The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 9, 1923, Page 9

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| ~ — a | FRIDAY, NOVEMB STUDENT FACES MURDER TRIAL! wards and Wofle Case Is Heard at Valdez VALDEZ, Alaska, Nov. 9%—With tho jury box temporerily filled and two dofense peremptories exercised Just before adjournment ‘Thursday, the selection of jurors for the mur- der trial of Robert & Edwards of Seattlo and Ralph Wolfe of San Francisco was to continue Friday, The men are charged with the Slaying of George Edwards of San Francisco, August 17, while the three were making a trip across the Aleutian peninsula. Edwards, who was a student at tho University of Washington when 192: BANDITS WORK IN THICK FOG Jewelry Store Robbed; Lone Thug Poses as Cop Working under cover of a dense fog which effectually pre- vented them from being discov. ered, bandits committed — two holdups early Thursday evening, escaping with over $750 in cash and jewelry. A Jowolry store at 1230 Jackson at, operated by Mra. Ying Sing, was the }first place to be victimized. ‘Two well-dressed young men entered the store at 6 o'clock and asked to soe some diamonds, Mra, Yirx Sing |whowed them a couple of dlamond jrings and a tray of other articles, he came North last summer to/The thugs suddenly snatgned the work in the salmon canneries at|/ diamonds, which were valued at Lidbyville on Bristol Bay, displayed No nervousness in court. His wife, | $500, a gold bracelet, four gold rings jand $100 In cash. They fled from alse a recent student at the unl-/the shop to the street and were In. versity, who lived at Newport,/ stantly lost in the fom. Wash, ia with him. A lone holdup man, who posed aa — | a police off stopped K. Akiyoshi, 317 Mayn driving nt Lake Washington hivd. and Lake. | wood pl. ‘The bandit flashed a star POLICE GRAB SUSPECT TRIO jena Pe eh ist pistol, Akiyoshi Believed to be a trio of men who} a ewindled thousand of persons in Se- attlo and other Northw: es dur TEL BER ss tng the past year by selling bogus|| HERE'S MORE AKOUT magazine subscriptions, D. F. Dra goo, E. Devaul and Carl M. Rone- gud will be brought to Seattle to stand trial, according to Information received at the postoffice inspector's | office in Seattle on Thursday. Dra-| whole NDORFF ON PAGE 1 LUDE government of the German oo wasyarrested in California, the| republic, including President Ebert, other two men in Oregon. While operating in Seattle, the al- leged swindlers rented an office at 30 Mutual Life building and repre sented themselves as handling a branch office of the Subscription Li dDrary company, an alleged fictitious | Organization with headquarters in| PARIS, N Allied ambasna- New York. Numbers of persons, an-/ors in Berlin already have made swering their advertisements for so-| clear to Chancellor Stresemann that Neltors, sold ‘‘club'* magazine sub-| they are opposed to a military dic scriptions at attractive rate’, which/tatorship in Germany, the corre were unauthorized by the publishing | spondent of the Journal telegraph. firms concerned, officials assert. ed today, Dragoo and Devaul were promo-| ‘The correspondent said the Amer. ters of the scheme, and it ts believed |ican ambassador Informed Chancel that Rongerud may be one of the!ior gtresemann that in event of a | deposed. NO DICTATOR, dozens of persons who worked in| cou; tt b coup d'etat by the right wing good faith were SADE rach groups (monarchiats) the United innocent of intentional wrong doing. | § # will announce that it has ndoned plans to settle the repar- ations question. ; The council of- ambassadors, after & meeting here, has decided to send note Holland and Germany, sumably about the danger of an nding monarchist coup in the HERE’S MORE ABOUT BURCKHARDT to a ARTS ON PAGE 1 One of the principal points in the| , Tie note probably will be sent to- sensational divorce trial, which held | 94, !t was said in well-informed public attention for several weeks | WArters and will announce allied last month, was custody of the boy,|PPosition to the proposed return Frederick Otto, Jr, age 10. Judge|/f the former crown prince to his Calvin S. Hall, in awarding her a de- | Silesian estate at Oels. cree, also gave her custody of the| A Munich dispatch today said boy, but provided that the father|that Adolph Hit leader of the should have the right of his company | Bavarian reactionaries, addressed the op name of thw co ive societies in the new government last from Saturday morning until Sunday evening, BURCKHARDT SEES SON BUT ONCE “Do you think he has aval self of that right?" Mrs. Burckhardt f fe asked, her dark eyes flashing indig-| “There is much to be done, It “No, he hasn't. Only once,|may be dangerous work, but called here at | will conquer Germany’s enemies and 8 o’clock—just to pester me—and I| In the end we will make the father. dressed Sonny and sent him with | land what dest! intended it to be him. At 10 o'clock the little chap|—a proud and solid empire.” came home alone. His father had| . ked him who he was going to te’ ; the court he wanted to live with. | Bavarians Sought Help From Hungary as arrived for which ed him. | we waited patiently for five “J will say my mother,’” Sonny | answered. | “Then I will pat you in the juven-} n BUDAPEST, Nov. 9.