The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 20, 1923, Page 7

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sey THURSDAY SEPTEMBER THE SEATTLE STAR NAVAL OFFICERS RUSS REFUGEES UNION OFFICIAL WALTON'S FOES CASHIER ADMITS @SNORE WARNING RELEASED HERE TO SPEAK HERE DENOUNCE ACTS STEALING FUNDS Sailing Under Own Reckon- ings When Destroyers Crash SAN DIEGO, That Cal, Sept, 2%. the seven destroyers wrecked off Point Arguello were under thelr own reckon ing ings, almost entirely, at the thuw of the crash, ignoring vices from compa they which in them were’ in the danger zone, today seemed the most important fact so far une f by the of ficial investig Commande ald ¥ " ct \ " 4 s bea I A I beyond Argue pm very RADIO WARNING KILLED BY CRASH How s radio set w dead under } was went minutes after n on the aled a testified he si of course tw inutes o'clock the night of the dis. iw wax a 65-degree left turn| from the squadror original out Ward cour “A. few. minutes later. the crashed. & imme ately tried to sent “by Tyler under orders of D. T. Hunt of embezzling bank fv | day it had been 2 return of th nator and 0 Ilwaco m be a signal | his for an open demonstration with pos- sille violence against the pair, Gov Hart had suggested a change of venue and a U. S$. deputy marshal had teen sent to Ilwaco, CROWD MURMURS AS PARTY ARRIVES Prosecuting - Attorney John 1 O'Phelan resented the suggestion the governor had made, and was determ bodies, t att for all the thousands of }what features Deportation Prevented Conditions in Japan by h . ased on m W D. efug were detained here as being Kons mber quota and were ha i or he ¢ Japan w arded as t to perm’ Ay Russians. . v b will ¥ prot HERE’S MORE ABOU MURDERS ARTS ON PAGE 1 » 1 was ad vanced 1 pt officials who rated vestigating the crim The double murder ¢ k Wednesday morn:| rts and her daugh Lacota beach, | noise of men| of thei elpts of the n currency in bis compar The n had wome smal bodies wore brought by Coroner Corson and take by the county morgue. to Se in charge HERE’S MORE ABOUT STATUE STARTS ON PAGE 1 might be considered as} as models for thiy statue} visit him at his studio, 2611) Eastlake ave. or to write or tele-| phono him. Discussing the needs of the occa sion he writes The Star as follows Editor The Star What typifies on earth—the men wh desirable the greatest fighter American doughbo American t physique and of ould the most ideal doughboys, w type include? Of course there must be some dif ference of opinion here. Some say that ideal should be the belligerent, ferocious type. Others, 2 medium size combination of sev eral nationalities, Still others will contend the American soldier shall the ideal in all respects—perfect of face—clansic. ch mother’s son would | ideal, but I must have aggressive, be President of Auto Trades Employes Coming mH " att pion uy jen di v 4 Ar “ Fed n of I i and, September The committee on arrangements madé ample provisions to er tain their guest,.the special fea rex W ist of musical num y Hla talent; F nt 4 ma " mechan he em er 1 HER MORE ABOUT FIRES STARTS ON PAGE 1 Renjamin | Whe t © oP ni me had stood, at t r for t " . 1, He wa ered b ») ot oge professors were en aged in the same sort of work n yoking for remains of I braries, others for objects of art find where wathered th he work of clear 1 awa powder neya which wreckage continued with dynamiting chim 1 fike great tomb. ds stones in tically the on { among It was considered pr high In the burned ccount of water many ¢ or nts of insurance and ome property owners car GASOLINE TAX RETURNS HUGE) Gas rales tax for the month of} | August were more than $42,000 above lthe tax receipts for the same month In 1921, according to figures supplied | by the state highway department at Olympia. Total receipts from the 1] cent tax on gasoline for the month $128,643. Receipts in August, | 1, were $86,281 and in August, | 2, $110,548. The greater part of the Increase is attributed to heavy tourist trade ax August is tho tourist month For the first § months of tax receipts totaled $698,2 reach $1,000,000 by the end is believed. bile licenses for the year, to returned $3,767,482 or $449,493 more than for the same period last year. MAIL PILOTS ENTER RACES) 8T. LOUIS, Sept. 29—Eight.or 10] pilots of the government air. mail, are Diggent 1928, gan will of the Says Governor Seeks Fame Oregon Man Confesses Guilt , by Coolidge Route When Arraigned BY ROBERT TALLE BANDON, Ore. Sept Unde OKLAHOMA CITY, Bept fi ‘ 00 bond to appe nh federa wennel Fame ane » Portland, October 1, R police strike inspired Governor |. Condon, for mix yea hier ¢ scular fight on the Ku Klux !gt jiberty today, following hin ple ¢ 6 ality to misappropriating th of a bigger goal, they |bank’s funds ) eager for nation-wide pub-| Condon was arraigned late yeater ly representing him as the cham:! aay and confessed to the pocu of law and order, The O) , tion, waiving a preliminary hearing ma vote apparently doesn't inter e * Bre wt him any more than did the Okia.|@nd agreging to appear in fe was of when he ran for § n caret ov Negardie ot Walton's x : een gat g cogs nitoria pur-|UP the amount «300 JAILED IN vintaaiaies | BEER WAR RAID EXPECTED | eee ca eiie woneta {Chicago Mayor Orders Big any wut “pp Roundup of Suspects prmeebiot ery BY L. L. SISK 5 ef wh 8 bout r t every p man and There has t 7 y no ne the hunt, one of t a enicte ll . of Police Morgan A. Collins oma City, formerly one of t Walton’ a pernbald sities o€ Chi tokadaite Had Goy. Walton stopped at Tul. | © oe rah athe rie sa, he might have still had most of ' sig 4 when he announced he was starting y Inw enforcement. | states, unless overturned, have been ” extended martial law | so drastic as to stagger belief. t d brought his mil The constitution ”kiahoma, un t quiet capital and began like the United State stitution, attempt to cow the|which makes certain exceptic ment movement against | gays the right of Bact 1 the [never be suspen cumstances. He t To this his mil added the suppression of fr as politi ATARIST EXTREMES STAGGER BELIEF suppression of the right of cefu The m extremes to which | assembly, and in oné case, since re v. Walton has g nd which |scinded, newspaper censorship by may serve ax A precedent in other the military FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE—PINE STREET—SIXTH AVENUE A Timely Offering of fned that the hearing should be held| for a model the one alone which is/ With their planes, will be sent to the Gk Tiwaco: |typical of all the United States (or| international air races at St. Louis | Early Wednesda and a deupty ate of Washington), | field, here, to compete in the special | sheriff went to 9 from South! holds as the ideal conception of her|300 kilometer race-for mail flyers, Bend to survey the situation and de-| soldier. | October 3, the postoffice department cided that it would be safe to bring If it is possible to find this type,|has notified the air board. the Sinclairs to their home town, and| either thru person or photograph, it| Several of the flyers who particl- late Wednesday afternoon Sheriff} shall be immortalized by use in my | Pated in the successful transconti Chester drove the pair to Ilwaco. The| statue, “The Sentinel,” this state’s|Nental flights will be included. NEW SILK UMBRELLAS sheriff took Senator Sinclair and his| tribute to the American Legion boys | wife to the bank buildiing and en tered the door and the crowd parted | fo make room for the party to go| thru. There were murmurs here and | there, but no shouts Attorneys Tom Fisk and Paull Houser, acting for Sinclair, waived | all formalities and ed that the judge set the bail subject to apnear- ance in the superior court of Pacific county. @POLICE GUARD NEWS OFFICES NEW YORK, Sept. 20 police guards were pos' side of offices of Ne papers where “combined” being published, despite men’s strike ‘The lines of battle were tightened, with men and employers both voting determined resistance to the others’ today out: | York news. editions are the press. demands at meetings lasting into the) early hours. Major George L. Berry, president of the International Printing Press. men’s union, ordered the men back | to work, but they definitely refused to go. After this decision had been announced, the publishers called for @ new union