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Maximum, Today iy, folks Da for president. Hooray Three cheers for Davis! fet who in heck is he? 2 eee y didn't they enter the demo in the Gtympic games for the Be distance balloting contest? at Madigon | looked as if instead of bal a long time Garden it use dullets eee » the American people can undivided attention to day, we understand, has | @bolished at the ball park this 8 The ladies should retaliate} by Prosecuting Attorney Malcolm} Mi slart a croquet game of their | Douglas The men are: Ex-Patrolmen 0. L. Pear | Redden and Joseph H. Burt, and} Sipe on the Back of » Ford: HEAR! “HEAR! Paal Holbrook. tile girl got a divorce yesterday she said her uhsband was a t women silly? ees — aeeently: _ FAMOUS Lies - Your bob makes you years younger, eee il Steve says there were accidents last year, ex- tof the two cases where the Operator got the right num- im the first attempt. Bc oe. idea of perfect control is a Who can let his wife drive bile thru congested traf- making suggestions. ee GEE GEE, TH’ OFFICE | VAMP, SEZ: pay on demand; hus. | | business men send out a cal- ‘Me biotters once a year, tell you that th Padvertising” and it ‘ | # ee THEY MIGHT HIT US Rewspaper advertisement, the Pool boasts that the bacteria oppaee corner of the | 12. it time we go swimming, | going to dive in that don't wa, to land on east corner the tests there are only two bac- Northeast corner is shal- waign to raisc $10,- 4 community camp site gressing rapidly, but if ant to raise the entire diately why don’t they otter concession to are far more bacteria in} m than in Crystal analysis shows, But doesn’t charge bacteria except possibly for a bath. . | DATE FOR THE POISON | i IVY CLUB who pcs’ the home | led Loan it dropped a | vee was it has been discovered who sinks were at the democratic THON whose votes were only as %, wire pedestrians cut in two ‘York taxicabs. “en el ae ‘Mebbe they were the dele- 0 ‘dled only % illuminated, | ar) tion is now over wil have face the music haven't been mowed in and to return and Lis house. where an aid hear \ parody on “tt h methinks, the ju Ad, 8. WEATHER f that politics are finished until | Gee is a decided blond, but Pr telephone operator says she | The five were engaged in an at- nd Friday noon, 60 NS ee | HIJACKER SLAYING. ~ CHARGE Still Seek Suis Mem: | ber of Gang; Death) of Louis Barei May, Be Probed in Court. Information, murder, charging tirst degree | against two former Seattle | | police patrolmen and three civilians | | was filed in superior court Thursday | Harry Landacker, Chester A. Rother: | | mall and Frank Stevens, alias Mont | rose. Five of them are charged withthe murder of Louis Barei, which the in. formation alleges occurred during the | commission of an attempted larceny on the Barei ranch, June 6. Stevens, or Montrose, is stil! being | sought by the police and sheriff's} office. The others are being held in he county jail without bar! The. information alleges that Red. | den and Stevens fired the shots which | killed Baret and that the other three | aided and abbetted them. | tempt to steal moonshine whiskey | belonging to Ernest Bare! and the} vietim, the Information add Deputy Prosecutor T, H. Patterson | reer up the Information. PACKING PLANT The Newspaper With the Biggest Circulation, in Entered as Second Class Matte sete tallest 4 ached acne es 25. SEATTLE, WASH., JULY © Act paress Mar 1924, THURSDAY, 10, THE DEMON OF HATE (EDITO RIAL) F YOU hold the weak, flickering flame of a candle closely before your eyes you can’t see the glories of the sunrise. Because the democratic convention was so busy looking at the Candle of Religious Bigotry, its delegates couldn’t see the Sunrise of a Better World beckoning them forward. And so the democratic party, for some years to come, lame issue. Two things wrecked the party, as they have wrecked em- pires and republics. The dim aisles of history are full of the corpses of great nations, far-flung principalities, powerful kingdoms, wrecked because a few fanatics tried to force everyone into their own fantastic religious mould. Religion isn’t the mean, spiteful little thing the fanatics in the democratic party imagine it to be. No one whois not a fool imagines that the Almighty cares for iormulas and creeds; that He distinguishes between Catholic and Jew, Baptist and Buddhist, high church and low. If the democratic convention had boldly swept aside the wicked meddlers