The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 29, 1923, Page 4

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| Labor Will be Asked to Raise Huge 1924 Political Cam ‘PROBING DEATH SINCLAIR FACES OF RICH WOMAN TRIAL OCT, 11 |Believe $2,000,000 Heiress | May Ask Change of Venue} eressmen pledged to work for abling others to PLAN “BLOC” IN CONGRESS Great Opportunity | for Workers Now Ahead, Is Belief BY LAWRENCE MARTIN Mopyright, 1923 by the United Press WASHINGTON, Sept. Or Banized labor, at its convention in Portland, Ore., next be msked to provide the cam Palgn fund in ity po Hitical activity in cam Palgn. Labor leaders sense a great op Portunity in the present to win for themselves a @m congress that will function effectively as tho farm bi @N Occasions. Labor's politic Portunity, they feel, lies tn Prosperity of industry and the pov @rty of agriculture. Prosperity in industry means @emand for workers ar Workers fee! more 1 fa slack times. ized WUEHt to seize a time of pros %o consolidate {ts p Ang election to congress of a Sive friends of labor. For tn times of prosperity, when worke @ering content by war And fulltime work, em mre able to obtain lex Tegisiative ald and ° Mieasures disadvantareous labbr The farm depression ripens the Bpportunity for continued and closer! o-operation between farm and city | Mabor, organization leaders feel, so | that the two branches of Wnay stand tom "sommon good. Attainment Heal Of co-operation between Pets and labor has been be @fid again by personal j Human distrust, but Jat Have not given up hope P will this year make a str fort than even in tha Labor's convention how the republica tng large sums Poses; how the democrs Wise have « big war chest, an Babor, conducting a non-partias Peampaign, must have money if {t is to back up its o tie | fur week, will biggest hist for the 1924 situation “labor bloc a that means | tha: labor} erity fon by 3 are ren-| pcreases | 3 often ot successes lections w the labor group beat more Hien than it elected. That is iabor| ‘Woled against ce . thus en. ir is time the Plan is for a positive rather than a Megative success. Labor leaders war to elect a definite number of con- | “Organization workers. oor this winter will derable program Demand will he made for fer immigration laws; for re- Or drastic amendment of the mmins railroad law; for Padoption of a constitutional amend. | iment giving congress veto power have before con- ) Over the supreme court and for a was forced 1St } Portland Monday PORTLAND, Ore | timt jot Labor Monday | Both e la | t bel and metal tra finished th business adjourn: builde epartn n convention and only the . | lay tion t this ex and was to check ov }1t was expected to discuss the Seat fternoon Jetalln of the convent fo union was au-| » Fisher, I Chicago. les L. Bi rete J re Matthew Be Joseph O. B presidents; and Washington, D. Tr ple’ and ad motal trades departm itn work yeate’ ned, af its of as fol James O'Con A. J. Borre James W. Kline. icaR ; lin, Kansas City, Kans Chic J. J. Hy ¢ . president ry-treas irer. Joseph John Ch AED; ea, Chica Ko and W. W. Bri . Cincinna’ ol - the department rc urging vice men " rence f given ex-# HERE’S MORE ABOUT REFUGEE SHIP STARTS ON PAGE 1 to m walk the ¢ es to reach t I could scarce! Ket I was forced over the wrecked houses th the streets roads of the ope Tecounted aboard day. ta I was so lame along. to country,” Mahr| he vessel Satur home in Yokohama’ was de:| nd ¢ y one I extricated d rounded ur oldest ribly n them 21. They were #0, to: " my wife all of my by tho: * ehiid labor amendmen bables | Mahr hess and mako Seattle his hea he said quar oo | HERE’S MORE ABOUT ters, art Annual Convention in| University muncll | | Saturday, haw LABOR READY [GIRL IS KILLED FOR OPENING IN AUTO WRECK Student Meets Fatal Mishap i nanenths the wreck it 50th ave Crus! f turned in when at Brooklyn Friday after Miss J I. Cole, of 5402 fist ave. N. EB, died shortly af ¢ age her car over pon, plea er belng rushed to the Seattle poral hospital, ‘The wreck in which she was killed was one of a series of traffic accidents that occurred on Seattle streets Friday Mina O and @ gradua’ Washington ie, daughter of ©. G. Cole was on her way A Latie's home 40: and atl car en by C, Latle ‘ car Bpar pletely ed from t entrance nok 14th st, Friday Mueller ly bruised. The left standing wild whe some Madison Mra, A was ss after 932 17th e had and y auto been the b ran tts ken were manner ocked down by an auto stage Tenth ave. N. B. and B. 45th at on, Mra. W, L, adena pl, was did not lny afternc I The driver dent to be owned by W 513 Broadway, knocke Jown and bruised H. TL. Jones, 63, of 2015 F ‘ording to the po was struck and & motorcycle Burnett, 17 Land at Minor ave, MAJOR HELD IN was « Olive at ciety Fuss Is Aired Milltary ing the my w.s from the third floor of the t y club at Tacoma, to det just what part Maj. John FE of Camp Lewis, took In that io alleged to have pre fall. Gen. Robert Alexander, command- er at Camp Lewis, ft was reported placed Beller under technical arrest and ordered him t the row ied the t pending the res of the investigation. Court martial gest of thom {# @ and the | Proceedings are in the offing for the [gallant major. Sandahl hurled th third floor according to reports, window from the during an ¢ whi was the the ot clu! & Tacoma ty | Picked up five suffering from a frac a prominent He was later a noe! woman hours | tured cheek bone and concussion of| of the University of | ave. | re | } | ‘Beller Detained While So-| | THE SEAT Died From Poisoning | Assistant I vied that a few We died ned ber expect atrict re hour M b Thureday she vat death might “under suspicious ciroum j stances The wealthy friends and wan polsoned. woman's relatives phyatctan. believe fo reoult of a tex! cogolist's report will not he for 10 Coroner | Weatehe fanhlonadle Webb died ts jon her de known dward unty, Fitzgerald er ¢ in which the ated, wan ox DOCTOR FIGHTS YEGG WITH GUN Burglar Routed From Home;| Escapes Uninjured A revolver duel burglar and Dr ner, 504 Boren ave, early Sat urday morning, failed to injure either man, altho bullets passed so close to both of them they barely escaped death, De, Gardner, a prominent siclan of Beatth Was anleep he bandit entered the forcing a window on Dr. Gardner awakened wh over the bed, automatic plato! into Dr. The thug carried a and wore a black mask. Yo quiet,” said the bandit, blow your brains out.” For a reply Dr, Gardner lunged at * m@ked man, striking him a ter fi blow in the omach which 9 intruder clear acroas the tran from the room between a F. P. Gard phy house by the | his the pushing ower vor. nd wife vere eaned flash. to the h Dr, Gardner reued him, The two men halted. the landing, and bo © same instant way and down the ateps seized a pistol and crouching on opencd fire at A bullet whiseed rdner’s head and buried » the banninter, A shot from Gardner's gun lodged tn the wall a nches from the thug's head. ruder then leaped to his feet and rushed across the lower floor and jumped thru the open window, where ed to have been jotned by nion tside as a lookout. Both men fled thru the back yard and down the alley, Dr. Gardner did not pursue them farther. The bandit got nothing, altho there was | considerable money tn house, when Attomey Pecora before was be she ot residence where Mrs.|Bank Examiners May A con. | ural | man] an Gardner's who had been posted| Was at the home of t fa LE STAR SATURDAY Campaign Fund LLOYD GEORGE WOMAN SHOOTS © COMING OVER! AT MASKED MEN | :|British Wartime Premier | Husband Offers Rewand for Sails for America Arrest of Suspects SEPTEMBER 2 HERE’S MORE ABOUT STORM STARTS ON PAGE 14 | From South Bend | | ma eported to have walked | SOUTH COULTERVILL ~ | Declaring that tempted t m, Til quartet of masked intim 29.—Charged ole i ud we SOUTHAMPTON Premier Lio rat Sept Form George 4 te omp atater a na hate his ab © Maureta 4 nia, & hester, 1 nied by Dame thelr of Counetl Lioy Geor Bluffs f 4 t from three to six feet when out of led to a day $300 for ndian f October 11 Sinclatr went ts banks, that million reek Dam-| LONDO! age in elty approximate | admirers half a do! it wag esti | mated |bid him bon voyage. A dozen houses were razed by! The war-time premier, accompan the wind, which assumed tornado| ted by Mrs. Lioyd George and thelr jt | proportions. | daughter, Megan, | in a ponaibiiity that @) The city is without gas, as the!ton, whence they change of be asked to! cas plant was put out of commis|in the day for take the trial out of Pacific | sion by the rush of water, the Mauretania . The dead Dressed in a new sult of blue ® At Louisville—Nobert McCarver,| serge, a lght grayish hellotrope Will McCarver, Mra, Will McCarver, | overcoat and # gray fedora hat, hin Alfred Laird, Mra. Alfred Laird, Mra.