1
Give some man thrown tempor- ! ' arily out of work by the snow a job : ' shoveling off your walks or roof". It ] will help him, and it will help you 1 and your neighbors. 25c A MONTH. TA( lOMA, WASHINGTON, T1 TKSDAY. JAM AI.'V :U). 1<»17. The Tacoma Times THE ONLY INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER IN TACOMA. lc A COPY. VOL. XIV. NO. :t".. weatßE-TTa^™^™ Taeoma: Fair tonighr*^l3S^sy Wednesday. Washington: Same. 1 FAMILY OF FIVE POISONED British North Atlantic Fleet Seeking German Raider Are You a Red-Head? You Are Invited to a Party, If You Are Tncoma red heads are coining into their own. Every sunset blonde woman or girl reader of The Times is invited to be the special guest of this paper at the Pantages Friday. They have only to appear at the editorial rooms of The Times, show their Titian locks, and claim free tickets for the Friday afternoon performance. It will be a sympathetic matinee. The entire chorus of eight girls in "The Bed Heads," a musical comedy act at the "Pan" tliis week, has red hair. Manager William K. Saxton asserts that he has gathered together perfect specimens of eight distinct shades of red hair. And The Times agrees that the women of Tacoma who possess bright-hued locks should have an opportunity to see this unique troupe. Wit want every woman of red hair whether H be a deep russet bordering on brown, or a brilliant hue resembling a ripe orange—to enjoy The Times' matinee. Free tickets will be given to Tacoma'l red- heads at The Times editorial rooms any time beginning Thursday np to 2:30 Friday after- noon. CHILD VICTIMS OF FIEND ARE BURIED il nlt.il Prena I »•\u25a0 tl Wire.) AUBURN, Jan. 30. —Mary Hew- itt, 29, and mother of the four email children dragged from the burning home early Sunday morn- ing with their skulls crushed, lies h«lf crazed in the home of a friond hero today under the care if a nurse, awaiting the burial this afternoon of her babies. Mrs. Hewitt, vibiting in Everett at the time of the tragedy, return- ed to Auburn with her old nurse, BOOZE PROBE TO CONTINUE il niii-.i Preaa Leased Wire.) SEATTLE, Jan. 30.—Further investigation of liquor shipping conspiracy charges will be made by the federal grand jury which indicted Mayor Gill, Chief of Police BteUukW, Ex-Sheriff Hodge and a score of others when the inquisitors reconvene Feb. 13. Conspiracy charges against Mayor Gill. Chief of Police Beck- irmliam, Hodge and others will probably be tried during the lat- ter part of February. An early trial was requested by the mayor. District Attorney Clay Allen and United States Dis- trict Judge Jeremiah Xeterer both said today they favored quick action. TO PROVIDE SHELTER For the wife and little ones is a sacred duty. But this usually involves a systematic plan of sav- ing, and the habit of sav- ing often has its begin- ning in a small savings account. We gladly open accounts with those who apply. BuqEt {foundßank IS Tmsi Csmoßsu Mrs. Alice Minnick, Monday after- noon. She collapsed when taken to the undertakers where the bodies of her children were Deing held. She was not allowed to view the charred bodies of her children, but was put to bed. The bodies of the three young- est children will be buried on the barren hillside west of Auburn. Hewitt, after viewing tho bodies and the charred room where the murders were committed, adhered to his denial of guilt. Following a conference today between Assistant Prosecutor Hel- sell and Deputy Coroner Koepfli, it was decided that a murder charge would not be filed against Hewitt until after the inquest which will be held Saturday. PLAN TO TEST ARMY BONDS For the purpose of giving a basis for friendly test suit as to the legality of the army post bonds, the county commissioners Monday accepted an offer made by the state to purchase of $50,- --000 of the bonds at four per cent. The next procedure, according to the commissioners, will be for the county auditor to attempt to draw a warrant. He will then be served with a mandamus, and the suit will be under way. J. T. S. Lyle, special attorney for the county in the army post matter, told the commissioners the state will also take the army post bonds to the amount of $1,500,000 at the came interest. Eastern bond buyers would have wanted 4hi or 4 % per cent, the commissioners say. The bond election authorized not more than B per cent. The state's offer leaves only $500,000 to be disposed of, in which the commissioners expect no difficulty. STATE WILL CHECK UP ON APPENDICES PIERRE, S. D., Jan. 30—Under a bill introduced in the legislature Monday all appendix removed in South Dakota will have to be sent to the state laboratory for exam- ination. If found not diseased, the owner would be relieved from paying the doc's bill. For writing at night there has been invented a fountain pen that caries a tiny electric lamp and dry battery. BEAN THERE (United rreaa I.caaed W<r*.