The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 6, 1923, Page 16

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PAGE 16 FOSTER JURY IS DISMISSED Split Six to Six; Foster Is Well Pleased SPH. wi today Mich April 6 leader © of the jury to of vic was a vic tm his trial the Michigan sy nsic tery for the F Poster de SIX members of the Prejudiced again Violence and about, could keep that a case had 5 for the best and a) Jury.” Prosecution attorr they will decide whether the be retried after a trial of other leged commu arrested in Bridgeman, Mich. communist Yention raid The Foster jury When dismissed by Judge White Yesterday The jury two days. Russell Durm. point on which Whether the a Yooated or merely Mition in Ame Six jurors voted Foster because they peared the p atior ing to “rail Munist rather Mrs. Minerva ©} Mrs, Olsen, the Jury. led the & held out to the la Rot guilty. ‘The jury was discharged after ing to reach agreement days’ deliberations > "It was the duty prove Foster guilty Rim guilty to satisfy public opir Mire. Olsen declared in an inter gyith the United Press, © Foster's wife sat beside | the jury came in. anges ing stood six to six ate had nearly deen out a the © sts ad eVo- ica. for uittal of uwo ot the not our tate te find view him as “URGING PROBE | OF “SCANDAL” ] Forty petitions to Attorney Gen eral. Harry M. Daugherty urging a [grand jury investigation of Mrs. ilies Puindexter’s charges of drink. and gambling in Washington CITY MISSING OPPORTUNITY Should Manufacture Silk Here, Says Arnold “Will Not Surrender’’ Says Cha ncellor Cuno BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Radiogram to N, FE, A. Service and The Star, ted States and All Countries Ha Reproduction N, B.A. Service in Copyright Laws, VIE A, April 6,—On understands that Chancel stated privately that so loi many will not raise the France, On other hand international mediation My perspective, gained the Cu Copyrighted, 1925, by ohibited.) high authority the writer lor Cuno of Germany has ng as he is chancellor, Ger- white flag of surrender to no is most eager to have here after visits to France, the Ruhr and Germany, is that Cuno probably would fall if he surrendered poin Also I am convinced t blank. France will not leave the Ruhr until she obtains both a reparations settlement and a guarantee against the perpetual nightmare of future German aggression. If England and America and good. If not, France herself, Germany is aware of thi side intervention give such a guarantee, well will make a guarantee for s; hence her desire for out- ‘Americans May Remove Julean Arnold, American) commercial attache to China at Pekin, who is in Seattle in the inter of mereased American-Chinese trade Ph o* Bear “re by mart Py That comme tle ts F enterpris the mill silk which is shipped here ea fo go to Eastern cities for ma: ture was the opinion expressed by Julean Arnold, commercial attache of the United States to China, Fri- day ‘Why permit this silk to go Bast New York and Boston when it could be manufactured into finished cloth right here?” asked Arnold. “The West brings the silk here and later has to buy it back from E: ern concerns to supply the Western demand,” stated Arnold. Arnold ts working directly the department of commer to under and ls touring the country In the interests of AmericanJapanese trade rela ra | tons. He pointed out Friday in an} Originally distributed In SPO! sadreas at the University of Wash mere sent to George E Rvan| ington that China ia one of the Bemmoent of the King County Demo-| ceatest fields for commercial de Eve club. | ¥elopment in the work A recent resolution of the W ONLY 10,000 SU. praising Mrs. Poindexter for) sprog IN CHINA fae fearlessly exposing a society) ee tn iy 000 uti es becafne cosrupt’ and calh! i. an of China,” said Arnold Ing on her for more specific data} . 