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i slimy i ama ce ana ie SMBER 11, 1922, ENCEAUIS ‘BURGLAR GRABS | MING TO U.S.) ARM OF WOMAN g Urge Unity With Eng-|Looting of Homes Reported land, France by Five People BY WEBB MILLER Many women were terrortsed by ht, 1822, by the United Pree) | burglars Sunday night and doxens 8, Sept. Me—Georges Clom:|of homes robbed, wu tx going to the United States) Prying open a dedroom window at Americans they should stand |the home of A. B. Miller, 11 McGraw r to shoulder with France /st.'a burglar early Monday reached England to finish the task of/inside and grabbed Mrs, Miller by | BEAUTY AND THE BEAST United Press. open & bedroom window at her home will make four speeches in| @uring the night, escaping with a rtea this year, according to prea. | Aby's bank and a razor plans ns Dickstein, 719 19th ave., saw ree men near his home late at ° t i: veseees theses magnin. | DIKE and Inter heard one of them > conemetienea > = rien (enter the house, Me yelled and the idarity during the war, but in|(ne” Jumped thru @ window, escap- troyron Sone ay Beek a be Opening a window, a burglar stole Mahausted by @n arrangement of | tro hand a oe : | Duelson, 16th ave mae ene — Rod ng rer, (3: Ms Eads, Clarendon hotel, was © solidarity had been maintained | revue’ Of S86 by & thief who pried a nm America, France and Eng hl be then the present crisis would | been avoided. It cannot be ittle he tt a Dry WASHINGTON, Bept 11 lid-clamper tion, and. He also keeps @ Td on his own tips. It was ag chairman of the fudt committee of the house that Volstead | wave his name to the prohibition law and thereby won @ niche in history, And it is as chairman of the same }committes that he 4 }| | without trace the hordes of bills, res- | olutions and proposals of all sorts for ‘repealing, modifying or setting the enforcement holes in with THE SEATTLE STAR Chief Prohibition BY HARRY HUNT dust-covered, ments than those of committee fe And no lid more tightly against possible law ngress are the judiciary is clamped onaid on The beat | in Washington that’s Andrew J, Volstead, of Minne: | note, father of the well-known pro- | hibition enforcement law bearing his ar VOLSTEAD WON BE INTERVIEWED Silent Invention to Give Supremacy of Air LONDON, Sept, 11-—filence of the government under severe attacks for alleged failure to develop ite air forces is said to be dus to a new war device which ts being perfected. Ac cording to reports, the device will assure England supremacy in the alr and permit It to rest in security without expenditure of vast sums of money in creating battle alrships and aeroplanes. wtead’s paternal strength in protect “It Is the law, The law muat be came” AGE ere Se-mips comeback to that, But on ratiroads or coal mines or matters not referred to the judiciary committee for action, Volstead will talk as freely an the moet ardent ad- vocate of booze will discuss Volstend. | Those issues, and not prohibition, Volstead will tell you, are the serious | problema to be faced just now, There is probably no man in con gress whose name is so widely known, but about whom as an indi vidual #o little is known, as Vel stead, He might aptly b “The Little Gray Man.” y described an ORDERS FAULTY, SAYS ENGINEER Coroner, Rail Heads Probe Spokane Wreck SPOKAND, Wash, Sept, 11 Twelve witnesses, including switch rew employes and Train Dispatcher J. Blair, have been summoned for the thoro probe of the collision be tween a work train and Northern rival of the passenger train was given by Bert Leidioff, switch crew foreman The inquiry, conducted in the of fices of J. L. De¥orce, division su perintendent, was before George B. Winter and W. E. Weeks of the bu reau of safety 0 | terstate commer comminsion at Se jattie &nd Charles F. Merry, state railway inspector of Olympia Present also were Coroner New man and 8, 1. Newton, ansistant superintendent of the Western divis ion of the Northern Pacific. Testi- mony of Mr. Leidioff, as reported after the forenoon session, also was pliances of the n-| PAGE HERE ONCE MORE, HE BRINGS A PORCUPINE Carry her gently, Knude; she's full of thorns, A prickly porcupine, victim of former Mayor Hugh Caldwell’s pet mania, was turned over Mon- day to the tender care of Gus Knudsen, keeper of the Woodland park 200. Caldwell, who arrived tn Seattle from Fairbanks, Alaska, Sunday night with his wriggling pin eush- ion, announced that & big moose will arrive in about a week to be | CITIZEN CALDWELL hing world peace. the arm, t to seo | name, ing hig legislative progeny, eee ® sag earnt | Phat " ol tier of France, who haa) She awoke foe fed toh * Sea cen Volstead'’s iid-clamping proclivitien| Had he tried to armue the merite| eric, Past ge anal Kiarg | added to his contribution to the fn virtual seclusion since his | fled, have not been limited simply to| of his enforcement act, his enemies! kiiied ‘Thursday night pose he world, ent from politics two years| Mrs. H. W. Ryan, 1709 . Alder st, clamping down the lid on the nation. | might have tafigled and confused bis! “Testimony that bis orders allowed pas made this decision in a telegram | reported that a burglar had forced al thirst, ntatements made capital of| 19 oF 16 minutes for a work train to He puts the 11d on a lot of legisia-|them, But all Volstead says in seturti to thie city before the ar- FINDS VALERA .. NOT WOUNDED DUBLIN, Sept. 11.