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pUESDAY. MARCI 11, 1924 HyoRDER REVO pLOTS BARED len From Southwest Con- sult Senator Wheeler Ww FRANK GETTY ua Prove Bratt Correrponsten WARRINGTON Mar of genranning and Fs an embryonic Fev WHE SRATTLE BOSTON TRAIN Would Substitute for ‘TWO DROP DEAD|Steals Bill IS WRECKED | Friend to Be Hanged _\N SEATTLE One Man Killed P | Broken in Health, Man Offers to Injured in eee) Fare to Scene of Gallows HARRISBURG, Pa, March Ie~) health, BURLINGTON, Vt, March 11 i job any more Brown ff | Bro) yealth and unable to|4 signtiy, |{OR@ Man wus Killed and more than |! u of n noore Injured when five cara of |hald job any more, W the Boston-Montreal express, travel ing over the Central Vermont rail road, lett the tracks at a point be tween Bolton and Waterbury today First reports her ut these lat offic STAR PAGE 7 ‘OIL PROBE MAY From Fellow | BE FAILURE 4 | Ja il Inmate | Committee Faces “Stone Tries to ye tallow) Wall” and May Have to Quit $10, but Cops AUL, Re MALLS Choke Him ; WASHINGTON, Already in Jail on a charge of rob / GAMBLERS WARY OF ELECTION ODDS AND BROWN LOSES FAVOR QHATTLE gamblers a pronounced case of Tuesday as the voters beg to the polis marked developed ennul odds tendency to Pay Rail | goth Past 60, Pass Away | Without Warning Netting wed a cannot hold down a real and don't see that any more use on earth|morning within It Just looks aslother, Fred Simpkine, startling will have Ibookkeeper of the done ve sacritic keen a God in waa wacrl | died eternal lifelin at Avidizav | dof favoring Mayor for reelection weakened Jay and Monday bets wer placed at $100 to §80 that Brow: would be elected, T . best odd avatlable were $100 to PUNISH the ja in 2021 Perig etic hil efi sman, for ite ag committee tigating } f 2 gperty_ inven’ | Only one bet posted on tw uthweat today the counciimanic race at one of of th | rake Brookh Whe the largest betting headquarters. Benat This was $100 even that Moore See eee eam > eee Will be elected to the council “3 Se ret am talked = eaests £700) nia and oH wrod outlined te case wert an open hearin | Two men dropped dead ‘Tuesday an hour of each | head | Bu atever cond 66, | udelphia, ha sometht ing a stone wall on ¢ Teapot Supply Laundry hime dio. tr friend, Joseph Philadelphia and of the Trinkle, 4 great awaken humanity to @ ‘eation that there tw still ond that Christ would have world for Jome committe collapsed just after arriving | ON: GORI bing one man, %, H. Clark committed the office to forced to close its investigation with demned The b ssihdares begin work, He His wald that 10 were were denied b who sald that Gains, of Burlington, wa ne only man to lose his life A rellef train brought the Injured ngton, where they were taken ompital & second robbery by stealing a $10 wan bill from Jack Watterson, prisoner, Tuesday was in the same cell with Watterson and took the money, which he hid in in two weeks pardohs, to wave refused t Trinkle ution April 7 thi whom | heaven Kirkwood permit. the almost instantly home a drunk morning. pinche ' The welght of high pressure from retie ag aris ts being felt and {n various sources 4 vestigators let it be known toda 8008 Greenwood ave widow and son live Paul Bojssonnault, 60, of 1102 Hoyt Everett, tricken requent for | t proposition thru T will| with k while walking aid in} you to any trouble at Pine st. He © first may be @ selfinh|will pay my own fare to Harris-|was taken to tho city hospital, but 60 yours old, " the ambul ar , where he happiness tit is much Pendent con, NO crooks ty than it is te ide and fight © family has If you can see any way clear put put aye a heart atta 1|acrons Second ave that unless some means can be de . making my hin shoe. Watterson and two failors the robbery | Patrolman Dan Hogan. A 15-minute search failed to locate the minsing bill, which Clark had in his mouth, Hogan saw him trying to swallow vised of breaking thru the