> LIMITS STATE BOARD (S|i<-ciul to The Times.) OIiYMI'IA, Jan. 80. Striking directly at the pow- er of tin- public service com- mission, a bill watt introduced in the Keimte today by Sena- tor Nichols. The bill rcKtores to the cities or the first clas.<t the power to control public utili- ties vested l>y the constitu- tion. The bill empowers the voters of the cities to decide whether or not the city utilities shall be regu- lated by the public service com- mission. A majority of voters can deter- mine whether a city shall surren- der to or vest in the commission this power of regulation and control. The bill also provides that cities shall be made a party to all complaints filed with the com- mission and all Investigations in which any public service company having in a city is affected. It is a clear out-and-out home rule bill, drnwn at the suggestion of Corporation Counsel Caldwell of Seattle. By Edgar C. Wheeler OLYMI'IA, Jan. 30. —It wan un- der the watchful eye of the Stone & Webster Interests, rh represent- ed by Louis Bean, that the state senate yesterday rolled up lta sleeves end slipped the knife Into the back of municipal ownership and municipal enterprise and turn- ed It several times. The manager for the T. R. & P. Co. was probably the most Inter- ested watcher in the senate gallery while the solons were knifing Sen- ate Dill 11, In fact his eye was trained on certain of the senators who from their former actions, might perchance take a notion to be swerved from the path of duty to corporate interests. llean Waita Patiently And he was one of those, no doubt, who enjoyed to the fullest extent the irony of passing the bill after it had been reduced to a mere proposition of permitting a munic- ipally owned corporation to sell water outside the city limits ITN- DKR RATES AND CONDITIONS TO BE CONTROLLED BY THE PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION. In fact Mr. Bean waited all aft- ernoon in order to enjoy the spec- tacle Intended to tickle the ribs of corporation owned folk. He waited during the long ar- gument over a public morgue bill for Seattle, while Dr. Ghent and the coroner trundled dead bodies out into the open and gave them an airing. He waited in patient stoicism, (Continued on Page Five.) HALF MILLION IN 13 DAYS! NEW YORK, Jan. 30.—Ber- nard Barucli, Wall street plunger, cleared $476,000 playing peace hum-lies, during 13 days in De- cember, he told the Leak-to-Wall- Street probers today. . If he had known what was coming from Washington, he said, he would have sold all day Dec. 20, instead of covering part of his short selling by buying United States Steel, and his profits would have been larger. The 20th was the day before the note was published In the papers. "Was this regarded as large dealing?" he was asked. "Well, I've done larger; I've been short of this amount often," he replied. On the 21st Baruch closed out his shorts at around 106. He said he figured his en- tire profits Dec. 10 to Dec. 23 as $476,168. Baruch said, under cross-exam- ination by Chairman Henry, that he had called up Paul Warburg of the federal reserve board during the leak period, but had not reach- ed him and had later got Secre- tary of the Treasury McAdoo on the matter of a federal reserve board appointment. He denied discussing the mar- ket at all with them and denied having called Secretary Tumulty. Her Smoke Views Lose Woman Seat on Jury Sophia Chovil, 41 G South 3i>th, doesn't exactly object to a man's smoking, but she might go to the other end of the car. So she said when Wesley Lloyd, attorney for O. B. Herbst, who is suing Edwin Orrett for snatching bis cigar from his mouth and slapping Ills face, in a Tacoma street car last October, questioned her Tuesday morning before the 'trial began, as to her convictions on the subject of tobacco. Mrs. Chovil was excused on a peremptory challenge. Every woman on the jury -was asked if she had any prejudice against a man's smoking. The case is being tried in Judge Clifford's court. With lier husband's arm aroind her shoulders and his cheek laid against hers as they both cried softly, Mrs. Hose Albutt, who was convicted last week of assault in the second decree for having at- tacked Mrs. Gertrude Robertson, Christian Science practitioner, with a revolver, because of a story told by little Marie Albutt of hav- ing been wronged by Frank Boyd in Mrs. Robertson's home, was sentenced by Superior Judge Cird Tuesday morning to not less than six months and not more than 1 0 years In the penitentiary at Walla Walla. The judge gave her the alterna- tive of serving the sentence in the county jail if she preferred. Mrs. Albutt's attorny, E. D. ABERDEEN GETS NEW INDUSTRIES (United I'rraa I .nix.