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CARDINAL SLAINY tenet tte ett et A tn ttt APPR LP LLL tr rere PAPPAPRR HOME Tih WEATHER Ww FORECAST NO, r May 3, 0A 1699, ot the & eattle, Wa: sh. under the Act of ¢ grees March 3, 15 9. Per Year, by Mail, $2.00 The Seattle Sta ITLE, Ww ASH., TUESDAY, JUNE 5, 19: IN SEATTLE, 40 Shriners Are Overcome b Hurrah, folks! It will soon be warm enough to sit out en the front porch after dinner, San Fr lady on the We dor we love her just the Warm Weather 1 pr ys that the nidis, ot leprosy | same, isco doctoy dollar has 4 m: Prospective acticing how’ to a coe Or. After all, it’s pretty hard to | | beat th’ moon as a matrimonial | | agency. “New York Now im Headline. Huh, it Som ot surthing on us! Booze Sta The § of Spain Hevvings! going into the movies? ee ys a hundred suits a year. Something ' wrong, Vaughn Woodhouse. No child won- ders or 30-year-old grandmothers have been discovered in. the past 24 hours. to | ar says that King Alfonso| BUREAU SCORES ACTION Criticise Cham- ber’s Methods in Dismissal of Committee Head By Lester M. Hunt Displeasure over the attit the trustees of the |Chamber of Commerce was ¥ | Tuesday noon by the fc n trade | committee which met to protest the | dismissal of Director W. B. Hendet }son of the foreign trade bureau. Members of the committee de | nounced the beard for the man- board ¢ At Is that guy thinking of} ner in which it has conducted the |iffs, Jaffairs of the chamber and its ac YOUNG PYTHON BACK HOME AFTER THREE WEEKS OF VACATION ERKELEY Cleopatra, alin 2 Which ri fron f Lee 1001 boy the i the escuped been mont ous found and is danct: Clare Joy entine Three k: we bath th wandered a seat a. Two the and ¢ ri boyn rt discover ing taking BANK BANDIT IS CAPTURED GLENDALE, in the River valley south we gon, the lone bandit bed the Glendale State bank of | more $1,000 In currency and jsilver, is in Jail in Roseburg today The man was taken late yeater- day by Douglas county deputy sher: He offered |when sutprised by yr Found Rogue tern Ore. who Saturday deep woods in than is no the y Heat THRONG WILTED BY SUN ‘Hundreds Faint as Jas t Shriners March in Washington; Harding Cheered BY FRASER EDWAKDS WASHINGTON, June 5— Forty heat prostrations among Shriner marchers occurred here today before half the parade had | passed President Harding's re | viewing stand. | A boiling sun wilted the marchers! tolled up Pennsylvania ave | Red Cross and hospital ambulances} resistance, | took authorities, | ot to hoapit while elght hers were given treatment in drug tion in dismissing Henderson with-|Who have been searching the forests | stores along the line of march. out conference with any other offi. clals or members. A committee was appointed Tues. |day to take up the matter with {for him since the He gave the son, robbery name of occurred. T. Lar Reedsport, The Ore stolen cur | fected by the heat, and said that his residence ig|ture mounted to 90 degrees HUNDREDS FAINT Scores of spectators also were af-| 8 the tempera: | | year HE’LL FIGHT | This is George J. Mayer,' Spokane school teacher, who| charges he was not given a square deal when the Seattle ctvil service commission r fused to award him the po- sition of playground director after he qualified for the job at an examination, and Ben Evans, incumbent, failed. In spite of Mayer's good-natured smile, he says he's going to fight. Spokane “Man Is Still After Evans’ Job BY WANDA VON VON KETTLER | Ben Evans may yet have to fight for his position as director of Seat- | tle playgrounds, For George J.| Mayer of Spokane, who early in the was offered the position and Templars reck; 5 Die MURDER ” CAUSES RIOTIN ‘ Religious Warfare as Pope’s Envoy in Spain Meets _ Assassin Death MADRID, June 5.