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MONDAY, MAY anv fHE SEA TTLE STAR CANOES CLAIM Norwegians to Celebrate 2,500 ATTEND TROUT FEAST) THE GROTE-RANKIN CO OTTO F. KEGEL, President & : oa] Cecil de Mille’s a Sunday Pleasure Seekers on Super-Sensation & «apAm’s RIB” & +f with Anna @, Nilsson, M tae A DONNA" Slatetojatolatals thine Bh at. veitae “You Can't Fool Your Wife” Nita Naldl, Lewis May 14 bailiff went to evict atters, they bro! -When sq bind it doors. Then thre the front door. s MOTION PIC- TURE PRO- DUCTION YOU MAY SEE ELLIOTT DEXTER ERIC VON STROHEIM FRED NIBLO PATSY RUTH MILLER ZASU PITTS CLAIRE WINDSOR MARSHALL NEILAN LEW CODY FRANK MAYO RAYMOND GRIFFITH HOBART BOSWORTH RICHARD DIX BARBARA LA MARR BARBARA BEDFORD BLANCHE SWEET ELEANOR BOARDMAN ROBERT EDESON CHESTER CONKLIN CLAUDE GILLINGWATER T. ROY BARNES ALICE LAKE BESSIE LOVE JOHN SAINPOLIS WILLIAM H. CRANE FLORENCE VIDOR MABEL BALLIN KATHLYN WILLIAMS MAE BUSCH ANNA Q. NILSSON JEAN HASKEL (A Seattle Girly You'll never again see this cast in one picture so long as you live! THE PICTURE IS RUPERT HUGHES’ © “Souls or Sale”’ NOW AT THE the a family of |; e in the rear door only to find another door erected be In all they broke thru seven the squatters escaped Willamette Drown PORTLAND, amett May 14. toll of « | Sunday afternoon and night fe drowned while attempting he swells caused by passing The anoe | their first sume when steamboats oseph Wendel, He, tried to turn his canoe wh ut by was the first mn. with two companions, ein th Tralda, awimmer the steanver his sudden plunge into the cold wa He clutched at the rol ¢, lost his hold went down within 200 feet of th bor patrol berth at the foot |street, His two rescued by the harbor patrotmen, har companions were The second canoe, carrying Mins Rose Hendricks, 18; Lloyd Cone, 19, and John Repp, was overturned near the Morrison st. bridge about 9 o'clock Sunday night and the two first named were drowned. They attempted to ride out the swell caused by a passing tug and Eyewitnesses saw Repp grasp hanging from the Morrison which is belng repaired, while Miss Hendricks and Cone float @ below the bridge isappearing, None of the « had been recovered thin morn. a cabl N. P. Has Special Children Menu: Tiny tote as well as big folks will special attention on Northern ifte trains from this date on, Kk. Owen, superintendent of din Ing cars, announced Monday. “We have a new book for the children,” be said, “a n made |espectally for them, and special food, | too."* | The “Tiny Tots’ Menu’ Northern Pacifie is gay with colored B | pictures of Mother Goose characters, B toy trains and Yellowstone Park a {mals Nursery rhymes, remodeled, Jexplains how good is tho “good food for good children” lsted in | menu | of the ON THE COOK ab, I hear you are mar gutn,"said the former cook. “Tse done got me a man now.” od provider? sum. He's a might + but I'se powerful sk: swine ait kotched at tt |mingham Age-Herald. good pro- red he's Bir- 14.—A farmer in Midiands observes the Sabbath |strictly, He can’t induce his hens to refrain from Inying on that day, but | he refuses to sell the eges, distribu- | ting them instead to poor fami! matinecs, 2:30 = Nights, T ana @ FRANCIS RENAULT Late Feature Now York Winter Garden Passing Show, ina Fan- tastic Lowe Revue, Display- ing Wonderfol Gowns Martinet Conn and Albert KLASS AND BRILLIANT George Mayo Pantagescope VLASTA MASLOVA AND cb. —_—- General Admission Matinees 25¢ Nights 49¢ Arthur Howard & Co. ana Spark! Fai GLED T Four Terrace Girle Nomany Eetor Galloway & Garrette Yokohama Boys ON THE SCREEN “THE BISHOP OF THE OZARKS” Are You A WORM? Do you lack the punch and vigor of strong manhoot? Why? not remain in this