The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 13, 1924, Page 9

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altien, goad B fall of the ah reciated frage. re than to use the mu | es of ©: ¥ much needy: idence It sctentitie Hons made in ong way) fellow man re Vigorous jence than *t for other ctpally in the world pds, would tions. As lency In Faterloo, tn were fired, =| ets | 37 tons. On oe | ar the ounds, rcents ‘Waterioo, ly ch wer, because of 2 in the use Pala trem these who are parkins| cu|(aERES MORE AROUT })| | PARKING | B ve Coolidge Has Named jowan Naval Head py A. L. BRA ed Press cepted the po ve aC ye 8) a of the ave caine after 2 400 e conference with today, Kenyon. House, said preeidest the W fe. aving this | he would immue 8 yrrernoor. The president. a statemen «’ Borah. und of Kenyon, wal white House just of ne purpose of the circumstances Indication of the nat ee statements | ement be tssued | nominations are | Kenyon was} staterent ident, he said, also would Idaho, a close 1s called to the Kenyon left./ summons was | that} could sisted ure ¢ oyu your the ti te the senate? ‘probably just about that time,” ied. po was With the He ¢ finite about it. “Kenyon knows more about a law) than a warship,” Borah re ry dectined to state the purpose | thle call on the president. | STARTS ON PAGE 1 Hh ave. will be abolished in the of the thorofure and confined the curb for hourly maximum a mealize bow Ddlamed funny | to an outsider,” sald Fuqua} . “But the facts are that | wet inte this thing with no other | jyamee in mind than to accommo- a bénch of policemen who | automobiles and who couldn't ‘a place to park them. “| gt a twoyear lease on the ine fer. $80 2 month and the police- ipsa were to pay me $1.25 each for} ide privilege of using it. Then ep began to drop out and I found with a Reavy expense and { to meet it with. "Ho 1 took on a few outsiders. Tm still losing. I paid the @rent money the first of the igh and so far I've only got in there. Ter THe FUSS “Tis whole fuss has been started imme police officers who got sore | ives I took Eddie Hunt off the/ @ ruasing the park for me. ¢ouldn’t make the collections I was worse off with him on pb than T had got him ‘Weck because T condn't find time ito dase the cops who refused to @ for tho parking privilege. Ttook the place back myself be sore and commenced to wt trying to make it ap- am forcing this ordi. stig go it will help my busi- be et rid of the blamed do it, but I can’t because ‘a lease on it for two years. c to let anybody take [my hands, but I can't Gnd iy who'll take it.” NURSING ‘WOMAN'S BODY | bighway, and a mile south of the jhome of her daughter one evening | } \ |eurrendered 0! the interes _ Doris Keane, starring in the drama “Romance,” gives the| lie to reports alleging she seeks legal separation from her | actor husband, Basil Sydney. UNDER LOCS _ | Aged Wanderer Dead; Left! Home Last August | | KELSO, March 13.—The body of Mrs, Katherine Deere, aged about 85, Who disappeared from the home of her daughter, Mrs, William Woodrich, at Owl creek, four miles south of Kelso on the Pacific high- way, was found yesterday beneath two logs about 60 feet from the Acker place on which Woodrich lived. Mra, Deere disappeared from the last August and search falled to dis- close any trace. Only the skeleton and clothing re- mained, the identification being made from a ring with the name “K. Deere” engraved on ft. ‘The body was found by Verlyn Mayclin of Shanghat, who with his father, William Mayclin, felled a treo across the logs this morning. Young Mayclin saw the shoes be neath the logs as he was working, and investigated. The sheriff's office and Coroner W. D. Van Note were at once noti- fied, and the body removed. It je believed Mrs. Deero’s mind was un- sound, and that she crawled beneath the logs in that condition or while il. The body was removed to the Van Note & Leichhardt undertaking parlors. HERE'S MORE ABOUT READ STARTS ON PAGE 1 in 1908 by charter amendment. i Nursing is about the only ession for women on ac the natives of the mppines look with favor, tHe Miss Patrocinio Jamias. : has come to this coun- HY