The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current, October 01, 1922, Section One, Page 6, Image 6

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    TITE SUNDAY OREGONIAN. PORTLAND. OCTOBER 1, 1923
REPUBLICAN HOPES
BURNING BRIGHTLY
Prosperity Is Expected to
Keep People in Line.
PARTY TAKES OFFENSIVE
Campaign Will Bo Carried Into
Democratic Territory on
Tariff Issue.
BY ROBERT T. SMALL.
(Copyright. 1922. by The Oregonian.)
WASHINGTON, D. C, Sept 30.
As the congressional campaigns ara
' beginning to make headway in the
various states, the republican man
agers here in Washington are as
turning a confidence which a few
weeks ago would have been incre
dible. It is not that they have found any
new merit in the record of the con
gress Just closed nor that they are
unconscious Of the blight that a
tariff bill generally leaves upon a
party la power.
The republicans believe they are
going to achieve victory this fall be
cause of the prosperity which is
sleeping the country.
"Give us good times and to hell
with the record of congress," de
clared a vigorous and virulent leader
of the republican inner councils to
the writer a few weeks ago.
Good Times Held Here.
Today the republicans believe the
good times are here and they feel
that the rest is easy sailing. Not
that the cold winds of defeat are not
expected to blow and to blow hard
In a good many localities, but by and
large the old chiefs of the Grand Old
Party are rather inclined to inform
the universe that they are "settin'
pretty" at the moment.
It is no secret that John T. Adams,
national chairman, and a lot of other
republican leaders six months ago
were much worried over the outlook
for the coming election. Nothing
seemed to be breaking right for the
party. Congress was in a jam, re
ports from the country Indicated
that the administration was losing
ground, the Washington arms con
ference had been a seven days' won
der, but apparently had left no per
manent impression upon the people,
ao far as political considerations
wdre concerned, and a lot of so
called "progressives" were threaten
ing to run away with all the party
contests.
Prosperity Sole Hope.
Chairman Adams, of a remarkably
equable disposition, found solace in
the conclusions which were reached
at not only one but many confer
ences. "If business conditions are good
'm the fall, we will sweep the coun
try," said the leaders, "if business
londitions continue bad we will lose
fhut is all there is to it, tariff or
o tariff, foreign policy or no for
eign policy, congress or no con
gress." This is the philosophy of the re
publican chieftains and it is the ex
planation of the optimism which has
taken hold of them during the last
10 days.
They have seen unemployment
virtually wiped out. They have seen
hundreds of thousands of men on
strike return to work. The condi
tions of the return may not have
been in all cases all that was ex
pected., but the men are back never
theless, and producing. The busi
ness revival from one end of the
country to the othw seems limited
at the moment only by the somewhat
crippled facilities of the railroads to
handle the flow of commerce.
Fall Dinner rail Slogan.
Word has gone forth from head
quarters here that "the full dinner
pail" shall once again be the slogan
of the republican speakers.
Faced a short time ago with a
purely defensive campaign, the re
publicans feel now that trade' fig
ures and business reports from every
section of the country give them a
positive platform upon which to
build for the ballot of November 7.
With becoming modesty the repub
licans will declare that returned
prosperity is entirely due to the
wise policies of republicanism and
the confidence of the people in re
publican management.
The democrats will reply that
prosperity has come back to the
country despite the republican party
and not because of it. They will say
there has been a breakdown of gov
ernment; that congress was never at
such a low ebb as it has been during
the past four years of republican
control. The democrats will say
they are Justified in this latter con
clusion by quoting explicit state
ments to the same effect made by
the secretary of war, John W.
Weeks, one of the most stalwart of
all stalwart grand old party men.
Charters to Be Iicnorrd.
The republicans have decided to
Ignore all such things and preach
prosperity from beginning to end.