-.I Wlrf.) ABERDEEN, Jan. 30.—Anoth- er shipyard, with ample capital, and a $1,000,000 paper mill are coming to Aberdeen, according to W. J. Patterson, banker, who re- turned from the east today. The citizens will have to raise $2,400 to prepare the site for the ship- yard and the city must give water rights to the paper mill, both of which there is little doubt will be done. GETS NOTTS I\ ALMOND (Inllril I'rr.i I rn.nl Wire.) MARYSVILLE, Cal., Jan. 30.— Hazel Hersinger, age 13, just for fun, put a note giving her name and address In an almond -!i -II and packed it along with other al- monds. Her father, whom the had not seen in years got the almond in Atlanta. BAYING AT THE MOON! Mrs. Albutt Sentenced to Prison for Pistol Attack Hodge, immediately gave noli'e of appeal, and a now bond for $I,r>oo was arranged. Charles E. Stewart, a neighbor- ing farmer, and Deputy Cou'ity Treasurer B. Darr, both former schoolmates of Mrs. Albutt, went on her bond. In arguing the motion for a new trial, Mrs. Albutt's attorney said he believed the admission of i.vl- dence as to the truth or falsity of Marie's story was an error on which an appeal could be based. He cited the Thaw case, in which ho said the court had held that the point was not whether the story Evelyn told Thaw was true, but whether Thaw believed it and was thrown into a brain- storm by it so that he was tem- porarily irresponsible. BLOW UP ENGLISH STEAMER; 9 DEAD LONDON, Jan. 30.—The steam- er Argo has blown up with a loss of nine men, according to an- nouncement today. Nino of her crew were safely landed. The Argo was an iron steamer of 1,261 tons, owned by 11. M. Wrangell & Co. and was of Xor- weglan registry, her home port be- ing Haugesnd. CLUB BUREAU WILL DISCUSS S. B. NO. 6 A public luncheon will be held Wednesday noon under the aus- pices of the legislature and taxa- tion bureau at the Commercial club. The purpose is to disc iss the senate bill No. 6 relating to the selling of water and light by municipalities outside of the cities' umits. ORDER TROOP HOME! (I iii(.-ii Prraa I.ruaril Wlrr.t WASHINGTON, I>. ('., lan. Mi—The following tidililion- al niitioiiiil n'l.iril units have been ordered from tli<- border to their home si at lon-. l<> [><> miiMeied out, tin- war depart- ment fliinouiiecri today: TlVOa A, Cavalry, Haltcry A I'icld Artillery, OMOM, Troop U, (Hvalry, Co. /\, Signal Corps, \\'aisliin<{toii. Mil UNCERTAIN liiltfit I'rrNx l.i-ux'ii \\ii, i SAX FRANCISCO, Jan. ,tO. The Oregon and Washington troops now at Calexico will not I start north until regular troops have relieved them, it was Mated today at the headquarters of the Western department of the army today. Two troops of the First cav- alry have been ordered from No- gales to relieve the guardsmen, and their movement will begin at once. It is estimated that it will re- quire about a week for the N'o- gales troops to complete their movement, permitting Northwest- ern militiamen to go home. "Just to think they are reilly coining home!" said Mrs. I), ri. Roberts, president of the Women of Troop B, when she was notified by The Times this morning that the troop will lie mustered out. "It seems too good to be true! "We are planning a celebration for them, but have been waiting until we were sure they were com- ing, and when, before arranging any details. "It will probably be a banquet at the Armory, and a number of the women's societies of the city will assist." The Women of Troop B will hold a special meeting Thursday afternoon at 2:30 with Mrs. Al- fred Metzger, 1202 North J street, to plan the details of the welcome. BATTLE GROUND WEDDING HOODOO CHICAGO, Jan. 30.—Mrs. Vorls Gwln McCoy, married at Battle Ground, Ind., carried the hoodoo through 19 years of married lit*. Now she Is suing for divorce. (tullcil I'rrm l.rnaril Wire.l DANfORTH, 111., Jan. :!o.— Mrs. O. J. Meints, wife of v farm- er living west Of lure, lillled her four sous and her grandson by mistaking araoßtc tot puctkt flour. In the farm house today awl the bodies of Theodore, Irvin, Mino and Kred Ifeteta, sons, and Clarence Meints, grandson of Sebo Melnts. Dlscorerlng that her supply of pancake flour was exhausted while she whs preparing break- fast, .Mrs. Melnts returned to the pantry and I.>• mistake secured a can of arsenic. (I nlia'il In-"" I.rnnoil Wlrr.) \i:\v yoi:k, .t.