The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 30, 1923, Page 1

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¢ were? Saturda led States men papers joth 9 The Newspaper W ith the I siomeat Cireulation in Washington mmr | Lhe Seattle Star 212. Dr. M. A. Matthews On Grill Rotered as Second Clana Matter May 2, SEATTLE, 1899, at the Postoffies at seattle, WASIL, Wash TUESDAY, under the Act of Congress March 2. OCTOBER 80, 1928 Every Week Apple Week Divine Healer Works in Church; Rumpus Brews Howdy, folks! A moonshiners' college has been established in Los Angeles. Graduation exer chives will be held in the ceme- tery. Mie ‘college _guarantecs to t ow to make corn whi the university is:} *Corn in the stomach is worth Of the toe.” two The post-, { the colleg Uiiier, and straags te sce what detight we. soarried have in fects decoyed Into oar condition, See sot wouiks smiling at thes. ea | in the ith R. Key~ ad to Bippe’s coffee | did eat Cro on the | and four aes "whten fata te got" wi feet atten T en #0 to home. . . } Jack Raper says that over In Get-| Many the newspap puragraphers | are writing s something | like this; “What has bec of the old-fash J run an errand ‘An Ohio doctor says Firpo would beaten Dempsey if his seconds! given him oxygen. Well, why Hot? Doc Brown won the mayoralty campaign by hot oxygen eee CANDIDATE FOR THE POISON IVY CLUB Gink who tells you he takes an ice-cold shower every morning. “ee Sign in the window of the Hote! Quinn says, “Transient Rooms.” Circulatifg libraries, no doubt. eee The critics are very fond. o Ing that music has color, Gee Gee adds that music from saxophone .is blew, Lit Gee Gee is learning to cook From recipes she keeps in a book; She tried out on paw, But he broke his jaw the first bite of took. ‘ eee On pancake —Photo by & good lawyer is one who can amaeé it sound as if the train had Jumped the track and chased the au- tomobile until it caught it and hit it ‘Em, and Boy, TH’ OFFICE BY G, LUCILLE BUTLER There ain't goin’ to be no core, judging from the joyous expression 4 | ot petite. Gertrude Lang, prima donna with Blossom Time Tomorrow night is Hallo If; Metropolitan, who gorged ny kids steal our gate, they'll have| With luscious apples Tuesday eo some. We haven't any gate. | observance of Apple week waite “And I really*DO eat them, other "EN times than this,” said Miss Lang, as HELLOWE’EN. * believe ‘me, I belleve sho does! She perfectly good show apple ay informs us that “Bios ten before the camera man ready to. shoot . the picture. t the Metropolitan this me nervous and 1 dashed out | . is a good play, We'd go to see “Blossom Time,”| Yes, the ador: but we've got hay fever. ee | A fat pee ger Mary Garden, | is a crime. Sure, and fat ankles | are 4 capital crime. had my 4 almost ¢ was Made for reinforcements. I never will sing, “1 Have No Bananas I don’t know the tune, And I have too much manners A fortune awaits the man who in-| vents a gum that won't remove fill-| ings in tecth. one .You can always tell a bad play by the way the audience suddenly de. velops bronchitis. . | BY ALICE ROHE It has been found that the house (Written for the United Press) fly, whose term of life is commonly | NEW YORK, Oct. 30.— After believed to be about six-weeks, can) an absence of 2 eleanor live twice as long if its food contains | traged nitrogen. Not that it makes any dif. American ference to us, but we have to give you the news. i et | Duse, the gre jenne, returned to the stage last night Two decades ago, when Duso was here in all the glow of her How to keep booze out of politica:| she played | incomparable genius, Keep it out of the politicians. | to empty seats. id shapes Now she is 64, frail and til | looking, and sast night New York 4s) paid more than $20,000 to. Ret into the Metropolitan opera house to see her, Speculators offering $200 for a ticket. People stood In line at the box office from early morning. Humanity may be progressing in soine ways, but you do not see Many mustache cups as formerly, see “Now, Fanny, tell the judge just how i happenedi” * | A.J. & Miss Gertrude Lang, “Blossom Time” ac, eats apples for her breakfast all the year Prima Donna