Lest some of the democrats get too
obstreperous about the "iniquitous"
tariff, however, the republican cam
paign managers have prepared a
little booklet which gives the tariff
records of the democrats who voted
with the republicans on certain of
the tariff schedules. The democrats
already have been alleging that the
Fordney-McCumber tariff act is a
political rather than an economic
tariff. The republican book count
ers with this charge:
"Democratic members of congress
themselves furnish the best proof
of the fallacy and inconsistency of
the democratic party's position on
the tariff. Their party may seek to
make political capital out of the
issue, but individually they seldom
fail to seek the needed protection
for the industries of their respective
states."
Demorrallc Vote Cited.
The republicans allege that 3S.8
per cent of the democrats in the sen
ate voted for amendments to in
crease the rates of duty in the Ford
ney bill, while 47 per cent voted
against amendments which would
have lowered the rates of duty.
They not only give this telltale per
centage, but they list fhe democrats
who did it.
Taken altogether it's going to be
a right merry campaign after all.
OX TEAM HARD TO FIND
One Mot hod of Transportation Xo
Longer in Vse.
CHICAGO, Sept. 30. "Times do
change," is the unanimous verdict
of officials of the American Elec
tric Railway association, who
searched three months for a team
of oxen, to be nsed in connection
with the annual convention here
October 2-6.
"When someone suggested an ox
team to show the stages in the
progress of transportation every
one agreed that finding oxen would
be easy," said Secretary James W.
Welsh.
"But when we began to look for
them we couldn't find one. Ezra
Meeker, an Oregon trail pioneer,
who drove an ox team about- the
country in the interest of good
roads, was appealed to, but his team
was stuffed and on exhibition in
Seattle, Wash.
"We asked stockyards officials,
wild west shows and many others.
Eventually we heard of one blind
ox in Phillips, Wis., and, after get
ting the entire city interested in
the search, we located a yoke near
there."
Together with the pageant show
ing old and new types of transpor
tation, the convention will hear ad
dresses from . all living former
presidents of the organization, many
of whom ran horse-car lines, ac
cording to plans. Trackless trans
portation, taxes and public relations
are other subjects included on the
programme.
s
WRECtf OF EUROPE LAID TO
, VERSAILLES PACT.
Xew and More Terrible Wars Are
Coming, Says Former Ital
ian Premier in Book.
NEW YORK, Sept. 30. Frances
Counitti, premier of Italy in 1919
1920, and noted economist, says in
his book, "The Wreck of Europe,"
issued today, that Europe is being
wrecked by the treaty of Versailles
and faces new and more terrible
wars. The former Italian premier
says:
"If England had lost the war, or
if the United States had been con
quered I cannot imagine what they
would say about a conquering Ger
many which had had Liverpool, New
York and the principal ports and
industrial centers occupied by black
savages and by whites clamoring
for indemnities so high that there
was no remote possibility of their
ever being satisfied.
"As the final insult to the con
quered, in the army of occupation
backward races are represented.
Thus the most cultured cities in
Europe have been and are under
negro violence, which has been
guilty of the most serious crimes.
"Victory has taken away from
France her greatest prestige, her
fascination as"" a democratic coun
try. Now all the democratic races
of the world look at France with
an eye of distrust; some, indeed,
with rancor, others with hate.
France has comported herself more
In cruelty toward Germany than a
victorious Germany would have
shown toward France. She has on
foot the largest army in the world
in front of a helpless Germany. She
sends colored troops to occupy most
of the progressive cities of Ger
many, abusing the fruits of Ger
many.
"Germany is in a helpless and
broken condition today: she will
not make way; she cannot. But
if tomorrow she should make way,
how many peoples would come to
France's aid?"
DAIRY CATTLE COMPETE
Prizes Aggregating $35,130 Of
fered at National Exposition.
HAMLINE, Minn., Sept. 30. The
largest group of pure-bred dairy
cattle ever gathered will be dis
played at the national dairy expo
sition to be held here October 7 to
14, when J35.130 in prizes will be
offered, according to officials.
Cattle from the prize herds of
largo Wisconsin farms and other
parts of America's dairy section will
be exhibited at the exposition,
which sponsors declare will be the
largest of its kind.
The United States department of
agriculture will co-operate with the
exposition officials in turning Dairy
hall into a huge educational exhibit
of dairy products and their uses.
Included in the hall's features will
be the government exhibit, a model
dairy kitchen directed by Mrs. Paul
Hemming, in which the uses of milk
in the home kitchen will be dem
onstrated. Demonstration also will be made
of the department's market report
service, by radio, telegraph and mail,
which is available to farmers, man
ufacturers, distributors and con
sumers. The various cattle associations
have assisted in raising the total
of the prizes offered. In each of
the five breed divisions 33790 will
be offered to the regular classes.
In addition to this special prizes
offered by individuals and organi
zations raises the total to much
larger figures.
Boys' and girls' calf clubs have
been offered prizes amounting to
$2200 by the National Dairy asso
ciation, 440 being given to exhib
itors in each class. In addition
each of the breed associations is
giving prizes in recognition of the
work done by the clubs..
Phone your want ads to The
Oregonian, Main 7070.
The Mathis
Label Is a
Seal of Quality
Jlbl
WET 10 DRY ISSUE
TEST
Both Sides Organize Forces
for Hot Fight.
WINE, BEER PROPOSED
Supreme Court Allows on Ballot
Amendment Providing for
2.75 Per Cent Alcohol.
' BY NAIN GRUTE,
(Copyright, 1922. by The Oregonlan.)
CINCINNATI, O., Sept. 30. (Spe
cial.) The decision of the state su
preme court, under which, at the
November election, ' voters of Ohio
will be the first Americans to pass
directly upon the question of mild
beer and light wine, has given zest
to a political campagn which with
only perfunctory contests in pros
pect had begun to languish before
it even got under way.
The approaching referendum on
whether the state constitution, not
withstanding the federal limitation
of one-half of one per cent, shall
be amended to recognise as intoxi
cating wine and beer only when its
alcoholic content exceeds 2.75 per
cent, and further to protect citizens
from search and seizure without
legal warrant, is the talk of the
state.
Discussion Is Widespread.
The merits of the case are begin
ning to be discussed wherever men
and women meet, in the business
houses, clubs and tea rooms of the
cities and around the cracker bar
rels in the crossroads "stores. Al
ready the proposed modification of
prohibition has attracted more at
tention from the voters than did
the 18th amendment to the federal
constitution when it was presented
to the state legislature for ratifica
tion or rejection, and politicians are
predicting that before the last
speech has been made on the hust
ings and the final campaign sky
rocket shot into the air the issue
will have attained such prominence
that the races for office will at
tract public attention only insofar
as the candidates are affected by
the way they line up on the ques
tion of wine and beer.
With the referendum made a cer
tainty by the action of the courts
Thursday, both wets and drys are
preparing for a struggle which will
engulf all other considerations be
fore the voters and determine
whether Ohio, of all the states in the
Union, shall be the first to repudiate
or indorse the spirit of drastic in
terpretation and enforcement of the
national prohibition law.
Drys Have Advantage.
It is conceded on all sides, even
by the wets, that the drys, due to
the intensive objection of the Anti
Saloon league, will have the ad
vantage of appealing to the electors
at the start at any rate. That the
leaders of the wets are awake to
the situation is evident from the
preparations made by the associa
tion against the prohibition amend
ment, the organization through
whose efforts the monster petition,
containing 240,000 names, was pre
pared which resulted in the referen
dum proposal being placed upon the
ballot.
The day after the decision of the
Ohio supreme court ordering the
referendum a leader of the associa
tion, C. C. Hinckley, left Washing
ton to assume active charge of the
campaign for the amendment and
also to tour Indiana and Michigan
to organize for a -similar campaign
in those states.
Decision Blow to Drys.
