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AGAINST DILL ¢, C. Committee Says Rai- nier Change Is Politics yor STATE MOVEMENT Says Lawmakers Did Not Ask Official Board’s Decree fiuization of business and profes donal women, made this request “HELL SHIP” = HITS ANEW 16 Men Attempt to Escape Two New Outbeaks; Japan- From Vessel in Sound ese Protest Slaughter Sixteen’ cannery hands were LOS ANGELES, Cal, A held in the city jail Friday, fol- | Two new and ks of lowing their sensational attempt hoot and mn ‘a Foe 1 fo escape from the schooner Ben . = FP. Packard off Alki point ai 4 | A"#*!** County were reported | = “nr eben department of as quarters here today 3 ate ‘ One discovery epidem! . Ceagrossman A " rhor pa a a herd “s all t \ fed them | }.onke im outt : roo. A w f lina la om Nat Sixt an Nuys ow his tayedon| & er of 7.187 hogs one ¢ . bee xy . ‘ " the largest: herds yet | Largig Big |} he tug ‘had just come alongside of infection by foot — Rake “th “ wy, | the ship with one of the bosses when disease, will begin today on : gaged {0 take n as to} northeast of Long Be ne of Mount 1 sa the | the 28 insurgents rushed for it and ang Heach ihe naive ot M R at of . if pos $ o nese owners of the hog ah t fs ft a back and the hart atrol Pi sib agp ches se hagayss edhe boat called. the ab oy woatatern: | boat have. th t burned t Qplling, ch Two of feet and mouths eating garbage hot Reakemerce COs h isoresist-| Gi, 2 om the sterilizer ag the prom go in the nam-jand a 5 Since the disease first broke out @-Mount Rainic nd Rat Na. | University « ington, with years | in this county 6,388 cattle have been Jenal park. 4 sald of study at Oregon Agricultura! col: | killed in this section alone, accon tpal Geographic bognd ts the body | jege and University of California to to a state department of agri | hich approves names for. th: » | and Vin ‘ ore Hesides the ‘ sdomain, It Broadway hogs and ats have been ol at tha tered to date . SIX Persons were under arr | 1. | he m@ in Pass a tod lating. qua: ; . f the past 20 how lusively that the not under control, auth ven lemt ts ald. by the senate’ sub-committ at exorbitant prt said. 1 oe Dil-ate ia eae “4 trie Geelared he was cha 1 $1.00 for a 2-cent pair of cotton ke, and 2 for a beent bar of soap. Other ; t The cannery hands were fed oa DES M NES : erate subcommittee Chinese food, according to the * Did was. Friday requested) men, and were given one cup of : : ton of the vote! water to wash in, for a day, and | ‘ . hen the senate one pan of water for the 80 men |CONtractors Handicapped in ‘ chahge. Kate M. Holmes,| to wash all their dishes in, | ili ‘ j Meretary of,the Zonda club, an or-| ‘The contracts called for the men Filling Under Bridge to serve the entire canning season : Work on the Des Moines fii under @ Chinese boas, it is ch to ‘ The follow telegram was sent! ‘The schooner i» owned by r 0 the condemned Des Moines 4 @ Congressman John F. Miller. > t Fisheries company and | * was being pus ne alts ommercial tne cannery to which the men were | inter etud, empha' tests destined is At Naknek, which is on pehange in name of Her, | Bristol bay, in the far northern part | °°" fas.do many other Seattle clubs, of lor " work ts being han feamiations and individuals. Mayor} the price he was to receive | UFe of the county to obtain a righ fBrown has made thix.a personal af-| yo, his labor was agreed upon at/CWay for the south end of the fair and does not voice the senti-!