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* trically Nghted at a nominal cost. REVELLE AFTER GOVERNOR JOB U. S. District Attorney to Run as Progressive BY SEARURN BROWN Declaring that his platform would | be progressive thruout, Thomas P,} Revelle, United States district attor- noy, Tuesday announced that his hat is In tho ring for the governorship of the state, “I shall appeal for the support of the forward-looking voters of Waah- ington, when I enter the republican. primaries as an announced progress: ive," Revelle said. Tho development of the state's water power and economy that will] permit low taxes are two planks al- ready hewh for the Revelle platform, According to his statement. “Washington must develop its tre mendous power resources to the fulls| est—and not tum them over to out aide, private interests. Not because of the glory that will be reflected | upon the state by such action, but | Bis Decause every citizen will then see the day when his home can be el Power for the development of Indus: | try looms as an urgent need for the future,” the candidate declared, Taxation, Revelle believes, hurts only when it is increased to such aj Se degree that certain among the people suffer. “I favor a now distribution of taxes that will relieve the burden on the poorer people and put a heavier proportion on the wealthy.” And so, with this much of his plan of ‘government announced, Thomas P. Revelle will “heave tho old top- | #°°RtEeebemensretenee= nips per” into the magic circle of polit| “Photos by Price & Carter cal competition when the primaries U. S. Attorney Tom Revelle open the 1924 gubernatorial cam annownced Tuesday his derby Clark V. Savidge, state land com-| #8 in the “ring” for the re- missioner, declared Tuesday that he| publican nomination for gov- would definitely announce his decls-| ennor, fon in regards to entering the guber-| natorial race on Wednesday. | Block Destroyed by $750,000 Fire Lamping, Hartley and Revelle are | the three outstanding candidates of | RICHMOND, Mo., Deo, 4.—Fire |today destroyed one full block of Western Washington at the present | time to succeed Governor Hart. old frame buildings in the business district of Richmond, with a loss ea. [timated at $750,000 by Fire Chief John Branamen, HERE’S MORE ABOUT FLYZIK STARTS ON PAGE 1 HERE'S MORE ABOUT MURDER STARTS ON PAGE 1 how do you account for that gun being In your room “T can't toll you, I'm sure, Mr May,’ Hall replied, ‘I had no idea it was there, I haven't looked in that drawer since Thanksgiving, I | had a box of candy tn It that I got to take with me to my aunt's when I went out there for the holiday,” | “Well, that's all, Hall'’ sald May.| Then, turning to the man who has been assigned to ‘cover’ him on his man-hunt, he continued: NO PRINTS OF HALL FINGERS ON “IT told you yesterday that T had} found stains that apparently were of blood on the clothes of two reporters, and you couldn't figure that out, aa you told me then you had asked only one man to sprinkle a fow drops of blood on his coat for a clue. “Well, at's the answer. ‘This man Hall] |eluttered up your game by attending | a turkey execution and getting some | of its blood splashed over him “But that ‘murder gun’ that was found in his room? What about | — that we asked him, “Hadn't been touched by Hall," May said promptly. ‘Hall's story A new fishing “bank 200 by 90|/covered off the coast of Labra- miles in extent was recently dis- i KE MAY Brown, re in the clothes previously worn by a dummy thr been fired, lay half sprawled neross a donk, his cfavat disarranged as tho in a atruggle, and his hand tehtly elenched. May ts asked to search for clues and run them down as he would tn 4 regular mystery murder case, M that lay near the “body He Teoquatrypts the murder seene, by tracing the course of the bullet, ax indidhted by the angle of fmbedding and the hole in the “corpse” and te Ho takes fin been told in advance that some one ofthe two dozen editorial men com- mitted the erime), takes scrapings from under the fingernails of each and samples of the foreign matter in’ the corners of thelr pockets, and 4 sample of their handwriting, i He finds the corner of a note in the “dead man’s” wastebasket, read- ing ih ono unobliterated line “it you do” and In another “will get.” Me picks up half a dozen burned ,matehsticks off the floor of the “murder room,” Ho straightens the “dead man's" glenched fist and finds several strands of hair, presumably the “slayer’s," With the ald of a powder he brings out on the corner of the desk, polished only a short time before the “shooting” by the janitor, a palm print not that of the “murdered man." AY, digging the bullet out of the whl where 1t had imbedded Itaelf, found It What It’s All About THE “CRIME” sriminologist, arrives at Tne Star office to find Seaburn port tim of an “imaginary murder,” Brown, dressed which @ bullet has ohne, that THE CLUES to have been fired from @)Sayago gun, not from the Coft 4 “wlayer" was of small size, prints of all editorial department employes (ho has the people, dor, Magnus Johnson, from Minnesota, declared in a state- ment to the United Press on the the judges jcourt even are appointed party In power, and ff that party fs in power for a long time, there may bo a tendency to lean to one s#ide, dential Coolidge's action followed. Federal judges now are appointed by the president, with the confirma- tion of the senate, feel, in proposing the popuiar elec- tion of these judges, that the courts would be made sensitive to public opinion and the expressed will of HERE’S MORE ABOUT JUDGES STARTS ON PAGE 1 new progressive udges are human, I[ realize the supreme of The progressives In addition, the progressive group will push the bill of Representative Stengle, New York, providing spe- cifically for the liberalization of the present contempt laws, ‘The position of Attorney General Daugherty, in denouncing Craig for criticising a federal court decision, drew criticisms from members of both houses of congress today. “Any person, with al to the court, should have the full due respect | strongly in favor of modification of (Union Official Is Held as Embezzler| PORTLAND, Ory., Dec. 4-—John Olson, an upholaterer, Who has been serving as treasurer of the Uphol- aterers’ International Union ot America and also of Noble Lodge No, 184, Vasa Order of America, a Swedish organization, is held today under $6,000 ball, charged with em- bezzling funds of both organiza. tions. ieee COAST IS HIT Columbia River by the the most severe right to eriticise any decision of the court in an honorable way,” Senator “{ believe in free speech, and 1 think any man should be unham- pered within the specifications of the constitution of the United Btates, “The Stengle bill, which is to be Introduced a» soon as the house or- ganizes, would prevent any judge from passing sentence in contempt cases where the action did not oc cur In his presence. “This would enable anyone to ex- press an opinion regarding a dect- sion and would prevent judges from jailing persons who took issue with the correctness of their decisions,” ‘All progressives in both houses of congress pronounced themselves U, & we the coast, Tuesday morning. tle headquarters reported the Marshfield, Ore. A 60-mile gale was at 6am, By 8 a m. ho Little drop Station were forecast. dicted clear weather and a ing in the wind velocity. the present Inw, was true, There wasn't a finger print of Hall's anywhere on the gun, as I learned by checking it against the prints I took of all the Star's ed- {torial men. But I did find on it the fingerprint of another editorial man =the samo fingerprint I found on the barrel of Homer Brew's gun— the print of the man who, after the murder, had picked up Brew's gun by the barrel from where {t lay in his desk and threw {t on the floor | near the ‘body’ as a blind, “I'm not ready yet to mention the name of any suspect, but the net ls closing,"’ “But, Mr. May,” we objected, “what we want to know {s just what you did with those spots on the clothing to make the remark- able discovery that one was animal blood while the other was human. Why, the way the cards seemed to be stacked against Hall, he might easily have been convicted on cir- cumstantial evidence.” “Not a chance,” May smiled. “Ex- perts could clear him in a minute. But maybe you would be interested in the inside workings of blood an- alynis. HOW TESTS ARE MADE FOR BLOOD “The firnt test, of course, ts to NEED COUNTY GRAND JURY TO PROBE THE PRESENT