Eats! i on oe What Big Bites! fo | chee | their ent for ¢ attle | ture and prima donna, who "round, c Er ice & Carter, Star Stat n two-fisted the word the who doesn’t , re thou lke ands rut” food know that as food much en of proven by apples who merely 1 apples as“ do not ar te the How ¢ nt des three as steak? California Yakima and Wenat sent their choic far York during this Se. hants will this week fea displays, Apple menus will make the variou uncheona noteworthy und railro estaurant housekeepers will feature bills of fare nation wide growers have product pln me apple apple e an New peeches s and apples on ‘Aged Duse Wins’ Triumph “= Ryom Tumultuous Crowd Great Tragedienne, an Old Woman Without Makeup, Thrills New York become the fashion in the Who's Who of profes of the arts and of society was present DIAMOND HORS ABLAZE WITH JE’ The diamond horseshoe blazed with jewels of the socially elect Names of the promnient people there were on overyone’s lips Astors, Vanderbilts, Ethel Barry: more, Fannie Hurst, Lilian Gish, neess Bo « of Rome, Don lasio they were in the crowd of wildly apptauding people in the huge opera house, An old woman without make up, her white hair done in an (Turn to Page 9, Columr 6) Duse has and everybody apple eater, | Chiropractors Assail Minister and Can’t Reconcile His Doctrine BY Seattle chiropractors practitioners Tuesday were ported attacks, by the Rev. First Presbyterian church, modes of healing, with the are being conducted in the church The 4 being and ine healer mem larly The Star the Rev ot nd opractors. Tuex anwalled t healing except, th en he ep ¢ Portland before tors ine wi doc w “Dr, Matthews always radical in his statements inconsistent ni Kis work, present instance of allow: ing @ faith heale rto hold forth in one of lis churches i Wnt another sample of it. It hap pens that this faith healer ts not related to organizations that are making inroads on Jr Matthews’ congregation, If he were it Is a sure thing that the doctor would try run out of town. HAWKINS CALI “CHEAP, 1 Rosy CATED" nwhi hy Rev. C.J ns, pastor ot the Plymouth Con ‘egation: church nominal head of medical and prycholog feal clinic, declared Tuesday that “all such evan; its are a rather Jot as to education and train. to him 3S HIM Haw Dr. Hawkins, and paychology, suggestion, or whatever you wish to call it. Faith healing, such you describe is being practi y this man, is utterly e bounds of reason for an grain fic k He aaserted tha Kellogg and other kelists are L. Moods Pherson ter clinic,” said od oR medical skiven it 18 of seb edge.” such men as traveling ¢ copies of Dwight unday, Mrs. Me ther Ianiah,” the practicing th van: poor Billy and Bi now Kirkland. HOSPITAL SALE heal ing” at IS FORCED THRU Admits Political Pressure; Forbes Not Blamed WASHINC¢ ES (“Liv'5 palitteal and Lowden leader in 1920, senate committee in- bureau repeated official the — Excelstor he had been 4 to veterans’ Springs hospital political the at a price brought out experts ple to bring which pressure bear government f $173,000. that govern disapproved the site February 11, 1921;. in November 1921; on June 1 nd that Col 1O. 77 then diretcor of the | bureau, all times “belligerently” opposed the proposal, theless, it) w government pure pital and alte for $1 agreement signed July | Morse and Forbes, Morse testified that he had forced acceptance of his property by influ encing "15 or 20 senators,” to bring pressure on the ve' bureau He said his political efforts had cul |minated in a visit of Senator Bur. jsum (New Mexico) to the White House. | FORBE TO S| caused purchase it It was ment ‘as shown that sed the hos. 00 by 20, 1 the an by REFUS) | MORSE M testified Forbes had re- | fused to him and kept him | waiting for hours when Morse tried to Interview” Forbes urge the of the deal, The Excelsior hospital project has | been of the major points. of Joriticiam of the administration of | the veterans’ bureau. The revela tion that Forbes had op al was brought about tion | conclusion by ques: (Turn to Page 9, Column 4) Ti fiatult TR tek trying Dr. on all but medical and surgical | fact that divine healing services East jo fthe |of the eity