Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
NGLAND SEIZES UIRISH PRISONERS Captives Rounded Up and Sent Back to Dublin rebel prisons: tured in a great + | The docks wero heay Rational troops « ‘were landed and convey eand armored cars The prisoners were captured by @ Yard detectives in alt mar er of places th Tand and Wates With supplying guns ton to the De Va President Cosgray Tendon was for the Questing the British govern When the signal was give ehinery of the famous I BARization worked to It is believed ed tn the arrest « everywhere for their they captured a De Valera fulso of a ther, a gir! taken as a Dusiness nren t in Toundup; one arrest was effect Bn exclusive West 1 Landon. Boys’ and ‘0-yearolt men were ‘@mong the prisoners. HERE’S MORE ABOUT CYCLONES STARTS ON PAG Dodies were ype tn the @qaete| here by rescue workers " Hospitals took emergency meas-| ures to care for the in} Mates at noon were that @ number of whor being eared for. to utilize pr: te if additional refugees arr and — adding to the tl of the Victims. The casu fered about while t eecaped with only si Worked frantically in And rain to provide for th @engers were rushed to surrounding ‘towns to secure nurses, | Provisions and other emergency sup- ‘piles necessary Jeaving death and destruction Hittle bands of hi Struggied to repair the} to their homes. of relief workers arrtved They came in re dawn. broken-down and. other conveyances. found the schoolhouse, hes and # number of rellings demolished. Debris was Seattered over a wide area. Many "Of the dead and injured still lay the street or under the wreck- pest t of their homes. Relief workers also pushed on ville, near Pinson, where considerable “the storm caused Eight persons were put aboard a} @pecial train and a 1 vi f from Pinson were taken aboard and Drought here for treatment. "Among the dead at a Pinson, wife of a Methodist ey Her husband wag among Pinson was Their home = been blown down and the @rapped in the wreckage. Bide by side during the long hi the night in the rain and col | MIDDLE WEST | 12.—A gale miles an hour, and| cause of his prominence in radical nied by rain, , swept up the Misstssipp! val-| circles. and across the great lakes | Hundreds of res were blown dow. “Rallroad traffic was demoralized. ‘Twenty were injured lone in accidents due to the storm A large part of the city was In lines, supply- were snapped electric current, /Thousands of people spending Sun evening at downtown umable to reach their homes. Car and elevated line tied up by a heavy snowfall. les were stalled unable to buck snow drifts, | With hotels crowded, the remainder of the night in late revelers Snow and rain clogged drains, Snow continued today, altho fore- ‘sts were for fair and continued ©0ld weather for tonight. | ‘Hundreds of telephone operators to their posts when the Iilinois- Mt telephone building was threat- d by fire today. Two top floors of the Times build- . adjoining the He office, wero swept by a spec- A high wind carrying smoke and ig embers, swirled around offices the phone girlg were working. handicapped by a severe were able thru herole efforts pontine the blaze to the Times manufacturing "| The losa was approximately $100,- | Father and Two Children Killed RICHMOND, F Sisdstorm, taking form of a tornado | Walch swept over this region last P Might, caused the death of William and two of his children outright weriously Injured his wife and HERE’S MORE ABOUT e WATERHOUSE STARTS ON PAGE 1 attack and I must pre y en ng William A, Gilmore, who pre at the banquet, declared that the people of Washington would demand itioal cleanup” tn 1924. “Pro gressives should stand together in this fight,” he sald, “The party that supports the Bone power bill will be my party.” Critickm wes hurled from every angle at the late session of the = legislature. Senator Fred Hastings spoke = good word for the session, qualify. ing his remarks by saying, “The new men did good work for the most part,” while Sens ter Dan Landon declared that Washington had not had «a goad session of the legtslature . since 11 Mayor J. Brown sprung the the evening when he went out of his Homer T. Bone of way to eulogtze Representative tive Bone was the tn. ant of the house dur sion of the legts “Only a few but others the same way |had just taught men like and Heighton to fight, and asset in 1924, “This talk of a third party is foolish,” was the statement of William M, Short, president of the State Federation of Labor. “It is propaganda to get the pro gressives of the state driving up a blind alley. We want to forget It and center our atten: tion on good men regardiess of party affiliations.” Bone spoke briefly on the power bill fight and switched to the tax tion question. He showed the gat , for taxa sis but $21,000,000, whil boast over $ s for rate making pu “The past pession of the legis lature accomplished little on the matter of taxation,” he sald, I believe it has opened up a pathway for the fight to make these public utilities pay the taxes that they should.” Helghton spoke briefly on the legis. lative session, emphasizing the way that both s had broken their Diedge in regard to the women's In- dustrial cl “Even § to break the party pledge and vote ‘no’,” Heighton said. He also pointed out how the legis. Lake City Saturday and is ton late tn Ja! training would be a valuabie| lack of clues and could of the myst ” SIR Ish} condition of pretty 24-yearold Cath ¢ Mor eatt k Tee Of forgery. Macfarlane Mareh 6 1 that i the amounts of be hecks she handied atherage plumbing College at, while dur the past Reports reaching Macfarlane have caueed him to ask the Galt Lake City Authorities to probe the girl's sanity. he said. Tho alleged inheritance ts believed a Mement of the young woman's imagination, Macfarlane | mays Nell Mortiboy, her husband, was! releaned by Salt Lake authorities | Sunday, aa he te not involved in the! arges, Macfarlane says. ‘Pleads Not Guilty / on Murder Charge! A plea of not guilty to a charge of | first-degree murder was entered in| , aree an indictment by Cauley ts charged with having shot & fellow-soldier to death at Fort Law. | wary, His defense will said Butler and Fart Davie violating the Harrison act, waived arralgnment and to otlcs dea e SEARCH FOR LOST PRIEST 8ST. LOUIS, Mo, March 12-- Search for Rev. John A. Vraniak, st of Little Ex to all parts of the nation | today Rev. Vraniak Gisappeared a week Jago after he left his parish In Vir den, IL, for St. Louls to buy mer |chandise for a church bazaar, His automobile was later found aban. ed on a lonely aide street here Police were baffled by a complete Avance no ve that might A to a solution arch th inols, Missourt and eky failed to reveal infor on, and a de iption of the eat was broadcasted to autho: all parts of the country HERE’S MORE ABOUT MOVIES STARTS ON PAGE 1 tloularty worrted about the govern-| 00 nt|Mment’s action, so far an direct ef, peakor Mark Reed saw Ot! act is concerned, for they have thus far been nble to keep a number of laps ahead of the U. 8, A.'s slow-| lature passed the narcotic act and; ™oving legal machinery, In fact, en refused to appropriate money its enforcement. “It was pitiful on the Inst day,” he sald, “to see good bills die In committee and see bills on tho calendar to standardize fire equipment, to clear brush from railroad tracks, and then allow & person over 21 to be adopted without the consent of his par- ents.” LABOR EDITOR IS ON TRIAL! |Picture industry attracted to it chiefly a om | mn ST. JOSEPH, Mich., March 12.—/ Communism went on trial here to day. ‘The most drastic radical state in| jthe United States—the Michigan anti-syndicalist law was put to the test as the first of the “red raid” |trinis, growing out of the alleged communist convention at Bridgeman last fall, got under way. William Z, Foster, editor of the steel strike, was the first of 32 men and women seized following the | spectacular raid on the convention to face a jury, Hoe was selected. be. Selection of the jury will take at least three days, opposing counsel agreed. The trial will last several weeks. Radical leaders crowded into St.| Joseph from all parts of the country | to be on hand for the taking of test!