The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 15, 1923, Page 1

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ed: on will hat nu use hat the op ry. el ate in mat Mu. inty his of d SHIPS SINK! 1 BURNS! 1 AGROUND Se | x ae A Temperature Maximum, 39. Today Let Minimun Toon, 39, | The a Star Rntered as Heoond Cle Matter May 8, At the Postotticn at Beatle, Ww hu. WAer the Act of Congress March 9. wm. P Year, by Mail, $1.60 BE ATTL BE, Ww ASI, “THURSDAY, Howdy, folks! Ain't chilblains =e a ee Ete x 1 beck? olf OL 0 Find Officer Stretched on Floor of ro is ¢ © way to ‘ ‘ n a* « » Gaye , calbuins cut tie oot off above tte} Home; Daughter Says She Took ankle A § eee a) ~ . Alin. aff eS Ba a Poison; Police Baffled proble thi op are ie those ca gave us us| Police detectives were completely baffled Thursday by the F at Ci wis in 191 jmysterious death of Patrolman Ernest Faust, 48, who was eS ioe found lifeless on the floor of his bedroom in his home at q so9 | D213 11th ave. N. E., Thursd 4 those 14.809 | Ue: a N.. E. sday morning. " t 4 for us by maiden ust’s daughter, Laura, 22, was stretched across the 4 aunts—at last have 1a definite|bed, groaning from pain. She declared she had tried to 3 use. é “ commit suicide by taking polaon. | 5 : ng P ‘ THOSE EXCLUSIVE CLUBS ROR B. Kent Seattle business men have or n, J. L : ganized an outing club called the Williams : “8.0. Y. P..” whieh means “Sox with Coroner Outside Your Pants,” rtp relay evideninee We are a charter member of jWhich lead to the belief that Faus the “Toes Outside Your Shoes | might have been poisoned The irl Chab.”" as taken to he city oepital, oo 0 peas where phy amining 42 epee obec | her, pro ¢ from any eS Se Siete “tame t ees | Death and Property Loss| sens or polson nald they | JS aegpibor gg ’ s i Joould not understa story didn't get colds Follow Blizzard ud not endertand ber stor. "| Planes Equipped With : ‘ aa e | ot | Thursday at E 1 Pike | eens naicies caso rath Yn |, Death, suffering and property jets, He rang box at a ie enes to prove that the femate| estruction came today with | 6.08 a m time, He of the species is more dangerous most severe blizzard of the sea- | “isippeare BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS than the male, | son blanketing the country. 3 Peas Ww rahe bbicey 2 ‘eh 1 The eo Ove mun 7 greatest fleet ¢ attleplanes 3 2 | From Washington state ¢ telephone, al Wothihas ever Kaci te aie poids cecallngs = sta ds Maine and from the Canadian ad on the floor and/at Mosul, { Mesobataite mady 0 Help Yourself. boundary to the Texas coust [tho daughter lying across the bed swoop down on the Turks at a mo Conpliindats 6) | the storm raged. | called the police. Coroner W. H. | ment’s notice. Olympic Theater. | Bight deaths resulted from the} Corson found a cup containing &| Thus does Mesopotamia continue erate jcold weather in th hwest. {liquid which he said may be poison. |to fulfil her destiny ay the moat ro- where the temper ranged | The cup was standing on the table. te spot 61 ft earth, s, th i it f the 2 mantic spot on the face of the earth. j te ae Petdaes cate that |ffom 10 to 25 below zero The bottle of poison which the girt| The very spot where these modern i A " mij Three died in Chicago, with the|deciared she had drahk from, was|airplahes, armored 4 equipped spring is only three shovelfuls of coal planes, armored and equipped } = . official thermometers recording five|also on the table, but the cork had |with twoton bombs and machine 2 fe as ra arg not been removed for several days, | guna, sit with thelr noses pointed Mik supplies. were short, due to| the police said. Two other bettles. of | Into the wind, marks the site of | facl into the promised land—and of linability of farmers to traverse| poison were found in a medicine | Ninewh, of Old Testament fame. Awoke ning and | snowdrifted roads, and a serious cut |chest. A postmortem examtnation| Capital of the Axsyrian empire found Bag cht, with lin deliveries for St. Paul, Min-|of Faust's body will ba made to re-j when Babylonia was n vansal atate, it ose re Son ke i ne Mee neapolia, Chicago and other North-|'veal the cause of his death, Micken who, poor soul, perforce had to| western cities was threatened said. Jother Assyrian kings more journey to the city to attend to business | he weather bureau Annoute Mra. Faust and her son, Engelbert, | thousand before Christ tm the courts of equity. And so to lunch at @ late hour, and fhen to the 1:15 boat, very tired from carrying Mistress Betty. 