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ran the and brth. any He the had on. OPE CUT, 2 MEN FALL 8 STORIES! Howdy, folks! It will soon be time to clean last summer's straw hat Ra a“ Not ‘ ct the © res rant ¢ Auk man cause he kills his But never hear of a man committing su ide because he kills his eng THE BYES HAVE IT “He died by his own hand for Just one reason, He couldn't bear the haunting reproach of the dead b Ber mann in The Star. jabricle § D'Annundio as «been made a Turkish pasha. Well, he was always a pashanate poet eee H. E. Man ts of the n that with sugar at 10 cents per, it means & lot when you call a ee thing.” The ay x CALL OUT THE GUARD! Shock troops, who will refuse to pay 10-cent carfares, have been organized in Rainier Valley Why not make Hugo Kelley eee er move on the part of Rain. fer Valley citizens is to have street ear riders travel into town in. their Reighbors’ automobiles, ‘We hope this movement spreads to other parts of the city. eee Poland is at war again, thus Jeop- ardizing our available supply of heavyweight wrestlers. ese If vou hear an atcful smash —It's Daddy's car; If you hear a frightful crash —Jt's Daddy's cas; In the alley, drive or street, Ita not safe upon its feet, Others cars are bound to meet —Daddy's car, ays tell h We ean a ar Little Ir, ba Ain book—Just ar as the pages are dirty. “ee THE FOOTBALL: Congressional committee says Standard Oil may force gasoline to a dollar « gallon. Well, if the Standard Oil doesn't, the taxation committee at Ofympia will. see The new mortuary has been fc It ts situ ated at the junction of Melrose and Pine, a sp er for accidents aioe "1 ho shakes a wicked flivy to thro _ them e tered as Second Class Matter May 2, 1899, at the Postoffice at Beattie, agusasgazesszuteesasnesazetitaeiazatanainaaitanaaeanmmamnimamearemre | Put Police Bootlegging on a Sounder Basis TOW thatthe traffic division of the police depart- ment has been reorganized, it seems to The Star that bootlegging ought tq be put on a sounder basis. » date, bootlegging has been run in a somewhat aphazard manner by the police. It should be better stematized, for the benefit of the officers and pa- trons both It could be handled much more separate division, with proper officers and personnel, be created. In the following review are submitted some r which would furnish a fine nucleus: efficiently if a me Hall of Fame (Incomplete) SERGE ANE E. W. PIE ANT LOW amined in Februa b TOM CLARK, PATROLMAN DICK SHIVELY, discharged in 1918 posssossssssossssstscsssssstosecy fee z HroSSSEaesSReRESSeaSeteseseeessaeesssaeeeessea tessa ee saa TS Sea Tessa aes ENs casa eae esas eeeessEEsT riff and ed ip charges. 1 PATROLMAN PAUL KNAPP, dismlised in 1929%%c cr jes Romero but falling to turn it n or make arrest PATROLMAN A. G. FORD, Macharged in 1920 for taking brit and liquor from Ar 4833 Orchard ot tisttitssttssstittrstiststestiestlStieessst ol iessessetesstss eg PATROLMAN ED HAGEN, resigned in 1918 . h several to MeNe $ canes betne f ro neve fed hich w facing Now police. Now fuctr Lu UTENANT STEAD, hoy OLM In 192 i by fer agents in & ved ous liquor since «| Listen Here, Fellows! Glassies for ‘‘Ducks |Marble Contest Plans Speed Up; Here’s About Ever ything Lae A All Tournament of Atmerica. Exactly 42 dozen “glaasion’” were | Each city ts doing its best to present }purchased by The Star; yesterday | the national winner, Seattle is like jafternoon, |the rest in {ts hopes and desires. “And now,” my we, “who can stop | Hence it seeks to give renewed Jnr us from putting on the preliminary | piration to its many boys and girls marble tournament, scheduled to bé.|—15 and under—who this week are \gin Saturday of this week ™ | practicing “shooters” both at home "Tis one of the most important |agd abroad, by mentioning the 42 events of the year. It means the |ddsen “plansi discovery of the champion marble | NO PLAYING | player of each playfield, of the cham- | FOR “Ki ” lpion of the entire city! It means| The “giassies,” beautiful in colors jultimately that of the entire North-|o¢ req and green and orange, etc., more United States! —King of Marble , that of are to be used as “ducks,” making | their debut on the niarbie fields Sat jurday. They will thereafter be used each time the championship games Shoot- fs the cry that in June of |are played, and, the end of the to go up in Atiantle Ci tournament, be gathered up and New w Jersey, w the final gam, saved for other years. t will be re ringers” has bee s] ] membered that all me! amen winner is decorated and crowned. | will be “for fair"; that no shooting MANY OTHER CITIF: + | Will be done “for ps.” Also it | PREPARE FOR EVENT | will be remembered that each p will supply his own “taw,” ma ain that jt ia not lesa than | Meanwhile, however, much ,prac |tice is going on in all the cities-in which newspapers like The Star are | ¢ishths or more than seven-cightha jpromotinig the First Annual National inch in diameter oe In case new *“taws" be ob. | | tained purposely for the tournament BLOCK He 71 Se Murphine Starts Fight on|,,i05 4°" | , Senate Bill No. 283 | March 6 ‘ockman of Lovelock, was & 5, WASH, TL (ITY 10 REAP OFIT FROM CARFARE WAR Rainier Valleyites Agree on Fresh SE ATTL Plan in Fight for! 5e Rides By John W. Nelson s to the < mv t reduced to a meeting MoKay's Monday night attended the meeting. 1 of the ¢ tuctorn to mecept a nee ot an agreed upon by troop n tno ng “batt ely of women re: who, street ca: officials © hardest kind of fight / ne woman, N © car up f rom was at Final to th t kel ot at yites will w Baker Park line. cash 10-cent fares punt will pay on Valley cars and demand transfers} and rido on the city lines with these transfers, By tho terms of the prea- jent agreement. between the two car systema, the city wil eotfect 5 cents for each of thene transtern, Hugo Kelley, secretary Brown, sald that he practice Tuesda to Mayor adopted the morning and the received a nickel for haut him from Fourth aye. to ‘Third on Jamen at city lne Ing ave, ed univer he had kept it and ix hauling each da of. other six people Kelley claims that score auto o in and out Wash SSDAY, M ARCH 61 nder the ngress March 419, Per Year, by Mail 16 he Seattle Star OM EDITION 1923 IN SEATTLE. | Two-year-old Patience gerously ill, because her of the family. Nelggn, the mother. ‘daddy”’ Tat and “mummy” —Photos Family Faces Eviction as Result of | Marital Difficulties; Charges C ontradictory € mers, The LT Ww a nizing ne par | get the s anization to 4 use of} But w 1 out (Turn to Page 9.Column 4) SIMSLOSES OUT WITH GOV, HART ot ond perhaps tatany| Fight Against Clifford May vst « Well, id eviction me they ha thelr father av extranged. The four children are Th json, aged 6; Lillian, 4; N | Py n were fi sday from t ever k wn because too out er, are, of They young to know what it’s all course, muc y do know t heir m ut, honest men ber of oc nd mojher have yecome | | wants to take 8. Nelson said Tuesd: “Each time he returns promises to care for me and I have always taken him back, The court have ordered him to support my chil dren and me, but he laughs at th courts and doesn't pay. Now he away what home we have." “One word from Attorney Morlarity, “would stop the whole eviction action. But he won't say it. He'd rather stay out at the Stockade.” Nelson,” asserts . injured ea. today when the “Sun. | Mr Willam O, Nelso: is always Attorney Casey, of Nelson's coun- ae es set Freight" was boarded by two Cost Him His Job |red-eyen from weeping: and that &/o1, denies that Nelson owns the OLYMPIA, March iscovering « near Glendale, Cal strange man, with a shiny badge, property from which Mrs, Nelson is 4 ohege tea rg eter fer mse {at the last minute otis pega Hal tering the caboose, they ordered | BY RALPH J. BENJAMIN | whe 0 evide tly doe ot relish ns | ine evicted. Ricipts, oc'kes te valk ana soon, “Wie roses Repredenta tive made a diva for the cupola | may be looking for a new job after T vcnh ab cadei oe intaltlec Tae’ SION or hoard her, Mrs. Lillie Mobley, my ane Es ; king a| Cf te caboone and both bandits fired) this yession of the legislature, Also | 9hartt gest. child—Patience—ts apartment house,” says mite, when there sre net one or juore | Thomas Murphine was macing | at him, injuring him severely jone McArdle, director of the depart LRA RG hoa “was owned by Nelson’ first respectable women staying at the ight today to get senate bill No. 283) As he sank down they caught him, | P00 “Or dtr ciency —ahem! may | anserously ill. In fact, but for her, Sua lech it ta teat tor heseohil fame place at the same time, finitely postponed. liaid him groaning on the floor, rot: x : ‘4 ‘tq the family would have been evicted a (Signed) W. A. Mobley, her hasband. th The abs have to go back to ranning a little! nae : dren. Nélson hasn't got a thing to Arca was introduced In the sen- | iq him of $25 and a watch and then |Monday. But a county physician) ao” in it, A lady: down in’ San . : ator Walter 9. Davis. It} ropped the other men, including the | M¢horse Insurance office found that she had a temperature of | 2° x ‘ Dramatic AE the Metropolt the disposal of municipal | « A 1]. Sima now holds the Job of chair-| 17 yn tv eeuwed to permit the evic-|fanclsco 1s the trustee, ind she Is tan last night, Philip Quin played the ; cae . conduntor, of the. train, of small) oon of the .stdte: flaieries board, |1°¢ And tetus ee Nor, | Tepresented by my colleague, Mr, King in eoeth aa ifthe “were but provides that {n mu-| amounts .. [ite ts also w member of the tegigla,| Uo court order or no court \order. | Ei! afenid t nih estat project or improvement, the) ‘The bandits swung off the train |? until. very tecentie vas| PATIENCE ‘TO GO al Lok RL “saapl s i » bonds must be sold and the cash y and disappeared. Henley was taken | ‘Ure And until vory recently was) | Oe naL Tho trustee has been as consider: at any momer tok hei erork (0 aeaboe to a Glendale hospital, where ‘hin| Me of the political chiettains of the|TO HOS are re nq { 8t@ 08. possible to Mrs. Nelwon. She J a Re icurphine sald, Wak is, attention’ conaition jeuwald ta.be serious, | Hart administration, But’ Patience was to be removed) hag stayed there for months without What this country needs is more| Murp Rickey bec eee : ‘| Sims was keenly opposed to the|to a hospital Tuesday, And then the| paying rent, and no action was tak. “or less of something or other ard atoll Phat ttl ; workmen's compensation act. He| Proceedings can bo resumed, Jen against her. But when Mrs. Nel asa ald devel ptnent on .the Plane Fleet to | helped the hard-boiled employers de-| ‘The marital rege ten of the! son started to try to collect the rent Bia gg sens premiere orm bd Bt leah par ara JIay an increase in the awards to| father and mother havo so many/from tho other tenanta it got to be ae Oa Cn ae Oe | Skagit provect was sald to be certain | Continue Flight | (f},.04 workmen and their depend.| different and contradictory ramifi-|q jittle too much of a good thing. | VAMP, SEi ; under the present system of financ-) 1 .ncqoumRy, Ala., March 6.