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The Seattle star. [volume] (Seattle, Wash.) 1899-1947, March 28, 1922, Image 1

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First in New# —First in Circulation (by 11,727 copies a day)— Call Main 0600 to Order The Star at Your Home —50 Cents a Month —Why Pay More?
As Manhunters Close In on Pair of Slavers!
1
VOLUME 24. NO. 27.
She'll Seek Secret
of Fadeless Beauty
/tome firew
Uaah. folk*: How Ihrw oa«.
dates do low Utr Aiantrw flag!
• • •
A local MMmrr ha* Installed a
radiophone. Passengers who get
aick cu lt*t»n to a campaign speech
and get atcker.
• • •
We'ro tired o< hearing the "blue*'
Why not a few "purples' and
"pinks"? Let's go!
• • •
Om DAJI.Y JAZZ
Linda 101 l me flat;
Don l know wherr r<i at
All kw. I don't like
The w«f aha were her hat
AiMy lMt tha
Thick Mack pnryke
lU-AA-M-OOt
IN got mm. ktt-
I rot the paie pa»h pinks far rmt
In GOT we, kid—
Vo« bat you luww Ik too.
Now, I ain't a hoy that Joe hen.
Bat TO mr that when joo Osshra
Tea , /° Ur
Ton da. Too KNOW yon da.
I(M the pink.—l he pnla pooh pinks
far y»n hoe!
• e e
Tha prraoct who call* for a po 11 co
man then* day* l» *rry apt to got a
bootlegger or a burglar
• 0 •
Now that Chief Bsnrtag ha* die
charged a policeman for ate*Ung
auto Urea and hartng a penitentiary
record. It la In order for the clrtl
aer»K-e commission to hold a hear
ing and reinstate the gentleman.
• • •
"I Ml IN \twmy
attending »• th«
affairs ot the city
l« resign m roe
pars turn <waiu*L"j
Wsltrr F. Meier,
candidate fori
nuysr
• • •
Of nram. It never ofonml to
Walt that ht» salary a* a cttjr official
might rnmc In handy in paying hia
campaign bills.
• • •
Per hap* Walt
doean't have to
wtfrry about cam
paign expense*?
• • •
■ W
Qt'EKT
Wonder what Corporailati
Cavnsel Walter F. Meier would
: do If called to rule upon the )
eligibility of Mayoralty Candidal*
Waller r. Meier?
■ ■
• • e
Old Mother llnkbnrd
Mhf mnit to the cupboard
To qmrmch that crating thhrtt;
WKrn ihe got tkrrtt
llrr cupboard w*m bare..
The dry «<yiod got thrrr first.
—Lei MorrU.
e • •
Just when the Los Angeles chief
of police is planning a shake up.
along comes anotfter earthquake.
• • •
They're ffoing to abolbrh the one
pi e<* bathin* nuit at Alki b*aeh.
And fv«n the moat liberal minded
Will freely admit
That's going too far.
• • •
Trylil t® bnr
feootlof whUkr Vn
!• MrtotJi.
You mlfflit mrtMd
• • •
0
•fHow do you eat your meals?"
■ka a correspondent of Cjmthla
Grey.
One at a time, we hasten to an
swer.
• • •
UT (IKE OER, TM' OPTICT
VAMP, HE/.:
It's easy for a bowlegged girl
to be ermdmt.
• • •
Bupt. Rosa, of the city light depart.,
■ays people are using more electric
ity every day. Perhaps they are
making current wine.
• • •
University professor *ny* there t*
157,000 horsepower In a spoonful of
water. That l*n't water*
• • •
BUly F.rmnm mmr* Hmhm Rith will
ha** U m«ii« » hom# ran •vorj tw
in tirrdi hU
That's emmy. All h* hu U 4« It
ptmy Mif t*«T7 <Xh»T dmy,
9 • *
EVldie Plnkman, Seattle boxer. In 1
now a proud daddy. Bddi'- can kf-p
in training by walking the floor at J
nl*ht.
