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; enant Who Took M000 May Be in City ge conmtwrise Ralph Brovr following rec a Las An Brown was | ° where be was seen We ane nowed the @ strain unde his efforts to from the vigilance of federa! His eyes were bloodsh: en, and his face, normally deeply lined wife secretly ee re and gave her $ San 000 paymast: Gk Blue suit with a pin gay overcoat, STAY Li part He is said to use th we F. Martin and FS. R ene [08 ANGELES, April 5.—Searc Leat. Ervine R. Brown, missing paymaster, continued yout fhe West today, directed by federal gaidorities here. Hapert that Brown was Qgia, Utah, before he came here ry in the week, for the dramatic peeing with his wife, Mrs Daisy frees, was being investigated as a clew to the $20,009 or more ayy funds stil! un- Ogden was to the ef. | aman answering Brown's | in that city on} and opened a joint sav-| it under the name of C. Daisy Brown. seen in i} I aay r ip Hell for Murder of Newly- | weds; 3rd Victim Lives | With the deaths of a young Pome ty man and his bride and the prob. ‘aie fatal shooting on an aged wom. #5 of hishands, Ralph Waller, Butte hiner, was Beld in the Walla Walla sty fall Saturday pending ar. a first degree murder His third victim, Mrs. Bar | Waldman, is still living in a ala Walla hospital, but her con. | Is critical. alleged to have confeased ly after his capture in Lewt Wdaho, Friday morning, that he and killed Mr. and Mrs, Alfred at their Pomeroy honey- home Thursday night thru y of his sweetheart-sister-in- fand the man who married her fatly.- When Waldman's mother | to a telephone to summon aid, | Lewiston police officers ,he her several times. She suc- ‘id Lewiston police officers, he m@ tho carrying several bullets in| be tad. was returned to Pomeroy | and was then removed tie Walla Walla jail, in another mity, when Sheriff E. V. Powell fated possible lynching in the home fem of -his victims. WANTED YOUNG BRIDE i 1k AIMISELF j _tealows because the woman he! Wrthad married Waldman, Waller Mi Police Chiet Eugene Gasser in| Tevston Friday that he came from to Colfax, Wash., purchased a! Mol and went to the Waldman| at Pomeroy. | | le Wmocked at the door, he Is al- ic to have confessed, and called: fsa letter for you, Wald. ¢ young husband opened the ‘S&, His bride caught sight of the Ban and out. Tien,” Waller told the Lewiston | 3 “I shot Waldman with the i my pocket and turned it on j I shot her, too. Ons shot 4 oof, them—she screamed as > er tagd Tushed to the| Me er said he shot her | before z | Tushed “ Outside again, loaded | cs Doheny Trims Hams and Sells Buffalo Meat at Leavenworth w I Made My Millions,” by K. 1 politician and central figure in the This is the third chapter of Dobeny, millionaire oil magnate te oli investigation Copyright BY E. L. DOHENY OBS were scarce, I could find none in Atchison, so I drifted on to Leavenworth, Its fame had been flashed the country over on the label of hams, for Ryan and Whit taker of Leavenworth were leading packers of the day. So I reported to their plant and got a job —trimming the sides of hogs. Six to fourteen hundred animals a day would go down the chute and past the long table at which I worked. The quarters I had to handle weighed from 50 to 60 pounds each. The work wasn’t much to my liking. But I stuck to it, for it was a job—and a job was my main concern in life then, For my labor I got $1 a day big boss, came by, looked at the small, undersized boy at the table, and wanted to know what he was doing there. “I'm doing all right,” 1 told him, But he thought I could do better elsewhere; so he gave me a commission to go out on the street and buy the hogs from the farmers as they came into town, I knew most of them, after my experience as book agent, and I had little difficulty getting 50 to 75 hogs a day But business conditions became bad. It was the winter of 1878—the year of the great panic, and intense frost out in Kansas much cheaper. To add to the general depression came the Russian epi- zootic influenza, which attacked all horses, and killed many. Oxen were used to pull the