and asked that all the strikers be outlawed. Meanwhile, New York's newspaper readers went without their papers, for the most part. An increasing number of the “combined” editions of dght pages, appeared for sale, but the number was not nearly sufficient to take care of the news hungry ¢ity’s demand ‘There been no reports of vio- q reves early today since the arrest of } five men, who attempted to destroy copies of the morning morning, It way agreed by leaders of both widen the strike appeared unlikely to end today The men wish now their differences directly with the employers, whe in their turn want the strikers outlawed and @ new un- fon established, “combined New York newspapers,” Wednesday fo negotiate |who were k Additional | 44 in Centralia on Armistice Day, 1919. Yours truly, ALONZO VICTOR LEWIS. REVOLUTION IN BULGARIA) LONDON, Sept. 20.—Martial law | has been declared thruout Bulgaria os a result of the belated counter-| revolutionary movement started by | the followers of ex-Premier m boulisky, dispatches from Sofia said | today. Severe fighting still is under way | scores have been killed or} wounded. | BANDITS ARE ACTIVE AGAIN) Fred Hicks was held up and| robbed at the point of a gun by an unidentified negro near his home at 6610 Riverside ave. Wednesday night, he reported to the police.| He claimed he lost $100 and a watch, J. HL Little, proprietor of the Little Pharmacy, 321. First ave. N,,| was held up in his store Wednes- day night by a man believed to be an Italian, and robbed of the contents of the cash register, about $10, according to his report to the police. Auto bandits stopped at the Green service station at O'Brien carly} Wednesday evening and escaped with $40, driving toward Seattle. Pennsylvania Oil Drops Once Again VITTSBURG, Pa, Sept Pennsylvania ¢rude oll toppled in} price today for the sixth time this} year—au cent drop wending jt down to $2.60 a barrel, Fifteen cent reductions were male in Corning, Cabell, Somerset medium |tal of 186% The race is six times around the 50-kilometer triangular course, a to- | miles. Prizes consist of | the Detroit News afr mail trophy and $1,500 in cash Speed nearly as fast as that of the| 200-kilometer Pulitzer world's speed | trophy race, the same day, {9 ex- pected to be attained. Dash for Liberty | Ends on Tideflat| TACOMA, Sept. 20.—A wild dash| |for liberty thru swamps, across the | tidefiats and sloughs near this city} | ended last night in the capture by county officers of Frank Campana, of the proprietor Mountain View hotel and alleged lauor violator, who was arrested here yesterday. After his first capture, Campana | ed thru hia hotel and dropped} into the sound from the rear of| the building. He was later recep,| tured by officers io an auto, 3 Suspects Held | ' for Safe Theft) PORTLAND, Ore. Sept. 20.—Three Suspects were in jail here today, be-| lieved to be the men who Monday night hawied away from a Front st. | drink stand a safe containing $1,800. The three men arrested are Ital jans. A fourth, and the man be' lieved to have gotten the money, is} heing sought. Indications point to the absent member of the quartet as having ‘‘double-crossed’’ his confed. erates by slipping out of the city with the coin, officers way Boy, 17, Dies From | Football Injuries TACOMA, Sept. 20.—-KHlan D, Me: Mahon, 17, believed to be the first victim of the 1928 football season, died from injuries at his home on} Wednesday. MeMahon-was engaged in football practice at a Tacoma high school last Tuesday when he and merset Heht, Ragland war unchanged. | sustained serious injuries to his right foot, Ho gradually grew worse until | his death, be offered Friday at very low prices: straps or rings. In Navy, Purple and Green. AT $4.95—Women’s Silk Umbrellas | of very fine quality taped silk with amber colored spoon or ball tips and | ferrules, made with attractive carved | wood or bakelite handles, finished with side straps, rings or drops, In Navy, Green, Purple, Brown and Red. Navy, $8.95 $4.95 $5.85 | HREE exceptional lots of new Silk Umbrellas in the favorite styles of the season, with carved handles, plain rings and leather straps, to AT $3.95—Women’s