|face ruddy and grinning like 13. F. Horran and four-yearold eon,|schoolboy off for tie holidays, | Mre. 1 Four) diminutive statesman was ch | spirits ae Lars Kel-| He made a brief speech. ; ater Richard| “Look for th ‘red | while I'm away.” | Lioyd George moment of internal He in prepared cut Sept. 29—Hundreds of f x-Premier Lioyd Georg were at Waterloo station today to ding to Benjamin's 1 front of } wife whieh and cane in Mary are charged the w house jhis wife Sinclair deporits wae in net fo atherine ving bank been lars, alon with knew has not |in the house the ni tomobile, mask not yet r proact After seizing a rifle, she opened th door when they knocked. “Do you intend to testify Aefenne the her t for Southamy were to nail New York later venue may aboard for the county aq he $10 Gressing tr cause of the widespread A Binc remult of the prejudice a referrt t of men anked > rule against air mn 000 all su bank fa ure, ing, St against he I | tel 7 the truth lou of . tren At Council Bluffs 6 Bmith, ait in e Ma entigat Fac har il C Eee § George Ke out 6 ted napections into Bank Exemin ang John A | Jelatr, forme ident of the defunct | tur eveled t leaves aker fel political erinis and fre his the door At Marquette—Dr, Ward. to short er men car Among the Injured were: American itinerary and return Frank and Henry Mo-|any time in the event of a serious Devitt, 30 railroad men of|turn in general European affairs or | spi | in developments at home that might Kelster and her children were| call for his leadership, as they fled from their home. The former premier reached the atreet the wind j tHe ne Sacetieeis pth a can | Negroes Guarded wn n large shade tree, which | me 8 loo 0 eagerly or ekg ground, killing all|to hin first visit to the United) by State Troops States SPRUCE PINE, N. C., M were on du 4 the automob aft to th Authort waiting b Dow, as both | Houthwest ngton bank at to find the we Perry, Mra here Is a ponnibility that eriminal ‘ be filed against t mplaints may san gcopalgg ? does not an wo men 5 lated, urges naid. | Roupple was killed as he fled from the Wabash restaurant as the front Sept. 29. ioyd George and) George was accom panied by secretary, A. J. Syl his former secretary, Sir William Sutherland and a mrvico man, who will guard British statesman closely thruou the trip. Will Take Drug to | Observe Effects | Cal, Sept. 29 neider announ he proposes to take a dozen | “a powerful South African Haw yet taken by Mzed and describe for science i ef. Mr a Resides here to Megan, LA to bis tamen to safeguard deportation enraged citizens The guardsmen were ordered out Governor Morrison Raleigh when he was advised a mob |ot citizens seek a negro who | attacked white a d stormed ¢ construction nd fo es to rm jon. negroes owing by that buliding colinpsed At Louisville, a score of bulldings TACOMA KILLER | Son of Murdered Woman | berers are reported missing § ‘Three thousand persona attending Suffering From Wounds reus performance in Om were saved from possible injury by cireun empleo: who shot holes in the “big top’ to prevent | ir ed canvas Dambe to the cirous will total $ officials #aid. '5 BODIES IN WRECK FOUND “ASPER, Wyo., 29. — The t relief train to come into Casper the of the Burlington passenger wreck this morning brought three bodies and others arrive abd wered t of 200 ks venter, necret | the were at th | by t th ed n ever to return to wome TACOMA, rake, Sept, 29.—"'For God's speed up the law and get me of this world,”’ eried John Car! of Mrs. Eu an he paced the ft cell in the city jail camp ith aw Dr.|this sec re to leave, the rain out er from pain 1 my raon, jerer il Sa ea i esas ete aiian School Law Is Ruled O. K. HONOLULU, T. H., Sept. 29.—The | Hawalian law, passed by the last ter African savages of certain tribes! ritorial legislature, requiring it at ceremonials and its appar- | foreign schools to be fa- eff o their American hi ry and in- f fear | d to be able to read and Dr. H. H | write the English language. held who brought the drug to this coun-| constitutional today in a decision by try, has furnished it to Dr. Schneider | Judge Frank Andrade of the circuit for the experim court chneider will conduct his test In| ‘The law is almed at Japanese lan- Portland, Ore, within @ short time,| guage schools, 300 of which, with 20,000 pupils, are affected. lded in rted that Carl offered ¥ to a charge of second they expected the p eb: an, degree that mm! James W attorn Selden, will fhe pmecut ' Bept | teachers rge of er tirst degree 5 At th hospital 9-yearold Arthur Anderson, sen of the mur | dered woman, is fighting for his life | He was badly injured about the head and face by blows Inflicted by a milic | ttle in the hands of Carl 4 ing to police. With a bandage around the flent wound in the right ankle, which suffered during the scuffle, little Rusby of New Jersey. was expected Those r Wid passenge Z E. J. Klove, Cheyenne, Wyo.,| brakeman. | Albert Hill, Garden City, Kan, \¥ear-old Bunice Anderson, whom po-| passenger | Nee found on erriving at the house| The following bodies were recoy.