The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 22, 1924, Page 7

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ee TUESDAY, APRIL 22, 192 - : : “a 8. ae THE SEATTLE STALE P ARIZONA WILL aig | KING COUNTY TO AUTOS INJURE 5 REPORT MERGER GAS KILLS MAN BOGUS ‘DOCTOR’ . as | by the Pelice r 2 are re) Nepon | a ' meeeneere oe ; cq Sigal | 263 of 386 Delegates Solid| Man ard Wife in Hospital;'C. P. R. Office Denies Used Ruse to Enter Homes, - r t > % on a Ongt s » to Show Special Certificate wishe for Candidate at Conclave | Aged Woman Run Down | Knowledge of Consolidation , It Is Charged t t th rag s ty e , “ r “* b k » w the « eect te ” King rey = lat ty a x c " - oR : 3 Pn t ft s ft ' : ome ad - > & 2 ee “ee t a ti € * f ft “Beta fi fo b b e i * oftre . were taken to the | Pacit yn oo 7 eee = c mis s by dey f . xi drive ow sa re y . m pares ie . a , ; > atthe lines & 4 aes sonics ae from headquarters, following referee Rip ancing thin lean (te Germas oe 1 t an | Foe, 60, of M ve. N. W., auf. The Japanese steamship compar fered probable th got . on - ‘ easons exist why we : re A i »| fored at : se her hip. | operates * from Ban Fr t ¥ are be s predict thet the domir a ; mane Eel ‘ . Da vate Me , ©. "The auto] cific operate thelr “Empres than a merger or absorpt y er ouiinne cee , 5 Jeane the Orient from Vancouver r “ PASSENGERS MUST ° t it apt gets ge’ 4 ‘ $16 Pike st ——— - ae STAY ON TRAINS ent whereve pete » te. fee Doris Thorp, 14, of 3127 Fa! Deputies of the state t . Oposs ‘ ‘i t sea t et front of health are expected te lea = Todd as delegateat-large from the| )*r home and was hit by ar t x ente ere zing again the need of service wget. jgilabhandbrs. lelegates for|"¥e. N. EB. The girl was y ot sureent ne. || HERE'S MORE ABOUT And, with the stability mssured | We S08 instr tatoanhe, OS | rt ’ s i} be considered, and then wr ‘Th abroad, the president & new « turday. Similar action was taken| Peter ¢ aborer, was bit by « not if the party has been tn an in COOLIDGE portunity for American leadership |. Tas. | 2 eae » he got off u street car at fected area within 21 days of the STARTS ON PAGE 1 for wor a pesice may preee at tele, Stephen F. Chadwick presided at| Avalon way and W. Bradford at. He ne es, he will caf another Capitol co as taken to the city hospital with a thru trathe moet | nn | world conference on limitation of /‘* ed | recone 4H ght injuries to } . | eave thelr cars while In Arizo- | Propose to pb grey ae * ° 1 The present ‘| Adoo at the Rente crn aubh use, | » eating houses . © time for this, he added, but ; 1 f ats pledged . BA « must notex-|82 eon an it seems euch a:pariey|,.. iB vocrate riedent| Slips From Ladder, ; feaident said, | Europe and would have x chance ot | maorsed Frank 1. Wilson of the| Is Critically Hurt No let-up on the rigid anti-trs « ublic tre for | success, he will ures that it be b- é + lle we ing om a ladder while tan on motor traffic at Yuma and > carry out their project ®.. | -Gecrss 2. Ry 5 alested eftair- 15 y Mart lurg sicre, at Needles Napa ~ tered On the Declaring that bills now before H’ — os tus torlly commend: |... t the * tion i ae en - —— oa. 34 miles inland on the Calter ong Rage rl evalt financial dieas-| sory in —- Fr ros m4 McAdoo as were ¥ megesae wreaking both arma, a leg, and sus- side. er to the nation if their §3,600,000,. | "7", . es it eade ¥|taining internal injuries. He 4 Trerd’ trom ‘Tus toley darted |" rane Ow Soerenrtatad, be said Rent” ipletadtionsl *aesareeies |? \ jeattle. General, hospital, ‘ina 7 ee he law of service must be ap ? ~ nr condition. The accient wa, he c fon th n » bier the Dit quiet a whe, the his Jo wiv, {Died to this situation, At present eae aad | ae aused by the ladder slipping on the s ‘ . our country does not need a greater | : . pavement. Crowe ts married, TE TkS Derben & Gomes: maeeine | catiay of expense, but @ greater ap vat cal taut. be | McAdoo Sook au oo pat p, woartied : th tation. They appear | Pllcation of constructive economy.” eet