condition. See our Spectalist FREE and have him TELL YOU HOW TO GET WELL. Hours: 10-12, 2-6. Sunday: 11-12 a. m. Lincoln Memorial Clinic 1327 3d Ave., Opposite P, 0. Mrs. Permelia Harrison “A Mother's 8 Friend” Seattle, Wash “While bringiae up my family Dr. Plerce's Favorite Prescription was of great benefit to me as a tonic and nervine. It kept me strong and able to do my house: work duing expectancy and 1 be Neve it prevented me from having any trouble with my kidneys. think T owe a great deal of my present good health and strength to the condition 1 kept myself in at those trying periods, with Dr, Pierce's Favorite Prescription, — 1 have the biggest praise for it as a mother’s friend.”-—Mr#, Permelia Harrison, 6402 26th ave, N. B. You should obtain this famous Prescription now at your nearest drug store in tablets or Nauid, or wend ie to Dr, Plerce'y Invalides’ Buffalo, N. ¥,, for trial pkg. and |) the |. 1 { to Hospi united to Jopendence pian: Norw with te the celebr ) ple jon will go pital ‘The progr eches, singing and music m begins at 8 p.m, May 17 1th of May |» the 108th annt ve ot signing of Norway's declaration of independence from Denmark, From 1814 to 1905 Nor was Indep 1 a personal union thru a common Sweden 1905 ended and Norway wn king which ts an The wa lent, but was unite union was up point The ton brati sation on who have banded to «ether and maintain a non stock hospital in Seattle. In Decem 1922, they bought the former End hogpital at Woodland ave, and North 26th st, which renamed the Norwe hosp! intend to build a ria hospital to the joneers in Washing Norwegian under whose Hospital associa n is being given, is an organl to erect ber North Park they this | ¢, o THREE VICTIMS Z'hetr Independence Day) Hold Big Program May 17; Proceeds to G 10! tal Fund The program for the c D. Feeling Just ® (hffie Kamina), Little Blue Goem (Wendelborg) North Bend Serves Dinner to Visitors nd entertained 2 pe ms Sunday at the annual trou y under ea of the Bend ¢ club, Dinner was served the reat 4p of Northwest the following the in the fishermen vided pre main item on the menu. Arville Belstad of May _M on wegian Pr urmena la Monson, secretary Ho Mot Kveld Hondas (Agathe Backer nd en (Bdvard Grieg), Walker Whiteside Scores as Prince in“T he Hindu’ Episodes of Play Keep ual State of Suspense “The Hindu,” the play in which Walker Whiteside opened a week's engagement Sunday at the Metrot politan, ts frank melodrama, It is Jone of thone dramas in which secret ‘doors open, hidden lights flash, strange natives creep from behind chairs and everybody is “what they ain't.” Whiteside plays the part of Prince Tamar with, gusto, and makes ckling Hindu prince a real r, subtle, dangerous and re- sourceful Tho play !s of the familiar crook but its setting in India gives myste exotic touch in gina type ta as that in tien. Wweltten and purely to en ver fails to hold] SAVE MAN FROM. DEATH IN CAVE Lost in Dark Passage of Oregon Labyrinth BEND, Ore, May 14—Thomas Murphy wan rescued by a searching party from the labyrinth of the Lava river caves early this morning, after he had stumbled along the dark pas- sages for almost 12 hours in a yain effort to find the entrance. Word of Murphy's plight was brought to Bend Sunday night by Joo Bigley, his companton on a tour | | also lost for five hours, and suffered a severe scalp wound when he stepped Into a crevasse in the dark. Murphy, Bigley and Mra. W. A. Mann made up a party Sunday tn- tending to explora the caves, which are 13 miles from | Dalles-California highway, Murphy and Bigley, acetylene lamp, entered | while Mra. jawalted their return from their re- jconnoitering trip. | It was not until five hours later that Bigiey