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.ZEV RACES TO VICTORY a as | Eg dil ‘VOL 25. NO, 204, BUTCHER’ FOUND’ WEATHER FORECAST Ns, | SI prob —) NARA ee The Newspaper With the Entered as Second Class Matter SEATTLE, Hold ‘em, Washingto Sar) University rooters held a night- shirt parade last night, but the coeds | didn't participate. They hate to feel} overdressed. Foothall is a brutal game. Moment, a yell leader is throw an arm out of joint. . . At any Hable to Altho we would like to see Wash- ington win, we are betting on U. 8. Cc. A man's family, first duty ts to his see CANDIDATE FOR THE POISON IVY CLU Gink who bets sara the home| team. i The dark horse of the Washington eleven is Ham Greene, the colored | kalfback, If it gets dark toward the! end of the fourth quarter, Bagshaw | can slip Ham into the lineup. He'd be practically invisible. see Juniors at the untversity are con- sidering red vests as class raiment. | When we attended Washington red flannels were the class raiment. ment. 29 Lit Gee Gee says it-looke tke a dry field—and a dry crowd. . FIRST PICTURES OF THE GAME Norm Anderson, giant U. 8. ©. star, Just after he had taken « bite out of Roy Petrie’s ear. | cee | Football is a demoralizing game. | A player will sponge himself off in the water bucket, and then take a @rink out of the pail Now what can you do in a drawing room with &@ man like that? In the old days football men|t wore their their heads. players kick them in the stomach.| eee The Star’s new serial Is entitled} “Captain Blood.” A football story, | no doubt. hair A diplomat is a man who cali get his small boy to take castor oi] and make him think {t is sarsaparilla, eee CASUALTY NOTE Our winter overcoat, which we have worn for five years, is so thin that 15 moths died of starva- tion this summer trying to get a square meal off it. Joe Beckett, the English heavy- ‘eight champion, has figured in the Newspapers for many years, but no- body has ever seen a picture of him standing up. . New York women have started a Movement to have all married men identified as such by tattoo marks. This hardly seems necessary. You can always tell a married man by the way he cringes when he hears a feminine voice. . o-. “Monxey Man Hunts Squirrels in Lon Angeles Wilds,”—Newspaper. Well, Los Angeles is a good place to hunt squirrels PROSPERITY NOTE Now is the time to buy! We're going to buy a postage stamp Just as soon as we get another penny saved up. see A Jot of detours are ax rough as the regular road. eee The boss {s a man who can take It out on the hired hands when he Sets mad at his wife. Bumper to bumper, And hub to hud, The cars are so thick, Their fenders rub. Bedtime story: “I am golrig to get up early in the morning.” See you at the game! Ad. 8. | | tributing [ent of the s GIRLS MISSING IS VERY LOW ‘Employed at Lib-|May Not Survivel erty; Probe of Halls Begun names of three young gir © legal age, who have -b working in dance halls below Ye jler way and who have mysterious! disappeared, were made public Sat. a urday by Deputy Prosecuting Attor- | ne Ralph Hammer, who ts conduct- | ing an investigation of the resorts. Police are still searching for Alice Myers, 16, who disappeared about three weeks ago: Nothing has been heard from the girl by her mother, Mrs. Mary Myera, 2442 W. Oliver Finnerty and Bertha Smith, who were last seen in company with the girl, also are being sought by the police on a charge of con- to the delinquency of a minor. The other girls who have disap. Peared are Jean Quigley, Sarah Quigley, 17, both of whom were employed as dancing girls at the Liberty dance hall on Occidental ave. near Washington st, Olive Enibree, 16, who also worked jin the piace as a dance hall girl. The case of the three girls has been under investigation by Mrs. Amanda Gordon, state «2xperintend te rescue society, who has offices in the Hinckley build ing. The threo girls had been pa- roled from the Washington Grin’ heqpe, snd uwers attending high school in Seattle and working