akties 9 i | ye eo ey cet, ft home| From California! Watch Theft Results t i », | img reference to the bonus, b did | ~ : | - 1 « a pF mates they. tutend © remain i ped — a ee oh pigs yd fo tp world peace may b| peating his Seattle promises that “¢] in Arrest of Couple | res ely, pending a possible lift Fl ance dan bonus DAD in its ¢ } med. And he warned th elected I will drive the grafters and| Theft of his watch in a “soft” | of the travel embargo. — tetaaos te ——«e -_ rica be ever 60 peaceably | corruptionists out of Washington |drink parlor af 806 Stewart at.,|{/ sr . . sitictana | MClined this nation cannot force | into the jails of the United States,”| Monday night @0 enraged E. Nord-| j | On taxes the president criticised | ine milienium on other nations if | William Ginte Meason, gameamtie| trea, 40, s ont ; DAIRYMEN TO BAR PLAGUE Meeting Here Will Lay Plans | to Keep Out Disease Decisions to be reached at a con ference of more than 300 dairymen and representatives of other state Organizations at the Masoule club- Tooms here next Monday evening will be the basis for the verdict on & new and more stringent embargo all possible hoofand-mouth con- Bon carriers from California into ashington, it was announced by Thomas B. Hill, assistant secretary of the Chamber of Commerce, Tuos- day, after a conference Monday With Director BE. L. French of the state department of agriculture. Stockmen, dairy and business firms, ranchers, civic organizations and college and university spectial- ists will attend the session, which begins at 7:30, with Director French and Dr, L. C. Pelton, state veter- inarian, In charge. The conclave will be held at the fmvitation of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce. ‘That the entire state ts becoming we generally cognizant of the gers of the dread livestock all- me was evinced in telegrams, telephone méssages and inquiries from all over the state the past few days at the office of The Seattle Star. Dr. S. B. Nelson, of the Washington State college at Pull- man, Tuesday added a word of of- ficial warning in the following Wired message: “I wag present in Copenhagen and studied the great outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease in Denmark in 1893 and witnessed the tremen- dous economic loss there. I believe if the disease becomes introduced inte Western Washington the loss will run into millions of dollars. 1 do not, however, belleve In making quarantine measures too severe.” Director French and Dr. Pelton have issued a bulletin on the foot and-mouth ailment, available to t Public, giving information on the disease, its characteristics, symp- toms, care and the preventive measures necessary. They may be obtained from the department of agriculture offices at Olympia, BE-BF-BY BF BF -BF-BF-BE Salad Days —all the days—every OT Paar you can get a fect. mayon- naise—the real home- made kind without fuss. Gold Medal Mayon- naise is made from fresh eggs, the finest oils and so piquantly seasoned it makes the salad course the treat of the dinner. Try Gold Medal at dinner on the most pop- ular of Every-Day Sal- ads—sliced tomatoes pn heart-lettuce leaves. Our delivery wagons cover the city “‘like the dew'’—so it is alwa fresh at your grocer s. Best Foods GOLD MEDAL Cy More than a dressing —it’s a Food 9 THE BEST FOODS, Ine. 1964 Bryant St., San Francisco. congress for it present time “ fatiure up to the ly to compre-| jhend and expeditiow to minister to | jthe need of taxation reform,” but | sald he believed In spite of this there} | would be tax reduction. He assailed |the opponents of the Mellon tax, | who, he said, were assuming the |country wanted to evade the law of | jservice and sought the benefits of | | government without paying for that government. | He sald the idea that taxes on| the great mass of the people could be cut and more taxes extracted |from the rich was an unworkable | principle } | eee E assured bis hearers that, funda mentally, America {ts sound, its | government in honest hands and tts | business, “including the owners, man: / lagers and employes, representatives | lof honorable and patriotic motives.” Turning then to forelgn affairs, the president, after repeating that the league of nations is dead so far as |the United States is concerned, paid | high tribute to Secretary Hughes, for | | initiating the idea of the experts’ con- | |boom by highly praising the work of Dawes and his associates in Europe. Mr. Coolidge then warmly urge that American bankers make a large gold can be of more | piled up at home, he said, empha f | | ed || HERE'S MORE ABOUT | BRIDGE STARTS ON PAGE 1 with the bridge, Paul charges. This dirt, sliding down the slope and under the bridge, exerted so much | pressure on the bents of the wooden | bridge that tt broke many of them | off, weakening the structure and | making it unsafe for travel. They | work under the direction of an to spector from the engineer’s office. Engineers say it is imposaibl lnow to repair the broken bents be- lcause dirt would slide down the| new fill |could be mado in an attempt to dig | under the bridge to reach a new solid foundation for the bents. THOMSON BRANDS IT INEFFICIENCY | R. H. Thomson and another con- | sulting engineer, were taken to the | j bridge late Monday by Paul ahd/ asked to make a report to him on the | situation as they sized it up. | Thomson sald Tuesday: “The breaking of these bridge stays Was the result of careless- ness or inefficiency to say the | least. The earth hasbeen deliber- | | ately piled against the bridge side | of tho fill instead of the down- grade side. Huge clumps of earth | have been dumped against the wood stays, apparently wantonly. | No effort was made to protect the | | bridge.” { County Engineer Thomas R. Bee-| man, under whose inspector, Tom | Blum, the fill is being made, scoffed | at the idea there was any deliberate attempt to wreck the bridge “No more dirt has been scrapes | against the bridge supports than was necessary to make the fill,” ho sald. | Paul insisted that many loads of | dirt—for which the country js paying 3 cents a yard—have been dump outside the grade of the fill, so the would undermine the bridge and} wreck it, and claims it was a part of deliberate scheme to antagonize ren Hidents of his district. against him by jmaking it appear that his plan had made it necessary to close the bridge. | POINTS TO GAINES’ WORD OF WARNIN |" 4. @. Bllingston, who operates a garage in Des Moines and the Des Moines-Seattle stage line, said Tues- day that the breaking of the bridge staya was either “thru carclessness and indifference or design.” “We supported the program to | make a permanent fill across the ra- | vine instead of the bridge advocated | by Dobson and Gaines,” He said, “We jare now being punished, I believe.” “Two weeks ago Commissioner Gaines spoke at the Des Moines Im- provement club and said ‘that bridge may be closed down soon without a moment's warning.’ And that's what happened all righ they are not wi peace, ng for it. World he sald, must come, finally, ‘trom the heart of the people.” PLAGUE SCOPE IS. WIDENING Epidemic Now Jumps Con- fines of Los Angeles County LOS ANGELES, April 22 the foot and mouth the bounds of Los Angeles county, southern California today faced the most critical stage thus-far in its battle against the epidemic For weeks the disease has been confined to three sections of this county. State and federal authori ties were hopeful that the rigid quar. antine regulations in force would prevent it from spreading. fan of nea With ¥ 1,000 Infected hogs tn | ference on reparations, and lent im-/ San Bernardino county, giving ample |jows and Chico. petus to the Dawes’ vicepresidential | evidence that the plague was spread. | ing. HARRISBUR 3, Ii, April 22. Damage was estimated at $200,000. HERE’S MORE ABOUT GAINES || STARTS ON PAGE 1 hates me. too square to let him get away It is because I am with his crude work that he gees among his south district people and Jays the