-ui. :«>— Tho cut in- North Atlantic squail- i(iii of tin- lirilMi navy Ikin been Mtfawi itit<> viators 'ul- juroul la Xrw York, it was antlioritali\«l\ staled licit' tit- day. Report! of steamelilp masters brought to this port and MM to. Halifax caused the. IMUMM of -'r- deis to the squadron to mtlh for a (li'inian raider. From source,; close to the Brit- ish consulate, it was learned "N«W York harbor wutorti" mißht mean any spot on the Allantle within 200 miles of M«W York, gtring color to rfOrtl of n (Jprnian rom-1 Bterca ilostroyer 200 miles off Snn-[ dy Hook. Ordi-rs wpro iftsuod after Wl> ters of various Btpamships had reported a mystprious ship aailiiiß About. At lpasl two steamship oapl lins dpclarcd they werp positive the vpssp! was a rtidpr. An pmlisrgo lias bMD placed on wireless BWI»|1I reiinrliriK positions of shi|i:- sailing amdf fla^s of the allii'<l nations. Ships from thp hasp at Halifax anil vpsspls now doinn patrol duty in thin vicinity will lie lirousiil U»- \u25a0ward pacli other and will nUblUh a most rinid patrol. Humors that thp OPrman r.-udor which lUOCMSfttlly operated off the poaxt of Sotith Atnerl.a was headed in this dirpition have brought many rumors of the pres- ence of Hip ship. That the raider Ir expeoU'd In this vicinity and that the Ilritinh ( Talk o' the Times <>i'cetiii|is, did you tumMc into the snow on your way to work tliiN morning? (So"d we). It niuM be fun to be a boot- lenner unri have tin laugh on till the dry* and every liody when the .(ud«e <|uletly lets you out afler you've served a few duys of jour term. Each of our Judges appears to have a specialty. IVi-Nonull)', we believe the mi. u-ni practice of burning in oil if none too harsh f»r fniln-i - who ''i-.-it in their chll- dren'H heuils in order to rol- led iiisnrjiiu < money. And we'd use good usplial- liim-ii.iM' oil, too. \\ h.ii has become of the old-faHltioncd man who u-ed to gn to work with m )•!<\u25a0\u25a0<\u25a0 of eKR on his < 11in about two mornings out of every week? "Why do Americans laugh at me for wearing the clothes of my country?" asked Tagore, us he was about to sail for home. Pshaw, Tag, they didn't laugh at you any more than they do at the college boys. «."<I-,me plays r. g. oa the EAT ARSENIC EN PANCAKES BY MISTAKE Hi r husband did not partake of the poisoned cakes and Mrs. MttaU. disi uvi'ijuK that they wer« bitter ate none herself. Her discovery came too late, however, us ;ill her sons and grandson hud eaten heartily. Two of them. Krod and Clarence, be- came ill shortly before noon and died yesterday afternoon. Irviu and Theodore died last night, mid Mino, thp last one to lie kept alive by emergency treat- ment administered by physicians who hurried to the farm house, dieil todajr. With the exception of Clarence, the grandson, who is seven, all IHe (lend were' iidultß. WMI ONLY 200 HUES OFF N. V, I men-of-war expects to capture her, wiis pvident from the nature ot preparations. colderTet, is forecast "Fair and colder," announced tho weather man Monday raorn- | inti; and with an additional four or five iin heb of «now on th» (round Tuecda; morning, hp still sticl<s to his prediction, In th« faith that if lie Htlcks to it lon« [enough it will come true. It has hepii "coldpr," at any rate. At 7 o'clock Tuesday morning the thermometer touched \V.'<, the | coldest it has heen this winter. ! Tills Ib several decrees warmer jthtm the minimum last winter, however, which was 12. Alternate snow and sunshine Monday and Monday night kept the car company anxious, and caused aiitoniohlles and po.les- irians to do straiiße xtunta on the slippery hills, and gave a chance for many coasting parties in the evpnliiß. All trains from the east were Kite, though the delny Is said not to have been duo to miow In Wash- ington, hut to intense cold in Mon- tana, where the trains have (rou- ble keepiiiK up steam. STORK AT JOHITs. BAKER'S RESIDENCE Mr. and Mrs. John S. Baker are receiving roriKnitulations on the birth of a daughter, who arrived early Sunday morninß. liji!>kctl)till teiiin of (Jarrett liililiinl Institute. Advance report of the testimony of .1. I. Morgan before the con- gressional leak committee: "Tell the committee, Mr. Mor- gan, if you made any profit In Wall street through the leak." "I did not." "Did you have any advance In- formation of tho peace note?" "I did not." "Do you know of anyone who had advance Information?" "I do not." "Do you know of anyone who profited through the leak?" "I do not." Sign on Commerce street shop: "Sh.,e Repairing While You Wait mid Hhlne." "I understand Bunker has wmi rare paintings in his home." "Ybb, rare—not well done." A Remarkable Man, This Mr. Wood*. A special countywide poultry meeting will be held In the Farm Bureau auditorium on Saturday. At this meeting discussions on poultry and other topics will com* up before the audience. A very interesting program has been ar- ranged. The program it, as follows: "How I Produced Eggs," by Mr. Woods.—Sewlckley (Pa.) HeraUk