1D, C) society have been received in ile for circulation. The peti nobties and there | fing high government and dip-| (Mer? re 350,000,000 people ¢ Offigials is’ quoted in the pe- Reports ‘from Spokane that hun-| who have never seen a Ford. Ciga- rets are smoked at the rate of 40,- 000,000,000 « year, and the Chinese) | Mummy of Tutankhamen Son of Lord Carnarvon ‘Washes Hands” of Ill-Fated Affair in BY LLOYD ALL LONDON, April be invited to take family of Lord Carnarvon the ask of removing from his newly dis covered tomb the mummified figure of that ancient Pharaoh Tutnak hamen. Lord Porchester, son and é Ameri tr ans “Valley of Kings” the suggest entific circles Exyptologiste on Ernest m the today scoff of evil spirits, how Budge, ot Britian keeper | "This vengeance idea ts all bunk It is pointed out by acientiats that EATTI Museum, | STA PETITIONS 60 OVER COUNTRY Expect “Good Citizens” to | Join in Probe Request SPOKANY Watehtul April was the p f the " ers citizen: Harris, rat hairman h were t ( the Ut signers te qual f ri whieh j mandi al grand ciety at the natic Harr nfident tions will get action and that thou sands of “good citizens” wil) join in importuning Attorney General Daugherty to start the mac of the department of justice to grinding out the real facts behind the ‘char ot duct In Washington en, ON Ce in € nat hin pett iniawful ce D. C, offictal oir published the slanarure xtorf, wife Peru Marrns was in pointed that Mr 4 for Lima, Peru | York yesterday, without 1 statement or answering questi atained in hig committee's 5 nutined in wapaper M f the Miles W. eador Poin are to lined be disap dexter had New rin the pres lution forward the Spokane cb He and ts with the situ ns will bring about the 4 sired end th ilar demand DOES NOT SAVE DROWNED MAN 1 wheer por helr of the explorer who died yester-| any poison known to the E«yptians|YOgi Gives Up After Long day after a lingering illness, which awed the superstitious world with its suggestion of a mysterfouns ven geance against him who violated the tomb, wishes to wash his hands of the whole affair Howard Carter, co-discoverer with Lord Carnarvon of the ontafalque that lay hidden for 20 centuries tn the cliffs of the valley of the kings may go on. But he said recently to his friends: “This tomb luck." Unless Carter is determined to continue with the work that was expected to be culminated next wi ter In removal from the sepulcher of Tut's mummy M Art Museum of Y vited finance and continue work The Aer able. Howard Carter has a contract with the Egyptian government gty. ing him the right to explore the "Valley of Kings,” but Lord Carnar has brought us bad ay ost of exon vation | | would have lost its potency in 3,600 | years. This was their annwer to the| suggestion that thone/| more scientific who entombed Tutankhamen left cret poisons to punish violators of his catafalque The British Egyptologists are par anxioun the work of finally removing the mummy not pass into American jadmit it i largely a qu | funds: tloula ahal but of Resuscitation Attempt MONT! ‘ | flehting | death, ERA NO, After Aprti weird battle ainat Yori Waasan, seif-ptyled “qeer,” admitted defeat today and Jabandoned his efforts to restore life |to Fred Hall, a local boy who was drowned here yor He work ed most of the n the morgue articles under | FRIDAY, APRIT ! ational Institution BANDIT MAKES THIRD ESCAPE “Million Dollar’ Chapman Rivals Gardner GR From Coast to Coast") Prowning King &- Co Established 101 Years ATHE 6. Gerald epmar the third after being f # hospit " A c on-doliar mail bar ed for a da n the basement of i mi ¥ At 12-45 CHICAGO The first retail store of Brown- ing King & Co, the opened in Chicago. in month Wa tore Thousands of former Chicago men help to make up Seattle’s present population, and a great majority of these men, who now are fathers and grandfathers, were outfitted in their first BOYS’ CLOTHES In Browning King’s Store The value and quality of our Boys’ Clothing has built up our business at a remarkable pace—and the sa GOOD values are here in Seattle. brought | sections } Chapman the nurse went into t this morr chair hidd basement Detecting the 5 poke a weak Norfolk Suits that fit your boy, st just like Dad's, with the Extra Knickers, made golf style, tailoring and fabrics of the same high grade that goes into our Men's Clothing. You've never been offered such values as these Suits are, at— $12.50, $14.95, $17.75 and $19.85 3oys’ Blouses, Shirts, Neckwear, Hosiery, Under- wear, Pajamas, Play Suits, Hats and Caps reasonably priced. 2nd Ave. and University St., Seattle ~/ TWO TRY TO |Boy Is Badly Hurt ae ncrease them od ological wor Tuttle Tac lum They plur to conce everything taught year ir higt 1s embracing ancien’ history Koman—ctvics, and general selenc WROTE WAR BOOK WHILE AT LEWI During the war to m ward at the pital, and, as a result experiences recoun a book, “The American Doughboy.” . a erie of spec ame wubject for T even a Greek ponit Camp L r Adventure d its] jor Whiteside Co. | but finally gave up, saying that th hoy had not been drowned but had killed by a blow on the head. it tmponsitde to revive the Undertaking Sa Death Cand Nothing But Bos | CHICAGO, Apri The curse theory the death of the earl of ot King Tut pure expert tn of Chi been whieh C s made Carnarvon rwered « ¥ appare Olympia ima he revived eti's tomb aS a? ankhar Prof. Fey cago, * boat tx pokdill, University declared toda Lockdill is the ansistant of Prof. | \ here parents Mr. and Mra. ©. Hall, who have been won over to the “seer’ |James Henry Breasted, who accom- | panied the Carnarvon expedition and | who now may become its director, cult | Wansan's methods are s strange nanocinted papers chapter Re ed to ant summer done th The story tf and she su ’ in her My now five yoars is g She had always wanted to go back | to college and earn her degree she wan going to do it. But she wan Jealous of every minute that she Friday by the police for two attempt had Unhappy suicides, man swallowed poison the elty howpital KILL SELVES When Auto Hits Him Struck by an auto at N. Sist s love affairs were blamed | and Greenwood ave. ,Thursday aft- ernoon, the T-year-old son of H. Southern, 106 N. Sist st. was critical- ly injured, He sustained bruises and concussion of the brain. The driver of the auto, George C. Smith, report- ed that the child ran in front of his car, making the accident unayoid. able. in which a man and Both were Friday laring that life was useless out her heuband, from whom she been separated, Mrs. Madaline Chandler, 6539 Third ave. N. W., Dancer Threatened swallowed three polsonea tablets Her condiiton is Jacobs, Is Claim | ? caelgay: | SAN DIEGO, Cal, April 6—Fritzi nald to be critical | stann threatened Dr. Louls L. Ja- _ [mixture rn resuscitation and | #pent away from her family—so ahe | Thursday night, Orfental superstition He | decided that she couldn't afford to employs artificial respiration. ¢n-| "Pend more than a year doing what von was financing the expedition Reading of the ear!'s will Is mwnited with Interest ams Ke may hare left! have had the cigaret habit but a few) “The story may have been spreadj years. i cient Rernte. ore being ot| by French consular offictals to atir | S2Cen d in that city, the petitions be-| Jaft in cigar stores thruout the| p section. Meanwhile Mrs. Poindexter has “Twenty-five years ago there were but three American institutions rep- resented there. They were the Standard Oi! Co., the American To- funds for the purpose of continuing the work of removing of the Pharaoh from the catafalque. The “Valley of Kingy,” tn the des UD muperstition against the Engl |e stated. mae, tho body In salt, applies heat! | in varied forma, breathes into the boy's mouth and also practions a Raymond Shelton, 29, engineer, of 2 1 ' cobs and wired him she would “stop is usually accomplished in three. | 439 224 ave, &., was found lying on | at nothing” shortly before her death, They told her at th t that it couldn't be done when why | the street at Rainier ave, and At?) according to a telegram introduced in announced her plana eae . . * rede: after he| evidence today in Jacobs’ trial, in Sixteen years | lantic st. Thureday night, he | © Says Poison Did @ut of school and only « sophomore | had rwallowed mercury tablets, Shel-| which he 18 accused, of ithe gifl's standing—It waa too much, everyone | ton sald he wanted to dle because his | Murder. declared love for his eweetheart was not re-| The telegram sald: But Mrs. ‘Tuttle didnt’ pay any at.