The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 27, 1922, Page 7

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THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1922. FRENCH SHIP FOUNDERS IN ICY WATERS! English Channel I Searched in Hope of Finding Wreck Survivors LE HAVRE, April 27.— Twenty*two persons are miss- ing from the wreok of the steamer Depute Alber* Tail- landmier, which foundered in a storm 30 miles off the Brit-; tany coast. Ships are searching the English channel in the hope of finding survivors. Ten of the steamer’s crew of 32 were picked up in the} THE PREXY THE GIRL ( r HERE'S MORE ABOUT KLAN STARTS ON PAGE ONE Left to right: beck, governor 0; Michigan, * * * THE SEATTLE STAR THE DEAN THE GOVERNOR | Principals in Michigan State Normal college cigaret war. Normal President Charles McKenney, Mise Alice E. Tanton, Dean Bessie Leach Priddy and Alex Groes- s * | | | } Gas Extracted From Oil Waste and Tar BAN FRANCISCO, April 27.—Re ports on experiments conducted un. der federal supervision here in ex tracting oll from haltum shale, oll waste and tar were forwarded to Washington today by C, P. Bowte, United States engineer corps. HERE’S MORE ABOUT THUGS KILL MAN IRISH TROOPS IN. PLUMLEY TRIAL) WITH DOPE DOSE) 2-HOUR BATTLE STARTS ON PAGE ONE $1,000 policy for herself with the Kquitable Life Tnsuran Co. On het way home, a couple of hours later, Mrs, Plumley bought ™ ealad, which she served in separate dishes for dinner, In her husband's salad she placed strychnine, purchased some time before, and kept in an old t about the house.” ‘The first witnesses for the tate were called Just before neon Sidelights on Plumley Trial Mra. Plumley, according to jail attendants, hind been a model prion. er, She has developed into an expert erlb player, it is sald | One witness for the rtate regis tered a foot-felt complaint with the bailiffs. “I've got nore feet,” he said, “and haven't been able to get a seat all morning.” He wan promised re- Met for the afternoon seasion. Auto, Police Believe Police detectives were gating Thursday the He 29, 4 wt the theor und robbed by ba death of Darnell N. 44th was xi driver that he Aite on drugged Helsley Blackie Harris, alleged dope adtict found lying in the street at Kast ave Stewart Wedn night at #:20 p,m D Vicker, 645 Sycamore stopped to Investigate a shadow, Helsley was unconscious from the effects of « powerful drug. At the city howpital Heisley grew rapidly worse and died at 1:20 a, m. Thursday Heisley’s pockets ad heen robbed and police believed that he had been drugged and robbed and bis body toned Into the road. ‘The cody is at the morgue, where Sorener W. Corson will hold a post-mortem ex. amination, Heisley is survived by his mother, Mra, Effie Heis'ey, with whom he waa living at 12 N. 44th at. wlso known as wan and nt when L. Telegram Waiting for Mrs. Trumm Invent! ;Slayers Threw Body From At Least Two Killed, Many Wounded, in Clash Free atate and 4 in « two in County DUBLIN, urgent April 27 tr troops clas hour battle at Mulling: Westmeath, early today At two are known to have been killed and many wounded, Mullingar is isolatea and eonfilete ing of the battle reaching Dublin leave the tsnue in doubt, Machine guns were useless in the battle, which took place under the, cover of darkness. Firet reports reaching Dublin said” that loyal troops launched the attack in an effort to oust mutineers from: their positions, It was at first fee) ported that the Insurgents had beat en off a Free State attack and were in possemsion of the town. Later, it was announced that Free State troops controlled the situations leant reports | Sutherland Wins. in Alaskan Primaries JUNEAU, April 27--Dan Sutherw land, republican nominee tor dele icy waters near the wreck,’ te*ponsibility upon the “invisible em. gate to congress In the primary @leo. several of them dying from cold and exposure. LATIN-AMERICA TO DISARM, T00 Matter to Be Taken Up Next March in Santiago BY A. L. BRADFORD (Copyricht, 1922, by the United Press) WASHINGTON, April 27.