rejoined her. For the | greater part of that time Bigley had | been feeling his way about the caves lin the dark. He had become repa- |rated from Murphy after their lamp went out and could not be re-lightod. | Mrs. Mann, at tho entrance, yalarmed at the long absence of her |companiona, called to them continu- jally. Her cries, finally reaching |Bigley in his aimless wandering, lruide:t him to his starting place, | Badly cut and bruised by falls, Big- ley took the motorcycle which the | party used for the trip, and returned to Bend. A searching party was immediately lorganized and well equipped with lights. It was after midnight before Murphy, who was hopelessly lost in the many natural tunnels, was brought out into the open. VOLUME TELLS OF OLD EGYPT | While scientists still argue about the time of King Tutankhamen’s life, some saying 3,000 years ago, some 4,500, a little book which-tells about Egypt in between thone years has been found ona bookshelf in Seattle, Egypt 3,400 Years Ago” is the name of the book which J, BE. Stand: |ley, proprietor of Ye Olde Curiosity Shop, has found among his posses. sions. tolls of the life and campaigns of Rameses the Great, of Egyptian tombs and monuments, It is be: Meyed there are no more copies of tho publication in Seattle. It 19 not for si the caves, Cave-in at Durham Is Fatal to Miner Rotting timbers in a shaft of the Hiawatha Coal Co.'s mine at Dur- ham, on the 2,500-foot level, caused the death of John Panotas, 42, miner, Saturday night, when he was crushed and buried beneath 16 carloads of coal, Panotas had been working with John Karageorge clearing a cave-in of coal at a dangerous curve, The timbers were old and rotten, ‘accord. jing to the coroner's office, The coal vein suddenly fell in on the men, Karageorge escaping, Miners wero forced to remoye 13 cars of coal from the slide befor® Panotas’ body could be recovered, He waa single, and had no relatives In America. His body wan brought to the county morgue, GOLDFISH, PERHAPS LIVERPOOL, May Me-The traw: Jeria started out on a fishing inh When it returned, {1 sold its Satoh ic cada “than $10, La tain | jof exploration In the caves. who was) Bend on The} taking an} Mann, at the entrance, | The book, published in 1869, | pectator in ae |. The prologue shows the hea: ters of Sc London. of the et agents of that famous | organization have failed to dincover the identity of the “Master Mind |who has been luring the natives of India into revolt aguinat the British government | A fominine agent ts dispatched to the Far Kast. Then the action Heaps to the palace of Prince Tamar, Ja deap uw the wild jborder states of India. © detec tion “Ma follows after at has | the of ma clutching | the arms of his chair | | _ For those who iike thrilling melo: | drama—and who does j The Hindu" ts 3 Jer in one of the ter capital entertainment, — | AJ DINAS PLEADS — “NOT GUILTY" Attorney Files Demurrer in| Everett Murder Case | EVERETT, M 14, — George | Dinas, restaurant proprietor of Mor- | |ton, entered a plea of not guilty of | the murder of Peter Karas before Judge, Guy C. Alston, in superi court here, this morning. Dinas, thru his attorney, entered a demur. | rer to a charge of killing Gust Karas, a brother of Pete, declaring | |that the state's Information filed |against him did not state a crime, | | Prosecuting Attorney C. T. Roncoo | and Defense Attorney J. H. Smith were to arguo the demurrer before | Judge Alston late this afternoon. | Pete Karas was found murdered jnear the verett-Mukilteo ar ago. othing turr [the case until in February, when | Mra. Kato Karas, Guat Karas and| Mr«. Karas’ two children were found murdered in a little shack in the | Riverside district here. Dinaw