| are as greatly at variance as Friday morning nursing her brother, | ered Inte yesterday: | when the first wild tales of the r uncle and} D. EB. Schultz, baggageman, Cas.| disaster were carried to Casper. J. Bawteile, | per They range from 20 reported by passenger,|the rallway company, to 70 snd | 80, declared by some passengers, to have lost thelr lives. accor Moutlse, nnison, Colo., 1 tance from the wrecked train. Figures on the number of dead New Minister Is z 5 Given Reception Rev. Ward W. McHgnry, the new pastor of Woodland Park Presby- terlan church, and his family were entertained at a reception in the church parlors, N. 7st st. and Pala: tine ave, Thursday night. Music and oratory were on the program. nt, Mr, urday Mrs. Anderson's husband, Arthur , Anderson, has been employed by the 8. P. & 8, railroad near Bteven and Mra Schmets, 2, Wyo. Hoth of these men had been thrown clear of the wreckage. | son, Wath. and has been away from | Schultz landed on the opposite bank | i. home for xeveral weeks and died shortly afterward of Inter He was apprised of the murder by! nal injuries. Schmetz was drowned % telegram from, the local pol and his body recovered a short dis ——$—$$ The Bon Marche’s October Trade Sales start Monday. Sce Sunday papers. | PPORTUNITY iStar Want Ads WIFE SUFFERS — ho brain. It ught at first | a ) Narvest the stand of timber. | city receives $250 per _ WATERSHED STARTS ON PAGE 1 WKincaid, biologist college of science ‘the University of Washington, are) aenisting me in studying the prob | dem,” Russell said. “I am prepar-} "Ong « report for the council and the} Muayor, covering the situation. I} idon’t just know which policy is the best to pursue in the matter, but I Mwant to see a tree standing for every one taken out. It is essential.” | Russell declared that it is essen Rial to have fir, cedar and spruce 1 am awaiting orders from h quarters in New Yo 6 firm here. ishment ($500,000), to establ Tokyo the estab as valued n it should not assume the same pro- portions here.” Little “Angels” Aboard Grant Two little eels” aboard he Presid jrant when she doc jaturday morning. They are Derick 4, and Robbie Angel, 3, sons of Mr.| and Mrs. Derick Angel. Neither the| nt 1,000,000 I see no | a were a-| his injuries would prove fatal, | had started. ut | he now has almost completely sieed covered | The the affair et ropped | several weeks ago, almost before it! nve: tgation Inte autho: ight on tho affa: the Investigation Ninth corps Francisco, whether tiled will be made jer Is @ graduate of West Point! ‘The will be headquarters where results of nent to at San as to mar dect be n Beller wilt cour igtowing there to kili off the alders| P@rents nor the children were in-|@d has been in the army for 17 ‘and other insect bearing trees. When | Caterpiliars appear in the They are always found on the alders| and the underbrush. > In the meantime logging opera- ions are continuing in full fores) “upon the land. The city council! B few years ago let a contract to) the Pacific States Logging Co. to} The} thousand | feet stumpage for fir, cedar and| #pruce and $1.01 per thousand for| hemlock and white pine. To date the city has received a| total income from the logging op-| erations of $265,599.26. Logging| started in October, 1919, and a total of 101,993,000 feet of fir, 3,111,000/ fect of cedar, 24,575,092 feet of | hemlock and 000 feet of ‘piling Have been taken off the land, A total of approximately 2,500/ ®eres already has been shorn of| Mts natural growth of trees and Ways bare and scarred to the eyc.| The timber stand is far heavier! than first estimates taken 10 years Ago. At that time it was believed that not more than 200,000,000 feet Stood on the city’s property. This| estimate was low by fully one-halt,| dudging by the amount taken from the acreage logged. The city does not own all Yand in the watershed area, Proximately 22,145 acreg by the United States government @s @ part of its national forests system. The Northern Pacific rajl- ‘Way owns 14,187 acres and approxi. Mately 10,000 acres are owned by individuals in small tracts. The city’s acreage totals 42,187 acres. re are 91,471 acres in the water. Buperintendent the Ap. are owned Russell declared. that the logging operations are being conducted in an excellent camps are as sanitary @4 it Is porsible to make them, and are under the strict supervision of the city health commissioner, 29.