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THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1 eT FOU CURB “e Vote Follows Acrid| : Bickerings and Is = Plot for Reply Wednesday night voted ¢ the terms of the American eration of Labor ultimatum cease activities of a radical na- ture, The vote camo after a bit er wr agle between conserva sive delegates and leaders of the ft whig of the council, vote was take e@: by Charles W. n a re Doyle, see 1 Pearl on to adjust t sign the report. The report of the committee dealt | at leagth with the controversy and finally ended by re with the A. F. ts dominated A committee consisting of Martin ik, ptesident of the United M rl and Doyle was named to draft a re-| ply to the fe the accept The accepta the executive board that Seattle labor | confine Its activities to the policie: laid dowg by the A. F. of L. is sati ory to many of the delegates of the local coun: There is a large faction of conservative labor tn 4 attle that would welcome revocat of the local cha: reorganizatio according to Hesketh, a de! LABOR SESSION o NEARING CLOSE e: AND, yates anxiously » gate to the council. folders and time tables, wh t “work yet remains before the American Federation of Labor convention was to be speeded up today. It was cer- tain that the annual gathering will come to a close either late today or after a short session tomorrow. Controversial resolutions are out port urging light wine and . wound up the propositions which debate was anticipated. President Samuel Gompers an Sefretary Frank Morrison will be r fetted without opposition, it beer over is agreed, the 1924 convention city will be chosen, and the delegates will atart homeward, returning to their} Fésidence in all parts of the country. here until Saturday or Sunday. To- morrow night, at a big public mass + Meeting, Gompers and his staff will speak on the results of the conven- » pa a the aspirations of organized OKLAHOMA FREE OF MARTIAL LAW: OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., Oct. 11. —State-wide martial law in Oklaho- tha was lifted today by Gov. J. C. Walton. Announcement of the end of mil- } {tary rule, established by the govern- | or in his fight on the Ku Klux Klan, made thru Aldrich Blake, ex ecutive counsellor, at 19 o'clock this morning. The mandate was made effective at once. Murtial law had been tn force tn the state since September 15. In withdrawing troops, the gov: érnor said the indictment of the Ku Klux Kian tn the state'is now complete; that the military investi. gation is completed anc the legislature to “outlaw” the or. ganization. With the legistature starting a session determined to impeach Gov. Walton, the executive called upon | the lawmakers to enact new stat- utes striking at “secret izations which represent fears, f, religious hatreds.” In 4 message delivered to the legislature, gathered in special ses. ion under most dramatic circum- Qa: the governor reviewed the ‘spread of lawlessness thruout the state during the last two years, He discussed testimony of beatings and floggings taken by courts under. martial law and said responsible. “The Gray the cook fried the eggs, and toa: it it was spread. THE NEW YORK CHICA! EST mending that | ¢ of the way. Approval yesterday af-| ternoon of the executive council's re- | | tast Presttent Gompers and members | of the executive counci] will remain | it is up to/ sehood and military | flatly that the Ku Klux Klan was) Spread It on Toast to Win a Toast the Red Cock Crew” got out of bed; she made the coffee, NUCOA sweet made the toast a treat, for on Finest Table At One-Half t KANSAS CITY 1, 10) THE SEATTLE AR HERE” S MORE ABOUT SHIPS ST. ARTS ON PAGE 1 Hippa fsland, B. C, and is been floated. ed but ie damaged The British steamer El Lobo, which went ashore jay on Roberts bank, near aver, D. C., was exp to be f A today The quator rests on the mud bottom of the Quilayute river, miles south of ¢ Flattery W tearing ole in her be ning on Quilayute bar Fr crew Was saved. he tug Dolly C, which went t the same time, has been os and heavy fog in the North | surpassed in tof similar tions @ year ago, when tive craft went ashore along the| const of Washington : MYSTERY SHIP ASKS FOR AID SAN PEDRO, Cal, Oct. 11.