GRAND‘JURY He. about a grand jury to in Yostigute the grand jury? Two dollars cash and a large umbrella, belonging to women members of the King county grand jury, now sitting on ertme avestigations, were stolen from ers in the county-eity s last Thursday and Fri- “According to the records of the international offic the fall of 1920 there was misappro- priated out of the ernational re- Nef fund sent to District 10 for strike purposes $4,044.63. « “For almost one year after that Brother Short, Mr. Harlan and asso- ciates wrangled over this money in the lower courts of District 10, and the we find thae in to hush up the w m: controversy got so acrim: it John B. Mullane, superintend ent of the building, has admitted that the women reported their and asked aid In finding thelr sing property. Like true in ‘ora, they queried, “Who has access to that room?” ne Feptied, | Madam, | the pernons who have access to that small room are members of the cand of all the district officers, the president of the State Federation of Labor stifl playing a prominent role in the se. lection of a slate of new candidates that he could dictate to and control.” Flyzik was d high candidate in the recent election for presidency of the ‘state federation, in which Short was chosen head by an over: whelming majority. I Short polled the of 70 organiza. tions and Flyzik 15. ‘In the final| election Flyzik did not contest. the primary rand jurors are wor- ried a casting apprehensive glances at each other. WALL PAPER AND PAINT SALE We are determined to make Decem- ber as big a month as any other in the year. So in the way of special induce- ments, have made drastic cuts in prices. Wall Paper $1.00 Papers, single roll, all ......50c 50e Papers, single roll, all ........30c Papers under 50¢ marked as low as 5e Paint For years we have been advertising our Wearwell Paint, which is made in Seattle, and is recognized as one of the best. Per Priced $2.45 £4 Smith's Wall Paper House Remember It’. 1621 4th Ave, Opposite Ritz Hotel | discover whether the stains really were blood or whether they were }made by something else. “We scrapo some of the stain Joff the coat on a glass slide and mix {it thoroly with common salt. | ac! | gincial acetic and cautiously | jevaporate it u solidification | commences, The evaporation ts ac-| complished by heating. Tho slide| His then quickly cooled and placed | Junder the microscope. If the stain }iw of blood, brownish rhombold or | tabular crystals of haematin will show. If the stain is not blood, | | there. will be no crystals. | “Once it In established that the {stain ts of blood, we must test far- |ther to. determine what kind of| | blood ft ix There are four methodn lot doing this, but the blologicall | test ts the most dependable and we | will use that. | “In it, it t1 necessary to have a) serum that fs made from s combin-| ation of human and antmal blood. For ney cases @uch ans a murder, like this, where haste In |the examination {s necessary, | get this serum from one of the uni- | versities, Otherwise we make our jon.” | | | we “How is it made?” we inter-| rupted. | “Blood {x taken from « healthy man, as in taking an ordinary blood ltest, and {» then tnoculated into | the velns of a rabbit ur fowl lence has learned recently that a | rooster {s best for this purposa. | BLOOD DRAWN FROM LIVING RABBIT'S HEART | “A week Inter sufficient blood for the experiment is drawn off. It tan't | necessary to kill the rabbit, or other lwubject. A fine hollow needle Is stuck into {ts heart and the blood syringed out without harming the animal. This mixture of human and animal blood then {s placed into a centrifuge, which Is a machine that whirls it with a centrifugal motion, casting off all the heavy clements and leaving only the thin, Ilght-col- ored. serum. It is this serum with ch we work. | ‘The stain that we scraped from the coat is dropped into a test tube | and a solution of nine-tenths of 1 per | cent salt and distilled water added. | ‘Then the mixture f# shaked until it | has « faint pink color, and is poured | into a number of other test tubes. | “An equal amount of the serum is added in each test tube, This ts added by means of a small hollow feedie-like tube that permits It to be poured into the