—Kamonn De | Valera was discovered today by an | english newspaper correspondent, « Manchester Evening writer for the News he former “president of the Irish had not been wounded and ood health, the correspond ent reported. | De Valera declared himself #tiit op- posed to the treaty establishing the | Free State, declaring if it were not | revised Ireland would witness vio | was in | without a resumption of that . Tam disposed to go and | HERE’S MORE ABOUT eration and Aisapproved by the committee chatr man pactment of measures Sixty-two yea build, unassurmi to the effect that the switch engine | jent turmoli for many years to come, pulling the work train which collided | = with No, 41 when it pufied on the! re of age, #light of ing in carriage and myself publicly on this in| before the end of the year, | “CLEMENCEAU, | neement of Clemenceau's BEAST-MAN STARTS ON PAGE ONE was elicited by the statement Retyard Kipling, famous English | asked for a ride near Nisqually, He gaverely criticising America f0T | appeared to be pear oo Ad % bes war toe late and uit) and left the car on entering the! named downtown section of Tacoma. u makes plain he does) it was stated tn Olympia Monday | with Kipling, but believes that Mrs. O"Hara, tho suffering f States should resume Its) 9 fractured skull, will nership with Great Britain) She has regained consciousness “jand told her story. Her 13-year-old daughter, Emma, who was the most severely beaten of all of the ftend’s victims, is in such a serious: cond} winner just the same. He won the first award in the English bulldog class at the Westchester Kennel club's annual show N. Y., happy. Hundre ds of Miners tent Justi Among the bills burted under the Volstend Hd are proposals to amend | the constitution to permit wines and! liquors of 10 per cent alcoholic con. | a ‘ to permit beer of 2% per cent | By Chance” may not be much on looks, but he’s a prize alcohol; to permit the states to de elde for themselves what constitutes “intoxicating Hquors” und amendment; to repeal to then buried w the Lath | rs . provide a national \at Rye, N. Y., and made Mrs. Bessie Lane of Mount Vernon, | retorendum on prohibition to trans. | fer enforcement of prohibition from the treasury to the department the enforcement act; to amend the act, and so on, by the score These bille were introduced, refer red to committee Mid clamped shut on them and they of |} The presence, the outstanding factor in his appearance ts the leaden-gray overtone that seems to enshroud rather darkish gray suit ont perfectly in hue the gray of bis mustache and his hair which in turn blend with the gray of his ey emn, discussion, cast a grayish aura about his personality. There in uggestion of color, of galety, or kle or scintillation about him. Only quiet, earnest, serious grayness Born in Goodhue county, Minne in 1860, when that state was still an outpost of our northwestern frontier, Volstead 1's a product of the gota His serious, almost nol. | attitude toward all subjects of | went-bound main line track; carried headlight and tall lights, This was declared to have been corroborated by Superintendent DeForce. Proof of Disputed Climb Is Claimed Proof that A. E. Smith actually reached the top of Mt. Constance jast June, was in an aluminum con- {talner which joey found at the high lest point on the peak last Thursday is the assertion H. B. Sparks and 1. E. Thompson, who are now in Ses tle and who have turned over their find to the official Mountaineers’ or ganization, | |Leaves Threat of | Suicide, Disappears Contemplating suicide, Violet Oaka, of 8521 Sunnyside ave. disap ed from her home early Monday, after leaving a note to her mother, Mrs, W. Withersbee, saying, “You'll find my bedy at the bottom of Green Lake.” Police have been stationed near the lake to watch for the girl. Family differences are believed ree sponsible for Violet's act. Car Hits Pole; Man Goes to a Hospital tion that she may die. Her skull i fractured and her features are so mutilated that she is unrecognizable, | Exama is crippled an a result of in fantile paralysis. The other daugh. jters are rapidly recovering. Joe j Dobson, tho still suffering from the blows on the head from the fiend's revolver, has joined tn the search. eee ‘SEES SUSPECT NEAR SEATTLE Search for the Olympia beast-man im the room, then made his state- | was begun on a different tangent | HERE’S MORE ABOUT INJUNCTION tion upon misrepresentation of facts. should at be made permanent. told