—Ra. dio operators are trying to run down a mysterious “SOS” received ¢ day by thé Radio Ci , and believed to| sent by the Mextcan ship | somewhere in Ww. ¢ the vicinity of C ape Sam Lascas, 1,000 have Gen, local operator reported he re ceived the call clearly, but the rest f the message was garbled, perhaps eto the excitement of the ship | [Operator sending {t or his lack of knowledge of wireless codes. Th steamer Coahuila reported she was in the neighborhood of Cape San Lucas. Her master wirelessed he would attempt to locate the Gor, gas. HERE’S MORE ABOUT PARTYING STARTS ON PAGE 1 particular strip of highway and not taken Into consideration story Just one-tenth mile outside the city limite rises the framework of the new Bungalow Inn, is aflother of old Colont al pe, to be formally opened to the public December 18 to bef ated by C. G. W! ow Op erating Willard’s Chicken Dinner| Place at Silver Lake. An immense dining f.oor occupies the lower story, with private roorhs ranged sround [the central apace. Every private dining room has a full plate glass! door. Upstairs will be the banquet hall, and a 12-plece orchestra has | been engnged to provide the enter. tainment A mile and « quarter further down | the highway stands The Grove, scene of the notorious Lacelie murder of Monday, and about the samo | distance further on, at the opposite | of the road you come to The| n—"‘Seattle's new suburban | | cafe’"—aimost completed and to open | } soon. This is a substantial building of | “I Rave never teen informed that HERE'S MORE ABOUT ROADHOUSE HERE'S MORE ABOUT INNINGS { HERE'S MORE ABOUT NIGHT LIF Ki PAGE # ‘USE AIRPLANE ODD FELLOWS’ Seattle Labor Council Accepts Gompers’ Ultimatum on ee | Assorted Liquors Seized in ) House STARTS ON PAGE 1 1} ARTS ON PAGE 1 STARTS ON PAGE 1 } IN DEATH RAGE HALL WRECKED -. e, 210% First ave, a | meatytie Inesday evening, John Wilson, lows there are dance halls in them," ring Pipp, Schang st ¢|"Mammy” song. Clouds of tobacc F F > ctor, was neld in jail by fed Gaines s F re chicken ponitdulllan relieved bY! smoke lent a bluish tinge to th *| Mother Dying; Seek Son | Mysterious Explosion Shat-|: authorities ‘Thursday morphing, inners are served are not under our 1 h i}a he elderly ma as dancing j + ‘ ‘The raiders found a quantity of h I presume they ho skeep wise the Lee gM ey) rughing A woman complained querulously,| prohibition office. It was ex. ere’ Hoe bitterly ‘anced. Bentiey,| “Well, 1 don't know what to do] In a race with death plane | CARSON CITY Oct. 1A ted that Wilson would furnish NE v TIOUSES CAN « that ‘Tl now, All the roudhouses close at 1] Ww wed jate Wednesday In an ¢t | yaterous explosion shortly after | ba just Below th " | o'clock far Le Poefiryt apvdtngelge dicey midnight partially wrecked the Odd ae everal new roadhouse f it Witt 7 man's yolee responded thick-|to the bedside of his dying mother, |™4 O64) potatoes were. ones Geseribed am ing constructed along VI Two runs, four Whatever y' want t do, An-| City Detective O, J. Van Buskirk | Fellows’ bull at Virginia City,| ing torpidden suit which eaneed te havé not obtained licenses te|.. die in. a: rahe, with If 1 wash|{s the man sought. His mother, |near here, according to a report to| fai) of Adam operate from the county commission | K's\\y Gunns BT gl | ‘ more whober, ‘Thish stuff—|Mary Van Buskirk, was reported |the police here toaay - = era, Gaines said, “but they can get | errors. | Hale & Haig-—naw, 1 tell ya’ 1] Wednesday night to be near death| ‘The bast Is nelieved to have been them when’ they do app! he ‘ HOT INNING ? | don’ want t' be shober, Don’ want/at her home, 1 W. 60th st. Van | ex by a charge of Giant powder, added sec ee ee out ancroft tol 1 go home Buskirk je in the forests of the § possibly set off by a prowler heard “We cannot diseriminate nto the lower right| His volce droned away to a sat-|Juan islands, hunting deer near the bull hortly before the against these people merely be Mausel singled to! istied, maudlin snore | Seattle police detectives were told | explosion | cause a girl gets drunk and Pipr ut, “eae | Hix companion’s voice broke tn] Wednesday that Mrs, Van Buskirk | Robert Plant and K. MeCart and shoots a Gaines said, “I taking’ third, | sharp! wus dying, and immediately organ: | wife, who were sleeping In the build. not think there would be any One run, two} “Tring us some black coffee. Got} ized an expedition to find her son.