to learn the profession oughly and return fully ped for hospital duties. tis taking graduate work Tursing at Western Re- university, Cleveland, OCH HANS | KARRING Comedy Play in Three Acts the Swedish Language) Sweden's Famous Anthor GUSTAV ay IJERSTAM at the opolitan Theater uinday, March 16, 8:15 P.M. he, 41 and $1.5 ; 4 $1.80, om wale at box of i eadlshAmnestonn tins at, and Sean. Meriean line office, 116 l overlooked the status of McBride un- Health officers are appointed for five yearn. ‘Tho first health officers was ap- pointed March 23, 1908. His term expired March 23, 1913, but Geo. F. Cotterill, then mayor, did not re- move him or reappoint him, but per- mitted him to remain in office while an investigation into charges of leged graft were being preased. Cot- terill went out that year and Mayor Hiram Gill named Dr. McBride health officer, March 17, 1914. Mc- Bride held office for five years, tho his term of office was legally ended March 23, 1918. Ole Hanson came into office and til 1919, when he withdrew, pre-| sumably at the end of a five-year |term. Hanson appointed Dr. Read, whose legal term expired March 23, 1928, but who has been serving a five-year term from the date of | his appointment as his two predo- | cessors did. Kennedy rules Thurs. | day that Dr. Read’a term of office | expired last March. Mayor Brown said Thursday ho had reached no decision as to a successor for Dr. Read, but that one will be appoiated as soon as he jhas conferred with Seattle phy- siclans, Recovered Bodies Lie Fire Impedes | CASTLE GATE, Utah, Mareh 13. —Castle Gate has started {ts sorrow- |ful task of burying its dead. | In the little cemetery on the hill- jside just above the workings where |the 173 men were trapped, seven |bodies yesterday were consigned to |their last resting place. | At Price and Helper, too, services were held. Forty-one bodies were |taken to Prico and six went back to their home in Helper. But in Cantle |Gate, where the tragedy occurred, was paid the most heart-rending homage to the dead. The caskets were borne to the cemetery in trucks. These were fol- jlowed by machines which brought |the women folk and relatives of the dead. At the gate of the cemetery |the procession halted and voluntary |pallbearers carried their burdens to graven, Bimilar tributes were pald by four clergymen of various denominations, following a tribute of the firing squad above the graves of service men, and finally the soldier's last wad requiem of taps. }yat was seen by | wreck before an attempt is made to Utah Mine Villages Lay Victims to Rest RAISE SUNKEN VESSEL | May Find Bodies in Hull of Tacoma Wreok TACOMA, Wash, March 13—For} the first time since xho slipped be-| neath the waters of Commencement bay, September 20, carrying three men and a woman to death, the hull of the Sound freighter Rubal- human eyes yes-! terday afternoon, Three months ago the second two earlier attempts to raise the! sunken vessel was abandoned. The! ship was thought to be tmmova' lodged against nken concer bulleh: of an old plor. The com} bined efforts of a Meet of tugs and @ great derrick were unable to| move the bull. Twelve days ago Walter McCray, Tacoma deep-sea diver, completed negotiations with the San Francisco board of underwriters, who auto- matically, following the paying of insurance, took title to the hull in the event it should be raised, for the purchase of the wreck in its entirety for $200. i It ts thought three bodies will be found fp the hull. They are thoss of Mrs. Eva Hellman, Lynndale, who was cook on the boat; Norman Braase, Seattle, first assistant en- gineer, and that of an unidentified man who had asked for a ride to Seattle the night the boat went down. The Rubaslyat sank suddenly, only 30 seconds elapsing from the time her first list wan noticed until she disappeared beneath the water, She was 65 feet long, and of 120 tons displacement. She was owned by Capt. Ed Love- Joy, of Seattle, and had been in commission only «a few montha when she sank. She was In com- mand of Capt. George Ryan, of Se- attle, who, with five members of his crew, was rescued by the steam freighter Fulton, which