—Further ar- ile home until you are 21 years Of} rests were expected today to fol age, if you say that,’ his father told| that of the nationnlist deupty, him. So Sonny left right then and came back home to me.” } Attorney Edward A. Chavelle said Ulain, held on a charge of fonter ing a military plot to support the Bavarian monarchists under Adolph that he had not protested to the| pis, court against the failure of Otto In return for Hungarian ald, it Burckhardt to pay alimony. Burck-| was said, the Bavarians promised hardt gave Mrs. Burckhardt $3 ‘D) to aid in overthrowing the Buda- October. ‘The November payment was due November 1, Chavelle said. pest government monarchy. nad restoring the Attorney Clay Allen, for Barck-) There appeared Uttle likelihood hardt, said that the final decree and|tnat any plots of the Hungarian the findings of fact and law had! monarchists will succeed. Press not been handed down by Judge}and public here seemed firmly in Hell. Burckhardt has not refused to pay the alimony, Allen said. “A} business man usually has until the| 10fh of the month to pay his busi-| néss bills.” of the gov rnment. . | support Rupprecht Is Not in Bavarian Plot LONDON, Noy. 9.—Crown Prince pprecht, of Bavaria, is not taking ny part in the monarchist move: ment started in Munich by Adolph HERE’S MORE ABOUT CAPPY RICKS STARTS ON PAGE 1 change Telegraph company Munich ts y and m ning in their behind barred doo) in a while th 4s replaced which indi homes oul-pier tes the smolde of “Cappy’s” spirit and the indica-| Troops are using severe measures tion that Captain Robert Dollar |to suppress all disorders. would be a bad man to cro | SS aE a ee “1 don't want to talk | ik toy hie thee Arrest Jeweler thing, and besides I usual With W. others do the talking when it's nec ith Wet Goods A little talk goes a long} Caught in the act of transferring I've got to get back to} six of bonded whisky from that’s Captain Robert 1 automobile to a Jewelry store lar, or “Cappy Ricks,” if you please. | 603 Third ave, Samuel J. Lavison, | proprietor of the store, a | McClus! Acquitted Woman = |}? Returns to Home|» Stanley y, alleged bootlegger, were 6 court charges of pro- law violation after both had waived preliminary hearing before CHICAGO, 9—Nellie Coulik,| yy Commi H. 8. Elliott acquitted of charges of giving a rsday. Levison was laying in a seni to her cousin, Tillie Kilmeks| stock for his own use at the time with which Tillie is alleged to h of the arrest, according to prohibl tion agents. Tho men were re- lensed on borids of $500 each, which were brought to the’ commissioner's office by thetr wives. Train Hits Motor Bus; Five Killed hust 4 nd her 12 spending more poisoned several of he went back to her home children today after than a year in fail. Mrs. Koullk was found not guilty by a jury in criminal court on the] first ballot. Oklahoma National Bank Closes Doors |,,, RI ople ‘Tra GUYMON, Okla, > 9.—The | when the Chesapeake Texas County National bank was|& Ohio filer, westbound, crashed closed yesterday, when s gelinto a 24-passenger auto bus a of more than $35,000 wa vered| quarter of @ mile east of Russell upon the books. Deposits were | station $140,000 9 | Oregon Indian, 113 Years Old, Is Dead Ore, Are Your Glasses | Up-to-Date the hour usco Indian wom ave been 113 years fi of reading and Christmas ¥ 1 intend Mary, hose tribal name doing “Daughter of the Swift Wate a Am Ah born near here in 1810, according to With ¢ the history of her people. If the records of the Wasco tribe, Huteson-Donahey down by word-of-mouth, are Optical Co. tio, she was 16 years of age when £L jot-4010 108 Pike St, | the flrst white man, a Catholic priest penetrated to this region, | ALLIES ORDER| we the Berlin correspondent of | JURY HEARS OF COVELL DEATH Husband of “Slain Woman Tells Story on Stand COQUILLE, Ore, Nev. 9.