street cars, Then came the great slaughter of buffalo, which helped bring on their extinction. Ryan, with his usual enterprise, arranged for the purchase of 2,000 buffalo hams. These were expensive, and my employers wanted to real- ize everything they possibly could. So they gave me a new job. They made me sell the spare parts and scraps. I stood behind a counter, in part of their establishment, — and became a retail butcher—specializing in spare ribs of buffalo and pork tenderloin! Business was good. But it was not the business I liked, home. So I decided to jack myself out of it; or else I might be shunted into a butcher’s rut for the rest of my life. Finally I found a way out. WOMAN SOUGHT HAMMER SLAYER AS KIDNAPER KILLS WOMAN New Mystery Crime Discov- ered in Los Angeles Motherless Lad Disappears in Motor Toward Bothell | A mysterious woman motorist was| LOS ANGELES, April 5 —Another being sought by police and relatives | hammer murder mystery faced po- Saturday to solve the possible kid-| lice today in the search for the slay- naping of Goodwin Ober, ll-year-old|er of Mrs. Vera Stone, beaten to son of George Ober, mining engineer, | death late last night in her apart residing at 5011 12th ave. N. E. The| ment. boy disappeared while en route home from school about 3:35 Friday after. | of the woman's clothing giving ev noon. is Riving evi But one day Matt Ryan, the f People burned corn instead of coal, it was so| With the room and the condition | dence of a terrible struggle, the body | |sole remaining |merly happy home, is gone. Tragedy stalks the footpath of the heartbroken father, Six months ago Mrs. Ober died. Today the lad, his link with the for- There has been no word of. Good. win since a playmate reported see = him conversing with the woman in an automobile. climbed into the car and it speeded out of sight toward Bothell. Good- win was a pupil at the Untversity Heights school, HERE’S MORE ABOUT AIRMEN STARTS ON PAGE 1 to the west of the others, was seen to glide across the water, throwing up spray that gleamed in the dull gray surface of the lake. “They're off!’ the shouted. And then the spray ceased as the plane came to a stop. Several more times the spray appeared and ceased. Then slowly the squadron taxied to the wharf, Major Martin's plane in the lead. COL. GILMORE IN AERIAL ESCORT Local airplanes which had mean- watchers had came back to the fleld and landed. been circling over the lake, apa Sot back inside just| Among them was Col. W, E. Gil-|tween former of the 29-year-old beauty was discoy | ered by her bar, when he returned to the apart | ment the two young women occupied | shortly before midnight | Mrs. Stone's clothing was partially |tern from her body, police discov. been broken and scattered over th: | room. | Mrs, Stone’s throat was scratched |with long, deep wounds, while her |sleull bore evidences of having been | crushed, presumably with a hammer | A hair dresser by profession, twice |married and divorced, the woman was known to haye many friends, |her sister admitted. One of these, jsaid to have been with her fre. |auently, Frank Heyfron, of Holly wood, was arrested some hours after |the murder and is being held for questioning. George Dunbar, father of the dead |divorcee, told police he had talked jover the telephone with his daugh | ter early in the evening and she said she “felt fine now,” following a slight heart attack, Party Split May Endanger G. O. P | WASHINGTON, April 6.—Danger she could reach the| while taken off from the field an#|0f 1 real split in the party faced ro- | publican leaders today ag a result of the increasingly bitter quarrel be- Attorney ister, Miss Pearl Dua-/ General | MAYOR SCORES COMMISSION Declares Policemen Should Have Been Tried public forma by the commi # reinstated by thority of a of Police Beve ion to the con from asking per ette ryns withdraw nat Weedin, Withdraw rges, the mayor ommendation 8 Charles the charg raid, w of Capt nant and W Weedin ix all > have assaulted upon « street while Weedin toxieated condition Corporation Counsel T, J, L. K will nked if the commiss