of the steps which had! taken to serve notice on the! erton, informed Seattle police and} the sheriff's office that a man an-| swering a description of the fiend | had been seen near Riverton. The) fellow asked Miller the direction from which he could find the Tacoma interurban. Detectives were detailed to search and Tacoma police were notified. Miller described the man as being about eix feet tall, wearing « biue coat, a straw hat and overalls, He carried a yellow valine and had a stubby growth of beard on his face. Judge Gordon, Speeders’ Foe, for Re-election Altho he has won state-wide fame as & leader in the movement to curb reckless driving, the greatest achieve. ment of Police Judge John B. Gordon during his 17 years on the police court bench has been the making of innumerable friénds thru his unfail ing gense of justice and fair play, his friefids point out. Judge Gordon's candidacy for the same position will be passed upon by fight,” Richberg sald. = Weinting out what he claimed was ) P ntation of facts to the 3 union attorney declared: he workers are under no legal of United States railroad labor 4. an the attorney general has “D ons of the board are not ing on the court. The board can- 7 if its decisions are not satis Message of President Harding me { in July, in which the presi in obtaining the injunction, pation to obey the decisior pted to claim before the court. keep the men from quitting their wish to call your attention to said that men have just as tight to work in the places of ers as the strikers have to quit thberg claimed the labor board inadequate and had no power to o its decisions. power of enforcement of the 's decisions was deliberately lett of the Esch-Cummins act by con- and courts have no authority read this power into the law,” he Judge Gordon the voters at Tuesday's republican Richberg’s argument was short. | spent most of his time quoting previous legal decisions uphold- his contentions that the injunc- should be dissolved. Indications were that the govern. it would refuse to modify any of demands of the original injunc- peace will appear on the ballot. Gordon has succeeded notably where others have failed, in that he ed before him for trial have been «truck with the attitude of friendly helpfulness that has been shown to them. He has made it his rule to give all offenders the benefit of the doubt. ‘A mass of evidence was expected be introduced to show that the road shopmen had instituted a mpaign of terrorism and sabotage./ uring the last few months a vig Federal agents carefully guarded | orous campaign against specders and tarload of implements of destruc-|reckiess drivers has been waged, in n, alleged to have been seized bY! which Gordon has played a stellar 1 agents in all parts of the/ role, cancelling hundreds of licenses try. and sending a score of drivers to — fail upon convicition of endangering ‘ould Abolish U.S. _ | ii*¢ a4 property. Rail Labor Board WASHINGTON, Sept. 11,—The Teachers Asked to ond labor bond rca, Support 30-10 Plan " board set up to handle contro- TACOMA, Sept. 11—United sup jes between raflroad executives |port of the 30-10 measure, which will d employes under a bill introduced |be referred to the people of Wash- | vy by Representative Hoch, re-jington as initiative measure No, 46 blican, Kansas. Hoch, a member |in November, as well as further de- the house interstate commerce|mand for the elimination of educa mmittee, which handled the indus. |¢ational inequalities, will be asked of al legislation recommended by |the teachers of the state at the 36th esident Harding, declared in a|annual ¢ decaege! ot Sa ipgeporc e passag ton Educational association, accor esis ale in a peivalir Boggs ing to the preliminary report of the| jon of the railroad problem. resolutions committee to Mrs. Minnie ‘The board which Hoch would have|D- Bean, president of the associa piace the railfoad labor board |tion. The convention will be held im wld consist. of five public repre. | Spokane September n 28 and 29, tives, appointed by the presi Caren, Bent, at salaries of $7,500 « year, 1Runs a Still; Now es Birth to 2 Sheriff Got Him Boys and 3 Girls George Healey, alleged operator of | a 2%-galion still, found near the JCHAREST, Sept. 11—A peasant | county highway Friday by Sheriff mn at Berka gave birth to five| Matt Starwich, has been arrested dren, two boys and three girls. with bail fixed at $750. Can't Even Be Tried CHARLES TOWN, W. Va., Sept. 11.