5. to th boat, © full quarter of a mile I vow, Very merry when we reached the city and fomd the town folks sven worse | eff than those of the country. And 10 to home to my family, and found them eating ice cream made out *f stow and vanilla, not very nourieh- ing, say 1. tho cheap, ank Ged! cen ay " fa The question of the day seems to 5 be: Did Tutankhamen play with F De Wolf Hopper or with Dugdale 2 famous “Siwashes? eee Mr. James Blaha, of Topeka, is an| ‘auto mechanic. But he ought to be | an auto salesman. | . In Olden days you could appear Out on the porch at night | In scant attire and never fear { LS About an auto light. | ‘ eee "Some of the Mquor I drank in| | America would kill an elephant,” says Isadore Duncan, still in good | health, Give me one of the same, Eddie So far in the battle over Charlie | angle cream-puft has been fired. | Tam not in favor of whiskers that take the place of a bib. | | eae | } { i | Jess Willard has gone on the war: Path, He is willing to take on Frankie Green, Dode Bercot, or Matt | Matthe nate PRES | Red-haired woman in pink nightie | fauses divorce in Seattle, No won- der, Rea heads shouldn't wear pink. | Say what you like, taxes day by Y¥, in every way, are getting higher and higher, % vee HOW TO STARVE THREE LESSONS Lesson One Don't Hat Lesson Two Don't Bat. Lesson Thre Repeat tes nom oe One of the first Pricstede “Tensons a two. i “You're Fired . “Henry Fora might not make a food president.” comments Brick Stilwell, “but he would give us a $008 shake for our money.’ . a Ount the derive Our relat , James. Wea have gone home. No Milk Mille Shortage During Cold Wave 9 Milk shortage will result from} \w % | mometer would fall to 10 degreen be- How zero in Chicago before | | more than 15 POISONED! ed the cold wave will continue indefinitely as no le sight. The storm, the country from was carried to the on a gale which re in York city was deme which the Traffic (Turn to Page i swept E t up is in across Northwest stern hed const 72 miles ized thruout ‘olumn 6) WINTER GALES | HIT NEW winds today New York mile ga eral per jured by broken glas signs. A plate glass | blown into the grill room of the Ho. | |tel McAJ,,hin late last night, ity was lashed by 1 YORK| NEW YORK, Feb. 16—A co wave, bringing zero temperature, was swept into the East by high a 72. sons were in s and fallin window scatter: |ing diners, but none was hurt. | Coldest Weat her Hits Middle West CHICAGO, weather of the winter ather bureau predic Three deaths from 50 fires \during the last 24 how Train service northw crippled and train ly Peb. 16 Heighton, the state legislator, not a| West was in the grip of the coldest 5 —The Mid-| today. The ted the ther- night freezing and were reported rs. ard was bad s on several lines were stalled in isolated sections. Relief societies rushed coal to hundreds of need The food and dy families, cold will continue until Sun- day, the weather bureau reported, ‘SEVEN DEAD IS TOLL OF STORM Scores of Others Injured on) way Icy Stree seor yen dead and the human toll claime the storm. Most of those walks. The fact that was confined to the pede: dead Young and ambitious fellow learns| while cleaning snow off the side stre ts es injured d to date is by succumbed wtrian traffic ts, on A count of the heavy snow on the side was responsible Automot yen car tra walks, the injuries. along the fre down 4 score or mor ‘The dead are: Charle: rector of the Seaboard for most of running ks, knocked Di pedestrians. 6 Ross, 66, di- bank, who died of heart disease while cleaning his walk at 601 36th ave. Hiawatha place, 62, 935 umbed to overexe: Pes mc ¢ heavy mnowfall of the past few Yh it was reported hy many dal- Hes of the city Wednenday. | ) “Our delivery trucks are from four to six hours tate, but are get HOR IheY the snow,” sald A. 1 Balley, assistant r of the mre Milk Di Wentinke manag Co, (tt supply trom outside in being ned and we in turn are keep: A, Case, 61, Des Moines, N. Sam who rtion; Roland who died shoveling snow in front of the home of Mrs. shall Flowers, 47, who while clearing the 77th wt I Shipman, W., whowe heart ot car chase; Willian 1 N, 81st st, wa ay wt | 04, jove 65, 2218 W, Barrett st, Gladys Van Gasken; who di xertion, and Willis 1. Mar. dropped dead 1k at N 71, 1681 failed after a in Seaumby 1 from Hardy, who dropped liveries,” reported Bailey. dead while walking to ‘the utroet car, 16th IRL. both went Insane » and died soon after, police. Since that time been living