- | mony. Rose Pastor Stokes, New York socialist, and nine others, charged with being delegates to the cor n- tion, who surrendered Sunday, were arraigned and released on $1,000 bonds, seven other members of hie family en the home waa blown several | hundred yards and demolished. A number of dwellings were un- roofed and half a dozen tobacco barns demolished, telephone connec- |tions thruout the county are down | and trees strewn all along Lexington pike. A negro dwelling with three oc- cupants was blown several hundred yards down the hill. Damage in the town and county is estimated at $30,- | 000. Snow Storm ‘Aiding Southwest Farmers KANSAS CITY, Mo., March 12. A million dollar blanket of snow covered the Southwest today. Rain, followed by snow yesterday and today from Missouri to Texas, increased the value of the winter wheat and other crops nearly a million dollars, experts declared to day, The storm, however, paralyzed wire communication and weriously interfered with railroad traffic, The rain moistening an area enti. mated at 250,000 square miles in the wheat-growing section, was heralded by farmers as a boon to the 1923 crop, while the snow which followed the downpour formed a protecting covering against the resultant drop in temperature, * ; ard PORTSMOUTH, Ohio, March 12.— James Dennis Hogg, 16, was killed and five companions injured today when wind blew off the roof of atl in face of they are buying uy companies and theate: atrength: dustry, | "pe alarmed at what the public may think of tho revelations likely to > ne But they are slarmed at the attitude the public may take, if the hearings which the gov- ernment will hold bring out too much of what goes on behind the scenes. For behind the scenes, there Is something rot- ten in the state of filmdom Briefly sketched, the trouble ts this | ‘The business end of the motion| ‘cape. Gen of Eastern grants, Thene men, rac from penny arcades and sweat shopa, entered the movies when the Industry was in its Infancy, |Pened fre, ki and by Intensive {industry and often thru none too scrup Jhave captured a |the industry, from production to| jexhibition tn theaters. bor Herald and leader of the 1919) lous practices ngle hold on} They applied the slogan “From | factory to consumer” to the movies This might not be so serious, were It not for the hold the movies have on the American public. The government's contention is that this alleged monopoly permita a few men who can scarcely speak the English Ianguage to contro! a great educational force, from which they exclude indep torn The trust's method of carrying adent competi its activities is to sign up a number of popular stars and big directors, arranging tn advance for production of some 40 or 50 pictures. Before the pictures are done, ealen men sell exhibition rights to the jater owners thruout the country, jexcept in cities where the trust jowns theaters. If the independent theater owner refuses to take all the 40 pictures, sight unseen, the trust threatens to, and In many cases does, opéa a competitive the- ater across the street. INDEPENDENTS GET ONLY THE CRUMBS Independent artists and producers may not market their films thru the trus If they market thelr own pictures except on trust terms, theaters, they stand a poor chance of recelving real money for their films, T stance. He 18 compelled by the trust to buy 20 trust pictures to _|be shown during the succeeding six months. Each of these pictures runs a week. ‘This leaves six weeks for all pletures not distributed ke Exhibitor Brown, for in the trust. He has to pay so much for hia 20 trust pictures that there is little left to pay for in dependent filma. At present, the situation tn the movie industry is about like this: The trust is making the money.’ Independent pro- ducers, no matter how good their films, are taking the crumbs. Many ef. them are being crowded out of the busi ness by the “factory system” of production by the trust, While the movie barons are not {4 that the government will them, they are thoroly made if the federal trade com rehool house. ‘The boys, playing |oven wreckage, marbles, were buried beneath ee | byte the federa} complaint, | j producing | ~ and openty | « their hold on the in-| m forces them out into the! Yomorrow: Will Hays’ job, THE SEATTI Raps Force in Ireland ys Bullets Desmond Say Harming Nation Shaw Desmond Bar Batt Phote He ts fighting Irishman tongue and pen. he says, “bullets and @ are the things that land today noted Irish lecture a, where on presen ns in his own Desmond discussed his own stand on the Irish question Monday mi ing while seated in his apartment at the Butler hotel “Despite the fact that my mo’ was yort English, that my grand mother was French, and that only my father was Irish, he declared, 1, myself, am aa Iriehman from head to } n one of the few Protestant Iriat movement stood for the Irian republic, but would have accepted the ‘Free Btate’ ns a ate r some thing better now however, has been shot to pieces not by