— | ents cations that {t s impossible to de-|go the trustee decided she would | If sugar keeps increasing in | |ing the work tarea|The wx De Haviland planes flying | Came when yentiment in|cide where the blamo ies. But no] have to evict her—especially in view | price, some of us will haye to ||. Pierce county members declared)’ ei, Antonio to Washington |the house was so strong for action| matter who Is to blame, it’s the) of the fact that Mra, Nelson has [hire a bee to provide our dally | | that it would hinder, if not also block, | 4 o144 Rico, were scheduled tolon the indifMtrlal Insurance act that| children who’ are suffering driven out five tenants in the last | sweetening. | | worl the Cushman power site: lresume their flight today. The|had been Kept bottled up in com.| According to Mrs, Nelson and her| four months. a Be ai Ra ae en iad a re, Planes are 24 hours behind schedule | mitteo that one member got ready | lawyer, Assistant U. 8. Attorney| wpe trustee. doesn't want to do A doct ODRRCLOE AF fOr ee eae eae ciate setlnite pont, {OM Account of damages to one Of!to make a fight on tho floor to take|Chatles Moriarity, she and her chil any injury to Mrs. Nelson or the chil DS tote CH perintie Thre [Coe ccaene we tie terest’ the machines |the measure away from the com.|dren are the victims of a cold: qren, however, and has even gone so id : rth a wie aeee oo sa bod Oe a a. oy Mine inia <= | mith % | blooded aaa ries why sheet ‘ar to provide @ furnished home «le eaatay atts ko teeter eth cct eta ioenenre: woke +, __)| Hd Sims leaped to hin feet and| contribute to their support, ts wills) for her near 72nd st. and Fifth ave. E> Hate Cettobe heroes) ES Rag we i oer pp et A Real Opportunity ln cused Ed Clifford, director of tho|ing fo go to jail for an ag | Sho didn't have to do this— Aye lof atty city workibut Introduced it for: Si O ate labor dep&rtmoent, of misusing | period ttorneys,| Put she wanted to keep the young: hie Gistiouleyiotatieiting eatin \to bisteck thetimarket of the dity or Some Une |stato inwurance funds, Ie quoted| According to Ne a ®,| store from want ‘ n y 1 |to protect the ma f& lot of figures and demandéd an|J. T. Casey and C. J, Smith, how-| “Ag far as Nelson and Mrs, Nelson ix that it multiplies #0 r bonds If you are ready to buy Hinyestigadon, ‘Tho purpose of his] the man is being hounded by | are concerned, she's simply hounding Bape te vou bay eace horne and wank o mice inodern: tl tight was wo plain that {t fooled|the worvan, ‘The-attorneys say that] “Nelson was ordered to pay her | eee on the crits cca n new home, today's, Want) Ad) cobody. Hut it did hurt the insurs| Nelson Is perfectly willing to sup-| $15 a week, In the month of No- aun. oe a SOP THROWN Columns are offering Just What T/ance act, and that was Ka'x purpose| Port his family, but that Mrs. Nel-| vember, when he was working, he adenolds ‘ you are looking: for. “Here Is] |i aking the charge, It now has|son herself has kept him from doing| gave her $63—or all but $§7—and was > ‘ade 4 OUT TO ROTH gt Sandy been learned that Sima got his fig-|it by having him thrown Into Jail.) entirely willing to pay the rest if people Lt Attain ibe aa 0" 0 lures trom: MeArdie “and from @tate| Here are the two storics as re-|she'd, give him tine, But phe’ waa do not have to fear germs. No self} OLYMPIA, Mi vy ob rreeniith ow? our OF TOWN \Treasurer Babcock, and that Mo.| lated by the two sides: vindictive, and had him arrested. Bepteine: eee pnt Some ear ee val Bharti Hoy OE Whatcom | 40 SELL BRAND. NEW Ardie and Baboook have a grudgo| CLAIMS STEP-SON tho jury recommended that no them oe [tative wrestaatt pieabildan lauder 4 \GALOW against Clifford and gave Sims tho|IS OUSTING HER penalty be imposed Or, any of his DA eistatraccaae ooun the Neue neat Nocangt $250 CASH | wrong figures ‘ Mrs. Nelson says that the apart-| former actions, hut the court refused TS TS Ti CS uae yesterday pas Roth within the tuene. oN" 1) Clifford stood pat In the face of|ment house in which she is living {s|to release Nim