with hin daughter. The girl was questioned at great length by detectives as she lay in the city hospital, but she refused to answer questions Faust has been a member police department for 12 years SEATTLE DIGS OUT OF DRIFTS Another Storm Is Likely * Thursday Night Snow or rain was the weather au's forecast for Thursday } night. The storm which is rag- ing off the coast has backed up, | it was said, but may change its direction at any moment. Four and 22 hundredths of snow fell at Tatoosh in the last 24 hours, eral years ago cording to the F ust has of the ogae | Seattle end the Northwest in gen ral were slowly emerging Thursday |from the blizzard which has held | n in its icy grip since Sunday. Transportation was still more or | leas at a standstill; all public utilities | were operating under the greatest) difficulties, and business was still suffering from numerous handicaps, | but the city as a whole was gradu jally returning to a normal basis. ‘The weather bureau, however, held Jout the threat of possible further| | snow, with the likelihood that Wed-| nesday’s general paralysis will return | of the fall is at all heavy, Thousands of dollars’ damage was | caused by Wedaesday night's rain and sleet storm, which transformed | the city into a maze of icicles atop the snow, Street car | und service continued to be} but the municipal rail 4 that all y night on} jewrat abridged schedule—un “ there was more snow. All schooly were closed ‘Thursday | jand {t was announced by the board of education that they would not reopen until Monday. Trains from the at were erally late—some of them os much as 36 hours—but the opinion was expremsed that regular schedules | would be resumed shortly, Outaide the city there was immi nent danger of floods in case of a sudden thaw. At the county en line jt Ken: sineer's office it was declared that! the White, Green, Duwamish and Snoqualmie rivers would certainly overflow if the weather changed suddenly, but the city was in no peril TRAINS ARE STILL LATE, ‘Trains from the Hast into Seattle ranged from 6 to 86 hours late | Thuraday, and eastbound traffic wax | }at a standstill, ‘The situation was) better than it lad been Wednesday, however, and the hope was expressed (urn to Page 7, Column $) kA Tiree ae | where the Britis lear, | day The wooden steamship Nika, San Francisco to Seattle, | Tatoosh island, after drifting helplessly during the night with a broken rudder. was one of four ships in disasters off the Northwest coast Thursday. Huge Air Fleet Is Ready FRANCE BALKED to Bomb Turks at Mosul BY QWN MINERS TWO C Guns Are W Spot Famed in Biblical History Corson | wan the residence of Sennacherib and |!8 the tomb of Mohammed's barber, than a/Salman Pak. yeurs born in nearby was Rethiehem. BABYLON ONCE GREATEST CITY The great love temple of Ishtar, goddess of love and war, was at Nineveh clone py the aerodrome war planes are now grouped. Baby on js about south of Nineveh, on the Euphrates ‘ " | It was the finest city in tha| Mesopotamia used to be a Garden | t one time, oft den, with great canals, a won-| . taken from bab-ill, m&ans al.” The Apocalypae dubs it the City of the Devil. It was the undisputed capital of Babylonia at ra before Christ Old Sennacherib, of | Nineveli lencked the city in 690 B.C, and raz the ground, But 100 t Nebuchadnez . restored it to a glory grea! TOWER OF BABEL Nebuchadneszar built about “Babylon the Grea two walls * the out aide one being 55 miles around and | |440 feet high—considerably more than half as high ax the Washington | monument There were 100 gigantic brass in the wall ing towers, The Hanging Gardens, one of the en Wonders, was in Babylon, Mesopotamia, centuries before Christ, then a land of milk and honey, was the center of many of gates of and 260 skyscrap- 8 250 miles to the} on iteelf. Read The “Confusior the Tongu happened at the er of Babel” on the edge of Babylon It wax the home of Nimrod, son of Cush, grandson of Ham, and great standson of Noah, builder of the Ark, The Hebrew race got its start there “when Abr came from Ur and wettied in Can The tombs of Joshua, Mowea’ suc | onssor—whe led.the children of Is- |the Prophet Keckiel, the Seribe, are there. Near the ruined arch of Ctesiphon and of Bxra, The 12 divisions of the clock orig. inated in Mesopotamia. So did the science of astronomy. Some of the very laws we are liv. |ing under today are only adaptations jof the code of Hammurabi, founder the Babylonian empire, years ahead of Christ—more than 4,000 