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J @douvias Fir Co, Decides an) Munaires Hits Dock in Fog; tHURSDAY, SEPTEMBER VOTE TO GIVE BIG FREIGHTER LUMBER, CASH $100,000 Present BANK WINS IN TRUSTEE SUIT Was Entitled to Waterhouse Trucks, Rules Court reputed va asmets of t trucks 6 recel ng ¢ acks oF ¢ company for ple thru Waterhouse- y on use re. dover to the bank ever placed in owned ts ‘by in the sp an $18,000 ceipts were turn but the trucks were the warehouse, whic by Waterhouse & Ci When pointed r hicles ank hem. Laube conte was ave pledge had urn the trucks over to the bank. Judge Griffiths held that the pledge was a valld| one and the bank was entitled to the trucks. | A motion for a new trial will be} filed by Laube, alleging technical er- | rors. | LIGHT BUSINESS. 13, 1928. MORE ABOUT SPAIN STARTS ON PAGE 4 Le RUNS INTO PIER Not Badly Damaged of t Mol command of freight . as the Madrid armed htly damaged before she moveme Bar pre ft up at |Censored Dispatch Comes From Madrid United Pre t following message, wh had been clone om its bureau in Mad: and was to ha ording to waterf on fuse n the Pre nd ad eded to miscellane forward are t to warrant K for rep airs, The Spanish cabtie HERE'S MORE ABOUT DESTROYERS STARTS ON PAGE 1 that in « would that the k et for the Farragut e wrong temar * bis instin in to the ding io rel Val Nines 2 The king Is due n believed | 4.14 today as this ac ss 2 HERE'S MORE ABOUT ITALY STARTS ON PAGE 1 the rocks, while the Sommers vessel which the ¢ other to rew believes The and is believed | is create bitter resen ng ever an corte % equall neare | impossible Premier F to remain neutr T stateamen strained exercise of Pr lint's enthusiaam f @ campaign for expansion, nce wants to curt 1 the 19 sea men still missing. After the Farragut Fuller, it plowed on of ships and struck the rocks tion on the py com er caused reversed engines, a boat managed to draw safety, ho a large hole wea torn in Its sides near the stern The Sommers ing the other vassel made its way Rips in as viewed struck the the uae u the melee Quick nd 4 the ft itself of Some British circte jlint with Imitato nded after strik. | UM! . s policy ng and then alsol ae home by external w to safety off shore.|" : several stern plates were suffered by the So ere. and all Bae, eee Memes. snd al | oe oagrignan nee , re Again Jaile reached port. The crews and offi SALEM, Ore. cers escaped injury. Kelly, one of two prisonera who es: SEARCH FOR DEAD CONTINUING caped from the state penitentiary yesterday, was back in his cell today Reports from Point Arguello, where salvaging operations and Kelly gave himaelf up at a search for the dead continue, sald |nouse hear alow last Pott ni that of | he had experienced a change of heart today that a fourth body, Fireman C. F. Rodgers, of the Del. | and wanted to return to prison. of bolater en Sept. 13.—Ellsworth aged TOWN WRECKED | BY THE Sk TIDAL WAVE Village in Lower California Reported Wiped Out f th eral feet Ihack of his head. knee and minor t | tended at the city Relief, it Mazatiar foun fear m of the con “‘SPRED COP” IS Rl DOW t which |Chicago’s Mayor Bans “Poor Beer” CHICA by jam nounced 9 aft officer from We} manufa ped, a that Battleship Coming in From Collision! no brewery PAGE 9 FREDERICK & NELSON | FIFTH AVENUE — PINE STREET — SIXTH AVENUE Downstairs Store Displays of WOMEN’S AUTUMN FOOTWEAR | Evidence a Union of Smart Styles With Modest Prices HE five attractive styles sketched are from current displays of Autumn Footwear These give but a hint o' able, in the favored sty] For wear with evening, ¢ in costumes. WEFT: ¢ button Satin mbination Pump of and Suede $8.4! Black Suede rench toe style eather * $8.45 Walking Louls or Jun tary heel Oxt with BELOW Women’s and Misses’ the Downstairs Store. f the wide choice avail- es, shades and leathers. jinner, street and sports AT RIGHT button Py » Two in Field $8.45 SHT: Brown Nubuck Pump, trimmed Brown Kidskin. ck Suede and