The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 5, 1924, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

——errn WEATHER Pair tonight. Sunday, cloudty and slightly warmer, Moder- ate to fresh winds, Temperature Last 3b Hours Maximum, 38, Minimum, 30, Today noon, 37, eae ols 25. NO, 267. «eae A FAMED CAMPFIRE GIRL | | | | | Seattle Campfire Girls entertained a famous sister late Friday when Mme. Anna Pavlowa, premier danseuse ard Campfire Girl, raised the Stars and Stripes on the Fort} Stamwiz, a war-built government boat, beached in Union} bay. The Stanwiz is being remodeled into a clubhouse for! thegirls. In this picture are shown (left-right) Mme. Pav-| lowa and Mrs. George Morford, daughter of Capt. F. W.) Keen, who gave the girls the boat. Miss Ruth A. Brown, | state_chie/ af the Campfire Girls, was in charge. of the | —Phote by Price & Carter, ff Photographers | Hewty, folks! What’ll we talk | Bath."—Headline In The Star. abut today? The weather? Who in heck’s been dancing In her bod pare | bath? ‘the @ounciimanic cam Meaching, Candidates will get stung y thes: First by the political bee and} taking @ bath, thereiy ac then ‘by the voters. Goal eee ores Mrs. Miracte sa un for! A checker Mayor, We hope she is not wearing | staged tonig t police h high heels, |The game will be slow, how & cop seldom me reporter. terday w he will tourn; | — —| | Runnihg for office is like rtn- | | ; 1 sing for’ a street car. When | lKFEIR so th | you've got it, what have you ed broadcasted by ¢ by mo Now Is your with the police de Dear Mr. Grey: Who first said ie". Hermann, with the longest way round is the | referee, and did lose two shilling Shortest way home?”—Curious 1 enn ill afford. And so to buys netrot buggy with Ans—A taxicab driver Diecythdoge Prohibition offi ta rum. | er chaser, says 1 bid ts ‘A Dmis| What T € lore Whole goit cosce’| GAMBLING HERE x Grand Jury Probe Not Over, |: Gink who Well, ts it cold hough for you } H ; (Turn to Page 3, Column 1) | saree Entered aw Second Cli errs The Newspaper With the Biggest Circulation in Washington The seattle Star * Matter Mey, 2, 1809, at (ho Postofticn at Keattle, Wash SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, JANUARY Bi. 1924. ton, who : Writes $ New Policies in 1923 BY G, LUCILLE BUTLER Have lunch with me te nply must @ can. follow it Her father, : Johnston, urday wrote a touching appeal from “Daddy” to his daugh- 4226 Interiake ave., Sat- s the woman .' 5 18 partmen’ n hiss every play, | ter, , still mysteriously missing from her home. The} jot mix! ‘The « he draw Mehdi y one thing ote gt : girl left one morning this , leaving a note saying she} \ine of demarkation between her ee a to untae | expert saver will go! was married and California. So far no evidence! cint rewwxations and her bus Mars spats to get elected to pub! in the Uni Quite ‘ A LF PETES ar te profe me more office, en ito gainer dows ry day | Hat she was wed locally can be discovered. Dorothy's mo ; tt is . | with restaurant’ apitingh. recent picture hown above, together with her father's|,” Mabel Norm: be barred ee appeal. “i Ashiton th we from the movie she can al con HEEEES TS Please Come Home, Is fester ingt Dad’s Plea to Dorothy = en ae ms tas Last cat for anenaino ew! Missing School Girl Playing Prank on)! vidas arents Think Ser Of savocieaon,pastod the JIM MARSHALL, WILL BAR OPEN. GEE GEE, TH’ OFFICE and returr | VAMP, SEZ, : Declares Douglas | “poffoté One good thing about a safety Vedne Tater is that your wife can't fe " sharpen pericils with it OF a . P ats d, | ste 0 _** n s f fi ighed y ty ‘ oy 3 1 see ft v ¢ 1 of AXDIDATE KOK THY POISON Iya 3 ; , oM WY CLUB ¢ - Jar t Fred Dumbell Dud’s Back He’ll Answer Questions for The Star M 2, DUMBELL DUD, the Bootlegging Busi- y to Star res ness? known read- Mr. Dud’s new job on ers for his many contribu ihe Stuy will Ba to aniwor tions in the past, is going questions. To him will go to blussom out in & new the queries that stump role—a role that Mr. Dud everyone else, He'll get modestly assures us is far the job of using the nut ara tited to hig accom- crackers on the impossible plishments than any he so. ones. far has assumed Dumbell assures us, with Mr. Dud, his. well-known modesty, i will re. that he'll be able to an call, was the wer them ali. Of cour first Amer the answers may not b: ‘ean to take correct, he adds, but at the Einstem least he'll give ‘em an theory apart swer That is, if he isn’t and “to suc too tired—or temperamen fully put it “toget tal. It’s rather difficult, iat Bla “alah wae} you know, to promi known for many investige TOO much for tempera tions he has made and for ™ental star h textbook on. “What Anyhow, the first of Becomes of Hairpins in Dumbell Dud weekls ybbed Hair Time?” and columns appe today on Phere Any Connection the editorial page. Turn een Consumption and _ over! ei sie mates: Bite under the Act of Congress March 9, 1879. Per Year, by Mall, § “Business and pleasure don't mix,” says Vurnice M. Ash- ls more life insurance policy-writers, She is credited 000 of new insurance in 19. famous “Two Club” for that reason. How she gets the busi-| of ness is told in the accompanying ! 200, 000, in| iti: “ JUDGE FINDS EDITOR GUILTY ot which woman ean-| and bubifiem: Ashton, WHO most women tite from the »|PHONE DECISION nd peastire car IDRYS RAID EVERETT! * TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE. Catch 107 -—Autoists! COPS WAR ON | Proper Lights | Fall Into Net JOINTS biles with only one or no head-| \lights was carried out Friday night at Westlake ave, and Virginia st., and in 9 hours the police naa! 14 Prise Are arrested 107 drivers. ‘The trap sys-| tem will probably be put into use| Seized 18 Pl. all over the city the result of | ; aces the success of the first experiment. | t neth L, Webb were on duty at the ep! y 30 to 7:30 p. m.| Si u A k arclight over the | urprise ttac: traffic semaphore. | Whenever a driver appeared with | one or no h lighta Webb stopped | the driver with the stop signal} snd Ivey gave him a traffic slip. ul drivers realized the trap be- Fourteen persons were arrest- ed and quantities of beer and whisky seized in a series of raids in Everett late Friday and / sini <a gutninthb ales 8 | early Saturday. The roundup than a lot of crack male | fore Sone nae Psyc te — was the result three weeks datying’ the. ste and a warrant| Of work by Proseeuting Attor- and is a member of the was igeued for-his arrest as the| ney C. P. Roscoe, of Everett, rs had no trouble in getting} in conjunction with Director soli ‘number, | Rey Lyle and William Whit- Carter, Star Blatt Photographers|. The same system willbe used to-| mey, of the federal dry office. night and in other streets, also, ac-| Sheriff James McCullough, of == = cording to Police Chief W. B. Sey-|.-Snehomich. cosmty, andJis dep.) eryns. Uties ussisted, A. foree conatiting of Lyle and LAT EST 10 deputies, the sheriff and hiv DRUNKEN COP deputies, and special officers raided th selling moré than $200,- 18 places, mostly hotels and soft- drink. parlors. Valuable evidence _[FLASHES) |was seized, Roscoe said, and will be used as a basis for other prose: cutions, Several bootleggers left the city | Intoxicated ‘While on Beat, |hutriedly while the raids were in |progress. Others were caught. Mosf NTA FE, N. M, Jan jadee Is Charge of the prisoners are charged as Jointists. “The raids are merely the start badly intoxicated while he should |°f * long campaign to mop up have been walking his beat at |©Pverett,” Roscoe told The Star, | Broadway and Pine st. Friday |““We intend to wipe out every night, that he leaned weakly |J0int in the city and stop the sale against the side of a building and |°f beer and whisky. We worked Magee, editor « Charged with having been so " urt. Thr pa-| seemed in ble of movement, {for three weeks getting evidence ! Patrolman Arthur Gunterman, |>efore we made the raids.” on 8 48, veteran Seattle policeman, | Those against whom charges have > ta on of ad as dismissed from the depart- |been filed gave the names of Matt rict at “ ey 4 ment by Chief Severyns Satur- McGrath, Sam Hess, Toff Bernard, day. Pearl Kline, Kate Pearson, Emma Two witnesses told the chief that|Huber, Roy Rossart, Helen Morgan Gunterman, in full uniform, was ob-land Frank Hilgren. The Arctic TO BE APPEALED served staggering around and lean-|cjyb, the Savoy, Colby and Inter TACOMA, Jan The telephone |{n# against the building. Gunter! urban hotels were included in the “ also is said to have failed to! - ia. s In on the police box for three| | hours. ; Gunterman Joined the force April Satur) 9 “i910, and was dismissed in 1016] Woman Is Knocked ‘\for a similar offense. He again} joined the ranks of the bluecoats | pea by Cable Car July 19, 1917, He formerly was a UY” first mate on a steamship. | hmar Madison cable car afternoon, » 69, of 412 oa iD st., was taken to the city n Execute Socialist | iGapttall severely Injured: ‘ . The woman w columns) ~~ |) Mexican Governor | .220 ore MEXICO CITY, Jan. 5.—-Execu-|started up and sh the action of ing the suddenly was unable governor of|to get out of the way, she said e Carillo, is confirm-|She was dazed by the impact and tatement said today, | suffered severe bruises about the killed by rebels|body and shoulders. She was later taken to her home, (Turn to P: ~® CARLETON GETS LIFE IN PRISON <2 = Former Seattle Youth Coldest Weather in Ten oe me "9 | Years Thru Middle West r 0 a Poin fe the iF ive Persons Dead and ] Many Are Suf- : AC EEN fering in Cold-Gripped Area f n agre (By United Pr from the Canadian Northwest, it t A Mikely that}: pao conaeat wes i 1 e high pressure area ‘ | _ ‘The coldest weuther, Ins dee hice Tiialenee on from} Se gripped the Middle West m, but| today, causing suffering, deaths . firs. F ( , and fires and interfering with 5.—Four persons | wire and transportation faci n to death in the past 24 y hours in the coldest weather here in Eau ¢ ec, W rer * | a decade, police reported today ' rat 1d | The thermometer fell to 16 J « A zero toda th at In Wilmette, a suburb, it was 22 In Pa below zero. ! Tn Chicag Tempe few 16 & ¥ nd O| degree n ve : Four men were frozen to death’ | grees bele 1 4 in Chic and one in St. F Wives wan duction’ i , Scores of fires were reported, | hureau as “severe due to overheated stoves and | hah ar Pt | furnaces. |} cHtca 7 tawest kaik I Ind e dle West carly today, t w r tr o|ing to thou n tenem 1 s ul c The mercury stood at 15 below rig at mark since 1912 t was 16 * Chica ported.| Similar low temperatures were re weathe c (Turn to Page 3, ‘Column a

Other pages from this issue: