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L.3 FACTIONS MONDAY, MARCH 6, 1922. ee HERE’S MORE ABOUT TIMBER WAR county of Clallam. “On ite foe this may seem a jharmioss, even an attractive scheme. jBut to ship out of Wester }Clatiam to Port Angelos, as they ment of a port district. propose, over the olf Spruce Di amend vision ra sd, would be consider rm ably more expensive than to shoot Clash Feared as A ed Men the logs down the Quillayute Dispute Control of “Lateral would have to be built . . at great cost to fetch the loga to Irish City the Fallread, wh with the Port pana of Quillayute as their destination the LIMERICK, March 6~—Armed| logs could be simply thrown into troops of three opposing factions In | streams, Ireland were in possesison of differ-} “When the settlers learned that and fears erne av the Clallam Lumber ent parts of the city today of an outbreak kept citizens in a state of anxiety {Goodyear and Rebellious Irish repubiican army | ossing Co. troopa, numbering between 200 and /of Port Angeles petitions, they M0, entered Limerick yesterday and |the scheme and raised the alarm. Mimandeered the leading hotels and| “They summoned every settler and Rilway station. It was announced | Other citizen interested in justice and they had come to enforce the recent |the prosperity of the country to proclamation of the mid.Limerick jmeet here today to oppose the coun. brigade of the Irish republican army, | ter petition and demand that their repudiating the authority of the free own petition be passed by the county | 1 to the Commissioners, | seca gg tt pernsaameg | oPhey foresaw that, with the Port One hundred and forty troops of Of Port Angeles petition in their the free state, under direction of the ta, the lumber interest. would Provisional government. were here! : forget the project and let to take over the military barracks |" keeping the country bottled 4 [Co Milwaukee railroad, the Merrill & Ring were back of the P saw STARTS ON PAGE ONE | |=*" barons are backing the latter proposition, and, if succes homes, — Ave « | ep s J ‘ 5 Sketch shows relative legations of Quillayite and Port me Angeles, each of which is waging a fight for the establish-v” Settlers in the former claim lumber or " turn, it was learned, that Balfour| «pectors a letter which said in part,|trict. He sold his store last week a formally announce lioyd| “We have your number, One of us| and could not be found in Taft to- “kh eA ASEM ee a ARE Goorre's withdrawal of his resigna |will get you. Watch your step.” day. HERE’S MORE ABOUT HERE’S MORE ABOUT | tion threat ‘obert Jackson, butcher, also of 1 Andrews, taxt driver, disap ASYLUM STARTS ON PAGE ONE tified,’ and did not make any in- vestigation. LINDSAY STARTS ON PAGE ONE the hour of least resistance. “He never offered sympathy, That} $n which was a considerable force | Until the settlers were finally forced have been crude, wouldn't it?" | "3. The prosecuting attorney of British troops and auxiliaries, |'° sive up hope and get out, leaving wire Atwood smiled, cynically, “But) of Pierce county did not invest- | prepared to evacuate, their timber for the interests to grab ne took that mt for bigger] gate, With the arrival of thé rebets, the| hen their lands were sold for taxes. things —for instance, for deciding tain able obi Sabineds Rritish commander ordered out biy| “There isn’t a man In the county four armored cars and sent troops tu| WhO cannot foresee that, with the patrol the streets in event of tron. |Port of Quillayute established, the Bie. The free state troops patrolled |town of Port Angeles would be that my jewels were unsafe in my! own house. “Fe came in that particular day,” Mra, Atwood went on, “and told me| infured herself by jumping and falling against a RADIATOR, as | there was no radiator in the room where she was confined. THE SEATTLE STA MAP OF PORT WAR DisTRicT | LLOYD GEORGE |Night Riders Menace CHICAGO TONG TAKES HOLIDAY California Citizens) MENIN BATTLE | LONDON, Loyd George, weary of the political | crinis of lant week threatened to resign, today from an attack of bro tarrh, Wales, 4 fortnight's holiday, Definite George's the |Premier ts Ill After Political Crisis March ¢ Premier during which he was suffering al en and is going to Criccieth, tomorrow or Wednesday, for announcement of Lloyd decision not to resign at present time, however, io by Arthur J. Balfour tomor . It was understood, Private me conferences between the minister, who returned un pectedly from bis country estate, ful, will drive Western Clallam county pioneers from theirjand conservative leaders at 10 Down in the