|ing, said they thought nothing of| padhouses | Snyder flied to Mounel,| to get him on his feet.” Aviator T#o Huber agreed to pilot | the prowler’s presence until the blast | murder | t, Ward to Pipp, Ban-| The orchestra had ceased mur-| a far as Coupeville with | hurled them from t beds. The! ltted at one the other day, | » Boot to Pipp, No runs, “Mammy” and had interred} De wa C, Watson, who will |puliding contained lodge — rooms, | They are investing money in MreTH h regal ceremony, They |m the long journey Thursday | dunce hall and the offices of a min-| their Institutions, presumably on packed up thelr instruments and/into the interior of tho sland to company. No one was injured, the belief that they can make filed out the door, which waa fit-|try to locate Van Buskirk - money operating them, Why, ted with @ chain lock in order that} Di st was selected from @ score | | then, should ot gra the manager might look bts cus volunteers, as be is a strong | ‘* 4 7 Gaines declared that he knew noth he two rn ra reached for 8 KILLED tng about alleged vice and lquor ‘Tenet overcoats and also took the} tions in roadhouses, 1 have never been in a roadhouse 18 MERRY HER MORE ABOUT LINDBERG STARTS ON PAGE 1 | in K inty.. I do not know what A tL ek ig }taken by the bus. The toad ap: {* going on in them. They afe grant-| It had been a long nig gat STARTS ON PAGE 1 [proaches the crossing at an angle, 4d leenses on the theory that they Tentley to| Short mile or #0 bt the Bee Pi but 1s perfectly level dro going to operate lawful eatablish- htley to Relly.| Seattle, The Grove flourished like} The official list of dead follows: 4 ‘ ‘. der ftx| Sorte; > ‘i ne officia of dead lows? nor it is the duty of the) Kelly to fh ot to Kelly, No runs, | String of blu light globes Medgc , ‘3 unty commiasionem, | no hits. n rh, é here that Winifred Gibbons shot) Passing bays be #0 in- Sherif¢ st h ‘Glante fouled to Pipp, Sny< celle to death during a| censed by Coyle’s action that he ruaatlt Sherite Gtarwich whet thie} ger filed co Meussl. iientiey doubled) Harty, Laces, 10, Cray Corning. | issued a statement in which he PiGan Berane, & eater question came ni h ad | ove ‘d, makin, he bag in a 7 ‘ ne r jargure’ untz, Would be enough for me to refuse |#ide. Bancroft fouled to Dugan. No] Two hours previous they Loe | bagi bigot the rons governor Julla Wancik, 13. una, one hit, no ¢ ere, parked tho filvver| to resign ‘ any applicant a lcense. ‘The duty |U* One Ait, no errors, atonned there, parked the filvver| to resign hia post. || oll alncky 1 For Coal or Wood | | of enforcing the law in the sherift's,| | Yankeos—R. Meusel fouled to| alongside eight other autos, and) Bor nat Coyle, by pardom | richard Silva, 8. dice Giemmned: Daas Hot mine, Prosecuting Attorney Mal-|8®7der. Pipp walked. Ward singled} had been met on the vranda by a@)ing Lindberg, “Has done more to- Full nickel trimmed. Duplex | colm Douglas is also responsible for law enforcement.” Gaines said that he did not know| whether roadhouses can be operated profitably only by the Illegal sale of Mquor to patrons, as many people! f: claim. BACKED OUT ON | INSPECTION VISIT roadhouses are séiting Hauor, Gaines said. “I have considered mak- | ing a tour of them, but a friend informed me I could find out noth. ing unless I took a girl and a bot te along. Bo I gave up the project | as too big m job, People would jauite probably misconstrue my mo-| Gaines said that he does not| think the tncrease of county road-| houses will imerease law violation, | or encourage such crimes as thi committed at The Grove a week ago. I don't think that crime will {n- | but I don't know. I have| never been in one,” be said Rev. H. I. Chatterton, secretary of tho Seattle Council of Churches, | said that the delegation of ministers mado a formal request upon the commissioners to discontinue iaruing permita dance halls to operate efter 1 a. m. | CHURCHES SILENT ON BOARD'S STAND “The purposn of the law was to close these places at 1 o'clock,” Rev. | Chatterton said. “There was a clause jinserted. to permit extensions on | | holidays and special events. Thi crease, to | Colonial type, boasting a dancing | | floor f0x50 f{éet, surrounded by 11 ate dining rooms and ai with a large handsome fireplace at the far end. Promoters are Arthur J. Beach and A. Beach, the former having been with Rippe’s for many years. Mr. Beach stated they almed to cater to a high class trade with their | motto— Food for Fine Peo- | dle.” Scarely bad the Plantation faded Fue the background when we came| Doubtiess | for the mill will be plentiful.| the upon Mii. grist It overlooks Lake Washington, and |{s a wood and plaster board struc- jture of the Inglewood Gardens type, having a table alley ranged jabout the dancing floor which large. This building 1s nearing completion, and is a close neighbor en to the Lake View Inn, two-fifths of a mile distant. Without exception these places | Are planned for heavy patronage. Los Angeles Oil | Promoters Indicted | LOS ANGELES, Oct. 11—Federal grand jury men Tuesday and Wed | ne returned indictments against |four Los Angeles off promoters, | charged with using the mati to de |fraud. They ore Joe B. Turman, E. A. Moore, Ernest 8. Phillips and Charles Sawyer. What’s in the Air THURSDAY October 11 KDZE—(455 meters)—Silent. KHQ—(280 — meters)~7:30 $20. KIR—(283 meters}—6:30 to 6:15. KFJC—(270 = meters)—3:30 to 4:20, $20 to 9:30. KFIY—(241 meters)—Silent. to Cock Crew, sted lots of bread. And lity Price FOODS, Inc. SAN FRANCISCO clause has been abused to the ex | singled past Bancroft, Pipp stopping at ond. Schang filed to Mousel. filed to Mousel. No ru: errors. Giants pleasant affable man in drona. To the usual salutation he sponded with a pointed query. Any women with you, boys? Be ‘one hit, no Groh out, Dugan to_Pipp. Frisch out, f Boot to Pipp. Youn: past Hcott. E, Meusel singled to left, Young taking third. Gowdy, iting for Cunningham, flied to Wit Wo rune teh no errors We don't admit stag pa “Sorry thes. a table along.” An inviting burst Yankeos field for the ¢ fingham, Pennock | Kelly. Witt out, ugan doubled to left center. Huth fied to Mtengel. No runs, ene ae no errors. 4 in | floor, An orchestra pu te—Kelly out, Dugan to Ph : Snyder out, Bete to Pipp. Jackson, |atacy over the latest piece of d | batting for Hentley, flied to Meusel. | music. No runs, no hite, no errors if you had any Bancroft to| h to Kelly wolde: Embezslement a: Tne newapaper men aan {00k 5 the task of joy hunting. $306,000 Admitted | sit i visor Beach Manor, quiet CINCINNATI, Oct. 11.—A plea of guilty to the charge of embexaling $200,000 wan entered Wednesday of the grave reigned. terior, It was Wednesday night, er of the American Iowans Expect Ford on Primary Ticket LINCOLN, Neb. Oct. 11—Henry Ford will permit his name to go op the progreastve party primary bal: lot of Iowa as a candidate for the presidency, according to an interpre tation placed today oh a» letter from the ‘automobile manufacturer's sec. | retary by Charles W. Pool, secre. | tary of state |n printer of Venice. tional bank. | Maybe Saturday— |ink, unbroken held ne couple, mbrace, ponmeaved atlence the | dark, rustling waters had no appa hour of midn They were not superstition ing hand. | tent of completely nullifying the law | requiring 1 o'clock closing.” Rev. Chatterton said the commis- | The builders and) soners refused their plea. Chatter: | |ton refused to make any statements jas to the activities |Chureh federation directed at law | violations in Seattle, particularly with reference to grand jury action. “We have nothing whatever to say upon that subject,” he said. HERE’S MORE ABOUT BALL GAME HERE’S MQRE ABOUT | | | the series started. The of the grounds was said Glant management to be about 62,- 000 and they expected a full house. There was just a ripple of ap- plause when Yanks came on the field almost eimultaneously at 12:30. The Giants were ttim and neat in freshly-laundered white dnd black atriped uniforms that they have worn all season at home. Yanks were attired gray road outfits. Batteries— Glants—McQuillan and Snyder. Yanks—Pennock and Schang. HERE’S MORE ABOUT DOCTOR STARTS ON PAGE 1 non bad been a civic leader here for %5 years, and that his reputa- tion as one of Seattle's leading physicians had been built up by years of service | Dr. C. B. Hapyard, president of the King County Medical society, declared. his confidence In Dr. Shan- non. “{ cannot believe that he guilty of such a charge,” he said. “1 have known him for too many years to think that he would stoop to such an offense." Dr. George Marshall attributed the arrest to the work of police “stool pigeons,” who, ho declared, have been entering doctors’ offices and pretending to be on the verge of col- lapse in order to secure evidence. Dr, Shannon was arrested in his office, in the Cobb building, after he had given a small quantity of mor: phine to an addict, on the latter's plea that his wife was sick and he wanted to take her to her homo n Portland, where she could receive dequate care. Action will be taken on the mat ter next Monday night, at a meeting of the King County Medical society of WATER SHUT-OFF NOTIC Water will be shut off on | Hamburg street from Beacon | avo, to Twentieth ave. 8. Fri. | , from 8 