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EDNESDAY. AUGUST 30, 1922, MUN TAP Wars YeaRs Fox oe Ta! ALL SPEEDERS| AITS 40 YEARS FOR BRIDE special Patrols to “Clock” | Stretches of Road Bpother drive against the speed was launched Tuesday when & clty officials met oe and decided to place thruout the county for reck ia county and re. P gpeciat highway patrolmen wit! be at lookout points, and speed. Rwilt be carefully “clocked” over stretches of road, j t conference were ing the Highway Lieut. CG bureau “ce Patrolman W. J Carr, Nad of the Sheriff Matt; Dalton and Ing Attorney Malcolm Doug: | > fall sentences were meted out | by Acting Judge Jacob Kalina tn po: | fe court Tuesday. Forty-nine speed quent three reckless drivers ap. at i court MANS AUTOPSY W RUM MURDER ner to Seek Cause of Dentist’s Death by chemical analysts of! The Cabin where “Sailor Jack” hopes to install his bride, found in the offices of Dr. and (inset) “Sailor Jack.” Jaa PR. Conley, 63, dentist, to find) wht of poison. Coroner W. H. Cor.|_ MARSHFIELD, Ore., Aug. 30—)The bride's view from ber front win ' = Thru the } “Ballo c dow will be down a el je prepared Wednesday to make an} an 0 gellchangelipresredl cmogl Cn higt t . ; ster of | a tion of the aged man's} ap sagan one al | stitt mo in an effort to decide the| So #ure in "Ss ef Conley's death. near here for the coming of a bride,| will come that died Tuesday morning,| Forty years of seclusion, hidden | Wends his way down the narrow that he was the victim of | trom his fellow men in a pine shack |'MFY the trees to the jogging road ink / this only co ting tink with civil drops administered 8 /nigh up in the hills burrounding|eatice) wong yf ff « thousand 1 on either side will be} Oregon, has waited tn his lonely cabin in the hills * that she each he SEATTLE a STAR FREDERICK & NELSON Made to Retail at Higher Prices! ON SALE THURSDAY AT Exceptional Offering: 120 New Bath Robes A ity, Considerably FIFTH AVENUE—PINE STREET—SIXTH AVENUE 3,000 “Sample’’ Special 3c Each Notions, including: Safety Pins Tape Lines Common Pins Cube Pins Toilet Pins Scwing Sundries Special at 3¢ each. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Hair Brushes With Hard Bristles Special 50c Each N A Bruehos of “very good qual well - made Solld-back atyle in black, and natura! varnish finis white, black, Special BO¢ cach THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Notions Sports Stockings Special 50c Pair. VERY UNUSUAL VALUES EATHER COTTON HOSE in combinations of Blue and Black, Green and Black or Brown and Black, with embroidered clockings in contrasting colors, special 50¢ pair. DROP-STITCH MERCERIZED HOSE, in plain Black or Brown, special 50¢ pair. large sample lot of THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE exceptional lot of Hair finished. brown with or brown bristles, and New Autumn Hats ay night, in Conley’s office at the “Sailor Jack.” now more than $0 waeky by « patient whom he had/ gation) to meet her He has made Bane men before, and who robbed |in eid rooster and thren, scrawny | coe My {fiDe for 40 yeare-evar bam a he fell unconscious.” The af-| ows has not shattered Mei Gteee since he deserted a bride at the! fair took piace at a late hour Mon sd church door in the little settlement ta ot yomance and marriage here—a bride whom he left waiting EACON CLOTH ROBES, two as sketched, Silk Trimming Tassels for Matrons jon building. yeamh Od, iN have to offer “ber” a) ene Mmppenred into foreign G Geely ait not awaken from the ef-| bridal chamber kept in readiness for| "A year aftérward he returned and % ao we Sine wet 6 nearly half a century The boudoir} cleared a narrow patch n on the fe Tuesday, when he called his/iacks the feminine touch, however.|ireen Jie built & shack of tour! jm the phone. He was given itor the hermit sacrificed vanity to|;coms, more than enough for hin| ald, but died six hours | necessity, A chest of drawers, hewed from the majestic firs of his hills, a bed ged brn nour rg — from the same firs and a redwood to traces of poison. He/washestand compose the furniture.) 