neighborhood of their billets, | boomed to thrice its size, and a new " mek anna ao Sent ss Interfere with |town would spring up at the mouth that 1 Peery Sager a 8 er el the ncenaaeee govt ten tase the xeneral policing of the town. of the Quillayute whose lumber mills Jewels, tha Wty catia cael Siler eae ne nd Beyond seizing the hotels for use |NOUM! have enough timber to keep, woman alle Oa She asked ims| Olympia into confession that |} &s billets, the rebellious Irish repud- |“hem busy for 46 to 60 yearn” jeormeous jewelry, and ph a mad fg es He ican army made no hostile move. It was believed their intention was to BONUS VICTORY NEAR IN HOUSE Passage of Modified Bil in| Two Weeks Predicted WASHINGTON, March 6.—The certificate and loan soklier bonus) Dil! will be introduced in the house late today. Republican members of the ways and means committee made so much | progress in fixing details of the| " that {t was virtually com- pleted at a meeting this morning. eee Man Hunt for Taylor Fugi- tive Leads to Sea NEW YORK, March 6.—A man hunt, spreading over New York, New England and extend ing to ships at sea within radio distance of this coast was on to- day for Edward F. Sands, sus peeted slayer of William D. Tay- lor, Captain of Detecticves Adams, in Los Angeles, asked that search be made, following receipt | of a written “confession” of the | Taylor murder, The “confewion” | letter was mailed from a Connec- tieat town, and Adams believes the handwriting is that of Sands. ‘The writer of the letter said he was an avenging husband, and that he killed Taylor because the movie director had had an affatr with hiv WASHINGTON, March ¢.— Pas sage of the modified soldier bonus! bill thra the house within two weeks was predicted by republican ltaders; today. 1 The house bonus subcommittee, summoned for today, proposed to put | Vir. ang then ae oe into form for tomorrow's full com-} wr asa tot mittee session, the bonus bil! based |, Certain detailn of the letter are be-| chiefly on insurance certificates |!9® withheld by Lox Angeles police having « loanable value. according to dixpatches from that What bad to be done was matnty | “ty. technical—getting proper phrase} The portion that hag been made ology. The terms remain as already | public, however, quotes the writer as announced—cash payments to sol-| saying he and his wife drove to Tay: liers having $50 or less due them, | Jor’s home the night of February 1 20-year insurance certificates with a|quietly watched Taylor escort Mabe! face value of the soldier's “adjusted Normand to her automobile, saw pay” with °5 per cent of that amount | Henry Peavey, the negro valet, de added thereto and carrying a loan | part, and then slipped into the bun value of 60 per cent of the face. | galow. Some democratic opposition has| tTayior, mpon returning from bd-| brewed against the measure. Repre | qine Miss Normand good-nieht, was| sentative Garner, ranking minority | confronted by fhe wronged woman member, holds the bill to be the|and jrate husband, The shooting fol worst from economic and fovrern-| joweg mental standpoint of any thus far! Comparion of this letter with! drawn. He foresees that ite~effort | s.-cimens of Sandy handwriting in-| on the national finances will be sim-| dicate he wrote it, according to ad | vices from Los Anggeles. However, ‘police are inclined to doubt the de talls of the kill , an given in the! tletter. They say Sands never had «| wife, If the letter is authenti a hidden chapter in the lives of the missing Sands and Taylor ia just Jopening, police believe. | Several such chapters in Taylor's! |life already have been made publig, including the revelation that he fot-| |merly was known as William Dean} |Tanner and had a wife under that] jname. This is the fir: trace of an! alleged affair with the mysterious. | hitherto unknown Mrs. Sanda | Police of the Eastern weatioard are | searching hotels and lodging houses for a man answering Sands’ desc jtion. They are also on the lookout |for the woman in the case. An ef fort has been made to pick up the |trall In the Connecticut town where |the letter was mailed, but whether ply to inflate currency and cause an | Increase in the cost of living PAID ADVERTISEMENT A STATEMENT TO THE PUBLIC | vealed. | The long arm of the wireless ts | reaching out to ships which sailed reeen, m Atlantic coast ports, flashing their captains a description of the fugiti « believed possible he may be arrested b: the hich seas | notorious wife wireless on as was Dr. Crippen, In announcing my cand for the City Council, I to know that I am not actuate by any personal