w arrested the following day by Sher- iff James McCulloch at Morton, | He Is alleged to have. enga, ja violent quarrel tn bakery der was committed, The state also has letters, said to be of a threaten: ing nature, written by Dinas to Mrs. Karas. ‘PAGEANT WILL BE EXPLAINED The significance and motive of the pageant “Americonus,” to be pre. sented In the University of Washing ton Stadium July 23 to 28, will be explained at the first rehearsal of| the pageant Monday night at the First Methodist church, Fifth ave. and Marion st Among the speakers at the meet fag will be Mayor E. J. Brown, Feeaident Henry Suzzailo of the Uni versity of Washington, and Edmund §. Meany and Montgomery Lynch, co-authors of the pageant, Already a goodly number of tho 10,000 people required for the cast and chorus are reported to have signed up at the Americanus head: quarters, 407 Union st. ‘The re hearsal Monday is to begin at 7:30 pm. Will Return Mail of Fraud Concerns Notice of the issuance by the post- joffice department of fraud orders Jagainst a number of Dallas, Texas, joil development concerns and the in- dividuals connected with them was received Monday at the Seattle post: office, Included in’ the list of fraudulent firms are the Pilgrim, Of Co, the Robert A. Lee Development Co. of ‘Texas, W. H. Hollister, H. B. Robin ron and Charles Sherwin of Mort Worth, Texas, All resil_sent to these cone persons will be stamped “fraudu- lent’? and will be returned to the jxender, it was announevd” Monday by Postmaster C, M. Perkins, |Police Search for Kenny. Home Inmate Missing since Friday evening when he left the Kenney Home, 7100 untleroy ave, Richard Coppinger, was helng searched for by the West Seattle police Monday morn: ling. | Coppinger told hia companions [that he wae going for 4 street car [vide Friday night and disappeared. ‘The authorities fear thet he may have been taken suddenly 4/1 or may have wandered jnto the woods in West Seattle, He his not been seen since, Coppinger. was unmarried and a gardener by trade, road, nj} up on! ns or | Wirelonn | harbor & few hours before t A hes 1,300 1. W. W. 60 QUT ON STRIKE: ‘The awards were Ww. I fish Beat cateh, of Auburn WwW. F cateh, largest non. resident Sweet largest Sweet of Auburn; dent, Verne Roberts; resident, Mete Larsen uracy anting, Ws M. ledhy BL J. Wallace; half ounce, mi Deskin Reid, Lonis Monette; quarter John Monette, Heitmill John M B, Farr; non-resident, bent real fish, fly arr and out neh, John curacy ounce, WwW. M. Ed half ounce, Ww. M fiveeighths o R Joh holm, H. ac End. Mo curacy notte B holm, nette INSTALL NEW WIRELESS SET Harbor Radio Station Will Now Reach to Orient BY STEVE ARNETT B end of the present eattlamay boast the mont complete id efficient radio station on the tie Recetving and broad canting apparatus valued at $20,000 will be installed and will permit Se. attle operators at the harbor station | to follow by radio Pacific Miners int Chinese diftiouity. The new stalled by, C. Ing engineer nd Japanese ports without | instruments will be in A. Lindh erintend of .the Independent Telegraph company of Se The harbor station will cloned for five days, eginning Tues while the new wireless machin is being installed. Lindh super ded the installing of the wire equipment of the bureau of edu | cation schooner Boxer he poles of th cet in height and the the wires will be approximately 175 | feet, h is an increase of 50 per cent over the old aerial The spark set to b » of the standar atts, with a day range of 1,000 miles and a night range of 4,000 miles, ‘The arc set will be two kilo watt federal, with a day range of} 1,000 miles and a night range of 5,000 miles. Wave lengths af 600, 650 and 700 meters will be used on| the new apparatus and operators state that there will be little or no| interference to amateurs from the| su ory recent wht installed will | use of the new machinery. The new net will increase the efficiency of the | station by at least 200 per it was announced Monday by operators. 