years ago! MODERN BOMBERS REPLACE ANCIENTS derful system of irrigation, magnifi cent cities, pompous kings, dazzling courts, fertlié farme—the center of jal the Known world | Today it is virtually fa desert. Tar tart, Mongols and Turks have sacked and razed ita cities, and destroyed its life-giving canals, The Tigris! and the Euphrates have got out of! control, overrun the country, and formed vast, fever-infested swamps, ‘making the spot one of the most desolate on earth | But the British are masters there | now, with their modern bombers and |their machine-gun-laden war planes. They have new plans for the coun: | try of Ishtar and Nebuchadnezzar. | They are going to restore the great jcanals, harness the Euphrates and | the Tigris, and make the land bloom | jagain, Mesopotamia, remember, lies acroxs | the overland road to India, which Britain has fought to keep open for} ithe past 300 years, | If the Turks try to put her out! now, there will be war. ASKS REPEAL OF HART CODE Mahoney Bill Advocates Return to Old Plan OLYMPIA, Feb. 15,—Repeal of the Hart code of state government is asked in a bill which was to be intro- duced in the house Thursday morn. ing by Representative Willis Maho- of Tekon The bill asks for the repeal of the law that established the code and the return to the system of state gdv- ernment in effect prior to the time of the adoption of the code. Mahoney announced some tite ago that he was preparing a bill for the r 1 of the code, but withheld introducing it until the findings of the spectal committee which Investl- gated the code were made public. He was not in the house on the that the committee report was made, and had no opportunity to apeak, His bill, he says, 14 Intro: duced in view of the fact that even this committee, which was in effect a whitewashing committee, had to admit that It coat more to run the government under the code than without It. That the cost of the Hart code ts much more than the committee re ported In the stat nt of Mahoney. | He saya that the attempt on the part of the committee to explain away wome of the excest costa doca not hold water. A conservative figure of the amount It costa for the code in excess of what the other form of govern. ment cost, ty $500,000, OLE LARSON TO GET NEW TRIAL Is Granted Rehearing by) Supreme Court Ole 8. Larson, president of the de- funct Scandinavian Amertean bank, | of Tacoma, in Olympia preme court. Larson had been sentenced to} ve frfm three to five years in Walla Walla penitentiary for appro- printing to his own use $17,000 of the funds of the Tacoma bank. Larson was convicted in the supe: rlor court of Plerce county and was denied any rehearings of his cane. Arguments in the rehearing grant: ed by the supreme court will be heard in May, Larson is now at liberty on bond, According to the prosecutor of Pierce county, all of the indictments returned against Larson were dropped, to become effective when Larson was well on his way to the state prison. Whether or not any of the Indlot ments will be resumed by the court following the reopening of tho case by the supreme court Is not known, was granted a rehearing | Wednesday the su-| Runaway Prince Drowns in Stream} PARIS, Feb, 16-Running away from his tutor, Prince Alain de Pov Ngnac, 11 years old, was drowned in # stream on hig ancestral estate near Rhema, burned Thursday | works, \VESSELS GO DOWN | IN GALE Four Vessels Are Wrecked Off North t; 54 Men on Burned Nika Are Rescued west Coa With one vessel buried? to and one ashore, the toll of the ocean had mounted to three m. No loss of life wa The wooden steamship Nik: morning off The Nika iting ON General Strike Due to Start| in France and Belgium United Press Summary since striking a storm 10 miles ship Wednesday ed at a point three miles off | guard cutter Snohomish, whi men. Smashed to pieces by heavy | ‘as after the storm had driven her ashore near Estovan, B. C., early ‘Thursday morning, the British freighter Tuscan P sank at 4:55 a. m., accordin brief wireless bulletins, The final | message concerning the Tuscan Prince, received hae the 1 Sea Monarch at ” “Sinking fast ayo ther” a | brief pause—“Going down France was battle for ¢ 100,000 men the Ruhr balked today al—in which she nd a billion francs in when French miners ap threw proved a general strike to start to. morrow morning and many left the} pits a The strike and* a simultaneous walkout of Belgian miners was) stated to have no connection with the Rubr situation, but Germany jtook heart ut the occurrences, Ger-| an 8... 