The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 26, 1924, Page 1

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ane 5 PRINCE IS INVITED TO VISIT SEATTLE! Home E ition| tome Brew Howdy, folks! Seattle couple is to be married on top of Mount fainier. This is a good idea. They can take their honeymoon trip on a glacier Agiacter m en it neve fome wives are & ‘ Bey'd even yell dire driving a glacte besdends when Being wedd ip a good ir Bt prepares y Pattie apartment fat the summit Ba heavy mist When she pro Jusbond can't TOURIST GUIDE POISON IVY INN ‘Wn.—Ideally located famed Ringworm Is a favorite re: e can wink x Ringworm, the near for the weak Rate 50 day, or ve you? L rates for nox patients : : x . «8 ’ * iy LARYNX LOD¢ pire 7. 8. Plann Prop {| Situated in the beautiful Ton silitis foothills, Excellent cuisine the food is also geod. Running water In every room—when it rains. Built on a bluff and run the same way, Leave your black hack with the clerk before regis tering. A paradise fdr fishermen, geifers and other liars egetables, fresh out 0 can ipeds $1.0 eco er a Our own - —- | i} SARDIN BUNGALOW || CAMP, Sardine, B. C.--A delight ful havén for travelers from the United States who are waiting for their indictments to be quash ed. Visitors can enjoy salt-water tathing by taking a short ride Dy rail to the heach, only 3 miles away, Also fishing in our own peldfish bow DUSTY MAPLES INN (Formerly the Hay Fever House) Dusty Maples Inn iy a thoroly modern building with 35 rooms, | with and without fresh « ‘The | | ian is under the able Ment of Mr. Tom Mc of Walla Walla, class of modern improvements, including doors and windows. Every room has an excellent view of the fa Dusty Maples garbage x eee wi a iy DE DILLPICKLE, Erysipelas, Ore.—Bathing, swim- ming and drowning. Bootlegger | | ervice at all hours of the day | | jjand night. Pajamas to rent by iiday or week. Among the sports ithat can be enjoyed at the Hotel jde Dilipickle are tennis, parches! fend darning. Bring your own! {itoothbrush. | i “ee EThe end of the straw hat season is drawing near, Candidates for of- are preparing to have their old | iw hats rolled into campaign | 3 aris # | SON OF AG The Star) and Mrs. Bernard Guna, i Fairview ave. N., » son. | Peuicx Gots Far oma Quart,” # fieading. And H. C. remarks thata | of fellows can go so far on a} i that their wife doesn’t speak | Bthem for « week i ead “Mars is closer to the earth than It ever been before, and scientists trying to see if there is any life| it. | You can't blame ‘em. We'd like to| ie a place where there's some life, f | ‘i vane Sign on the Back of » Ford: —--__-___-» | WHOSE i a7 7AE 1S SHE? 18 is SHE. | oe. x | Frederick. | The man who turned his corkscrew | Méory into a hairpin mill few Wars ago has, it is hoped, saved the| Machinery.—The prev Pee Re of the chief reasons a person Mt execute all the shots as de Mtibed by experta—no few of us are ortionists od “ee @ Ni YE DIARY 4 (Auguat UP hetimes, and to the office, but Lord! | nd did regret that | mm tver I heard it sung. andience mach pleased, and did Mand many encores. Anon to home, o- " A.J, 8, | Thursday {mond ne Newspaper With the Biggest Circulation in Washingtoh The Seattle Star ~. Entered as ase Matter he Postoftics at In Wash SEATTLE, WASH., |TORRENT OF MUD WRECKING LANDS Mount Shasta Glaciers Melting; De- structive Flood Hurled Down eCLOUD, Cal., Aug. 26—A raging, muddy torrent, born of the supposedly eternal snow and ice of Mount Shasta’s glaciers, which have succumbed to the drought which has parched California this summer, is pouring down the slopes of the mountain again today, extending the delta of morainal mud still farther along the upper reaches of McCloud river. Hundreds of acres about the eastern foot of the mountain have been covered with mud to a depth of many feet, and more mud is coming. Mud canyon has become filled with a bubbling, swirling mass of sticky slime which mixes with the water of the McCloud river, killing the fish and threatening to force the stream clear out of its banks Lawrence Trumbull, of MeCloud, who so fur has been the only man venture to a point near the of the trouble, reported that ITALIANS =: Last-Minute Rescue Ends ; Flyers’ Four-Day Wait eres jaciers have slipped for fomn the m de, coming together in a sort Up by Arctic Sea | BOARD U. 8, 8. RICHMOND, Aug. 24.