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range pns of pme! jeattle y the anche ment, data i be can erin in. An In the ations ission cy is Hoa of ker, idea, dit \ ind. work It eight f is the Sho | 26 ity Saturday night. — tonight, tomorrow night, It will be a shame if you miss the great pageant, for you would be missing, not only WEATHER « Temperature Last Maximum, Today nd Friday 4 Hours noo! Hntered as Second Class Matter May 8, 1899, at the Postoffice at Beattie, Wash. an inspiring, colorful patriotic show, but also failing to hear the songs of Sophie Bres- JUST THREE MORE CHANCES TO SEE “AMERICANUS” You have just three more chances to see ‘‘Americanus” lau, a great operatic solosit. And both attractions for the one price of $1-$2 a seat! to see the S Stadium production if they can. under the Act of Congress March 8, 1879, Per Year, by Mail, $1.60 The Seattle Star The Star advises its readers SEATTLE, WASH., THU RSDAY, JU LY § 26 1928. “Hal Hal" The cry of “Honest Joe” Bung. arter rang out on the still night air, With a quick lunge, he lept forward. A strangled, inarticu- * late cry came from the doorway, In a minute more, Joe's steely grip would encircle the mysteri- ous hand, and then * * * “Yes, We Have 2} Next episode of t will b > Bananas,” the ing sertes Reserve le Homer Bre’ to be a Fast on Sp Why can’t our mer use this kind of fuel? ee YE DIARY This evening, my wife still in the coun- try, to Rippe’s coffee house, where I did order hog and hominy, a strange dish, but not unpleasant. Metropolitan playhouse to see “The Spice marine of 1922," and prettier chorus wenches uever I saw, but the author of the Ubretto still at large. And did see L. Austin and N, and H. Drusman, and also L. Tindall, owner of The Wireless, and he did offer me = job on his paper as charch editer. And did see D. Sal did expect to b an’ gentlemen, th ing will be *'* vo to heme, Some of the ba nips now in El- Hott bay cost as high as $15 present quotations, th Many of the gobs, haven't been in Seattle for ne @ year, are celebrating Old| Home week on the postoffice steps. Society note: After watching vada wig-wagging ‘Texas for fi min finally spelled out whi ing. It was: a gob on the Ne “Have you gotta cigaret?” yne good thing attle Is that the en a few of last WORLD See Be a messenger boy! Good pay! Free bicycles! Dress lke an admiral! Go everywhere! Collect autographs of leading business men! The mes- And thenee to the | > a gob on the | about the fleet's | Peale: Welcome President Harding! WITH HARDING IN SEATTLE President Harding reviews fleet in AMERICAS EXECUTIVE IS CHEERED ‘Tens of Thousands Witness Arrival of U. S. Leader at Vancouver ica feat Vint dose sake or 8 president of the United States to Canada is being celebrated —s with tremendous enthusiasm in Vancouver today, The shown Jac tara and Stripes are being ywhere with the Union and never before has the city m so gaily decorated. | Thousands of motorists went to 3 k this morning to catch glimpse of the president's Prospect Poin and all along the beaches of first tie » Where tho Henderson and her escorts were but a few hun: [dred feet off ands of peo re, tensa @f thou: party be wel lieutenant governor of British Co ett and by on., J. 3, King | fea minister of public. works, and other officials of the dominion gove m Ot tawa to al nent who had c welcome the o-8 BY LAWREN' | VANCOUVER, B. President Harding dropped in t f neighborly call on Canada. ¥| help hi 9:30 a. m of transport Henderson. 10 a. m show 10:30 a. m—Parade starts from on First ave. to Cherry at, Second ave. Olive at. to Fifth ave. 1145 a. m—P; £0 on to Volunteer park, goin Olive way to E. John st, east on EB. on Mth ave. to the park. Harding g ig in presente m in aclhy addresses boys Jo, 15-year-old Seattle t v eat of Seattio F Leaves » Hardin, 1 4p. m Warren G. Harding, U, & Transport Henderson, hort note to tell you T am well, and hope you are the same No doubt you are sv ar from me after m ined to long sl. I was forced to 18 writing to you ‘on acc ot neuralgia in my right hand, ch I © acted last New n somebody stop I be able to have a with you tomor ¢ over to the W know. WILL HAN east on Olive at leaves Voluntec at First ave. and Bell st., east on Cherry at to Stewart st, cast on Stewart st, to Olive John st ool children at ve quet of Mc & ital for lub at I © minutes. heon unt Addresses crowd at stadium. you will just his mouth hai will find me. I wil! rying a Brownie WARNS HARDING And #0 I¥ © ye try of him, You can pt the other sid was a breeze blow! to ait on the windward side jott bay from deck Lands at Bell wt, dock and passes thru Northwest Products north east rade stopa at Olive st. and Fifth ave. and autos only way, east to 14th ave, N. and north lunteer park and nd pa presented no be © 1a 7 OF , going routh to Second ave to Olive at. jo things ar on on on rk. by Homer G. Brew Extends Welcome to President ‘Sorry He Can’t Have Long Chat With War-} ren; Warns Him of Governor