bottom of the tube | and to rise to meet the stained water, | HUMAN BLOOD CAUSES | PRECIPITATE IN TUBE | “In from 20 minutes to two hours} after the serum Is added, if the stain |was human blood, a precipitate will lhe deposited on the bottom of the | tube, ven before that time there will be @ marked cloudiness In the| mixture. If the blood fs not human, | there will be no such precipitate. | “well, after finding that the blood: | stain on Hall's coat was not human | blood, I tested tor other animal blood and found that a chicken’s blood gave | the greatest reaction when I tested it | with known human, animaj and fowl Jn and reptiles, yor nee, have |nucteated blood | when chemic Jed under the micro: | camily Aistinguishable puscles of humans and animals are nat nucleated. “You might bo Interested In know: ing, too, that the anthropold ape Is | the only animal whose. blood reacts | to the ‘human blood test.’ Maybe | \Pryan and some of the other ar | Darwinian theory fellows might lto know that, too, if they don’t kno lit already.” make them as the cor ve got to be off, Tomor: | |rownt'm going to give you some in-| |teroating facts about this "murder. | | halr. You'll recafl that I found |neveral strands of hair in the ‘dead clenched hand when 1] dit out. Evidently ho| 1d pulled it out In the much you can learn from a strand | of hatr furprising | "See you Wodnenda developments in Luke May's man hunt) (See tomorrow's Star for bere } Then we treat the mixture with| | / AC =H ° vee The melody of waves EUTERPE, trailing her star-dust robes round about the home, draws a magic circle wherein all are kin and each is known to each. Generations are bridged in one brief moment by her soft touch. CHARS THE MUSICIAN PASSES ON, but his art, his genius, through the wonderful mechanism of honography, continue to live for you, to be re- eased at will; to still a lenging or to meet a mood. The living artist courteously responds to your moment’s whim. Tedium vanishes, hours pass merrily, on the wings of melody and rhythm, CHER ARTISTS have contrived cabinets of admirable con- struction and great beauty, to encase the music- reproducing instruments of today. Such cabinets, as designed for the leading builders of phono- graphs, are justly valued, in their own right, as appointments of importance in the creation of livable home interiors. (Fifth Floor) Che Dark Ma hogany, Beautifully Figured Cheney “Early Dngttsh” Two-tone Mahogany y “Kent” Let there be Musiv » on and leaves and footfalls hazardous, Where crafty logte shall not keep with us” Frederick & Nelson. the strings let de —John Drinkwater. ©) pr THERE BE MUSIC, ‘, when the holiness of the Christmas season dispels the murkiness of commonplace. Let the peace and brightness of these hours be made more meaningful and memorable _ with music in the home. Let there be hymns breathing the spiritual beauty of that wondrous night on Christ- mas Eve, and gay, old-time carols for the joyousness of Christmas Day. CH? LET THERE BE MUSIC, when the light- hearted gather in your home for care- free, happy hours when the year is Old, and dance their way to the glad threshold of the New. CHARS LET THERE BE MUSIC, when the family cirele made up of young and old feels it- self in danger of drawing apart—Music, speaking straight and clear into the re- cesses of every heart where mere words cannot reach—Music, breathing for Youth the lure of Castles in Spain; for Age, the sweetness of dear memories; for all, the depth of feeling which can find expression in no other way. Victrola 405 Walnut Fintsh Victrola 400 Two-tone Brown Mahogany Brunswiok “York” Walnut or Brown Mahogany Oheney “Salisbury” Two-tone Brown Mahogany Sonora “Serenade” Walnut or Mahogany Victrola 280 Brown Mahogany or Walnut BY HIGH WIND 60-Mile Gale Blowing Off Btorm warnings, presaging one of southwest wind» storms of the season, were broad- cast to North Pacific const shipping for the ensuing 24 hours at the her bureau offices, area extending as far south blowing into the mouth of the umbla river Tuesday morning, 52-mile wind at Tatoosh 7 had dropped to 24 miles an in temperature 1 slightly more than ordinary precip: ‘The report for Wednesday ARSE The average dally wage of the French laborer {8 reputed to :