• • •
TO TUB aALUOTTSO BATtITI'BS
Hush, little street car,
lloo't you cry;
You II be a rhk ken coop
Hy and by.
. . .
What ha* become of the old fash- ,
ioned prohibition raider who some |
times u*ed to capture a shipment!
worth less than half a million dol
lars?
WEATHER
Tonttkl and Wf < Mn;
ttTone Moutherly
tr4nd.t.
Tmprrmtarr Ijml *4 llnan
Muunum. 17. Minimum. 41
To«Ujr noon. W.
Expert Sent by Millionaire Women to
Find Eternal Pulchritude
BY KOV GIBBONS
CHICAGO. Marrh U Kternal
beauty!
Mix Sadie V, Mausby of this
•city, who holda the title of "hu
J)f is)inter Comes
BY A. S. M. HUTCHINSON
Cet>Tnabi. IISI. A. 11. W Hstrhiaaos ,
HARK SAItRK la Introduced to the reader by—
lIA/fiOOP. a garrulous I.ondon aollcttor. who went to arhool with him
year* before an<l who haa Just renewed hi* acquaintance with him. At
thla time—lf 17 Sabre la 14 and la tiring with hla wife—
St ARM. HAIIHK, In Penny Green, an Kngtlah village aeven mllea from
Tldborough, where Habre la In busliwa* -"aeven miles by road and about
aeven cen'urles In manner* and customs." but now la-lng "Improved" by a
pushing development company, llapgood suspects that Mark and Mabel
•re not nulled to each other after visiting them In their home. He eiplaln*
that Habre, e»«-n in hi* childhood, waa remarkably tolerant always able
to see the other fellow * point; whrreaa hia pretty wife la a typical, violently
opinionated gossip.
Now go on with the story.
VI
Penny Oreen. like Rome, had not
! baen built In a day. Ths hou»r* of
, tha Penny Green Garden Home, on
I the other hajid, were t>elng run up
I In as near to a day as enthusiastic
4evek>pers. feverish contractors
I 'vying one with another) and irn
! patient tenants could encomrauia.
, Nor wa* I'enny Green built for a
j day. Habre's bourse wits of gray
! stone and it presented over t!« door
j way the date IM7.
"Nearly two hundred and fifty
I year*," Ma tie I had once said.
j "And I bet." Hahre had replied,
j "It's never lieen better kept or run
I than you run It now. Ma»>el."
j The tribute wa* well deserved
Maliel, who waa In many ways a
' model woman, was preeminently a
i model housewife. "«"rawshaws"
| was spotlessly kept snd perfectly ad
I ministered Four living rooms,
apart from Ihe domestic offices,
w»-re on the ground floor. One was
the morning room, <n which they
principally lived; one the dining
room snd one the drawing room
They were entered by enormously
heavy door* of oak. fitted with
latches. th«s drawing room up two
i steps, the dining room down one
step snd the mornlnc room and the
fourth room on the level. All were
low beamed and many-windowed
with lattice windows; all wrv
stepped Into as stepping Into a very
quiet place, and somehow Into a
room which one had not c*pe»ted to
be there, or not quite that shap« If
a room were there Habre never
quite lost that feeling of pleasant
surprise on enherlng them.
They had moreover, whether due
to the skill of the architect or the
sagacity of Ma>>el. the admirable, but.
rare attribut*' of being cool In sum
rner and wsrm In winter.
The only room In the bouse which
Habre did not like was the fourth sit
ting room on the ground floor; and
It wa* hi* own rqom, furnished and
decorated by Mal>e| for his own par
Ocular use and comfort. Hut she
called It hi* "den," and Habre
loathed and detested the word den i
The Seattle Star
u M«wi ClMa ItelUi Hit 1. lit*, n Ik* NMamr» ti Mini*. Wwh. niular Ik* Art of o»ncr«aa Mtrcb I. IITt. r«r T«*r. fcr Mall, |l to It
Miss Sadir V. Mausby
man engineer." la anon to aall for
Europe In search of a max to
elulr ssld to have l>een dlacov-
er*il by foreign scientists, which
(Turn to Page 7. Column 3)
I a* applied to a room a man specially
Inhabits. It Implied to htm a ml*
cullne untldlneaa, and he wax In
tently orderly and hated untidiness.
It Implied cuatoma and manners of
what he tailed "bosrdlng-house
, idea*"—the Idea that a man must
. have an untidily comfortable apart
ment Into which he can retire and
envelop himself In smoke,
I and where lie "ca« have hla own
thing* around him," and "have hla
| plpea and hia plcturea about him."
and where he can wvar "an old
■hooting Jacket and slipper*"- -and
he loathed and deleale<| all the*e
phraae* and the Idea* they connoted.
He had no "oil shooting Jacket"
find he would have given It to the
I gardener If he had. and he detested
wearing sllp[>era and never dkl wear
slippers; It wna hi* habit to put on
I hi* hoots after hla l>ath and to keep
them on till he put on shoes when
changing for dinner. Above all. he
loathed and defeated the vialon which
| the word "den" always conjured up
Ito him. Thl* waa a vision of the
door of a typical den lielng opened
by a wife, and of the wife saying
; In a mincing voice, "Thla la George
j In his den." and of lioardlng house
i female* f«rerlng over the wife'*
shoulder and *mlllng fatuously at
the denlxen who. In an old shooting
Jacket and Rllpper*. grinned vacuous
ly I Kick at them. To Mark 'hi* was
a horrible and unspeakable vlalon.
Ma)>el could not In the least un
derstand It. and common sense and
.common custom were entirely on lier
j*lde; Mark admitted that.
The matter of the nen and another
j matter, touching the servant*, came
up letween them In the very earliest
day* of their married life Krom
l/ondon, on their return from their
honeymoon. Mark had been urgent
ly summoned to the sick lied of hi*
father. In Chovenabury. Mnbel pro
rveded to Prawshaws He Joined her
a week later, his father happily re
covered Mabel had been busy "set
tling thing*." and she tr*.k him
rotind the house with dellrlou* pride
and happiness Mnrk, sharing both. I
(Continued on Page 6) J
On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise
FAIL TO
MURDER
TANAKA
Two Assailants
and Six Others
Wounded During
Death Attempt
I *H\N«illM. China, Manh rt.
Mlmipt by two
men. kllfiHl In h*«« hum
Korean mdtiUnMi, to a»» ■•se
nate Harai I.htil Taiuka. of
Japan I«d>y. resulted In ll»i In
jury af both ml Um would hf aa
aaealna. the rAfHurr at mm ai
Ihmi ud Iha Injury <*' "Mw
pi nana. Lhre* of Uvm
llama Tauak*. »ho *a> embark
ln« for Japan aftar having paid an
"fftriai vuul lo Iha I'hlhppln* islanda
escaped uninjured.
The Injured InrMl one foreign
woman an Acp*rlaen newspaper man
named Thnmpaon. a I"ortugoewa dark
and three Chinese.
K B. Oullck. an American broker,'
aaatatad In the ispture at oca of lb*
two saaallanta af the i«n«nl.
The two m*-n appeared al th«
wharf from which IWwt Tanaka's
ataam«r was to laavs frtr Japan and
attempted to jrt wtlhln nana* of lha
general. Ounrds surrounded tha
ahlp and othera turned on tha pair,
who fled thru tha street*. ihootMi
Ha they went
tlulkk appeared In thetr path and
on* flrn] at htm. tha bullet mtaxing
him but clipping tha hair off a worn
an near by.
Oultrk h*ld tha man at bar tmUl
police arrived
Tha other escaped but la known to
have been wounded.
It wm believe,] iha man who waa
captured will dla. •
ilaron Tanaka. who holda tha rank
of general hi lha Japane-e army, waa
former minister of war. and waa
among thoaa considered aa possible
premier following tha recent asaaa
•lnatton of Premier llara.
AMUNDSEN IS
. IN NEW YORK
NTW TORK, March I* Two
Amerlcan cruising airplane*. equip
ped with powerful radio telephone*,
will accompany Capi. linaid Amund
•en In hla "drift" aero** th* Arctic
baaln, *rh*<lui*<l to Mart from Seattle
Jun* I. th* Norwegian eiplorer de
clared today on hi* arrival from Nor
way to complete hla exploration
plana.
With Amundnen wa« I.leot. o*rar
' >mdal, Norwegian air see, who ha*
had special training In flvlng under
ndrw condltlona. Anolh*r pilot
who will accompany th* expedition,
lieutenant I»ahl. now I* on hla way
to the (-OAat via th* Panama canal.
Rickard Case May
Go to Jury Tonight
HEW TORK. March 2* The cane
of Tex fClckanl. rharfftd with Im
proper relation* with Barah flchoen*
feld, IS year old achool rlrl, probably
will jo to the Jury tonlihl
Tho defenae re*ted at 11:40 a m
after Tllckard ha/1 N»*»n neverHy
crow examined concerning hi* alibi.
Woman Trie* Four
Times to End Life
TACY)MA. March 2S.—Sunt* Roup*.
30, wax bark In the county hotfpltal
today tnr examination. Dlocharfrfd
late yeittrday an cured, following an
attack of Influonia. «he wHlked from
th«* hrmpltnl Aod tried four tlmen to
ond her life beneath the wheel* of
pmurin* Btreet car*.
On her fourth attempt the rr*ru*
wan onlv « m«tt*»r of Inchen.
You Can't Help
But Win
by reading the ads in
The Star carefully from
flay to day. Provided,
of course, that you will
take advantage of the
bargain opportunities
they present the
chances to save on
things you have to buy.
The beßt offerings of
Seattle's best stores ap
pear in The Star.
SEATTLE. WASH., TUESDAY. MARCH 28, 1D22.
Discovers Trath of
Lincoln's Parentage
Mr. Meier,
Job-Hunter
% (EDITORIAL)
Mayoralty candidate meier says he is
"too busy to conaidcr resigning as corporation
coun*el."
Mr. Meier, however, in not too busy to do a lot of
campaigning. Not too busy to xurvey the array of
handxome hlark and orange pictures of himaelf that
are appearing all over town. Not too bu*y to low
interest in the big campaign chest that a ciique of
buninem men are raising to bring about hia election.
MR. MKIKR'S failure to resign the one office he
holda while seeking the other, stamps him as a
jol>-huriter.
Seattle doe* not need, or want, a job-hunter a*
mayor. When election day comes. The Star believe*,
a majority of the voter* will tell Mr. Meier that they
are "too bu*y to consider hi* candidacy."
EXPLAINS FIRING!
OF FATAL SHOT
Witness in Foster Murder
Trial Tells of Tragedy
now Robert IL Kwler fired the
shot which caused Ihe death of Mm
Mary bushnell 110) Km pi., last
New Tear'* Kre, was related on the
witnem atand before Superior Judge
Mitchell Gilliam Tuesday morning
by William R. Walker, a friend of
tha Itushoell family, who also waa
wounded during tha shooting.
Walker wm Ift* state's second wit.
n*aa. Th* flr»t wa* R. H l/rr, of
th» county engineer'* office. who
poAklwt out to th* Juror* a diagram
of th* Hushnrll noun*, which he had
made At th* ln*Uu»c* of I'mtctiUiv
Attorney Malcolm t'ouglaa.
Adam Heeler, Fo*t*r'* attorney.
(oM th* court that at *om* ttm*
during th* cajie h* wanted the Jury
to viatt the premise*.
Tli* Jury wax finally selected and
■worn In at 10 a. m. Prosecutor
Douglas th*n outlln*<t th* facta lhat
th* atat* expected to prove. Heeler
reserved hi* atalrment.
VOTERS' LAST
MINUTE RUSH
With the registration books
scheduled to close Tuesday nlglit at
» o'clock sharp. Seattle voter* formed
In a long line at the city comptrol
ler's office In order to enroll for the
spring election*.
Total r*ri*tration thin year In ex
pected to approach th® M.OOO mark
Mora than 1.000 voter* reflet ered
TuMdty tnornin*. Thoa* who have
not had their nonww placed on the
)>ooka will he unabl** to participate
In the primaries April 18 or the elec
tion May 2.
One of Siamese Twin
Sisters Faces Death
HY caul viemm ijttijc
CHICAGO. March I*. Rosa
Blazek struggled for life today as her
Slomeso twin sister, Josefa, faced
death.
The twins. 43 years of a*-e. are the
only ones extant known to the med
leal profession. Josefa was In a
stupor at the West Knd hospital.
Rosa, at her sl<le, prayed for life.
Ilosa would gladly follow her sister
to death were It not for Fronts, a
bright-eyed, 12 year old son, she told
I ir. llenjainln II Itreakstone, leading
Chicago surgeon and writer.
"Mother love lias triumphed over
sisterly affection In this case," Dr.
Breakstone said.
Dr. Breakstone, Dr. ICdwnrd Cn
nat and other physicians todny
were still uncertain whether the
death of Josefs would mean Roea's
death 'also.
Surgeons have not (riven up hope
for Josefa, who Is suffering from
Jaundice. Iler chances for life,
however, are slight, they agree.
An X ray to determine whether
the sisters can be separated If one
dies has never l>een taken, accord
Ing to Dr. Breakstone. Kfforts to
purl thi-in will bo niudu If JiucCa
SEEK ARREST OF
2 EX-POLICEMEN
Robbery Charged Against
A. G. Ford, C. V. Harvey
rpo*> complaint of threw victims of
an alleged "knockoTer" boose raid.
A O. Ford and C. V. Harvey, former
memlier* of the police dry squad. and
two other m*n whoae tma nam**
are not known, were nought by Sher
iff Matt Slarwlch oa warrant*
| charging rol>»iery.
All four of th* men are alleged to
har* Impersonated federal prohibi
tion officer*. Harvey wbi discharged
from the police force for holding up
a bootlegger at Reach. the
record* dhow, while Ford wa* fired
for an alleged attempt to collect al
ienee money from the proprietor* of
a rambling den. Good description*
of the two other men ar» In the
hand* of the taooecutlng attorney.
The warrant* were laaraed Monday
upon complaint of It A. ("Joe") Rlerd.
Orandvlew apartments, and K.
Smith. Hits hotel, who told Deputy
Prosecuting Attorney K. I. Jorw*
thnt on last Friday night they were
held up and robbed of a quantity of
liquor and their automobtle by six
armed men at Richmond Reach.
The stlrk up occurred about 10S0
p. m., the complainant* said The
men called each other by the name*
of well-known member* of the fed
ernl prohibition squad. they said.
The victim* were Rlerd. Smith and
a man named Hilly Jenaen. The
*uppo*cd officer*. It I* declared,
handcuffed the trio and drove them
to town, circling the cqjinty Jail sev
eral time* and endeavoring to extort
money from th*>m by threat* to
"Jug" them. Falling in th!*, Rlerd, 1
Smith and Jensen claim th*y w*r*
thrown out of the car near Harrison
st. and West lake av*.
dim, the doctor wild.
Rosa ami led wanly a* she talked
with her son Frunts. Occasionally,
she would glance at her sinter as
doctor* forced medicine Into Joeefa's
throat.
Josefa and Roaa wet* born In
Austria. They traveled with shown
In Europe for a decade. The Bis
ters arrived In the United States a
your ago.
Rosa's husband was killed In the
world war.
"It's the strangest case In medi
cal annals." said Dr. Breakstone.
"Many Siamese twins have been
born, but they seldom reach ma
turity. We cannot even dare fore
cant what will be tho result If
Josefa dies. Rosa may follow her
slater In death. She may not. We
are going to do our beat to Have
her life."
According: to Pr. Breakstone's ob
servations. Josefa possesses the
same love for Frantz as does Rona.
the mother.
Rosa, who was buoyant all morn
ing and spoke freely with her son.
Frantz, lapaed Into a state of swill
cuina Utter la the tU*.
HOME
EDITION
STATUS LEGAL
Marriage Proof
Established by
Noted Writer
RECORD FOUND
, I Dr. WiniMi R HaHwi, mf Omk\
I IVi 111.. U mm thm 1
I grwlnl mm AhrtUtmsn I
\liMtln. H« hM Bin'h I
!bte llf* Mtliiff lnU»
/ mmmrrwm mt I Imlb I»r. .
l> Ihf MOlhar **f m+r*wml (
ibnlii am ti»» rmiUplilUr I
/ T"h# !«»■* kn»»n art **Tb# f»- 1
I l«mtl y of Abrtlum mn4 I
\ 'TV Dml of AbrmltMi f
BY WM. E. BARTON
C«pyvicht. US!, by a**tU« lUr
Abrahun Lincoln lived and died
not knowing whether hi* parents.
Thnrou and Nanry Lincoln, had
ever been legally married.
Those who knew him Intimately
I believed that this haunting uncer
tain'* wu on« cause of his periodic
melancholy. a nuflnwa no deep thai
when he wax in Ita black possession,
"gloom dripped from him aa he
walked."
lie m* MM laaffeetvai at
tempts to l«m the truth, and
(iv« U Bp; he learned nothing,
and Ida Inquiry started ugly
rwmn.
lie thought he amid find the rec
ord of the marriage of hla parents In
Hardin county, Kentucky, In which
he waa born, and at whose county
neat. Kllaabethtown. hla parenta were
living when hla older * later waa bom.
The reoorda showed hla father"*
' second marriage, that to Sarah Bush
| Johnston, but not hla Urat mart u(«
j to Nancy llankß.
KINAIXY ABANDONED
KKAKCII
Abraham IJneoln gave up the In
, quify. and there waa what waa railed
a "significant reaerve" In hla conver
nation about hla |>arenta
lie believed in them, but he did
i not know.
It would have cheered hla heart
1 could he have known the truth which
| thi* utory contains.
In 1878, William V. Booker, county
1 clerk of Washington county. Ken
. tucky. found In hla record* a mar
! rtage license bond dated June 10,
1 1806, between Thomas Lincoln and
. Nancy Hanks, and also a return of
It marriages alleged to have been
performed In 1806 ami 1807 by Rev.
Jesae Head, a Methodist minister. In
' rluding that of Thomas Lincoln and
I Nancy llanka. June 12, 1808.
Hut who waa Jesse Head? An
thoriUea In the Methodist church
could find no record of him, and It
waa freely charged that this record
(Turn to I'age 7, Column i)
LIQUOR THEFT
CASE STARTS
! Trial of Curtis Berndahl, Albert I*
Dickey, li. A. Livingstone. William
M. Murray, Carl 11. Martin, Warren
V. Youmana, Clarence H. Untie and
Walter Milton, chanted with the
theft of 130,000 worth of high (trade
liquors from the government ware
house at Western ave. and Wall st.
last August 29. opened In Federal
Judge Jeremiah Neterer'i court Tues
day morning.
Choosing of the Jury and the
presentation of a motion by the de
fense to dismiss all but one count In
the Indictment ngainst the eight de
fendants In court consumed tine
morning session of court. The mo
tion wail denied Two other defend
ant*. Carleton H. I'arker and Charles
M. Crawford, have pleaded guilty,
and their sentence hns been deferred
until the roncltuflon of the trial.
Failed Bank to Pay
Its Second Dividend
A dividend of 10 per rent Is to he
paid some time In April to depositors
of the defunct Scandinavian Amer
ican bank, according to K. A. Unit
ley, speclul deputy supervisor of
hanking. This will be the second
dividend that has twsr>n T*ald since the
bank closed its doors. A 20 per cent
dividend was declared lost Decem
ber,
Daugherty Would
Kill Civil Service
WASHINGTON, Ma. h 28—Aboil
tlon of the civil service system of
selecting government officials and
adopting the plan of making appoint
ments on political recommendations
is favored by Attorney Ueneral
I)nugherty.