—A religious war is threatened as a result of the sassination of Cardinal archDishop of Zaragossa Authorities are taking extreme pre cautions to prevent strect outbreaks in the major towns and cjties thru out’ Spain, while. search pressed for the assassins. Some minor rioting atready t* sald Sojdevila, | |to have oédurred In Barcelona, where the cardinal was greatly revered. The premier Catholic churchman of Spain was slain when assassins | j2mbushed his automobile outside the as | is. being | WAILING FOMCAT IS RESCUED FROM TOP BRANCHES OF TREE pAsee surrounding district hours, while taking refu topmost branches, Residents of apartment and homes near by the unlucky feline bricks and mince neous but the cat managed the mis- sile inully, in to the up Sixth houses thowered ith old shoes, articles, to dodg: séveral calls were sent fire department and a ladder company was sent to the scene, After the tree to skirmish in nm managed Tommy rounc an exciting top, a fire capture the cat n brought the larted to a convenient a wh h f continued hi wit terr GIRLS HOME MATRON FIRED) COLUMBUS, O., June Charg: | ling she is guilty of cruel and abu-| {sive treatment of girl inmates, State | Welfare Director Harper removed | Mrs, Mae BE, Stannard, of Detroit, as matron of the Ohio Girls’ indus- |trial school, at Delaware. Harper, in a letter to Mrs. Stan- nard, accused her of endangering the lives of girl inmates by padiock- ing in sleeping rooms. Other “unwarranted disciplinary measures,” accordng to Harper, in- lclude gagging of young girls, tying re mounted & lullaby MASON SPECIAL DITCHED, ‘Michigan Tragedy Halts Excursion to Convention of State Lodge DURAND, Mich., June 5.— | Five persons were killed when — a special train carrying Ma- sonic Knights Templar to a state convention at Flint wrecked six miles west here at noon. The dead include two mem- bers of the Iona, Mich.,’ com mandery of the Templar, the engineer at E fireman of the train and ‘ newsboy, according to mea-_ ger reports brought here, who later saw the offer “outlawed,” fas declared war on the civil ser vice commission and the whole ency DURING PARADE Shrine officials and police estimate jthe boat of trustees at its mest was in his} jing Tuesday afternoon to xeek the | POase led the offi |retention of Henderson and to pro-|C*® to the place where the silver hundreds of spectators congre | test against any curtailment in the| 84 been cached. All of the stolen; sated together in thick ranks along foreign trade bureau. money was recovered. | Pennsylvania ave. had fainted from at each other ay DR -- {the heat and lack of air. At one see R y point heat victi e A special Invitation has been ex-|1N_ CONDEMNATION 4 mmbbbaidave Whaat nated oa the tended to the Prince of Wales to at-|, George R. Drover, | monastery of St. Vincent de Paul. As|their hands behind them and_bind- he was alighting from the car, the|ing their feet together, leaving the three or four supposed syndicalists | victims utterly helpless.” playground affar | fired a dozen revolver shots at him| Harper's order of removal is ef- Mayer, a Spokane high school/from their places behind trees. The | fective at onee. teacher, late last year was reported | cardinal collapred, dead, His chauf- SR MAS ACE TEE to have been the one individual|fcur and valet were wounded. FIRES SHOTS to have passed the civil service} A report has been circulated that examination held November 13 in| the assassination had something to ion, while he SOMETHING TO WORRY ABOUT | How soon Mayor Brown and Rev. Hawkins will start to growl STEEL VESSEL! RUNS AGROUND ciniman_ ot ADOPT NORTH aid hospital which served asa first! tend the Dempsey-Gibbons fight at Shelby. do come bring your ho . over, Prince, and Six Dartmouth college seniors de- Mclare they have never been kissed. You never want to believe anyone that says that, for they'll probably le about other things, too. see The Star states t sharp has discovered a cure for} paresis. Now to find a man brave enough to suggest it to the Chamber oa Commerce, a medical Lica of husbands Oft remind us, We can make our alibis And departing— Leave behind us Alimony for our wives. see A fortune awaits the man who in- vents 4 machine to remove egg-shell | from omelets. . WHAT THIS COUNTRY NEEDS More square dice and fewer square car wheels. rar With red tops, yellow, brown, black and white taxicabs, it remains for some Scotsman