—Pirst steps have been taken to extend lim- Station of armament to Latin.Amer. und it was learned authoritatively te. AN agreement between the repud Nes from the Rio Grande to Cape Horn to limit armament ts about to be proposed by Chile, and already the Blan has been informally discussed ‘The Chilean proposal is that the Question of limitation of armament be taken up at the fifth Pan.Amert ean conference, tq,be held at Santi ago next March. If this proposal ts approved, the Bantiago conference will be in effect pire.” The rald, conéucted by a dozen officers under the leadership of [place within 30 minutes after © Undersheriff Eugene Biscatlus, took burn had refused formally to deliver the records and files to District At. College Girl, Smoking, Starts Fight! at YPSILANTI, Mich. April Fired for “It's the fault of my s«ndiady. t ‘ Seburn's jorney T. L. Woolwine. Coburn's!s gist smokes cigurets refusal was accompanied with al” 7" © = statement that the Kian declined to} 18 she fit eget Jco-operate because of the “personal | BM the children of lle school teacher? attitude” of Deputy District Attor ney W. C. Doran in the matter. | That question has xplit the faculty | Doran has been in direct charge and student body of the Klan investigation since the | State Normal college here. |spectacular Inglewood raid of Sun-| It has found tts way |day, in which three members of a Courts and in a few days Judge} masked band of more than 200 were | George W. Sample of tire shot, one of them fatally, by Mar shal Frank Woerner, | Coburn intimated that Doran, for | reasons of his own, was attempting "0" Of the to persecute the Kian as well as Alex Groesimck, at Lansing prosecute the allegedly guilty mem. Called a apecial meeting of the state) ders. board of education to pass on the! Wootwine'’s answer to Coburn was | question. the forcible seizure of all files and STUDENTS records at Kian headquarters in the AROUSED Haas building. | The Michigan State Normal col Coburn and Price made no effort |iege tere is a state ‘raining school to resist the raiding officers, They |tor public school teachers, Moat, of jrent for legal counsel and watched |the students are young women / |the ransacking process in silence. | wry ee Ot thesl ua. Seba! pote membership lists were desired, | sroused by the clearet war. Every puty District Attorney Deran said. | one has an opinion, one wy or an- down a ruling settling it. your child | my thers as a pub: | Priddy of the Michigan | ¢4 cigurets as punk cirewit S4mitted that te Dean Priday. court of Washtenaw county will hand | last fall several of us girin smoked [here who's really ba, | was right She did find two cigaret stubs in wastetanket She told Mra. Mra. Priddy charged me with being an inveterate wmoker, “In reality, 1 uned those two burn- to burn the edges of a poster I put on my wall “I have amoked cigarets and 1 Onee on @ dark street Just to be devilish Its echoes have reached the man | But I never smoked ty my room or in governor of Michigan, | the presence of a man, He's | RAPS REGULATIONS “I don't know one girl of (he 1,400 All the girls really ambitious and the regu'ations and con- 1 know serious, 1 | stant surveillance over us by school authorities an anenke.” And Dean Priddy, who preferred the charges, pays “The acti taken by the school ‘We bad the intervat both tend to make us Qnother disarmament conference. jin order to positively identif, The Chilean foreign offica, it was! members of thre Ku Kiux Kian pu learned, has communicated to the merous men known to the prosecut Chilean embassy here the desire of or's office to have participated in the that government to initiate a discus | Inglewood episode sion of plans for limitation of arma TWO KLANSMEN Ment in Latin-America, at the San | UNDER ARREST tiago conference. The wnbassador| Two asserted Klansmen were ac has been instructed to sound out the tually under arrest today. They question here. were Walter Mosher, son of Deputy Ambassador Don Peltrar Mathieu | Sheriff