—Lee H, to was of the Al- Sept. Tandis, San Francisco, named general manager Aska railroad by Secretary Anterior Work. Landis’ appointment 1s effective Monday. Aandis is a railroad yearn’ experience, man of 20 «saa Reatalal dath tae The Bon Marche's October Trade Balen start Monday. Sce Sunday | escaped further Injury of the | jured in the quakes that destroyed ship by storm and were the fay ites of passengers and crow, eee Mr, and Mrs. Milton Seymour of Seattle, who arrived aboard the President Grant, are believed to experienced as harrowing ad. ventures as were recounted In, con- nection with the Yokohama horrors. Seymour was buried completely under a mass of timbers and masonry when his home was de- stroyed. After an hour of tireless work by Jiro Tatsumi, a Japanese music pupil of Seymour, the stricken man was finally rescued, Mra, Sey- mour was taking a message in a room on the second floor of their| home at the time of the quake. She was hurled thru a window by | the shock of the first temblor and struck the pavement heartily. Roof | tiles, timbers, stones and glass show. | ered the street near her, but she Tatsumi companied the Seymours to Seattle. see ir | | | | Among the refugees who were not| Included in the passenger list of the Grant, but who were thoroly satis: fied with their lot, were Benny, the | pig, and Tobie, the goose. These two stowaways were found aboard the ship after she cleared Yokohama, How they managed to smuggle them- | selves past the customs officials is not known. Immigration Inspectors here were In a quandary Saturday morning as to which nationality they should be called. Immigration quotas of sev. eral nations for September have been exhausted and it in believed Benny and Tobie will be admitted as Ameri- can subjects, inasmuch as the quacks and grunts they emitted were div. tinctly United States in diction, Red C poke Carks for Refugees The 69 refugees, 31 of whom are destitute and without funds, will | be cared for by the American Cross and the Chamber of relief fund here, The of them will register at hote! until funds have them from friends and Com. mi. the been rela meres jority Bush font tiven, Capt. M, M, Jensen, master of the vewsel declared Saturday that conditions in Yokohama are not as terrible as was at first believed, district,| Y2Kohama. The children took the|!n the late war an \{ HER . | ship Red} rendered useless, years, He served with dist 3 was wounded. MORE ABO’ CHAMBER STARTS ON PAGE 1 ber of commerce in the state in the movement. | Besides this campaign, the state! chamber will bend its efforts toward the creating of an effective market-| ing plan for the farmers of the state. | Lively explained Saturday that the state chamber of commerce is posed of representatives of organi abor, farmers, manufacturers, dairy: | men, financiers, lumbermen and| other producers of the state. Five representat from each cong sional district in the sta’ comprise the board of directors Lively was appointe of the st chamber two months ago. He has had ide ex. perlence in promotion work, having uperintended many exposit! in the United States. He time United State South America was a Red Cro: Russia the Ci merce. C. L. Coffthan Is president of the Washington organization. The pub lielty program of the state body had It# inception at the State 560 ciation mecting at Bllens com: to manager. ate x at and during the war " major Later he was identified with ifornia state chamber of com Pre urK, safe for navigation and steamers are plying in and out did before the catastrophe, The ocean floor was turbed as severaly as ed, and there are navigation in the forts on either trance were however, according to sen, ‘The great guns in all directions, the ar crumbled they as not wan meni The grent of the en. demolished, Capt, Jen are pointed foundation have & Jensen declared the const dls. report. no "i bay side completely and n Lighthouses commission, but are eight their original positions, cording to the master of the Pregl dent Grant, along co! ar in feo! below Constance seen in a screen version of Wdgar Selwyn's play, “The Mirage," It will follow completion of “Tw Danger. The harbor is now regarded ai ous Maid,” The probe by military | Mrs. ’ | authorities under Maj. Bertram Cad.