The supreme court decision was a
defeat which the Anti-Saloon league
felt keenly and which was all the
more poignant because so unex
pected. Contrary to expectation,
Harvey C. Smith, secretary of state
of Ohio, who had long been under
the ban of the Anti-Saloon league
as too lenient toward the wets, re
fused to authorize the referendum
when the petition for the proposed
amendment was presented to him,
taking the ground that such a ref
erendum would be illegal because in
conflict with federal law.
In ruling the amendment out
Secretary Smith pulled the props
from under a writ of prohibition
which the Anti-Saloon league was
preparing to seek in the courts to
prevent him from placing the
amendment on the ballot.
The wet forces, led By Frederick
W. Marcolin of Cleveland, who
headed the petition for a referen
dum, immediately applied to the
state supreme court sitting at Co
lumbus for a writ of mandamus to
require the secretary of state to
order the referendum.
This appMraMon was bitterly
Good Clothes
at '25 to 45
You men who wish to pay a
moderate price for a good
Suit or an Overcoat will find
here just what you want, and
at popular prices.
$25 to $45
a
Strong lines at these prices.
See them in our windows.
J
if r
Manhattan
. Shirts
fought by the Anti-Saloon league,
whose leaders, including State Su
perintendent White, were permitted
to appear as friends of the court to
argue against it. In its decision,
which was handed down by a. vote
of five to two, the court held that
the secretary of state had no power
to withhold a proposed constitu
tional amendment from the suffrage
of the people when a petition in
proper form and with the required
number of signatures was filed with
him. The court took the view that
it was not within the province of
the secretary of state to pass upon
the constitutionality of the proposed
amendment nor upon a possible con
flict with the federal constitution or
federal statutes.
George S. Hawke of Cincinnati, a
dry leader, acting in behalf of the
Anti-Saloon league, appealed to the
state supreme court, but met with
no better success there, the higher
court upholding the lower, which
had ruled that for an inferior court
to iBSue an order contrary to one
made by a superior court would be
bad law and breed disrespect for
law enforcement.
- Arguments Are Prepared.
Under the Ohio law when a pro
posed constitutional amendment is
referred to the ' electors, the secre
tary of state shall see to it that
the voters are informed of the ar
guments on each side of the ques
tion. Consequently Secretary Smith
is appointing committees of wets
and drys to prepare the arguments
and will send them broadcast to the
voters in pamphlet form.
While the Anti-Saloon league de
clared at one time that the refer
endum was a serious assault upon
national prohibition and at another
that it could be nothing more than
a "straw vote," inasmuch as the
proposed modifications in any event
would be ineffectual, wet leaders
declare that the amendment. If car
ried, will have much more than a
moral effect, because it will require
modification of the state prohibi
tion enforcement laws and enable
the federal government to assume
the entire burden of making pro
hibition laws effective in this state.
CHEHALIS PARK LIKED
1 5 1 Cars Pass Through Resort
Each Day, Reports Caretaker.
CHEHALIS. Wash., Sept. 30.
(Special.) Mrs. W. J. Leggett, care
taker at Alexander Park. Chehalls.
has made public her report of the
number of people who visited the
resort during June, July, August
and the first three days of Sep
tember, during which the park
was open under her direction.
During the period 1402 outside
autos were listed, an average of
15 a day. Of these 722 were from
various points in Washington, 220
from Oregon, 163 from California,
75 from British Columbia. other
Canadian points 6, 28 from Idaho,
24 from Montana, 16 from Illinois,
11 from Minnesota, one to ten from
each of the following states: New
York, Texas. Missouri, Colorado,
Utah, Mississippi, Iowa, Michigan,
Kansas, North Carolina, Massachu
setts, Florida, Indiana, West Vir
ginia, Arkansas, Alaska. ' Virginia,
Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Okla
homa. Wyoming, Connecticut, South
Dakota, North Dakota, Georgia and
Old Mexico.