| turned. Ho probably will recover. “Have gone thru enough the last umber of mysterious incantations | for Peru with her husband, who : bacco Co. and the American Mission: land other ar’ yitées = papal aan ‘The “slogans “for all = : | three were ‘Let there be light,’ ” con- | tinued Arnold. "Now," he pointed out, “there are hundreds of Ameri. ert outside Luxor, In biletering at present beneath summer suns that Not Cause Death} Hall waa drowned while working make all human life almost tmpoest-| CHICAGO, April 6-—Dr. Charlesiaa boom man for the Selinfer Los ble. Work of removing the mummy/| Lowen, assistant curator and stu- ging Co, He was not misred until few weeks on account of§ to em- | c&n Concerns represented there and/ _ WARMING UP. | Now that only one more day is Teft for filttig of candidates for the school board and port commission | there seems to be a rush of litir| hour aspitints, and indications are} that both contests will be lively. Four candidates have sppeared so far for tHe two three-year terms are to be filled on the schoot board. They are W.J.fantmyer, a /@andidate for re-election, E. B "Holmes, C. Wellington Casler and “August Toeliner. O. B. Thorgrim. gon, attorney, is also expected to © file, and W. T. Camptell, president | viet the West Seattle Commercial ‘lub, may throw his hat in the “e - Maj. W. J. Muirhead, William J. inn, R. V. Higbee and W. S. Lin- | Goin are all candidates for port com- omer from the South district— n being out. for re-rlection. The city council race narrowed slightly Thursday with the hdrawal of J. Thomas Dovey, a engineer. ctress Wants to _ Prove Innocence ‘NEW XORK, April 6—Sarah Lar- in young actress named in Ger ne Farrar’s divorce sult against Tellegen, today renewed her | to have the action tried before | | 8 fury, so she could have opportunity | to prove her innocence. , in the supreme request of Miss lmore’s lawyers for a rehearing his demand for a jury trial. Last day Justice O'Malley himself ro-| the motion, but consented to up that decision and let the law. fer carry the fight to the appellate | ‘eotrt. It will be argued before the ippellate division before April 20. | fight | CLUB IN 1916 are anable to supply the demand for American products.” FOUNDED CHINA Mr. Amold arrived in Seattle Fri- day morning, on his way to Pekin. He will be here until Sunday and| during his stay is making many addresses before University of Wash ington and high school audiences, He founded the China ciub of Seattle in 1916 and it ts at the! invitation of that he ts making his many addreases. Arnold will speak on board the Admiral-Oriental liner President nt Saturday noon on the subject, | "Will the Pacific Coast Assume| Leadership for America in the New China?” At 3 p. m. Saturday he will speak at the Women’s Un versity club on the subject, “Amert- can Women in the Pacific Era.” Articles of incorporation were to be filed Friday in Olympia by 0. B,| Thorgrimson, attorney for the new.) lyformed “Seven-League” club, and Preparations were being made rapid-| ly for its permanent organization. Ten thousand membership cards have already been mailed out tb charter members of the club and a second issue {s already being con- templated. “It's going like a house afire,” de-) clared F. W. Strang, one of the pro-| moters. “I'm being fairly deluged with phone calis, letters and per. sonal visits—everybody wants to} Irwin, of the Puget Mill Co,, was to speak Friday at a lunch: eon of the membership council of the Chamber of Commerce at the! Masonic club, Arcade building. Ha organization that |” | Meanwhile hearings of the divorce| said his message would be that “the| it before Referee Mahoney are|0ld Seattle spirit” isn't dead, but! ispended. |that it only needs “a little organtz SUICIDE WAS _ SEATTLE GIRL The identification of “Mrs, Esther) nt,” the “mystery woman” who amitted suicide in one of San mincisco’s fashionable hotels as litg Father Anderson of Seattle Partially cleared up the strange | incidents surrounding her death, | in Francisco polire have declared. body was identified in San eo'by an unidentified womar ho called at the morgue and told authorities that the dead woman formerly worked in