will cause his removal.” jcipitated what seems to be the only)” Mayor Caldwell cherged that Inwue in the conference and proves! the wishes of the superintendent aguin the value of open dincuxsion.| of water, whose duty it is to run | He tells why France feels that she] the water department, were en- ust maintain a considerable army-| tirely ignored in the secret sale As long as no reason for this was! of the bonds. | wiven no answer could be made. Youngs i* also chairman of the But now that the world knows the board of public works, which is reason, all eyes are turned on Ger IU8 | Dimoet thru ber governm . announces her The mayor pointed out that Youngs’ Willingness to co-operate in the pres advice a year ago saved the city ervation of peace it will be up t© more than $1,000,000 when he op- j France to accept the assurances oF posed the construction of a steel [show why they should not be #0: |pipe line at that time. |e MAYOR SEES ‘The cane now is in court, the JUrY BETTER SALE has been selected and the trial ts in) = Out of it will come Euro-ltained for the bonds by &@ “public” [pean disarmament or a threat of fu gle was pointed out by the mayor, | ture ware that will make It im ‘who xaid gat various bond houses |posnibte to carry out the progrum Of nad told him that the ity should, on \* naval disarmament. Ithe wale of these bonds, be able to The situation will Increase in iN- obtain « premium of from 1 per cent it until the jury. returns its ver ty § per cent on a 6 per cent basis. lect. France will receive greater #5) ‘The bonds bear 6 per cent, the |surance than she asks or has #Ug-/nighest rate that these sterling se. |wested. It will bring in Europe 4 curities of the water department i disposition for peace whieh, as Sec have ever borne, . [retary Hughes says, will be more “If at 1% per cent, as we may valuable then ap army. reasonably expect, this would be Peace in Europe is not impossible. a saving of $30,000 to the city The conference might take @ les*on| gnd@ a loss of profit to the bond |from chemistry. Oxygen and hy-| dealers in that amount,” Cald- drogen, when in the form of gas,| well said. will ignite at any ratio except H20.| Besides the loss of $30,000, the ac- but when they are brought together tion of the council means that the at the proper ratio they form water, ‘city will begin immediately to pay which puts out fire. '$10,000 4 month interest on money Question: How can France and which will not be needed in all prob- Germany be brought together? ability until next June, according to An long aw they are hostile they the mayor. may at any time produce war: if WANTS SALE ‘they can be properly united they can | posTPONED insure European peace. Superintendent Youngs also said Japan is receiving congratulations that if the sale is postponed for three jon every hand. Her action in ¢X- | months the bonds can be sold at-a jtending the helping hand to Chin® premium. He likewise declared that sives her one of the great victories the sale of the full $2,000,000 worth {thee far won tn thie denforenes. in @ block was inadvisable, ag it will | Re require from 18 months to two years CHRISTENSEN fixie set Swan Lake, which is the proposed undertaking for which the bonds {fore the county grand jury Wednes |skagit bonds a few months ago. day morning, and Commissioner COUNCILMAN FITZGERALD George Lamping was expected to be DENIES MAYOR'S CHARGES called at any moment. Councilman C, D. Fitegerald, chair. This was taken to indicate that’ man of the finance committee, de the apparent probe of port commis “ |sion’ affairs, which is believed to Mayor Caldwell. have occupied the attention of the) «1, communications of only last investigators since the grand jury! june both City Engineer Dimock and was convened, ix nearing an end. L. B. Youngs, superintendent of Considerable internal friction has water, agreed to the urgent necessity been known to have developed of the Swan 1 Sum 5 Lake pi among the port commissioners re-!eerald said, e pipe line,” Fits. jeently. Commissioner tansote pab-\” Died eebh) “wanted to “trae jlicly charged certain employes of the ponds with the contractors, which port with being drunk while on duty. | would-have meant a large discount.” Fitagerald declared the council had Lincoln has been lined up on one ‘tried to get a par bid for these bonds side and Commissioners Christensen for the last four years, and Lamping on the other, “We got the par bid,” he aald, “sc Commissioner Lincoln has already !tne council worden Noi Gecresd to been before the grand jury for #®v-{se the bonds. The transaction was eral hours, and indications were that jy no way out of the ordinary.” Commissioners — Christensen — and) ye finance chairman said that the Lamping are being asked to present 'tirms who accepted the bonds were their side of matters, ithe only companies in the city who It also {x understood that the wit:'over bought utility bonds from the nesses summoned from Maple Val- | municipality ley will not be heard for a few days,| “phe city has not been able to and that members of the board of sei) reyenue bonds at par the last jcounty comtmissioners will be called four or five years,” Vitagerak added at the same time \22 Are Indicted by Federal Grand Jury) toint Thankssiving services with be held in Plymouth echureh tomorrow, all of the Congregational churches in the city participating, A union chorus from the churches represent- ed will sing. Joint Thanksgiving Twenty-two indictments were re- turned by the federal grand jury Wednesday just prior to adjourn. ment until after Thanksgiving, Three of the indictments returned were se- cret, Of the open indictments, 18/. 