look for a man ne alight and his ears akimbo, you ar No. 4 camera, RANGE OF GOVERNOR Now, just a word of warning, Mr. Pre The reception committee has arranged for you to rid the same car as G i For many years our governor has been a de- votes of Granger Twist, and he fs reasonably accurate, But you know how thes e. ro I would yor Brown on ding and the off POLE AT UNION ST. bay ee, See se one panied him to Alaska ar However, I cs hae ie eee Thee ncouver at 11 a. m., to ntown in ’ a you have a nice time In Seattle, | remainder of the ¢ you are in the te Se ta aoe hal HE a 6 of amenities 1 Probably eo each other again, | And don't forget to see the tide dian officials and citizens «| 1 will be h he lamp Plate SE ON Weve ah pee ieee {it here marks the first | post at . mech t than the Potomac, |Mr. Harding has stepped upon for-| behind the big, cere : ae eign sc co hin election, and he| the red plumes HOMER G, BREW. jis the president, except Mr. my wife. P. §.—I am « you a Wilson, who has thus visited a for It will be hard for you to pick package of Glover's Mange Cure eign country while in office, me out of that big crowd, but 'f | for Laddie Boy. But Mr. Harding does not regard ea ee ae * 4% & Canada as exactly a foreign land, tho a different flag wa over It |He has pendence, n when hi admired the inde. invit Ss exte ded op here while making his senger boys are the first to land—on| Alaskan voyage, he eagerly ac their heads! | cepted, cee | 1 Incipal event of the day, Today's candidate for the Poison | pol t least, Ig to be Mr ady who asks the what band he Ivy club is the old | dignified en plays in. eee The West §& colyum run by That's nothing. colyum which ma fs run by a attle Herald has a 10. This paper ha y readers believe | old child, Here Hes the body of William Tidd, He thought his tires wouldn't skid, They did. x08 a The ripe berries are hanging on the| growers’ vines by the thousand and pre shouting, ¢ will have to have “A-Mary-Can-Us,"—Bellevue tor, cee GRAMMATICAL NOTE Considering that Prof. Meany is the author of “Americanus,” he might have gotten the title correct. “Can us” is bad gram- mar. It should No co-operation among Seattle citt- }and 300 injured, it now {# ascer- zens er try making love to 4/ tained, Wrecking crews still! are flapper? searching the entangled fragments elena i |of the two trains for bodies, Henry Ford may take over the) Juulty signaling is understood to Columbia Basin project, according tO! ye responsible for the crash, In| a state official which an engine and eleven coachen| Guess he wants to turn It into) were derailed and flattened by tho another service station. |compact. From 10 couches no one die Ah - | escaped alive and dozens of victims| Senator Hi Johnson is attacking | were unrecognizable, mutilated un the world court plan. He's right.) der the grinding framework of tho But if there must be a world court, | wooden cars, we hereby apply for the job of batl| ‘the collision took place near ite Plevna Tomorrow | the not a re legal holiday sloons will main open a Wound Gotla go, now. The boss geta sore whi we work overtime, A. J, Be year-old boy. a | Reflec: | Ha speech at a ‘Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod Is Discovered Staff Writer of ‘The S Star Finds Important Personage and Jollies Him Out of a Pass | WARD INDICTED IN DEATH CASE With Murder WHITE PLAIN Y, July - on of the million. “ahr iglead fa es Walter 8. Ward, dered him a p. m. by the clvic ooo eed ot aire baker, was indiéted today by government. At that time, the| % M. HUNT When, the ‘gentleroan. yaber: of: Gan; | ta Bie bos any ye radars president will express those senti-| vv, B. C, July 26.—|ada and the gentleman president of jc. murder in the first degree, in ments of friendship he feels with|The ¢ nan Usher of the Black |the United States exchanged glacial | tai with the Billing cf Clas respect to. Cani nd Canadians. | Rod out of his shell this |formallties, while a platoon of Royal yfurn toF 7, Column 2) | mornin. r an hour's diligent|Mounted Police saluted, held without bail. | pursuit 1 couple of Pv Sound | GENTLEM/ q for the first men. He siniled | HURRIE TWARD Tuesday in § y, taking care not to dis-| Canada 1s much. exerc over| ‘The Ward s baffled author. arrange the rapler end of a wax|the arrival of Harding. This ac-|ities for months since the body of moustache counts for the presence of the gen. |the slain ex-sailor was discovered As a result, five passes to the|tleman psher in Vancouver. | alongside a lonely road in Westches: | doc K at which the transport Hen His » corre pee to none in| tr county . json, bearing the presidential party.| tne United States as tar ag is known,|, Want later confessed the erlme, arrived, were issued Instead of the | $16 {x chief of ceremonies on occa. | “*¥!