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Tides in Seattle WEDNESDAY ocr. 1 | ‘THURaDAy me ap ant red as Becond Class Matter May 2, 1 SEATTLE, WASH., Nicci paca OCTOBER 1919. An American Paper That Fights for Americanism e Seattle Star 0, at the Postoffics at Meattlo, Wash, under the Act of Cor Weather B ‘orecas E go skating in the old flivver. When will Uncle Sam take those dull hulks NE of the pleasures and thrills we renew ac quaintance with these first moist days fs the akid. |All summer we have been sky- 2] ing along at full speed, turn- corners on two wheels, shoot up @irt grades on high, and acting lke all laws of witation and traffic were null ts) ¥ into a pole, waltzing about on hindlegs, bucking its driver out ‘a the windshield, and getting hind heels where its ears oughter and faithful fliivver suddenty amuck, go stark, raving crazy he middie of traffic, and ske all over a hundred-foot like a side winder with a | Our reliable Henry called our at tion to the mutability of all ings human yesterday morning, when it turned right round nd started back up the first hill ¢ came down; turned around ithout asking us about It, with- it even flirting its ears in warn- ‘And all day we saw horrible ex- ples of the opening of the skid m, Every few blocks we would pass delivery wagon, or 4 roadster, or pretentious equipage, that pulled its little scalp dance ind been left in disgrace. They say when “she” starts to to shut off the power and turn he wheels in the same direction hshe” is skidding. Usually we do p; it seems to help a lot; it makes perfect skid out of what other vise would have been only a $20 or 30 one, ee VERY night, when we go home, and every morn- ing, when we go to what we fondly imagine is our have to pass the of almost job, we somber, inert line + roosting out there in Lake like a lot of fat buzaards Tr all these months they Hare getting on our nerves They are not ships any more; are big hulks, lined up ike circus elephants, waiting for junch and the way freight A ship 1 be a thing of f life, with action, and « and tery and romance ng from the bone in its teeth { ear back to the fan tailed wake | its stern ( Sut these preudo-st he joy out of life here like buzzards, or of lemon something i posh around a little the i ind rises, and groan : uke ghost shadc Bter at night, and genera re an i easant feature of the land beupe And, for the mi nm do! are & boor bu We wish Uncle Sam would take ‘Mm away. In which wish we t one wi gentlemen so fast for a war hat died too soon Are Negotiating New Coal Wage BUFFALO, N. Y., Oct. 1 hoint conference of miners tors of the central competiti al field today began the r of negotiating a new ws lew working conditions The possibility of a strike on No- rember 1 seemed more remote, and oper soft 1 work ale and ILove Triangle Drives E. E. | | | |LETTERS BETRAY STORY) Man and 2 WILL MOTHER KEEP SON? by. Decides It: WomenEnd 7 Lives Here | Fuller to Murder and Suicide in Local Hotel Three suicides have heen re- ave. N. and the gas streaming from the opened jets in the | range. | Miss Gruftiaum, who was living | with her aged mother, Mrs. Johanna | |Grunbaum, widow of the late Henry | runbaum, of the Woodhouse Grunbaum Furniture Co., 416 Pike | st., had been in il health for 13} ;¥ears. Dr, G. F. Warmbure, her |physician, said she has been suf- jfering from melancholia for years land that she has made repeated | }ttireats to end her life and had at- tempted suicide on three occasions. She was last seen at 11:30 p.m Tuesday and is believed to have gone to the kitchen and turned on |the gas after other members of the family retired Woman Takes Poison Despendent over continued ill-} jness, Mre. Ethel Beadreau, 20, end | ed her life by drinking poison in her apartment at 418 Columbia st. late Tuesday night. Her husband, Cline | Beadreau, was in the next room. He heard his wife moan and hurriedly |summoned the elty doctor, but the woman was dead before help ar- | rived. Beadreau told the police his | wife had grown despondent and of- | fered this explanation of her suicide, The most tragic death story wax revealed late Tuesday afternoon when the police were called to the |New Avon hotel, 606 Second ave. —Creas-Dale Photo ‘There they found the dead body ot} . . Fuller, 3 < site poured Here's Bobby Jones and his mother, n his arms was the body of Mrs.