republican bullets, but by the Free State’ bullets that shot the re publican leaders, The Free Staters have gone too f the devil into tne" SS wecta'e sh SECOND NIGHT {MAY UNEARTHS| | RIDER TRIAL MURDER CLUES VANCOUVER, Wash., Monday night at the Firat Pres-| an church Desmond |» to give lees of the Women's University club, on “The and of Today,” in which he will & lecture, under the a on many of the sub The Drama of Sinn Fel being published in the Ea. HERE’S MORE ABOUT GERMANY STARTS ON PAGE ng been tmplicated in the murder ott the French officials arrested. They aturday 4 seated ened to perne, whereupon the soldi ng are Germans. |GERN IANS KILL 2 FRENCHMEN DORTMUND, March soldier was killed and © othern in. |jured tn a Sunday evening atreet battle here. A Gi man police com missioner and three German civilians wounded the Ruhr town near which Itin and M. Joly, French of were murdered Saturd , wan held in a sharpened exe today by the invaders The ta town had been given until 11:30 last night to discover and hand over the uasasnine, believed to have been former members of the police force, because of the excellent marksman. victim#’ backs. Failing to find the murderers, Buer today suffered a further tighten of the military grip. The burgo. master, assistant burgomaster ar other officials were under arrest, and & provisional fine of 100,000,000 marks was levied. PEACE FEELER IS SENT OUT BERLIN, March 12—While the German ernment was understood to have secret pence feelers out and to be willing to resume reparations payments on a “reasonable basis,” provided International ald was ed, events in tho Ruhr grew dredfold worse toda ing of at least seven Germans and a French officer and numerous clashes Germany is not at present inclined to name any definite sum she is will: Ing to pay, preferring to have an in ternational commission § fix the amount. HALIFA fishermen aboard the fishing hoon er Helen M. Coolen are thought to have lost their lives in the fierce galod which swept the North Atlantic Sunday. ‘The Coolen foundered on the fish ing banks, and a part of her crew were swept overboard. fice P for $5 COMPLETE All Work Guari 1003 Wertinke, North of Pine Aver timar Wr tn nia (vent Hah Special | Chiflorobe Dresser [Chair 6519 Box i3GH0 Make Your Own Selection Or Combination of Pieces to Form a Complete Matched Set 4 Style Beds, 3 Size Dressers, 2 Style Chiffoniers, Vanity Dresser, Dressing Table, Chair, Rocker, Bench SUGGESTIONS—THESE ARE SOME PRACTICAL $168 14 Pieces— IVORY OR WALNUT Beautiful Finishes COMBINATIONS or om {$118.50 Greatest of Stove Values BUCK’S RANGE $72.50": ONLY $5.00 DOWN $5.00 MONTHLY 16-Inch Oven Steel Range—Polished 6- Hole Top—Nickel and Enamel Trimmed TRADE YOUR OLD STOVE; LIBERAL ALLOWANCES Phone Main 6921 for Appraiser ing away an 11-Piece Set of lass Ovenware with every Buck's Range. 'M.AGOTTSTEIN FURNITURE CO. | SEATTLE'S POPUL AR HOME FURNISHERS 1514-16 Second /.venue, Near Vike & Four Large Floors of Homefurnishings 1 Stove Pipe eaker was Shaw Desmond. fr and writer who aving arrived & largo audiences yen who has been Let us show you how east at all in favor of the 6inn Fein HERE’S MORE ABOUT CARFARE STARTS ON PAGE 1 amassed against Edward Whitfield charged with ing out of a the cars will ctrowlt court Anna Be lL-year-old schoo! girl} this yoarty. consume $100,000 of =: MOWER DYE IT © NEW FOR 15¢ 1 in his recent book, | “Seattle citizens are entitled to 5 ” Fitzgerald said the b-cent tare for the ayntem and never have | But 1 belie © car riders for igation Saturday “uke 8, May, of veatigating criminologist, an-| Rot bel 3 May haa been w ing on the case since Friday May refused to divulge the nature ris and T. B 22a | under charges | 0." In bond redemption and |interest must be met tion with Anna's death la She was found bru & program which would to 6% cents and tax levy of approximately armes shot them dead. | A big crowd then aasembied in| | front of the police station and threat and Howard ean men of Medford, ed of charges of riot in connee leged near-hang WRECKED SHIP. _ STILL ASHORE « of the general orm it. French troopa| ordered the mob away. It refused to Y proposal to Invade the tax fund and Increase fares would never meet with the approval of the vot, " Fitegerald y be adopted.” carfare scheme iendish crime. Train Kills Fare; Driver Spared 60 days and growing deficte Then the city must elther consent was