In addition to the various out
side people who visited Alexander
park during the summer, thousands
of local people from Chehalls and
the surrounding country made this
resort their headquarters, the ol'
swimmin' hole proving a drawing
card of great magnitude being one
of the best fresh water places of
the kind in the whole northwest.
1600 CHICKENS BURNED
Fire on Poultry Farm Results in
Loss of Many Fouls.
CHEHALIS. Wash., Sept. SO.
(Special.) An unusually heavy
fire loss is reported by John Burri.
one of the largest chicken and egg
producers in the Winlock section,
when his poultry house burned.
He lost 1000 laying hens and 600
fine pullets that soon would have
been laying, as well as tons of
straw and feed for -the winter.
The loss was partly covered by
insurance.
Aberdeen Realty Moves.
ABERDEEN, Wash., Sept. 30.
(Special.) Two property sales in
volving about $9500 marked a re
sumption of real estate activity
this week in Aberdeen. The former
Perry home at Wishkah and M
streets was sold to Daniel McCraw
of Spokane for $6000, and a house
and lot across the street from the
Perry residence was sold to Dr. J.
Brown of Hoqulam - for $4500.
Prospects for development of Wish
kah street and the eventuality of
a new bridge figure as inducements
for the sales.
Japanese Mission En Route Home
CHICAGO. Sept. 30. A party of 50
Japanese, headed by S. Yamanle,
who have been touring the United
States this summer, expected to leave
Chicago tonight for San Francisco
enrouip to Yokohama.
if Ini if c
MEN'S WEAR
Fifth and Morrison
(Corbett Bldg-.)
Vassar
Underwear
Interwoven
Hose
LABOR i;j EUD
HILTS WAR BLUFF
Unions Held-to Be Above
Parliament in Power.
CABINET IS SURPRISED
Intent to Show Imperial Soli
darity to World Results In
Display of Weakness. ,
BY NORMAN H. MATSON.
(Copyright. 1922, by Ths Oregoolsn.) m
LONDON. Sept. 30. (Special Ca
ble.) British labor unions are now
more powerful than parliament,
says the president of a famous
English college, and can stop or
prevent a war. He added an aca
aemic "Alas!" being, ant;-labor.
Unionists themselves are not so
sure, but their party, which is busy
preparing for the victory, confi
dently expected at the polls a year
or two hence, did, and Is exploiting
to the full the situation consequent
upon the mess in the near east.
The first response to the war
like pronouncement of the cabinet
was that of labor and it was: "Not
a man, not a ship, not a gun."
Leaders were organizing "stop-the-war"
meetings before the ink
had dried on headlines announcing
the new crisis.-
Nobody thought the war sugges
tion would be received enthusias
tically, but the intensity of the op
position must have been a disagree
able surprise for Lloyd-George and
his cabinet. The crisis, said a pro
government paper, is not in the near
east, but at home.
War Move Failure.
The cabinet deliberately beat the
war drum so that a tableau of Im
perial solidarity might be shown
those who needed reminding; it Is
the reverse that Kemal and Lenine
and Poincare see displayed for
them.
The labor party, which has al
ready named 400 candidates for the
next general elections, did not think
war actually imminent. But it de
cided to stop it anyway for the ef
fect on the voters.
I am assured by a parliamentary
authority that the cost of the pren-
jj g 1
Volume is the word. We are after more business and not looking: for big:
profits. Our past 20 years of honest dealings with the people of Portland
speaks for itself. Our windows are full of new Fall Shoes. You will find
here one of the largest assortments of styles shown in Portland, with a
saving: of from $1.00 to $3.00 on the pair.
PUMPS
Goodyear welt sewed soles, low Cubans or
Special No. 1
For the Girls
A brown calfskin
shoe, 8 Yz -inch top,
broad toe, low heels,
Goodyear welted.
Just the shoe for fall.