unless he put up More than 1938: 127,928 |ip an effort to keep Rot be! large |}@ tough fight and the house com-|/owned by her husband, but that he] $1,000 bond—which was too high for germs can stand on the end of a | fold, it 1s ald. ; vey Imittee which Investigated ‘Sims'|transferred it to a aon by a formor|him to raise. So he had to go to pin, hut think of thé umber of The measure is & particular pey or } |charges decided they were utterly|marringe ih an effort to keep from | Jalland, of course, he can't do anys people who ean get into a one- | Roth's and he has fought Hard tor ||. $. lovely” pedroomet camel ounateady( Clittord: baal’the sbhek.| anpporiig: her, Naw, cahe declares, (inthe to I fe "onl te j the Ree ee Acedaree ‘ain, You cauld not buiid thid |/ing of Gov. Hart, and McArdle and|her step#on is evicting her and the| There are tho two stories, ‘Take he ae FER OY ne aCe a eee ra cteotl| somes conc tnia tl Sims incurred the hostility of Hart,|children at tHe father’s order your choice, But, whichever is true, The report thatthe first robin red- |again yesterday ei gem Me ten b| FIRST PARTY WITH DUPOSIT Neither Sims nor McArdle is pc Lost January she brought an ae: | it's the childron who are the losers, Beet (Of japring has been seen: in /that it waa contrary iD itked” (hark Ai Sid a ular with the other members of the| tion against him for non-support and | - {le 19) hereby denied. Jt was | did dot hinderthe "Old Guard” fro 7 , Ww. 4 » || Hart administration, So, it is now/he was sent to the Stockade, the| ROME, March 6.—Ttalian. tenants Only « Wackbird with « mustard |taking a third vote on the measure Turn to the Want Ad Columns hor $9 ‘ f ‘oat organization to aid bay iturchent NOW and make an appointment || reported here that both mon arejcounty agreeing to pay hor $9 @lare forming n great organi Dlastor on 4 I t noon. hie. bMS wala thie. home, jseon to be eased from the state | week save the rent laws, decreed by tho Quick, her i Pe 1 ” reagent cess ei | Pe payrolls “We've been separated on & num] Maselsti to be abolished in June, k, here come the cops passe . ll ry i nd | | by His Own’ Witness . iF ; *t Nelson, who is facing evictioh from the home where she lies dan- have fallen out. Left to right, Lillian, 4; Noel, 3, and Thelma, 6. Below are shown the rest At the right, Mrs. Violet Price & Carter, Star Staff Photographers BRIBERY CHARGE ‘AIRED IN COURT James Deaver Is Accused James Deaver, known as the rich- est marine, in Unck }Was charged with bribery by | Reea the department No. and a former sergeant Sam's sea soldier corps, Jack and in 3 of superior court} | Monday afternoon. Reed accused |paid him $ to tell «a ‘certain story at Deaver's trial on a charge of second degree assault.- When jealled to the stand Reed testified |that all he knew of the ase was what Deaver had told him. Later, Roed testified Monday, Deaver de- | manded, the $ and threatened to shoot it out with Reed unless it was returned, from witness Deaver is suing George H, Trahey, a former naval supply officer at Bremerton, for $10,000 personal in- Jury damages. Deaver charges that ‘Trahey assaulted him in the lobby of the Seattle hotel and adminis- tered a severe beating. He asks $5,000 for this, He also charges that? Trahey falsely caused. his ar- rest and prosecution .on an assault charge and asks $5,000 on the sec. ond count. Trahey, in denying the |filed a cross complaint |Deaver of stabbing him knife, causing a body wound. ‘Tras hey asks $2,500 in his cross com- plaint. The alleged cutting scrape ocour red at the Seattle hotel January 1922, Deaver recently charge, was placed acoused of the murder of a West Senttle storekeeper who, it is said, ad been paying attentions to Dea ver's wife, He was acquitted when placed on trial before