authority t niss the Weedin without a jtrial by the Hubn ommins na, the man downtow Was in an against forma commins after in his fay ion of the « de. He amplaint of Mrs who charged he m her was dismissed Adolph extorted mon the guise that he an a federal prohibition agent The mmission sald that Chief Beveryna « others had been not! | fled of the aring, but did not ap. pear I do not think thority to dismins charges against of. ficers without a formal trial," the |mayor said, "The commission will destroy the morale of the civil serv vice organization by such tactics! Both men will remain on the police force, the commission said OFFICIAL TRIES under this board has au |for it was not to survey the sides of hams that I had left; T0 END LIFE \u. S. Vice Consul Held After Repeated Attempt | | FESSENDEN, N. D., April 5 rapped to a cot in a hospital here, George Henry Richardson, Jr. viee consul of the United States at Auck New Zealand, is under constant to prevent further attempts at nulcide. rdson was taken from a Soo Line train here on of the | orew after two attempts to kill him welf, After being brought to the Jcounty Jail he renewed the efforts and was strapped to his cot Papers in his possession showed h arrived in Victoria, B. C., March }and was on his way to Washington |to take a civil service examination. Ho is a son of George Henry Rich- jardson, of San Francisco, and ts 26 years old, His father is en route here and Is expected Tuesday, and, request a HERE’S MORE ABOUT LUMBER STARTS ON PAGE 1 outputs, Many have laid off night Then Goodwin |°fed. while ‘a string of pearls had|,yitts: others have cut down their runs to five a week, 2 at thelr present level. | While this works. a hardship not Jonty on the workers, but on the Jowners, it is, lumbermen say, the only way out “The situation {s simply this," }maid one large operator: “Wo have |tho lumber and the East hasn't. Sooner or later the East must buy ft and pay our price for it. It's merely a question of endurance.” More than 75 per cent of the leaving in thelogging and lumbering indus tries. At no time have profits been exorbitant. Compared with other industries, there are very few wealthy lumbermen. The timber of Washington and Oregon 1s one of the nation’s larg est asnets, and it Is fast disappear ing. Lumbermen hold the opinion that those operating the industry should see that an adequate return is gained, so that, when it is gone, the money will be available for {n- vestment in other branches of in- dustry, and especially for reforesta- | tion, “Our object isn't to force prices see Waldman'’s mother | more, commander of the alr forces|Daugherty and Senator Pepper, ste a well-known mill man told fart? 108 the telephone again. I More shots at her and . She dropped back on the | elderly woman ‘was not led in holding her- ing on the wall and Powell, who dis- LE | got lost and this I found myself} Wash. 1 went into! over to Lewiston for | ent to the Liberty then, and Pa. Rot me. to be sorry now, take my medicine as re ready for mo." ly the husband faster, The younger then Ida Behlau, ent between the Prisoner is alleged to ’ at fn love with her and me. When I married Waldman I came ittt ho mob action {n Pom. fears, Sherift Powell lurday, ss wt Youth for | oman tery Charge Pian CHAM, Apri 5 — B® 18, wan being Shatged with forging Arrest yester. festern Nationa) Simed to have come of the Ninth Army area, in a plane with Lieut. Theodore J, Koenig, commanding officer of Sand Point airdrome. The two, with Maj. Ran- dolph and Lieuts. Goldsmith, Davies and McLean, were to have escorted the world flyers to the Canadian} line. It wan expected that all needed repairs would be completel by Sat- urday afternoon, and that the fly- ers will start Sunday morning, if weather conditions continue favor- able, see British Plane to . Start Out Again CORFU, April 5.