¢e59 put when he received the con-| ‘lll. Frank Gay, who owns the ents ofthe people of Seattle in th Matter. Woe depend on your influ. proposal. C. W. Frank H. Bee to kill thi Wedin, preside 4 T rcc-Sunday Night Supper . —for a delicious lunch- eon, a bite. after. the theatre or a Mah Jong _ Party, nothing is more ' welcome than a Club » Sandwich: Makeit ina _ Jiffy. All you need is a " glass of boned chicken, “toast, bacon, a tomato, abit of lettuce and— _ Best Foods ‘GOLD DAL ccrssstettoes More than a dressing’ —it’s a Food 9 ‘THE BEST FOODS, inc. ‘W61 Bryant St, San Francisco. “BF-BF-BF-BF-BF-BF ' SEE. VAN for % TIRES FULL OVERSIZE CORDS _ Factory GUARANTEE ‘SPECIAL PRICES — | FULLY GUARANTEED iB 20x3 Fabrie «+ i .. 19.50 ip We Carry Aut Makes of Tires First-Class Repairing Olive Way Tire Shop A. 1. VAN SANT, Manager 9 OLIVE, WAY «Phone MA in3it? | Come Once, You'll Come Again Lieben, | FRE IF AE 3F FEF BE 28 As tract, after signing, it was stipulated | Property obtained a court or | at $220, der forbidding trespass on his ‘land. The Chinese contractor who (Condemnation proceedings are in hired him, refused to accept him (the hands of the prosecuting at torney's office and th ta unless be drew money in advance and went into debt for stuff sup. ited by the comp ne comminsion Frank Paul, chi y ure of the ped from th r action by the c oris from t P Thirteen of the men t com Ws on, two are negroes and one | office show that, on De oa man, Gill, is a Hindu. {the board by formal res al Early Wednesday morning two| tected Prosecutor Douglas to pro-| other Filipino cannery hands escaped | ceed at once with the condemna- from the Packard by lowering a smal} | tion of the land as a right-of-way. beat, and, altho pursued, managed to|The suit has not been filed yet, | jeffect their escape, The police are| Paul charged. re searching {or them. Contractor Coyle sald that the| work is being handicapped by tha| 'Scoffs at Mutiny \aquabble between commissioners and | Ithe county engineer's office and ‘ {also by closing of the Des Moines Rumors From Ship |i 0 52 ote at ae Peter H. Mot ses ja ean. | county haw. violated. its con Arycapell od i jae Fay thac (2d Will hold it lable for the a nica, 4 RUSE. Recmres Bytes. ditic 1 st bh been yut {ne had heard’ nothing from Cage. | ditions cost-ihe ‘haw \beett: put | D. Delttichson, master of the Pack: | ard, about the so-called mutiny, | “There was no mutiny,” sald Me | | Gue, “of we would have heard about | it. The captain “has not come bushore, however, and I’ am sure } there’ was no trouble. Woe try to | treat our cannery hands as well as | Possible, and conditions on the ship [are of the’ very best. The North | west Fisheries company, I believe, treats its employes with more con sideration than any other Alaskan, cannin pany. REPORT SAILORS OF U.S. SLAIN nvetigated the Shooting of Americans in Honduras PROBE STRANGE, HOLDUP TALE Victims Say Bandit Made Visitor Aid Robbery Detectives Friday were {nvostigat ing a reported sensational holduy, jin which Raleigh Howard, 612 W Ewing st., was held up by a lone bandit and forced to enter the home of R. G. Foote, 616 W. Blewett: at., | where the bandit, at the point of a gun, compelled Howard to tie up Mrs, Ethel Sterling, housckeeper for Foote. Howard said he was on his way to see Foote about 2 a. m. when the man. approached him and made | | | } him enter the house ahead of him, | beans ct ADT Co Teane After ‘tying up Mrn Sterling, the Wester anelcings of bey has neerning| Pandit robbed Howard of several | { Seg spormation concerning | dotiars and started to search the| the reported shooting of American | ,0\0" taailors in. Tegucigalpa, Honduras, No official confirmation has yet \then