obstacles | their inquiry may fatl ure of the committee to ancertain the facts concerning multifarious re ports, rumors or direct information land grabbed him by t neck, chok-| that have come to it. They include jing him, Clark finally, when half} 1, That the exigencies of politics |unconscious, spit the bill out, Wat-|have caused some witnesses con- FRANGS ADVANCE YOUTH ADMITS cayprrive win tet pus |Express Agent Charged With |" ___ [ee Oe tor geennes ieloces a Credit Believes Cause for Aged Kent Man Seriously Stealing $14,000 Rise to 27.30 Hurt in Holdup | ; witnensed and called leepers and coaches left the tracks * swamp (HERE'S MORE ABOUT The accident occurred about 4 a ELECTIO STARTS ON PAGE 1 m. as the train was speeding toward slough dats | er pCreuwacnne |) | Burlington on its way to Montreal. bespoke the | ¥OUld set @ record for city elections | a and exceed the 1920 figure of 83,000, when several thousand more yoters|| HERE’ were registered. Only 92,000 voters fon | have registered and a vote of 85,000! would set an unusually high perce age record of votes to those reg’ tered three day and fell into I am -|rlved there, Coroner W. H. Corson tomorrow ec Thuradsy. bs Figen with the Black owing ties at iat were. among Jere at the office hevier, where the ting the finish of its case | the early of Se GOVERN MORE ABOUT OTHER MINE | STARTS ON PAGE 1 —— tor inve |the face of opposition from high | 2 |Dock Company to i guarters. Increase Tariff | 2. That there ts no evid hence {t cannot be found. nce and 11—| (The com | SAN F 18CO, March T have fought the same kind of a| total number involved in the disaster ‘phe Daugherty comar to train its @THTa revolution w Pet in which, Senato and his colleagues will try , the rebels were alded by es justice IBjges acting under orders from | thing department of ton. | trial may lead up to the mos jon in Mexico- Pao ‘Cantu. the committee will seek t fs that wealthy oll men who Hy to secure favor and conces- | the former governor of Low- ‘was successful, “pulled department of justice, the result that United States ‘were ordered to violate the | ee im the apainst gun running and recruit eo has defi that of de la Huerta—but at the) igart the committee's efforts will be to showing the part they | o. csits Daugherty played in as- fight I would have fought had I been | & private eltizen not seeking office, Mayor Brown said Tuesday noon, “!| opening | have defended the good name of our | WO have been removed the: department's alleged ih the Cantu revolution | jee ay came to city against slander and shall always my Voice for Seattle against those who seek to defile her name."} { “Seattle hay never before failed to jFally to the standard of a clean town advocate," Candi 4p sald. “I am sure it will nc hi Conditions have never beon ,| Moree than they are now, My friends are confident of my el tion Friends of the two bridge bond: were claiming victory Tuesday. No ion to the imues developed | [during the campaign, o| , bikewine, friends of the port of Seattle aleo were predicting victory |for the $800,000 port bond tssue.| A, bitter undercover fight was made | on the port bond issue. but it ts be | jlewed Seattle citizens will indorse the recommendations of their port} commissioners and give the bond | sue a 60 per cent vote. Final addresses by the two candt: | r and thas assist the Cantu faction. | s.105 stonday were marked by en- NAVY HEAD * ee | ®& [0oolidge Picks Man, but Is | tne crostai Poot, said the 121m hour | SILENT ON NEW S22. thusiasm. At the Hellig theater at noon Lundin talked to more than 1,600 people, He made a last-minute ror Brown by charg: | ing the mayor had financed his farm holdings in the Wenatchee dis | trict by selling a $30,000 bond tesue | t® Seattle's underworld. row, at a packed meeting at attack was slanderous. stands at 173. Funeral arrangements are made by the company {sr the min Dea tifieates are being made out