8 | cent, } MAN ARRESTED | | IN BOMB PROBE} in} Witnesses Questioned Wall Street Case sW YORK, May 14-—Lieut nes Gegan, famous chief of Now | York's bomb squad, questioned wit-| * today in an effort to prove | isprove the charge that Noah nner, 26, was implicated in the| Wall st. bomb explosion. Lehner is in jail on a charge of | murdering one of the 38 persons} killed when an infernal machine | Was sot off in-front of J. P. wan's office, September 16, 1920, He was arrested on information furnished by Mr. and Mrs, Thomas | Boyle, who said they knew him very | well when they were members of | the Kuzbag colony, Jn’ Siberia They suid Lehner had admitted to them that ho drove the v which the bomb was conveyed Wall st. An I, W. W. card w found in his. possession when was searched at headquarters, Leave Job at Cazadero Over Shooting Affray PORTLAND, Ore, May 14.—Thir. teen hundred I, W, W. employes at the Hurley-Mason construction camp on the Clackamas fusing to work Satur. , walked out on strike Sunday, The strike alt of the shooting aff camp last| Friday, when ( , a OVEN ment log sealer, shot and killed H. A. Smith, whom the I, W. W. allege) was an “armed’? guard for the com: ny. he strikers demanded that the company disarm all guards. ‘They | also claim that thelr union meetings | have been interfered with by. the company, and as in the strike just | ended, the release of political pris: oners is demanded. George C, Hurley, vieo president of the company, says that Smith was # timekeeper, was not employed ax a guard, and was not armed, Hurley admitted, however, that the company did employ armed guards to protect thelr property, and would continue to do 80. Stephen I. Miller Speaks at Banquet Stephen I, Miller, dean of the col: loge of business administration, Unt sity of Washington, was the principal speaker at a banquet of the Wallingford Commereiat club Jast Weflnesday night, At the close’! of the meeting It was voted that the | club assist with the Wallingford Mor- | Lost $100 Shooting of a $100 bill at Mount Vernon re- cently of duck in PAGE 3 USED FURNITURE | AT FEATURED PRICES Furniture Taken as Part Payment on New Homefurnishings 1 18x40 frame . Large M hogany - finishe Dresser, French Mirror. Beautiful Three-paneled Oa Screen Brass Bed, aie heavy; fu Bed Davenport, brown leath rette, 7 ft. long Combination Bookcase, size, mahogany-finish Mirror, heavy Wilson Kitchen Cabinet, por- celain table iolden Oak Buffet, mirror see White Bassinette tired wheels ... Frenc! ‘yubbe Mahogany-finished Commode $2.75 up- Quartered Oak Settee, holstered seat . ode eves Oak Music Cabinet, e Ladies’ De: i Overstuffed Tapestry Daven port Mahogany Floor Lamp, wit blue shade Wm. and Mary Table, 54-inch size : Wm. and Mary Walnut EF: tension Table, 48-inch size. Wm. and Mary Jacobean fin- ished Serving Table ... Bedroom Rocker, mahogany- finished . Solid Oak ‘Rocker, with cane te _Reeeption Chair, t tape: oie Congoleum Rug... large large $12.75 maple $10.00 1 Green Denim Box Couch.... $5.00 1 Library Table, with book d shelves, Early English finish $10.00 $25.00 1 Round Oak Table, 36-in. size $3.00 1 Sanitary Couch, ste condi- tion .-. $3.75 25 Full agless Springs, each ... $7.00 1 Comb. Commode with mirror $5.00 1 Quartered Oak Office Table, $10.00 54-inch $5.00 k $13.75 Il $14.00 he 1 Square Oak FE: xtension Table, 42-inch 1 Round Ex. Table, 42-inch... 1 Rochester Nickel Lamp and shade .. 