a Jury. Renews Sencah’ for Fugitive Murderess AN FRANCISCO, March _ | Frank Dewar, who said he wa: respondence with Mrs, Philllps desired to question this declared, He man, he Deaver of having) accusing | with x¢ before the public eye when he was | con: nected with the Los Angeles sher \ff's office, arrived here today for | jthe announced purpose of taking Jup the search for Clara Phillips, Jeseaped “hammer murdoress" trom | Los Angeles | He declared he had information jas to the whereabouts of a man here who Is said to be in cor] ARE PLUNGED FROM WINDOW 10 PAVEMENT ‘Suspect Foul Play in Accident; One Victim Dying as Probe Is Ordered March 6.—Poliee vest ee of the tory scaffold of er Goss last mighe er it fas found today that one of the ropes had been cut half way thru with a k Goss was uninjured, despite his fall, but Polski is close to death at the receiving hospital Goss, who employed Polski, was engaged with him in cleanthg wine dows of the Metropolitan building when the rope gave way. Police declared today that Goss probably struck an awning, which broke his fall Police believe a labor war may be responsible for the cutting of the rope. Goss told police that this is the fifth time he has fallen from @ scat folding, men with him being killed jin three other cases. His d has broken several times y, the last time being Sund . wh managed to before he teh a rope | himself | police. fell and pull told the to the cornice, he MANS KILLED IN TRAIN CRASH Two Others Are Hurt When - Boiler Blows Up fa One man was dead today and two others were in a hospital at Shelton, seriously injured, as the result of two accidents Monday in logging camps. Arthur Kerr, brakeman, died when a logging train crashed thr a trestle near Castle Rock. B. Gabriel, engineer, and Earl Sheldon, brakeman, were seriously burt near Oakville, when a locos motive boiler blew up. A broken rail was blamed for the accident which caused the logs jging train of the Silyer Lake Rails way & Logging company to drop thru a trestle, instantly killing Kerr. He is survived by a brother, | Albert, and a sister, Mrs. Harold Nelson, who resides near Kelso. The other accident occurred near the Gibson Creek camp of the Mas son County Logging company. Both’ Sheldon and Gabriel were hurled from the exploding engine several yards into the brush. The two were removed to the hospital at Shelton; where it was |found that Sheldon was the most |seriously injured. His recovery iq doubtful. Sheldon is single, while Gabriel ts married and has a family residing jat the camp. SENATE PASSES. WORKMEN'S ACT, Bill Practically Same as Murphine Measure OLYMPIA, March 6,-—The work+ men’s compensation bill, providing jfor increased awards for injured workmen, was passed by the senai this morning, The bill is the indus- trial insurance committee bill of the. house and was amended on the floor of the house last week by Speaker | Mark Reed, ‘Tho bill, with the increased awards, is almost identical to the administras tion bill introduced. early in the ses | sion by Representative Thomas Mur phine. | Building Burne sail 4 Men Fall 3 Floors SPOKANE, March 6.—Four men | fell tliree stories when part of the fourth floor of the burned ‘Tull & ibbs building here suddenly gave way, late Monday, burying them {fn | the debris, W, L. Burnett, it is feared, broke his back, but the others | sustained toss serious injuries. Thug Shoots Man Twice Thru Feet LOS ANGELES, March 6—Calling: James FR. Laxton a “cheap skate" be: cause he had only $15, a lone bandit early today commanded Laxton to run and then shot him twice, once thru each foot, Hoover May Probe High Sugar Prices WASHINGTON, Maroh 6.-An Ine vestigation of rising sugar pricey may bo made by the department of commerce, Secretary Hoover said to- day, a