Graham's | in Seattle and had lived ore at| The woman refused to give her ame but said that Miss Anderson | “Was supposed to have inherited con- | widerable money from an estate of ‘W& brother some time back. ‘| | Mrs. Walter Steele, a Seattle 5m} of the Miss Anderson, who “ hiven At 127 W. 83rd at., anid that | ithe descriptions given in the news. ) (Papers tally with thone of the girl “who used to stay there, , © Geylon exported 171,392,249 pounds | oy Of teu last year, of which 70 per| tent was shipped to Great Britain, United States wan the second ing.” 2 WOMEN ARE FOUND SLAIN NEW YORK, April 6—Stabbed in the back and with throats cut, the bodies of two young women were found lying beside a lonely road near the village of Dongan Hills, Staten island, at 6:40. m. today, Thirty feet from the road a bloody butcher knife was discovered. A receipted bill found In the pocket of one of the women bore the name of Mrs, Irené Blandino, Jersey City. Walter J, Donovan, of the Cantle- ton Datry, who found the bodies, told police there were no signs of a struggle and no bloodstains at the spot, It Is w lonely district, with few houses and no sidewalks. The open lots are covered with dense brush, and there is a creek near by which 1s occasionally used as a land ing place by bootleggern, Officers Hanged From Same Tree DUBLIN, April 6.—Two Free State officers captured by Irish guerrillas customer, near Macroon were hanged on the cannot be continved until fall dent of Egyptology at Field Museum. | shout 8 o'clock and his hody war tention to them, Taking the limit in| The entire world eppears, from) joined today Charles Breasted, who! not recovered until two hours Inter. dispatches to London, to be debating the porsibility of the curse of an: clent Exyptian priests having de ascended upon Carnarvon Cc in Doyle's markable theory that ‘‘ele. mentals’’ or guardian «pirite may have caused the explorer’s death haa started violent discussions in occult TRAIN KILLS TWO IN AUTO INDEPENDENCE, Ore, April 6.— ‘Two men were instantly killed and a third is belleved to be fatally in. ured following the collision of a Southern Pacific electric passenger train with the amtall automobile con- aining the three men at Stapelton's crossing, one mile north of here, at 1:30 this morning. Fred J. Featherstone and Joseph | M. Jones, both farmers, were crushed | to death beneath the wheels of the speeding train, and Dave Quiring, | aged 19, son of John Quiring, a farm-| er, was horribly crushed In wreckage. The automobile had at- tempted too Inte to make the crons- ing and apparently stalled in the path of the train, it was learned. 50 TRAPPED IN HOTEL FLAMES HOT SPRINGS, Ark. April 6. Many guests had narrow escapes last night when the Arlington hotel here was destroyed by fire. Lona from the flames was estimated to- day at nearly a million dollars, One fireman was killed and two others injured fighting the blaze. Fifty guests, trapped in thelr rooms by flames and smoke, were rescued from windows by firemen. Many others Jost valuable Jewelry and personal effects, The Arlington was one of the fa- mous resort hotela of the South. Control ak Klan Fight Up In Court ATLANTA, Ga,, April 6.—A_ hear. ing to determine who shall have au preme control of the Ku Klux Klan will be resumed in Judge ¥. D. Thomas’ court here this afternoon. Col. W. J. Simmons, “emperor” and founder of the Kian, seeking to wrest control of the secret society from Dr. H. W. Evans, imperial wizard, by means of an injunction, in a state. ment Issued here, charged Evans and his cohorts in the “imperial palace” wasted thousands of dollars of Klan funds and maintained an explonage system, Outcome of Rabbi Is Still In Doubt SAN FRANCISCO, April 6,—Out- come of the injuries of Rabbi 8, A, Lafeo, who was beaten in a hotel room here Tuesday night, remained in doubt today, Surgeons operated on the rabbi lagt night, In an attempt to rehwve prem. sure caused by hia fractured skull An offer of $600 reward for arront of his assailant was made by the bourd of trustees of Congregation Chabal Shalome, of which he was the wame tree, leader, the} recently returned from