gain or political LOS ANGEL Cal., March 6 aspiration. In fact, 1 will be || Police here rece @ report from making more or less of sacrific Hartford, Conn., today to the effect if elected. I believe it the du that a man answering tho descrip of every business man to give || on of Edward I. Sands, wanted in UP a little of hin time some time || nnection with the William D. Tay in his career to Civic affa lor murder, registered at a Hartford [hotel two weeks ago. The man gave San Francisco as home, according to the report was said to have deserted from ew London naval base during A businesslike administration by business men should be the tax payers’ slogan. More sound business and not so much politi cal horse-play is needed in most of our cities. My sympathies are || Sands is being songht as the mye with the taxpayers. The larse || terious writer of the “confemsion” taxpayer can somotithes meet || letter received here # the excess taxes by raising his |) was mailed from an unr renta, but the «mall home owner ip Connecticut Police : one gt ce ed relief. If || keeping its eonter ecret. tod: elected, I sha endeavor to give - to City matters the same bu. oo ne ne « that has mad me & reasonable success in my own bust I shall carry on a sira ail times in my own way || ae aon ines a Old Fashioned Beet Stew, will, if elected, try in « way Potatoes, Bread and Butter to dignify the position I shail || hold. From time to time, 1 wil publish in pamphlet form “Littie C emb e my platform. Read teed easatalie ama it ven“ ons In the following indotse me COLEGROVE Restaurants N KITCHEN, Third Ave ALTO KITCHEN, Pike and Bi | SPECIALTY FOOD § 110 Pike St. bla XL biog My campaign headquarters is my office at Northold Inn, 214 University St. FOR SUSPECTS! - | He then |* | progress has been made is not re murderer. | it ho might take ft to hin safe at the Astor, where it would be out) caved in when they examined of harm's way. her body. ur coed person in her y ing “I objected. I fiatty refused. But} ‘ave , ae he simply took some of the most = ory IMAGINARY pleces at which he had} been looking and walked away with reece | unintentional carelesmess of one “Pond of him?” Mrs. Atwood re- of the attendants.” It was, in- peated the question. “Goodnem. m0!) deed, very* careless of an attend fiabby valuable . The cdmmiiter says: “The “And he waa an excelent aljbier, & wondertn) fictionist gone wrong “I might have gone on believing for any length of time that all he! eaid was true and that eventually big returns would come, if his van NoT A CASE OF | CARKELESSNESS | . The possibility that Chose inaccuracies are made thru in- advertent carclemnexs (on the part of the committee is elimi ity bad not struck a false note. Rated by thelr own words: ‘We “He was always proud of his! have carefully considered all the hands,” said Mra Atwood, “and! testimony. ” | kept them well. His nails were a| qn conclusion, Mra. 4e Montie de trifle too long and too shiny and be! clares she has in her pamession all wore a huge sapphire on his right the documents furniahed the com hand. | mittee by the asylum authoritier "One day, in shaking hands with on this matter ne “At no place,” she aswerts, “is there any mention of a r= diator in connection with the ease, No one claimed she struck | a radiator. * * * This is there | fore a pure fabrication on the | part of this committer, “In none of the documents is there any claim of any attempy | to place this matter before tho Prosecuting attorney’s office ov the coroner's office.” him, my finger closed over that} stone. It didn’t have the clear, khen | feeling of a genuine jewel. | “The nicked, almost pasty feeling | of that stone made me think for the| first time that Alfred Lindsay was/ not genuine himself! “I looked at him,” contineed Mrs. Atwood, “and I thought, ‘Are you wearing fake jewelry? And are you like your jewets?’ ” Aaked why she continued to trust Lindsay, long after she began to| Mrs. de Montis' parting shot te: doubt his reliability, Mra. Atwood 1 say this committer has brought in an unfair and untrue thought a moment. “Probably it was because he need | to come up here and cry like a child when he was in trouble! “During the periods that he wns getting along well, he used to stalk bill on the death of Leone C. Peck. She was foully murdered | in the Steilacoom asylum while hetpless and defenseless and .