—For fuur days, Lieut. | ore eter force of the streams. “It's just as if the mountain were aluiced down,” Trumbull said. feat cracks have rent the face g 1 ANd Hin fatothenglaciers, whieh look as tha| thre cea, Tiftg companions huddled in| they are disintegreting, and. when the shell of their huge metal mono.|!t unites with the McCloud river in| lane—unaware of American cruiser |the old mud creek course, the roar |near by and waiting for rescuers to|can be heard for miles.” |take them out of the storm-tosed| Men are working along the mud creek of the McCloud to keep the stream within its banks, but despite all effort new channels are being cut, new land threatened |with inundation by Arctic waters. course Locatelii and hix aides, Lieut Tullio Grosio, Bruno Falcinelli and Clovanni Braccini today are aboard the Richmond—saved late Sunday of mud. The end of this, the sec night when green rockets sent up| mud. Th ie adie this from the plane were seen by the|On? TAMDSE Of toe teh. crew of the Richmoné—and are en |*°4#0M. 4 by no m sig route to Labrador Locatelli was forced down last license by down by City May Control Every few minutes one of the air-| onto the swaying water.soaked wings, The Bluebird daficing pavilion, scanning the empty seas. | which operates on the placid waters d by just out of their| weekly, is subject to the ured by fog and rain city Sent up green rockets and one of| Corporation Counsel T. J. 1. these late Sunday night attracted | nedy Tuesday at the special request Richmond Jor also ssked whether or not the The Richmond trained powerful] ioating dance hall could be closed | Lieut. Locatelli could be seen stand-| Kennedy said that the Sunday ing on the bow of the tossing yel-| cloming iaw also applied to the Blue: ICHE NO. 8 in The Star’s Hall of Fame for candidates ‘Loganberry Jim.’” So, upon the scroll above the niche was incribed the name of Candidate for the Governorship The Star offered a niche in the Hall of Fame to any specifically and without beating about the bush. The ques- tions were: in dollars and cents, will you reduce taxes? : Just exactly and specifically how will you do this? cut a certain amount. h Monday, Tom Revelle won Niche No. 7. He promised listening to large talk from other candidates about “saving millions,” The Star felt that Mr. Revelle, modest as his Tuesday Mr. Fullerton, who is mayor of Port Townsend, managed to become fairly specific. By July 1, 1925, 1 will have reduced state taxes in Washington 20 per cent.” total of $92,000 it costs to run the governor's office each two years and “to cut expenditures on all state Institutions an average of 20 His system for spending less, Fullerton says, is to give state departments less to spend—which sounds so simple there's probably ment would.crawi thru the ‘manhole Floating Pavilion Once, unknown to them, the Rich-| of Puget Sound for public dances tri ime to time the aviators} ‘This opinion was handed attention of the crew aboard the| of Mayor Edwin J. Brown. The may- searchlights on the monoplane and| in conformity to city ordinance. (Turn to Page 7, Column 3) bird . ° . and Occupies Niche No. 8 in bore a sign Tuesday. The sign said: ‘Reserved for JAMES T, FULLERTON governorship candidate who would answer three questions, Just how much, Name a specific date on which taxes will have been to cut only $7,000, but he was specific about it. After cut was, deserved recognition. Here is his promige: Fullerton makes a specific promise to cut 60 per cent from the per cent.” a catch in it somewhere, “Jim,” however, gets hazy when he's asked to be specific concerning the “how" of hia system, Ho says; “I will eliminate grafters, leeches aid papsuckers," but fails to name any of them, Old stuff, Jim. They all say that. But there, over night, The Star didn’t expect to train politicians to be specific It's going to be a long, hard job—we can see that. Who'll be really specific and win Niche No. 9? wader « ® TUESDAY, the rising tide | Ken-| “Ma . F 1924 AUGUST 26 MUGGLED MAPS Ship Caught in Ice Grip Hudson Bay Sealer || Is Victim in North or Year * TWO CENT: IN > GENS IN SEATTLE (4 CAPTURED, TO DEPORT li Six Arrive Here in Taxicab and Are| Captured on Downtown Street | areer of the a vy er Bear, 1 io adie | Passes ECUTION of one and asee ation of 11 other alleged} portunity to seize the Hudson Japanese stowaways and the probable prosecution of sealer Lady Kindersley, # at least two alleged to have aided in smuggling their coun- = to 1 received trymen into Arbdeeen was announced Tuesday