—Hundreds of West Vir- sinia coal minets who are under indictment for “treason” In con- nection with their armed march inte Logan county last summer are to go free. The nonunion coal operators financing and conducting the Prosecutions here can't try the accused fast enough. Under the lawn of West Vir. ginia, an indicted person must be te the court, asking that the in-| stonday, when George Miller, of Riv. | tried within three terms of court aft | as been returned. | or his Indictment The third tern will expire tn De cember, and up to this time the op erators have tried only three men— Bill Blizzard, acquitted of “treason,” and Rev. John Wilburn and his son, James, convicted of second.degree murder. ‘The fourth trial, that of Walter Al len for “treason,” ls now on. More than 100 witnesses have been sum moned to testify for Allen, It ts ox pected the case will be drawn out for many weeks. HERE’S MORE ABOUT shake the giri's story tn any way. “She talks as freely as if she were at the dinner tabie,” he sald. “She speaks willingly, even animatedly, and she has a re markable memory. When she was told she had a right to counsel, Mine Skarin said: “I don’t want one, I don’t need one, and I haven't cot any money to pay for one, anyway.” mit the appointment of a lawyer for her. It was shortly after #a m. when the H. F. Alexander pulled in at Pier D. There was a large crowd on hand—some reporters and newspaper photographers, but idle curiosity seekers for the most part. They craned their necks as soon as the ship came alongside, eager for a chance to see the prisoner. As soon as the gangplank was low. ered, Sheriff Matt Starwich jumped aboard and joined Lieutenant of De- tectives William B. Kent and Mra. Nellie Herbert, who brought Miss Skarin back from California. A few minutes later, Sheriff Star wich reappeared, followed by Skarin, while Lieut. Kent and Mra. Herbert brought up the rear Quietly and becomingly gown: ed, Miss Skarin was by far the most attractive passenger to come off the ship. She seemed entirely at her ease and turned and waved as a battery of cameras were directed toward rr. ¢ didn't seem to be aware of the it Sh primary when five justices of the |oristence of the crowds that pushed | around her as she walked to the sheriff's automobile, Her alr was nothing less than regal. A slight has made few or no enemies, it i# plimbed int smile on her Ups, she climbed Into) Kent commented enthusiastically, on claimed. Prisoners who have appear’ j 1), waiting car just as if she Were) tieir arrival Monda a society leader, leaving the opera house. - She seated herself with Lieut Kent and Mrs, Herbert in the ton- neau. Sheriff Starwich sat in front with Deputy Sheriff Stewart Camp bell, and a Star reporter hung on the running board. “Do you care to make any state ment about your case?" Miss Skarin was asked, as the automobile pass ed over the Railroad ave, tracks, Lieut. Kent interfered before she had a chance to reply. His prisoner amiled «ympathetically—but didn’t attempt to violate the detective’s in: structions not to talk. A moment or two later, how- ever, she volunteered the state- ment about the hills. “W's wonderful—just wonder. ful,” she breathed —and, the strangest thing of all, it didn't seem to be acting. She was ab- solutely genu she was really glad to be back. No one else spoke—there was one of those awkward paunes that some times come, Mise Skarin came to the rescue—just as any grand dame might try to amuse her guests. “The Alexander's « wonderful whip,” she remarked. “It's Just like a first-class hotel. I enjoyed every minute of the trip—even If I was a ifthe sick.” “No,” she replied, when she wa asked if the voyage had been rough, “just a heavy swell, But Mra, Herbert and 1 were both under the weather a little’ and the two women amiled at each other with the jcameraderie of those who have been August 1. CLARA SKARIN STOR Later, however, she decided to per | Muss | awakened to the realization that they have made a mistake in bringing Al Jen to trial, He is just a * ger,” who holds no office in the union | organtzation. } ‘The operators want to “get” | Frank Keeney and Fred Mooney, | president and secretary, respec: tively, of the miners, These men are the brains of the union move- ment in the coat flelds, In the few years that they've been run- ning things they've increased the union membership from 6,000 to 43,000, One of these two men probably can be tried before the court term clones, | in December, but hardly both them. The statute of limitations |__The con! operators have suddenty / will set the others free, provided the defense attorneys can make the Al len trial and the next one last long enough Both are under Indictment as be jing “necessortes to the fact" in the | murder of John Gore, nonunion mine | wuard, kilied In the battle of Blair | mountain last summer. ‘STARTS. IN 0) PAGE 1 a thru misery together. When the automobile stopped in front of the County-City build ing, Miss Skarin sprang out with all the youthfal exuberance of @ trained athlete, | “E feet fine," she asserted. “dust fine. Even tho,” she added, “I did have to sort of | burry thru breakfast.” A moment later she was behind | Cloned doors—not to emerge for the | reat of the morning, It was apparent, however, jthe prosecuting attorney, came out from when he from time to time, that going entirely his way—while Miss Skarin wore the confident