with religion and had stood out for broad Christianity, it might today have been leading a great nation toward its destiny. It didn’t. Instead of that, it poked around in the mire of creed bitter- ness, creed hatred, creed cruelty, It offered sacrifices to the Demon of Hate; it rejected the God of Love. Today its influ- ence is that of the leaves that sifted from the trees last autumn; its prestige and power, for the moment, at least, have gone to join those of dead empires in the catacombs of history. It held the candle of bigotry so closely before its eyes that it couldn’t see the sunrise of a better world. is a AROUSES IRE Barton Co. Project Meets Protest of Residents In a stormy session at the West Seattle Commercial club meeting in Carpenters’ hall, Wednesday night, residents of the district voiced em- phatic protest against the construc. tion of a new packing plant on the site of the present Barton & Co, plant at Spokane and Wyoming ats. ‘The meeting was called by mem- bers of the Commercial club to hear about the plans for the new plant. c for N E party harmony, John W. Davis, dem- cratic presidential nominee, fore his national committee here to day. Addressing them in executive ses. sion, he let them understand that all differences must be buried ‘mmedi ately and the party must bs J. W. Davis Pleads for Peace in Party W. Bryan Is Named Running Mate by Democratic Meet. W YORK, July vigorous movement to 10,—-Starting a restore campaign [support of himself, his brother, Wilh The committee acclaimed him en-|iam J. Bryan, and all thoir follow. thusiastically for his unprecedented lera for party unity action in making « direct appeal to| The committee followed the them in their meeting, which was|of Davis and did not select a new called for the purpose of roorganiza-|chairman, as is the usual custom. tion under the new jcadershtp. Adjournment was taken, After Davis had concluded, his|the cali of the present running mate, Charles W, Bryan, |Corde!l Hull, united | who led the anti-Davia faction in the | eee 3 Walsh and Meredith went be desire chairman, concerted action in the ; The project is expected to coat $750,-/ 600 and officials of the company} have promised thgt there will be no nuisance features or obnoxious odors. Residents of the district, many of whom are large property owners, heard of the meeting and packed the | hall. When the matter was brought up several persons made heated ar-| guments against the construction of | the plant. They claimed that Barton| & Co. had promised to move to The Meadows. The construction of a new plant there, they sald, would bring other packing firms to that location and| there would soon be 4 packing dis- trict thru which motorists would have to pass driving between West Seattle and down town Representatives of the company declared the plant would have fea-| tures which would eliminate offen- sive odors and that it would be set back from the street, with no, front. age on Spokane at. The matter was finally put to a vote and resulted in an overwhel ing majority against the construc. tion of the plant. | got HE idea came to Big Chris, thru mouth into the night and the storm, that this world of his was an outcast world, a land that God had cursed and forsaken, lawed from. world teemed because its grim, desolation and death had long ago coming |eonvention, pledged an unrectraine Decline Nomination | BY ROBERT J. BENDER i NB’ YORK, July 10.—John | Davis of West Virginia for | president and Charles W. Bryan 6f Nebraska for vice president, That democratic ticket, coupling | the conservative East with the pro- gressive West, was brought out of the most bitterly contested conven: tion in political history at 2:25 a, m. today. The nomination of the Nebraska kovernor was forced by a coterie of democratic leaders, after he had been selected persohally by Dayis as his running mate. It came on the first (Turn a Pr ise 7 7, Cola 3) BRIDGE IS FIRED; CAPTURE BOY ‘Companion Eludes Officer w. by V Cdison Marshall 2 Released by NEA Service, Inc, PE” Copyright 1923 by Little, Brown & Co. Jim, of the Jupiter—on the way home from a scouting trip for a new trap site—had driven his staunch little ‘ship thru seas twice as high. But Captain Jim did not care to take a chance when 4 mere passenger's haste was the only consideration. | Shiels, at Bellingham, and Bradford, | at Squaw habor, had given definite instructions against that very thing, | needless riek of the lives of his