b aiclans as soon as positive { cation has been made on each body FUNERAL PLANS ARE BEING MADE A large force of undertak Salt Lake City and nearby working in the morgue the bodies for burial. Comp ficials are notifying the im relatives of the dead men and ing their desires as to the disposition of the bodies: Miners whose homes and families are in Castle Gate will be buried In the local cemetery, where more than 100 graves have already been pro- pared. | The local cemetery will be divided | into plots for the various nationall:| ties, Two carloads of caskets have! already arrived. Company officiaix ® from towns in preparing have decided | Ubut it will be. impossible to bury ail | the local men at one time, Largo fu-| nerals will be held, taking care of aw) many as ponaible. } RUNNING WATCH i FOUND ON VICTIM | The searchers yesterday found a| body, in the clothes of which was | watch that waa running. The time of discovery shows that unless the watch wan started again by the move: ment of the body by searchers, the watch had run hours. Medica | American BY WEBB MILLER (ted Preas State Correspondent) al eck OLN eae PARIS, March 11, — With all Res Sentouned'to She anode rance straining every resource to > F. Tilley,.73, during the up the weakened 1 holdup of a pool hall at Kent Satur. ency, francs opened some day night, acconting to deputy shor. wer tock Dollars were quoted | ifs, franca 30 centimes and pounds Groger, 17, an ensburg | ster Tilley ts in @ serious condition at at 116 francs 40 centimes, | the ‘Taylor-Lacey hospital at Auburn Petit. Parisien confirms a re-| with a bullet wound fn the aide. His t the Bank of Freuce has! rece ry is doubtful. btalned “important ald” to stabilix ight at Auburn by | the france in Engiand States. (This presumably arrested Mon would re tained a three credit of $60,000,000 for | whot the aged man months from a syndicate of a banks headed by J. P. Morgan & Co, | The cabinet meets Thursday with President Millerand to make plans measures already discussed for bet-| Nichols Makes Final Talk in terment of the franc. 1 A us banking Council Battle It was reported vark measures Were under sider ation, | i including prohibition of speculation. | | Declaring the development of mu-} nicipal ownership the only clearc issue in the present city election, | former State Senator Halph D. Nich- ols fired the final gun in his council. | jo campaign at the Beacon Hilt] jonal church, 16th aye. 8.| ist wt, Monday night . who seeks a three-year | term in the council, praised the de-| velopment of public ownership in the| it d state and decla | enterprise “head: | lo asserted that the thaue WITH: LOOT Cafe Man Slugged, Robbed of $475; Chases Bandits 5) hquarte for loy- ‘George I Express Co, agent, officials of the comps wa scondin, at large today, with offi seasion of only vague clues as to| tariff contains both increases and| ment offic unless protests are filed it will automatically be in force ing | on the date net, his whereabouts, The | boarded schooner atus, a: Groger was|Golden Gate yesterday morning. Mrs. tho United | Sheriff Matt Starwich and deputios.|The agent was taking the money to | He is. maid to have admitted particl-|a bank in Sausalito when he dis-| “i ed fer to @ report that France has ob: | pating in the holdup and to having! peared. He had been with the com. | floor window of the Arcadia apart-|hospital, suffering from a fractured Prior to that time | ments, Summit ave, and Union st..