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Give some man thrown tempor- !' arily out of work by the snow a job :' shoveling off your walks or roof". It ]

willhelp him, and it willhelp you 1and your neighbors. • 25c A MONTH.

TA(lOMA, WASHINGTON, T1 TKSDAY. JAM AI.'V :U). 1<»17.

The Tacoma TimesTHE ONLY INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER IN TACOMA. lc A COPY.

VOL. XIV. NO. :t"..

weatßE-TTa^™^™Taeoma: Fair tonighr*^l3S^sy

Wednesday.Washington: Same. 1

FAMILY OF FIVE POISONEDBritish North Atlantic Fleet Seeking German Raider

Are You a Red-Head?You Are Invited toa Party, If You Are

Tncoma red heads are coining into their own.Every sunset blonde woman or girl reader

of The Times is invited to be the special guestof this paper at the Pantages Friday.

They have only to appear at the editorialrooms of The Times, show their Titian locks,and claim free tickets for the Friday afternoonperformance.

It will be a sympathetic matinee.The entire chorus of eight girls in "The Bed

Heads," a musical comedy act at the "Pan"tliis week, has red hair.

Manager William K. Saxton asserts that hehas gathered together perfect specimens ofeight distinct shades of red hair.

And The Times agrees that the women ofTacoma who possess bright-hued locks shouldhave an opportunity to see this uniquetroupe.

Wit want every woman of red hair—whether H be a deep russet bordering onbrown, or a brilliant hue resembling a ripeorange—to enjoy The Times' matinee.

Free tickets willbe given to Tacoma'l red-heads at The Times editorial rooms any timebeginning Thursday np to 2:30 Friday after-noon.

CHILD VICTIMS OFFIEND ARE BURIED

ilnlt.il Prena I • »•\u25a0 tl Wire.)

AUBURN, Jan. 30. —Mary Hew-

itt, 29, and mother of the four

email children dragged from the

burning home early Sunday morn-ing with their skulls crushed, liesh«lf crazed in the home of a friondhero today under the care if anurse, awaiting the burial thisafternoon of her babies.

Mrs. Hewitt, vibiting in Everettat the time of the tragedy, return-ed to Auburn with her old nurse,

BOOZE PROBETO CONTINUEilniii-.i Preaa Leased Wire.)

SEATTLE, Jan. 30.—Furtherinvestigation of liquor shippingconspiracy charges will be madeby the federal grand jury whichindicted Mayor Gill, Chief ofPolice BteUukW, Ex-SheriffHodge and a score of others whenthe inquisitors reconvene Feb. 13.

Conspiracy charges againstMayor Gill. Chief of Police Beck-irmliam, Hodge and others willprobably be tried during the lat-ter part of February.

An early trial was requested bythe mayor. District AttorneyClay Allen and United States Dis-trict Judge Jeremiah Xetererboth said today they favored quickaction.

TOPROVIDESHELTER

For the wife and littleones is a sacred duty.But this usually involvesa systematic plan of sav-ing, and the habit of sav-ing often has its begin-ning in a small savingsaccount.

We gladly open accountswith those who apply.

BuqEt {foundßankIS Tmsi Csmoßsu

Mrs. Alice Minnick, Monday after-noon. She collapsed when takento the undertakers where thebodies of her children were Deingheld. She was not allowed to viewthe charred bodies of her children,but was put to bed.

The bodies of the three young-est children will be buried on thebarren hillside west of Auburn.

Hewitt, after viewing tho bodiesand the charred room where themurders were committed, adheredto his denial of guilt.

Following a conference todaybetween Assistant Prosecutor Hel-sell and Deputy Coroner Koepfli,it was decided that a murdercharge would not be filed againstHewitt until after the inquestwhich will be held Saturday.

PLAN TO TESTARMY BONDSFor the purpose of giving a

basis for friendly test suit as tothe legality of the army postbonds, the county commissionersMonday accepted an offer madeby the state to purchase of $50,---000 of the bonds at four per cent.

The next procedure, accordingto the commissioners, will be forthe county auditor to attempt todraw a warrant.

He will then be served with amandamus, and the suit will beunder way.

J. T. S. Lyle, special attorneyfor the county in the army postmatter, told the commissioners thestate will also take the army postbonds to the amount of $1,500,000at the came interest.

Eastern bond buyers would havewanted 4hi or 4 % per cent, thecommissioners say. The bondelection authorized not more thanB per cent.

The state's offer leaves only$500,000 to be disposed of, inwhich the commissioners expectno difficulty.

STATE WILL CHECKUP ON APPENDICESPIERRE, S. D., Jan. 30—Under

a bill introduced in the legislatureMonday all appendix removed inSouth Dakota will have to be sentto the state laboratory for exam-ination. If found not diseased,the owner would be relieved frompaying the doc's bill.

For writing at night there hasbeen invented a fountain pen thatcaries a tiny electric lamp anddry battery.

BEAN THERE

(United rreaa I.caaed W<r*.>

LIMITSSTATEBOARD

(S|i<-ciul to The Times.)OIiYMI'IA, Jan. 80.—Striking directly at the pow-

er of tin- public service com-mission, a bill watt introducedin the Keimte today by Sena-tor Nichols.

The bill rcKtores to thecities or the first clas.<t thepower to control public utili-ties vested l>y the constitu-tion.The bill empowers the voters

of the cities to decide whether ornot the city utilities shall be regu-lated by the public service com-mission.