to invent a plaid cab. oe. . Your nose knows when the violets Of apring are in the bree And your nose knows also wh Hat that dern limburger cheese. a Se ee ‘The controversy over the “ten best books” is still 80 far nobod claims of (1) Standard OU; La Square. ging in the East, but has advanced the Book of @) Rice Papers—Rix ra CANDIDATE FOR THE POISON IVY CLUB: Gink who throws his stubs in the goldfish bowl. eee cigar No, Hortense, a Liquor not what happens when Ring is a guest leaves his glass on top of the piano, ed . Lives of rich men oft remind us That it’s wrong to purchase clothes Vor a flock of little janes with Names like Mabel's, Ruth's Flo's. . oad Another big safe was stolen in Se. attle over the week-end. We don’t know why people don't keep their safes in safety deposit vaults, owe SIGN IN FIRST AVE. SOFT DRINK PARLOR If You Don't See What You Want, Ask for It. ,e And another sign in a waterfront! Gsh market says: Have It. But it seems they bathing beauties ope i, to Iube's re. me outa yood Hoy, step down tourant and pick slraw hat, ‘oupons— | B and | “If It Swims, We | are Just out of foreign in his trade committee was tngak cendemnation of the ber and declared had been be in the a moment's would hasten jtion of the that his resigna prepared. and of the it complete i tion would board such reorganiza- Present administration. The committee appointed con jsists of R. H. Parsons, Keith J. | Middleton, Henry Blackwood and W | E. Coman. | The foreign trade committee | clated its belief that the foreign hands at notice, action trade policy of the chamber Is too a | |important to be jeopardized limited personnel and that jeffort should be exerted |strengthen Seattle's trade | premacy. | OFFICE IS TO BE [eee JUNE 15 enderson was notified last Tues y that the board of trustees had |decided to discontinue the position |he held because of the necessity of economy. He immediately sent in his resignation, ‘The office of director of the for abandoned Juno 15. Prior to that |there had been no intimation that such curtailment was contemplated, said Mr, Drever. It was this that aroused the eign trade committee and them to take Issue with the board of trustees, Find Two Guilty of Olympia Robbery TACOMA, June 5.—Richard ‘J. and James McNulty were found | guilty on three counts of robbing the Olympia postoffice of $27,000 on {March 19, by a federal grand jury here Monday afternoon. The verdict was returned after an hour's delibera- tion. Sentence was deferred to per- mit motion for a new trial. Both prisoners are well educated and of high mentality, by every to} su for. Want Ad Bargain How bout nice home right along the Jake, where it's cool? Here ix a place that you can en- Joy all summer long. $6,000 COUNTRY Hom AT MEDINA VOR $4,500 9-room house; fine condition; less than 5 yeurs old: excellent view of Lake Washitigton; 4. block north of Medina wharf; 300 f paved boulevard: lying. room 16x30, with French d |] Kitchen, 2 bedroome nnd buth, | all on first floor; full eement 1 basement; built-in features: house well conatructed, 2910 Jolats, ete; cont $5,500 to bulld, Size of ground, 1308105, all in warden, Turn to the Want and find more about and who will show orty, Ads NOW this home this prop. n trade bureau is to be! cansed | |‘ TRUNK ROUTE! Present administration of the cham-| The North Trunk highway backed by the North Trunk ers’ club, has been officially rated the route of the bhighway between Seattle and ett, according to telegram re- {ceived Monday by A. Lottland, president of | Allen, supervisor | The telegram read: “North Trunk | route officially adopted by Stage committee for the route ic highway between attle and Everett—James Allen.” The North Trunk Boosters club | | mot mday night and agreed to route, Boost ific a Ww. of highways work now for the extension of Dex: | jter ave. and widening Of 85th st. PLAN TO MOVE OFFICES HERE Marketing headquarters of New |York meat wholesalers dealing in | rein meat, will from Minneapolis near future, |Lomen, pioneer |the Seward peninsula, Lomen was and declared 500 carcasses ttle the ording to Car reindeer rancher of Alaska in Seattle Tuesday that a shipment of was on its .way to New York via Seattle. The cai casses will be transhipped here by |steamer, Lomen declared that the New York wholesalers had been finally won over to reindeer meat and that it would heneeforth be shipped to the Atlantic coast in |large quantities, retailing at 30 leents a pound. Lomen sail Nome, Alaska, to § in for his home at Tuesday. Boy’s Matches Burn Village; Two Killed CANAAN, N, H., June 5,-—-Canaan is a heap of smouldering ruins to- day, and the families of two fire prank of a 4-yearold boy with matches in a barn, The boy said he accidentally set |fire to a pile of hay. When the Jeonflagration ended, 42 bulldings were ash heaps, $506,000 worth of property was destroyed and two lives were lost. A 40tmilo wind lnwept the fire from one end of the | village to the oth 16 Are Killed in | Italian Cyclone | MILAN, June 6.—-Sixteon persons were killed by the eyelone which re cently swept the Ousole valley, ae Jcording to the official reports of | Deputies Moxtaloz lwent into the devastated Inspect the damage, They telegraphed Premier Musso: lini asking for immediate govern ment oid, especially for shelter tents and bridging materials. ‘The lows totuls $17,000,000, playing region to vietima are grief-stricken, due to the} and Toassini, who | jArizona, Salisbury sald, way much hotter when it started ity wa fo desig. | Prostrations was due to the unum exertions of some of the marchers | {and | spectators. club, from James |f thone in thelr care was in serious | condition. | go | HARDING W | BROTHER SE RENERS, pi th | ye | | St | hi sitting in the first |imperial council. | | te bo transferred | their | Ms la i |M. ic E jth se! up th 1. in, on j eo is th | no jth he {ne kn ma | marchea civilian 7 | Witnessed, | which cheer swept along the multitudes as | stirrin iby ldent by means of a new fancy drill brows for the past two days needn't | ehiets, WwW was shade ater, revived and hustled ake room for others. The day was not unseasonably hot © Washington and the number of i } out to the density of the crowds of Howpital authorities said that none All of them were able to » home after treatment. ‘OMES Noble Warren G, Harding, drop- ing his official role as president of © United States, welcomed his other Shriners today as they past him in the greatest ade the capitol has ever officially opening — the brine conclave. A little later the president made # welcome still more personal by meeting of the Representatives from nearly every mplo in the country, garbed in gay, flashing costumes, re. rned the welcome of the president they marched past {he White ouse, where the president and rs. Harding eat, overlooking the arden of Allah, with its towering ptian columns, Thousands of citizens and other ousands of visitors packed every at in the two-mile grand stand bordered the line of marclt » Pennsylvania aye. Cheer after e visiting patrols maneuve: i alr, The parade was frequently patrols, dd to halted which saluted the presi- Aladdin temple, from 9 ; Cofnnn 5) aneuvers (Turn to Seattle for prospective playground | directors. Ben Evans, who for the| past five years had been acting} director, was reported to have gone two points below the required} grade, Early this Mayer was’ of-| fered the position, He accepted and Wag to arrive in Seattlo in June to assume duty. Considerable protest arose in Se- attic. Civic organizations and wom- en's clubs filed objections to th changes, They expressed a ‘aeaird to have Evans remain in office. Still, t re told, the law was the law, | tumors arose to the effect that) the examination had been conducted | ilegally--that, all men trying out had not been given their lawful rights. Some had not been given oral as well as written examina- tions, This was said to be in vio- lation of civil service regulations. Two months ago Corporation Coun-| sel J. T, L. Kennedy was requested | by the commission and the park} board to render an opinion on the| legality of the exam. Kennedy voted “illegal,” citing even more irregular technicalities in | the examinations. | Mayer was notified to this effect | May 24, when the civil service com: | mission requested that he “send in| @ reasonable claim" for the expense | of the one trip he made to Seattle. | It was explained to him that the results of the November 13 exami: | nations had’ been stricken from’ the calendar and that the present diree- *, Ben Evans, .would necessarily | remain in office for at least anoth er year, Mayer, however, plans not to tet | Churn: to Page 9, Column 3) year “Heat Wave’’ Hits City; It’s Almost 70 Degrees Seattle on Tail-End of Warm Sweep That) Comes All the Way From Arizona | NELSON e been wip: from their BY JOHN W. Seattle folks who i the honest sweat der a new supply of handker. because cooler weather is Wednesday afternoon, , if cather Boss George N, Salisbury to be believed, And while they are wringing out oir shirt sleeves Tuesday efter non, they can be thankful that where thi present from, wileh is in The wave a mine liv came don't wave ey aut rthivard pligrimage, Just a Hite under down there, and everyone hows there's no shade in Arizona, Yesterday, when the peak of the In fuct, it 100 In the nm beh Ht KA Rae hot wave reached Portland, it was | only 85. The hottest period of the wave was expected between 3 and 6 p. m, Tuesday in Seattle, when the mereury, it was sald, might run as high as 82—about three degrees lower than Portland, Heat waves always drop about three degrees coming from Portland lo Seattle, according to Salishury. The wave will probably take the snow off the mountains east of the divide, and cause rivers to raise repidly, Salisbury predicts, It may Jost several daya there, But in Seattle it will reach its maximum today and cooler breezes are due lite Wednesday, The mor oury registered 76 at its highest point Monday, At noon Tuesday it was just under 70, Caen My) i {his j Spanish court. do with a personal labor dispute be- tween the cardinal and some of his hired laborers, but this was not con- firmed. The general belief is that the killing was planned. by | Catholic faction of Spain, The cardinal was the chiéf repre ventative of the pope in Spain and official spokesman before tho JAPAN FIGHTS RED PLOTTERS 100 Socialists | Arrested as} Alleged Communists TOKYO, June $.—Russo-Japanese jrelations took on an unusual aspect today, Almost simultaneously with reli- able information that the cabinet had decided to open parliamentary negotiations for a trade agreement between Japan and Russia came re- ports that Russia had financed an alleged communist plot to overthrow the Japanese governmont. Officers, acting on information re- garding the alleged plot, arrested and threw into jail ov 100 , socialists, suspected as the leaders, No formal announcement of | cabinet’s action was made, but it was | stated on high authority that today's | meeting of the ministry passed reso- lutions favoring parliamentary nego- tlations with Russia and specifying that details of procedure would be arranged later, The cabinet was acting on Rus. sia’s request for a resumption of negotiations looking toward a trade agreement. The original negotiations wore broken off several months ago. Seattle Women Are Elected by Lodge WALLA WALLA, June 5.—Three Seattle women were elected officers of the grand lodge of the Rebekahs at the annual encampment here yes. torday, Mra, Myra Fairbank of Se- attle wag elected grand warden, Mrs. Nellie M, Knoff, of Seattle, grand seo retary, and Mrs, Agnes Janieson of Seattle, grand treasurer, Would Flank Roads With Rhododendrons ‘Thru inténsive cultivation of rhodo dendrons, the tourist committee of the Chamber of Commeree hopes to greet the tourist with 26 miles of the state flower blooming along the) Olymple highway coming into Se attle: Plans for planting are under consideration by the committee, Selontists say the surface tempera. ture of the sun is 6,000 degroos contl. grade, or 11,000 degrees fahrenheit, the, antl: | tho | AT TWO MEN Discovering two burglars in the jact of entering a warehouse on Han- iford st. early Tuesday