| ; ; : atthe lows, 28, whom he haa|the boy’s grandparents from taking him away fron killed by firing two bullets thru her| «1 want to «tay with mamma. | Frater, heart. The revolver was lying be-| phat man wants to take me away | ’ tween the dead couple where it had) trom her and make me go with him. slipped from Fuller's hand after he} tr. wants me, but I hate him, He's had shot himself. The woman's] ..' 2ooas rT jutched e cloth ger’ oa sik Lge eGintened the clothing |” ‘This is the decision of little 6-year: | Dykeman's court, be i old Bobby Jones, who is the center Letters Explain jof a legal ‘battle that threatened Deputy Coron Howard MecDon-| Tuesday to involve three judges of ald and nk Koepfii, wh ves-| the superior cour disagreement the o . takes ater the ais Pape ina te nat ethan te After posing for a picture, Bobby | Whether “ ty indeed va ning game of the series at Chi ‘ *) f Siidgta’ the’ alery played around with the photographer,| Yard workers in the New York », Redland probably will pack meh iad tesco In 1915 Mrs, George Jones obtained | examined the mechanism of the district should strike to enforce | the stands at every game played a divorce from her husband in Med ‘’ a ne | 4 one Be ne | " ‘ « and a 25 per cent wage Cacbustsh pull 06 cone nls dada ae gr ry ford, Okla, on grounds of cruelty. | plates. On his blouse he proudly | a jround ru! ‘0 cover hits into the Negro Captured; fe a ot "heclian ye 7 +4 bod pees | wears a deputy sheriff's badge that| inerease. portions of the outfield where stand Held for Trial the custody of Bobby, t the grand: ; ¥ a j |he confiseated from Deputy Beebe. | ing room was being sold were made CAMDEN, N. J., Oct. 1—(United|parenta, Mr. and Mrs. L, C. Jonea,| This Will Be Deaver’s De- hap Reem Bleep ad RE: POY i ay ae cae Press.) James Whitin negro, | were to help her A year later she | all the finality of a court of last ap n ie eld w go for two bases; seatotdh with ui ott tira, eeten, (heed, . tb another Oklahoma . city fense; One Pulled Gun =| peat. He wants to stay right here in the other fields three. Hits into white, was in jail here. today, await.|and then to Colorado,’ She came to | with his mother, and he shrinks from he stands, of course, will be home ng trial. It was understood he|Seattle more than a year ago. Her husbands in | his grandparents when they come | runs sould be yrivately some time | former husband enlisted in the army | entertained no | near him. A bright, sunny little fel-| today, to pre t possible mob ac-|in 1917, was stricken with menin ss for H, C. Holt, mur. | low, tanned and healthy, his dislike | e | tion. gitis and died at his home months| dered Alki g r, and one at | for his grandparents is outspoken, | : BS carrey ape , Whiting was captured in a swamp |later, On September 22 Deputy| tempted a few weeks ago to |#nd his affection for his mother is| SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 1—(Unit udendor s 19 milex east of here, after having | Sheriff Beebe, at the instance of the| sheet him with a revolver that | senuine ed Press.)—-With the avowed inten He said to| grandparents, who claimed their son| failed to go off, Harry A, Mar The grandparents never did any-|tion of curing Californians of “pres ; urged them on his death bed to get| ‘tin, an attorney in the Lowman | thing for my husband, and now they |idential hypnosis,” Senator Hiram} A i ( J id. he was going home from school.