| skull and bruises, Monday afternoon, $03 Main st., was perhaps fatally'on the ledge and fell. pany fo \he was an employe of the Dominion Express Co., at Vancouver, B, C. American Rail: | harged by | the ig with $14,000 cash, was ati | ers in pos decreases, man 1s muppored the Vis Iv, r, which has no ind which cleared to have Uster also has disappeared. | ur years. Die From Big Fall! ‘ Falling two stories from a third-| hurt. Shippers were notified Tuesday by | mittee, however, 1 reluctant to be department of public works at with ab | Olympla that the Dodwell Dock &| out a little fire.) Warehouse Co. have filed a new tar: | iff, to become effective April 8. The | eve there is so much smoke with: ‘This situation obtains regarding | reports of a big stock pool of govern- | s, rumors of the so-called million-dollar slush fund, the story that an effort wae made to barter |the necretaryship of the interlor at |the last republican convention and other important phases of the in quiry. | Window Washer May He was taken to the city Murakami was Y. Murakam|,| washing windows when he slipped FREDERICK & NELSON In a Featured Offering to Begin Wednesday Morning THIRD FLOOR: and that his A Slugged on the Awaiting Conference id <i _ BY AL. BRADFORD ‘Press Btaft Correspondent) | ON, March 11—The ry of the navy—whoever en route to 4 for, a conference at fe gald to have made ad by three ban. “Wax well drawn and that the stand son, Ed J. Brown, owna the fruit | ™en feout the th that the man ‘ked Bim in the alley[ot the varioun candidates “pretty establishment for which the | 4d lived and wound the watch, may.| dite who i. well extablis! f ssa wlesrreaey for which ling that thal eandition .cf:.the “air be . Lota ay oe ot, ays eyes hed in thé minds of the Lundin promised, if elected, od bab! not permit a man living Lapafh CMS treasurer of the Lotus was rob-|. “The. progressives of both parti name a chief of police who will be /*Uch length of time. | bed of $475 in cash and a diamond | ail over the state, have supported me | ordered to clean the polite depart.| | Ancther difficult problem the wel-| vig valued at $200, |fare . cia ir} Ll ab Pete eR | hed te cope with is the task of fur,| Torrey had just cashed several sat 4 nishing adequate sleeping quarters. | Checks in a nearby stere and was re- CLOSE COUNCIL Practically no one aleeps more than| turning thru the alley when three RACE EXPECTED five hours @ day tn this town, Ax|Mem, one of whom carried « pistol, Brown promised a continuation of workmen, tired from dragnetting the |J#™ped on him. One:of the thugs Seattle's prosperity. Both candidates | 1 ino, are relieved, they come to town | knotked Torrey down with a blow on issued statements of confidence a8 | x14 drop Into the beds recently held |the head, stunning him, Torrey was to the outcome. Brown's camp pre-| by their successors. Every sleeping | then robbed of the money, the ring, dicted his election by 13,000 major | “Lacie has been taken. ‘The hotel|® ruby, and a wateh and chain. ity. Lundin followers predicted his | 1.15 provided beds in every corridor.| Torrey came to his senses ax the} election by 5,000 plurality. Cots have been flung Into the schoo! | tr!o was escaping, He Jumped to his In addition to the mayoralty @/ houses: men are sleeping on tables, | feet and chased them fhru the alley close race is expected in the city 4 cars and auto. |to Pike st. thru Wakefield's billiard council between certain of the candi. |" uxt (8 railroad cars and auto |e oe ourth ave, The three | dates. Ralph Nichola, John EB. Car. men succeeded in escaping Torrey by roll and William Hickman Moore dodging in the crowd, eee were generally conceded to have the | edge for the three-year term, while | W. T. Campbell's election was all | but assured. shod deetorenty. E, “Bhcrocx, |Overwhelming Force of Blast who fathered a lower wage move in Wrecked Mine | the schools two years ago, has been the target for a strong altaek from) car LAKE CITY, Utah, March 11.—Gov. Mahey, of Utah, returned high wage advocates, Bg Seattie will vote on the Montlake- : ons Stadjum and West Spokane at.