—'The trial of Arthur Covell, broken-back- ed astrologer, will be resumed in earnest today, when Dr. Wred Covell, brother of the accumed, will again take the witness stand and continue his story ef the circumstances sur. rounding the death of his wife, al- leged to have beon the victim of Arthur Cowell's malign influence over hia nephew, Alton Covell. Crosmexamiration by Defense At- torney Claude H, Giles indicated that Arthur Covell, helplessly crip: pled and facing a life of suftering, jis willing to face the gallows to shield others of his blood. Pale and wasted, u to move, the accused man lies stretched on hin cot before the bench and ap. parently is less interested in the proceedings than the most casual spectator, Dr. Covell, | Thursday, | in hin testimony told of being summoned |home by telephone and that his daughter Lucille: had broken the | news to him of his wife's death, | | He had no suspicion of foul “play | until he was arrested the following | night on a murder charge, Clashes | between counsel occurred, as Giles, | during cross-examination, sought to establish that Dr, Covell's attitude | | was that of self-protection: Court adjourned with the witness } still facing a grilling crosz-queation- ing. | A RAINIER LINE OFFER SCORED Prices so far quoted by the Rainter valley railway as a tentative value |upon the property are three times [the actual value of the property, jCouncliman Oliver T. Erickson said | Thursday before a meeting of the city utilities committee, Erickson scored the efforts of the company to force purchase of the lnes by the city at a,greatly padded figure Erickson declared that the easter way would be for the clty to pur ase $100,000 worth of motor bus equipment and run buses to the dis trict. He said the last appraisal of the line placed tts value at $200,000, while the last offer of the company }set a val | system, | ‘The railway 20 of $1,600,000 upon the company’s threst to] raine fares unless rélieved of fran. chise obligations was to come up be fore the council finance commi |late Friday afternoon [EVERETT FIRE CHIEF IS LOW EVERETT, Noy, 9.—With but ght improvement noted since an| JOperation was performed Thursday to relieve the pressure of fluid in his {ri lung, the condition of Fire |Chiet W. Taro, who has been Jeonfined to the Providence hospital neo he was Injured in « recent au: | accident, was reported as grave by his physicians today. The lung, | |Which became congested ax a@ re.| sult of be punctured by a broken | jrib, has drained the strength of | |the patient until hi cove | doubttut | Two men were killed and several chances of re. are regarded ay extremely | more or less injured in crash between an auto and a truck | in which Chief Taro received his/ | hurts. . |Notorious Bandit } | Said to Be Alive | OMAHA, Neb., Noy, 9.—Tommy | O'Connor, notorious Chicago gun | man, is living in Sioux © Towa, | Henry Yackey, atate agent of the| [Towa departrr |in Omaho today, declared. | | “L arrested a member of his gang |the other day and he told me that] | Tommy was stopping at the Swanson | jrooming house under the name of Tommy White,” Yackey said | Yackey sald he had no orders to| arrest O'Connor and wouldn't try to| do it single-handed, as Tommy al-| ways has a personal guard of three| gunmen with him | He sald O'Connor had been run-| |ning booze from Canada during the| |Past few months and that his head-| | quarters wa D. nt of justice, who was Minot, |Suspect Captured After Wild Chase} After a live chase, which fol-| 4 his escape from. Federal Nar-| cotic Officers Irving Brown and W.| | J. Patterson at Third ave. and t nlon | afternoon, Ray Cook | placed in a cell in the L office tured and| marshal‘s| and George Nev | rested in front of the federal bul after the officen watclied. ¢ change a large bindle of mort | |for a $5 bill. Cook suddenly | from the officers’ grasp and ro |waa downed by Patterson af | short chase thru the crowded ral cet tr | Use Star Shells in | | Rum Running Fight NEWARK, N. J., Nov. Star |shells, Which played an important |part in night trench warfare during the world war, are being used with success by prohibition agents guard ing the Jersey State prohibi tion Director Chamberlain states, Yc eT ae What’s in the Air || WHAT'S IN THE AIK coast, Adrian Friday, November 9 (455 metors)—12:30 to 1:20, |] 8:20 to 9:30, | 4270 metera)—B8:30 to 4:3 | 4231 meters)—Silent | | (283 meters)—6:30 to 6:15, || | ; | (280 moters)}~Bilent | | KHC HH mi na th) Tre Biggest, Jolliest Circus Parade Captivity Nearly Three Blocks Long Filling 20 Show Windows (Count ém) from Head of Parade to Calliope s 4 (OOF - WOOF ~the trained GRIZZLY SEE! MA-HA-RA-JAH - The" WISE; the “One and Only SEE ! BINGO and SLICKO (Here We Are Agari Wy) Good Old SANTA is right at home in his TOYTOWN Post-Office — with a letter,asmile and a hand- shake for all his little friends Ma) MONKEYS by the