—The spare parts Necessary for repairs on the British ‘round-the-world amphibian plane arrived today from London and Maj. Stuart MacLaren announced that the big machine would be ready to take the air again in a few hours. MacLaren said he hoped to take off for Athens either today or to- morrow. Over Dry Office F. A. Hazeltine, recently appointed | divisional chief of prohibition agents for division 17, with headquarters in Seattle, arrived here Saturday morn- ing and assumed his official duties. Hazeltine was connected with the local prohibition office for a number of years, and for the past year has been attached to federal prohibition offices in Pennsylvania and Florida, Acting Divisional Chief George Hurlburt, who bas had charge of the local office for the past few months, Will remain with Hazeltine for an In: keriod, ., Pennsylvania. | Daugherty issued a statement last |night lashing Pepper for his Maine speech and warning G. O. P. leaders he does not intend to be the butt of eriticlam for republicans or demo- crats, | Daugherty declared that a “fow ;more keynote speeches” like Pep: per’s would “sound the death knell Jof republican success in the coming election |Reduce Duties on Exports to Brazil The export duty on wheat and wheat flour into Brazil has been re- duced 40 per cent, according to a telegram recetved by Shirl H, Bla- lock, Seattle district manager of the United States department of commerce, The Brazilian govern. ment has been authorized to acquire foodstuffs abroad in order to reduce the cost of living, it ia stated. |“The Fool’ Hears | of Father’s Death REDDING, Cal., April 5.—Mitohell | Harris, actor, playing the leading [role in ‘The Foot here Inst night | wan handed a telegram as the final jeurtain dropped, It announced that his father, aged }86, had been accidentally killed, in New York city. The message had been received just before the evening’s performance be. gan, but it had remained undelivered until the close of the play. Harris will continue on wiih the (companys \ The Star, maintain “What we aro trying to do is prices at a level provide work for everybouy at a fair wage, We'll fight it out with the East and California on that line.” May File Suit Against Ford! DETROIT, April 5.--Henry failed to live up to an agreement to reimburse Lincoln Motor (Co, stockholders, Wilfred C. Leland, for- merly one of the heads of the com. pany, charged in a letter made pub- He tod The letter was sent to Ford March 14, Leland sald. The letter intimated that the case would be carried into court if Ford failed to reply or indicate his read. ineas to carry out the agreement mentioned by Leland, “BREATHING” LAKE IS DISCOVERED IN JAPAN KYO, April 5.—Japanese scientiats have been startled by the discovery that the Lake of Reeds, located {n the heart of the Hakode mountains, is rising and falling with tho regularity of a person breathing. ‘The rise and fall amounts to several Inches, The aotivity is attributed to the sume volcanic disturbances which caused recent earthquakes in the Japanese island, ‘ Prof. Nakamura, leading seis mologist, has rushed to the Ha- kode mountains to study the phe: nomenon, wages paid on this Coast are paid| where we can continue to run and | Ford | “Polly With a Past’’ , ACH Is Freed and Forgiven Concerts on Radio Slates for Two Days SATURDAY pyright, 1924. by Unit WOR, Newark, 46 I s. T. Kn Mater by chureh, N phony ore! KDKA, Pittsburg pm. ¥ & T Ch 10 p,| waint's oratorio, | choir of St. Jo-| ark th sym entra 428 mber of com honor of Andrew meters, § dinner in W. Mello WBZ, 8 ters, § p.m ngfield Boston, 337 m E. 8, T.—"Get-together dinner National Masoni Gov. Chan: Butler, M WBAI, ¢ eht, C. 8 KGO, Oakland P §. T—"It Pays to Ac thre medy by the League of with addresses by Cox, Gen, Bmediey | and others 09 meters, mid. WSAI midnight en meters, & p.m KGO SUNDAY WEA York, 492 p.m, I T.—-Dr, 8 man and the Br men's conference: meters, 3:4 Parker Cad poklyn Y. M. Cc. A,! 0 p.m, BE. 8, T Musical program from The Capitol theater | WCAP, Washington, 469 meters, 4 yp, m, BE, 8. T—Maunder’s cantata ‘Olivette Calvary,” by the chapel! cholr of the National cathedral, WLAG, Minneapolis, 417 meter, | | 9:20 p.m. C. 8. T—Huron College Glee club. | WDAF, Kansas City, 411 meters, |4p. m, C, 8. T.