|D¢re from the scene of the tragedy | fankstel under bridge tasues and on a $660,000 port |@t Castlo Gate jaat night. He im) i. oe atush and snow early |bond issue, The voters will elect | ™ediately called a conference of | Corporation Counsel T. J. L. Ken. |Prominent men to discuss relief |today and the worst storm the capt perl a four-year term and |™ecasures. tal has experienced this winter George Lamping for a three-year; “The overwhelming forge of the showed few signs of abating. Driv term as port commissioner. explosion that wrecked the Castle|ing rain turned the night's heavy Gate mine would impress anyone Who | snowfall into a moraxs ° . ight visit the camp,” the governor/ a Seek Injunction | tata on Oil Activity One ght-inch water pipes were torn| Underwood Forces [out like straws, the emergency gates ‘ “ . LOS ANGELES, Cal. March 11—| of the mine were twisted and thrown om redict Victories Atlee Pomerene and Owen J. Noblis one side as tho they had been| > LE, may" nig m- erts, special presidential counsel] dig of wire, and steel rods as large crag veo for Be rig arr handling cases in which the govern-| 45 4 man's forearm torn to pieces. | . UI pemeets, sane ate tor the ment hopes to set aside naval oll) '“ony of the freakish things I no.|2*mocratic presidential nomination, leasex, expect to appear in court here were confident today he would win tleed,” the governor continued, "was < 8 de: Bites Monday, according to word received the blowing off of the insulation trom |!" the state presidential primary by by Charles N. Williams, clerk of the t an overwhelming majority. United States district court. Bai ere bones toe] Underwood ty opposed by I'm SRS Cerne ll Cer Ui sanced | Man, who had’ boon ‘werkt with | mmceseye mre Droernare: Cheyenne, Wyo, and seck nn tho ‘relief teams told me that the tion preventing further wae on heat from the explosion must have of the fields leased to a, oll |been terrific. ‘They told me that the| deacons, penaing, Paap mie coal along the walls had actually been coked from the first explosion ares and then was glazed over from the Grain Grade Meet Is Scheduled Here second.” A hearing to discuss grain grades and their application will be held in Seattle Saturday, March 22, by Dr. | Henry C. Taylor, chief assistant of the department of agriculture at ‘Washington, D. C., according to word received by the Seattle Chamber of | Commeres Tuesday morning. Use of the chamber’s assembly room was requested for the hearing by B. L. French, state director of agriculture at Olympia. The Seattle session one of a series of hearings that will} be held at different ‘points in. the state. Winn swnn } WN Cansei AAA OA AAA ATR in this campaign,” he added. | sit WA mt Movie Comedian Fights Alimony | 1,475 Pairs of moves «| Ratfled Window Curtains Dwi Wt 245 Net Window Panels a supreme court month alimopy no joke, and is seek. | of the United States ing to have It cut down. His attor. | ney declared: “He has no money. | He can't pay it. It must be re duced.” ‘The ‘case hax been continued untit March 17, when tho litigants will stage a legal tug-of-war, Mrs. St. John obtained her divorce some months ago, after a physician | testified that she was on the verge of a collapse. STORM STRIKES National Capital Is Under Snow; Rain Comes WASHINGTON, Washington was DIO FEATURES SLATED TUESDAY ight 1934. by United Press |RTATION “WSB. Atlanta, (429 p= meters), $00 to 1145 p, m. ES T}—Anousl ball and cele- ton of-the Atlanta Federation | As Follows: | 175 PAIRS OF RUFFLED 100 PAIRS OF RUFFLED Benttie’s Realty Firms offer their} CURTAINS CURTAINS homes and rentals to you thru The| Star Want _Ad columns SPECIAL $1,25 PAIR SPECIAL $2,50 PAIR —cross-barred scrim, white, 214 yards —dotted marquisette in three sizes of long, with 2-inch ruffles and ruffled dots to choose from; 314-inch ruffles tie-backs. and tie-backs. 100 PAIRS OF RUFFLED CURTAINS SPECIAL $1.10 PAIR —plain white marquisette, 214 yards long, 114-inch ruffles, ruffled tie- backs, hemstitched border. 500 PAIRS OF RUFFLED CURTAINS SPECIAL $1.95 Pair —sheer quality voile, cream and white, 214 yards long, with full, soft ruffles and ruffled tie-backs. 100 PAIRS OF RUFFLED CURTAINS ~ SPECIAL $2,50 Pair —sheer cream marquisette, 214 yards long, 2-inch ruffles and ruffled tie- backs. 100 PAIRS OF RUFFLED CURTAINS SPECIAL $2,25 Pair —white dotted marquisette, 2-inch ruf- fles and ruffled tie-backs; bordered with glos hemstitching; 21%, yards long. 100 PAIRS OF RUFFLED CURTAINS SPECIAL $1.35 PAIR —heavy quality white voile; 2-inch ruf- fles and ruffled tie-backs; 214 yards long. ty Booth Tarkington. j} Matlon WIZ, New York, (455 meters), $:10 p. m. (E. 8. T.). of America Orchestral | Ballon WGY, Schenectady. j Meters), TAS p. m. (E.8.T.) oy egal by Georgia Min- }| Baton WDAF, Kansas City mit meters), 11:45 p. m, (C. 8. T.) : eo frolic for early 300 PAIRS OF RUFFLED CURTAINS SPECIAL $3.25 PAIR —good quality dotted marquisette, pat- terned with medium-size dots, 2-inch ruffles and ruffled tie-backs. Porcelain trimmed 18x18-inch 96 FILET NET WINDOW PANELS SPECIAL $1,990 waAcH —filet net panels, 86 and 40 inches wide, trimmed with 2-inch bullion twisted fringe with black heading; in cream and ecru; 214 yards long. 65 FILET NET WINDOW PANELS SPECIAL $2.25 bAacu —45 inches wide, trimmed with 214- inch bullion fringe; 2144 yards long; in ecru only. 48 NET WINDOW PANELS SPECIAL $2.50 EACH —filet net, in ivory only; 214 yards long; trimmed with 3'-inch knotted fringe; each panel 38 inches wide. 386 NET WINDOW PANELS SPECIAL $3,25 EACH ~—handsomely-patterned Net Panels, 45 inches wide and 214 yards long; trimmed with 4-inch twisted fringe; ecru only. FREDERICK & NELSON TUESDAY, MARCH 11 KDZE—1230 to 1:20 p. m. KFIC—3:30 to 4:30 p. m7 p. m. aad to 840 p. m.; 6:30 to 645. SPRING PROMENADE of Practical Fashions IN DOWNSTAIRS STORE Thursday, Friday, Saturday, March 18, 14, 15 At 2:30 PRING showing—on living models—of wom- en’s and misses’ apparel for afternoon, street, sports and evening wear. SATURDAY—a special showing of children’s Spring apparel. You Are Cordially Invited to Attend WOMAN MADE WIDOW TWICE BY EXPLOSIONS ALT LAKE CITY, Utah, March 11—To be twice wid- owed by coal mine disasters ts the experience of Mra. George Shurtiift of Castle Gate, accord. ing to local officials of the Utah Fuel Co. In May, 1900, Mrs. Shurtliff's first husband, a Mr, Evans, was killed when the Scofield mine ex- Ploded. Later she married Shurt liff, whose body was among the first to be recovered from the wreckage of the Utah Fuel Co.'s No, 2 mine at Castie Gate Just a few weeks short of 24 years weparate the two disasters, the only considerable coal mine disasters in the history of the Utah fields and which rank among the most catastrophic similar tragedies ever recorded Many of the men trapped in this most recent explosion were old |} employes of the company and re. } | lated in rome to those men | | te tt Newsboys’ | BENEFIT REDWOOD CITY, Cal., Marels 11. —Extradition papers for Thomas J. Searle Skinner, Canadian lumnber- man, recently arrested in Vancouver, B. C, on charges by Mrs. Thomas | Searle, local club woman, that be | had tricked her into a fietitious mar | riage in Spokane in 1919, are in the |hands of Governor Richardson and | Prize Fox Trot sad will be signed shortly, It was learned Waltz | todas : \Feel Tremérs on | Chicago Recorder Dalles Man Will CHICAGO, March 11—An_ earth | Hang for Murder as registered on the weather ] 4 iegraph bere today. The| THE DALLES, Ore, March 11, Evans was sentenced yesterday | tremo: t 4:62 a. m. and con: | Abe e tinued until 610 a. m, It reached |by Judge Wilson to bung June 6 for lite maximum intensity at 501 4. m.|the murder of James Doran on the |The distance was 1,170 miles south-| highway between here and Bend in| orwst 66 Chleioh September, 1922. Enrollments will be received in the Down- stairs( Store, Millinery Section, for th SPRING MILLINERY-MAKING CLASSES to begin Monday, March 17 IN THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE FREDERICK & NELSON killed in the Scofield mine. = n SPS ETT $0.25 ic xOm RON eau