responsibil. ity on me. “This Des Moines bridge affair ts a terrible thing. It will put Des foines off the map this summer hat's certain. It likely will cost the county thousands of dollars. Paul is pushing thru that fil) on land as fast as excavationa| that does not belong to King coun- | ty. Ho has not obtained the deeds for all the right-of-way, and he is | right now threatened with damage suits by parties who own the land on which the dirt Is being dumped. “One man sald he had a good notion to get down in that gulch with a rifle and stop the contrac- tors from spoiling his property. “True, we're in a sad meas, and Frank Paul has only himself to blame. “I shall see to it that the facta in this case, and a lot of others, are known to the public. Pau"s cam- ouflage has gone far enough.” SLAYS SELF IN LOVE PUZZLE Former, Seattleites Head School in’ Tangle TOS ANGELES, April 22. A quarrel with his sweetheart js said today to have been the cause of the suicide of Theodore G. Beaver. Beaver was faced elther with a break with the girl or with a socalled “School of Sacred Science.” Unable to make a decision, he shot himself, The girl, Miss Evelyn Pelton, sald that she had tried to dissuade hor flance from investing in the school, School authorities, on®the other hand, disclaimed any attempts to in- fluence Beaver and sald he had given them no money. Tho sehool is operated by Ralph] M. and Ione Wo Bit, formerly of Beaux Arts, on Lake Washington, near Seattle. They camo to Los An. goles a few years ago. WATER SHUT-OFF NOTICE Water will be shut off on WN. 47th at. from Fremont ave. to Wood: land Park ave. on Wednesday from 8 a. m, to 6 p, m. eee will be shut off on May: fait ave, from Newell st, to Flor entia’ st, on Wednesday am to 4p. m from however, the slaughter be-| ~!possed the Mellon tax bill and de loan to Germany to assure complete | Fire today swept an entire bust-|pounced the Fordney-McCumber tar. success of the Dawes’ plan. American | ness block here, destroyink halt a li¢g ¢ abroad than | dozen stores and a newspaper office. | that he caused the ar candidate, spoke here He asked support of presidential | Monday night. a delegation to the democratic na-|, tional convention pledged to seek his| hig nomination. rest of the proprietor, P, J. Shilling, 4 and himself, and the seizure of bottle of beer. Nordstrom told troubles to Patrolman P. E. | Morris, who promptly arrested both Shilling and the “plaintiff.” Two other arrests over booze were |] | Whatcom Demos to | made Monday night by the dry | Back Bone Measure) sauna, ono at 2708 Western ave, ||| / | BELLINGHAM, April 22—What-| Where George Ross, 36, was i | com county democratic atate conven-| rested with 29 gallons of i tion delegates will submit support of}and the other at the Excel: i the Bone power Initiative measure|apartments, where Harry Totten, and of the American Legion bonus/ 36, was arrested and h d for $30( plan as two provisions in the pro-|ball, Moonshine wan seized. posed democratic party platform at Seattle May 2 JAY ©. GOODRICH with speak . | Wednesday noon before the Seattle |Optimiste club. He is international G; 0; P. Alone Is toi| ir eeeuate os ee Blame, Says McAdoo) | BAN FRANCTSCO, April | Willian G, MeAdoo, the only preal dential aspirant to Visit California in the present primary campaign, was making a tour of the northern part of the state today, 2—~ What's in the Air TOESDAY, APRIL 22 NEW TOPCOATS p.m. to 9:15 p, m. ing te dag, at Valle Nepes Wi || to Ta0 pm Imported English Tweeds | KIR—6:30 to 6:30 p, m. | KHQ-—8 to 9 p, m. KGY—8:40 p. m. Hie speaking tour wa, opened last | night with an address wherein | which he declared that the oil scan dal was exclusively republican”; op- A special group of 50 New Coats. Unus- ual value is apparent in every detail of } these models. Exceptional $40.50 They are in scarf-collar and notch-collar models, as pictured —in tan and gray mixtures, Plaids, checks and stripes. —Second Floor “FREDERICK. & NELSON —in the soft-textured imported tweeds of smooth or nub weave. Probe Wild Revels | of Church Youths | DALLAS, Texas, April 22-~A/ |tederal grand jury today Reard the story of tho sensational “wilder-| ness dance” and liquor party staged by students of Southern Methodist) untversity at Savage lake. Evidence of the drinking party| gathered by federal dry sicuths was presented to the jury after} nearly two weeks of investigation. | | Participants in the gay revel, sald| |to have included local girls and stu-| dents, were among those summoned | i for questioning. 1 the fine hand-tailoring that usually distinguishes Coats at higher prices. —in the good quality linings of crepe de Chine and satin. — | Avers Wife Hurled | Knife at His Face | Harry Yennie says, in a divorce | complaint filed hero Tuesday, that | jhe didn’t object when his wife ac- cused him of infidelity, When, he| says, she threw a butcher knifo at | GURNEY | (Northland) Refrigerators | him and wounded his face, it! " Wh seemed to him that the end had| 25-pound Ice Capacity | beon reached, however. Yonnie | Javers his wife took thelr children | land went to Kalispell, Mont. refus- jing to live with him, He charges | desertion, $16.50 Wiath 21 16% inches, Inches; helght 49 depth | inches. Seattle Kidnsning f Story Held Fiction SAN FRANCISCO, April 22—"A New Spring Silks and Woolens Provide Impartially and With Originality for Sports and Formal Apparel f R SPORTS FROCKS, NEW TUB SILKS, patterned with small cross- bars, cluster stripes and plaids on white grounds, 82 and 86 inches wide, $2.50, $3.00 and $8.50 yard. Washable Crepes with woven checks, in combinations of rose-and-white, blue-and-white, tan-and-brown, 40 inches wide, $3.00 yard. CREPE FRIZETTE has the appear- ance of being finely tucked, though this effect is achieved by skillful weaving. In Black or White, for frocks in this smart combination; 40 50-pound Ice Capacity $18.50 | | | bit of ro i” was the character: | Width 23 inches; depth | ization by tain of Detectives!) 3714 inches, helght 42 inches. Duncan Mathewson today of tho| story told by Rose Fahey, of Seattle; | in which she charged she had been | kidnaped by her brother-in-law George Carr, formerly of Oakland. — | The girl today was sent to the home of her’brother here and police announced they had dropped tho! case. PRESS LUNCHEON, CHORUSES, BANDS ON AIR PROGRAMS (Copyright, 1924, by United CHARMEEN WITH SELF-COLOR RATINE STRIPE, in gray and beige, 54 inches wide, $6.50 yard. COVERT CHARMEEN, in tan, gray and artichoke-green, 54 inches wide, wes, New york, 492 meters, inches wide, $9.00 yard. $7.00 yard. Sabie ATES Benndatnas, 0 WOOL JERSEY FOR SPORTS FOR SMART TAILLEURS, Haivline- meters, WNA? Boston, 287 FROCKS and Children’s Wear, in check Twills, in black and gray, 56 Hei sr6) BN es, ea tae jade, red, golden-tan, brown, navy, inches wide, $6.50 yard. Hairline Vulcan SMOOTHTOP * Cabinet Gas Range Visit our Stove Section and seo this wonder gas range in operation, Five models to choose from, Prices #46,00 to $2465.00, The model pictured, $95.00, p. m, FB. 8, TAnnual luneh- | con of the Associated Press, with address by President Calyin Cool | idge. | CFCA, Toronto, 400 meters—~ 8 p.m. EB, 8, T—The Harmonic cholr, WoAW, p. m, C, 8 band, WGN, Chicago, 370 meters, 9 p. m, ©, 8, T.—Concert program, KPO, fan Francisco, 428 meters, 8 p. m., P. 8, C. T.-Pro- garam by the Orpheus club of Oakland, artichoke-green, pineback and black; 54 inches wide, $2.50 yard. White Jersey, of heavier quality, 52 inches wide, $8.50 yard. FOR COSTUME COATS, the Lustrous Twillbloom Coating, in beige, gray- stone, filbert, brown, black and navy, 64 inches wide, $6.00 yard. Stripe Twills, in navy and black, 56 inches wide, $6.50 yard. FOR SPORTS TOPCOATS, Camel's Hair Coatings with large plaids on beige and gray grounds, 56 inches wide, $6.50 yard. In beige mixtures and cross-bars, 56 inches wide, $8.50 yard, Omaha, 626 meters, 9 T.—Omaha Elks’ —First Floor

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