crew. Yet, Chris had to admit that this was | no night for landiubbers. In all his travels he bad known a land quite Ike this narrow, treeless, storm-blasted peninsula that CHAPTER 1 The Remittance as he stood on the beach gazing out the narrow, darkened harbor a the where the Because pariah Jand out- kindly, sun-kissed races moved and it was his home, strange spirit of art hold of him, it was as if he were God-cursed and God: Attorney | Wiliam Taube said| a pariah, too, (God than they was the fence between the Paoitic| Under South End Trestle Thursday that the meeting was un-| forsaken, scarcely less so Lhd ocean and Bering sea. Perhaps that fortunate in that {t was held before| Remittance Man, with whom he had) hy he hated it, and by a gro:|QURPRISED by Patroiman Pat Fr. the people really knew what kind of a plant Is to be built. The: factory, he says, will be of the style that is built in eastern cities, where odors) jmust be clfmgnated. lay just become acquainted and who now the tumble-down shac! village behind him Such | was w , Heinen og | tesaue paradox that no mind such as in @ drunken stupor it one Oo") his could ever explain, ioved it, too sin the native) aie hill behind him sheltered him from the lash of the wind, yet. he felt that odd dryness in is head that Dorian as they were setting fire {o 12th ave, 8. bridge over Dearborn |st., late Wednesday night |tried to escape, One of them suc Jceeded and the other was captured ideas did not haunt him = wibject to} Washington The Seattle Star 1819, Per Year, by Mai $500,000 PLANT T BE BUILT ‘Port Commission to) | Develop New Site Next Year, Ready for New Business P ANS for a $500,000 ocean ter. | minal, to be bi Seattle | port commission's r acquired | Skinner & Eddy site ure now | No. 1 being drawn by port engineers, Com- | missioner George an | nounced Thursday The terminal will be complete in| Lamping | every detail for the handling of in j 7 shipping | § tercoastal and European d will accommodate the largest ships that come into Seattle's har-| | bor i As first steps towards the con- struction of the pler, the port com-| jMminsion Wednesday let a contract to! |the Cosmos Fuel company to clear the port site of all the old buildings of the SRinner & Eddy shipyard, The machine shop, the store rooms {and the office buildings will be left jetanding, but the other structures | win be razed, |No NEW FUNDS WILL BE NEEDED Work on the new }not be started until next spring, | Lamping said, as it is the plan of the commission to develop this site jwith the surplus in the port funds }and not to issue any bonds for this | purpose Considerable storage space will be terminal may provided in the new terminal and | jthe latest in labor-saving devices ea be installed. The terminal will be the first unit of the project. More piers are expected to be con- structed later. Many propositions part of the site have been received |by the port, Lamping declared. |There offers will not be considered Juntil the site x cleared, however The port commission formally took possession of the site on July 1, altho the land was purchased several mont) \ ago, for leasing DEFIES GITY IN TAX. FIGHT County Treasurer Refuses to Turn Over Interest $200,000 IS INVOLVED Court Battle Looms in New City-County Argument . Not one penny of the $200,000 street railway delinquent tax interest money will be surrendered to the city, state or school district unless an order of the court is issued, dl- recting the payment of their claims, | County Treasurer W. W. Shields de-| clared Thursday. Shields is basing his stand upon the opinion of Prosecuting Attorney Malcolm Douglas, who declares that the county is entitled to the railway tax interest. | Corporation Counsel T. J. L. Ken | nedy is expecting a conference to be |ealled, to be attended by himself and jattorneys for the state and school | districts. No decision has yet been | reached in the matter, Kennedy salt, | } "We may bring suit, and we ma future actions «n an opin- the attorney general," Ken: nedy said jotten. He was huge and blond and always marks zero weather, and the} the foy caught by Dorian was Paul| ‘Thursday morning County ‘Treas: | Fugged—not A drenmer:in any. sate ouch of the froxt, as of a band.) sajer, 15, Dorian took him to the{urer Shields paid to the city trens- | except as all men of the northern |crept under hls heavy shirt. He} aity sii, where he wna held by juve.