Marinor_B. Mosher, who has already discussed the plan tn-|his life in the fhelewood battle formally with Dr. 1. S. Rowe, de/Leonard Reugg, Los Angeles manu ot ch mi of er at normal Leach was Alle ‘The evidence against was two cigaret her. The clgaret war paries McKenney colle Priddy inned 27 girl having committed tions." and Mre dean of women. One of the dismianed gtrt students of Detroit Miss Tanton cod E. Tanton, 18, stubs, started when ident of the Heanie dis. jents on charges “soo'al indie Fector general of the Pan-American \facturer. have been found in a wastebasket in lof the girl and of the teaching pro | fomston at heart.” And President McKenney: “The normal does not wish to pars on whether women shoul! smoke But it has reason to believe the peo ple of Michigan do not wan: as teach ers women who emok WANTS COURT TO DECIDE “Sines the purpose of this college in to furninh teachers to meet the standards of Michigan It takes the position that girls who smoke are to Rowle declared that three years of perimentation had convinced him | that & process has been evolved whereby 10,000,000,000 gallons of cas oline can be added to the present an. nual output of refineries HERE’S MORE ABOUT |; STARTS ON PAGE ONE against Dr. Brown of $125. Hansen showed in court that Brown, In treat ing & tooth, had left a vroken piece! of wtee! needle or wire buried in one of Hansen's teeth, had placed the fit. | ing over it, causing such complica tions that Hansen had to have the! tooth taken out, In 1920 and 1991 several of Brown's under-dentists were ar- rested, prosecuted and fined for practicing without a license, The sinte encountered great diffl culty getting the evidence to con- viet, owing to Brown's carefully worked out system to thwart en . Meanwhile he had continued preaching radicalism, The war came | on, His sons entered the service. He |became a Minute Man He took an active part In the elec tion of Ole Hanson as mayor. He * himself that he elected Hanson, | n drove him from Seattle It was during this period that) Ualted States army officials quaran- } tined Seattle as an “unclean city In |which disease and German propa-| ganda was being spread.” i Every good force in the elty In antly Jumped to the job of cleaning | |Seattlo up. An internment act was/ | th The presence. of several women'n person in Portland, Ore., and ad: | jority with bables in their arma was a sub: feet of comment among courthouse attaches. One elderly Indy, somewhat crip- pled, sadly recounted the number of murd trials she had attended. theif rights ignored, They have not stuck together, They have never ; Deen organized until now, They have been slaves and have never elected thelr own representatives to places } Of confidence and representation in governmental afafirs. | “Thru the One Big Union they have the power to elect, on election day, their own fellows to ponitions of confidence. lect such men. They will be true to their trust, SAYS NOTHING IN PATRIOTISM “A lot of patriotiem has been preached to us lately, There is noth- ing that covers no much rottenness of rascality as does the word ‘patriot. iam. ‘Thorne of you who are detect ives here tonight can take that to ¥ ir masters tomorrow morning, and my that I said it, too, Tell them. too, that I am a Minute Man, and here is my card proving that, “Tel this to your masters, you who are here tonight for “that purpose, that patriotic bunk and ish does not work with me, What we want is a change of institutions, and a change that will bring about a soclety that will be happy and contented.” Dr, Marie Equ! and other 1, W. W.| leaders npoke at the meedag follow ing Dr. Brown. Brown urged the meeting to do all they could for Dr Raul. | Dr. Equi told how she had been rurrounded by agents of the military | | | | A measage concerning the death of |ijon, recetved more than 2,000 mae dressed to Mra, T. Trumm, 6602 18th | to incomplete returns. ave. 8. main office. dress a The the one given in held by Western Union| a | with no opposition. r James L, Galen, secording (Stroller) White wag nomik is no such ad-|nated tn the democratic primaries FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET Aluminum Ware | AT UNUSUALLY LOW PRICES Aumine™ 90c A very practical square Roaster with rounded oom ners, making it easy te keep clean. Either the top or bottom of this Roaster may pan. be used as a separate Size 10% inches square and 5 inches deep A very good value at 90a Aluminum Double Boiler her room. union. It Jeorstood Math 1 ie wenemmned Mashinn wi | And, besides that, Dean Priddy Both Walter Moher and Reuse not suitable candidates for the teach. | paxsed that permitted the health de-|intelligence department, ant pleaded ghortly propose that che question of extending limitation of armament to Tatin-America be included in the @genda for the conference Cuts Freight Rate to Lure Touristss Freight rates on automobiles from San Francisco and Los An geles have been reduced to $20 and $20, respectively, by the Pacific Steamship company, as an aid to the campaign inaugurated by the Seattle Chamber of Commerce to Bring tourists to the Northwest thx eummer. Bellingham Ready A A for Tulip Festival RELLINGHAM, April 27.—Belting- ham will celebrate its Tulip Festival for three days, beginning May 4, with Miss Aletta Day as queen. Miss Day, the Bike’ candidate, won the queen contest, with Miss Merie Jackson, of Burlington, Skagit county candidate, wecond. CUT RATE WALL PAPER PAINTS Our CASH and CARRY sy» tem enables your dollar to buy 60% more WALL. PAPER and 20% more PAINT than elsewhere. All goods the beet that money can buy. Satis faction or money refunded WHY PAY MORE? PRICES: Kitchen Paper -1¢ to 20¢ B¢ to 25¢ Hall Paper— Roll. ++T@ to 400 Parlor Paper— 10¢ to 50¢ Tapestry Paper— Roll..... -- 256 to 90¢ Varnish Tile Paper— Roll eee 20-inch Oatmeal Bolt 30.tneh Bott . Moire Ceiling— Re Dry ¥ Pouna -24¢e Harmonel siventibeveg sone Be %-Ib. Deadening Felt— 60 yards to roll......$1.88 Deadening Felt— 10 Olle eee BZAD Galion ... Floor Paint Mixed Paint Galion Gib. package ( Western Wall Paper Co. Largest Wall Paper Store in the Northweat 1921 Second Avenue Hotel Washington Is Across From Us were Injured In a gun duel with Marshal Woerner, Reugg may die. He in In @ hospital at Inglewood Mosher was placed under $10,000 bond. Reugg was not taken into cus tody owing to bia condition. Both | men are charged tn the warrants against them with “assault with a deadiy weapon with Intent to commit | where Judge Sample and = dl pected decision come in. Names of al! klansmen tn the coun: | ty miny be given to the newspapers lene three p: for publication after the rosters have | been checked, the district attorney's | office intimated. One morning newspaper announced | _ tts Intention of publishing a lat of | 200 klansmen which It is claimed to | have compiled from other sources. The regularly scheduled meeting of | | the lors! kian wan held here last night, Gespite the day's disturbing developments. ‘The seasion, twld in ja Knights of Pythias hall, was well | | . | jattended. Kleagle Nathan Baker was| | from E. S0th st. to BE. 86th st, | maid to have presided from § a. m. to & p.m 1 | A story was in circulation today |* " pert that 50 candidates were admitted to! jthe order at the klan meeting. It Day Says There 8 was without verificarion points out, Miss Tanton had her | blonde locks bobbed! TO ABIDE DN But Mixes Tanton wouldn't by the school decision. A eult for reinktatement. That's his ex rineipals in the wrangle and Dean Priddy, air their views, Says Mine Tanton: Water will be shut off Friday, | April 28, on EF. | 10th ave. N. E | E., and on 16th ave. N. EB, 16th | | ave. N. E. and 17th ave. N. E., Both st, from to 18th ave. N Home Drew | (Starts on Page 1) lence, he said, convinced him that ei, PO of Fraud Jultus G. Day, port candidate, de clared at several meetings Wednesday night that there was plot on foot to put him out of the race, He defied | bis enemios, he said. |eharcing ® public Is a bunch of saps. | Aga inst Johles We don’t think much of a man who had to serve as chief of police) Accused of defrauding anemploye lto learn that. out of a $10 fee for obtaining work | for them on the Alaska railroad, 1 | ‘The day may come in Seattle when | C. Sumnderiand, 42, was held in city there are no bootleggers; but itpgili 1 ay by Detectives Ross doesn't look like the night ever wil.) Wats ad J. 1, Williams, Sunder. | go: land is anid to have sold the men a | Re that as ft may, there's a man in Seattle who always wears a silk | jobs, hat when he plays golf on Sundays. | jivere mrtg | | “ “Jack Dempsey ts getting quite a ‘ reception in Paris.” Say, buddy, do | Hit by B: you remember when you rode thru) that burg with your feet sticking out |thru the side door of a 40 hunynies? neither of which were | cycle; In Serious Condition | E. Peterson, 61, of 6721 Alaska at., | was taken to city hospital Wednes- day night, after a bicycle driven by |Sat on Grease Spot ([{ifrea und. 16, momonuer bor, | and Now Wants $3)°2 1 29th ave. 8. W., had knocked | him down at Marion st. and Second) | Because a grease spot on a car) jave feat sotled her new coat, Mrs. G. A.) Peterson's condition Thursday was Condie, 2817 24th ave. S., asked the | serious, city council Thursday for $3. The claim will be investigated Man Arrested on Charge of Forgery Charged with stealing a draft for} $745 and forging an indorsement, W A, Smith w rrested Thursday at the Union Nat al bank by De tectives Jim Byrne and Jack Landis. The draft is alleged to ve been} | stolen in Okanogan county 5,000Used Tires | All high grade selected casings, thoroughly inspected and guaranteed Cord | |His Creeper Vines 6.50 | to Beautify City 750 4.00 8.50 6.75 12.00 10.00 12,00 All Other Sizes in Proportion MAIL ORDERS Careful attention paid to Mail Orders. No deposit required W. 0. STANDRING, Propr. 1026 Pike St., Cor, Boren Phone Elliott 0446 With the suggestion that the flow-| er display committees of the Cham-| ber of Commerce or the park board utilize them in the beautification of fences, walla or terr J Stand. | ley, 1760 Palm ave., Thursday offered the chamber 600 English hardy creeper ivy vines : : | MRS. MATTHEWS--ma_ Kelly, | 2542 15th ave. W., is anxious to have! Mrs. Matthews call at 110% Seventh | ave once. zterterere N. at - | RAYMOND.—Gilligan Grasson, 26, ‘farm between Willapa and eStreet Tire Shop | commits suicide while working on a| Mento. | ng bag” in addition to selling | do. | Valued at $45 was stolen from Andy € Financial* matters and poor health , Slven as reasons, ing profession. Hut we should wel jcome & court decision.” abide | teachers bob their hair or wear short She etarted skirts Ana mayr "It makes no difference the governor of Michigan whether Hut teachers or git!» prepar- ing to be teachers should not smoke? ‘The student partment to Intern men and women | |found to be afflicted with certain dis ramen | BROWN FOUGHT AGAINST CLEANING Brown fought the measure, and) fought its enforcement. Dr. J. 8 MeHride, then city health officer, | counct! is bo-king the had written his resignation to give to }seid the any [school authorities In dismissing Mise | sfayor Hanson when he got a letter |small for Dr. Equi And while the decision hang» fire | Tanton and the other 16. |from Brown demanding Impertourty | for money for the “ball fund” for |herself and other “political prison- ors URGED “THF. BOYS™ TO GIVE MORE A collection Was taken from the audience, and Mra. Mary Howe, who was introduced as “from New York,” nt of money was too She urged “the boys” to give more ind a shower of | And while Judge Sample prepares ito know when he, McBride, was go: | money hit the platform. Miss Tanton, Preaitent McKenney | his decision, and while the governor |ing to step out aret war rages on! it WATER SHUT-OFF xorice *| Dismissed Sleuth Charges Frame-up Scoring federal narcotic ayents and “frame-up agrinet bis client, Detective William PF. Wor- sham, Attorney Adam Bowler has filed with the civil service commis sion « petition asking a hearing on the dope charges brought against Worsham by the federal off'etala. Worsham held the best record fn Plot Against Him |t poitce department tor catching and convicting thieves and burglars. He said he had gained the enmity of | the federal officials during the search for the $30,000 liquor stolen Inst year from the government vaulia Thieves Get time, Cash and Lingerie A harvest of diamond rings and cash, estimated in value at about $300, together with various allk un- mentionables, comprixed the loot of thieves Wednesday night Mra. A. EB. Bishop, Fleming apart ments, lost a quantity of Hngerte, in ddition to a gold watch. A diamond rvin, 608 Olive at Mabel Farr, 316 30th » lont 9 $150 diamond, a ruby and a pearl ring In the washroom of the county- city building. Mra. J. Almquist, 6239 Fifth ave., E., was robbed of $60 in Man | r ning's cafe. TO EXPLAIN the workings of the! Proposed roning laws, committee appointed by well will hold a public the Green Lake school, and First ave. Ing. the special Mayor Cald hearing at 65th at N., Thursday even- Business Is Good WHY? Because they are 100% leather shoes, where leather should be. Because they are this season's styles in patent, kid and satins. Because they are priced at $5.00 and less—none higher. Because these are our regular prices. United Shoe Stores, Inc. Family Foot-Fitters 509 Pine St. Opposite Frederick & Nelson's That letter deter jeonducts his probe, Ypailanti's cla | mined him to stay in ‘and fight Brown | U. and the element he was representing | to the last ditch It was a bitter fight, The govern ment, on the one hand, was urging greater action on the cleanup Brown, on the other, wan doing his| utmost to break the cleanup forces Diseased men and women whom | Rrown champtoned as an attorney, | raised thousands of dollars to smash the government's drive to intern them Brown filed several habeas cor. s proceedings in the local courts to get these men and women out of jail and turn them loose again on the streets of Se aitle to prey upon soldiers and | sailors. Failing to accomplish his ends by this means, he took several members of the pink-cuff gentry to Olympia | and paraded them before the state | legisiature then in session. He tried to get a law passed, at this time, to | overshadow the city ordinance and break up the government's program. HANSON GAVE BROWN TRIMMING At this juneture, Mayor Hanson | whatever else may be said him, went to the front for & He hurried to Olympia and on the floor of the senate gave Brown the trimming of his life Defeated in his purpose, Brown me back to Seattle and began be. rating Hanson, He now claims to | have driven Hanson from the city. During this period there was scarcely 2 man discharged from service in the city hall as a “po- Utieal incurable and parasite” that did not run to Dr, Brown with a story of “oppression and orda show that Brown, tn many ns was the loudest jchampion of these disgruntled dis- charged employes and that he never let an opportunity pass by to go with |them, as their defender, to the civil |nervice board, demanding their re- Instatement | About this time he was the cause jof a grand jury being called to In vestigate “irregularities” In the city hall. ‘This resulted in the indictment of one $50-a-month employe whom a drug addict said had taken some of his money. | Of the 80 or 90 case® filed against the city to get diseased women out | \of internment, most of them \filed by Brown | CLOSELY WATCHED | BY U. 8. MEN | In July, 1919, Brown, a Minute| |Man, was being closely watched by United States secret agents, On the \night of July 10 he addressed a maxs |meeting here in behalf of I. W. W |leaders who were then being rounded \up and jalled as war prisoners, The meeting filled a large hall and |was called to order by Harry Fein. berg, an I, W. W. organizer and |worker, who tntrodu Dr, Brown as the first speaker. Brown ridiculed an ordinance that had been introduced in the city council to curb the activities of the LW. W. and other radical elements here. “Practical men,” Brown declared, “are being trampled under foot and were | | Vincent, Mra. Howe acted as a reaner tn the 8. censorship bureau in Seatth | for six or eight months during the war and remained in the service until | after the armistice was signed. Kate Sadler was present at the meeting and aided tn the collection of the money, Other «peakers who followed Dr. Brown to the platform were A. F. Dores, recently out of Leavenworth prison, and Walker C. Smith, who! condemned the present system of government and prophesied “a| change goon.” Since coming to Seattle, Dr, Brown's record shows he has $1.50 Rice Boller of heavy stamped aluminum, tn 2-quart #ize; has substantial riveted handles and fitin cover, with ebontzed wood knob. An unusually good value at $1.50. Aluminum Windsor Kettles © Especially good for cooking ee roasts ts this Windsor Kettle, with | tapered sides and flat bottom, that stands well on electric stoves oF ranges, A very adaptable kitchen utensi!—unusually low-priced: 6-QUART SIZE, $1.60 ¢QUART SIZE, $1.75 Aluminum Colander been a persistent seeker for pub He office. On the socialist ticket and later on non-partisan tickets he has run for superior court Judge, supreme court judge, gov- ernor and other minor offices. During all this time he has advo cated the eight-hour day and such measures as the minimum wage law. At the same time he was employing | unlicensed dentists to work for him in his office, working them overtime and paying them salaries far below | the usual dentist's pay At a time when white men, well qualified for the job, were walking the streets in fading army uniforms begging for work, Dr. Brown, in his | laboratory, was employing Japs. | But today his retinue of political advisors and supporters includes rad. jeals and reactionaries, a motley lot never before companions In politics, and in hin following are many sober. minded men. ‘This morning on James st., near Dr, Brown's headquarters, were seen two of his advisors in animated con- versa tion. | They were Ralph Plerce, attorney for the I. W, W., who defended the murderers of ex-service men at Cen- tralia, and George Russell, former secretary of the Employers’ associa tion, reactionary whip-cracker and lobbygow. Life Saving Test Held at Y. W.C. A. The following members of the junior class of the Y, W. ©. A. quali fied in a Red Cross life saving test Wednesday Edith Schermer, Gurene Garrison, Margery Urandt, Bernice Nudd, Mary Farris, Marjovie Maize, Ruth Baird, Barbara Maire, Eliza. beth Browning, Eileen Hill, Luella Sleanor Brandt, Katherine MeCormick, Shirley Bearcsworth and Peggy Payzant. Memters of the senic class to qualify were: Mrs, Ethel L. Cole, Mra, Nettie MR. Barnes, Mrs. H. M, Chase end Mrs. C. M, Weber, Murderer Sentenced to Life in Prison BEND, Ore., April 27.—A. J. Wem ton was sentenced late yesterday to life imprisonment for the murder of Robert H, Krug near here two years Weston had previously served a year of a previous sentence for mur der, and then was granted a second trial, A jury deliberated 78 hours, the record for an Oregon jury, before returning a verdict of guilty of seo ond degree murder,’ 75C€ Aluminum Colander as pictured, with substantial riveted handles and foot rests, A practical utensil for mashing berries and washing vege tables—or it may be used inside a kettle as a steamer. An exceptional value at 75¢. Aluminum Sink Strainer 85c This three - cornefed Sink Strainer is easily cleaned, haw ing a raised bottom that allows Nquid to drain through, Low. priced at 85¢. Housewares Section, THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET —Downstairs Store— Women’s High-Cut Boots For Outing and Hiking Wear $7.95 UTING, hiking, camping— all these activities of Spring and Summer require just such staunch, high-cut Boots as these. They are of heavy brown calf, with Goodyear welt soles. izes 314 to 8. Priced at $7.95 pair. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE

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