fire de LELAND HANNUM other drugless and knifeless to reconcile recent re- M. A. Matthews, of the 50th st. branch of his Rev abeence of town ists mue 7 WHY CHU KC it GIVES HIM FREE REIN T I n Giboney for div lenial doct econd coming of seemn away fre and in order to gi {hone who desire it some of this di j ¥ine healing teaching the church is| allowing Kellogg almost free rein in| j his services. “What 1 believe about it take too Tong to tell." he added. Asked If that @eant that he was rter, the Rev. & conservative would other th qualified organic affect he one to confirmed Kellogg's state The Star that he (Kellogg) vited to hold his meetings in nch church by Dr. the of the a church. e evangelist ing to packed houses each evening, he informed The Star, in what he terms “a Gospel of Healing cam His doctrine and practice of so-called “faith healli Gibone s logical conclusions of beliefs in divine seasion 8 speak palgn.” the cording to Rev ing thru to the Presbyterian A each night are answering the invitation for “m! alings,” Kellogg say dare testifying to healing thru falth. He reports the of a Mra. Sarah, Wolfe, 2608 Marin Monday, night, who, he said, was healed of neuritis and can: cer after he prayed for her. Friday night's “healings,” he added, alt €@ in one man, “sick with the palsy who was a to leap from the plat form and run a foot race homeward.” Many other cures are by purported the @ wane iat WIND IS AIDING FIRE FIGHTERS Believe City Light Plant Is Out of Danger | postponement Alded by a slight change in the wind, fire fightera from the munici. pal light a rtment and the fire de- partment were abel Tuesday to fight back the flames of the forest fire which endangered the city's 15,000 hor hydro. power plant at Cedar Falls Monday after noon and night, according to a re port the city light de partment office at noon Tuesaday Supt. J. D, Ross, of the light de. partment, was at Cedar Falls Tues directing the fight against the , Which had approached to within | 800 yards of thé power plant and| had surrounded camp ..o. 2 at the} high danger point late Monday. According to the information is sued Tuesday, danger of desiruction of the power plant and of cainp No. 2 had passed Tuesday morning, altho | some fear was still felt that a sud-| den change in the wing might drive | the flames in the direction of the plan | “The fire is under control, and 3 | be handled unless the wind turns against the fighters,” the sald oT The fire, which started in the camp | Pacific States Logging Co. | at noon Monday and increased with such rapidity that late in the day hose company No. 24} riment was dis. d to the scene by Fire Chief Mantor, and Supt. Ross mus a foreo from the light. depart: | nt employes and hurried. to Cedar power received at patel need the | Falls. An all night tle was fonght be- suggested to the committee by fore the flames could be checked, ac: | it will come, cording to the report, MOTOR {wince 1901, 1879 Per Year, by Matt, $3.80 CARS MAY DROP 10 LOWER PRICE tock Bottom Not Yet Reached, Is Forecast Made by Experts BY JOHN CARSON WASHING IN, Oct, 30. Auto. tom prices, ¥ ed prices may had again next #1 and cer automobiles will be bought jower prices in th are his ts the con ff govern. who are dealing f auton er than the 1913 p of everyth tho the 1 Jabor mont auto aed educed of in pro. year betw 500,000 and automobiles will be pro American manufacturers. Already the production has redched 2:770,000, and that ix greater than the entire produrtion for last year, Back in 1913, the production ‘was | Srotind on-half million “cars There are shout 14,000,000 cars registered in this tountty. ‘The average “lite ix seven years That means, {t will require about 2,000,000 sa 0 Feplace thone Then, with every or improvemen conditions, car: who have not The forelgn eventually, 000,000 cars on 3.5 4,000,000 duced by now bout ein in use. wage 1 eral ecor are sold to owned them marketes sons before. are expect to absorb as many as 1 a year. In most o Industries, great trusts have been formed to prevent the consumer from getting the ad vantage of reduced prices. The au- tomobile industry 1s not yet so closely organized, despite