The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 15, 1924, Page 1

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dil — | WEATHER | Temperatur ximum, & Toda | © Last M Hours Malmum, 60 30 reon —Y VOL. Howd, A cold vocate ld show for Big ce th Whose fa Now, Bryan away a nothing. breath. Dr. Prince of present job as a pare cs The Cup. pointmen Pumpkin self-starte At you ha zooms is My bo My bonn On, in the from the sausages, over and we he doth boy who spell book Bit. at not, it will se umonia There was Smelizer, Bhe situation has cinched O14 Sil He wrapped i 26. ly. folks! shower - em ¢ DIZZY his bow! lebration world fl nt worite her declared that it says tha NO. Bell 4 is the drink was a married, head it an's brain. 17 planned Seatt From lieve it or nm be time to drag out the old red flannels again. morning |s n against in't mind a) was warm. of the oldfash to sew her DITTIES Cole was a merry old soul, A fact that is not unknown; He called for his pipe and he called And he called for his radiophone. here In council arrive. named ipper day, A dig strapping fey. then aches, he in, in Seattle is more of HOUSEHOLD HINT whisky steals But that’ Cloves steal away a man’s life. Bryan's Slogan worthy of his Hires Wales, night VAMP United States its hold on the But what's the haven't a thing to put in it. ts. But is disappointments. G las Ho! rs.’* OBITU. Willie bought a brand new car And started out to drive it; ‘round a hydrant, The Interment’s strictly private. eaten t the coro My bonnie lies over mnie lies ic ate rooma, bring back my bonnie to me!) Up betience country, and did find the fog dripping trees, bat and the house warm breakfasting on w: he bes asked And Willie did answer, It's perfer ump, lg. has too many cranks Matthews says that one of the cleanest men that has ever been in public vertisement for Proctor & Gamble? Is The SEZ would never marry | Prince of Wales. called Mrs. Wale: Bryan is this an ad- laborer is Judging by the hours he keeps, the if he ever loses his can always get a watchman 7 LI'L GEE GEE, ™ OFFICE | aan| Think of being | * tennis team Davis use? ‘They busy Hangers-on of the successful can- didates are now secking ap- all they will get t s ARY ze over ner out of a cake-eater, fire ou fi hy “ve and little dish for « fall mornin And anon comes lo talk of this and that, ma a story he sage of The world nd not enough | fall, the best judge of whether | adstools or mush the ocean, the aca; toadstools for mush- Li'l Gee Gee says the hardest thing world is to make a bread-wir soon started, ih, and so to bod Tune, and | about « little his teacher to and he did spell “b-o-0-k, he teacher did say, “Very oot, “Very And so to work, ink wood against the winter days, and putting in m new stove, Jest 1 do aplker, heaven help me, from chilbjain ym to bed. ‘ Leopold arid IWeb ought to one of these new crors-word pu: They'd probably be able to finish It before they t out “And this,” he shid, laughingly, “tMs is the end!” onkey Removed Bryan Luncheon ~ HARTLEY. LEADS E, L. FRENCH BY 1,810 VOTES ‘Confident of Victory as Re- turns Trickle In "| COYLE CONGRATULATES: |onty 26 Precincts Are Now! Unheard From a crime to buy liquor than it is to} Col. Roland H. Hartley, with 1.810 ool! tt a miei | votes to spare, is confident that the Gosh, but there are a lot of crimi- jofficial count of Tuesday's ballo nals in this country | which {s already under way in many [parts of the state, wilt put him stil! [further ahead of his nearest oppo-| |nent, & L. French, of Vancouver, |in the race for governorship nomina tion Lieut. Gov. W. J. Coyle sent Hart ley a warm letter of congratulation Monday, dubbing Hartley's vote a “convincing victory. | votes and four to Hartley. In Lew- | is county French received seven more and Hartley five. Both coyn- ties are in Freneh territory. 1,000-FOOT FALL KILLS STUDENT Party Trying to Recover Body on Mt. Kaletan A party of two rangers and two mountaineers was waiting for day- light Monday to recover the body of | Harold Sparks, who fell to pis death J over u 1,000-foot cliff Sunday, while climbing Mount Kaletan, in the Cas- cade range, near North Bend. They | | | lexpected to reach the body late to-| | day. Sparks left Seattle at 7:30 a, m Friday, with a small party, intend. | ing to climb the mountain. | He wag a University of Washing- ton student and an executive In Boy | | Scout work. | |” Meager reports state that he prob- | lably lost his hold on the face of the | l cliff, falling 1,000 feet. His body Hes | lin an inaccessible place, His father, William A. Sparks, 510 Minor ave. N., and his brother-in llaw, W. L. Carson, 2216 Harvard ave. N., left Sunday night for North | Bend. | |3-Year-Old Baby Burned to Death! ROSEBURG, Ore., Sept. 15.—The | |body of little 3-year-old boy, | | burned to death while playing In the lashes of the kitchen atove, will be| |buried here today. | Earl Stone, son of C. C. Stone, of Myrtle Creek, was the victim. When |the baby’s, clothing caught fire, his little twin sister toddied to a neigh bor’s house to call the mother. She put out the fire, but the boy was #0 badly burned he died several hours later. Mistook Companion | for Deer; Funeral ASTORIA Ore., Sept. 15.—-Her. jnard Isle, 20, of Hamlet, was shot! thru the heed and killed yesterday by Philip Horceny, a companion, who mistook Isle for a deer, They were hunting in heavily wooded country in the Nehalem valley. ~~ The Newspaper With the Bigges 4 as Lerond Clase Malier May B, 1899, at the Postoffice at Seattle, 2ATTLE, WASH., MC . LIVE monkey A invited to break bread with William Jennings an, at the Seattle Ad club luncheon Monday noon, wa removed from the dining room of the Gow man hotel because the club members wished to spare the monkey's feelings. “Mr. Chairman, in view of Mr. Bryan's expressed opinion of Mr. Monk and the part some folks think he played in the evolution of man, I think it fitting that Mr. Monk should not be subjected to another personal attack,” said a club member, addressing Tom Jones Parry monkey, having beer Ato at A get, that wan perfectly able to maelt n tacks M ir n might m j addition to the live m phant and . uffed donkey ted from the meeting, the mbers agreeing that ng Fe erry Passengers Face Death in Near- Tragedy «: Moment Finds Fire E tinguishers Is Claim | Crucial Empty, Lifeboat Leaking, tragedy ar to what/fire was ext! hundreds Puget y Got us 9, as pointed out) “It was fortu natances by The Seattle Hot en all Bove d ugust 30 on the) Women or child | morning. r 3 Ae the ferry Plonesr| = crows of peculanwe can gnty sure | between “Beatilo and Kingston, The| Mise what the outcune would I Star learned Monday to ar ™ letnat final and re beon on this e no { the Pioneer who experienced the) "0% wes Bh ip ichac ge idoree the! fight to’ make|an4 Kingston, The company's. Ot servicé in and out of ocon Simoulon taken off the + mentite Sie Ses The boat was removed about a ing adventure on the cold waters)... of the Sound. z | “When about half way across the bay,” the letter sets forth, “the engine on the Pioneer stopped. In an atternpt to start It, it backfired, to the off and gasoline after that setting fire ‘Things happened quickly | FIRE EXTINGUISHERS PROVE TO F MPTY IS “ame “The engineer rushed to the deck and asked the captain if he could turn on the seacock. ‘She ts gone! ho exclaimed. | “When the wheels of com-| den of. turning the merce and lighting the city Mayor E. J. Brown announced that 6,000 kilowatts, or 6,500 horse. passengers heard this power, was shot over the transmis: there was a rush for the boats, but) sion linen from the Gorge plant to/ there was only one. The davits and| the North End substation, and then | tackle were so rusted and the cover) over the city’s distribution system warped on so tight it took some|-the turning on of the juice was time to lower the boat Into the| merely a test, but the load will be water. | increased as the tests continue. “When she took water one of} In about two weeks President the lads called out: ‘What is the| Coolidge will press a button at the matter? She is leaking badly.’ On| White House in Washington, D. C., investigation we found large hole| which will open the two generators in the bottom of the boat, but one|to full capacity, or 60,000 horse: | man took an old sweater and plugged | power up the hole. When this reaches the city, the secured steam plant on Lake Union will be| shut down, while the Skagit picks up | Its load. “We life preservers and waited developments because we had done all we possibly could to ald. “When the captain tried to xound| ‘The current whieh reached the city | the 5.0.8, there was only enough| Sunday camo from generator No. 1 air to.give a few wenk blasts. | No. 2 generator will be dried out in “But by opening the sea cock, the|a few d it is said. | @ THE STAR presents, begin- ning tomorrow, another fiction achievement—Isabel Ostrander’s latest detective story, “The Tat- tooed Arm.” It’s the most baffling the most bewildering, the most brilliant mystery story of the year. @ “The Tattooed Arm” thrusts itself from out the door of a limousine and kidnaps the daughter of a wealthy broker. ||! Why? What motive? Only America’s mistress of mystery stories could fashion it. You'll get a real thrill in the climax of “The Tattooed Arm.” Start it in The Star Tuesday. | | i] | Kraurer | Leopold instal t Circulation in The Seattle Star Wash, under the Act of ¢ ogress March &, INDAY, SEPTTEMBER FIGHT TO SAVE LIFE OF YOUTH Chicago Citizens Urge Pardon for Poor Boy Facing Gallows Death HI NHICAGO, Sept ng ney Thomas B. Swanson toda ° ared the petition for pard 1 a J poor f life have enlisted aside by Governor 8m: 1 and } 1 Loeb, naires, who confersed fer of Bobby Franks ASK GOVERNOR FORK PARDON Swan nf will have Gr time Small e United F 21d pardon some be board of pardons. ank: for the pardon on | nda that the testimony con-| n wit @ murder of Pa al puders was #0 anto ber ulor I ardon Is refused, Swanson said | © would ask for commutation of All I ask for ts almple justice for this poo Swanson said EDITOR OPPOSES DEATH PENALTY The Chicago Tribune today print 4 an editorial stating it would he. unfalr te hang Grant and Walter 20, who confessed the Sou dern killing With Richard Loeb Jed in th and Nathan © instl tution at Joliet, it would be grossly to hang elther Krau or ¢ editoria had no means acular fight fixed by as theirs that heir cases, ne pen aw for such of, Kic might in bo fulft in acocrding to the crime committed, and withou' 1 any other case. But t a |higher logic, which protests against such inequality of punishment an 6 cold | | nist the law | they to regar Only 26 precincts were missing | “One - our crowd ene to uae 6,100 Horsepower Used i as ‘heer om unfair e gee 4 ad day vote ds Hartley | with a fire extinguisher. It proved Grant ai rauser while Loeh a Ceci cose whecle betes, cant | to be empty of Nquid. Another was| City Sunday Night |Leopold excape the penalty for a Slight gains for the candidates| handed him and it, too, proved worne crime,” are expected when the official count |empty.. Then the large extinguisher] gy.01 current, after nearly a year] Bartley Grant. father of the is made. In Clarke county the offi-| was used until its contents were! (7 4, reached Seattle Sunday, (Turn to as: Column 1) cial canvass gave French five more|empty, and the fire was not out| iia picked up its share of the bur FISHER DIES OF HEART ATTACK Treasurer of Milling Com-| pany Suddenly Stricken Burr Fisher, treasurer of the Fish- er Flouring Mills company, died sud- |denly from a heart attack in his apartment at the Wilsonian, early Monday morning. With his wife had from and son, Jack, he returned to Seattle Wednesday an extended trip In Buroy taken for his health, The Fishers had | just taken their they apartment, whence returned Sunday evening after j visiting relatives, Mr. Fisher was ap- | parently well. He was seized with the attack and died in a few moments. Mr, Fisher was also secretary the White-Dulany Co. ident of the O. W. of and vice pres isher Co, Ba came here from San Francisco 1918, He was born in Missouri, Febru 17, 1872. For years he was in the mer cantile business in Missoula and Bo» eman, Mont. 1924 Washington EDIT! “ Year, by Mail, $1.60 OME ON Tots Seeking Father H ere| Sent to fore Delivery 24 Here are Ellis, Clyde and Hazel feet acoestiy who came to} Seattle from Idaho in care of General Delivery, and found |‘ that neither that accommodating old gentleman nor their| father, Claude E. Hathaway, was there to meet them. The Travelers’ Aid Society will take care of them until he| shows up. —Photo by Frank Jacobs, Star Staff Photographer BY G, LUCILLE BUTLER Jered them up, shabby clothes and ‘ Pp” I want my papa,” wailed /all, into her arms and comforted | d-year-old Clyde Hathaway, |them—and took them to a nice, pathetically, as he gazed up into the | breakt: nd things began to |cheer up a bit Meanwhile, phone wires were acyl and every ene bent to find papa. Thru the elers’ Aid society, | one of the many oka tuben cul vate. ing from the. Community Fund, eyes of th of the Trav | King st, station, fast-time Monday, before day-break. “Mother sent us to general delivery harming lady in charge | Ald society at the a-littleafter-break He had been there lers’ and he didn't meet us!" supple-|countless old and young and needy | mented the 1l-yearold little mother |travelers find comfort and succor, of group of young travelers, |and YOU, dear reader, are one of | Hazel Hathaway, reaching automati-|those who make thls possible thru foe ly around into the telephone | your contribution to the Community booth after young Ellis, who, with 6. | Fund. | year-old pertinacity, was Investigat-| ——— ae jin all the mysteries In sight : ‘these threa littie children arrivea| Heaviest Sentence | lin after two nights and al foe thls the Unon tacee| for Dope Is Given train from Burley, a small town in} Federal narcotic agents from the | Idaho. Little divorce orphans, they | Seattle district office secured a con-| |have been in care of their mother| viction and a 10-year sentence for there, who works In a laundry. Re-}a Chinese in’ Boise, Idaho, this cently, their dad, who is a plasterer] month—the heaviest ever assessed] in Seattle, offered to take them against. a narcotic law violator. in | ti school lets out” and after several | that. state. ! letters received at “general delivery"! Harry V. Williamson, chief of the |here, their mother put them on the district office, Monday received a re- |train, tagged with the same address, | port from Agents Davis and -Bal- rommended them to the care of God} jaine, who acted with Police Chief nd thelr father—and went back to| ernest Stoops, catching Ad Chuck her Inundry tubs—and the eternal] for the sale of yen’ shee, on Sep-| struggle. tember | 8 j And there was no daddy to meet PRS But they wore turned over weet foster-mammy, who gath * STAR'S SUIT UP |them! toa |So He Recke Ging and Took the Bills | A thief Sunday outside the National Cash Register Co.'s office, 1616 Third ave., to a: mire a window display of eight $1 bi morning paused | | Argue Phone Raise Motion | He is survived by his wife and te Monday Afternoon Apparently he found the bills in sons, Jack Barnett, and the follow: | | dispensable to his welfare and pock-| ing brothers and sisters: Mrs. W. W. | etbook. A brick crashed thru the Warren, Will P. Fisher, 0, D. Fisher,| Attorneys for the Pacific Tele-| window and the dollar bills disap: | Dan R. Fisher and 0. W. Fisher, Jr., [Phone and Telegraph oe. and Carl | pearnd in possession of the _thiet. all of Seattle |. Croson, attorney for the Seattle | ” 7 vill be held a | Star, Monday afternoon, at 2 0’ The | funeral will be held at the| were to argue a motion to quas |Gun No Good if He | Bonney-Watson parlors, et date not yet ‘Tacoma Woman Will| Aid G.O. P. Campaign CHICA § §.—Miss Cora Alney: Re: Tacomnil * Wash, and Miss Emma Chandler of Stillwater, Okla., havo been appointed directors of or- ganization of business and profes- ional women in. their respective states, the republican national com- jinittee announced today. To Tell About Bar Meeting in London Willis B, Herr Battlo will tell about their travels thru Europe and t¥® American Bar association convention in London at the weekly luncheon of the Muntel- pa} League of Seattle at Hotel Frye, Tuesday afternoon Members of the bar of Seattle are cordially invited to attend in Mey Ros and Judge Alfred | associat jon officials here. against fa Division Commercial t W. J. Phillips in |'The Star's case to avoid payment of the Increased telephone rates A. demurrer to the application of the case in superior court was to have been argued at 1:30 Monday Since it has not been assigned, ar- guments on this demurrer were to be postponed because of priority of the federal court argument before Judge Jeremiah Neterer, Is ase of The Star Myers and | Superintend Sleeps; $29 Gone} Harry Sogov, 1927 First ave., had $29 under his pillow Sunday night. He also had a pistol to guard the cash, But he left the door unlocked while he slept, and awoke to find cash and gun missing, having dis. appeared while Sogov was “pounding his car,” |22 Chinese May Be | Denied Admittance Asking that writs of habeas corpus for 22 Chinese held here for deportation be denied, Immigration Commissioner Luther Weedin Mon- day filed returns on the cases of the wives and children of Chinese- American merchants. Most of them have been held for deportation since arrival, July and following tn- vestigations by the special board of inquiry which turned down their Dampness Brings Control of Fires A sharp rise in humidity and drop in temperature today had. greatly reduced the forest fire hazard in Western Washington, Fires that had threatened Saturday were well under control today, Fal) rains, scheduled for an early arrival, are expected to settle the fire problem for this year, TWO CE) {again?’ OPEN. MILK WAR | | Crehan’s Charge Jap Milk Is the Seattle Milk Shippers’ associae~ jnatural conditions on the farms that |the jit into Seattle,” {to produce 100 pounds of milk.” TITLE. THRONGS WELCOME | AVIATORS | World Loopers Are in Illinois on Way to Seattle; Hop From Dayton \ AYWOOD FLYING FELD, Chicago, Sept. 15.—The world flyers arrived here 51 p.m. to Seattle, ators greet- Thousands of spe ed the In the crowd w two sisters of Lieut of the three repi 4 flyers Willam hel and A Gertrude here from Cassopolis, the e fir lieutenant an@ were among t to engulf him he first to land was the flagship Chicago, piloted by Lieut. Lowell Smith. Then the New Orleans, piloted Lieut. Eric Nelson, slid graces fully to the gre followed by the Boston, piloted b ut. Wade, The three army planes were em corted by five machines from May wood, The machines flew over the loop and were greeted by the shriek of hundreds of factory and steamy boat whistles and the bray of thous ands of to horns. GIRLS WELCOME DARING AIRMEN So dense was the crowd that the plan to take the flyers all the way around the field in machines had te be abandoned before the tour was completed. Girls leaped on the running boards to shake hands with the pilots a their mechanicians. E “This ‘ts the biggest crowd. we've hit yet,” Lieut. Smith declared. “It certainly great to se@ this turnout! Smith said the flight from Dayton | was without incident. The weather was good and conditions generally vere excellent. “‘Would you make the flight over he was asked “Once is enough,"’ Smith laughed. ‘I wouldn't do it voluntarily, but if I was ordered to it again, | would.’ The next tour around the world will be made in less time than the army flyers are doing it, Smith de clared. HERE TUESDAY Issue Is Denied The first offensive in a new Seate” tle milk war will come Tuesday whem tion will cut off its supply of mili to the Mayflower Dairy, one of the city’s biggest distributing concerns. On Wednesday, the association an- |nounced, it will reduce the wholesale price of milk, from its farmer mem- bers, from $2.50 per hundred pounds ~ |to $1.80 per hundred pounds, I. G, Guitteau, secretary of the as: _ sociation, said Monday that the price reduction wasn’t brought about by would justify such a price, but that the farmers were simply meeting an emergency situation. CREHAN CHARG JAP MILK IS IS! James Crehan, president of the Mayflower Dairy, charged that the price reduction was ordered in an effort to keep outside shippers from” jbeing able to get their milk into Se- attle. “When the association notified us that they would furnish us no more milk, we made arrangements with association in Snohomish and Pierce counties to buy milk and ship he said. “The drop to $1.80 was ordered in an attempt to prevent this. At this time of year, wholesale milk prices normally |should be going up and not down. {It costs the farmer more than $2.50. E Crehan charged that the fight on a { es to Fare 4, Column 3) HAD THE GOODS — Three Youths Arrested With, Chinaware From Cafe Accused of the theft of two silver sugar bowls and other silverware from Boldt's cafe on Third aye, early Monday morning, three youths, Melbourne Reed, 17; Mark Ruther: ford, 22, and Dewey Smith, 24, were» arrested at Rainier ave. and Bran- don st. by Patrolmen 8. T, Lipke and A. 8. Kelly. 3 ‘The youths when arrested had the sugar bowls, two creamers, salt and pepper shakers, and cutlery, as well as three bottles of home brew, police charge. ‘The silyer was stolen by according to Washington Forest Fire| entry applications, under the new immigration law, three youths who ate an early break. fast, cafo employes said,

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