Silk Umbrellas, made with taped edge on eight-rib frame, with silk case and carved or plain handles finished with leather AT $5.85—Unusually smart styles in Women’s Umbrellas of fine quality silk with wide self-color satin border, amber colored ferrules and ball or spoon tips, with short, stubby han- dies and bakelite caps and straps. Brown, Red, Green or Purple. HERE'S MORE ABOUT KLAN WAR rARTS ON PAGEL | ategic 5 6 of Oklahom taken eved here to be in ans the “address to the people of the other county officers to remove Klar emblems from public view thruout n many 7 places, ¢ ng GOVERNOR DECLARES ISSUER CLEARLY DRAWN empire under the fiery cron omble themee.vel In —First Floor alsa editors’ desperate attempt to stop in some anner, no matter what cont, this fight upon the Invisible re such @ meeting that if they have any respect for the law and safety o from. 1 call upon al! good citizen sentatives in parti to repudiate BUTTE, Mont., Sept, 20—Osca Rohn. prominent mining man oi of East Mising com ye «fiernoon by a. des fin kip shaft of th Pittamont mine here 1,800 Pairs of 700 PAIRS OF GLOVE-SILK STOCK- INGS, $1.95 PAIR—With pointed heel ‘and novelty stripe; in Black, White, Silver, Fawn, Beige, Sand, Otter and Brown, 600 Ingrain, Women’s Silk Stockings At $1.95 Pair PAIRS OF STOCKINGS, ings, with lisle top, heel, and toe; in Black only, 500 PAIRS OF ALL-SILK STOCKINGS, $1.95 PAIR—Full-fashioned, and well-reinforeed; in Black and many of the smart light colors. BLACK SILK $1.95 PAIR— full-fashioned Stock- sole —Aisle Table, Firat Floor PAGE % FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREE’ Becoming Autumn Modes in MATRONS’ HATS $8.50 $10.00 $12.50 HE fashionable turban, off-the-face and smart novelty shapes so becoming to the matron, are among Downstairs Store displays of Autumn Hats. Fashioned of Hatter’s Plush and Panne and Lyons Velvet Trimmed_ with ostrich hers, flowers, embroidery and ornament -rices $8.50, $10.00 and $12.50. ee New Tuck-in and : Overblouses Of Voile, Dimity and Batiste $2.25 A T TR ACTIVE new Blouses in the popular tuck-in and _ overblouse styles are fashioned of good quality Voile, Dimity and Batiste in plain and barred weaves. H Two of the seven | \ styles are sketched. | i I! Peter Pan and jf” \ wide revere collars are of self material and embroidered and lace-trimmed organdie. Long and short sleeve models. Sizes 36 to 46. Price $2.25. Dimity and Voile Blouses. In Tuck-in and Overblouse Styles EETER PAN collar styles in attrac- tive Blouses of barred Dimity and $1 25 | Voile, with embroidery and lace trim- * ~ med collars and cuffs and inset panels in hemstitched and embroidered effects in front. These are the blouses so smartly worn with sweater and sports skirt costumes. Sizes 36 to 46. —DOWN: AIRS STORE Silk Petticoats Of Radium Silk, Jersey and Messaline $3.95 $4.95 $5.75 O wide is the variety of styles and so complete ‘the assortment of shades it would seem impossible for one not to find the very Petticoat she desires. There are plain bottoms; scalloped bottoms, em- broidered bottoms and many styles of ruffled flounces. All are well cut and of serviceable quality radium-silk, ~ jersey and messaline. Sizes for women and misses. Prices $3.95, $4.95 and $5.75. —DOWNSTAIRS STORE Little Boys’ Suits $1.95 te $7.45 COMBINATION SUITS of wash Waist, with Cordu-_ g roy ce Tweed straight Trousers in button-on style— |] ” 1.9) MIDDY, BUTTON-ON AND ETON SUITS of Serge, Tweed, Cassimere, Jersey and Corduroy. The button- on and middy styles trimmed with braid and emblems —$2.45, $3.25 and $4.95. SAILOR SUITS in Middy, Raglan and Oliver Twist — styles, trimmed with braid and emblems—$7.45, SIZES 4 TO 8. i Boys’ Wool... KA Mackinaws, $5.50 Liga wn Boys’ Wool Mackinaws in double- AQieaeow breasted style, with all-around belt, patch pockets, raglan sleeves and in- verted plait in back. Dark blue, gray and brown plaid patterns, Sizes 8 to 9—$5.50. —DOWNSTAL STORE 14x24-inch Fiber Door Mats A convenient and much needed size Special in durable Fiher Door Mats, 14x24 69 Cc inches 3 special, Thursday ¥ DOW IRS STORE Ps

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