by A. J. Lady Kindersley {a fast Kahl, an immigration inspector, working under Commis- in the ice 25 miles northeast of || Sioner Luther Weedin Six were arrested inst Point with ber crew still |} |day. Kight more | teed stowaways launches ready to take off the prisoners a ha men, should the ice fall to break. || been smuggled from Ni is the cutter Boxer and other || There are no whites atea in} coast guard craft have been or the affair, Kahl declared prior 0 ed to the scene | probable trip late in the day The sealer has been fast in the || deen te for 10 days | Isha Satani, allas Yamamoto, him self an alleged stowaway, is held as . t B the ringleader in the jatest fight Cutter Bear Is_ || s6 lpainmetna aiatiee.c Okias Oe N Hark \“No Right to Forgive! caration) nets \Me-wilisbe prose fearing Harbor |/thunders tinois Prosecutor 8," cm flor! ou. 8. coast guard cutter Ron u's crew, reported held in ar, en route home from t ‘ ; the Navealire Assis |[CALLS LEOPOLD FOOL | sveraeen Tuesday, may nino tuce th nited Btates co Weteeisy 9 phon |Defense Completes Case, |» F..Fugiwere, 28; H. Yama was hoping fo it from th ‘ F 21: M. Kakuchl, 32: 1. Yenooe plucky erat but she puased by ||Asking for Mercy in Penalty | So ora y. yenooc, 24; were arrested overs mo withe top } on Senttie streets Sunday night after ’ aming in a direct line (Raa COURTROOM, Chica-|they had hired # taxi to bring them Francisco. \\ go, Aug. 26.—"Am the judge of | from Aberdeen, where the steamer is | Bear at 10 o'clock this l/thin court, you have no right. to | docked morning was about 215 mile tiforgive anyone who trespasses| Further search of the steamer by a from San Francisco. She makes |/against the state of Iinols,” State's | deputy at Aberdeen Monday discov about 180 miles a day. That} Attorney Robert By Crowe thun:| ered the other six, and two members schedule. would. bring ber isto |ldered at Chief Juatiog John B. Cay-|OF the crew declared | impticated. | Wedne® harbor about 4 p. m. day 80 MEN TRAPPED ABOARD WRECK Rescuers Fail as Heavy Seas |" Pound Government Dredge | ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Aug. 26 Eighty ¢ believed in peril aboard the government dredge Solo stranded on South Bar, a half mile off shore, here today The dredge can be shore, pounded by heavy seas. |im listing to seaward and big waves are breaking over her top decks Efforts to bring a lifeboat along- side 0 far has failed because of the heavy sens | The dredge is known to carry a |large crew, and according to one | report, 80 men are aboard her. After efforts of the power life-| |boat to reach the dredge had fatled. }@ government tug succeeedd in get-| |ting a hawser over the craft and |partly righted her. The work waal hampered by the heavy swell, how- jever, and coast guards feared tho} dredge would spring a leak and sink) | before the crew be taken off. | dredge 1» one of two that} |haye been working on the channel here, She was torn loose from her moorings at 4 a. m. and swept out Into the sea by the high wind. ARREST 39. IN | RUSS PLOT /Anti-Soviet Conspiracy Is! | Found in Vladivostok men seen from| She Moscow, Aug. idte-Governmsnt| agents in Vladivostok have arrest Jed 39 leaders of a plot to overthrow | |the soviets and re-establiah the monarchy, according to information| here todas | | ‘The leaders Included the grand) duke Nicholas, brother of the late| |ex-ezar and the grand duke Cyril, | |the czar’s cousin | The conspirators were connected |with monarchist centers in Harbin| land Paris and hoped to discredit | the soviet by banditry and organ OUTS BANDITS | WITH A CHAIR ORANGE, N. J. Aug. 26.—Will Angien, station master, had almost finished counting $2,000 in fares 'when two bandits entered, making him lose. count. He flung a chair at them, and they left without the ,000. IRE ON PLANE | CATCHES WOMAN) POINT J/LEASANT, J, Aug. 26.—Mre, Emily Hoosbauser was walking in her yard when she was rudely jerked to earth and her tog broken. “The fall was caused by 1 dangling wire from an atrplane which flew over, It failed to stop following the accident, + |be prosecuted and the w Terly In demanding the death penalty | They will probably be taken direct for Nathan Leopold and Richard.| to ‘Tacoma and held for the trial ot Loeb. | Satani “You have no right to forgive any: |: Thia is the first Japanene smug: | one ‘brought before this court for| sling case uncovered since the ban trespassing the laws. You must) became effective July 1 deal with them as the law pre] | scribes.** j Again and again Crowe walked |Body of Mrs. Mors |near the boys, and, with fints raised | high. thundered denunciation after | pvlation upon them. | Thin young fool, N at Journey’s End °. NEW YORK, Aug. 26. ‘The body lot b utiful Theresa Mors, last of n Leopold, | Kid McCoy's loves, arrived home to- says there {# mo God," Crowe | day, met at the station only by an jstouted. undertaker, to whose establishment “I wonder, Nathan, whether youlthe body was taken believe it was a pure acc or! At thelr home in the Bronx Mr divine Providence that caused you/and Mrs. Joseph Weinstein, par to drop those glasses so that the/or the dead woman, whose love f laws of the state of Mili pis could h of God | Kid McCoy brought death instead of romance, remain behind locked doors, | visited upon your miserable car keeping their grief to themselve can t ‘ ze ie They let it be known thru another CONDEMNS WORD daughter, Mrs. Morris Stein, that jOF PHYSICIAN |tuneral services for Theresa will be “Three wise men came out of|neig Wednoutay from the chapel of referring | the undertaking parlors that it will} Column 1) Ibe strictly private BUBBLES! M** OR BROWN’S solution of the telephone tangle ; Mires upon examination, to be no solution ata Its main object, in-fact, seems to be to spend $25,000 on a nonsensical “survey of the cit: Its secondary object appears to be to foist on a long-suffering community that abomination known as the “telechronometer,” an instrument almost as unpleasant as its name. Everett some months ago was used as a laboratory specimen for experimentation by the telechronometer and the last we heard the telephone company was busy refunding to patrons who had been grossly over- charged by the instrument. In addition, pretty nearly all the subseribers were ready to commit mayhem and sanguinary murder on the inventor of the tele, ete. the Ea. (Turn to Page Crowa declared, | * HE only kind of telephone service worth consider- ing is unlimited, 24-hour service. If Mayor | | Brown's expert engineers can figure out some { way to give Seattle that service at a figure under the present trust charges, then we'll have a base to work from. The $25,000 “survey” proposal is so silly that it falls of its own weight. It is tantamount to paying a painter for estimates on redecorating your home. No one in his senses would suggest anything of the kind — unless perhaps he had | somebody picked out who needed $25,000. | When the time comes there will be plenty of electri- | cal equipment manufacturers willing to survey the city. for nothing before they bid on the millions of dollars’ worth of equipment Seattle will need if she decides to go into the telephone business. | * * * S a matter of solid fact, Seattle can’t go into the | telephone business. Brown knows that as well as anybody else. And he knows that spending $25,000 or 25 cents in preparation for the city’s entry into the telephone field is just wasting money. You've got to do these things in order, and the first thing to do is force the legislature to give cities power to run tefephone systems. When that’s done we can take the next step. | If we're going to spend $25,000, let's spend it on something more substantial than one of Doe Brown's bursting bubbles. Viebkoliee }it became | elty }that, in 4 | CITY POSITION leapital to {months before they |—Drastic | another Like many another Seattle girl, one of the dreams of Miss Violet Joschine Ker's life dow vertising agency, has been t Wales. “Well, you never get she surmised Tuesday—and most approved fashion. n in the Strang & Prosser Ad- o dance with the Prince of anything you don’t go after,” went after the prince in the by Frank Jacobs, Star Staff Photographer Now Who'll Help Miss Violet Ker to Make the Invita t Josephine K down at ¢ and Prosser advertising 8 morning Who dancing with who? raid the practical Miss Ker, shaking |bobbed curls You with the prince of Wales,’ imagined the friend again, Miss Ker did some of her most rapidimuginiags right then. And in about two mistutes, being than imaginative, decided that the good things of this world come to those who go out after them. (You Vital Truths like that dvertising ngency.) ‘ER SAID DON Miss Ker sneaked about a ute from Mr. Strang and an po minute from Mr. Prosser and more | tion Unanimous? in. the gre pen ce men r After she'd done that she feit somewh: and timid;about do- ing It ul Of course, nobody ar an ¢ agency's sup. posed to be shy, but a girl can hardly be expected to be business like when there's a chance of fox |trotting with Auprince, oan she? So Miss Ker wint® ato of other Seattle’ girie’ tosten thelt names to her. invitation, Then. she'll send the bid to the prince and the prince will . Well, |You never ¢ | his culate n tell come, at that. “Anyway,” Miss Ker, prac tically, “you never get what you want unless you go out after it, do you? Newcomers Should Have Capital or Job, Advice Prosperity Brings Huge Influx; There May Not Be Work for All in Winter ITH tourists and. workers flock- ing to Seattle by the thousand, apparent Tuesday to the! Chamber of Commerce, private and employment agencies and con- tractors that there will be danger of unemployment for some of them| Fs this winter No warnings to stay away from Seattle because of this condition have been sent out, but tourists are} being told’ that, if they come here to settle, they capital to tide them over, or a job. Reason for the influx is the con- tinued prosperity and activity here, | compared with the rest of the coast territory. But even with this activ- Ity, there is unlikely to be enough work this winter when construction slows up temporarily. The chamber's position !s not that It wishes to discourage settlers, but Pench, residents here will have first call on jobs and comers must take thelr turn, MANY SEEKING new- “We are urgigg newcomers, Harold Crary, fh charge of chamber ‘and city. publicity, “to bring enough tide them over a find work. are calling attention to the round- trip rail fares from their homes and we are telling them that Seattle, like all other cities, has an ample supply of labor at present.” We KLUXERS ROUTED Troops at Camp Custer Take Hand at Fiery Cross CAMP. CUSTER, ‘Mich, Aug. 26. action was threntened today by. General Moseley, com: manding officer at Camp C attempt to burn ‘a fiery cross is made within of the camp. At the head of a detachment of soldiers, the general routed a large group gathere@ about a burning cross on a hill Jate last night. Most of the demonstrators had fled by the time the troops ar rived, but obout 35 persons were held in the guard house for inves: tipaticn. ne majority of are believed merely to spectators. Goneral Moseley “has issued #a warning ogainst any further gather jugs in the camp them, however, have been should have enough} 5 | permanent. They are day few | ister, if} the confines } | Approximately 100 persons “hit” |the 11th district headquarters of the U. 8. clvik service here every day for | work, it was said Tuesday. They are th Seattle and out-of-town persons and they range from unskilled labor- and young boys to artisans and jcollege trained specialists. A. week ago Monday 210 persons made application tor government positions here. Monday — afternoon alone 75 more applied. Down at the Washington st. office of the city's free employment bureau for men fully 100 more men, com- mon laborers, but mostly. with mouths other than their own to feed, daily group in front of the. bulletin board. About 40 to 60 are placed |by Supt. A. H. Shields cach day and |approximately that many. are turned | away when the day's dole of off jobs is used up. MOST OF JO) NOT PERMA The woman's free employment bu- |reau reports the same conditions. Most of these placements are not 5 Unloading cars of coal, onstruction crew, now and then @ lawn to care for or more wood to chop—once in a ile a chance at | farm work Foremen on construction jobs, their gangs filled up for the work’ in hand, can testify to the scores of other Jobless men who daily approach them (turn to Pa ce’ 7, Column 3) | “ANOTHER SMITH?” “THAT’S THE NAME” HE’D LIKE TO SAY AN FRANCISCO, Aug. 26.— Henry Monroé Smith, setting |] forth that the name hé bears car. || ries with it no distinction, wants it changed, and has' filed # court petition hore. to that effect, “LP don’t: mind. the name of Smith,” he declared in his peti: tion, “but I'm having trouble with the two first names. Henry M. Smith {s not so good; H. M, Smith is worse, and Monroe Smith is begging the question.” |] © So plain Henry Smith wants to cash in on what the other fellow thinks every time he is intro. duced. “Ah, another Smith.” They either think it or say. it,” say Henry, “so Iowant Just one Chris. tian name—Another. “T want to ‘Another’ be known as Smith," rah ian cach

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