| without giving cause or reason for the ac around. He was clumsy, too. “But ome day—and there were aor Leo Renee | similar oceasions he came ut meny similar oceasione—he came ut.](“ WERETS MORE ABOUT | over something be had done with Mrs. Duke's money. “The old defiance wae gone.” Mra. Atwood went on, “he dropped down | in a big chair and cried, cried like! MRS, OSBORN STARTS ON PAGE ONE child. | “He threw himeelf on my mercy, | begged me to give him another the bath room door. chance to make good. | Dr. Herbert Com testified that he “Then, after having given him|had transfused one ounce of Mra. thousands to invest and lost it,” | Osbor bleed into the baby’s head Mre. Atwood waa speaking slowly,}at the city howpital:in an effort to I borrowed more money for him. jsave th child's life | ed | A transfusion, he sala, might cause increased intercranial pres. ure. Dr. TD. A. Drown temtified that the blood taken from Mrs. }so smal Osborn was Lindsay’s Ways in quantity, however, that it would not have caused inter ranial pressure sufficient to kill JEFFRIES TO. 'BOX KID SATAN LOS ANGELES, Cal. Mareh 6. 4 preliminary bout with Kid Meph | istopheles ¢ Formal ar cement was made toda t t th tr heavyweight chamt world, who is plan rlory trail” with n of the Bible, sermon tonight sentangle straight rites religious that have | |man,” anne “California Griz. wly,”” I'm going to try to put acros little common sense tn. |terpretation of the things the book | really means to convey.” “Dr.” Jeffries expected to start on tour with his friend, A. F. Fut ter Bible student and author, in ubout three months William H. Moore Files for Council William Hickman Moore, former mayor of Seattle and a member of the city council for the past six ye 1 for reelection Mond: HE Misusro wis GRAMMAR, sii wer * “4 ne ving be en 7 ” WHEN ExciTEy ghee 9 Saget perior court judge and a member of the state Wegislature. He is chair man of the important stre and | sewers committee of the council and || in declared to be one of the best d men in the city on this sub UA, Ore—-Obert Clifford | Lien, 1 drowned in the John Da jriver at ern Hill, Ore, when a bout in which he and a companion HE cried LIKC A CHILD WHEN] |¥ere Playing capsizes THINGS WENT WRONG OLYMPIA.—Pete Flagstead, De Snapshot of Alfred L. Lindsay, and |troit National league’ catcher, weds hia ways with women victims as| Miss Rita Tibbett, of Olympia, at described by Mrs. Vorothy Atwood, | Montesano, death probably resulted from thé } had a red nose, great ant to permit Mrs. Peck to get | jowla, gray eyes which were 00) bruised and battered up by fall- | |light and too shifty, His chin wae! ing against a nonexistent | too short. radiator. ]ing st, last night, took much » FREDERICK & NELSON | will be} and generally thruout the for | triet, | ters, |the night riding and disclaiming auth origin PAKMRSVINLD, Cal, March 6 Fellows, had dismppeared today fol Activities attributed to “night riders” | lowin jhave annumed grave espects at Taft|to leave the district, Jackson's em West Side} ployers said. Oxear Richardson, field agent| Tart, hurriedly sold his home la Dor pil district Detective A, 1. Cooke, District Attorney Jemma It wey, ha ved'a letter giving him | a matter of hours to leave the dis | ceived a let {t was rumored in offictal quar-|he did not Coe on inventigating| Dr. J rece left the ol! fields, after he © has Raptht min-| dragged from Rev, Van Dyke his home by masked inter at Mellows, who yesterday | riders and beaten with spiked | preached against lawlearness in the | clabe.” He exhibited cuts and abra. loll fields, today received a communt na. Mason did not say how he had} cation warning him against interfer | incurred the dirpleasure of the secret ence. On the heels of this note came | organization. ned “Ku Klux Klan,” ship of the note. It maid that the real “Klan” approved Todd's stand, Guy Mensch, Fellows garage man, today turn in to postoffics tn George Taft, a necond, sim was given a port to officials FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET oie Rector wating nim (One Man Is Killed and Two om drifier of | week at a reported loms of $2,000 anc had re r the contents of which e4 to Investigators that he had been N. Bowman, @ruggist of beating and} dragged by ropes thrn an oll @UMD | to the On Leones, the strongest tong, by “night riders,” according to a re- Bowman wan to to lenve the din- é * . « Wounded t| CHICAGO, March €@—Tong war flared up in Chicago's Chinatown te- day, resulting in the killing of ome and wounding of two others, The victims were members of (ha Hip Sings. A man alleged to be @ | member of the On Leongs entered @ | basement gambling house and shot and killea Joe Lee, restaurant pre. prietor, and wounded Tom Lee and San Lee Police befieve failure by the eam bling bonse proprietor to pay tribute caused the shooting. ————— peared about the same time. He also claimed to have been whipped by @ | band of masked and whiterobed men, Have You a Wicker-F urnished Room in Your Home? IAT a wealth of charm is today conjured up by these two words —- Wicker Furniture! Sunny, enclosed porches or “solaria,” gaily be-chintzed pleasant, airy living- rooms—charming bov- doirs—with gracefully- designed furnishings of finely woven reed or fiber, in colorings that run the gamut from sedate to gay. Rooms that fairly dare one to be oth- er than bright and cheerful! Of such Furniture we are featuring, on the Fourth Floor, an ex- tremely varied collec- tion—many pieces in the natural color, to be finished and _ uphol- stered as fancy dictates—many others tinted in colors and in the new_parchment finish, with cushions and upholstery of cretonnes and tapestries. Among the items are Chairs, Rocking Chairs, Settees, Tables, Bird Cages and Stands, Desks, Chaises-Longues and Ferneries, in many differ- ent patterns and within a wide price-range. New Bungalow Drapery Nets 65c Yard NEW shipment of these dainty Filet- mesh Nets in point desprit, stripe and small, detached figure patterns features the popular ivory and beige colorings. These Nets, so admirably adapted to Spring's decorative require- ments, are forty-five inches wide. Very moderately priced at 65c yard. FILET NETS in a va- riety of new Madras and foliage patterns, in ivory and ecru, are attractively priced at 75¢ yard. —Third Wieor Fourth Floary The Ohio Range at $69.00 Is a Splendid Range Value: RANGE that heats as quickly and holds the heat as well as the Ohio, is’a substantial fac- tor in reducing house- keeping expenses. Remarkably little fuel is needed, for instance, to get the breakfast ready. Eight minutes, in fact, from the time of kindling, the oven of the Ohio, un- der normal conditions, is ready for baking. Quick- er action—less fuel — smaller bills. The Ohio is well-con- structed in every detail. Clean-cut in design, it keeps bright and clean with very little effort. It can be operated by using wood or coal, as fuel conditions require. The Four-hole Ohio Range (16-inch oven) is now $69.00 The Six-hole Ohio Range (18inch oven) is now $74.00 (Best quality Six-way Water Coil, $3.00) -—THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE The “Northland” Refrigerator, $14.90 Built by the Gurney Refrigerator Company Majestic Carpet Sweeper $3.75 Very convenient for a quick brushing up is this Carpet Sweeper with rubber-tired wheels—bound with braid to ASHED POTATOES are fluffy and free protect furniture from from lumps when pressed through one of scratches. Pressure on lever these efficient Potato Ricers, and it is also empties both dust pans. priced at $3.75, Low- A SMALL, compact Refrigerator of this type is an investment in economy for any home, quickly re- paying, in prevention of food spoilage, the original cost and the small expense for icing. The “Northland” is built by one of the veteran makers of refrigerators. It has an attractively finished hardwood case, well- insulated walls, and the interior fittings are convenient and easily kept sweet and clean. The model illustrated has a factory ice rating of fifty pounds. We rate it as having “25-pound ice capacity,” for it is operated most conveniently and economically upon this amount. A practical Refrigerator at a very low price— $14.90, —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Potato Ricer, 25c useful as a fruit-press. priced at 25¢. As pictured, low- THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE DOWNSTAIRS STORE: Comforter Batting and Challies 3-POUND COTTON BATS, - SPECIAL 87¢ EACH White, Fluffy Cotton Bats of good quality, in full comforter size, weighing 3 pounds; spe- cial 87¢ each, COTTON CHALLIES, SPECIAL 15¢ YARD Cotton Challies in 36- inch width, in a wide as- sortment of pleasing pat- terns for comforter cov erings; special 15¢ yard. Women’s House Slippers Bed Sheets Special $1.25 | Rye ser BLEACHED 32-piece 4 Dinner Set | | LAIN white semi- lain, in the graceful Ranson pattern, is Ser- vice answers admivably for everyday and kitchen use. The 32-piece Set is ‘made up of 6 Dinner’ Plates 6 Pie Plates 6 Cups and Sgucers % Sage Dis! 1 Vegetable Dish 1 Pigther Low*ptiged ft $3.50. ae DOWNSTAIRS |f) Rs Tabjé Tumblerse Special 25c For 6 Tran general. set of si lain, med; are wi P kitche: ° Tablé Knives 1 afid Forks Special 15¢ Each jf ~ Heavily silver-plated are these Kntres and Forks—the Knives with plain, dulifinish handles, }f- the Forks with tasteful modeled a design, THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE