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FRIDAY REVOLT CHIEFS IN SPAIN WIN! Formation of New Govern- ment Ordered by the King SEPTEMBER 1 BY RAPABL MORAYTA indicate t complete the military gram, wh LA the N othe ITALIANS TO LEAVE CORFU Other Penalties Are Re- served to Punish Greece BY WEBB MILLER note of the to Greece, today However, the note says, bassadors reserve the right, in case they decide the conditions of search for the persons gullty of the massacre of the Italian dour commission have not been executed fully, to im. pave other measures of coercion and penalties, such as handing over 000,000 lire and renouncing Greek right of recourse tribunal, Italy, however, will retain her right to submit to the tribunal her claim for expenses of the occupation ot Corfu. of ambassad: which was made public the am. @ HERE’S MORE ABOUT JEFFERSON TARTS PAG possible across the Pacific in an effort to reach here before the supply i exhausted. Destitute and injured refugees aboard the liner will be cared for when the ship docks at Victoria by Seattle and Canadian Red Crow workers. Dr. J. EB Crechton, chairman of the Red Cromp in Seatti, and twe nurses, Mise “Margaret Rice and Mies Anna Knott, will go to Victo- rin Friday night, to co-operate In the work of caring for the persons aboard the ship. Requests for autos to transport the survivors and refugees to their des- tinations have been made by the Red Cross here, and anyone who will do- nate his car for the use of the Red Cross 1s asked to leave phone num- bers with the Chapter here by calling oe 0795. HERE’S MORE ABOUT DUMBBELL STARTS ON PAGE 1 4, 1923, to The Hague} | SEATTLE STAR | PLANNING RELIEF FOR ST! Ambassador Hanihara (left) confers with regarding relief measures for his stricken countrymen acting chairman of the Red Cross; He. vert Hoover Eliot Wadsworth, acting secretary and treasurer of HERE'S MORE ABOUT CITY BOOZE BOAT STARTS ON PAGE 1 RICKEN American Red Cross of ficial: , member of JAPAN Washing- James L central com- right are the To the the Red Cro. ‘ HERE'S MORE ABOUT PRIZE FIGHT STARTS ON PAGE 1 type that can ¢ |four hours, leaving motor t At thin time the b want to get sion a8 qui NG FUNDS NEW SPEED r to the bay t kly ax possible ¢ TO BUY AT ed, and sunk $1,000 ong an had The mach nted ite bow had been t off just before it wan stolen to prevent Just such a loss. partment has no fu hase of anotiiex was purchased Brown from a as since been said. ured for $1,000 and theft. ‘This ean be collected as the chief prove it was stolen $1,000 he seeks to add purchase a larger, and | SHERIFF SAYS BOAT USELESS The police boore boat, believed te have been scuttled by boot- leggers, has been no hindrance to booze runners operating In Puget Sound waters, Sheriff Matt Starwich sald Friday, when informed that Chief of | Police W. B. Severyns had ad- vanced the theory that the boat was sunk to clear the way for landing a huge cargo of booze, “I don't think the boat ever cap against’ fire probably belbeves | $3,500 + faster “The old launch was too small,” he sald. “It was in danger of being sunk any time it struck a big log At high peed. We need a partially | enclosed boat to protect the men from stormy weather in winter. The old boat had no cabin and the men | were exposed “It was also difficult to fire a machine gun accurately from the|tured a single booze runner or broke smatier boat, due to the way it|up a single landing pi ° ¢ pitched and tossed in a sea." |Starwich said, “My men have Tho boat was discovered missing | it nosing around, trailing them when shortly after midnight Thuraday|they went out wait for morning from its mooring point at/ments. But I never heard of the the harbor patrol float at the foot | booze boat capturing anyone.” of Yesler way by Patrolmen A. J.| According to Sheriff Starwich HM and Robert Kernan. boome runners are not landing their EananaaEe |Uquor in King county, except at | private wharfs in the business dis [trict under the eyes of the police. | Booze shipments are being landed jin Snohomish county and are being brought Inte Seattle in disguised shipments, the sherift said. “There hasn't been a shipment of he reaches Seattle. A. Berg, assocl.