at/ Private families when the lure of | thé dance halls reached them, Mrs. Gordon said. They went to work jin the Liberty and shortly after-| wards wero enveloped the shroud of mystery which has taken so many young girls from Seattle dur- 58th at. | 15, and} and/ COPS VICTIM. the Day; spate Improves oft Isaac shot ort on Wrvatlake ave. t, was hanging ray. | | who was 8. | neaday balance Sat “Today will be the crisis, clared Dr. U, C. Bates, his sician, who is attending him at the| Providence hospital. “While Ham- burger is {n no worse condition than he was Friday, the danger |point will come today,” he sald. Hamburger, if urday, will stand jchance to recover, His ago ts the| |mreat barrier to his recovery, and his condition js extremely crith | Dr. Bates |two days ago on Hamby testines, which had been puncture |by the bullets, and Saturday was the day which would prove whether | jor not the operation would be suc- |censful in saving his life. WOMAN'S CASE MORE HOPEFUL Mrs. Violet Davis, 28, mo two children, who was #! spine by the officer, was reported | Saturday by her physicians at the | Seattle General hospital to be sltg! jly improved. She spent a restful| |night and hopes for old are held, The bullvt has been removed from ite pobition |, | against the spinal cord, and she is} | abie once more to move her legs, | for thm first time since she was shot. Chiet of Police W. B. Severyns said Saturday that he doubted whether any criminal charge would be filed against Officer Short tn case (Turn to P; doses totam Cohen 4 Hambur 63, down by Patrolman Wed. in the a fairly orm ine ot in the | 1 Football Weather Okeh as Hour of Game Nears Fans Are Eager fo: LD SOL, shi Be i. a haze, naking almost football weather, awaited the University of Washington and the University of j Southern’ Califor- | football tei jas they lined up| | for the kickott of their big game at i Ay ithe stadium Sat-| afternoon. George was to teams urday Refereo Varnell the into battle at 2:3 The perfect weather conditions and importance of the big game, the biggest football magnet of the local searon, was expected to jam the hugs Washington horseshoo| with football fans. The by Washington students morning, was firm"and fast, for a speedy contest. The South erners are expected to be aided by a dry field. A wet tield would have put Washington on an even basis with the Trojans. As it is, South- ern California is a 10 to 6 favorite with the betting gentry. It was to be the first meeting of these two institutions in any form of | athletic competition. | Elmer Henderson, wetl known to Seattle fans as coach of the Broa way High school football team here until 1918, returns to his old town, hoping to show the folks here that his enviable reputation has been rightfully earned. ‘Today's encoun first meeting of Enoch Bagshaw. popular Washington coach, and A BARGAIN ACT QUICKLY Today's columns bargains in one of them: Saturday will not be the tne E Automobile carry som’ Used Cars, Here is ‘ou want a good Ford cou starter, spotlight Haaslers, oversize . speedometer, dashlight, and good tire rfect; at 4hé of $350, with i ma and trade—if m0, tell little Ad is columng will selling this ‘The Want you who coupe, ideal | home | tris wa Huskies and Trojans Are All Set for Contest; r Battle at Stadium ining Mer Henderson. About 10 years ago, | |when Bagshaw was coaching at Ev. erett Hi school and Henderson at Broadway, the two teams hooked up. It was a hard and bitterly fought game, with Bagshaw's men winni Henderson’ hasn‘t forgotten th jdefeat, and many of the dopesters |figure that his team will reverse things on Bagshaw today. Southern California is a 10 to * favorite with |those who. bet, but there are plenty jof others who give Washington an even chance, | Both teams went thru the final practices in the stadium Friday aft- ernoon, Henderson had his men on the ground at 1:30 o'clock, and after ja little kicking and p: tice, ran his two eleven: |down the field. in a snappy signal workout, Despite