was nearby at the time of the tragedy. Mr. McCray will explore of the raise {t completely. Swedish Drama Is Met Sunday Play A large advance sale forecasts a big attendance at the one-night per- formance of a Scandinaylan stago drama in the Swedish tonguo at the Metropolitan theater Sunday even- ing at 8:15. The production is by the Swedish Players, Inc., and t@ entitled “Per Olson och Hans Karting.” One Killed When Train Is Ditched SPRINGFIELD, Ohio, March 13. —One fireman was killed and an en- gineer and brakeman Injured when a Detroit, Toledo & Ironton freight train went Into a ditch here today. The dead man is Andrew Henry, of Defiance, Ohio in Little Burial Plots;} Rescue Work ‘The first seven had been laid away to rest. Fire impeded the work of rescue all day yesterday and as late as mid. night these fires still offered ob. stables. At 2 a. m, it waa reported that probably no more bodies would be recovered until daybreak, At that hour the number recovered stood at 131, Several singular incidents of the catastrophe have been brought to light by the searchers. Pieces of rock were found wedged in the crevices of the opposite canyon as if they had been bullets shot from a gun. ‘The force of the explosion inside can be conoelved when searchers found a 10- ton electric locomotive which had been used to haul cars within the mine thrown off the track and upturned, In another place four con) cars were found piled one on the other, and on the topmost one a man's body was thrown by the forco of the ox: plosion. A horse was found blown into another car with its fect ex. tended upward. {fight pictures which was to net them PHY EAT PHELAN URGING'CAPTURES THIEF DROP OFFICER BOY 1S SLAYER Ys BAN OF JAPS Says Orientals Plan Coloni- | zation of Pacific Coast WASHING N n 18] an, of Calif lef spokesman rola delegation advocating ex of Jag immigration tod we because of thelr roligibility citizenship. His testimony was in reply to a state ment by Secretary Mughes in favor | f including Japan within the quota helan declared gentlemen's notwithstanding agreement,” 38,- | Japanese women have entered \ifornia since 1908, Of every 11| lidren born in that state, one is w 600 now a + “It is apparent that the only wa: to check Japanese immigration ts to impose an exclusion law such as we have nst all other Aaslatics,” sald Phelan, “At present we have! sovertenty to! Jnpan. Of courne, the exempt class of merchants, etc, should | aul enje privileges of com merce, ple nd study, but, In America and Amer the permanent | at be barred,” Phelan said Japanese would not | take offense if the United States | sougtit exclusion’ “In a manty| and pointed out that excludes Chinese and Kor who are racially not very | divergent | “The trouble has been the attt tude of our government in dealing with Japan. ‘There ts more danger of war in the creation of domostic friction by the warring of races | than in politely refusing the Jap- anese demand, which has been pre sented to the committee by mis sionary societies and high officials, said Phelan. oe Pape | | PROBE CONGRESS Seabee | WASHINGTON, March 13. — Sub-| poenaes were issued today for wit-| fesses who will tell a special grand | jury about alleged improper receipt | of money by congressmen, It was learned at Attorney General Daugh- erty's office. Tho grand jury will be convenod| at once. Assistant Attorney General | Beymour, aided by two members and) others of the attorney general's atatt, | will have charge of the prosecutions. Names of grand jury witnesses aré| scholars, Institution he | being kept secret HERE'S MORE ABOUT DAUGHERTY STARTS ON PAGE 1 ] | today demanded the Pei probe alleged favoritism to wealthy) prisoners at the Atlanta peniten- tary. Upshaw aald he had been In- formed “a millionaire bootlegger | named Remus, from Cincinnat!,” was being allowed to lve in luxury | the prison. If this were true, ! Upshaw said, he believed it was be! ing done under orders from Wash: | . | Calling the senate committee's In- | quiry an “alleged investigation of | the official acts of the attorney gen- eral,” Attorney General Daugherty | today gave out a statement saying 6 wag too much oceupled with his duties to make any comment on the |}) testimony of Mra, Stinson about | Jome Smith and Daugherty. “My attorneys are giving their at-|]} tention to the matter to the extent | that they are permitted to. particl-| pate in the alleged hearing,” said | Daugherty. “If pertinent inquiries regurding the department of Suntico | and the offictal acts of the attorney general only were made, and com- petent testimony taken, the whole matter could be fully and finally dis- posed of in a week or 10 days, at the farthest.”