il jed Satur ne for-hire automobile in gs wan struck by train at Kent. | ver of the machine, A French permitting the railway company to step in and take bach 3 or funds must be provided to pay uth the train by the en coaches pa: ylor was lying and was not touch. | ves a widow, Mrs. on the rocks | colli: between the rails bor radio advice POSSE SCARED BY AGED MAN “He's only a poor old man, just a Uttle bit off—possibly—but trying to r and the work of shtering the cargo The copper and lumber which she carried is being put ashore on the elieved that she may loated at high tide Monday. idenced by the wounds in the That's the way Sheriff Matt Star wich described John Ryan, 63, he left John at the county Jail, Mon But Latham Page, . and A posse finted citizens found Ryan a “holy went to his bur- row domicile on the Auburn dump Sunday and tried to take the aged recluse into custody sharp-pointed, Ryan frightened them away, and re | fused to surrender ® came along docile and gentle as a kitten with Sheriff Starwicn. He will be given an insanity hearing WASHDAY FREEDOM Armed with a FOR YOUR HOME theumatic pain. Bloaris Lintment- Kis ped! For rhewm atiem, brotere. strates, chat cokle Nala be rere TA ATH AT stretched without pin plant In the West. Strictly han Aetna Curtain Cleaners Cor, Oth and Wentiake Stomach Sufferers Neod suffer no longer. with the kill. heartburn and other {lls of a disordered stomach . N.#&, March 12.—Six Two Minutes J0-10 . effective com= pound of natural elements. “Why Pay More?” WATCHES That Will Keep Timo washing machine HAMILTON WALTHAM ALBERT HANSEN Jowoler and Silversmith $1.50 Packages At Your Druggist Hlectric ee Co. Hellingham, Wash, Beautifully Finished IVORY OR WALNUT Dust-Proof Construction PIECES—SUGGESTIONS Waly Cash Mey ond pirchane “ “ “ “ “ Kalance of Payments Lib enientiy Arr Credit Has Established Thousands of Seattle Homes © cordially offer the Mberal GOTTSTEIN PERSONAL CREDIT SERVICE we can arrange or monthly payments that will with furnishings of your own and remember that money spent on ngs is gone forever, No Interest—No Extra Charges —$—$_$_ DRINK POISON TULSA, Okla, March 12—Two burglars who entered a drug store | bere drank a mild poison by mistake for Mquor, They were arrested when they sought medical hel: Skirts Kimonas Draperies | Walsts Curtains Ginghams Coats Sweaters Stockings Coverings Everything Diamond Dyes Buy “Diamond Dyes"—no other kind—and follow the simple direc- tions in every package. Don't wonder whether you can dye or tint success. fully, because perfect home dyeing is guaranteed with Diamond Dyes even if you have never dyed before, |Just tell your druggist whether the |material you wish to dye {s wool or y isilk, or whether it {s linen, cotton, jor mixed goods. Diamond Dyes |never streak, spot, fade, or run. IF RHEUMATIC EAT NO SWEETS Says Glass of Sa Salts Helps to Overcome Rheumatism Acid Rheumatism is easier to avoid than to cure, states a well-known authority. We are advised to dress warmly, keep the feet dry, avoid exposure, and above all, drink plenty of good water and avoid eating sweets of all kinds, Rheumatism is caused by body waste and acids resulting from food fermentation, It is the function of the kidneys to filter this poison from the blood and cast it out in the urine; the pores of the skin are also & means of freeing the blood of this impurity, In damp and chilly cold weather the skin pores are closed, thus forcing the kidneys to do double work; they become weak and sluggish and fail to eliminate this waste and acids, which keep aceu- ating and circulating thru the system, eventually settling in the Joints and muscles, causing stiffness, reness and pain, called rheuma: m, At the first twinge of rheumatism get from any pharmacy about four ounces of Jad Salts; put a table- spoonful in a glass of water and drink before breakfast each morning for a week, This is helpful to neutralize reidity, remove waste matter, also to stimulate the kids ne thus often ridding the blood of rheumatic polson, Jad Salts {s inexpensive, and ts made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and ts used with excellent results by thousands of folks who are subject to rhoumatism.—Adver tisement. BREAK ’EM UP QUICK COLD, GRIP, INFLUENZA CAPSULES [Joyner] No Oplotes or Habit-Forming Drops, SOc hex 1518 Second Avenue Recommended an: BARTELL DRUG Co, Pick bor Henet JOYNER REMEDIES,"