the fact that the men had never played on a dirt field before, they did not seem to be botn- |} Bagshaw’ | and sn: | ‘The rival coaches announced Sat- practice was also short were | in good shape. Bagshaw wit start = Lee Sherman at quar terback, Leonar¢ Ziel at right half orke Wilson a | left hale and E} mer Tesreau | fullback Hender | son's back field made up Chét Dol- rterback, | “Chie Newman, right halt; Ottoy Anderson, left half, an@ Norman Campbell, fullback. The Washington tine will take the| | field as follows: nt, Wayne Hall, right end; Roy P right tackle; | (Turn to Pag jumn 1) will of le be apt. qu Dolley ri | Trial of Covell May Be Delayed | MARSHFIELD, Ore. Oct. 20, vell, charged with complicity in the slaying of his sister-in-law, Mrs Ebba Covell, not being started until November wag admitted here today The hearing scheduled to open yen. terday pled astrologer changed his plea to not guilty, With the chance that it | will be an extended affair, the trial taken its place on the court cal jendar, and may not get under |for another month, | Alton Covell, nephew of the star who has admitted the actual will go on trial following his hearing way |e dayh LT biiote he lives until Sat-| good | performed an or nye her complete | y was postponed when the crip: | y 2, 1809, at the Postoffics at Seattle WASH., SATURDAY, MAY BE. SENT TO RUSSIA ..|Immigration Au- | thorities Expect! | to Re-open*Case of Soviet Leader | ae | By John W. Nelson | “Gen.” Nicholas Kalashnikoff, | |known thruout the wastes of cen-;| tral Biberia as “the Butcher of Irk-| utek.” and termed a traitor by his |former white associates, faced do- port m to Siberia Saturday as the | result of the expose of his entrance into the United States, j Comminsioner ot | Lut her Weedin Saturda Immigration | y sald that open Kalashnikoffs case, altho the Immigrant wag admitted formally | after a special board of inquiry hearing, October 15. | “The new evidence brought to Veht on his case by,‘The Star wilt ide thoroly investigated. 1 ve Kalaahnikett plage te pending developments,” Weedin | maid. | WHITE RUSSIANS | FEAR “BUTCHER” | Kalashnikoff's record tn Siberia when he wns fleeing before the on- coming Red army with the abat- |tered remnants of Kolchak's forces, His one of sanguine hue, according | ~~" Ito mmbers of the White colony of | Russian refugees who reside in Se. attic, The term “white” has been applied to these people to differen-| tlate thern from the so-called”Reds.” “He was a traitor to the white cause,” they declared. Investigating Kalashnikoff's rec- ord Friday brought to lght a. fear which still holds the Russians in its grip, a fear of the far-reaching arm of the soviet “Cheka," or dreaded | secret police of the Reda. It was! with the greatest reluctance that | members of the White colony re- (Turn to Page 11, Column 2) DISARMING OF COPS FAVORED Business Men Back Sev- eryns in His Plan | Several voiced to disarm Chief of Police | Saturday morning. | ‘The chief made the suggestion | Friday as tho result of the shoot jing by Traffic Officer H. Short lof two pedestrians in a crowd on| Westlake ave. Wednesday evening Seattle business men their approval of the traffic policemen, | Severyns declared | have e 1 a djthe F field, carefully raked over/urday morning that all of their men| He said that several men had called on him since he made his plan| public and offered to give him their support in the matter. Severyns de urday that! traffic officers did not need weapons} and that he had decided to disarm them if such a step could be proven practicable. “There is only one thing stands in the way of ‘such a mc he said. ‘That is the danger of| an emergency arising in which the} traffic officer might be called upon ut a moment's notice to defend his own life or the lives of citizens If he had no gun, the police de-| partment would be severely criti-| | cised.” | Severyns declared [meeting of the next Bar associa tion, of which he is a member, he would favor the adoption of al |state