# he slew Potors in self-defens 300 Injured; - 160 Bodies Are! |three prescribed by the gentleman | sions of stato and when he waves | H© Was arrested and later released. Recovered From Debris jusher: Se ict raee capresso black’ rod everybody |when new evidence was uncovered And¢ another result, representa: | salutes | and there © whisper’ at pres ie z \t ttle Star and a} He is stationed in Ottawa, whore | 20" ere Wer rouge ts Piey an SOFIA, July 26-—One hundred . r were at hand yTurn to el 7, Column 2) ses age Seon |and sixty bodies have thus far been | uimod he had been mi ne vic recovered from splintered wreckage + em e & tim of blackmatlers, and that he was lof two Bulgarian express trains j which crawhed between Sofia and | Varna on Monday Two hundred persons were killed “The Daughter of Chai- Hung,” third episode of the thrilling story of “The Yellow Seven,” will be found on Page 18 today. Guna of the cruiser Seattle will © elty's first welcome to Pres! dent and Mrs, Harding Wriday morn. ing when they steam Into the Be atte |harbor on board the transport Hen derson Leaving Vancouver, |Thursday night, the F due to arrive in Hilott bay at 9: {Friday morning and will slip by the |formidablo array of 10 superdread , and a host. of » first presidential roar t fleet ever held in Puget found. Wednesday the giant fighting craft assembled in Seattle harbor from the different Sound ports where they were stationed. Following the lead of the flagship Seattle, Friday, eaeh | of the big vexsels will give the 21-gun wlute to the president as the Hen-| ederson kes her way to the moor | ing ne the Bell st, dock Promptly at Guns Wil | BoomW elcome to President on Friday |Harding Will Have Busy Day Seeing City, Meeting Folks and Speaking 10 the president and his party will land at the dock, spend a few minutes lookin, (Lurn to Page 7, g over th Oolumn 3) ox forced to slay Peters to save him. self Make It a Habit Every Day The Want Ad columns are filled with many op- portunities in every walk of life. * Bargains of every kind wre being offered at sac- rifice prices. You ean profit most by thesé offerings by watching the Want Ad columns daily, Turn to them NOW. Son of Millionaire Charged | | | sidering the issuance of a {told Deputy Prosecutor Macfarlane, | without saying a word to anyone and without even leaving a note, She has not returned, Fearing his wife the victim of a sinister power, C. L. Cook, city fireman, who is} shown here with his 3-year- old daughter, Alice, has. call-| ed upon the authorities to find the woman, She left the Cook home, 1824 E. Terrace t., Sunday. At the left are Mrs. Cook and the little girl. —Photo by Price & Carter Star Btaft Photographers Believe Mrs. Cook! Is Victim of Foul Play BY JOHN” Ww. NEL SON Pitiful cries of a t ing for by mother—in the morning when it | 150,000 disabled ex-service men, re-| the trend, and the investigation wakes up, thru the long day and|cently issued by Gen. Frank T.| being carried on by the vet again at night, have failed to reach | Hines, director of the United States | bureau itself, together with the” the heart of Mrs. Al 21-year-old wife. of C, fireman, who disappared from her home Sunday evening, leaving a heart-broken family behind. Cook, pretty L. Cook, city pea Investigation On; Meanwhile member of the senate committee investigating Veterat |Bureau activities with respect to hospitalization and voe jtional training of men disabled during the world war, ha been thru the district office of the Veterans’ Bureau hem within the past week, without the knowledge of L. GC. seph, district manager of the bureau. the senator is now in Portland investigating conditions i the hospitals there. lof Senator Oddie’s presence in the district office and the he had not seen or talked with the senator since his lin this district. parently seeking information on which to base cong sional action looking to a reorganization of Veterans’ Burea activities, later as governor of Nevada, the Veterans’ Bureau investi- }gator unearthed a series of u tion, frauds in spectacular manner: Observers in Washington He is a mining engineer and| quoted as stating the o metallurgical expert and was the first manager of the orig- inal Tonopah gold properties in Nevada. ing his first term United States senate, having been elected for a six-year term in November, 1920. reaching order pensation veterans’ bureau, ceived by effect huge savings in the operation of the veterans’ bur bul Doesn’ See Jessep Signs Point to Complete Breakd in Vocational Training Prog May Try Pension Plan BY W. J. BORLAND Tasker L. Oddie, United States senator from Ni di It is understood thi Jesseph today acknowledged that he had not been ad se Senator Oddie, evidently working on the quiet, is During Senator Oddie’s term as district attorney watching the problem as it lates to that particular means the beginning of the of the United States vete bureau. Others in Seatile are acquainted with the p will not admit this view, they do conclude that the o really means the beginning | the end of the vocational trai ing phase of the veterans’ reau activities, Recent reductions In the p