o'clock in the morn. | || ing'to 2 p. m inch cp cnrnegnrtninnnent x of the Seattle | stands were sold several days before | capacity | by the! the Giants and the/ The! in thetr blue| * i) FREDERICK & NELSON MN en UII ALN \ Ly \\’ The Victrola Console —a superb music-reproducing instrument and a beau- tiful piece of furniture, is available in the prevailing finishes of mahogany and walnut, and in several dif- ferent models, ranging in price from $100.00 to $300.00. Pictured Is Victrola Console No. 400 | An Adam period model in beautifully-grained, two-tone $250.00. A very fine instrument, with all the nicety of finish and convenient equipment for brown mahogany, at | | which the Victrola stands five record albums This Week’s Record Releases include the following selections of | particular interest: This machine is equipped with DORA CHALIAPIN (Basso) sings * t” and “Song of the F 2.00, mg of the Viking —a 12inch record, at | MABEL GARRISON (Soprano) sings Thee" and “Gay $1.5 nee TI Wirst Met Hutterfly"a 104nch double record at THE BE ot two good Fox Trots Gang of Mine.” ION ORCHESTRA gives a spirited rendering “Foolish Child" and “That O1d A ten-Inch record at 75¢ THE 8. 8. LEVIATHAN ORCHESTRA playa “Down by | the River" and “Louisville,* two of the season's latest and. snappleat Fox Trote—a ten-inch record, 7 evening} Jand discrediting law a re-| anything else that has ¢ of warm light flooded the grounds from the dance} Not « single |person wag inside the beautiful in- |here by I", W. Hecht, former cash-|you know, explained the proprietor. On the long pier near by, dark as away locked In a loving structure. The fact that two rum-runners had | met mysterious death near by in the| ent effect upon them, tho the witch ht wag close at Italte type was {nvented fn 1521 by r | the | Jurors ‘The dancing couples thrilled f to the tones of an excellent tenor |™nths of hard labor to accomplish}on the filing of new charges, he! a rm a. Tickled to death to give you | 4? females | ward increasing the ranks of radicals order than r occurred Mica-paneled No. 18 grates. door. OAKLAND, Cal, Oct, —F. A| Bonnin, former secretary-treasurer of the State Federation of Labor, died here today from {njuries sut. tained in an auto accident several In the state. IGNORED USUAL WAY OF PROCEEDING “It has been a set rule when an| weeks ago, plication for a pardon has been|- made to consult the trial judge, | Sorley’s statement read. Prosecuting attorney and the| “W. J, Coyle can seme the peo-| who sat in the case, but} ple of the state no hette™than by en have all been {gnored by W.|{mmediately resigning,” {t concluded. Coyle, in the absence of | ley was awaiting the return of| with one stroke of} Prosecuting Attorney James Sclden,| has set aside what took | before any action would be taken| who pitinkde Hart, his pen, in bringing this criminal to justice," intimated Thursday. $17.50 front | FREDERICK & NELSON Now Begins Another Season of SWEATERS A NEW season, and appealingly-new Sweaters—in their col- orings, their texture and their cut acknowledging Winter’s requirements, and meeting’ them with smartness. NEW CHAPPIE COATS were probably especially designed for the occasions when a regulation sweater seems too “sportsy,” and a topcoat is nothing but a hampering heaviness. They are as warm as soft brushed wools can make them—light weight—in box-coat or jacquette effect with low side fastening. For walking and semi-sports wear they are the height of smartness. —in brushed mohair, with low three-button fastening, gray, navy and seal, $18.50, —in brushed wool, gray or beige, in brushed worsted yarns, sometimes with fiber-silk bind- ings or with a ale border, with novelty patterned front, pile: $8.50. —in fiber-and- mohair weave, —in brown-and-beige combina- silver-gray, with silver-finished tion with plain beige binding, $12.50, buckle fastening low at one side, $12.50. oe NEW GOLF COATS —intended for many activities besides golf. High-school and college girls will wear them every day with sports skirts—and they will go on Autumn week-end trips and hiking parties. —in brushed worsted, plain colors and patterned-front ef- fects, $6.50, $7.50 and $8.50. —in soft camel’s-hair, in natural color, $10.00. —in brushed camel’s-hair and mohair, with novelty fronts in mingled colorings, checks, stripes and plaids, $15.00. ~—IMPORTED GOLF COATS in English Cashmeres and Scotch Woolens, in individaul effect, $25.00, $32.50 and $35.00, —Second Floor FREDERICK & NELSON