law making it illegal to pur chase firearms without a permit. | jand providing stringent penalties |for carrying concealed weapons. — | Seattle already has such an ordi-| | nance, but the state at lange ~| protected, and cheap mail that at the} un- orde| indiscriminately the. police In ently Weat Seattle, uncovered and| ® ed of 200 mail order| pistols and large amount of ammunition | Bantits 1 almost en jtirely with the cheap weapons | which they could not buy In | ways in 8 tle, Arthur C, the bandit capt in holdup. of the j laundry, carried one of the guna,| hich had been purchased thru} the mail from a New York import ing house, ire arm logal} Ray-| mond, the recent 4 ti Wash j Automobile with a Californ’ | number, | rowed" h | the Metropolitan | 5, nnn nnn nder the Act of OCTOBER 20, FIND BODY OF GIRL BURNED! Deepened; She) Was Heroine pete March 2, 3iggest Circulation in Washington The Seattle Star |. 1819, Per Year, by Malt, $1.00 ATHLETE . IS GRID Fy Mehr Miss Josephine Everett heroine, whose charred and lifeless form was found Friday on an Olympia beach, adding to the mystery that surrounds her disappear- her Of! ho has directed his inspectors to re- | @7Ce, eee OLYMPIA, Oct. 20.—The par. tially charred body of Miss Josephine Robey, —_ beautiful daughter of H. ©, Robey, prom- inent Everett business man, was on the beach near Priest park, ~ here 0 thas ending a frantle searcip® conducted for her by her par ents, since she mysteriously disappeared from her home three weeks ago. Miss Robey’s disappearance fol- Jowed her herolo rescue of two drowning swimmers at White Rock, B. C, which her parents feared affected her mentality, Tho body wan found by Thomas Giles. Her shoes were lying near and the girl's clothing and hair were almost burned off. Neither Robey, who came to claim his daughter's body, nor local could account for her condition. mysterious In one pocket was found a clip-| went of-|claim his son's body. |has been set for 2 p. had! with Rev. ping from an Everett paper, fering a reward for her location. Both parents said the girl $265 In her possession when sbe Jeft her home, Arrest Mrs. Burkhardt Charge Violation of Light Law Mra. Luise Burckhardt, who fig: ured in a sensational divorce case involving the custody of her 10-year: old son and a division of the wealth of Frederick Otto Burckhardt, for- mer millionaire Alaska canneryman, was one of the victims in: Sheriff Matt Starwich’s traffic dragnet Fri- day night. Mrs. Burck’ fic highway south Motorcycle Deputy 10 p.m, She was charged Saturday with at was arrested on of M city by Rp, RbONE said. violation of the mobile lights. Mrs. Burckhardt was driving inan| law governing auto- which*she said was “s r. A young man Deputy Stalleop rs Twenty other Friday night by were for a tems on the cars, Saturday Sheriff nounced he will put out thr tional motorcycle deputies bor. panied her, arrests were made Stallcop. All but one ective lighting sys. and ex. Robey,| offictals| | | } ja trainer for | | license | &ccom | Radie Larson, 28. an: | » addi. | — pects to arrest upwards of 100 mo.! torists for traffic violations on King county roads Saturday and Sunday nights. ‘DEGREE FRAUD PROBE AGAIN ST. LOUIS, Mo., Oct! 20. day summoned Dr, Florence E and Dr, F, L. Streicker here follow ing the revelation of the St. Lou's Star that a reporter had bought and paid for a course of personal instruc. tion in chiropractic and wag given a diploma of graduation within 72 ours “The total cost of the diploma, a chart uxting table was # Instruetion, hooks and ad 90," the Star aid The two doctors gave the reporter the course. he sald, Both are gradu: atos of a St, Louis medical school and of chiropractic colleges, 1) ARI pe hla ae alaba asad Prose. | Possibility of the trial of Arthur Co-| guns are allowed to be purchased |cuting Attorney Albert Sweitzer to- | Barre | jtained a fractured - VICTIM! ae Youth) Meets Death in Football Game at Puyallup All Bremerton was steeped in sorrow Saturday at the fatal ac- eldent