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WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, 1922. THE SEATTLE STAR PAGE Northern Pacific fices Moving In of two large cars Oil Stove Explodes, Home Is Destroyed Of BHUNDREDS Rickard Acquitted, LLOYD GEORGE 'Star Debaters Near )}irfs : Charges Blackmail READY T0 QUIT) Blows Over Carf are #028; removal of the North- Weatern head. of equipment : acoma to Beattle was | before firemen arived the b , ane : AKEN IN NEW YORK, March 29.—"Leave|ing the bones in Philadelphia Yor Will Resign if Confidence Is| Jack Hall and Hal Armstrong, The Star’s brilliant econ}. jot.) ions, The lone w mat ry vs Her New York? No, sir! Right here 1/ $36,000 a throw out the itm: | Not A d omists, are getting pale and haggard from burning gallons) at $2,000, partly covered by inwur berm ‘ stay, ‘They te I thought that was about the | - , abate ¢ ——e Ray. ‘They tried to get me here and!., °>‘itrein, but the hour while the ot Assure of midnight oil looking up statistics to use in their debate or ie sages cia. tak : 5. runt a at t " er : , ini Pettit A erheated range Tuesday a. ne home of ) fips, HH get them in their own yard jury was out had it beaten clear off | BY ED L. KEEN jon the proposed Erickson three-cent street car fare. fie S araeive at abil teen tot aile M va ~1 by. beri State er the boards,® he anid york! LONDON, March 29—Premier| They have not permitted their physical fatigue to inter- ” hey ‘ kard, “out of the bad eyond remaining New York : | ’ rs f . Meas” that has had bsten worried for Pi =P “e sang Pe Rickard Moyd-George has his resignation) fere in any way, however, with the verve, the animation aay months, added this morning hadn't made any definite plans ready for next Monday of their debate. As a matter of fact, the debate is getting i P ; Unless the house gives him a ma : " " Berlin Stations Blocked Aft. | They know who I mean aml that It was learned today that the — jority of 300 or more wiwe he wake | Hotter every day, and other members of The Star staff are i “ “ for the present, Framing and/ing commission, which suggested J° ¢ ty wt . lie’ » os ever be set- er Murder in Anti-Russ blackmailing are all a part of the |t it would be well for Rickard to ® Yote of confidence on the govern | be ginning to believe that the question will fea } of Shooting at Meeti gume, I guess, but there are no rules |give up his position at Madison ™Ment’s Genoa policy, his frienda say|tled until the two opponents meet in the squared circle in 9 ee ing that prevent you from striking |Square Garden when he waa indict — rad resomnigie mw gis ,) actual physical conflict, - batek ed, will have no objection if he re ama a ¥, of which Lioyd Jac " ; 1, in Fy h—but x ot } 1 ack Hall cursed Hal Armstrong today in Frenc' put BERLIN, March 29.—Fundreds of | Rickard said that hitting pay dirt |sumes his former place jSecege ts almneas certian, will, not , - - ‘ac as x 7 gases ts weak "Ane arta vpotics fin Ababauend commne S1eh 00S ee ee ee ee oat ot the |eatisty. the Precnler |a8 Hal doesn't understand French and thought Jack wa: FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET telieve to be a workbwite plot of RINKS in four years didn't compare direction of sports in the Garden, he| Threats of crisis in two other Me! just indulging in a little airy persiflage, no casualties cairist sympathizers to murder Rus. /(° the thrill that was his when the /hag not totally severed his connec: Isrues with — cpa Mia os 's! resulted. sian revolutionaries were arrested Jury mild he was not guilty of im- tions as it would have taken months faced may Influence the house | here today. | Proper relations with a little 15-year. for him to have bus}. ageinet him, These are: By Hal Armstrong By Jack Hall | All railway stations were blocked |! girl of turning over all his interestx.| 1. Labor may line up agninat] yey dintinguished opponent in this| Yesterday, for want of a better ar and a mysterious automobile. be.| “I've never felt so good,” he said ard was freed by a jury early | Lloyd brge to prevent him leav pate has dealt much with flurures | cument, nt printed an ar Jieved to contain five former caariat |“! feel like fighting. All I need is a|today from charges of improper con- Ine the country while the Industrial | jy deavoring to prove his point,| ticle on the 3cent carfare, written ” = Officers implicated in the attempted | FOO! match and T know where they |duct with Sarah Schoenfeld, 1-year. |crisis caused by the shipbuilding and) put al he has proved is that, while|by one Philip J. Sennet, correspond Assassination of Professor Paul Mi. several of them. old school girl. The jury was out 90 engineer atrikes & | figures don't He, lots of Mars figure. |ent for a Middle Western newspaper | Mukotf, was being traied by secret | The matchmaker of the | minutes | 2% ‘The Irish situation ts consid: | “Ay a matter of fact, figures enter | nyndicate, | police on motorcycles, | Garden he once had a great) The remaining three charges ered full of menace and the outcome | very jittle into the argument, | The news Item had little impor. Lieutenant Schabelski Work, ar. | feeling of suspense when he was roll-|againat Rickard may be dropped jof the proposed conference between | While Union League club members| tance, being nothing more than a rested today for the shooting in| ~ - north and south leaders uncertain. | and Jack Hall seem much perturbed | poorly written resume of Erickson's Philharmonic hall last nicht, in Failure here would antagonize a con-| over the cost of the street car ays | views on the 3-cent bill. siderable number of coalition lib: orala. which an attempt to @ay Miliukoff resulted im the death of Viadimir . Nabokow, proudly confessed he fired STARTS BANDITS CORNERED *'..°s| - at the former Russian foreign min- PAGE 1 IRIS ORDER ister : “Lam sorry I missed,” Lieutenant! fore he could pall the trigge | doubt they are watching every H B mane = fei Mm ets | WAR STARTING HERE |tem, the actual defictt or profit is a) If my opponent cannot produce mere bagatelle in comparison with | more solid arguments than this, 1 am | the principle involved. | wasting my time debating with him. DUTY OF CITY HE'S THINKING REAL ISSUE ABOUT 4088 | The fact is that the only real point) Now, let us leave personalities—in | at inwue is the duty of a municipally| which my opponent's tactics force | owned railway, me to indulge—and take up the all MORE ABOUT Two officers of the old schoo! rose A few heute eter Stietiee be difficult from some points in 1 | from their places in the audience,| 454; the hills.” Tho street oar eystem at present ts | important effect that the Erickson it, a m 5 “ which crowded Philharmonic hall,| rer pe soe marcee ery ica, | Up tw veuelew Sas Seah peo. Bb 4 losing only $600,000 @ year, instead | measure will have upon Jobe | and fired at Professor Miliukoff. The| 8? rr) med about ee | deme that’ the bandits were not|, BELFAST, March 29.—Irish bor-| of the millionodd that showed in the| ree car rides in Seattle—and the speaker dropped to the platform and) S™A3. spied the Bandite crowing ein with food and. would aa ider War broke out today when a|red last year, because the manage-|reulting 32 per cont increase In tax Nabokow, who wax seeretary of state} & Meld. ar eee | ere ee oun pe large force of Sinn Feiners entered | ment increased the income by raising | ation—-mean that there will be twice under Prince Lvoff, rushed to his aid, Sins authtan nak vance, wr. | seus beret ahe-g Bos wage pa} for it | Beleo. County Fermanagh, and storm.|the fare AND CUTTING STREET |ay much unemploymen next winter jore jn iste a co nc ccc CAR TRONAGE MORE AN * nia | throwing himself between Millukoff | ‘This presumption no longer exists ed the police barracks, according to} C aoe AGE MORE TH an there was this wiriter. and the assaasins’ bullets, He was} The bandits, for whom such a Sherif reports reaching here, 26 F CENT, Let us take a few instances, Nelson said he learned yes struck several times and fell dead terday for, the first time that a few }man hunt as the West has ‘never across the body of his chief. | seen before, hax been organized, are Ulster constables holding the bar. jracks were made prisoners and 15 of Certainly no one can question the | statement that this is a direct de The Todd shipyard in Seattle em: ploys between 300 and 500 men. The Sap nse genta Rtn is rh ype two bandits had visited the hall and } * mend on th: | played poker with his Intended vic |north, Maynarde on the west and|| } vets Bo ada j tims, getting the lay of the land. | ure passes, the taxes in Seattle will utility is to give service—and it is|be 40 per cent higher than in Ta | hot giving service when it increases | coma. its revenues by raising its rates to/ $< believed to be hemmed in, with a ree Previous i the holdup of/tnem were taken back to the Free|parture from the clear duty of a ™MU-\ concern also operates a shipyard tn | price of $1,000 on their heads, some. | O¥E*'* In the Recreation hall atistate side of the line. nicipally owned utility. |Tacoma. If the free car ride meas. EET | . Port Discovery, the smaller of the nn The first and only duty of such a CITY TO GR HERE’S MORE ABOUT i } % HERO THURSDAY Joffre Trip Curtailed, but Seattle Plans Unchanged VICTORIA, B. C, March 29.— Altho Marshal Joffre’s trip across the continent will be radically curtailed, there wil! be no changes In the plans for his Seattle visit, it was announced. ‘The famous French general wos ordered by Premier Raymond Poin. | hi" on the southeast. ARMED WITH PISTOLS AND RIFLES Bounding the triangle and posted at vantage points inside, are the posses of both sheriffs, some sea- soned pioneers of the peninsula, some Younger ex.service men still wearing parts of their army and navy uni- triamphal| f°°ms, and others who are mere lads, not yet out of their ‘teens, yet ex- perienced woolsmen and hunters, and all atmed with businesslike atx. shooters and 30-30 repeating rifles. Sheriff Nelson has Maynards as base of operations. Sheriff calre to proceed shortly to New Chase's base it at Port Townsend, York to represent the French public at the unveiling of J. S Grant statue. Jotfre will arrive in Seattle and from these two towns the man the | bunt, hourly becoming more intense, le being directed. Yesterday the two bandits did not Thursday night and will spend Fri.|Show themselves, as they had on day resting. Saturday he will carry out his public program here, departing for Portland Sunday From San Francisco, the marshal will go directly to New York, mak- Ing no stops en route to attend public receptions. His visit to Los Angeles, for which elaborate preparations have been made, has been eliminated. Tofay Marsha! Joffre wilt honor the memory of the Canadian dead with a tree-planting ceremony on Memorial way. ‘The program for Thursday eludes a short visit to Vancouver, | | | | } | each day previously since the man hunt started Seturday, following the killing of Light “I believe,” said Sheriff Nel- son, “that they have found a shelter where they can keep warm and hidden, and at the same time watch our operations —perhaps from some cave on the mountain side. I have no J meseeigsielipeetannciaratcningieeatily COAL STRIKE IS ». DUE SATURDA CHICAGO, March 29.—The meet- This was followed by the disappear. ance of 22 loaves of bread and sev. eral sides of bacon from the logging | camp. HITS ADVISORY COUNCIL AGAIN Lundy Demands Once More to Know What It Is Denying that he ts criticising the Seattle Advisory council for indore: ing a candidate, but asserting that his criticum is against “this self chosen committee's picking one can didate for mayor before the list was complete and the time for filing closed.” Ira D. Lundy, candidate for mayor, delivered another broadside at the committee Wednesday “I condemn,” he said, “the meth ods used by this organization in making it appear that they are the authorized be of the ‘different, civic, business and tax-watching or |eantzations of our city. In mak | ing inquiry I cannot find any organ- | imition of long standing or influence | which is affiliated with thie council, am inspection of the Peace Arch|ing of Illinois mine operators and |f Commerce. at Biaine and arrival in Seattle at 9 o'clock in the evening. Friday Joffre will rest in Seattle. union representatives here today failed In its efforts to avert the strike of coal miners set for April 1. |with the exception of the Manufac | turers’ association and the Chamber “I want it distinetly understood |that I am not condemning the right to organize, but that my objection | GOGETTER STARTS ON PAGE ONE ordered back in September, and demobilized. Immediately after his return to Seattle he filed for city coun- cll—and in the ensuing election was given the highest number of Votes ever reecived by a Seattle councilman and also carried the largest number of precincts on record. ' Tt was at about this time that he first took up the Japanese question He had been deeply interested in, |the subject ever since he came to jthie city, but it was not until hie re-| turn from the war that he was im-| Preemed with the true gravity of the} nituation, from observing the extent | 1919, He mulled the matter over in char acteristic fashion—and then decided it was Important for some man in; [public office to arouse the people | Whereupon he did, |HAS RECORD or | ACCOMPLISHMENT He has been indefatigable in hin efforts for Japanese exclusion since that time, The high lights of his ac tual accomplishments may be sum. jmarized ag follows Secured adoption of strong Japa- nese exclusion resolution at the state convention of the American Legion in 1920, Secured adoption of a strong me morial on the Japanese question to jot Japanese inroads in business \f Do you think that the Todd ship-| & prohibitive feature. yard could continue to operate in Se It does pot take an expert econ: 'attie? omist to see that the lom wuffered| ‘Take another Instance. by downtown business men because The Sears-Roebuck company has a of the decreaned street car patron-|piant in Seattle. It ie worth $2,900, age is immeasurably greater than /000, It employs approximately 700 any deficit that could be incurred | people. by the systerm—even if passengers! Under the Erickeon measure its were carried free, instead of paying |taxes will increase $60,000. | 2 centa. | The Montgomery.Ward company It t# the plain duty of the city. /in Portland, a rival concern, would therefore, to make the municipal not have to bear this burden. They railway a public utility fact && |could afford to underrell the Seattle well ax in name. [concern | NOTHING LIKE | WOULD THEY | ERICKSON PLAN | REMAIN HERE? | And no plan has been offered) tow iong do you think the Sears-| which would accomplish this 80 suc: Roebuck company would remain in cenafully as the Erickson schemé. Seattle? | Under this plan street car patron-| ‘Take still another instance, | age would be increased to such 8M) Seattle, Portland and San Fran-| extent that business thruout «the city would Immediately revive. No longer would theaters be only half. ed in the evening—because peo- ple can't afford to ride downtown; no longer would stores seem like de rerted Villages—dercaune housewives, after paying their 162-3 centa, have elsco are competing as a shipping jpoint for salmon, The milmon is taxed on the docks. Competition be. | tween the three citlen is keen, Now suppose Seattle shippers have to pay | a 33 per cent increase in taxes. | Which cities would get the business? How much work would there be for | nothing left with which to #bop. | stevedores on the Seattle waterfront? | Downtown merchants would s00n| ‘These examples—chosen at random | find that their inereased revenues |_could be multiplied by the score. | ould pay thelr negligibly increared | And they mean just one thing ° tax burden a hundred times over. The so-called threecent farfare| And the common people—you and |measure will kill Seattle and Seattle | I and others less fortunate than the | jobst | platocratic Jack Hall—-would reap our reward in the form of benefit thru increased general prosperity. | If the law permitted, indeed, I would be in favor of putting In an | absolutely free car service at onc, instead of in 18 years, as contern BICYCLIST RAMS | AUTO; IS FINED) DENVER, March 29.—James Seto} was jailed for reckless riding after| he had crashed into an automobile! The 4-Hole OHIO Steel Range Is Now $69.00 Best Quality, Six-Way Water Coil for This Range, $3.00 IRST of all, the Ohio is built right, from superior materials, and its design is clean-cut, pi and attractive, Next, it is a splendid baker—a fact that is being proved daily in many thousands of well-conducted home kitchens in and around Seattle. Next, it is an economically - operated Range. It heats quickly and holds the heat well. Under normal conditions, the oven is ready for baking within 8 minutes from time match is touched to kindling. Next, at the price quoted, it is a Range value that we can recommend unreservedly to every prospective Range purchaser. The 4-Hole Ohio (16-inch oven), now $69.00 The 6-Hole Ohio (18-inch oven), now $74.00 © Best Quality 6-way Water Coil, $3.00 > > im entirely based on their chal | plated + eo Eric pl We; a 5 gram nm a . “lAmerican Legion state convention in| %08t have to fil | ? m* over which they have not the slight-! » . - cen o © take an SR ‘ ‘ ‘. j him here. call.” Tt was stated that the mest- | over y Pre retoundboy grat St" Seely conte wien we ee Bpiesom The latest model Majestic Range, 18-inch oven, ee ing was merely a formal seasion,|¢#t control. I therefore demand of Secured adoption of vigorous iq. | elevator in the publicty owned coun) LE SEUR, Minn.—Authorities tn. | . 1 d d : 110.00 i > H > ' thi € D © " ; puild hy, therefore, ¢ of KE. C. os tee eeeee Se ae, ee ee tees ame Ott tm thesis on, tho mubdoet by Rho patna’ | <i baliaing: | Why. therefore: | yectienting: death of M.-C: Bolt otf] water front included, is now $ ta pb ey J encampment of the Veterans of For. | should we pa . Be appt See aren fee Bie —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE BRITISH ENV progress towa rd making a separate| ganizations affiliated with thelr lien Wara at Washington, D. C., in| street cars that are equally as much | room aboard Chicago, St. Paul, Min- | peace in Illinois in the coal war | council or quit claiming everything 1920 our own? | neapolis & Omaha passenger train. was made. in sight.” % But, as the law mys we can't pay! Was active in securing similar ac tion by the national conventions of the Amerigan Legion at Cleveland in 1920 and at Kansan City in 1921 Was one of the leaders in the suc. cessful fight for the allen land law in the Washington state legislature and assisted in the enactment of similar laws in Texas, New Mexico, for the road out of the general taxes, we have to content ourselves with the masterly solution devised by Mr. Brickson. MOVIESTARIS HERE THURSDAY = mou men ava Murder Defendant of Sir Auckland Campbell pa | Tells of Tragedy British ambasandor to the U. 8. Geddes will arrive here at 4:40 p. FREDERICK brought complaint him against to ¢ m. Thursday from Portland, and will Arizona, Colorado and Nebraska, | ' speak at a public meeting at $20 at] By E. P. Chalcraft gsr aad BIR furnishing literature and informa the First Pré@pyterian church. Speaking slowly and quietly, eX |p onneil broust that Mrs. \tion used before the legislatures of | ‘The Geddes party will be welcomed | hibiting deep emotion only when re. those states. her 3 . * min-law, saying om their arrival here by Bernard ferring to his wife, Robert H. Foe = son-in —_ - i Polly, British consul, Mayor Caldwell ter, on trial before Superior Judge | {hat he refused to buy milk for the Rawlinson Denies Charges and Frank Waterhouse, president of | Mitchell Gilliam for the killing of |P* 7 ies 6 ae ntontt oo ey = fled f Her Mother the Chamber of Commerce. Mrs. Mary Bushnell last New |that Mrs. Foster permitted her hus // HERES MORE ABOUT t) band to visit her on the day of the seudor and his party are The ambe: jor GI pa shooting. scheduled to leave Saturday for Vic Year's eve, took the stand Wednes. day morning in his own behalf. TINDALL . | oria | Foster told in de , — Her : $8 lie rag meg Po ly yo A middieaged father, in his bert Rawlinson, cortes, Wash. then in Alacka. In| Pocket the gun with which he movie star, today Mme. Joffre Voices Admiration for City STARTS ON PAGE ONE intended to commit suicide, on Femponse to questions by his attor.| jo ours a denadasline oils prepared for a bit Adam Peeler, Foster descrited | al fight over to his mother-in-law’s home to » $200,000 da Mme. Joffre, wite of the marshal life he led with hit irl! see his infant son for the last |*°URht fo frantically to establish her | J hye yoy tiled of France, who, with her daughter Tela, who was 19 Years! time. Peering into the house he |People on the richest farming land tn one Biogas ghee . * ie Viliting in Seattle at the home of — oe eee wT saw in his wife's room the man | California gon and Washington | Mra Ethel E Att t Samuel Hill, Tuesday afternoon ex d her. whose rival he had been for the | ®"d other Western states: Giark, alletag ractive plained to friends why she likes| The defendant was still on the} jong of the i9-yearold girt "The Japs aim at intermarriage | that Rawlinson at- Amer: and Seattle. stand at renthenay raf Attorney Eu Someth snapped in hiy brain, | #4 blood an paseo rig werd tacked her daugh . eo. . “My husband,” she said, “admires | daar . | ‘This in brief is the defer story |Mongrelized the strain could never ter, Dorothy Clark B O t t Seattle I like because of its cleanli ye and Frank E. Hammond. Mra.| i. rior Judge Mitchell Gilliam for| “What use is land reclamation if} October 16, 1920 nent, because of the “cotta in the | Emma IaPorte, a childtiood friend |i. murder of Mrs. Mary Bushnell,|#!! the land so reclaimed is to be Dorothy Clark is residential district, and because of nd Mra, Georgia 9) Poagper by Adam Beeler, hia | tken over by Japs—ag in the Yakt Rawlinson oan actress. The ||| the sunshine.” counsel, after the state haa rested ity |™# valley? mother, in whose name the “I have never attempted to stir up | action | case and before the jury was taken| was filed, is a resident of Brookli but I have always ap-| lout to view the premises at 1109 | race 4 ma yr ' the | Masa ¢ ”? Elim place. pealed te ne American people on th | Atte si J.C. Stick be t | i Dramatically pletured by Beeler,|fround ‘of patriotism, holding that |, Attorney J.C. Stickney, of, an | B ide: jthe story held the attention of the Complete exclusion is best for the | PR™ & Tupimnilill ded thn anit rom a Dr e rowded court room for the better|/apaness themacives, since their| | Rawlinson today branded the sult in |aresence means future discord and|@ “imply an attemp extortion, | if, £ “ rit half ha pe ans ie te ty | perhapa bloodshed.” I gave Mrs. Clark small sums of | « After rapidly sketching the earty | Perhaps bloods money from time to timé in response ‘As a young housewife of o magne deri Hs re, ety | riadall decided to rim on the ad-|* ' es P reas * ae 8 eal ie in" Iiinals 52 yours. nao, unll his | vioa of friends Inthe various vate. [19 Mer {ales of want.” he wuld. “That —most of which are too small to justify de- an bad narra n the girl, ria, after ns’ orgnizations of the city, among (he entireextent of my relations with two and one-half yes rere eh tng Hi een ote | nom he fn an acnowindd inser | jeman or her acer. enn fl pia wes 2 ° " | e has nol announce ue om pag wo! bs on r > oe ¢ perience I am glad to find that Ketchhan, Alaa, Becier ape mb | tle, Me Pat Yet annnunend Na more money trom tae scribing in detail, will be featured bat d they have taken no official | awiinson at the pres e has |f/ R al ¥ r, who was Magi . eet ibe a) . wife, known professionally as Alberta ' FY to take part in the social life of the seein Avie Gs Chace : srted {Ht successfully - bide use oy: town Her hu oa wes willing t| POSSES CHASE aie, barges Rie deqert "| 9 nN Baking Powder. pemaisied ‘at ‘tame wittl tue" baby. | | or ursdav §S ein - M: J L. M. cenaggta developed in him an at. | TWO MEXICANS | Daughters Cut Off rs. J. fection for the tot stronger than that) owranio, Cal, March 2.—Wwith| With Dollar Apiece | | get andar ena argh genoa haing |threats of lynching everywhere! rosnite the objections of three |{| hay Det Grass, aa ta Lecitiod, |Sae bomen, OF pee or ca today | axnghters, who were cut off with $1 save Cevvata Seater 896.01 aa running a race with deputy sher-| gach, the will of Dr. J. Eugene Jo s * s s 4 RO y AL Save Geormse Vosise $26 ox 995 84 > itte in « bunt for two Mexicans al:| Gan "way admitted to probate Koes | in various Downstairs Store Sections. Each of ty. Now, shout @ month after the nd 1 . gh avd . ps ays 17 | day by Superior Judge King Dyke: }| nay ite A er Mec) urold Edith Hall, daughter of | mo | : : or KING POWDER Jie MOMs. ae ana Mrs AH ail ote "he dvuehters ati morine sor] these lots can be readily identified by the Red ter, asking that she ve Foster and city a dan, Mra. Lucille Freitag and Mrs. come to Seattle, But she was loyal| The girl ts sald to be in a serious] Jeanette Glassmire, of Buffala, N. Y., |}| . i . : Shee raed conaition [were represented by Attorney. John Price Cards—and each is priced in a manner to Absolutely Pure ‘ “The pine nce will show that two! According to detectives, the attack Hunt, | | 1¢ T. days before the shooting, occurred when Miss Hall returned| Dr, Jordan left the bate of his es : ff. d n l : ] i in f? i ental condition became home from shopping trip and|tate to four women friends, includ S si ‘G Contains No Alum Leaves No Bitter Taste De bad, Win alitde WE os tently: delet ton -Stishiane robbing her| ing Mrs, Hadith Steva and Miss Helen altord unusual value giving. Finally, on December 1, he decided home, Before she could scream they|Adams, who were represented by | g Send for New Royal Cook Book It’s FREE ed RAT UNL Sib Wrote 0 farewell Jet peend and gagged her Phillp Tworone , ater willing . tre t| . ae er to h ister, inclosing in it his of land to the city of Seattle for the , Royal Baking Powder Co., 130 William St., New York § ‘e" ' age hence toriey Sign Eh Vga ER TCT YOR PeRATN IS mI ablishment of a municipal hospi | | posited it with an acquaintance, with , not show up again.