The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 16, 1923, Page 16

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tet © Peart Goist, South Prai Mrs. Dockery Uses Umbrella; Many Delegates Arrive on Purse-Snatcher to thel atthe when 4 old walke ed bot) the wor love re 1 ™ face. umbrella to head Her at $12) (ont chang after wi Mrs then r Were treated « The police made the dis! t bu purse 3 BIG DAYS ARE OBSERVED AT ‘U Week’s Commencement Is Under Way Today Dockg it the silver New! Of the Sigm Members of and Sigma hall Friday opened exercises « ington Graduating class day class history dance at } council was induet tt alumni-fo held in the aftern ‘The baccalaureate delivered Sunday Meany hall by Bisho; Keator of Oiymp @xereises will be a.m. in Mean and masters diplomas will Members of Seattle Woman to Head Eastern Star TACOMA, June 16—A_ Seattle Womah was elected to the highest Office in the Washington Eastern Star here Friday when Marian V. Sparling was chosen grand matron mt the 25th annual cor tion of he grand chapter Other off! prop! were: sssistant Sutton, rank An- mt grand Gundlach, Spokane, Minnie M. Hast grand treasurer; Le West, Seattle, grand con Lena Latchett, ens. associate grand conductress. gtand «matron; WwW. J (Cheney, grand patron; J Merson, Seattle, ass patron; Mabel grand. secretary ings, Seattle, velia K. JURY TO GET OUIJA CASE OROVILLE, Cal, Juno 16.—The weird “oulja board murder case,” in Which Mrs. Mae Murdock is charged With shooting and fatally wounding her husband, was expected to be in the hands of the jury by noon to- Murdock testified p aps a spirit hand the revolver with which she is alleged to have Shot her husband. Mrs. Murdock claims not to have remembered the factual details of the shooting. In an alleged deathbed statement, read into the record, Robert Mur- dock, the husband, claimed that his Wife shot him three times, appar- ently without cause, and that he be- lieved she had become suddenly in- sane. Mrs. Murdock testified at the b ginning of the trial that a oul, board had advised her to kill her husband, because he planned‘ te Murder her with an ax. yesterday placed in her ave Seattle-9'9A.M. Arrive Chicago-II'2 A.M. (no extra flre Northern Pacific R ja|make thelr first real get-together a| Portland Picked - SS SS eo ee eee ed THE SEATILE STAR OFFICER'S WIFE AD CONVENTION GATTLE KILLED PEASANTS SLAY EXPECT TRIAL BEATS OFF THUG OPENS MONDAY BY HAIL STORM FORMER PREMIER TO END TODAY “You Betray Me,” Said Stamboulisky Before Shot at Big Stones Take Heavy Toll Spokane Saturday in Eastern Colorado ANE, J \ »PNVER WASHINGT( , PREMIER ASPIRED TO MOUNT THRONE HERE'S MORE ABOUT BEACHES STARTS ON PAGE 1 ASKS RECEIVER FOR KING BROS, Manager Says Directors Ignore His Advice Marle observe store 1 MN © things r i rippl small pebble thir lightfu says that avek seeking to % in behalf of Mrs. Nellie Heit King and have ignored lis advice. } needed when she thought {t advisable to take b mall daughter out Lou Marie unced water balls and r friends, promises equent beach bather months, 0} Mr. Bowd fusal of the sity summe o get a au of this y aby him a k of the ot Railroads Boost The Pay of Mechanics aged) CHICAGO, June 16.—The the) York, Chicago & St. Lolus jade to Mr. Bow-/ and the Lake Erle & V After the | way today notified the United States | STAMBOULISKY FALLS majority | railroad labor board that pay of me-| DURING FIGHTING stockholders, bein: isfied with | chantes, helpers and apprentices of] But him Joy lasted o jthe result of Mr the shop crafts had been advanced | The troopa,. t ment, elected Mr. King’s son, Chester |3 cents an hour, as of June 1 faahan teas ethene’ pagel W. King, to the presidency of the) ‘The San Antonio & Arkansas Pass! Stamboulisky fell dead during th jcompany and placed the management |rajlway announced a J-cents-sn-hour | fighting that followed. Ho w of the business in his hands. Mr. |{nerease for mechanics, helpers M4} tine of fire and it is believed bullets Bowden was unwilling to serve 1n &/apprentices, and 2 centa an hour for! from his own followers’ guna killed | subordinate capacity under Mr. King,| car cleaners, as of June 15 and shortly thereafter withdrew from active participation in the business. | “When differences arose Mr. Bow- den then, for the first time, asserted a claim for approximately $5,000 and King death of Mr the ment am. him. He died onl Pika Cochedionae in native | played as a boy. Commits Suicide! * ned the ubsequently increased this claim to| HOLLYWOOD, Cal, Juno 16.