received from American consu- jlar officials there. Foote came home about that time, and when he entered the front door | {the bandit told him to how up his! hands and fired o shot at him ‘Accore 16 eatiocs | were “hulled Peta da forces toe |S penetrated the front door, ai Honduran capital |FOt® surrendered all the motey he | jhad and the robber departed. Capt. of Detectives Charles Ten- nant intimated that he would inves in Tegucigalpa, sent there |tieot, the story. Tho ahatwia 6} to, Buard the American legation and | reported to the police in detail, as} jcontulate, where contending forces | roote merely called the station ‘and | in- the ‘revolution threaten the | bandit had robbed rg bs from an airplane. je a force of American | said that a capital. The city fs now besieged | it jin home. by tho forves-opposiiig the provi- sional government. J.P. Morgan Ready ‘ . for Paris Parley PARIS, April 25—J. P. Morgan, Americap banker, will be consulted here thia afternoon with reference to | the, international loan to Germany } recommended in the Dawes report. | Morgan a due at 2:45 p. m. from Venice, where he ended a Mediter- | Yanean ertiise in the yacht Corsair. His conference with French offl- ciais will be private and unofficial.) Paul says he invites public | but it was learned that the subject | vestigation of all rumors ani jof the source of the proposed loan jjic statements and says he ts will be put squarely up to him. fied to stand on his record. After remaining here 48 hours) “the county records speak the Morgan will go to London, truth,” he says, omer County Commissioners Gaines ana| | Fi ‘ Dobson and other official ed | ‘One Killed 15 Hurt and other officials namea by Paul ridicule his charge Ne a . they constitute an “Invisible govern- in Texas Cyclone AUSTIN, Texas, April 25.—One ment,” and deny that there ts any functioning of a “ring” in county | was killed and 16 injured ta a tor-| affairs. Inado which struck the southeastern pe ‘part of Travis county today, The |6-year-old’ son of John Hinkle was Catch Young Boy [killed when the wind demolished lthe Hinge home. The father’ and Runaway; 2 Gone} Robert Walters, 13, who ran aw a daughter were perhaps fatally in- ay a: from home Tuesday after being jJured and a dozen farm hands were | soigeq for turning in a fire alarm, hurt. {in company with two other boys, |was being held Friday by Salem, | Ore, police’ His two companions sie ee HERE’S MORE ABOUT COUNTY RING STARTS ON PAGE 1 | | |less in emergency caser which re- jquire a unanimous vote. Likewise the same majority can and does ap- prove all pay rolls for empl and thru this po may allow a| |surplus of employes in all depart-| | ments and as much dead timber as| political necessity may require,” | ———$—$—$———— Water freezes every night in ‘the year ut Alto. Crucero, in Bolivia, aaa ie hd Tame ee) io sun is almost hot | Cacaped, a bis a berty, while at noon the su nceording to word received from enough to blister the flesh. the Salem police, | pia n Jof more than 1,300 miles It was the first Paris-Bucharest | [Non-stop flight, Wheh over Bayaria | the airmen -encountered — terrific | jeal French spirit of dash and dis: Hk TRIGK CHARGED MUTINY ABOARD ANIMAL PLAGUE MILK ASSURED FOR CITY Compromise Ends Thvreat- ened Wafare Over Prices us supply of 4 ened out, Thus agre jes that the producer ive $2.75 a 1h edwe delivered in M g2 and May milk i$ June milk, delivered, 7 kree | Brown t t theymilk supply woek, when James Creet tested against the boycott ‘ : Central and flower companies, by milk Creehan ta connected attle Milk Distributors’ The distributors had .cut t of milk 1 t, to Ike ators th a result of the tha nent!: evt put in ner + opposition TWO BALLOONS NOW IN RACE ‘New Record Is Expected in| National Aerial Contest SAN ANTONTO Texas, Herbert, Von Tha of the national elim! Dubuque, Iowa, this morning, cording to advices received by aero. nautical authorities here The balloon had been aloft hours and 10 minutes, and had tr eled 1,100 miles. The American re ord distance set in 1910 by Capt W. R. Hawley St. Louls, ts 1,172.9 miles In ¢ jon mce a jeved t ord. The by H. } year UL, He Good in charge o ard T. Van Orman, have not been heard from, They are belleved to be drifting in the region of the Great Lakes, al- ready beyond the American record and out after the world record of 1,896.86 miles, Four other balloons have landed, two being wrec voked ‘FRENCH AIRMEN IN LONG HOP Paris Plane Performs Thriller in Joining Race ries. Aprit Lieut. Pollettor who flew a French military ane from Villa Coublay here at pleted ries ol 1,400. 1 take the airplas Japan in World's record time and demo J France's fi | Patches regarding what was to been a secret long distance ff attempt, reports that Lieut. d came down at Bucharest at 5 yesterday, having mado filght to tho Rumar n capital, a distance 4. in a Nttle over 11 hour rainstorms, tnt weathered them: On his way to Japan, d'Oisy plans to make only the briefest halts, and he will nttempt to sleep chile flying, having his mechanic Hlot the machine. The plane specially-built mitt | tary Breguet, took off from Villa} | Coublay secretly, The big Broguct carries enough gasoline to permit successive jumps of 1,400 miles, cond halt | probably will be at Aleppo. Thence} d'Olsy will fly to Bagdad, Bender | Abbas and follow the usual route across India to Rangoon, Hong: kong, Shanghai, Pekin, Seoul and Tokyo, without special preparations having been made anywher It {s being carried out with ty gard for danger. Tteut. d’Oisy car ries no spare parts, but haw ban. anas, rum, cocoa cola, chocolate and biscuits. Tho flight is not an around-tho-} world effort,.as it is planned to end it at yened: 'Major Martin Will Try Flight Again DUTCH HARBOR, Unalaska, April 25—-Maj. Frederick L. Martin, commander of the United States |army round:the-world Might, was ex- |pected to make another attempt to- day to get away from Kanotak, en jroute to Dutch Harbor, to join the other three globe-encireling alrmen who are hero. Heavy winds prevented Maj, Mar. | tin making the flight yesterd yen ricT ave, ATER will be shut off on | Holden st., from 16th | W. to 29th ave, 5. W. Pressure will be low on the high | high points. of White Center | 1 { ana vielnity Saturday, from § | a.m. 10 6 p.m. Also wator will bo shut off in the district south Of Brace Point drive and weat } of 44th ave, 8. We on Satum day and on Monday, from 8 | a, m, to 5S pom 1} a FREDERICK & NELSON DOWMSTAIRS STORE Women’s and Misses’ T opcoats $13.85 SPLENDID collection of Topeoats in the popular weight for Spring and Summer wear. Fashioned in serviceable ATURDAY iL Assorted Wrapped Kisses, 25¢ Lb. Delicious! Kisses in a i 1 in our own daylight cz Special, 25¢ pound. CANDY SPECI quality fabrics in tan and gray shades, and attractive over-plaid effects Comfortably-fitting styles for womer and All full-lined with Distinctive value misses t satee! elf-stripe $15. at Trimmed Hats, $4.49 MALL, Hats in Milan stra fancy braids and taffeta Attractive styl ined in feathers, flowers and ribbon. Mostl $4.49. Also some att $3.45. Gatti Fashionable Coats For Women of Full Figure $37.50 A? NEW group of dress