8. early Thursday, man leaders pointed out that Franoe, during “her month's occupation of the Ruhr, has secured about 2 per/ cent of what coal she would have/ received had she stayed away. M, Letroquer, began his appeal for British co-operation before Bonar Law and Loris Curzon and Derby at Down- ing nt. Tho French minister asked Britain to let fuel trains, manned, pass thru Cologne. The French government hopes to confine the coal strike to the Loire valley, since all miners’ associations will not go out, and It was nounced today that coal trains were moving from Ruhr pits to. France, Belgium, Switzerland, Italy and Hol- land, The Ruhr was still on edge for an outbreak; a French officer was| reported to have been beaten by a German crowd, altho one dispatch had the incident occurring at Gel- senkirehen, while another placed it at Bochum. The town of Gelsenkirchen did not} pay the hundred million marks fine imposed upon it for the wounding of two French officers, and its officials seek to arbitrate the matter with Gen. De Gait ‘MIN ERS QUIT BY THOUSANDS PARIS, Feb, 15,—French and Bel- |xlan miners quit work by thousands | today in a strike over wages. While the strike declared by the French miners’ federation does not start officially until tomorrow morn: | ing, workers at many pits stopped) a8 soon us word of the plan reached them, Several thousand Belgian workers walked out at Cuesnes in connection with a nation-wide de- mand for a 25 per cent increase in wages. ‘The National Council of Federated Miners of France has thus far re- frained from joining the strike in this country, This is welcomed by operators as a favorable sign, but L’'Eclair admits a majority of the miners in the Loire valley will wall out tomorrow, The strike Is expected to be par- tially effective in the North, while the Pas de Calais and Anzin coal basin awaits Saturday's interview with employers at Douain, ‘The French press today expressed fear that Germany would interpret the coal strike as encouraging resist: ance in the Ruhr, The Petit Parisien appeals to the patriotism of the} workers not to give the Germans this much hope. FRENCH ASK BRITISH AID LONDON, Feb, 15.—France's ap- peal for British co-operation to make the seizure of the Rubr really effec: tive as far as coal production and confiscation are concerned, was placed before the British cabinet to: day by French Minister of Public Works Le ‘Troquer. The French want to run trains londed with coal that has been selzed in the Ruhr pits thru Rhin6 territory occupied by British troops. This ap: plies particularly fo the city of Cologne. The British have no objection to the trains passing thru Cologne, ex cept that they are manned by French troops, and carry German hostages: This, it is felt, constitutes a breach of Britain's sovereignty in the ocou- pled gone, Le Troquer and a group of exports in her} minister of public] troop: | an. | Th motorship t down | shore near Head, B. er striking a and going ashore late Wednesday. The motor ship withstood the pounding of t storm until an eqrly hour Thurs | It is believed tke crew had aban. | doned the Coolcha several hours be fore the ship foundered. |. Pirst news of the wreck of the lumber frefghter Santa Rita came in| The ves-| li ‘was. reported ashore. off Tatoosh island, but fn Ho immediate danger | | of sinking. Both the Merchants’ Ex. change and harbor radio stations re- | celved the Santa Rita’s distress calls. The cutter Sea Monarch was re- ported to be standing by the Rita, awaiting an opportunity to) pull the freighter into open water] and tow her to port. No loss of life has been re- ported by any of the vessels that rescued crows of the Nika, Tuscan Prince and Coolcha, | The Nika was the property of the) Everett Packing company of Everett, | Wash. At the time of the accident | that ended in her destruction, the ship had left Port Gamble, Wash. | j with a cargo of lumber for California consignees. Capt. P, D. Johnson was | in command. | Sanfa | | ‘The storm drove the Coolcha on | the rocks shortly after the motorship | had left Victoria, B, C., for San Pedro, Cal. Her tonnage was registered at 1,480, The Santa Rita ts a small, coast- wise lumber carrier of 915 tons. She was bound from San Pedro to Puget Sound ports when the storm was en- countered, Early reports of the rescue of the crew of the Nika by the cutter Sno- homish read like a thriller of sea fiction. Carrying no wireless, the Nika was unable to inform the Sno-| homish, standing by, that she was afire, and the fact was not discov- jered until the ship burst into flames fore and aft. Rapid action was imperative to save the 54 members of the Nika's crew from burning to death. In the early morning darkness, the Snoho- mish ran close enough to the doomed ship to effect the rescues by means of a breeches buoy. Sailors of the Nika leaped into the water and were | hauled aboard the Snohomish by | means of ropes. Three rien Were slightly infured tn | the rescue. Italian Steamer Sinking, Asks Aid BOSTON, Feb. 16.