ubuck. A pump with .. $6.95 with Kidakin, itary mi heel . two shades ar welt and rub tent Leather and i $6.50 ra in a OREG in being sold t $50 to $60 a t 0 beat bee iMegalt re! A * Dever on the dintri. tTLAN In order to ra s money is belr federal and t : cents a ginss f With dec dragon of th must t to see to tt] s00n come am goin operates.” believed. An the K der, in not tes, the gat nated Fred H candidate alrem ON KLAN IN SESSION t. 13—Ku parts ¢ y for @ Klux D, 6 vex from thered he oncerned indorsing d State grand to en Gifford, ng Klan, decli ter the race, the organization will| Marie Ma ut in support of some in the fleld, it is 1 Klux Klan, as an or presumed to be in poll horing today was deal; as a meeting of the State|ghieks from SAN FRANCISCO, Hept, 12.—TKe| Good Government league, with all said, LIFE IN DESERT TOLD BY MARIE Princess, Charged With | Murder, Testifies Princess trial LONDON, Bept. 13. rite Fahmy, murder of her Egyptian usband, today resumed the wit |ness stand to tell the second chap. |ter of her life in the desert. | Continuing her story of what happens to tho wives of African the point where the popular novels leave the young and on | for the freighter Stee! Seafarer, damaged in| thore, attending MKansmen, it wa) peautitul Western girl clasped in the arms of her seml-savage lover, | Tomorrow's Program for the DOWNSTAIRS STORE Autumn Promenade of | Practical Fashions Women’s and Misses’ | At 2:30 Coats, Wraps, tt Mien: ae a Pata the princess le up to the death of Dresses and Sports Apparel. gee rm covered. Interest! George Jackson, who also got| collision off Point Arguello yenter | f centers ox Nev entiada Pees hres away, was retaken shortly after hin|day with the battleship Texas, was] ~ f jfenters on the examination of Capt. escape, aa he leaped from the truck |expected to reach port here today a es | Edwin W. Watson, who was in-cdm-| teow nich the sen wees uneitina |Fails in Two Tries Jatter a wild wooing and honey- Para mand of the squadron. The captain’s hauled from the prison yard. $, © of Other Utilities Also Have} state ana otticers of the Delphy, the | ; a " to Commit Suicide /*"*" * 3 } | moon tn Cairo. Pert leading boat, are other {mportant . wo attempts tu end his life by| The princess said she found the Increased Activities witnesses who will be ealtea. at the) Men Hurt Trying ‘GC Shc la eluate cetapsesy tiawt [stiakcr nemmadepawertal, overiicd é conclusion of the hearing the find-| i Money o CFMANY | Vien Albert J. Corwin, 8519% Fre-| the Paris boulevards. |!ngs of the board, together with rec: to Board Freight SUNDERLAND, Eng, Bept. 13.—| mont ave. wan rescued by friends} But after marriage in Cairo, she} ommendations that may be made for! aco, Sept. 13.—Two men, at.| A German stowaway arriving here | and taken to the City hospital. He} sald, all was changed and she soon/| the trials. by court-martial, will be from his native land confessed hin | will recover, physicians say, | saw she must seek a divorce. forwarded to Washington, ambition was to earn ono English) Other residents of the premises,| The prosecutor then handed the ete ger aban Ahcatate «Sa pound and return to the fatherland | smelling gas, found Corwin inhaling | princess the weapon with which {t from a cooking stove, While they | she shot and killed her desert lover. wero summoning an ambulance, Cor-| “This is the pistol with which to| win returned to the stove In an ef-|you shot Prince Fahmy,” the prose- fort to complete the job, police say.|cutor sald, coldly, as the witness = _ _ ~ — burst into tears. is Princ® All Kamel Fahmy Bey, whom sho killed in a hotel here SATURDAY at 2:30—Children’s and Junior Misses’ Apparel. Easy to Be Rich in r her own power. Seattle's public utilities have made excellent business gains so far this year, according to figures submitted FREDERICK & NELSON | tempting to board a freight train in by department heads. Since January Ms |the yards of the Northern Pacific the city light department has en- | HUH epart:| railway here last night were struck er 4,375 new subscribers, bringing ua ire |by another engine and severely in. | and “be a millionaire.” he total of city light patrons to 71,- ‘ |jured. The men are J. T. Avoe of 2 PNT 032. New Explanation Lewiston, Mont, and August Del.| Karty Christian bakers used Large sales of electrical equipment | plerre, a Frenchman. | stamp their breads with a croas. of Wreck Is Made . - have also been made. There have Seats ef Bi been more than 500 electrical ranges sold during the period and numerous other articles of merchandise The city water department has also shown substantial gain, according to} George F. Rusell, superintendent. | total of 1,722 new taps have been} resenting that number | ngs. Russell predicts | 500 for the year, or twice} at least the number of normal pre-war years. | The 1923 building record also Promises to set a new record. To} date there have been $18,142,890! worth of permits ixsued. Last year, | a record year up to the present time, | the total permits were only $1,640,245 more than the first eight months of | this year. City Employment $i z Shields reports the biggest for men since the days of the war. | Every man that wants to work ca get a job here now, Shields said. One| day last week Shields’ office was ask- €d to supply 385 men. A heavy increase in the business of | the county auditor's office where | real estate transfers and other legal papers are filed, is reported by Audi- tor D. E. Ferguson. This increase| will total more than a quarter of a million dollars, Ferguson sald. The} biggest increase jis in automobile} cense fees which jumped from $479, 6 in 1922 to $747,695.83 in 1923, DALLAS, Texas, Sept. 13 farring his Job as motorman, he has held with the Dallas Street Railway company for 20 years, Archie Trotter has turned down sev- eral offers of promotion—an easier | Job and better pay—because he likes his present work. Trotter is content | to pilot his car over the Sunset-Sec- | ona ave. line day in and day out, and let others take the promotions. Trot- ter is the oldest employe of the com- | pany in point of service and began| as a motorman in St. Louis, coming | to Dallas in 1894, COLT-McLOUGHLIN Week-End Specials Choice Ferns $1 Each Baskets of Flowers $1 Each Our late Fall ready free COLT-McLOUGHLIN 407 Union Bt. White Bldg. EL iot-5156 H. } demand | —Pre- which | Catalogue now Call or write for one to you. lreturned after ‘an absenco TA BARBARA, Cal., Sept. 13. nation of the piling up destroyers at Point Honda Saturday night was offered | today by a survivor, a veteran chiet | quartermaster. il ‘The 16 vessels of the squadron foven |Bewitching Fall Hats were traveling in formation of two| || Priced at columns, the petty officer asserted. | When the Delphy, in the lead, struck | the rocks, the started her siren, alg-| naling “collision.” Having no idea} of thelr actua* position, the com-| manders of the other veasels took | the signal to indicate a collision at| sea. Following the procedure in the left column of the formation swerved | sharply to port. The right-hand col-| umn made the same maneuver to| siarboard to avoid the collision. Naturally those who swerved to planation was confirmed as probably the correct one by officers. eee Warships Traveled | at 20-Knots Speed WASHINGTON, Sept. 13.—Contfir- | mation of the report that the seven | United States destroyers wrecked off the California coast were traveling | at a speed of 20 knota wan given | the navy department today in a} message from Admiral Coontz, com- mander-in-chief of the United States | fleet. Coontz advised that “comment and criticism” be withheld for the! present toward the small draped hat, yet possession you will enjoy which they can be worn. a ae HERE’S MORE ABOL MOTHER STARTS ON PAGE 1 under similar circumstances and had of nix) months, asking that she be forgiven, | but refusing to give details of he , absence. t Accorting