Cageful CLOWNS / by the Score; ANIMALS, morn a milyun( . - see them! ~count them / ~ tease them, A 4 \ \ \}! See the Big Parade in the Windows then see SANTA -in TOYTOWN ~in the DOWNSTAIRS STORE. Sra eee ae am 1 inquired Of pretty Ay heanaeh CRASH VICTIM TACOMA, Nov Mal. G |Camp Lew! tainly er of suffered a broken rib, Lifeless Form of Nurse Is|* severe biow on the head, bruises Burr Babbitt, comma Littl reer jand cuts yesterday when his tm MI neh. ti Found in Kitchen ousine overturned after colliding The cloth | witt other automobile in a dense Costs too mech The mysterious death of Mrs) ee en ope tne den i fox on the road between the camp Francesca Mardenioa, 41, a nurse,| ona Nisqually All my clothes who was found dead in rooms at! ‘he generat was taken to th By the inch. ee 5407 Kensington place, Thursday| hospital at Camp Lewis for treat ee ne Bekow | night, with gas filling the air, was|ment. Liout. Edward N. Starr, elde 7 * |de ¢ » to the general, and the e to be Investigated Friday by Coro-|4® camp to t " DAILY MAIL Mew. tte | solatee eheutfaus. of the, limousin in Mectle Peete escaped without Injury, as dic CMB Se Seats te etCe TOPS 6 ivy: seallenive wan tetind dead cor eiiaue an ihe Otis’ Gee aquarium get curvature of thé) by Miss Cora Cottrill, housekeeper) “Rappitt and his aldo were being spina from deing kept tm auch|at the Seward hotel, whero Mrs|taien to Nisqually where thee cramped quarters.”—Newspaper). Mardeniea lived. The body Was! planned to catch a train for Port huddied against @ stove and, altholinnd at the time of the accident Dear Homer: There's fish out at| the air was full of gax the Jots| 15 iajor qeneeal came here re my house who has curvature of the| from the gas range were not turned! Ny ron, Ben iwancieey anil took spleen. I don’t understand this, as] on and there were no leaks in the| Command ot the camp Nevember 1 he never allows anything to cramp] gas pipe ; | his style, Should I divorce him?) Mrs, Mardeniea had been in ill| |, A | He's the only poor fish I've got on} health and had attempted suicide) Stinnes’ Son Will | } my string? a yenr ago, 1s was sald, widow, FIVE KILLED IN EXPLOSIO She is a CONSTANT READER. Not Visit Seattle} Hugo Stinnes, son of the famous |German financier, and his wife, now In the East, will not visit Seattle, as formerly announced. Such was the word reoeived Thursday by the G, F hoepelborg & Co., Seattle represen: | 49uHfq 879019 qojym olmudde ox 4 ‘ate OY) TO s} OfsntT fh, 10 435 C fo THEY UL N OUTSIDE STATIONS | TURN KINGSTON, Jamaica, Nov. %—|tativea of the Stinnes interests. A r 23 a“ - 4 Five men were killed instantly and| wire tro the Stinnes party, now jn KPO—(8an Francisco ,423 meters) / | wire from th 1:00 to: 2:00, 4:80 to’ 6:80, 8100 BM LMC LEO MMM 9 | four badly scalded when a boller! chicago, stated that they had ca z m islet a of the Janaica Fruit Shipping com-|aeled the proposed California ad to1 a.m { arr ak TOWN Baay'i cagtearad’ ateacioe cor ncead | raciatn reine RACNEA HO ATE SAIC 1 Bere 2" 8 te 7 rl P May exploded, it was learned when} tails, The Schoepelborg firm repre 6:00 to 6:30, 6:46 to 30, 8 to 12 * |] KHJ—(Los Ani A UPSIDE the ship was towed back here to-|sents the Stinnes interests in China "49:80 to 1:16, day. Y and Manila % | to 1:30, 8 to 4 | Two passenger including Joseph EAB bds va | Di Giorgio Vaccaro of New Orleans,| Sugar cane was first cultivated In te Portiand)—3:30 to Weta ak Voroaethas ite dane coal AHH! worg not injured. They landed to-|the United States about the year hie out snowy 8G Puy toqe =WA | day, [A7st. ! " u S. GENERAL ‘Oregon Income Tax Kp Measure in Doubt PORTLAND, n, Tod-| of the vote cast Tuesday seems cer- | necessary the state income tax bill is finally | somewhat altere “Polly, put the Kettle on and we'll all have Tea—and be sure to make plenty of sand- wiches.”’ GOLD MEDAL Mayonnaise ives to sandwiches that teasy, tangy taste that always brings | the call for “more”—a taste so different, so distinctive. “so bet+ decided. Nov. 9.—A recount 0, the fate ot | how In almost every official return, rer, befor ter", that men are now “willing” tea guests, and women guests beg for your sandwii recipes. Here's a recipe to delight your guests and to pass along: GOLD MEDAL Tea Sandwich: Chop to- gether cold chicken, celery, Brazil nut meats, a little pimento and a few a olives. Mix with GOLD MEDAL. MAYONNAISE. Serve on a slice of pineapple between thin rounds of buttered bread. THE BEST FOODS, Inc., U.S.A. Unofficial figures Friday morning: indicated that the bill has been re @ Jected by a margin of from 100 to the unofficial figures are

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