This was revealed today by testi
mony of Daugherty before a sub
committee of the lioumj appropria
tions committee.
IBM
JIIH
TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE
200 MEN
TRAILING
BANDITS
Skirmish Line Is
Thrown Across
Corner of Olym
pic Peninsula
By Hal Armstrong
PORT TOWNBKND, Mare* S.
—Two hundred heavily armed
men are spread in "skirmish"
line" format ion today across UM
northeast corner of the Olympic
peninsula, searching for the twm
bandit* who have held the I nail
tryside in a reign of terror far
Utr last five day*.
Knraged aver the kfllin* af
Ray Light by the
and the wounding of two other
men. members of the posse hara
•worn not to return frata **- fir
chase until the ibiwlwim an
taken dead sr alive.
Inasmuch as at ieaat cm af
the fugitives has pi o»ed lihadf
• Hut and aumate abet, it la
feared that further casualties
will be suffered as mod aa tbn
man hunters calHi sight of Ihdr
prey—(or the bandits real las
that ibey are virtually certaim
to go to Ihe gal low* If take*,
and they are exported to fight ta
the last If they are cornered.
The posse was recruited from both
Jefferson and Clallam counties, aad
t» led by two sheriff*. J. E. Nelaou
of Clallam and William Chasa of
Jefferson.
William It Ritchie, proeecvttnff at
torney of Clallam county, baa alaa
Joined the chase.
HANDITB NEAR
PORT 1.l DI.OW
The bandits nre believed ta ha
somewhere In the vicinity of Port
I Ludlow, nbout 16 miles south of l*ort
Townsend. between Center and Shine.
The posse has established a work
ing base at Mnynards. which Is nea*
the supposed bandit stronghold, ajflp
men are working out In every dlNb
lion from this point, beating every
square foot of the heavily wooded
country.
Morr than 50 automobiles hare
been placed at the disposal of the
po-sev and these are used by
deputies patrolling the roads
which Intersect the peninsula
forest.
At the same time the roast
guard cutter I* standing off Port
Discovery with machine gun*
trained shoreward to keep the
fugltivfpi from escaping by boat.
Two small boats have been
lowered from the cutter and are
patrolling the beach.
One of the coiist k uardsmen aboard
these boats shot Tom Carlson Sun
day when the latter failed to heed
demands to stop his launch at tho
entrance to Washington harbor. This
Incident brought the total casualty
list directly asrribable to the bandits
up to fou».
Deputy Sheriff Rex Mclnne s «u
shot Saturday when he encountered
the ban due and a short while after
ward the desperadoes killed Ray
Light anil wounded Charles Carlson
when they held up the logging camp
at Maynard.
FOOTPRINTS AMINO
RKACII It)I.I.O\VKD
The most promising clue y«l
brought to light by the man-hunters
was being followed by a group of
e*|>erienccd trackers today. Yester
day afternoon Mrs. M. Eldrldge saw
two ptrange men in her field, near
Center. She telephoned to Sheriff
Nelson, who immediately sent a party
of deputies to the scene.
The strangers had disappeared by
the time the deputies arrived, but
their footprints were found In the
field and these nxnetly coincided
with the measurement* taken from
footprints left by the fugitives at th»
time they shot Mclnnes.
These footprints were followed
down to the shore of Discovery bay
last night, but dark news Interefered
before they could be pursued any
farther. Knrly this morning the
tracking was begun again, and the
possemen are hopeful that the trail
will lead them to the tnurderera be
fore nightfnll.
The SSU.OOO In rash and ««rttrl
ties which the robbers stole from
the S<-<|ulni .State hank Thursday
night Is believed to be cached
somewhere In the forest, and the
nianhunters think they will be
able to recover the loot If they
can succeed In tracking down tIM
desperadoes.
( '

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