Sizes 8 2 to 11, $2.65
Sizes ll2 to 2, $3.35
Big Girls'
Sizes 22 to
7, $3.95
SPECIAL
No. 3
If for any reason Shoes purchased here are unsatisfactory, we will gladly refund
you another pair. Our motto always, "Quality Footwear at Moderate
Sole Agents for
KEA-NIT
HOSIERY
Moderately Priced
sratlons to resist the Turks attempt
to cross the straits will reach some
thing like $250,000.00. Rumors of
war sent food prices up. only
slightly, it is true, but discouraging
enough after the assurance that the
fall would bring a general reduc
tion. Food prices and taxes are even
more topics of general conversation
than predictions that If war were
begun it would inevitably spread to
the Balkans, Palestine, Mesopotamia
and Egypt and farther.
Trade Pact Importait
War talk has crowded from the
news the trade agreement between
the soviet government and the
Russo-Asiatic Consolidated com
pany, one of the biggest industrial
organizations in the world, which
bow controls practically the whole
of Russia's non-ferrous metal indus
try, nearly 70 per cent of her cop
per production, all of her sine and
lead output and more than 20 per
cent of her gold production, not to
mention millions of acres of land,
railways, factories and coal mines.
But developments are being nar
rowly watched by Englishmen who
were in Russia before the revolu
tion. Applications for Jobs from
some thousands of them have al
ready been received at the Russo
Asiatic offices in London, and places
will be found for many of them.
Leslie Urqurhart, head of the or
ganization, is very optimistic In
an article published by the Observer
he declared that while practically
all of the other British enterprises
la Russia are at the end of their
tether, an advance of no more than
$7'5,000,000 by the government would
U-estore all of them to pre-war
activities. It will involve further
recognition of the soviet, but that
he thinks inevitable and better now
than later.
.Quick 'Action Urged.
He urges his fellow countrymen
to get 'in quick. "Russia is inex
haustible and indestructible, and the
signs are not wanting that already,
even beneath the accumulated mis
eries of. the last five years, her
Inveterate resilient Impulse, her
tremendous recuperative power is
beginning to gather strength and
confidence. Do people realize what
it means that Russia should again
be self-supporting?
The harvest this year for the first
time since the revolution will be
sufficient to supply her domestic
needs. A year or two hence we may
again, see her exporting agricul
tural produce on something not so
very much below the old pre-war
scale; and Russia's export of wheat
used to be, and will be again, the
first of all factors in stabilizing
prices and making it possible for
the world to live within its Income.
"But that is not all. The Russian
peasant has now a higher standard
of living than before he needs a
far greater variety and amount of
manufactured articles. He will need
gdusfe of
MEN
WOMEN
BOYS and
GIRLS
French heels.
Black kid or calf,
patent kid, brown
kid or calf, also
black suede and
satin. All sizes.
All widths. Your
A
at
choice
$85
$4g5
V OODVj)
smisfcaW ssssMssssMBBMss2Jl''
145 FOURTH ST. WHERE
In unprecedented quantities the
goods that British factories are pe
culiarly qualified to supply."
STOCK CASE HEARING SET
Reparations Cases to Be Argued
In Portland October S8.
OLYMPIA, Wash.. Sept. 30.
(Special.) Joint hearing before the
interstate commerce commission,
the Oregon public service commis
sion and the Washington depart
ment of publlo works of repara
tions cases on livestock shipments,
brought by the Northeast Livestock
Shippers' Traffic league, has been
set for October 38 at Portland, the
department of public works an
nounced today.
Livestock shippers seeking rep
arations allege that between De
cember 31, 1919, and March 30, 121.
livestock rates were based on dol
lars and cents a hundred pounds
Instead of flat rate for each car,
the dollars and cents rates being
unreasonable and discriminatory.
The interstate commerce commis
sion is brought into the hearing
because of interstate shipments
during the entire period, while the
state commissions become inter
ested in the guaranty period from
March 1 to September 1, 1930, and
after the guaranty period from
September 1, 19f0, lo March 20,
1921, when the flat rate car basis
was restored.
CLAIM SYSTEM CHANGES
Washington Begins Xew Method
In Handling Workmen's Cases.