morning, B. R. Austin, merchant patrolman, shot twice at the thugs as they fled in the darkness, | Austin pursued the men but fail- led to locate them, He declared his [belief that one of his shots had taken effect. | Jewelry valued at between $100 land $200 was stolen from the home lof H. J. Kempel, 6322 Woodland Park ave. Monday night by thieves {who gained entrance thru a kitchen | window. Deeds to city property lwith an army discharge, formed the |loot of a thief who prowled W. 1 Page's room at the St, Paul hotel, | }taking a suit case containing tho} papers and a blue suit. together Fleet Vanguard to Reach Here June 29 Headed by the battleships New Mexico, Tennessee, Idaho, Oklahoma jand Texas, the vanguard of the Pa- cific fleet to assemble in Puget und this summer will’reach Seat- |e June 29, according to word re- ceived Tuesday by the Chamber of |Commerce from Admiral E, W. Eberle. The repair ship Promethus and several destroyers will arrive with \the battleships. On July & they will lhe distributed among Puget Sound \ports for the July 4th celebration, Jone battleship and some smaller ‘erat remaining in Seattle until July % On July 14 the fleet will be at [Port Angeles. | p28 Monroe Escapes Held for Seattle Lee Johnstone and Wesley Mar- tin, former inmates of Monroe, were arrested by the Spokane police and are being held for Sheriff Matt Starwich, on a charge of stealing an automobile, The two had the automobile of Dr. Carl B. Ogle, Joshua Green building, in their possession when they were arrested, They stole the car from the curb in Seattle on May 20, it is charged. When ar- rested in Spokane they were en- gaged in a stickup, according to adyices received by Starwich, Sentence Korean to Leavenworth A sentenc? of 14 months in. the federal prison at Leavenworth, Kan,, was imposed on 8. Ix. Yoon, 99, a Korean, who pleaded guiity to a charge of selling narcotics, Judge Jeremiah Neterer, in pass: ing judgment, told Yoon that he was fortunate In pleading guilty, for otherwise he would have been given o heavier sentence, Yoon admitted also that ho was a drug addict and had been fox many years. Hits Sand Spit, Near P Angeles, Tuesday While working her way thru the darkness in the Straits of Juan de Fuca Tuesday morning, the ton steel steamer Cacique, ¢ a full crew of men and a cargo, ran aground in mid. north of Port Angeles at 4:10 aim. according to word received by tl harbor radio station here, The vessel is said to be f aground on a sandspit that — into the sound north of the amoo cannery. Her crew, to number about 45 men, was aboard the vessel at 9 a. m. * Tugs were being dispatched her assistance from up-Sound pot and it is believed that she will \floated before any great damage has been done to her hull. The Cacique is booked to W. Rv Grace & Co. and was inbound for Seattle from New York. Girls Escape From. Children’s Ho Escaping from the Washi Children’s home just before night Monday, Henrietta Hieks, ‘16 Ruth. Fisher, 13, and Ella At 15, roamed the downtown street several hours before they were rested by Patrolman #, Vallet, at Occidental ave, and Jackson st, trio was cared for by the wot a | protective division, pending its re: turn to the Children’s. he homs, # TEN RICHEST _ MEN IN WORLD able question of fact or informa: tion by wriling to The Stars } Washington bureau, 1323_ York ave, Washington, D.C, | closing 2 cents in stamps, gal, medical and marital ad can not be given nor ean | tended research be unde Unsigned letters cannot. be swered, All letters are confid tial, Q—Who are the world! richest men? A.—According to the estima: reliable bankers and _ statistic! they are! Henry Ford, $550,000,000; John D, Rockefeller, $5010,000,0005 th Duke of Westminster, $150,000,000 t $200,000,000; the Gaekwar of Bar $125,000,000; Sir Basil . Zaharo $10,000,000 to $125,000,000; Hu Stinnes, $100,000,00 feller, $100,000,000; Baron Hy Mit $100,000,000; Baron K, Twasaki, $ 1 000,000; J. BL Duke, $10,000,000 George FB, Baker, $100,000,0003 Walker, perhaps less than “gto 100 000, perhaps as high 42 £800, is x oda, i cx a