7 . k’ | | -| But still “Sailor Jack” dreams o that Conley had suffered from |except for one clumsy cedar chair. |q pride. pond ‘ek oun Be Aone | @ieease. making bitn an easy| The beck yard is filled with fire perhaps another. For, he says, a in case a drug was admin: jand redwoods, rising more than 200) man who has lived all his life in the feet straight from the back oof. open is never too old to marry E DESTROYS BIG FOUR MEN PREPARES FOR WALL AT TACOMA) START SESSION BONUS BALLOT Potland-Bound Trains Are|Debate Critical Strike|Final Vote Due Today, Veto ; Re-Routed Situation Expected From Harding alles: Aug. 20—Fiames at| CLEVELAND, Aug. 20—Chlefs| BY KENNETH W. CLARK which destroyed the main jof the Big Four brotherhoods, their; WASHINGTON, Aug 30.—An alr ef the abandoned old Ta-/sessions shrouded tn secrecy, re |of cchfusion over the soldier bonus simple wants, but he was counting on the future and a wife, He saw} his abandoned bride often. He plead: | ed forgiveness, It was never given. Corson conducted a post- fig in the road after he was shot by Cline, movie location mana oi ‘was found by investigators to- north t ft it, min cpohbed oe Parthond, (sumed thelr deliberations today over |pill enveloped the senate today as trains today. the situation caused by the shop-|it prepared to take a final vote on of train and part of the|men's strike. the measure. tunnel thru the re ay ‘The situation confronting the rall-| While passage of the bill was ex wd damaged sufficien| A of roads today was admittedly critical, | pected before adjournment tonight 2 gpm rae via the Point} With Big Four chiefs not in accord. |its supporters feared that the unex. The brotherhood chiefs faced the | pected tactics of the opposition In ef. following situation: fecting adoption of the McNary 1. They must see that the men /$350,000,000 reclamation fund amend. ie comply with contracts with the rail) int and the proposal of Senator 7. They must give all moral and |Simmons that the bonus be paid out -l¢mancial support possible to the |of the interest of the $11,000,000,000 | striking shopmen, permitted under |atiied debt made it certain that Prest-| f their contracts with the railroads. dent Harding would veto the meas 3. The report of the interstate | ure, | I commerce commission, showing that! The Impression prevailed that the! SU more than 60 per cent of the 70,000 /senators who strongly opposed the m locomotives of the country are badly jou voted for these amendments in| | deteriorated, offers added excum for ‘order to make a presidential veto cer- firemen and engineers to stop work | tain, believing that the measure can under the contention that their lives | thus be killed. mente are endangzred. | oo =pEEengeued i i 4. “Red” influences spreading) NT Dying Actor Whispers His)... ii nie terainais in an et AGREEMENT IN % fort to persuade brotherhood mem- | Story to Her -|ters to quit work are causing brotm-| STRIKE LOOMS! erhood chiefs to carefully investi; Hie gate every complaint of armed be ASHINGTON, Aug. 30.— ep ve defectiv gines. ment of the anthracite coal deadlock guards and defective engines. appeared much nearer today as| St td committees of operators and miners) prepared to meet in Philadelphia ta- RAI, PICKETS: |Sc2 ne mise proposal ef Senators Pepper SENT TO JAIL | «54 teed of Pennsyivania of term. ‘To thie mystery witness, accord- inating the dispute. fag to Prosecutor A. C. Hart. Rergen,| PORTLAND, Aug. 30.—Robert| The Pepper-Reed proposal was pre- daredevil of the films, whispered the|Green, George Scharmann and Mar-|sented to President John L. Lewis Mery of how he met death after he|tin Chutuk, three of the 14 defend-jand Vice President Murray of the SMaiitted intimacy with Cline’s wife. |ants in the contempt case brought by | United Mine Workers and 8. D The woman, whose entrance into| the O-W. R. N. company for alleged | Warriner and W. B. Richards of the| ease added a new thrill, wiped| violation of the federal court's re-janthracite operators in conferences | blood £ Bergen’s breast as he| straining order forbidding picketing |held in the offices of the two sena- | the tale of