to Mactarlane, Cook| Trimmed Hats desirey his wife to return to her| home here and be a mother to thelr Uttle daughter, who ho says, has pined continually for her “mamma” since she went away. An investigation to determine whether the man Mra, Cook is said to have eloped with can be held un-| der the Mann act, or on some other | charge, has been inatituted by Mac: farlane, be said, dominating note in ‘The Fall volors and shades. cles, ete. A wonderful assort ment on sale Friday ats... There aro only four fonsil for. eat arean in the world, three being in the United States, the other near Cairo, Egypt, Buckram Frames Every conceivable shape, in all newest Paris copies. sale tomorrow fits... Lamteth palace, ¥ tains samples of every architecture wince 1170, land, utyle con. of You will instantly be delighted with the smart. shapes that have come forth this Autumn. ever-becoming large here in many striking forms, smartly trimmed. feathers, buckles and pins distinguish many rakish novelties whose because of the many An amazing array | the right escaped, while the vessels | . going to port piled up on the rocks | [iz almost a solid mass. The ex-| unusual trims and While there is a trend hat Is Artistically draped pecullar angles at \\ AK \ \ \\ ZS \ Felt Hats characterized by rich colors and those versatility all their own Hats alike to sports and street wear. assures easy relection, Your cholee Friday The nd the values Untrimmed Hats Never adaptations of original large a display of Untrimmed Hats in velvets and duvetyns Paris patt as The Criterion has ever shown, The sizes warrants the assurance that th will find her heart's desire here Friday of manifold of ready-to-wear and untrimmed Felt Hats, | rakish modes with a uses—suited sope of this display e astounding, $1 erns characterize as scope of shapes and home at Volvets, duvetyns and velvet and duve- | tyn combinations strike a rich and | Griterion's | display, which embraces all the new Sizes and | nhapes to mult every type of porson- | ality, in trims of ostrich feather fan- | $1 the Winter Flowers and Feathers Flowers, feathers and feather fancies play a large part the season's. trir Every conceivable on display at 66¢ to ®2.465. in whim in these lines eattle’s [argest Iylillinery 3 Sees at Seneca tore KNEW NOTHING ABOUT AUTOMATICS “I know nothing about, automatic pistols," the girl sobbed hysterl- cally. “1 did not want to kill Fahmy, I only pointed the pistol at him to frighten him, when he said he was going to kill didn’t even notice when I pressed the trigger. I didn't even know the shot had been fired until I saw Fahmy lying on the floor.” The witness was dressed in the |same black garments which she | wore when the trial opened yester- day, and swas pinched and_ pale. She seemed on the verge of ner- yous collapse as the prosecutor hurled question after question at her in an effort to show alleged reletions with other men before the shiek crowded all others from her life. Cross examination of the princess was concluded with introduction of a letter she sent her attorney August 21 “to be opened in event of my death.” The letter explained the quarrels between the shiek and his jand declared that if the princess died from violence, Fahmy should formally be acctfsed of her murder. Pierce ‘County Tax Rate Cut .08 Mill TACOMA, Sept. 13.—Successful in slashing the county budget estimate to such a degree that the tax levy for the next year will be .08 mill Jess than the 8-mill limit of this year, the Plerce county commission- ors Wednesday night completed the preliminary budget for 1924. Seems eRe sea FATHER DRIVES 100 MILES IN EFFORT TO SAVE 15-OUNCE BABY (Qhenanyss CITY, Eept. 13.