| moved bef | walader, it is believed, may throw|® crowd that packed every foot of «.| Detween O'Keeke and one | ait in northern | and they | way | ng. | the | simadge will be next | coutinved DAY OF HORROR During an afternoon of horror, Loulse Burckharit mat un. the curious eyes of available audience space in Judgo Calvin 8, Hall's courtroom Friday, an with after witnens took the stand and told of Mra, Burck hardt's alleged indiscretions, Occasionally a faint flush @pread over her features, At times dark eyes binzed defiance at her husband, Frederick Otto Burckhardt, former wealthy Alaska canneryman whom she is # for divorce and the custody of their 10-yearold At the end ‘of a day of tent! mony that wearled even Judge Hall, with all hig experience In divorce hearings, Burckhardt was granted permiasion by the court to call for his son at 6:30 Friday evening and retain til 12:30 Saturday The ation the day, for the auditors, came when a depo from Tillie Edge! now told of the him wu nen ead n dt maid, who reniden N. J. This quent visits to the Burek- hardt home of Jerry O'Keefe, now said to be In British Columbia, and of the alleged intimate relations Mrs. Burck- turekha in Newar alleged fr hardt CHARGE KISSED “He ki her hair the depos MRS, BURCKHARDT THE CHAL cUR d oher lips, her #he had beautiful stated. “They arm, and would room by the hale lon down stairs, In the iiv came arm in ing hour commiasioner in|He would visit her bedroom and sit on her bed and stroke her forehead. ‘Th was ill for a day He would come right after break. fast and stay all day, Many times 1 have served breakfast in her bedroom. Jurckhardt was in bed." Mra, Burckhardt ed with having kiswed pan, the chauffour the house during the visiting there, Two policemen, Oscar Lee Redden and H. C. MeLennan, testified to the midnight visit the Burok- hardt home and to finding Galpan hiding under the rafters, in a partly dressed condition. All of the maids testified to the kindness of Burckhardt father nd husband and to his good charac ter and disposition Attorney Edward Chavelle nounced the attompta by rant Hurekhardt the boy at the end of testimony, Judge Hall the father cen oniy unc noon Saturdey unl Monday, It ia that Mrs, Burokhardt deny the chidiges and testimony full when sho te called back the witness stand, hair while sho two, them while Mra. Maurice Gal. who was in tine O'Keefe aga do motion to custody of the day's ruled that his boy he cuse was pected will in | her was also charg. | ox: | METROPOLITAN SEATTLE’S LEADING THEATRE—FOURTH AVENUE AT UNIVERSITY STREET HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! HURRY! POSITIVELY LAST WEEK sx7 2:30—8:30 10 Miles a - Americans Al 100 Miles an Hour In 1848 they tradged In 1923 they cleft the across the plains air like birds TYEARS before Yankee ingenuity outdid the birds, hardy American pioneers with white-hooded “Prairie Schooners” toiled across the plains between the Mississippi River and the Rockies and down the Western slopes of the Great Divide into the golden land of California and the fertile valleys of Oregon. The wheels of their wagons transmuted the desert sands into gold. The pebbles kicked up by their horses and oxen crystalized into the diamonds Hs our queenliest social leaders. Their outriders broke the pound from which springs the grain to feed the world. heir thrilling story is tol JESSE L. LASKY Presents THE COVERED WAGON A PARAMOUNT PICTURE From EMERSON HOUGH'S Novel The Film Epic of America Produced by JAMES CRUZE ‘ey ARIZONA \t~<t. AT KANSAS CI (then Woatport Landing), at St. Jo, Omaha and Counell' Mutts the Wagons catherod starting the spring, When grazing was Xe 8 ls traveling by various SE the dangers through which they passed, the adventures they encountered, the hard- ships they underwent, their joys and sorrows, their labors and their recompense at PRICES—MATINEES, 30¢, 50c, $1.00. NIGHTS, 30, 5Ocy $1.00, $1.50, PLUS 10% TAX GRAND ISLAND whence they started arduous journey across charted plaing They di fi and flood, hunger and thirat, ba flea with Indiana, In the ‘sume mer they passed OLD FORT LARAMIE and looped thelr way north and then south agaimto the border of Ctan, Hove the California trains parted from the Oregon, ploncers, the latter trickling Intom OREGON where the fertile lands awaited their ploughs, The gold seckers turned southwest to the newly found treasures in the Sierras and sought their wealth with pick And shovel Instead of the plough.

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