A majority of voters can deter-mine whether a city shall surren-der to or vest in the commissionthis power of regulation andcontrol.

The bill also provides thatcities shall be made a party toall complaints filed with the com-mission and all Investigations inwhich any public service companyhaving in a city is affected.

It is a clear out-and-out homerule bill, drnwn at the suggestionof Corporation Counsel Caldwellof Seattle.

By Edgar C. WheelerOLYMI'IA, Jan. 30.—It wan un-

der the watchful eye of the Stone& Webster Interests, rh represent-ed by Louis Bean, that the statesenate yesterday rolled up ltasleeves end slipped the knife Intothe back of municipal ownershipand municipal enterprise and turn-ed It several times.

The manager for the T. R. & P.Co. was probably the most Inter-ested watcher in the senate gallerywhile the solons were knifing Sen-ate Dill 11, In fact his eye wastrained on certain of the senatorswho from their former actions,might perchance take a notion tobe swerved from the path of dutyto corporate interests.

llean Waita PatientlyAnd he was one of those, no

doubt, who enjoyed to the fullestextent the irony of passing the billafter it had been reduced to a mereproposition of permitting a munic-ipally owned corporation to sellwater outside the city limits ITN-DKR RATES AND CONDITIONSTO BE CONTROLLED BY THEPUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION.

In fact Mr. Bean waited all aft-ernoon in order to enjoy the spec-tacle Intended to tickle the ribs ofcorporation owned folk.

He waited during the long ar-gument over a public morgue billfor Seattle, while Dr. Ghent andthe coroner trundled dead bodiesout into the open and gave theman airing.

He waited in patient stoicism,

(Continued on Page Five.)

HALF MILLIONIN 13 DAYS!

NEW YORK, Jan. 30.—Ber-nard Barucli, Wall street plunger,cleared $476,000 playing peacehum-lies, during 13 days in De-cember, he told the Leak-to-Wall-Street probers today.. If he had known what wascoming from Washington, he said,he would have sold all day Dec.20, instead of covering part of hisshort selling by buying UnitedStates Steel, and his profits wouldhave been larger.

The 20th was the day beforethe note was published In thepapers.

"Was this regarded as largedealing?" he was asked.

"Well, I've done larger; I'vebeen short of this amount often,"he replied. On the 21st Baruchclosed out his shorts at around106. He said he figured his en-tire profits Dec. 10 to Dec. 23 as$476,168.

Baruch said, under cross-exam-ination by Chairman Henry, thathe had called up Paul Warburg ofthe federal reserve board duringthe leak period, but had not reach-ed him and had later got Secre-tary of the Treasury McAdoo onthe matter of a federal reserveboard appointment.

He denied discussing the mar-ket at all with them and deniedhaving called Secretary Tumulty.

Her Smoke Views LoseWoman Seat on Jury

Sophia Chovil, 41 G South 3i>th, doesn't exactly object toa man's smoking, but she might go to the other end of thecar.

So she said when Wesley Lloyd, attorney for O. B.Herbst, who is suing Edwin Orrett for snatching bis cigarfrom his mouth and slapping Ills face, in a Tacoma streetcar last October, questioned her Tuesday morning before the'trial began, as to her convictions on the subject of tobacco.

Mrs. Chovil was excused on a peremptory challenge.

Every woman on the jury -was asked if she had anyprejudice against a man's smoking.

The case is being tried in Judge Clifford's court.

With lier husband's arm aroindher shoulders and his cheek laid

against hers as they both cried

softly, Mrs. Hose Albutt, who wasconvicted last week of assault inthe second decree for having at-tacked Mrs. Gertrude Robertson,Christian Science practitioner,with a revolver, because of a storytold by little Marie Albutt of hav-ing been wronged by Frank Boydin Mrs. Robertson's home, wassentenced by Superior Judge CirdTuesday morning to not less thansix months and not more than 1 0years In the penitentiary at WallaWalla.

The judge gave her the alterna-tive of serving the sentence in thecounty jail if she preferred.

Mrs. Albutt's attorny, E. D.

ABERDEEN GETSNEW INDUSTRIES

(United I'rraa I .nix.-.I Wlrf.)

ABERDEEN, Jan. 30.—Anoth-er shipyard, with ample capital,and a $1,000,000 paper mill arecoming to Aberdeen, according toW. J. Patterson, banker, who re-turned from the east today. Thecitizens will have to raise $2,400to prepare the site for the ship-yard and the city must give waterrights to the paper mill, both ofwhich there is little doubt will bedone.

GETS NOTTS I\ ALMOND(Inllril I'rr.i I rn.nl Wire.)

MARYSVILLE, Cal., Jan. 30.—Hazel Hersinger, age 13, just forfun, put a note giving her nameand address In an almond -!i -IIand packed it along with other al-monds. Her father, whom thehad not seen in years got thealmond in Atlanta.

BAYING AT THE MOON!

Mrs. Albutt Sentenced toPrison for Pistol Attack

Hodge, immediately gave noli'e ofappeal, and a now bond for $I,r>oowas arranged.

Charles E. Stewart, a neighbor-ing farmer, and Deputy Cou'ityTreasurer B. Darr, both formerschoolmates of Mrs. Albutt, wenton her bond.

In arguing the motion for a newtrial, Mrs. Albutt's attorney saidhe believed the admission of i.vl-dence as to the truth or falsity ofMarie's story was an error onwhich an appeal could be based.

He cited the Thaw case, inwhich ho said the court had heldthat the point was not whetherthe story Evelyn told Thaw wastrue, but whether Thaw believedit and was thrown into a brain-storm by it so that he was tem-porarily irresponsible.

BLOW UP ENGLISHSTEAMER; 9 DEAD

LONDON, Jan. 30.—The steam-er Argo has blown up with a lossof nine men, according to an-nouncement today. Nino of hercrew were safely landed.

The Argo was an iron steamerof 1,261 tons, owned by 11. M.Wrangell & Co. and was of Xor-weglan registry, her home port be-ing Haugesnd.

CLUB BUREAU WILLDISCUSS S. B. NO. 6

A public luncheon will be heldWednesday noon under the aus-pices of the legislature and taxa-tion bureau at the Commercialclub. The purpose is to disc issthe senate bill No. 6 relating tothe selling of water and light bymunicipalities outside of the cities'umits.

ORDERTROOP

HOME!(I iii(.-ii Prraa I.ruaril Wlrr.t

WASHINGTON, I>. ('., lan.Mi—The following tidililion-al niitioiiiil n'l.iril units havebeen ordered from tli<- borderto their home si at lon-. l<> [><>miiMeied out, tin- war depart-ment fliinouiiecri today:

TlVOa A, Cavalry, HaltcryA I'icld Artillery, OMOM,

Troop U, (Hvalry, Co. /\,Signal Corps, \\'aisliin<{toii.

Mil UNCERTAIN• liiltfit I'rrNx l.i-ux'ii \\ii, i

SAX FRANCISCO, Jan. ,tO.—The Oregon and Washingtontroops now at Calexico will not

I start north until regular troopshave relieved them, it was Matedtoday at the headquarters of theWestern department of the armytoday.

Two troops of the First cav-alry have been ordered from No-gales to relieve the guardsmen,and their movement will begin atonce.

It is estimated that it will re-quire about a week for the N'o-gales troops to complete theirmovement, permitting Northwest-ern militiamen to go home.

"Just to think they are reillycoining home!" said Mrs. I), ri.Roberts, president of the Womenof Troop B, when she was notifiedby The Times this morning thatthe troop will lie mustered out.

"It seems too good to be true!"We are planning a celebration

for them, but have been waitinguntil we were sure they were com-ing, and when, before arrangingany details.

"It will probably be a banquetat the Armory, and a number ofthe women's societies of the citywill assist."

The Women of Troop B willhold a special meeting Thursdayafternoon at 2:30 with Mrs. Al-fred Metzger, 1202 North J street,to plan the details of the welcome.

BATTLE GROUNDWEDDING HOODOO

CHICAGO, Jan. 30.—Mrs. VorlsGwln McCoy, married at BattleGround, Ind., carried the hoodoothrough 19 years of married lit*.Now she Is suing for divorce.

(tullcil I'rrm l.rnaril Wire.l

DANfORTH, 111., Jan. :!o.—

Mrs. O. J. Meints, wife of v farm-er living west Of lure, lillled her

four sous and her grandson bymistaking araoßtc tot puctktflour.

In the farm house today awlthe bodies of Theodore, Irvin,Mino and Kred Ifeteta, sons, andClarence Meints, grandson of SeboMelnts.

Dlscorerlng that her supply ofpancake flour was exhaustedwhile she whs preparing break-fast, .Mrs. Melnts returned to thepantry and I.>• mistake secured acan of arsenic.

(I nlia'il In-"" I.rnnoil Wlrr.)

\i:\v yoi:k, .t.-ui. :«>—Tho

cut in- North Atlantic squail-i(iii of tin- lirilMi navy Ikin

been Mtfawi itit<> viators 'ul-

juroul la Xrw York, it was

antlioritali\«l\ staled licit' tit-

day.

Report! of steamelilp masters

brought to this port and MM to.Halifax caused the. IMUMM of -'r-

deis to the squadron to mtlh fora (li'inian raider.

From source,; close to the Brit-ish consulate, it was learned "N«WYork harbor wutorti" mißht meanany spot on the Allantle within200 miles of M«W York, gtringcolor to rfOrtl of n (Jprnian rom-1Bterca ilostroyer 200 miles off Snn-[dy Hook.