on the Puyallup high school football gridiron Friday which resulted in the death of Allen R. Johnson, center on the Bremerton high school eleven. Alien; a husky boy of 17, sus- spine in tho second quarter of the game when a jand Allen recovered it. Several play. era ef each team, in Jeaping for the oval, piled on top of the youth and when they arose, his stricken form was found, curled around the ball. He had recovered the ball but lost | his life; ‘The bey was rushed to the Puyal- jup. heapital, where physicians took aeray-phato/which showed the spinal m had been severed be- tween” tir ‘and fourth verte bra. hour after the ac¢ident. Coach Keith A, Lyman of the Bremerton team places no blame for the accident upon anyone. “It was one of those unfor- tunate things that sometimes happens,” he said, deeply moved. “The play, a plunge by the quarterback thru tackle, is a common one and has been tried thousands of times without ac- cident, Allen's father, A. R. employe of the U. f. Navy Yard, to Puyallup late Friday to The funeral | m. Sunday, Mook of the Episcopal chureh ‘officiating. Interment will be made in the Ivy Green cemetery. ‘Tho boy's mother died several years ago. The youth was a member of the De Molay and the Junior American lodges and was one of the most popular athletes in the school. School officials at Bremerton sald that no decision has been reached 2s to whether the remainder of the football schedule will be canceled. The entire student body will turn out for Allen's funeral, ernoon, RACE TRAINER SHOOTS 2 MEN} AKRON, Ohio, Oct. revenge, becaus) of suspension of his horwine..nalinn sald “Gti! Watt, the Aldrich stables, shot down Race Judges F. W. Ger- hardy and Peter Callen, in the lobby of today Judge Gerhardy was shot thru art. and chest. Judge Callen thru the |Murders Twi Men; Is Burned to Death ALEXANDRIA, Minn., Oct. 20— After killing two men early today, was burned to death by National Guardsmen, who ret fire to the sh in which he took refuge. Larson shot and killed Jacob Ley, 60, neighgor, as a culmination of a long-standing feud, Johngon diéd within a halt! Johnson, an | Sunday aft-| 20.—SeeRing | the Portage hotel here just “be-| the] fore .noon Hcop|the left side near the hi | | | ieee of County Affairs Is Set for November 12 King counts 1 will convene November vi county inst | expenditures and almost eve: subject that has been in the eg light of controversy in the clty and |county during the past year a care- |ful scrutiny. The call for the grand jury was issued by Judge King Dykeman, sit- jting as presiding judge of the su- | perior court, Friday morning. A list jot Yeniremen was drawn by | County Clerk George A. Grant and jhis assistant, |turned over to Sheriff Matt 8! wich to serve with subpoenas, direct- |ing that they appear at department ‘0, 1 of superior court at $:30 a. m., | Monday, November 12. Judge Everett E. Smith will be presiding judge of the superior| court when the grand jury con- venes. After the 17 jurors are se- lected from the yenire, to serve on ‘s anny nd jury | to giv crime | Bremerton player fumbled the ball |the Jury, Judge Smith will charge {them on their duties. These will jbe the usual routine matters, such |as inspecting various county instl- jtutions and then special matters | that may be | for investigation. Judge Smith says |that he has nothing formally before him fn the way of evidence that will warrant a vice investigation. Prosecuting Attorney Malcolm Dougins was absent from the city Friday; bot he has never annotincéed he was gathering evidence for the | grand jury.