— | Peasants y 6 one of $11,000, which he contended|Evelyn Nelson, pretty 23-year-old was due him as bonus over and above | film comedienne, scribbled a note and his salary for the years 1921 andjthen turned on the gas fots in her 1922, during which years Mr. Bowden | Hollywood home, committing suicide, | conducted the business. In this per- according to police reports today fod there was a substantial Joss to| “I'm tired,” the note read, the company, which circumstances |I'll soon be with my pal, | precluded any legitimate claim for a| Reid.” |bonus. This claim was rejected as| Miss Nelson referred to Wallace limproper and illegal. | Reid, film star, who lost his fight “No creditors of the company has|against drug addiction recently. Her joined in the application for a re-| body was found by her mother |eeiver. The company is solvent and - is now doing a more profitable busi- ness than it has done at any similar |Maughan Resumes period since the boom times of 1919.” Plane Course Test inne | ST EVILLE, lL, June 16 Kenneth \EAST SIDE TO Lieutenant Russell Maughan ro-|missing woman, declared Saturday sumed flight to map | HAVE FROLIC) for a dawn-todarkness | |country flight here today Seattle people in a goodly number! Maughan, returning jare expected to attend the first an-| Philadelphia, Mo., |nual East side community plenie to| chine be held June 20 in the Kirkland park. |another plane from Scott, F7 East Side residents, including those|nopped off westward a few of Rose Hill, Juanita, Houghton and| trey | Kirkland, haye been co-operating for | the past two weeks in thelr effort to| a short distance from where he had town, whe earched house The ne i sian government announced th: this search produced | proot of treaty between Bul garia and Russia. It is also stated }that 600,000,000 levas worth of | French perfumes were found stored a necre! | HERE’S MORE ABOUT HUNT WOMEN STARTS ON PAGE 1 hustand of the ajthat in his opinion there was no s jquestion but that Mrs, Burnes had drowned. “I will keep on searching here lake until I have found he where his ma-|he said. t Captain of Detectives Charles ‘Ten a doubt that the body overed. “Lake Washing ullar, asserted, “Many times the lake has refused to give up the bodies of drowned |persons. We have searched tho ° |lake for weeks without results, and for Music Meet) tmany times tne holies have naan ASHEVILLE, N. C, June 16—|been found.” FP. W. Turner of Kirkland have plan-| Portland, Ore., was today selected | DEEP WATER HAMPERS ned the menu, to be supplied co-/as the next meeting place of the bi- NG OPERATIONS operatively by the pienickers, and the | enniat convention of the National! ations by t athletic program. They have s¢-|Federation of Muslo clibs, in. ses. | bor patrol boat are great) cured the support of the business! sion here. pered by between 100 and people to the extent that all East] gan Francisco and Lox Angles |of water at the point Bide offices and stores will be closed/aiso had submitted invitations for |search | sbeing made ‘ Wednesday. the meet. The convention will close| Spiritualist mediums were called |tonight, following election of offii-|to ald in the hunt for Mrs, Pallady | cers: Friday, In almost every mediums asserted that Stanwood News Has |ieaiiin declared that a 'Big Booster Edition |* job as a scrub woman in coma hotel In a special booster edition of the] A frantic search of Tacoma hos. al tokens or additional dimes will be | St#nwood News, the cheery greeting | teiriew followed, but no trace of Mra. charged. There is no differentiation |°f the district, “Welcome to Stan-|pajiady was found, and e clue 4 trolley line fares| W004.” is sent broadcast thru thelwas given up transfers are issued when re- hwest | A half-dozen clues phoned to Pal 1, on all fares, Daring Fri-| The edition iilustrates the advan: |iqaay were fun down, both in Seattle ay and Saturday the railway office tages which the nwood section and Tacoma, but proved vain. 100 worth of silver tokens and | offers to the porspective settler, and A reward of $100 was offered Sat med $750 worth of 6% cent tok. |invites the general public to visit | Stanwood and see for fitself that the| finding of t | missing woman, If the same number of persons ride |ComMMunty liew in the center of,"The| “yt am sure my wife is suffering Charmed Land.” | on the cars under the § 1-3 cent sys- |from lows of memory caused by in tem as rode under the nickel sys-| 4. D. Angevine, formerly a well-| omnia, from which she complained tem, the lines will collect a daily| Known Seattle newspaper man, i8| recently,” Pallady sald, “But soon: revenue of $18,520 a day, Supt. Hen-|@ditor of the News, et or late we will find her, 1 am derson said. Decreased patronage is| g sure,” sti enimiton so om ier") Madison, Park Will m fr : Have Big F: rolic !LOODS ARE [Gvran xenun NOW RECEDING Operating expenses of the street | railway, including maintenance of | | tracks and pavements, total $11,200 a OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla,, Juno 16, |day. The balance of $5,600 a day will | be @ part.of the program which will) ‘icoa waters which have menaced go towards’ bond redemption and in-/be given Sunday, when the Madison | OKlahoma for the last wook began to terest charges, Under the ent) park fresh water bathing beach will! recede today, |fare the roads were paying $11,360,|be officially opened, One of the| Damage & @ sum slightly in excess of actual op-| parachute men will make a bullet | aoitars we [erating expenses, which allows noth-| drop, while another will drop in the | rains Jing for depreciation reserve. usual fashion, — * | etre from | the crashed yesterday, ¢ would be r ton is pe minutes | noon. | success. | | A committee representing the dit- | |ferent communities and headed by} har- ham: 150 feet where (the —_—_— HERE’S MORE ABOUT CARFARE STARTS ON PAGE 1 A band concert, a paractiute cor fl stunt flying and water sports will | {mated at thousands of caused when torrential in Kanaas and Oklahoma sent ma in thig section over their ~|banks, Inundating rich farming land! and flooding homes in the lowlands. Reports bh Indicated the Arkan sas river Was atl on a rampage in Arkansas, but little additional dam. age was expected, Marm land® in the vieinity of Fort Smith and Little | tock Nave been flooded and consider. ible property damage dono, DIAGNOKIS DR. T, 718 Seahourd Wi J. APPLETON th and Pike urday for information leading to the || Lesebt Park is 0 Cohen-Speliman Case Draws to a Close TWO NEW PLANS ON REPARATIONS Great Britain Would Include America in Proffer on | Costuming on of the under tho sid not be tional | . including all tb nations in any wa as creditors of G involved, either any or as suf: [ Carries \ ‘ictim Down Broadway ee 3, FY 4 ‘ Miss Blossom (above), pretty strangled to death, police say, by Eleuiga Lazade, Filipino (shown handcuffed below.) The murderer took the body from uptown New York, down thru Broadway's crowds and to a Staten Island ferry, As he attempted to throw it overboard, police nabbed him. The Filipino was a servant in a doctor's office where Miss Martin worked, police say. Martin, 23 nurse, waa Dancers in Bal let Story Feature Final Festival | By Wanda Von Kettler Contuming and dancing scored at the presented in Moore theater Friday night, leading | when 250 Cornish school nen 250 Cor ook pupils were . annual | whose dancing dia much to give the |a@8 a result of the Hollywood liquor their ninta a Cornish Production Proves Delight to Audience feo (M “ y of At-| | Jantis, and in « ballet school of the | Opera (1776.) | dle Ages), in the ct ‘Those taking prominent parts and | ferers from the economic instablitty, |2&2C¢ feativul, tho closing event of | professtonal toucn were Zvangeline | to dincuns the question. 2. Subminsion of the reparations dispute to the league of nations. France probably would either method, it wan believed here. | But it ts known tn high official) {quarters that Italy and Great Brit. | ain both are putting pressure on France, with a threat of tsolation unie ome dinposition shown to act “reasonab! In American official quarters the attitude in that of Since Secretary Hughes’ plan for an international board of economic experts tp settle what Ger many can pay was summarily re jected In European capitals, the att! tude here has been that this govern. |the school's spring {has been in progress for the past | three weekn 1 ed the entire program—b reatst |! marked the entire program—but festival, which A note of professional- particularly the last half, or “Act 2,” entitled “The Ballet of Destiny Hate Dest More than 100 girls and a nurpber fy ung men participated in “The * a dance f story In which a chess in played by Love and of the hearts of the world 1 Death, who hover close yers, have much to do with events. Love, of course, ntually—after the progress © game is depicted by the many dancers who appear in the scenes that follow the opening of the kame, Those scenes are laid in a | ment will keep strictly out of the | Moorish harem (year 1,100), in Ven- reparations muddle Tho administration apparently ts not even considering what ita course would be were it invited to ait in, for| it was stated at the White House yesterday on behalf of President | Harding that he considered it “idie"| to ap as to the probable in clusion of the United States in any {international reparations discussion, ‘PROBE STORY | OF KIDNAPING| | A weird tale of cruelty ing by a truck driver, told by! Peter Mullan, miner of New castle, as he tay on a bed at the} city hospital, suffering from a jbroken hip and internal injuries, | |which he says ho received when he was struck by tho truck, was being investigated by city detectives and Joffictaly of the Pacific Coast | Co Saturday. Mullan was the railroad Waukee depot “I was crossing a Washington st. | livery and Kid-| coal Coal found unconscious on | low the Mil-| aturday street near | when a small de! truck came alon 1 knocked me down, Someone got out of the truck and into it, and after blocks, railroad ness. | “After a while 1 came |Senses and felt that 1 was in dan.