|000me landed in King county for ated with the Untversal Trading & more than a month, I believe,” th Shipping Co., said that no reserva. | Sheriff said. og have been made for the ex-| The last bie cargo that was land. plorer at any of the Seattle hotels. | 4 im this county was captured by neon to, ehip- HERE’S MORE ABOUT AMUNDSEN STARTS ON PAGE 1 methods, ® sure y was the ¢ ber of rou able to retain in front of one of tho ring’s most effective assaults | } With the except: | sual weather bre could not bh n of a rather un- Tex Rickard ans better to the “second will fight for | supremacy | Gray, low chilly breeze that made the we appropriate for clouds and a er nettings fan more| & football game than rw boxing contest, and | the conditions proved a big break in fi of the champion outdoor When the weather was Vhite Sulphur had to work in a w a full set of hea mpta . ona will fit him fa t t than wun of Atlantic City, Argentinian prepared himscit the bigkest battle of his life. | Altho there were more than 5 Annorted seata navilable this morn | 'n6 at the box office, Tox Rickard predicted that a capacity crowd of 00 would be in the park when the principals enter the ring at 9:20. Rickard at the last minute decided |to send the main bout In at 9:20 in |mtend of 10 o'clock, but ft in possible [that the usual before-thebattle cere. monies will consume so much time jthat the gong for the first round of the scheduled 15-round contest will | not start before 10 o'clock 0 chilly that he ned, but b the w pies big for 000 yy Beyer will leave Saturday for Alas- ka and will be unable to entertain the explorer during his stay here/ this time, he suid Friday. Lieut. Oskar Omdahl, of the Nor- Wegian navy, who Amundsen on his trip who was to have piloted Amundsen's plane in the flight over the North Pole, is also said to be returning to the States. ‘The projected flight was definitely abandoned early this summer when : CHARGE ROSHON |Sherift Starwich at Alki point when | Speculators. still in possession of 1170 canes of liquor were ncized.| Many choice seats were holdine | Starwich claims tho liquor was the /OUt today for two and three time property of Roy Olmstead, former |the face value of their tickets. Wise poles Heutehant. New Yorkers, however, wait jing until tho Iast minute because jot a hunch that some of th |‘‘speca’*’ would have to go below |the face value to get rid of their Uickets. ‘The announcement ° that |counterfelt tickets have been ploced in circulation has ‘made purchas ts more than usually wary in deal | WITH POLYGAMY 1 of Potato Gr Expects to Be King owers CAVES OPENED TO TRAVELERS PAGE 9 ———— reorisea «t| Ghost Soldier Is omen 4 Wiped From Wall Bath A delayed E been tp Grand Canyor FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET URRENT displays of Autumn Coats emphasize the ability of the rtly fashioned, Sizes for to offer than fifty styles to choose from. Choose From More Thah Fifty Styles in Smartly-Fashioned Autumn Coats in Five Moderate Price Groups $15.00 $17.75 $21.75 $27.75 $45.00 unusual Values in sm women of full figure, $27.7 Corts of .good Navy-biue, brown shades, gray, Borrento- of good quallt blue, brown ned. Also: Utill erpiaid effects $15.00 fab Navy-blue a coating quality pile fabrice in blue and taupe. Trimmed with braid, stitching and but tons Fur and cloth collar styles; full lined. 800 ‘ Sample” Curtain Ends and Corners AT EXCEPTIONALLY LOW PRICES NE-YARD and yard-and-a-half lengths (ends and corners). of fine quality Curtains in Filet, Quaker Craft, Tuscan, Shadow and many other at- coating fabrics full-lined. nd black Store More for Downstain garments Extra sizes well tailored women and misses, Dem brown a -size Coats 41 to 63), in 4 black couting braid with Full-lined and fur Fur -tri mm good quality Brown. Coats of lustrous, high-grade pile fab- $45.0 ries, in Navy-blue, wood-brown, taupe, brown and black. Cloth and fur collar styles. ‘Trimmitd with braid and stitching in simple or elaborate designs, and buttons. All coats fulllined, —DOWNSTAIRS STORE ing with the scalpers. | The “samples” of a manufacturer of high-grade Cur- Rickard said this morning tnat the 22c tractive patterns. the plano Was damaged in trial guts . tain. guy he ever saw was a bird who saw the si “Fight Returns to Be Given Here” end asked what per cent returns the sight was going to pay. Canadian Club is a ball team.— Oleomargarine ts a Swedish gentle- man. H-20 18 @ submorine—H. A. eee Mr. Dud has been deluded into thinking that a fishing smack ts a particularly soulful kiss. Also that a bull fight ts a fistic encounter between policemen.—Ray. ile Sel a 8 pce aban. He thinks that— Hampton Roads is a pubitc | highway—Jack W. M. A friar is a spring chicken. Cod Fish was named after C. 0. D,| Blake, A scale is a freckle on « fish — Irene Lee. here z And, last of all, Mr. Dudd dis- plays such a lack of knowledge ) that he thinks the paragraphs sent to this column are all fun- ny—R. B, Patterson, 8, eee Rhubarb is a wire fencing. Trapeze is a garden vegetable. —C. M. Patterson. | flights and when !t was found to be “Wholesale Husband” Held | | Ku Klux Klan and tending business |his demands would not be met. absolutely unsuitable to the purpose. The plane, according to word from Amundsen, did not have sufficient lifting power to carry two passen- gers and sufficient gasoline for the trip. for Coeur d’Alene arrest and extradition to Cowur }d'Alene, Idaho, of H. R. Roshon, |alias A. E. Woods, the “wholesale husband,” now held here, was re csived by focal authorities today from the Idaho city. ‘Tho warrant asks that he be held on a charge of “polygamy” as a re sult of his alleged marriage to Alma E. Schnelder in that city on Novem: ber 3, 1920, Roshon has been held in Jail ever since his arrest when a notebook jcontaining the names of 60 Los |Angeles women was found in his | Pomsossion. Ho has confessed, ac: cording to the police, to having married seven times without hav- ing gone thru the formality of @ | divorce. ‘tacoma polloe also have placed | charges against tho “high pressure HERE’S MORE ABOUT TULSA STARTS ON PAGE 1 he was boss and tho orders wore to “olean up.’ Immediate hurried conferences be. tween city officials, leaders of the men got under way. But when the governor reached Oklahoma City this. morning indications were that A few minuten Inter Aldrich the governor's closest ad- viser, announced the censorship of the Tribune would becom effective immediately, husband,” Editor Jones and his associates Unless formal charges are brought have called in attorneys and pre-| here a# a result of the Investign- pared to seek an injunction in fed-| tion now under way of Roshon's eral court preventing troops from | activities, he will be returned either interfering with tho publication of |to Idaho or Tacoma. i INDICT HERO The President’s Pet Dish is May- onnaise, so say the newspapers. ‘The Natio#’s pet Mayonnaise is GOLD MEDAL | M he mayan bu New You. ayonnaise | 80 “say” the Sales — from coast to coast, Gold Medal is real home-made M naise in that it is made fresh daily of new- laid eggs and the finest of in seasonir ¢—the chef's secret that gives thetangy, trasy taste that can't be imitated, Write for a copy of *The Salad Bowl", THE BEST FOODS, Inc. Chiesgo = Kai OF LATE WAR Camel is at home amidst sage- brush and thorny desert vogotation. | A hero of the world war, Sergt John D. Huntington, winner of tho | Distinguished Service Cross and Jother decoratians for conspicuous | bravery In action, was in custody of the United States marshal here Fri. day while he attempted to raise $2,000 bail, set by the grand jury, which indicted him Thursday on a charge of making a false entry in army deposit books, Huntington in chief clerk of dl visional headquarters, 104th division, | stationed ut Salt Lake City, He in charged In the indictment with mak: ing # faise entry in army deposit | books, amounting to $35, at Camp Lewis in January, 1922, Ho was indicted on the charge hero and removed from Salt Lake City to fuce the chargé, in the same district lin which the alleged offense was | committad. | Huntington was decorated with the D. #8. G, In October, 1918, following layon- ItisFrench @ | a Gorfnan position, ing officer was put out of Action and Huntington took charge of the com pany, reorganized it under fire and acedmplished his objective, He ta ono of the founders of Amuroc post, American Legion, at Coblonz, Ger. many, in 1920, City San Prancisee LOS ANGELES, Cal, Sept. 14.) A telegraphic warrant asking the} | receipta would be itr exces of $1,250, | 000 and that only the cheaper prices that prevail and the limited seating capacity of the park would prevent the