King Tutank hamen’s tomb, tn deciaring that neither a curse nor “polson left to guard the king's grave” caused Lord Carnarvon's death. Professor Breasted, Chicago uni vernity, father of Charles, wan asso. ciated with Lord Carnarvon “Poisons were not highly devel. oped tn ancient Egypt," Lowen de clared. “If Cleopatra, with the re sources of all Egypt at mand, could have used a quick poi son she would not have resorted to & snake.” Several Are Hurt . in Bomb Explosion CARROLLTON, Mo. April 6. | Five persons were injured when » | bomb was thrown into the midat of ]m meeting of school trustees near | Quoto last night, polfee here were advised today. The bombing is be | Heved to be the outgrowth of a achool | fight which haa extended over the | last siz months. (eos NASHVILLE, Tenn., Several persona received | her co | | | | April slight in wrecked by explosion of dynamite here today, ‘The dynamite, used tn blasting for sewers, exploded premnturely, wreck ing nearby houses and damaging others within a radius of many blocks. DISABLED VET HEAD ARRIVES Captain C. Hamilton Cook, na tional commander of the Disabled American veterans, {# to arrive in Seattle at 11:20 a. m, Baturday from Spokane. He will be taken Imme- juries and a number of homes were | He graduated last year from the high school, he as prealdent of the senior class and an athletic hero. In addition to his Porenta, be leaves «a brother, Robert > le at the University of Wash. lineten, and @ sister, Mary, who ia jie hgh achool here, local where 1 HERE’S MORE ABOUT KILTIES STARTS ON PAGE 1 | | Gieater, paid her respects to the |municipat golf links, Dressed in jber Stuart plaid of red and green, lyellow and white, she proved an junusual bit of scenery on the local | green “Just the same," she dectared, tee. ing off, “I couldn't do a thing tn otter clothes, I'm used to these for golf, #0 I miust wear them.” = | Irene, who incidentally tx Mins | Irene Adams, tan't exactly the first | Peron in this part of the world to| | play In kiltles, Scotland, for a long} time, could boast of having the only | | kiltiewearing golfers, the players | there having worn them since the| game of golf wan first known, Re-| cently, however, American motion! picture stars have taken up the| | plaids and clubs together ax a tad. | It in said that in Hollywood the club | swinger in highland costume is not| unusual, | Irene, however, Is the first person #0 attired to play on the local mu- nicipal links, She says kiltles give | #0 much more freedom than regular | skirts or even knickers, and that a| “better” game can be played when they are worn, Maybe #0, She won| the match Thuraday afternocn from | Joe Muller, Palace Hip manager, who | (OUT OF EVERYTHING | wetting a kick out of things. you se my oldest boy, Hiram, Jr. | | bitter me more than every” the danc- COWES, Eng, April 6—Arthur| ing girl wired him from Beach, Commy, « convict transferred from | “If I do not hear from next two Parkhurst to Dartmore Prison, took ' days will come to San Diego and will h him @ pet mouse, stop at nothing.” Class work, she got the rest of her} eredite thru examinations —and by | the end of lust month had 203 ered its, or 13 more than the 190 nesded. She tm still at the aniversity and Plans to get her master’s degres in August GRTS A “KICK” Here at the Boston Less than a_ five dollar bill will buy almost any of the ‘new Spring styles. You save a dollar or more by our “strictly cash” buy- ing and selling system. Oxfords in dark brown calf } Sizes 2% to 7 . to go to high school afd be ready for college at 14 | “I'm going to take him down to} Satin Strapped California to see Dr. Terman again this summer, as soon T get thru at Slippers with Beaded Designs $4.95 What Mre, Tuttle will do herself Plain Satin or Brocade she repeated the! “Of course it was hard work. But It was lots of fun: I got lotn of kick out of ft. And,| after nll, that's all there ts to lite “Hard work?” query, Friday “The riost fun was my sociology I had to pass examinations jn it and I've never read a book on so clology in my life, But I got thru Mra. Tuttle saved her best “kick” for the last | “All