expression of one who is holding an unbeatable hand. It was believed that the prose- entor was trying to break down the story that she killed Hoch brunn in defense of her honor, and that he was meeting with No success. It was said that she would re- main in the prosecutor's office ate into the afternoon—except for a recess for luncheon. Later | she was to be taken to the city jail. Clara Dances With Guard Aboard Ship While on her way North, aboard | the H. F. Alexander, to face a charge | of murder, Clara Skarin amused her | self by dancing. Her partner was Lieutenant of De- tectives William B. Kent, in whose custody she made the trip. | “And she's a darn fine dancer,” }things were not y at End in Seattle Seattle, this winter, will not have the long serious lists of unemployed |that it has had for several years past, according to J. H. Shields, su. | perintendent of the elty employment office, Jobs, he says, are more ‘plentiful now than for some time past. War Vets Week-End Guests of Victoria Three hundred King county veter- ans of the World war spent Satur. day and Sunday in Victoria as the guests of the city. OSSINING, N. Y.—Three prison- ers at Sing Sing charged with having made “home brew.” 2 Agnesisnne Lost at Sea in Skiff . FUNCHAL, Madeira, Sept. 11.— Two men who declined to give their names, but said they were Amert- cans, rented a boat here, put out from shore and have not been seen | since. SPOKANE.—John Farrart, wanted in connection with shooting of Joe Marsden, captured in brush near Herrick. Search being made since were gone! lid, you find sitting atop of it a small but grim and very determined man, who doesn't argue or plead or waste tume “coal dig. | FoRatives of his position as commit jtee chairman and the weight of the dignity of that position gives him to| the board of edt hold the lid firm. prohibition stead tells you if you weck to lead | electer him afield into consideration of the | pieting hin tenth term as representa merits of light wines and beer, prohi bit! tles and kindred subjects. And if you try to tilt the | hard.working. ple with whom been cant Ed st. O }to the in 5 in words, but exercises the pre bar of After having se jand mayor of bi county attorney for 14 d to congr “I never discuss prohibition or the enforcement act.” Vol-| cour tive n pollx, the wet influence in poll | an the Volstead oft Minn. Therein has been much of Vol it ANU WANN NN “es nesabtnes A AAA pM LAAT 7, y i Net serious-thinking peo: f's college, His one child ttorney and Is practicing law tn Smith's claim to the climb caused! peter Paulson, 56, of Marysville, considerable discussion at the time, | was in the city hospital Monday, suf- and was discreaited in some quar-|¢ering from lacerations about the tern. The climb ts considered ex |head and a broken right arm, sus tremely difficult tained Sunday night when hig son- in-law, Ray Clark, of 6042 48th ave, S. W., drove his auto into a phone pole at Occidental ave. and Spokane i to avoid another car. Paulson thrown head first into a pile of his whole life has public schools and at he was admitted | Minnesota In 1884 | rved as president of fon, clty attorney 8 home town, he was of Yellow Medicine years before being | He is now com: Girl Is Killed in Fall of 200 Feet VANCOUVER, B. C., Sept. 11 Gertrude Bishop, 19, of South Van- | sand. couyer, was instantly killed when | she fell thru some rotten boards on an old flume into a stream 200 feet|to be 100 years of age, a veteran of A fisherman hooked her|the civil war, is run down by auto and pulled her body ashore. and comes up uninjured and smiling. st a daughter—ts OAKLAND.—Raphael Cilardo, sald fice at Granite City, ~ “ 3 Ls No Cost A 10-Day Test is Free any home a ten-day test of Pepsodent, ee ee ee ere rr HAA For Dainty People 4 _ For careful people—A new way to brush teeth This is for people who want prettier teeth, cleaner, safer teeth. It has brought those results to millions, the world over. Tt is fast displacing old and ineffective methods. Dentists everywhere are urg- ing its adoption. In some fifty nations careful people use this method now. Find out what it means to you and yours. There are few things more im- portant. The war on film Dental science is conducting a world- wide war on film. This new method is the way employed. Film is that viscous coat you feel. It clings to teeth, gets between the teeth and stays. It becomes discolored, then forms dingy coats. Tartar is based on film. That is why teeth lése their luster. Film also holds food substance which ferments and forms acids. It holds the acids in contact with the teeth to cause "PAT.OFF. Pepsadéent ACG.US. The New-Day Dentifrice A new-type tooth paste, made to meet five new requirements. No’ leading dentists the world over. druggists supply the large decay. Germs breed by millions in it They, with tartar, are the chief cause of pyorrhea. 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