—The — Italian! steamer Moncenisco sinking 159 miles off the New Jersey coast, ac cording to 8. O. 8. valls received here today, Another message said the steam- ship Cartiaka was steaming at full speed to the rescuo and was then 77 miles away, The Moncenisco had given her position as latitude 86:85 north and longitude 65:22 west, or approximate- ly 150 miles off Cape May. eee DESTROYER IN SEA ACCIDENT SAN DIEGO, Cal, Feb, 15,—The United States ship Farquhar, de- atroyer, was badly damaged in a@ col- ston during maneuvers off the west coast of Mexico today, She is proceeding to Panama under convoy of the supply ship Arctic, The Farquhar bases at San Diego, No injuries were reported, NOMINATES HOVIND WASHINGTON, Feb. Presi reported in the meager dispatches. afternoon, caught fire Thursday an | wireless reports to the Merchants’ Exchange, from the eo The Tuscan Prince, a freighter of|of lamp globes made by the 3 tons, was on the last lap of ajlight department to the \trip from Antwerp to Puget sound|Lamp Supply Co. were ports, traveling via San Francisco (Turn to Page 7, Column 7) and Portland, according to Frank | Waterhouse Co., Seattle nts, | NEARLY ALL | by AAA rtrd, =NTS IN SEAT tie water's edge, two sun) | storm raging in the Pacifig® ajor ships at noon Thursda; a, after drifting, rudderles north of the Umatilla ligh ; burn) | Tatoosh island, according t ch rescued the crew of 5 MAY PROSECUTE LIGHT EMPLOYES Fees? Charges May Be Filed by Prosecutor Decision as to whether im complaints will be filed against D, Lamb, chief ountant of city Hg! artment, and su nates him, on evidence” vealed at a public probe of the d partment by state examiners, will reached by the prosecuting Immediately following the the public hearing Thursd John H. Dunbar, assistant att general, and Examiners F, G. ley and L Hopkins, went into 1 ference with Prosecutor | Douglas and Deputy Prosecutor, D. Carmody. Testimony was given at the man of the shop at the light d ment, that various employes openly bragged that they had unj accounts of many months’ ndin and that they did not intend to the accounts, a When this was reported to Ross, W. D. Lamb, chief for the light department, said: “You little You raised ” | yesterday with Ross, didn't you,” a¢ jcording to Reed’s evidence, Further details of the $10,000 LINES OPEN Remarkably little trouble was perienced from the storm by telegraph compani The Western Union anno Thursday that si: iines te Francisco and to the East were! and that the Port Townsend, Sequ and mbie lines were the ones out of operation. The Postal reported that all Ii | were in operation, the only. culties encountered being p local in character. City light wires also had a markable escape. Practically mal service was maintained thi Wednesday night and no particular trouble was in prospect. The 3in men had some difficulty gotti thru the snow to repair wires, b very few were down, ARMOUR FIRE RAGES OMAHA, Neb., Feb. 15,— Pi which destroyed the main buildin of the Armour & Co. plant here sul burning today, Damage eaui the flames is now estimated more than $1,500,000. eles MEXICO CITY, Feb, 15—Mexioa border officials were instructed day to use “rifles and machine if necessary to stop"airplane smu gling between the United States Mexico, eee ANOTHER CAMP IS DRY | TELLURIDE, Colo,, Feb, 15,—Ans other of Colorado's famous min camps had been “dried up" tod Following the raid upon Leadyille by prohibition agents when wider open saloons were closed and hui — we it dreds of gallons of liquor ¢o} cated, the law paid Telluride a vis sterday and 312 persons were ¢ rested. PROFESSOR TO RECOVE STANFORD UNIVERSITY, Web, Professor Frederick J, R dent Harding today sent to the sen: ate the nomination of Oscar P, Ho- vind, of Montana, to be receiver of public moneys at mogul Mont ers, nationally known scientist, 1 was burned by electricity in his 19 orato! Hare, voaterds

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