Coats for women who wear the larger sizes Becoming fashions—slenderizing lines one-of-a-kind styles, at ractive Trimmed Hats, at —DOWNS TORE T Knitted Glos Scarfs without sacrificing style. | In the Brightest of Colors it i if | In good quality pile fabrics in gray, $1.85 ti It tanbark and black. Ail lined with HESE attractive knitted glos # sateen and crepe, | Searfs are in the brilliant stripes Hi i 2 9 | and fancy designs so fashionable just Hels / Sizes 4244 to 521). now. A fresh shipment has just ar- tel Attractive Fitie at $37.50. rived and offers very good value, Sat- Hb; —DOWNSTAIRS STORE urday, at $1.85. RC eee, | j ta Women’s Union Suits 41c, 2 for 75c OMEN’S fine-ribbed cotton Unior Suits in low-neck style; knee length. Sizes 36 and 38 (only). Bodice-top style with tape shoulder straps; knee length, sizes 36 to 44. Good value at 41¢ each; 2 suits for 75¢. Silk Dresses In Fashion-Right Styles $10.85 to $27.50 SILK DRESSES form an important part of Downstairs Store displays of Spring fashions. A notably attractive array of styles and a broad range of low prices. Lovely Taffeta Dresses at $15.00 are of particular interest. Dresses for street wear. Sizes for women and. misses. At $10.85, $15.00, ate. 75, $19.75, $21.85, $23. hid and $27.50. bi —DOWNSTAIRS STORE Pretty Styles in Little Girls’ Capes and Coats $5.75 to $16.50 ITTLE girls will find many pretty styles in Capes and Coats in the Downstairs Store. Plain colors and the attractive plaid and check effects little girls like so well. Prices—$5.75, $7/75, $9.75, $11.50, $15.00 and $16.50. —DOWNSTAIRS STORE and afternoon rear DOWNSTAIRS STORE Fashionable Sweaters $5.75 to $11.95 Sleeveless, Manda- rin coats, jacquettes and many other fashtonable and pop- ular styles. A strikingly varied and attractive as- sortment of plain shades and gay col- or combinations, In wool, glos-and- wool and glos 8.75 DOWNSTAIRS STORY. Knitted Overblouses $1.95 Lightweight knitted glos Overblouses in light blue, gray, tanbark and mas hawk. Simple, at- tractive styles with short sleaves, ‘Dainty Blouses , ol. 95 As spring snowy white charming barred dimity frosh as flowers, and in ALT i ataarbs Ph with their new collar and cuff trimmings, Often brightened wi uchex of colo black t ming. Very value at § Also with white collar and cuffs. Other knitted slos Overblouses At $2.50, $3.95 and from 5, —DOWNSTAIRS STORE New Half-Sox For Children 35c pr., 3 pr. $1.00 RAY, tan and green with fancy striped roll tops and white with colored roll tops. Also red, blue, yel- low, lavender and black. Sizes 5 to 8. At 35¢ pair; 3 pairs $1.00. —DOWNSTAIRS STORE Boys’ “Scout’’ Shoes $2.65 especially good Shoe for play wear. In brown elkskin, with Goodyear welt sole. Sizes for large and small boys—10 to 13 and 4, 414, 5, 5% and 6. At $2.65 pair. MEN’S AND BOYS’ TENNIS SHOES in white cxnvas, with heavy cushioned rubber soles. Laced-to-toe style. Boys’ sizes, 11 to 2, $1.65; 214 to 6, $1.75; Men’s sizes, 614 to 11, $2.00. GROWING GIRLS’ PATENT PUMPS in broken style and size as- sortment. Sizes 214 to 7. Reduced to $2.95. —DOWNSTAIRS STORE Specially Bought! Specially Priced! UMBRELLAS 8 UMBRELLAS jn black cotton, plain, curved and ring hand! 163 WOMEN'S UMBRELLAS in black cotton, red and blue, plain and fan low-priced at . . 150 WOME 8 BLACK Co’ with fancy handles; low-priced at....sersee 154 WOMEN’S AND CHILRE 200 WOME: with taped BLACK COTT ‘iges. Strap hand $2.45 86 CHILDREN'S SILK UMBRELLAS with fancy ferrules, tips ped $3.95 $5.00 MBRELLAS, low-priced at... Also children's $1.45 34 WOMEN'S § styles; low. LK riced at.