* Closely guarded, at her own re quent, the widow of Jenne Smith, who! committed suicide in Daugherty’s| apartment last Decoration day, was Kept in seclusion unti} time for her to resume her sensational story of) intrigue, stock deals and self.sacri- fice. The raven-haired, soft - spoken woman who told the committee with many tears late yesterday, at the start of the open hearings, of the) friendship and partnership of Jesse) PB. Smith and the attorney general, had much to reveal, according to Senator B. A. Wheeler, Montana, chief prosecutor. SUICIDE PROVED ESCAPE She was to take the stand again at 2p. m,, and {t was doubtful, ao-} cording to Wheeler, if any other w ness would be heard today. Tho story os told thus far by Mra. Smith, who was divorced from Smith, but remained an intimate friend to the time of his suicide, was a sketchy oecurrence. Sho sald, under Senator Wheeler: That Jess Smith adored Harry Daugherty and “gave his life" for the attorney general. That Smith, coming to Washing: ton after the élection of President Harding, became involved In a mass of intrigue from which in the end he found self-destruction the only) escape. E | That Smith and Daugherty were) involved in a “deal” concerning ex-; hibition of the Dempsey-Carpentier prompting by a. profit of $180,000. RECEIVED STOCK “WITHOUT COST” "That she, herself, was given 25 shares of White Motors stock, which, her ex-husband told her “didn’t cost us “anything,” | That at another time she received 27 shares of Pure Oil stock, likewise obtained “without cost.” That Smith, proprietor of a depart: ment store in Washington court. house, Ohio, amassed a considerable fortune after coming to Washington. ‘That the dead man was constantly harassed by persons seeking “pat | rondge’ because of his intimacy with the attorney general, Thru all her story, broken by sobs, Mrs, Smith stressed the clone friend ship of Smith and Daugherty and in- sisted that what inyolved one in volved the other. ie! | which [ rAR IN HIS ROOM Tacoma Dope Operative Is ; Dismissed From Force One Man’ Escapes With Watch; Other Is Held amarily at Jeau ‘Th for the ut St was may b caching probe federal officers w Loma of 28 dope peddlers a more recently arrested labanoft on a charge In @ terrific struggle in a darkened the New England| Be Main Norman Richa 4 that t ave. and at. | given, licat aday night alleged burglar action ‘ and é in wh 1 be came to note in th was kn: unconscious, severely wounded and ear ago an Dr. ©, ¥ f violatin finally captured by his intended vic 4 villiam Byron, Byron himself > severely bruised in the struggle. | Ba Byron reported that he was asleep in the room when he was suddenly awakened to discover Richardeon ata | Hotel Workman Is another man searching his clothes. | . . He jumped from tis bel and gravtes| _ Injured in Plunge Nichardson, the other intruder run.| ©. W. amen, ning to the door and escaping. He| ¥#s in the Seattle General he took with him a gold watch owned | Thursday, suffering — from | bruises, following a fall Byron, fierce fight followed, during |from a 1} at the most of the furniture was| hotel, now under construction smashed, Richardson was knocked| Reames enc out with a blow on the head, Byron | 4eath by jracle, his compan: then called the police, and the captive | 4eclared. The ident urred was taken to the city hospital, where | Wednesday morning for several hours he lay unconscious and unable to talk, It is believed that Richardson came from Oregon marriages in recently 922, according to 6239 Carlton ave pit 0 feet! my A at oO} new od serious injury or There was one divorce to ever