happenings in the|in the shopmen’s strike, received |tors, which lasted until after 2} Giine cottage last Friday night, ac-| fines and jail sentences from Federal jo'clock this morning. | cording to itart. Judge Wolverton yesterday. The —_— eed | The woman, just before she fled| other 11 defendants were discharged. . * [When the ambulance was approach-| Green and Scharmann were sen Lewis Will Talk ttered a prayer for the repose] tenced to 60 days in the county jail New Peace Plans "9 soul. peat oi > rt Aas gue ttbaae “8! PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 30—John finding of this woman marks | fined $50. L. Lewis, president of the United | irance of the second “mystery| Upon the request of B. A. Green, | i ocr of America, and dis * into the drama of scram-|attorney for the strikers, a 10-day |) inion officialn are to meet here | domesticity. The first was Miss|stay of execution was allowed, and) i). ioaay to act on the anthracite| Thornton, who, it wag discov-jthe bonds of Green were fixed at peace plan of Senator Pepper. 1 a few days after the crime, was} $1,000 and Chutuk’s at $250. Lewis will confer with 8. D. War 7. at the Cline home when Ber- moe riner, spokesman for the operators, ont after the conference with the district ms HIGHER WAGE 2220s ence peace may agreed upon. FIGHT OPENED |°° "=" _ Miss Thornton, Bergen’s sweetheat, the tale of a wife's infidelity resulted in the murder. ap ae BE CHICAGO, Aug. 10-—The battie| SOldiers Evacuate Rankin Leading im [ONGC races for railroad main. Mine Strike Field! Montana Primaries |'2""°,,° 727 men reopened toy) ARRISBURG, Pa, Aug. 90—A| before the labor board. Following the refusal of the board to accept the living wage principle of the employes as the basis for fix- ing a new wage scale, maintenance leaders prepared to present argu ments to show that « living wage and a “just and reasonable wage” were the same. President Grable wired to Senator Albert E. Cummins, Iowa, co-nuthor of the Esch-Cummins bill, asking tm- mediate congressional action to amend the transportation act to defi- nitely define “just and reasonable wage.” lake steamer after bringing charges Hohmann Backers against Dr. A. J. Moore, conductor : Organize a Club tr ici to “heal homes. and hearts,” was found by life guards to. day. | virtual end of the coal strike in the bituminous fields of Pennsylvania was recognized by Governor Sproul with the recall of national guard troops who have been guarding the fields since July 21. Your troops of cavalry and one troop were ordered | The ‘rest will be | another week, the/}| HELENA, Mont., Aug. 30.—Well- D. Rankin, state attorney Seneral, maintained a slight lead over his opponents for republican nomina- tion for United States senator in “Montana, early returns from yester- ,@ay's primary showed. Congress Man Carl W. Riddick ran a close second. Burton K. Wheeler led Tom Stout by more than a thousand votes fh the race for the democratic sena- Yorial nomination. machine gun home this week, recalled within governor said, Suicide’s Body Is Located by Guards CHICAGO, Aug. 30—~The body of W. W. Talcott, who jumped from a Orangeman to Tell Views on Ireland Conditions in Ireland as seen thru phe eyes of an Orangeman, will be Haturday evening by Wil- Mam Coote, a member of the Ulster] A group of women advocates of Petiiament. who will speak in the|the candidacy of Susan Hohmann ic club, Arcade Bidg., under|for prosecuting attorney, met at 402] ‘Talcott alleged that after his wife Auspices of the Puget. Sound| Hinckley building Tuesday afternoon | became » disciple of Moore's philos Orange Lodge No, 160 of Se-land organized the “Hohmann-for jophy, her affection for her husband _ Prosecutor club,” * covled, in attractive figured mings of plain or quilted satin, silk cord belts and pockets, or self trimming. DOUBLE-FACE BLANKET CLOTH ROBES in plain colors, with quilted or plain satin collars, cuffs and pockets, in contrasting col- or. (One style sketched.) Light-Blue Copenhagen Lavender Beige Sizes 36 to 44; special $3.95 Drapery Remnants Reduced SEFUL lengths and samples of Drapery Fabrica, including Cretonnes, Curtain Nets, Scrims, Marquisettes, Madras and Swiss Muslina, reduced for clearance. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE 100 Men’s Shirts ‘At 89c Each 'ADRAS and Percale Shirta, of good quality, well-tall ored; sizes 14 to 15%; low-priced at 8O¢. Men's Muslin Night Shirts, well-made, of good quality muslin; sizes 15 to 18%, 95¢. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Cocoa Door Mats Special 75c Each A timely offering of these practical, durable Door Mats, made of #trong cocoa fiber. Size 14x24 Inches; special T5@ each. Grass Rugs Very Low Prices Inexpensive floor coverings for bungalow, cottage or camp; plain or with stencil designs; edges fin- ished with carpet binding. Brown, Green or Blue, 110 Grass Rugs, 27x64 inches, special BBE each. 137 Grass Rugs, 3x6 feet, spe cla) $1.25 ench 180 Grass Rugs, 9x12 feet, spe clal $3.95 each. 6x9 Velvet Rugs Special $15 wach NLY 18 of these §er Velvet Pile Rugs, in) and conventional paternal special price ‘Tan, Rone and 70d-++ grounds with des! Tan, Blue, Bro ing quality. Size / special $15.00 —THE DOWNST OES—FREE Stone-u, men, or women, Mixing Bit of Shoes tomorrow 25c to YS5sio apens at 9:30 & er free Woll-finished = grur—be Mixing Bowls, with ration; insides abac in sizes measuring inches across the The small. size stands 4% inches very good, mayor bowl. Prices 26¢ —THE DOWNS’, $3.95 | aif eather; Priced spe- 45 Ss effects, with trim- Mulberry Pink Gray Rose THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE 650 Pairs Misses’ and Children’s School Shoes In an Exceptional Offering, prices: > —tn highcut pattern as shown in eketch, with good quality tanned leather soles, welt-sewed, spring-heel (spring heel) Special $2.35 styles, Boys’ School Clothes Are Featured in The Downstairs Store at Moderate Prices: OYS’ 2-KNICKER SUITS— —in belted style, some with yoke and inverted plait; two pairs of trousers, fully lined. Sizes 8 to 16, priced: $6.45, $7.85, $8.95 d § ani 10.85 BOYS’ 2-KNICKER CORDU- ROY SUITS, $7.45—of me- dium-wale corduroy, well-fin- ished; coats with pockets and belt. Sizes 7 to 16, $7.45. BOYS’ BLOUSES of woven madras and percale, well-tailored and finished; sizes 8 to 16, price 85¢. BOYS’ WOOL SWEATERS, in school colors; sizes 28 to 34, price $2.15. BOYS’ CAPS in Gray tures; sizes 63% * uth, nere’s one big lot, consist. ing of 350 pairs of fine Dress and Army last Work Shoes, worth $5.00, to fo now, priced special, $3.95 rows: ues 9 oMEMBER THE PLACE—DATE—THE TIME—9:30 A. M. TOMORROW Special 25 C Each Four hundred thirty-two Silk costume trimmings. A great many different styles, some with metal galioon and tinsel trim- mings, Blue, Black, Beige and other popular shades. Special —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE S the result of a special conces- sion by the manufacturer, these Shoes for Misses and Children are quoted to you at these very low Tan Lotus Calf Shoes Black Gunmetal Shoes $8.50 and $10.00 FEATURED VALUES ‘Tassols in novelty e«tyles, suit- je for ra able la pm, wore ee ee ein, tage wei ~~ QAILK-VELVET HATS in the becoming draped and cloche shapes, favored by the older woman, with trimmings of feathers, metal pins, tinsel ornaments and flowers. There are many all-black Hats, and smart models in Prune, Taupe and Midnight. Two styles are sketched: a draped Hat of Velvet, $10.00; and a feather-trimmed style at $8.50. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Rone, Navy, in White, Taupe, 25¢ cach. Comforter Materials at Special Prices Full-Size Cotton Bats Special 95c Each —three-pound size, of soft ‘quality Neece. 2,100 Yards Cotton Challies Special 15 Yard —36inch Challies ina wide range of colorings and patterns, suit- able for Comfort coverings, spe- celal 15¢ yard. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Thursday: $2.35 $2.85 Pair Sizes 114 to 2 (with heel) Special $2.85 —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE and military heel SE Re St me BOM WS Yow saving the votes. Come here tomorrow at the GRAND OPENING. See the huge piles of fine shoes we have to offer at LOW prices. :