OLTMPIA. Wash.. Sept. 20.
(Special.) The department of labor
and industries prepared today for
a radical change in the system of
handling claims of Injured work
men which will be put in effect
Monday. Branch offices In Seattle.
Tacoma. Belltngham, Vancouver
and Spokane hereafter will handle
all claims up to final adjustment,
sending them to the main office
for final settlement only.
The new one-form report for
sccldents also goes into use Mon
day, supplanting three separate
forms formerly used for the first
report of accident, the employer's
report and the physician's report.
The new system will speed up ad
justment of claims at the same or
slightly reduced expense.
Chicagoan, 109 Years Old, Dead.
CHICAGO, Sept. SO John Fltz
patrlck, said to have reached the
age of 109 years, who lost a leg in
the Chicago fire of 1871, Is dead. H
resided at one address for more than
FO years. He whs hnrn In Ireland.
ualttp
r
1 -Ji
DRIVE I
Men's Shoes
All Goodyear welts,
full double or single
soles. All widths and
sizes. Brown calf
and kid, black
calf and kid.
real buy
Special No. 2
School Shoes
for Boys
U. S. Army Last Shoes, all solid
leather. Oak leather bottoms,
Goodyear welts. Very comfortable.
Built for the hardest kind of wear.
All sizes.
Sizes 9-13 . .$2.45
Sizes 13 2-2 $2.95
Sizes 2,2-6 .$3.45
SPECIAL NO. 4
HOE CO.
HONEYMAN USED TO BE
SLAYER IS BOUND OVER
KD IIALVKRSO.V ACCVSED OP
MCHDKRIXO NEIGHBOR.
Explanation Declared Larking for
Skull Injulrlea Found on
Dead Man.
BEND. Or.. Sept. 20. (Special.)
Ed Halversen. rsncer near Pend,
wss eld to the grand Jury todsy by
County Judse Sawyer on a rharpe
of murdering William Carrett. a
neighbor, on the night of July 1.
Hatverson admitted shooting Ur
rett to death, but alleged thst the
bullet which pierced Garrett's heart
was fired In elf-defene. Halvnr
sen was held for grand Jury Investl
tion because no explanation has
been given by the defense of skuli
Injuries found In the course of an
autopsy conducted at SUverton and
because of doube raised by state's
witnesses ss to the clrcumetsnces
attending the shots which Halvorsen
said Garrett fired at him.
Examination of witnesses was con
ducted by U H. McMihto of riaiem.
designated by Governor Olcott a
special asslstsnt to the attorney
general for this case, after District
Attorney Moors and Justice of lbs
Peace Gllson had refused to act is
the matter.
Halvorsen's story wss told by
Sheriff Roberts and Justice Gllson,
acting coroner at the time of the
killing. According to their state
ment Halvorsen had fired through
a crack In the door at Garrett when
the latter, after urging Malvorsen to
come outside snd fight it oat. shot
twice through the door. The offi
cers agreed thst the courss taken
by the bullets said to have come
from Garrett's gun made It Impossi
ble that he could hsve stood on the
ground when he fired the shots.
No testimony wss put on by E. O.
Sttdtjr, attorney for Halvorsen.
Druglega Healer Accused.
OLTMPIA. Wash.. Sept. JO.
(Special ) A complaint has been
filed before the trial committee of
drugless practitioners against Wll
mot E. Zeiker. a druglens healer of
Yakima, for the revocation of his
state license, Fred Dibble, director
of licenses, announced today. The
complaint, based on Zedlker's con
viction In federal court. charges
use of the malls for sending ob
scene letters to Miss Fsy Huston
of Wspato. Hearing has been set
for October 20 at Olympla. The
trial committee appointed by the
governor Included James Carroll of
Tacoma. Theodore Ostlund of Se
attle snd Director Dibble
your money or give
Prices."
FREE
TOYS
FOR THE
KIDDIES
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