1 Hall Tree, with 18x40 mirror + $18.00 1 Bed Davenport, im. leather. .$15.00 1 Oak Folding Bed. § 8.00 1 Oak Bookcase, one door ... 1 Morris Chair, imitation leath- er cushions ..... 1 Colonial Buffet, finish fase 1 Gus' ave Stickley Library Table, 48-inch .. - + 320.00 | 4-Poster Quar. Oak Bed... .$19.00 | Pedestal Ex. Table, 45-inch. .$10.00 1 Center Table, mahog.-finish $2.75 1 Kitchen Table, white enamel $2.00 1 Box Couch, hair top, 30-in. .$15.00 1 Living Room Couch, brown imitation leather ..........$10.00 10 Wooden frame Springs, for 1.00 CRIMP, GACH... Bs as nse see 20 Oak Extension Tables, from ..-.$5.00 to $20.00 10 “Oak Library Tables $10 to $15.00 1 Center Table, mahogany-fin- ish, rope leg .........+.--+ $5.00 $20.00 $35.00 h .$10.00 - $2.00 gold n . $9.00 “mahogany ‘5.00 & h $25.00 ($27.50 $15.00 $4.75 $3.00 $5.00 REBUILT STOVES AT BIG SAVINGS Ail in fine condition, and every one guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction. Al- most every make represented Connection made for $5.00. Regular Price +-$ 18.00 25.00 Direct Action seeeee Domestic High Oven .. Acorn High Oven, white en- amel trimmed eseees Clark Jewel A. B. Range, high oven white enamel, Regular Price 4hole Monarch, with front b-hole front. ..... 4hole Monarch, ameled 4-hole Monarch +hole and, with coil. 6-hole Faultless Malleabie, with coll G-hole ‘Puget, G-hole Screen coll -$ 67.00 Monarch, with wat white en- with co! Malleable, with Oil Cook Stoves MONARCH or RELIABLE mi Regular Price $24.60 32.50 40.00 2-burner Stove .. Sburner Stove 4burner Stove in this offering. Prices in most cases include coil. Freight prepaid to out-of-town stations, Gas Ranges SPECIAL $14.75 $19.75 Regular Price Reliable Range, white en- amel, high oven Reliable Range « A. B, Range .. Quick Meal, all gray enamel, like new Eclipse Range, high oven. $42.75 Superior Range or Wood Ranges SPECIAL $55.00 $49.75 $44.75 $9.75 Regular Price 4-hole Buck with coil,. 4-hole Majestic, with water- front G-hole Colonial, with coil... . 6hole Quick Meal, as is +hole Faultless Maileabie, with coil 4-hole Monarch, with water- front 6-hole $95.00 369.75 $36.75 $59.75 $39.75 $89.75 Peninsular, withcut ip! Malleal Combination coal, gas, wood, with coll; like new.. Jc Staves and Oil Heaters Florence Automatic Stoves Regular Price aes $32.50 Stove . sence 40,00 Oil Heaters $1.95 A number of Oil Heaters, various makes, all reconditioned and in perfect working order. akes Sburner Stove . SPECIAL 4-burner $16.75 $19.75 $25.75 Ducks, Not Craps Four nimrods shot the spots off} $26 when they attacked a flock after sundown. Th were federal court Monday to } the charge. Judge Jeremiah Flower show to be held in the sum: Laxatives Replaced By the Use of Nujol Nujo! is a lubricant—not a medicine or laxative—so cannot gripe. When you are “constipated, not enough of Natute’s lubricating. liquid is produced in the bowel to keep the food waste soft and moving. Doctors prescribe Nujol because it acts like this natural lubricant and f thus secures regular bowel movements by Nature's own method—lubrication, Try it today. Neterer fined the quartet Jesse Poynes, Robert L, mond Eaton tory bird act. including | “We just lost $100," said one” avis, Ray-| the men in the hall after they h and Archie Campbell, | been fined. 28 edch for violation of the migra-| ‘Shootin’ craps’ “No, ducks,’ asked a was the reply, YOU HAVE A BOILER LIKE . THIS. IN YOUR HOME. SPECIAL SALE OUR STANDARD COPPER COIL GAS WATER HEATER $21.00—$3.00 down, $2.00 per month. Or $19.00 cash — Regular price, $25.00. Ordinary Connections Free. May 10th to Closing Hours May 21st Only. SEATTLE LIGHTING CO. Use the Phone, Main 6767 ATTACH A GAS WATER HEATER LIKE