count census figures, rn Pacific May Sell Paper Admits Killing Companion During School Quarrel Lammers Vulcan ?SMOOTHTOP Cabinet Gas Range Sinclair’s Wife Seeks Recreation BATTLE CRE , » Mrs. Harry the ir ref ther tha red of being hounded by men and FREDERICK & NELSON I FREDERICK & NELSON The Campus Maid* Colonial Patent Coltskin Gunmetal Calf Tan Russia Calf oS HE Colonial is the favorite Spring model in the featured CAMPUS MAID? line of smart Footwear in the youthful style pictured, with square metal buckle and very broad toe. A style for girls and young women, ap- propriate for street and semi-formal wear. In Patent Coltskin, Gunmetal Calf or Tan Russian Calf, $11.00. CAMPUS MAID JUNIOR* wear for younger misses. ACROBAT SHOES—For girls. Smart Spring Foot- children and younger *Trade Mark Registered. —First Floor A New Importation of “Silver-Bleached” Linens From Europe AT SPECIAL PRICES -- is a real opportunity, when Linens in the soft, “silver-bleached” finish, and in very smooth, closely woven quality, which wears and launders so well, can be bought at such low prices as these quoted: Napkins Speciai $6.35 Doz. Napkins in Spot design border, size Luncheon Sets Special $5.00 the same novelty vens the blue-checked mask; sets consist of th size f4xb4 inches and six napkins, size 16x 16 inches. Hemstitched Cloths Special $5.90 ble Cloths, In soft, “silver-bleached" quali in attractive floral de signs, with wide hem. titched hems, size 62x84 inches. —150 dozen —in three lots: with key 3 inches; in floral patterns, size = 22x 22 inches; floral patterns in Napkins hemmed ready for use, 24x24 inches, Table Damask Special $2.45 Yard —heay: durable quality silver-bleached Linen in floral patterns, 70 Inches wide, epectal $2.45 yard. ° Napkins to match, 22x22 inches, special $6.35 dozen. “Silver + bleached” Table Damask in 68-inch width, durable quality, special $1.85 yard. Blue-Checked Linen, Special $1.85 Yard --Novelty Linen Damask fn “stlver-bleached” qual- ity, woven in two-inch blue checks—sultable for breakfast or luncheon sets. Width 68 inches Linen Towels Special 40¢ Each Huck Towels in we: very different from mestic linens, In. “sily bleached” finish, hemmed, size 17%x32 inches, spe- cial, each, 40¢. Size 17x82 inches, with hemstitebing, special 45¢ cach. Hemmed = Linen Huck Towels with damask bor ders, size 17x32 inches, special 50¢ cach. ~First Floor res D- In the Downstair SPRING PROMENADE OF Spring showing—on living models—of moderately- priced Fashions, in Froc SATURDAY—a special showing of Children’s Spring Apparel. Millinery, Shoes and Accessories. 's Store—Friday and Saturday—at Cleverly-designed Novelties in Neckwear Form a Fashion Alliance With Every Smart Spring Costume UGMENTING inter- esting displays of Neckwear are new real- lace-trimmed. styles, for wear with satin or high- color crepe frocks and tailored suits or dresses. New Guimpes with side cas- cades, round or ‘tuxedo col- Jars, or in collarless effects, combining nets, Venise, Irish, thread-run lace and Filet. Exquisite Collars with Cavalier or flaring cuffs, in thread- tun Ice, net and French ribbon, . Smart new high-collar styles with jabots, in sheer nets, thread-run Jace and Filet. Unusual panel Collars huge Cuffs to match. with Rose-point Irish Lace Vests with round Collar and flar- ing cuffs to mate _ New Topcoats In Favored Stripes, Shadow-plaids and Plain Fleeces $25.00 HE side-fastening, belt- less Coat appears in several new versions in this Spring group—often with plain bindings or un- usual sleeve effects for variety. The new flaring style is also represented, some- times with cape sleeves. In woolens of good quality, “turing brown and beige com- and becoming shades y, with full silk lnings, Sizes for Women and Misses, $25.00 The Goat pictured, in a novelty stripe weave, with plain dind- ings, $25.00. —Second Floor Cut Glass Table Tumblers SPECIAL 95¢ For 6 Tumblers of good quality, thin blown glass. Cut in grape and star designs. Special, 6 for 95¢. —<Alste Table, First Floor ) 2:3 0 PRACTICAL FASHIONS Suits, Coats, Sports Wear, —DOWNSTAIRS STORE

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