| | 1 crawled as be 1 could ‘or distance and then all | went 4 woke up hei on | bed.” |To Return Decision in Port Test Suit A decision in the mult to test the | jlegality of the $850,000 bond tasue | |for the purchase of the Skinger &| |Bddy shipyard site by the Seattle | |Port commission will be returned | Monday by Judge H. B, Gilbert of Yakima county, sitting temporarily jon the King county superior court | | bench |. Arguments in the case were heard | |by Judge Gilbert Friday, Attorneys | BH. C. Snyder and Charles Bradford | Upheld the legality of the issue anc Attorney O. B. Thorgrimson ar. | ued the case for C, C, Domworth, | |who started the sult ial | Band Concerts Programs for Next Week | SUNDAY Volunteer Park ....0190 Wagner Woodland Park ., ) Adams Madison Park 2:40 Wagner WwW AY Cowen Park , threw me going @ few thoy Ww me out on the} track, 1 lost conscious. | 0 Wagner Adama to my! 4 | Edwards, Portia Grafton, Violet Rich- ards, Ruth Richardson, Ida Levin, | Harold Ames, and Morris Wilson. J. | Sherwood Dobbs was vocalist. Act 1 of the program featured, in| | the first episode, “A Pickaninny’s| Dream,” and in the second, “A Little | Yankeo's Dream.” Episode the first | had to do with dancing flowers, but- | terffies and bees—the second, with | King Wintera, icicles, snowflakes and ' Jack Frost. Children, for the most part, made up the cast of 100 that ticipated in the dream dances. — | To Mary Ann Wells, instructor of | dancing at the school, goes the credit | for the completeness and success of the program. ‘The entire affair was produced by Miss Wells. Those who did not attend the fes- ~) OLD-TIME BON) 77 COMPANY FAILS In Business 70 Years, Firm Forced to Close Doors nnounce- f the fatiure Kuhne, bro. of the New 2 shows ‘The peti. sacte are nf other 1,000,000, * made from nge usiness for Street failure n eRe a ex rk Btock 6. m authorized of all our consented to the of our able ner can our equities be ct and ¢ number 4 value, but count of the market and are not read dated, fou ufficient that we owe od one of the most 1 offices in the financial dis Its establishment, h mar and gleaming brass, had more aspect of @ conservative ba han of a brokerage house. luntary petition in bank been filed against the the United § istrict palat Middleton §. Borland was named recelver under $50,000 bond. MOVIE LIQUOR GANG SOUGHT LOS ANGELES, June 16—Officers ched over the Pacific coast Claude Dudrey and Maurice “Frenchy” DeLeon, sald to be leading spirits in the “millionaire bootlegger” |ring accused of purveying liquor to the Hollywood and Los movie and soclety colonies. They were the most important of several alleged members of the ring not yet In custody, Approximately half of 18 men and women Indicted Angeles Investigation, have been arrested or have surrendered. Dudrey ts alleged to have been Canadian manager of the ring. Eighteen counts are contained in the indictments, ranging all the way from illegal importation of liquor to illegal delivery of liquor et homes of wealthy Californians. The indictments resulted from raids during the last few months, which included the arrest of Alexan- der B. Stewart, president of the Cur- tis Packing corporation, as one of the alleged liquor smugglers. tival Friday night were to be given a second opportunity Saturday after- noon, when for the last time this _ season the Cornish dancers were to be featured In a dance recital. Opportunity and Economy makea strong team—hitch up to them. The Bargain Basement constantly ‘unloads reliable merchandise in every department—save on all. Local Jobber Cleans House! MISSES’ and WOMEN’S CAMELAIRE and cuffs—leather buckle on cuffs. pl SPORT COATS that should bring the folks a-running! AND POLAIRE 50. Sizes 16 to 44 $1 Included are lined and unlined; inverted pleats; raglan and set-in sleeves; triple pleated backs; belts aids. Some over- White Summer Dresses Crepe de Chine Canton Crepe, Voile $1 Some scalloped hem, trir lace; with ribbon velvet; voile shirred collax, lace trimmed; panels with large rosettes of lace, and satin ribbon trimmed, Sizes to 40 nmed with Valenciennes (era frien day shring Su was little paper knew rd, Tmu To mu Im For ai My Wi Mal these ends “STAY Direc! WAY) ment Sor on thi “Th Seattll carfal cover, dolla Watel Ye: laugh ery by not a was

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