-—- ‘A baby girl weighing 15 ounces, died at University hospl- tal today, after the\father, J. P. Parkins, had carried the child 100 miles In an, automobile from Wetumka, hoping medical skill and science would be able to keep the spark of life in the tiny Parkins, encounternig muddy roads and difficulties with his auto, was seven hours on the trip. While driving, the baby, nine inches long, was pillowed on rot water bottle, inclosed in a shoe box, which Parkins carried on his lap. When he arrived here, the child was alive--the smaliest liv ing patient ever received at the hospital, However, physicians were unable to save the baby's life, and It dled a few hours later, me. 1| wife | PICK JURY IN MURDER TRIAL Millionaire’s Son, Charged With Sailor’s Death BY PAUL R. MALLON United Press Staff Corespondent WRITE PLAINS, N. Y., Sept. 13. —Selection of a jury of his peers to try Walter S. Ward, millionaire’s son, for the slaying of a poor ex- sailor, {s proceeding so rapidly that the hearing of witnesses may start this week, instead of being intermin- ably delayed by wrangling over talesmen, The accused man, showing the pal- lor of his brief confinement in prison, and appearing downeast and re- served during most of the proced- ings, is taking an active part’ in choosing the jury. He aids his coun. sel in questioning and accepting or rejecting the veniremen. LINE GETS NINE SHIPS WASHINGTON, D. C., Sept. 13.— Nine shipping board vessels were turned over to the Grace and Dollar |Mnes on contract sales during the past week, it was announced yes- \terday at shipping board offices. | Seven of the ships are combina. tion fréight and passenger craft and | will be used by the Dollar line in | round the world service and two will be used by thé Grace line in South American trade, The Grace vessels are cargo carriers only. The Dollar line, operating out of San Fran- cisco, will maintain a service cir cumnavigating the globe. The addition of the ships to both lines will materially aid the com. merce of the Factfic, according to shipping board officials, ‘The sales contract calls for guaranteed con- tinuous on the part of both lines for five years. i Charge Man With , i Pummeling Wife red H. Wits faces two criminal charges as a result of his arrest, Jato Wednesday, near Enumclaw, Wits Was arrested on a charge of manufacturing Hquor with Intent to sell, and also for an assault upon his wife. According to deputy sher- iffs, Wits severely pummeled his wife during a family brawl, TULSA REFUSES PLAN OF PEACE Will Not Comply With De- mands of Governor TULSA, Okla., Sept. 18.—Tulsa ficials today refused to accept co tions made by Gov. J. C. Walton lifting martial law in this city—th resignation of five leading public of- ficers, who, the governor said, were — dominated by the Ku Klux Klan. The five whose resignations were . demanded by the executive all said they would not quit their offices. They are: Sheriff Bon Sanford, Police Commissioner Harry W. Kis: kaddo» and Jury Commisioners C, I. Holland, J. W. Owens and O. EB. inson. x Hold Auto Mechanic For Murdering Wi op te ife OAKLAND, Cal, Sept. 13.—Chas, E. Miller, automobile mechanic, was held without bail here today, charged with the murder of his wife. While a 7-year-old child gazed helplessly on, Miller last night, aft- er accusing his wife of infidelity, shot her to death and then sul moned tha police, BIRMINGHAM, Eng., Sept. 18— Twenty pounds in gold, found by boy, was the subject for an inquest recently, The jury learned the boy gave it to police immediately and — did not try to hide dt. As a result he may get a grant of 16 pounds by the government for his honesty, (pe GEN. SAWYER SCARES “HELL AND MARIAH” | INTO REAL SERVICE ASHINGTON, Sept. 13— Brig. Gen) Charles FE. Saw: yer stole some of ‘Hell and | Mariah's” stuff yesterday when the two of them called at the White House, “Hell and Marial got his name in the papers some time ago by cussing before a con: gressional committee. ‘Oh, don't talk so damn much, Sawyer admonished Dawes they left the White House, an Dawes was about to tell th world, thtu tho assembled White House correspondents, what. the visit was all about, Dawes was so astonished at Sawyer that he meekly submitted to be led away, 4