- However, he was voted $1,000 us a secret fund to get evi- dence of law violation and gambling in the city several weeks ago by the |board of county commissioners. Rey. H. I, Chatterton said Fri- day that the Church Council of | Seattle is not meeking an investiga- tion to lay evidence before the jury, |nor will they urge a vice investl- | gation, he said. The jury will be jndvised by Prosecuting Attorney Malcolm Douglas. “Skeex’’ Is Back. Home Little Kitten and Dog Reunited A happy dog and a contented little kitten romped merrily together Sat- |urday in the warehouse of the Eagle Transfer company, 224 James st. The dog was Wee Pal o' Mine, be- | longing to Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Mur- ray, owners of the transfer com- pany, who Wednesday and Thursday mourned the loss of its adopted kit- ten, Skeez. The kitten was Skeex, itself, who was lost Wednesday morn- Ing as the Murrays were bringing it | to the transfer office. | Wee Pal was heart-broken when |her little playmate disappeared and |retused to eat or drink. ‘Thursday | night a story was printed in The | Star about the dog. Skeex, in the meantime, had wan- dered about the city after falling from the Murray auto Wednesday morning, and Thursday went to the |home of Mrs. Felix Mickwitz, 1017 |B. Marion st. Mrs. Mickwitz saw The Star story and called Mrs. Mur- ray about the kitten. The result was that Friday Pal and Skeez were reunited. Safe Dynamiters Shoot Watchman CHARLESTON, Ul, Oct. 20.— Yeggs who dynamited the National bank at Oakland, 15 miles north of here, today shot the night watchman, cut all telephone and telegraph wires and escaped with $15,000, Wee | Abe Olson. These were | t-| presented to the jurors | ENTR American | | Wins Great Race | from Papyrus by | Four Lengths | BELMONT PARK, New York, - | Oct. 20—America wins! | The international stake race, | for which Papyrus, English Derby winner, was brought to | this country to meet the best American 3-year-old, was won in easy fashion by four lengths this afternoon by Zev, Harry | F. Sincla'r’s crack colt, Zev took the lead away from — | Papyrus from the very start of | the race, and a crowd of 70,000 saw the American horse always in the lead. The thme was 2:35 25. | The race was ndt even "tt all reports of Zev’s poor © 1 the eve of the contest proved un | founded. With a sun, alternately bright and dimmed, fighting for ts head thru overhanging clouds, the early birds—first of the hundred thousand —began to find their places. Seated on an improvised bench within the centerfield rail, just at the finish line, was a little group of girls who brought their lunches and ap- peared determined to stay there un- til the main event, Everywhere one looked the blue uniforms of policemen moved about the course. ZEV, PAPYRUS AND MY OWN OUT EARLY Zev, Papyrus and My Own, ae can alternate, were out long before the first of the racing crowd ar rived. All three colts looked fit and the English champion was to have gone to sleep in his stall, blissfully ignorant of the nang pulses of his backers. The track dried a bit under " sun's spasmodic’ attempts to do its — stuff, but was due to be heayry — muddy for the race. The first race trains arrived) at noon and began emptying thelr mul titudes into the stands and Early in'the afternoon the places along the Infield’ rail taken. An endless stream of turf fans, cluding hundreds. of well women, drifted in thru the gates, Before becoming a one had to run the gauntlet of ia half-dozen gray coats and as bluecoats. Many officers of the Nt York city force were brought here in private’s uniforms to see race. The movie cameras were getting ¢ lens full of beauty and celebrity. FAMOUS PERSONS IN ATTENDANCE All the famous figures of the ern turf world were out. Groups Englishmen and women could be tinguished among the American tators. Everyone was kept at an appro- priate distance from the, Cosden and Rancocas stables, where the respect- ive champions were housed. Basil Jarvis said: “AN T can say is we have done our best with Papy- rus and I think he is fit. Sam Hildreth, trainer of Zev, haa (Turn to Page 11, Column 1) The Colonel delivered himself in a roar. His long) bamboo cane was raised Peter Blood’s and—? READ WHAT to strike. blue eyes caught the flash of it, HAPPENED IN “Captain Blood” ; BY RAFAEL SABATINI Writer of “Scaramouche” STARTING NEXT MONDAY IN THE SEATTLE ST A Great Figure — A Great Epoch — A G