-Program by Wyan dotte post of the American Legion. © 6 What's in the Air Saturday, April 5 KDZE—12:30 to 1:30 p. m KFHR—4;80 to 8:30 p. m KHQ—& to # p. m WOMAN MISSING | Probe “Bluebeard” Mystery of French Widow | LYONS, France, April 5.—Police| here are investigating the mysterious disappearance of an attractive young | widow under circumstances recalling | the notorious “Bluebeard” Landru | murders. | The widow, as in the case of Lan Gru's victims, answered an adver. tisement to visit a man who claimed |to handie investments very profit-, ably for people of small means, par }ticularly women, She has not been jseen since Preliminary Investigations of police | | reveal that several other women have | | disappeared under similar ciroum- stances, and they think a “Blue. | beard” may be responsible TWO MAY DIE! |Man and Girl Injured When’ Car Overturns in Everett OTT, April &—Marion Kin-| , Who sustained a fractured an automobile accident | Thursday night, was still in a crit |fcal condition at the Everett General {hospital Saturday. Gertrude Erick jron, 23, who suffered a compound | fracture of both Jegs and internal | injuries, 1s also in a dangerous con- dition and may die. | The two, with George Dexter, were | | riding in a car on Everett ave. when |the machine crashed into a telephone | | pole and overturned, after it had} } been hit by another car, Dexter sus-| tained a broken nose. | | HOLD PATIENT ‘Man. in Hospital Believed | | Drug Store Bandit | After applying for medical ald from a physician, Nick Mantoll, 21, | was arrested in the Empire hotel, | 422% Main st., Friday afternoon, as | one of the bandits who robbed the Bothell pharmacy Wednesday night. | Mantell was suffering from a bul- |Iet wound in the chest. The physi cian who attended him called the po- lice. Mantell was taken to the city hospital, where he remained under | |uard Saturday, He was identified by W. W. Crawford, Bothell drug. gist as the man whom he disarmed and shot during the attempted hold- up. Another suspect, Vito Fiori, 35, is held in the city jail, after the police had learned that it was Fiori who! called the physiclan for Mantel, Viori in suspected of being the sec- ond member of the auto bandits. Mantell denied that he had helped rob the pharmacy and declared that he had been shot as he passed aj house where shooting was going on. Socialists Win | Argentine Votes ist candidates won overwhelming | victories over thelr radical oppo: | nents in elections to the chamber | of deputies in final returns (oday. In the contest for one vacant seat, Senor Justo, the socialist can- didate, won by more than 9,000 from Senor Lorello, radical, ‘Tho Jatter, who ja Argentine ambassador to France, was so confident of winning that he sailed from Paris to take office, jat the samo time. RESCUING CREW Aid Is Rushed to Grounded Steamer Admiral Rodman Aid im being the Admiral Rodman mahip oint Calvert, ne rushed company, agtound at r Queen Clurlotte sound Some of the crew ha off and on the been taker are en route Ke Queen. amuel Gla and oth rd the Rodman The ship grounded in a snow form, The Curacao, of line, is miles but trying to away, # get to her Bonney Funeral ——— — Slated Sunday | COUT THIS OUT—IT IS WORTH Funeral services for Mrs, imma A. Bonney, who died Friday morning ll be held Sunday afternoon at ck at the University undertak me parlors, The Rev. H. 8. Temple will officiate LADY EXPERT COMING TO HELP Demonstrates Rice Method Free to All Williams, m 8. Ri Y¥., inventor of the famous (Non-Surgical) Method for Rupture, will be at the Seattle Hot nttle, Was Monday, Tuesday and, Wednesday, April 7, 8 and 9, to demonstrate @ new special corset at-| tachment that holds any rupture, | no matter how large. E abtomen is very fleshy, it holds any rupture with ease, comfort and security Adams, N. Rice | Every woman} been) who has compelled to wear an ordinary truss! or abdominal sup- port knows the gouging, cutting and chafing caus) ed by rj bands, The weight | of the abdomen or; pressure necessary in holding thel rupture must bo | carried by the! band around the} back, and the pressure {s some- times very great, causing untold , suffering. The} ~ special, broad sup- Special Combined Dorting corset eo back distributes | Back Sapport, j tho pressure s0| as to do away with all cutting and | chafing. There are thousands of women who are in perfect mi: because they cannot find anything that will hold their rupture and the abdomen | The appliances | usually worn are hot, bulky, chat. ing and irritating. But this wonder. | ful Combined Corset Back Support is light, flexible, durable and cool and fits the figure like a glove. It gives you a sense of absolute comfort and protection, while at the same time greatly improving ab- dominal outlines, Trusses in common use are not adapted to women and often do great harm. Women, therefore, sut- fer more and are in greater danger | from rupture than men, and all| women, who have ruptures or who wear an abdominal support of any kind should not fail to call and seo this wonderful Combined Corset Back Support. No description or illustration can fully convey the remarkable utility of this splendid Support. It must be seen; it must be put on to convince any woman that it was designed for her. Mrs. Williams takes a large woman just as she ts, all out of shape and un- sightly and by this remarkable Cor- set Support gives her a natural, neat, trim figure. She will also give full instructions on how to handle and care for any rupture, large or small. She will show how to hold any kind of rup- ture from the simple groin and fem. oral to the large and difficult Navel and After Operation Ruptures, with. out chafing or squeezing, also how to wear the corset correctly, Don't let this great opportunity get away from you. Don’t continue to suffer the burden of rupture and truss wearing when it is so entirely unnecessary, Your call on this Lady Expert is sure to prove one of the best things you ever did, Sho wili be there only three days, then your opportunity will be gone. Tho fitting and demonstration are free, It don’t cost you a penny to learn all about the Rice Method and the wonderful opportunity for help it offers in your case. After demonstration you can purchase the Outfit required if you wish, Call any time from 9 to 12 A. m., 2 to 5 p. m, or 7 to 9 evenings. Just nak at the hotel desk for the Rice Representative and she will do the rest, W. S. RICE, Ine, Adams, N.Y. Advertisement, ting. Gyro Clubmen to | preceding Friday representa en if the} DIES “AGAIN”! Bad Whisky Fatal for Man After Reviving Once Donse BrotHers DEALERS SELL 6000 USED CARS There was a time when we looked upon our Used Car Department as an essential evil. Now we realize that it is a tremendous asset. We sell only GOOD Used Cars and thus make friends who come back to us for new cars. came once more Meet in Oregon Twenty Seattle Gyro club members and the local club's orchestra of 10 will go to Portland next 12, to help club there. A district council mesting of Gyre clubs will be held in Seattle on the Good Values for Today— ers A Sedan refinished- sor bers. mir Snyder to Speak : Edgar C. Snyder, Seattle ettorney will be the speaker for the meeting of the Commonwéalttviclub to be held t let a 5 Su in Dartnall’s cafeteria Madison, Monday subject will be Voter swipe. Second and peric fel; good tires evening, Snyder “The Independent ust refinished; very good value. Ford Touring. 2; slant e-man top ndition MONEY Bend this ad and ten cents to Fol & Co, 2835 Sheffield Ave., Chicage I writing gur name and addr early, You will receive a ten-ce ttle of FOLEY'S HONEY TAR COMPOUND for cougt A hoarseness; also fre packages of FOLEY PILLS, a diu. retic stimulant for the kidneys, and FOLEY CATHARTIC TABLETS for Constipation and Billousness. Thes onderful remedies have helped mil lions of people. Try them!—Adver tisement. | pe; excellent good rubber Dodge Brothers Te 1$19 production. sampl WLEaton East Pine at Summit EA st-0313 $ 10 Down Huys Any One of These Gen- ir a MoToBIKE $47.00 The Bleyele Aristocrat ev. C.J. Hawkins 11 A. M. Sources of Normal Inspiration Piper & Ta tt 07-1109 SECOND AVENUE 7:30 P. M. QUITTERS Great Chorus Quartet and Soloists Plymouth Church Sixth and University | New Westminster Presbyterian Church Harvard Ave, and Howell St. CHARLES T. SHAW, Minister SUNDAY SERVICES 9:30.a,m.