the fact that one neial group controls a large share of the cars produced, EZRA MEEKER IS IMPROVED} Tho suffering from’ a racking cough, induced by a form of bron chitis, Ezra Meeker, 93, pioneer Ore. gon trail blazer, author and retired} Washington ranchman, was marked: ly improved Tuesday morning, ac- cording to his grandson-physician, Dr. C. L. Templeton, at. whose home he resides Mrs. Templeton reported Tuesday that the aged man had a “good night, and was “very much im- proved,” tho still weak and not out jot danger. Meeker has been {ll for nearly two weeks with an affection of the throat and lungs lBecond Salitonee Race Postponed HALIFAX, N. 8, Oct. 30.— Fog and a lack of sufficient breeze forced today of the race between the Nova Scotia schooner Blue Nose and the Yankee Columbia in the series for the inter- tonal fishermen’s: trophy. ‘he race will be run tomorrow if weather conditions: permit second | PROSECUTE DEATH DRIVER epeaies Ignores Verdict of Coroner's Jury! TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE. DEATH TAKES FAMOUS MAN OF ENGLAND Andrew Bonar| Law, Former Pre-| mier, Succumbs! After Struggle Oct. 30.—The Right Honorable Andrew Bonar Law prime minister of Great Britain from 1922, » May, 1923, died at ¢ in London at 2:30 a toda He had been 41 for many months, The of death was given as septic pneumon| Dea ame Ww Law nmediate cause a cancerous growth which an operation after ation as ted to eradicate. angements will be as possibie, with his wishes, LONDON, October, his resi¢ fie ascordance announcetl condolences as in was eived British empire to regret jcame e from 1 queen and from the P: ales Death followed a long but fruitless gland and on the conti- 2 effort to regain health shattered, by his duties as chief of the British state during one ef the) most trying periods in its history. WAS ADMIRED BY COUNTRYMEN The passing of Bonar Law, altho not unexpected, caused profound lgrief thritout the nation when an- nounced in the morning newspapers, for he held the affection and ad- miration of his fellow countrymen, regardless of political faith, as have few leading statesmen recent years ar Law for his country, He knew he was signing his own death warrant when he took over the strenuous duties of | the premiership after the resignation of David Lioyd George last year. The sitoation at that time, how-/ ever, was such that Bonar Law felt s own life of little importance and} came out of temporary retire ment to take up public life again. He bad been in poor health since he was forced to retire from his | | cabinet post as chancellor of the ex- chequer under David Lloyd George, due to the breakdown he had suf- |fered from overwork during™ the world war. } The first ion that death} |might be near was contained In a [physhtan’s bulletin Friday, which id that the former prime minister | had suffered a relapse and that his) |condition was seriou: } On Satura newspapers —said| |that pneumonia had developed and that doctors feared Bonar Law could not live two. weel | Bonar Law was’ born in New | Brunswick September 16, 1858. Rarely has a man in the political |life of any country commanded so completely the respect of all par-| |ties. He was affectionately known jin the house of commons as “Bo- }nar.” and however _ bitterly |strongly conservative ideas have been conserved. |never entered into the dispute, STAYED DOGGEDLY AT HIS DESK When, after doggedly | his desk thru the latter part of the |war and first years of peace, he| was forced by growing ill health | to resign in 1921 the exechequer, his going was felt] (Turn to Page 9, Column 3) may Wealth for all of Us to Come Some Future Day All-Powerful Race of Supermen Is Predicted by N. Y. Scientist BY ALEXANDER HERMA (Copyright, 1923, N. B, A. Service, NEW YORK, Oct. 30.