fight from passiing the record entablished by the Demprey-Carpen:| | ther fight for attendance and receipts. | Despite overwhelming opinion that |]| | Dempsey will win oaaily, there in|}} some good Judgment represented in a few supporters of the South Ameri. can who believe that he has a good) chance to win tho titlo, | Regardless of his crude methods and his Iack of experience, Firpo has more of a chanco to beat Dempsey than Carpentier or Gibbons because he fs bigger and stronger than the| champion, and he can hit a terrific} blow with his right hand | On form, Dempsey should win in a |few rounds if he could still hit “as} hard as he hit Jess Willard at To. ledo, But he can't. ai PREDICTS SEVE? OR EIGHT ROUNDS The champion should win in sev. en or elght rounds, but Firpo has a| ghance to win, and if he should take | the title from Dempsey it will be a| shock only to those who have been | misguided into the, way of thinking | that there t. only one way to do a thing, and that i» the in which it has always been done be fore | Dempsey and Firpo were in seolu-| sion thia morning in Now York. Tho | champion was 4 his sulte at the Belmont hotel, and Firpo was bar.| Headed In his uptown apartment. | They will make thelr first public appearance of the day when they! | visit the of of the boxing com | | misinon to st@p on the scales, | Welghing in {x only a formality, | as neither one has to make weight, | land the disparity In poundnge {a not boing fonsidered a vital factor by those who have monoy to bet either | way on the fight, | Lixted among the box holders for the way fight are tho usual celebrition from theatrical, professional, com Merclal, politieal and social ranks who always assume the role of spec tators at sporting events of interna. tlonal flavor, ‘The preliminary bouts will start at 8 o'clock, and will consist of tho following: Al Roberts, Burke, New Brown, New York, va, York, six rounds, Australia, six rounda New York, va Leo Gatiy, New, York, 12 rounds, — | To entertain the crowd and pro] vent m jam after the muin bout, } Jack Burke, Pittsburg, one of Demp: | noy's sparring thers, and Bill Reod, of Columbus, will box elght rounds after the main event, Mike va. Dan EACH —500 Curtain Corno length, each ... ws {In the 3%¢ group are many Suitable for door panels and curtaining odd windows. terns alike. sin 1%-yard 39c Practical Suits for Boys With Extra Pair Knickers $7.45, $8.95 and $9.85 OTHERS who know how practical a boys’ Suit must be, will recognize that quality in the Suits the Down- stairs Store has to offer for boys of 9 to 17 years. Service- able materials, practical tailor- ing details and each suit with two pairs of Knickers, full- lined and with taped seams. Prices $7.45, $8.95 and $9.85. Boys’ Caps, 95¢ and $1.50 Boys’ Caps, of good quality fabrics, many to match suits, with non-breakable visor and leather band in- side, Sizes 63% to 7, 95¢ to $1.50. BOY'S SHIRTS, BLOUSES, NECKWEAR, UNDERWEAR tore Downstairs and STOCKINGS are in stocks, in wide assort- ments, within a moderate price-range. DOWNSTAIRS STORK Wood-Carrying Baskets, 65c ANDY Baskets, strongly with of splint wood, forced bottoms, fin at 65¢, wood - carrying made rein- In unstained h, low-priced, Saturday, with fine fringe) No two pat- ~—500 Curtain Ends in 1-yard length, each aac STAIRS STORE Knife-Plaited Skirts $5.00 EW Knife-Plaited Skirts in lustrous crepe-weaye fabric, in two shades of Gray and Brown, Beige, Navy-Blue and Black. Sizes 25 to 82. Attractive - values at $5.00, —pow —DOWNSTAIRS STORE Women’s Stockings With 20-inch Fiber-Silk Boot At $1.15 Pair LACK only in these women’s Stockings, with’ 20- inch fiber-silk boot, mercerized top, spliced heel and toe. Sizes 814 to 10, low-priced at $1.15. OLEPROOF HOSIERY—for Women, 50¢ to $2.00 pair. For Men, 35¢ to 75¢, pair. DOWNSTAIRS STORE Boys’ School Shoes Made on the Munson “Army” Last $3.50, $4.00 and $4.50 Aha accompanying sketch shows the important de- tails of construction that distinguish this boys’ Shoe, for wear, for comfort and for yalue. ‘ Made of good quality Brown Nlkskin, with Good- year welt soles (no nails or tacks used in soles), and rubber heels, An unusually sturdy and comfortable shoe, Wieths C, D, and B. Sizes 11 to 1814, $3.50; 1 to 2, $4.00; 214 to 6, $4.50, DOWNSTAIRS STORE