of this,’ she remarked, “may feem rather unusual—but wait until | | | Dr. Lewis Terman, the paycholog:! at Leland Stanford, has pronounced him “ns ranking os a genius —the highest rating in six or seven hun dred children. Ho's only 10 years old now—but his teachers want him | in still undecided. “I'm directing a motion picture play at present—'The Old Woman! Who Lived tn the Shoe'—end play. | BM ing the part of the Old Woman at} the same time,” she explained, “1] Nike ft very much—and something | may come out of It—maybe I'll go} into the moyies.” | "Out at the university they want | me to write—poetry or prose. I'm | fm not so sure about that. I like to} write poetry when I'm listening to} musio—or on a long street car ride All Sizes diately to the New Washington | ‘!2"'t wear kiltie hotel and from there will go at 12 o'clock to the Masonic clubrooms, but T don't think 1 could do it cold bloodediy. ) then, again, T may teach, where a disabled veterans’ banquet will be held. Between 2 and 3 Pp. m. open house will be held nat the hotel, where tho public will be Invited et the commander. ng tour of the city, Captain Cook will leave at 6:46 for Walla Walla, Sunday he will tnspect the veterans’ hospital Monday he will return to Seattle, and on ‘the same day will visit both Everett and Tacoma Tuesday he will leave for Btella- coom, Olympia and | Centralia. Wednesday he will go on to Port- land, HOLD THREE ‘Three men were held in the. city Jail Friday for investigation in con: nection with the murder of John Wylle, colored ex-convict, who was shot Tuesday morning when he en- tered the home of a friend, John Boyd, 327 24th ave, 8 Detectives were nearching the olty Friday for several more suspects, all of them white men, Captain Tennant declared his be- Hef that Wylie was shot by mistake for Boyd by a bandit who had en tered the House to tle in wait for Boyd with the purpose of rosping him of several diamondy and his MATT USING HOUN’ DOGS ‘The guy who fa “bringing home the bacon” from the Algona meat market ia apt to find a couple houn’ dawes tralling in on him #ome time this morning If the olfactory nerves of Sheriff Matt Starwich's bloodhounds are in keon working order, The meat shop wax broken Into again Thursday night, the second time within two montis, and as the footprints of the night prowler were plainly traceable in the wet ground Friday, when the theft was discov: ered, Matt sent his dogs to take the trail, Startling results may follow if the dogs successfully plek up the track of the prowler, Starwich says, Ravenna Club to Meet Friday Night A community rally, under the aus- plees of the Ravenna Improvement club, ty to be hold at § p,m. Friday evening, at the hall on 9, 65th at. and 2st ave, N, , Plans for the paving of 1, 66th st, will be formu lated, | | Horses can be given a firm foot. hold on slippery surfaces by meany of carpeted slippers, whieh are ale ready on sale in the United States, a New patent—broad strap; 2-button model 95 Per Pair don’t know—things come— “But, whatever I do, I'm going to get a lot of kick out of it!” DOPE SUSPECT | RE-ARRESTED ACOMA, April 6.—Released by a Jury in superior court here last night, on charges of violating the state nar cotlo Jaws, John MeWhirter was re. arrested and is now being held on federal Ilquor charges. H, T. Hartley, witness In the case, ‘a being sought on a perjury charge, and W. G, Lee, alao a witness, Is be. ing held for the same offonse, Charges against the 17 rematning defendants will be dismissed in the state cases, and they will be tried in federal courts, according to Prose outing Attorney J. W. Selden, All of the person charged with-vio. lating the narcotle laws were arrost 6d by clty detectives recently in one of the most successful drives ever staged in the Northwest, PARIS, April 6.—As Preomler Poin care was on his way to Inspect a ro plica of Fort Douamont, near the Grands Boulevardes today, « woman Anurehist named Madolein Poyy rushed up to his automobile, scream ing “Ansassin!” She was arrested, New shipment of Black Kid Boudoir Slippers 00 Per Pair

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