| Martin is counsel for James R,|to Bet the boy away from me, but/against the peace treaty and the ‘ : : a irents charged the moth.|Deaver, retired sergeant major of|they only want all his insurance |league of nations covenant in “his Will be found on ighed peat dancer, and not a|marines, who was cha Wednes-| money.” declared Mrs, George Jones, |home town.” t raptor ie fit person to care for her son, |day with murder in the first de-| the boy's mother | Johnson will address several civic|] Page 3. He tells of ys put in doubles. Bobby ts Prisoner le for the shooting of Holt at ‘Just After Money” orga reid this moon xen tuned) the “blackest day pne 5 nd aln ©. rT a eon a the Pa 1 hote) y, D. : Their Want Ads get results Judge King Dykeman ruled tat Went late k at Bae Ww aint an The father set aside some of it|© = ae A will be he ia t tiie for the Huns in the or me both Bobby and his mother are wards | “°* oe ast Saturday night.|/to educate t boy and they are/® ™* Bess 4 ha fn RO abl votthe Juvenile court and the boy In| Martin claimed Wednesday torbelafter it, They never have paid any | Coliseum > recent war, Ger- While the rest are blowing |! being kept at the detehtion home |{n. pommension of an abundance of| attention to the boy, and it is str ince | Eight Are Injured many’s defeat at bubble While he is in court, he is with his |@¥idence to show that Deaver was) that they should make this trouble) h in : While ei our rehtul tre ag|not near the scene of the shooting| now. My husband has been dead for| in Street Car Smash|| Amiens threw ° the Was mA | Say Leputy Sheriff Beebe. Under Judge|00 the night it occurred, and that,/a year and a half and they knew) SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 1.—(Unit chief Huns, inelud- The above poem is by Dykeman’s decision, the mother won| #ltho he knew of the friendship of] where I was all the Ume. They }ed Press)-—Hight persons were in . ke eee C. “IL: Stubbles. Are |\her tight for her boy. Unless he re-|Holt for Mrs, Deaver, he fad no| haven't been hunting me eee) two neriously, todas, wae «|| ng. one — into ail be i a verses it, the mother will soon be| intention of doing away with his| “If the boy's grandparents are #0) United Railways car jumped the yanie. Today’s chap- you trying for the cash |i oieen’ the boy'dveustody. But. the | tival }anxtous to help their grandchildren, | track at a slippery curve at Chenery I et i P prize and seats at the |\grandparents were not satinfie Three weeks ago, Martin sald,|they should take care of the others, /and Thirteenth sts. ter is one of the most Ne a? ie a They continued the struggle. Tues-|Deaver came to his office and said) who need help, They have lots of} Over 100 persons were on the car.| vividly interesting Clemmer? See the day Attorney Chester appeared in|Holt had tried to get a warrant] grandchildren who are in actual need, |'The car's speed was checked when : M i Lead 8 Classified Page for par- Ronald’s court and asked him to set|for his arr on a charge that he|while I am taking good ca of |it struck a fence, ones in the Luden- H ticular aside Judge D¥kem decision. |had. threatened to kill the grocer, | Bobby. I'm not n dancer, either,| ‘The brakes failed to work as the|! dorff book. |Judge Ronald doubted*his jurisa “At that time," said Martin, “I| Ike they ald, I sing at thé Tavern,| car was going north down a s |tion, and called in Presiding Judge (CONT'D ON PAGE SIXTER: but I don’t ‘shimmie’ for a living.” grade, ‘The car remained upright. 2 mother were |B Rone " her. who refused to cided first Bobby and taken into Jud then sent to Jud ald. HOLT HAD MANY Mrs. Georgia Jones, enter the morning the case was and then taken back to the “I’m Going to Stay With Mamma,” He Says THREE JUDGES WORRIED Pay Higher Owners to CIC ov BY (United TTE Wage Scale |Order Prohibiting Raise is | Rescinded; Local Yard | } Managers Satisfied — | RY L. FARR! Press Staff Correspondent) | REDLAND FIELD, CINCIN- NATI, Ohio, Oct. 1.—After half @ OTHERS REFUSE RAISE century of tasetat famine, Cincin- nati fandom ne into its own to- | day when the Reds crowned their | bogrd’s decision to permit ship- aed raters to a Wage pre cag izns, conte an [1910 world series Si ee A Ditetering «mid-summer “sew Every shipyard In Seattle will pay| shone down on a fiefd that was put ithe advanced sreale according to of. linto perfect playing. condition by | Sox in the opening game of the Seattle shipyard workers re- | mained on the Job Wednesday sensational National league season | as on result of the shipping |py colliding with Chicago's White Per Year CENTS Late Edition by Mail 06 $5.00 to probably showers; westerly winds, Thursday, uthwest to CINCINNATI REDS WIN: COAST SHIPYARDS, EXCEPT SEATTLE, ‘STRIKE E KNOCKED ‘OF BOX IN 4TH Batting Order CHICAGO CINCINNATI Rath, 2 b Daubert, 1b Gandil, 1 Risberg, «s kee CINCINNATI, Oct. 1—Rath, first man up for the Reds, scored the first run of the series. He was hit by Ce cotte and’ took third on Daubert’s sin- ele to center, Rath scored on Groh's | sacrifice fly to Jackson. peggy of the shipbuliders associa | | showers last night. Fleecy clouds ‘ \apotted a blue sky—just the kind Workers in steel shipyards in the! or overhead conditions that ball] San Francico buy district, Los 3 Taustee, Porkaiiia Cas Shades.’ bow players pray for » better weather | conditions ever sent joy to the heart ever, went on strike according to * vate aavines. ‘Che. va catteg Of World's series crowd. % Soon after noon the right and out before word was at th uippibe board left field pavilions were packed} [with a shirt-sleeved mass of Red s order prohibiting ship sard pe 7” Sep sol! Mea atone wae,| followers. ‘The temporary seate int ‘ I wk fate ficld were filling, while. the | ren Pp @ President ‘Wilson's bos . Sk Oblate “4 t id stands were packed to i \the aisles, (a right fleld and left May Go Back | field 2,000 fans were jammed shoul- | When union leaders of the cities|der to shouller, standing on one affected later were that} another's fe ‘The Vig stand and the government wot ship-| bleachers filled slow! |ping board yards to 5 the Scent] A brass band raded the field. ja ur increase ag to by the|serenading the various stands. The Jemployers and the men, they indt-|Red rooters, under the direction of P 1 the men on. strike white-gloved bandmaster, gave in ha gried this agr » assemblage taste of singing me be ack to workland ‘yells t would have 80 by tomorrow morn-|xhamed a six-cylinder college foot- | ball crowd. however, will remain) perhaps the ball players had a bit yards (that have n0t/ of sicep Inst night, but if they did] he eight cent increase. they were about the only element of eee ¥ the Bethlehem | yards) this paseball-fevered public so favor vedas 6h Garten : pag ‘\ ed. Early hours saw hotel lobbies yards at Portiand. Fifty thousand) and other haunts of visiting fane cee Nad kad cheue bO0e dee men | tilled. with eatty: risers, WhO wae gage ed Pee gee more than ready to abandon their a ceaggg 8 jes ten-toaroom quarters betimes. ards are open conflicting 4 claims are made abt eiker Sealpers Hold Auction of at work Ticket scalpers registered a new ’ i af i | in 5 tr one tod Box and grandstand who is making a fight to keep| Business agents of metal tr ne today 9a fig MT'T dabah tals canveusing the seats for the first game were auction . here Wednesia make ed, and bidding was brisk. No at sheriff's office to walt for some sort| that the new scale had gone into} tempt was made by the authorities to | of fecision, Judge Ronald went | effect prevent auction sales, One speculator ahead. with a jury trial,.and Judge Turn Down Appeal declared government agents would cet the excess war tax on all sales his| Dykeman is expected to decide the| At the Metal Trades’ council meet: | Set ¢ Spo lieae -finaily--aiulse, to reverse $181. (comes Om ga0d wueramn). Ente Seeley er np fo tere he age|own decision giving Bobby to his ; a piscion * price charged by the clubs Pulothar, ¢& te +r ¢ pat in Redland field was sold bo ma 4 Bh : veicioiibseinieiie is NEW YOR H hyo i; Mem- | before last night and an attendance pada gic. «tin Bilin any al Trades coun | o¢ aimost 30,000 seemed assured He's Deputy Sheriff cil were t today to decide | 7 ast year 19,000 persons attended the y First Inning | CHICAGO—Jobn Collins took his ‘ace in the batting box and a hush | fell over the field as Reuther poised on the mound. J. Collins up. The | first pitch was a wide one and out- |side. Collins singled to center for | the first hit of the series. 1. Collins up. BE. Cojlins forced J. Collins at second. Reuther to Kopf, on an at- | tempted sacrifice. E. Collins taking first. Weaver up. E. Collins out Reuther, Star of Big Game, Played Ball on Local Lot “Dutch” Reuther, the big hurier who pitched the Cincy Reds to a win over the Chicago White Sox in the first game of the baseball classic at Cincinnati, is a product of the Northwestern league, play- ing with the Spokane and Van- couver teams in this circuit a couple of years ago. Reuther also starred with the stick, hammering the ball for three bases with two men on the bags in the big fourth inning, Keuther hit two homers over the Seattle right field fence in two consecutive days here, a feat that has never been equaled on the local lot. stealing, Wingo to Rath. Weaver | flied to Rousch in deep center. No runs, 1 hit, no errors. | Rousch made a sparkling one |handed catch almost to the stands, CINCINNATI—Rath up, and was hit by a pitched ball; Daubert singled to center, Rath going to third; Groh flied to Jackson and Rath scored after the catch, Daubert remaining on first base, The crowd went crazy |with excitement when Rath crossed with the first run of the series, Rousch up. Daubert caught stealing, Schalk to Risberg; Rousch walked; Schalk’s throw die Collins to Rousch stole second, being’ too high for F handle; Duncan out, Risberg to Gan- jail. One run, one bit, no errors. | Cleotte was a trifle wild and the Reds were laying the bat on the ball hard thruout the inning. Second Inning | CHICAGO—Jackson safe at first jon Kopf’s wide throw to Daubert and went to second; Kopf was given an error; Felsch sacrificed, Reuther to Daubert; Gandil singled to center, the ball being just over the infleld and Kopf should have had it; Rouseh reached it with his finger tips; Jack- son scored on the misplay; Gandil out stealing, Wingo to Rath, Wingo's throw beating the runner six feet, Risberg walked; Schalk flied to Rousth. One run, one hit, one error. Kopf was guilty of bad baseball |when Rousch raced in for Gandil's pop fly CINCINNATI--Kopf struck out, swinging hard at the last one, but missed; Neale out, B. Collins to Gan- dil; it was a clipper driven hard at the Sox captain, and he flelded it fast for a close decision at first; Wingo flied to Felsch, No runs, no hits, no errors. Cicotte in this inning. fast curve over the showed great improvement He was breaking & the corners and had Reds chopping at the ball. Kopt sed his third strike, a curve over (CONT'D ON PAGE FIFTSEND Cab- rinets ched $ are rided Mary 10.00 68.50 10.00 15.00 14.50 stress rem with th dit the 1 mmbra at. Th itched vhich, ct wh ily ve le fi act fi com e gel e ble las b an fi isfact suces afflie 2st ca it dri the imine nee fi 3 sold those or ot iintai n cha in th write our ¢ ‘rite indi © cha ice. Co., Atla a Kin at rest baTM % Bints. Ky he ligh he mo b; gua ree