|urer $631,000, which Is tie’ city's | ees, knowing life to Its cruel) wished he had his heavy xea-cout nile authorities H share of June tax collections. depths, are given to dreame—and)that he had left in a cabin In the!” ane policeman reported that hel. Included in to sum was $179,000, | his last name was Larson, His Job. | vitage, Thence his thought turned | urprived the two boys just after|which is the city's share of the | Japanese Student Held as} thar of a web foreman in connection {to the Remittance Man, wondering |{yep yea, (ye, {WO pos Just after | whieh ta the oye neta | with the fishing that Was the one In| how he wax making out. It I notlsracture, which would. probably | Shields also the state treas: | Attempted Assassin duntry In these far, formaken waters, | wise, on the peninsula, 0 Houk OneJnave accomplished its destruction {uret § and credited the school | nee | kept him too busy for such moods A | seif in distilled your dough and then Hadideg nok Hebn put out, Both {district fund with $76,140, the re: | TOKYO, July 1¥.Kazuo Noda, a/ this, But the North way showing |\je in the cold. ‘This was November: jw fled en Declan approached, but [spective shares of the tax princt college student, was arrested Here|itq teeth tonight. Boaldes, te Was] he mude a het with himself that the|siier was captured | |this aftern charged with at-| inwardly ill at from wiirely iia | Remittance Man—granting that. he| he felage eurrion wtroet. car and | "We expect. (o Koop the 200,000 | tempting to dinate Prince To-| terial considerations--he had cave) sustained the drinking pace he hadlaytio traffic to the Beacon Hill and interest. for King county,” Shields kugdwa, us the Jutter was leaving| the cannery launch Jupiter at Nish: (get and which, because Ht surpassed (Mount. Baker dlatrlete hai | the diet building, Noda armed jagak, with the Idew of connecting up all records in this hard-drinking lund,! city ¢iremon put in a busyenight| “Tho county has alwaya vetained th revolver and dagger. He was) with the mati boat at Squaw har wt, | wad already famous clear to Nusha-lwoanesday when over 40 calla were (interest on tax collectior and placed | overpowered and arrested before he) the Jupiter's Hore pore te A ete eae Would Hot purtichmte In the] iyrned in. Most of the firen wero [the money in the genoral fund This | had opportunity to harm the prince, | the “outside,” but the swift-breate na | Rawelan festival with which all Farlprugh and grass blaze Sparks | general custom will be folowed in Vollce wuld they found that Nodu | st had: forced the faunch into ay Western: Aliaka colebrates’ thelrrom chimnoya: nino causdd omiutch |thin cnse, unless we ure directed’ by Wise supporte of the “Horizontal | miniature cove far up in one of the | Christmay season, damage, a court order to pay it over to the * locity,” an organization made up| moat dexolute and stormy stretches | An Watched, the storm) the home of W. H. ‘Tyre, 1066 |olulmants “lof woolal outcasts, and that he| of seucoust in the entire North, there} seemed 16 Increaxe; the boat of the! summit. uve, Na Was parinlly del Prosecutor ‘Doug id that he | charged Tokugiwn with rosponsi.| to remain for an uncertain time Ways on the rocks had a deeper, lstroyod by chimney sparks setting [finds nothing In the state laws bility for oppression of the out-} Of course it was only a qual! Hid fad nister viele (Ho had the ltire to the roof, ‘The toss is eatl:|which warrants tie. city oking a caste, the tradition of seafarers, Captain (Turn to Page 3, Columa 4) mated at $2,000, dharo In the Interoat money. :) Safe Here Seattle Couple Adopts Arme- nian Waif - Zadi. av ~ Armenian » baby” git], ,or- Phaned as a result of ‘Turkish atrocitlés following the’ armistice, when ‘the people of the Armenian fortress city of Zeitounli surrendered as hostages to the Turks to insure the lives of others of their race in Silicta—ts visiting in Seattle with her foster mother, Mrs, C. R. Gannaway. Seattle will in time be her permanent home. When Dr. and Mrs. who were conducting the American relief hospital in Marash in 1921, found Zadi and her mother dying in the streets they did not believe the little, emaciated baby could live. Her father was killed. Her mother died a day or so after. Taking Zadi into the hospital, they slowly nursed her back to health, Hight months later, when the urks obliged them to leave Turk they received permission to take her with them, Today Mrs, Gannaway is in Seat- tle ‘to: legalize the’ adoption of the little Armenian waif Gannaway., ACCUSE MOTORMAN IN [en OF ALKI WOMAN ME EDITION TWO CENTS PLAN NEW OCEAN TERMINAL IN SEATTLE. SPEEDING VERDICT OF JURY Luna Park Accident Due to Negligent Operation of Car, Jurors Decide 0. Blackley, motorman of an Alki street car, was he'd respon- sible by & coroner's jury, Thurs for the accident on cost the life of Susan Seater, near Luna Mrs. park, Mrs. Seater had alighted from one car and the when com ing the ran over and killed her The jury was ing another ley in opposite direction, verdict was to the effect that ‘t cident was due to the street car being ope d at an ex censive rate of speed over a créssing when passing 5 pas- sengers.” Deputy Prosecutor |mer has made no dec! ction his office A car discha Ralph Ham- n ais yet on i) take in RUSH SILK EAST Boat Breaks Record; N. P. Hopes to Lower Old Mark A new record in shipping time be- tween Yokohama and New York, via ‘the Seattle gateway, Is expected to be set by two Northern Pacific trains now racing eastward with a $7,000,- 000 silk cargo, landed here by the President Jefferson. The Jefferson made a record run across the Pacific, setting a mark of nine days, 14 hours, 28 minutes and clipping a day from schedule. An at- tempt is being made to lower the transcontinental time and set a new record. The silk shipment, which arrived in Seattle at 945 p. m. was on its way to New York five hours later. See Yellowstone, | Then Rainier Park | Rainier National park acts as a great magnet which is drawing many people to the Northwest, The estab. lishment of the Rainier National park bureau at Mammoth Hot Springs, Yellowstone park, a move *|initiated by the Seattle Chamber of Commerce, is stimulating interest in the great national park on Puget Sound, according to Miss Adelia Tor- bill, who is in charge of the Rainier exhibit at Yellowstone. Florida Tourist ee Long-Distance Champ Long distance auto travel honors Wednesday went to BE. H. Corville, who registered at the Chamber of Commerce tourist bureau from Bran. donton, Fla. While in Seattle, Cor ville and his family are staying at 4612 Dawson. Salt Water Park Is Lauded by O.J. Dutton “That Salt Water Park project is one of the greatest pieces of work ever undertaken in this town,” said 0, J. C. Dutton, president of the Seattle park board ‘Thursday, just back from a six during which Dutton, weeks’ trip East, he inspected the park systems of 15. cities,’ said Seattle, by supporting. the salt water park, is awakening to the necessity ef conserving some of its beauti- ful waterfront for recreation purposes. “It is doubly significant and he continued, the very thing cities are do- Louis. Back good deal as hey spent their in their interesting to me,” is other St “because It that many ing, notably there they did we have done. energy making money early days, They took little thought of the future, Now, when the urge for recreation spots has become pronounced, they are setting out to acquire them. “And, believe me. paying plenty for City governments tive of the 4 must have a place find now «that most sirable reerention owned by private large business interesis, and when they try to acquire new playgrounds or new parks, guch as the proposed Seattle they are them now. representa: who. teally to play of tne de spots are estates or | sag | salt-water park movement which salt water park, they are forced to pay fabulous prices. CAN GET RESULTS NOW FOR LESS eattle will support the the Young Men’s Business club is working for, we can have one of the things we wili vain. high- ly without paying a prohibitive figure. Here certainly is a won- derful opportunity for some of our public-spirited and wealthy citizens to do something thas long will be remembered.” Developments in the move came thick and fast Thurs The salt-water park. edits barely squared away for the day's grind when Frank Kin. nair, secretary of the Seattle Retail Grocers’ —_assosiation walked in with a cheek for $100. Had to do it,” Kinnair said. “This was voted as an ors ne tion contribution, and not as from the individual members, There are 197 organizations in Seatile. Every one of them can well ford to do the same lay. had an tus in on this thing. We want to help, vo,” said the manager of the Washington Printing Co, over the telephone. “Undertsand you want 10,000 | dodgers for distribution a: the j Young Men's Business cluy cel ebration at the ball park, urday.. We'll print wet to send a bill’ Sat. fom and for: (Turn to Page 7, Coluni 4)