nel operating the vocational tt ing problem in this district He is now serv- in the Official confirmation of the far- affecting the com- status of approximately nai ate investigation, is likely to about fundamental changes in reau operation when the next gress convenes. HAS BEEN AN hag not been re- the Seattle district office. It is said the order is designed to by the elim. a idk : ination of considerable personnel, | EMBARRASSING PROBLEM _ eee goat _ par ‘ sR and that it will settle for all time} Vocational training as condu da ok pleas of a y loving and “attentive the compensation problem for this|by the then federal board for husband, and of a mother whose faith is shatter- vd, but all to no avail. The Cooks believe Alice wag lured from her home by some strange | power exercised over her by an| unknown man, What this power is they are at a loss to know, but | fear that it Is hypnotic in its ef. fect and occult in its expression, COOK APPEALED TO SUTOR THURSDAY use Mrs. Cook is thought to be under the ovil influence of some | sinister figure, Cook, who is em- Ployed at fire station No, 34, ap. te the prosecuting attorney's y and aid of the police of coast cities has been enlisted in the search for the girl wife. Deputy ‘arlane is con- warrant Cook on a for the arrest of Mrs. charge of criminally deserting her S-year-old child, and should it be group of veterans. Washington, according to press re- ports, make lay monthly checks, $75, payable to the group affected by the new order, BUREAU MAY UNDERGO RADICAL CHANGES office the ment is withheld until copies have jbeen received thru official channels, Disabled men in vocational training in this district are a little degree of anxiety the new or- der of things presumably affecting | their Statisticians in| tional education and its success@ the United States veterans’ bi has been the subject of much e3 iment on the part of the go ment agencies charged by ‘con with the duty of rehabilitating disabled in the line of duty a the world war, As operated and as it has been operated dui the past five years, the problem: been the cause of an almost less amount of discontent and satisfaction on the part of the met affected by the provisions of the ® habilitation act first passed by col gress in October, 1917, Perhaps no other problem in history of our government has ee so barren of results for the milli¢ upon. millions of the taxpayers’ m ey that has been thrown into administration and operation of th problem within the past five Thousands of men_thruout (Turn to Page 7, Column 1) estimate that the move will Necessary a permanent out- of $75,000,000 each year in varying from $8 to Opinion at the veterans’ bureau here is divided as to what order really means, and com. iting with no present status, That the order means the dis- integration of the vocational training phase of veterans’ bu- Treau activity, is the opinion of some observers who have been to bring her back, if the} young woman ts located, this will} bly be done, Macfarlane sald. The Cooks lived at 2324 B. Terrace st. until Wedne: when they moved into a new home at 8317 64th ave. S., in Rainier Valley. ‘The disappearance of Mrs. Cook is shrouded in mystery, according to the story the grief.stricken father Sunday evening she left the house There had been no domestic dis- | cord, Cook says—this was verified by neighbors living In adjoining apart- ments, who testified that the two ap- parently had been most congenial— and he and his wife were on the best of terms, he is a good girl, 1 know that," (Turn to Page 7, Column 4) Thrilling Moments Recalled by Readers | Are you reading the true adven- ture stories that Star readers are contributing daily? If not you are missing one of the most interesting columns in the paper, Turn to page 3 for today's tales. HISTORY OF THE SANDWICH Gastronomy has immortalized John, earl of Sandwich, In th convenient morsel which is reputed to be his invention, ‘The earl | was a great gambler. In the pursuit of his passion he rebelled | against the tyranny of meal times, whereby each day the hours _ of gambling were curtailed. Therefore, calling In the waiter, who, having announced dinner, hovered uneasily around the table, earl ordered that pieces of meat should be laid between two sli of bread and brought to him as he sat at play. This was done, and the sandwich was born. The progeny have been prolific. Recipes for the 60 most wor famous’ sandwiches are contained in a bulletin just prepared our Washington bureau, which any reader may get by filling out and mailing coupon below. P Washington Bureau, The Seattle Star, 1822 New York Ave., Washington, D, ©, I want a copy of the bulletin, “Sixty Sandwiches,” inclose herewith four cents in postage stamps for same, and | Name, POCPPECeCCERCCOCOOCC ter trctcet iret tr reese s rear Street and No a ememee Clty. reccceccecsececaeeceeeeccacecccsseeseeseseeeesaeaeaeinmm Slabh, dscdeeveceatanne cokearaécabaan ca cavds Cane’ pecCnnammnmamE