4 majority of the churches of all were narcotic cases, ‘denominations will observe 'Thanks- ne NASAL ET Fr jeiving day thruout the city by spe- i © cial sermons and services. To Give Mechanical Dentistry Lessons Fleet Corporation Plans for a school of mechanical | Settles Big Suit dentistry for Seattle have been com. WASHINGTON, Nov, 23. — The pleted, and the institution is sched: suit for $260,000 filed by the Gould uled to open its doors in the McDer- Coupler Co, of New York, against were found not guilty In the U Re bet | Night, courses will be held for the mott ‘pullding, Fourth and Pike, De- the United States emergency fleet comber 1 | corporation has been settled out of day: has announced, that in fi ing ft full allows regardleng their can nt used Tuesday's g director playing of dinabled submitted to Disabled Seattle chapter ns next Wednesday night: Ivy Osborn will be tried | ehould not’ exceed 18 per cent of th PAY STOPS WHILE MEI £ STILL OUT OF WORK policies of the unced, reh ral board were 4 man wae p in a position where} able living. Y new ruling all gover the exception of @ | disability allowance }30 days after the permanently This means in effect, ac McGirr, a man now receiving $100 « |for training will be cut to $20 or The second ruling arousing test is that a man who is placed 4 business firm will receive from toes caune a lone to the city of from $60,000 to $100,000," j The mayor scored City Engineer | BY WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN la H, Dimock for his part in the al: | ee government only enough to bring’ y to 15 per cent more than. it a federal board man is from his employer, the ment will pay only enough to his pay to $115, Formerly the regular $100 a was allowed by the governme ¥ long as the man Wag enrolled the federal board. OTHER PROPOSED POLICIES © | DISCUSSED AT MEETING Other proposed Forbes to combine al) federal men in central universities, to y the use of government jand tools, and to cut the pay 205 cent for men in training, were 4 cused at the meeting. A letter was read by Adjt. M which the men decided to send congressmen and all veterans’ izations in the country, } crac ‘That a far better figure can be ob- | waned for elther w change im . instructor and business, told the vete practical difficulties would gal redress impossible, altho opinion the law would be on the of the disabjed men, bels in Mexico Facing Executi NOGALES, Ariz., Nov. 23.—C: revolutionary troubles spread to t part ised the border for the first fi 1 shall take occasion to inform! the mayor mid, “that a} repetition of such a course on his | policies of charged with the duty of expending | many. If she comes forward and. the money derived from the bonds. | Numerous Cantu officers and a leged spies were under arrest at gales, Sonora, across the tional line from this city. Executions were imminent. Other arrests were 0 Guaymas, Hermosillo, Alamos, nea and Navajoa. Generals Manga and De La H of the federal army, troops in all directions early A general action against the | tionary encampments which states of Sonora and was said to be impending, Tijuana Race Tradl Opens Up To . Nov. 23. opening of the Tijuana race were sold. 1 ‘ Close observers of politics at the| morrow will find nearly 600 city hall indicated Wednesday that th a anes he, Hae on the ground and before many he cash hanged to the bond ring} have passed this number is expect: Chairman W. T, Christensen of the|was merely to compensate them for ed to be increased to 900, according |port conmmission was summoned be-|taking at par -$1,000,000 worth of {to applications now in the hands of the Lower California Jockey ficials, President James W. predicts the greatest season in his- y, to run 125 days or more, stakes and purses aggregating over] nied emphatically the charges of | $600,000. Repairing His Boat. Waiter Is Dro: L. F. Peters, 35, waiter, 2908 Wi was drowned in Union Tuesday night when he ped from a ladder while repalt the roof of his boathouse, A . A. Sandmark, heard Peters in the water, and with the aid of lice, recovered the body a few m utes later, but efforts to restore lake ave. N. Peters leaves a widow and ter. The body was sent to Ww ateon, peacoat Congress Awaits End of S WASHINGTOD Jeress today awaited the fall ‘ort gavel which ends the special called by President Harding for purpose of revising and tax legislation, The much-rewritten tax bill wilt? the last piece of legislation to Mast” under the wire as the session elo The senate votes on the con report on the measure at 6 o'clock - Gen. Diaz Due _in San Francisco "RANCISCO, Nov. 28- commander-in-chiet oe 4 Services Tomorrow) Vittorio Diaz, the Italian army, is due to arrly He will remai He will be the guest will be met at the Oaklan dock by a reception committee hei ed by Mayor James Rolph, Jr. diameter from pole _ miles shorter than at the equator, court for $40,000, Kimer Schlesinger, | | benefit of men who work during the general counset of the corporation, ie training t university 0 regardless of This “on a 2 rt BI Ce es) 28] % 20 iu ae

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