- will be as rich as Croesus er—some day Ine.) All of us and rich. We will have—everyone of us—the same means of obtaining almost end- discoveries which it made in part, This is the prediction has already some contributions to the world of selence that have been revolutionar Michael Pupin,, professor of electro mechanics at Columbia university and chairman of the com. mittee ‘on aircraft communications during the war, “Just when that day will come, 1 do not know," he says, smiling, “But For scence is making progress at a rate that years ago } would. have been considered impossi- ble. “When it does come, we will have wealth, in energy, |real thing | THERE WILL BE which, after all, is the OTHING report | less wealth, if science completes the | TO WORRY US/THEN To get the full import of Prof. Pu- pin's idea, a knowledge of the funda- of no idle} mentals of the atomic structure of/auto of) Fire Chief W. fed upon slashings | dreamer, but of a man who has made | matter is necessary, “Every atom of matter," explains the professor, “consists of electrons, | positive and negative, the former be- Jing in the center of the With the latter a satellite, “That is according to the well known and universally accepted the- of matter, “The simplest of ‘all structures is the hydrogen atom, .which. consists was| sacrificed his life his) sticking to| structure | ling around it like | TAXICAB MAN TO BE HELD | Another Coveney "5 | Jury Finding Is Also Repudiated m.} | - a | By John W. Nelson Charges of manslaughter will probably | Twesday ag: j 1216 E. Pine st., driver of the | for-hire car which crashed over an embankment on the Des Moines highway late Sunday night, causing the death of Clark, 2158 55th ave, in Prosecuting Attorney Malcolm Douglas announced of Clark’s death by a coroner's jury which held an inquest over the man’s remains Monday, The erdict of the coroner's jury was completely disregarded by Douglas, who conducted an investigation of the case thru Deputy Prosecutor | Robert Macfarlane, ‘The evidence ‘ali points strongly to Scott's responsibility for the ac- cident,” Douglas said. “Scott, mitted that he was violating speed jaws, also that he had been | drinking moonshine before the fatal crash. I cannot be guided by the jcoroner’s jury's verdict in that case.” DRIVES FOR TAXI | CO. IN TACOMA | Scott, a driver for the Rainier Taxi Co., of Tacoma, was driving {towards Seattle on the Des Moines — highway.’ Clark, Miss Violet Moore, and Owen H. Mayson were occu- | pants of the car. On a slight curve | Scott apparently lost control of the = and while going at a high rate | of speed, crashed over an embank- | ment, fatally injuring Clark in the “jaceident. Both Miss Moore and | Mayson wero slightly injured. Miss Moore was under the influ- ence of intoxicating lMquor when |sheriff depities arrived on the scene and she was arrested and |charged with being drunk, - accord |ing to Sheriff Starwihch. She is at liberty under $100° bonds pending trial. a Douglas also repudiated another finding of a coroner's jury Tuesday |when he disregarded the verdict | brought in at the inquest held over jthe remains of Peter: Kelly, 2116 Ninth ave. S., who was killed In an | (Turn to oh ea ee 8, Column 5) ‘SNOW COVER COVERS — MIDDLE WEST Wisconsin ‘and Minnesota Also Shivering in Storm CHICAGO, Oct. 30.—Snow ‘fell over the Middle West and North |during the night and today, A sharp drop in temperature ac companied the blizzard. | Nebraska was blanketed with the | heaviest snowfall in the history of } personalities: as chancellor of|the state for an October day, Towa and Kansas also experlenced” la heavy fall of snow. Madison and other parts of Wis- consis were covered with snow to | day to a depth of two inches, Minnesota also was swept by snow, thetempe rature dropping to 18 above’ zero. A liht snow fell over Chicago and jother parts of Illinois. TWO KILLED IN Six Injured EV: i 30.—Two men were killed, one probably fatally in+ jured, and six seriously cut by fly ing glass when a fire truck and the A. Taro jcrashed at Hewitt and Colby aves. | here, Jast night. The Impact Kurled the truck into a corner store, Daniel Michel, Sr., was instantly killed; Dennis Boyle died while be. ing taken to a hospital, and Chief Taro may die as a result of his ins juries. The injured include Arthur Lefling, Cliff Taro, Ra Taro, Prank: Haley, Bob Dixon and Harry, Faulke, The latter pair are olvile fans, EVERETT CRASH » |Fire Truck and Auto Collide; not in money and gold, but) 0, oe)

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