—Sunday School. 11:00 a, m.—Morning Service. Sub- ject: “The Magnetism of the Cross. Communion and Reception of New Members. 6:45 p.m.—Young People's Ser- vice. 7:45 p.m.—Evening Service. The Subject: “Their Per- secutors Persecuted.” The choir will render the last part of the cantata, “Queen Msther.” MANAGEMENT, CIRCULATION, RESS OF AUGUST 24, 1912 at Seattle, Wash., for STAT, T OF THE OWNERSHIP, RTC, REQUIRED BY ACT OF CO! Of The Seattle Star, published daily except Sundi April 1, 1924. State of Washington, -County of King ‘ Before me, a Notary Public in and for the state and county aforesald, personally appeared F. W. Webster, who, haying been duly sworn accord: ing to law, deposes and says that ho is the Office Manager of The Seatt Star, and that the following is, to the best of his knowledge and belief, true statement of the ownership, management (and if a daily paper, the ci culation), etc, of the aforesnid publication for the date shown in the above caption, required by the Act of August 24, 1912, embodied in Section 443 Postal Laws and Regulations, printed on the reverse side of this form, to-wit: : 1. ‘That the names and addresses Of the publisher, editor, managing ed- itor and business managers are: “ ame of— > Postoffice Address— Publisher, Star Publishing Co. .... attle, Wash. ’ Managing Iditor, Ray W. Felton . eattie, Wash, Mttice Manager, F. W. Webster ... ciss+e.Seattle, Wash. That the owner is: (If the publication Is owned by an individual, his name and address, or if owned by more than one individual, the name and address of each, should be given below; if the publication is owne by a corporation, the name of the corporation and the names and addresses of the stockholders owning or holding one per cent or more of the total amount of stock should be given.) z Le Roy Sanders, Seattle, Wash. The H. W. Scripps Co., Cincinnati, 0. Joxephine S. Soripps, Miramar, Cal. B. H. Canfield, Oakland, Cal, Estate of John P. Scripps, West Chester, 0, 8. "That the known bondholders, mortgagees and other security holders owning or holding 1 per cent or more of total amount of bonds, mortgages or other securities are: (If there are none, so state.) N. 'H. Scripps, ‘Trustee for NH. Scripps, West Chester, 0. M. W. Vandercook, Execx, of Wst, John Vandercook, dec’d. (heirs Margaret M, Vandercook ‘and minor child), Leonardo, Jo K |, Cincinnatl, 0. Frances B, Clark, San Diego, Cal, Olga R. € is, Oak Cal, M. H, De Muth, San Diego, ‘AC AL! Hopkins, Cincinnatl, O. Mrs, Gertrude G. Johnson, San Diego, L. R. Scholl, Cincinnatl, 0. A.B. Murph: Xe Cal.. JW. Curts, ‘Treas, Oakland, Cal, J. 8. "Ditty, Seattle, Wasi C, N. Clark, Sen iogo, Cal. ci a That the two paragraphs next above, giving the names of the owners, tockholdera and security holders, if say, contain not only the list: oF lders and security holders as they ‘appear upon the books of thi but also, in cakes where the stockholder or security holde| pears upon the books of the company ae trustee or In any other fidu relation, the name of the person or corperation for whom such trus' acting, ix given: also that the said two paragraphs contain § it bracing affiant’s full knowledge and belief as to the circumstances conditions under which stockholders and security holders who do not ap- ear upon the books of the company trustees, hold stock and securities na capacity other than that of a bona fide owner: and this affiant hae Bo reason to believe that any other person, jociation or corporation ty any interest, Sisgoe LE in the said stock, bonds or other securities: than as so stated by him, 9 s t the average number of copies of each is: of yi publicatio sold or distributed, through the mails or otherwise, to paid subseri! during the six months preceding the date shown above in 75,085. ( information Is required trom daily publications only.) RST! Dinige f (Signature of Ofticr Sworn to and subserlbed before me thi of April, 1924, (Seal) DONALD. RTS, Notary | | as. ee ead