Ordi-rs wpro iftsuod after Wl>ters of various Btpamships hadreported a mystprious ship aailiiißAbout.

At lpasl two steamship oapl linsdpclarcd they werp positive thevpssp! was a rtidpr.

An pmlisrgo lias bMD placedon wireless BWI»|1I reiinrliriKpositions of shi|i:- sailing amdffla^s of the allii'<l nations.

Ships from thp hasp at Halifaxanil vpsspls now doinn patrol dutyin thin vicinity will lie lirousiil U»-

\u25a0ward pacli other and will nUblUha most rinid patrol.

Humors that thp OPrman r.-udorwhich lUOCMSfttlly operated offthe poaxt of Sotith Atnerl.a washeaded in this dirpition havebrought many rumors of the pres-ence of Hip ship.

That the raider Ir expeoU'd Inthis vicinity and that the Ilritinh (

Talk o' the Times<>i'cetiii|is, did you tumMc

into the snow on your wayto work tliiN morning?

(So"d we).

It niuM be fun to be a boot-

lenner unri have tin laugh ontill the dry* and every liodywhen the .(ud«e <|uletly letsyou out afler you've served afew duys of jour term.

Each of our Judges appears tohave a specialty.

IVi-Nonull)', we believe themi. u-ni practice of burning inoil if none too harsh f»rfniln-i - who ''i-.-it in their chll-dren'H heuils in order to rol-led iiisnrjiiu< money.

And we'd use good usplial-liim-ii.iM' oil, too.

\\ h.ii has become of theold-faHltioncd man who u-edto gn to work with m )•!<\u25a0\u25a0<\u25a0 ofeKR on his < 11in about twomornings out of every week?

"Why do Americans laugh atme for wearing the clothes of mycountry?" asked Tagore, us he wasabout to sail for home. Pshaw,Tag, they didn't laugh at you anymore than they do at the collegeboys.

«."<I-,me plays r. g. oa the

EAT ARSENICEN PANCAKES

BY MISTAKEHir husband did not partake of

the poisoned cakes and Mrs.MttaU. disi uvi'ijuK that they wer«bitter ate none herself.

Her discovery came too late,however, us ;ill her sons andgrandson hud eaten heartily. Twoof them. Krod and Clarence, be-came ill shortly before noon anddied yesterday afternoon.

Irviu and Theodore died lastnight, mid Mino, thp last one tolie kept alive by emergency treat-ment administered by physicianswho hurried to the farm house,dieil todajr.

With the exception of Clarence,the grandson, who is seven, allIHe (lend were' iidultß.

WMI ONLY 200HUES OFF N. V,

I men-of-war expects to capture her,wiis pvident from the nature otpreparations.

colderTet,is forecast

"Fair and colder," announcedtho weather man Monday raorn-

| inti; and with an additional fouror five iin heb of «now on th»(round Tuecda; morning, hp stillsticl<s to his prediction, In th«faith that if lie Htlcks to it lon«

[enough it will come true.It has hepii "coldpr," at any

rate.At 7 o'clock Tuesday morning

the thermometer touched \V.'<, the| coldest it has heen this winter.! Tills Ib several decrees warmerjthtm the minimum last winter,however, which was 12.

Alternate snow and sunshineMonday and Monday night keptthe car company anxious, andcaused aiitoniohlles and po.les-irians to do straiiße xtunta on theslippery hills, and gave a chancefor many coasting parties in theevpnliiß.

All trains from the east wereKite, though the delny Is said notto have been duo to miow In Wash-ington, hut to intense cold in Mon-tana, where the trains have (rou-ble keepiiiK up steam.

STORK AT JOHITs.BAKER'S RESIDENCE

Mr. and Mrs. John S. Baker arereceiving roriKnitulations on thebirth of a daughter, who arrivedearly Sunday morninß.

liji!>kctl)tillteiiin of (JarrettliililiinlInstitute.

Advance report of the testimonyof .1. I. Morgan before the con-gressional leak committee:

"Tell the committee, Mr. Mor-gan, if you made any profit InWall street through the leak."

"I did not.""Did you have any advance In-

formation of tho peace note?""I did not.""Do you know of anyone who

had advance Information?""I do not.""Do you know of anyone who

profited through the leak?""I do not."

Sign on Commerce streetshop:

"Sh.,e Repairing WhileYou Wait mid Hhlne."

"I understand Bunker has wmirare paintings in his home.""Ybb, rare—not well done."

A Remarkable Man, This Mr.Wood*.

A special countywide poultrymeeting will be held In the FarmBureau auditorium on Saturday.At this meeting discussions onpoultry and other topics will com*up before the audience. A veryinteresting program has been ar-ranged.

The program it, as follows:"How I Produced Eggs," by Mr.

Woods.—Sewlckley (Pa.) HeraUk