The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 4, 1924, Page 1

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a i_ * ere = 4 es” Progressive Party stands for the full control of Government by the entire | electorate in the interest of all the people with special privileges to none. |] GIANTS WIN OPENER IN 12TH! bx 6 = The Newspaper With the Biggest Circulation in Washington WEATHER i The SeattleStar [bm ti ae Becond Clans Matter May 3. 1899, at the Postoffics at Seattle. under the f Congress March 19, Per Year, by Mail : - I VOL, 26. NO. 189. ete SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1924, I Home “Hello, Seattle! We're in Dayton, ” Phones Eva Meeker 4a rev “He Got Me All et Out!” Confesses Lieutenant Kelly ¥ 12 Giant Home Runs Feature First Battle Kelly and Terry Hit for Circuit as ‘ H LO, Seattle, We ar e arrived here okeh and in good order at 11 o'clock.” hat was the message of Ezra Meeker over the te lephone this morning. He called up the Seattle Chamber of Com- nerce from Dayton, Ohio, immediately after his arrival there with Lieut. Oakley G. Kelly, famed transcontinental flyer, Howdy, folks! Who d'you think | 4nd commander of Vancouver, Wash., aviation field. GANG rf will win the world series? Huh? “The trip was not hard, and I'll take it again,” said the Why, man, you're crazy 93-year-old ox team pioneer, as he continued to talk over ~Albbg. 2 the phone. “I'm going to fly to Washington tonight in an freund/ army plane, and will see the president Monday. oft,ax, Major Curry, commander of McCook field at Dayton, then} peopl | got on the wire. “T'm glad to welcome Seattle’s distinguished pioneer to There was a wild rumor town this me ie th game would bh to be ¢ gogo taipllate | Walter Johnson Opposes Art Nehf couldn't see the scoreboa errant a : i] eee Dayton,” Major Curry said. “The mayor and a delegation | WASHINGTON, Oct. 4.—Coming from behind to score | fis loner 08 of Dayton citizens escorted him from McCook field to W right en iy Slugged, but Routs the tieing run in the ninth inning the Washington Senators the sport eds favor and det | field, where the rac forced the first game of the world’s series into extra in- egainit tt The n Lieutenant Kelly talked to Seattle. Youths and Recov- nings here today, ‘ eee “We were just 1916 hours flying time from Vancouver! ers Two Cars Stolen | The Giants won in the 12th, 4 to 3. ° . var} tO Dayton,” he said. ra Meeker stood the trip very well,| in Seattle | | og : 4 but he got me all tired out.’ |. Meeker will urge an air mail route from Seattle, connect- NINGLE-HANDED, J. E. VI ing with the present transcontinental route at Elko, S an ng on the D “orrice | when he sees s the president Monday. in urs Mi ines ; ute 2H 4 te J | if “Ma” Ferguson gets elected } ed him with » on the highway governor of Texas, I do hope sve 4 tes = May. | Vincent re- Johnson fanned 11 Giants and pitched fine ball, the homers beating him. Art Nehf opposed him on the mound. Kelly's blow came in the second inning and Terry’s in the fourth, both landing in the left field bleachers. Washington broke into the scoring in the sixth, when Earl McNeely doubled and scored on two infield outs. The park was jammed to its ca-| eit D2 4 many people { e {net memb ere | them over to sheriff's pacity when the Senators el re out on the field. Some were aitting | INNINGS 7} {n the aisles. The housetops out | 4 With a man it's “Try and get it.” tad vee | With a woman, * and get tt wih 4x3 ff Matt Sta > arrest the gangsters nide the park were crowded with FIRST INNING some fans clinging to chimneys | _ 52 27 The bleachers were so filled it] G!ANTS—Lindstrom filed to Me- looked an if they might spill over | |Neely for an easy out. Frisch at any minute. |bunted out to Biuege; it was a ttle | A # conference with the um | sop By. op oung out P pires about the ground rules, the Es . ng Out Ce: te boos took their positions on the|TU8% no hits, no errors field ard the crowd sat buck after| WASHINGTON—McNeely flied to a big cheer. Both Nehf and John-| Wilson. Harris out, Jackson to son warmed up to the very last) Terry; Jackson juggled the ball, but Consider Wiliam Hofbrau Schnicte- j ducing: fritz Debdlatt— | What can you ez; with @ name “ enifled from hi bed | by two of the youths » told Eonar Poa Testifies Pothier Said “Board ™* |: ‘ei: 22 Veoke gow ra He dreened t they w Shock absorbers and inate a lot of waste mo CANDIDATE FOR THE POISON | eats cin — Didn’t Try te Get to Bottom of ; Camp Lewis Shooting” minute and both seemed to be in| got it over for a fast play. Terry good ferm. and Harris collided at first and | i be oa ross word | TACOMA. Oct. 4.—5 evi al Richaras ‘ > Se tore Inte Jobnocn w to the dugout be-)Terry hurt his left knee, but re- “4 inventor a dence { ing th board "Then I asked him about the | 4 and ecattersd the fore taking h place In the box) mained in the game. Rice fouled puzzle. aE of inquir: probed the shoot beard of inquiry and he sald H ran to his house and c and players uthered a@round/to Lindstrom. No runs, no hits, no IP ing of M Alexander T. Cronk-| they were all in on it.” Perdlerctce aptamer A und gays him some vigorous] errors. Old Silas Grump, the sage of at by Bartier the sear Sloe = them until pings. ] . parent liver soon has a slow liver.” at the n ence The teed hen the Washingtox pce took the| | 7 ANTS Ke verre 8 hoe Sfrege ws ‘ Se ts Sani arian ound for his firsi worid's series eee th aia beens Pee! Lizzie, Liezie, fucl-ea i ‘othier maid, be Frankie Frisch is playing second base for the Giants to-| # me eaees Wattad “Gowdy Ihied ina : A forty Acc ardeocpatpintaghety A ea eenuAt cette pitt, dosroarts [as cnet: cho eicion once mt day. He suffered a finger injury to his throwing hand) Th* Fame startel at 2:11 p.m. | edo aiay, Peckinvaugh to Hane she wouldn't ru Oo ell, n neral « Yhio h malor or whethe ap! ‘ Fy , a ; 4 iid’ den the “Ral che ren Mke tes marshal at Provi did. Th were four pitata te recently and it was thought that the Giant captain| BY HENRY L. FARR jris. One run, two hits, no errors. q dlazes. ere Po’ was ar I fired two. The wouldn't be in the lineup, but he took his usual play at the} uto thieves. Goslin out, Jackson to Terry. RIFFITH STADIUM, Wa } = ton, Oct, 4.—Pennant v testified to| fourth xbot came from the rear.” r = ; stuar”adter|): “wollewine thai, Cannon anid Poth x In history tha Wash {!paugh fled to Wilson, No runs, ' en geod de one of/jer made the remark, "That the jth aig Mapper Sire ee ‘the | 2° hits, no errors. o ; @ soldier in eee called of ;| In this “confession” Pothier had| Pothier did not elaborate his state . si | Nehf out, Johnson. to Judge. Lind- 1 Cyan. of wet. grounds and Capt. Robert Rosenbluth of | ment | thing else that it never had before—| oni ‘tanned: Fristh agubien fee { checks are issued to the dough-| 9c Phat hag 0 ie Hebei bnaed ditat been tn want |a world’s series championship base- Peckingpaugh's head. He’ Was ite : ssh eee |CHARGES ARMY BOARD to et to the bottom of it,” ¢ jail. team. o-e rested in March, | ad to the a “| Judge walked. Bluege fanned. Peck- keystone bag. | m | | “4 {ped off second, Ruel to Peckin- ] WERE ‘IN ON IT’ non quoted Pothier as sayi | | With two teams so evenly matched! paugh. No runs, one hit, no errors. j THE NO: 1 expres@ed surpriae that Pothier| they had it would have been en- Aviator at "Dayton Killed ERC |that sharps could not decide on a} Washington— Ruel walked, John | had gotten away with his story be-| threly clear." When Plane Explodes One in City Hospital Near Death; betting favorite and with weather! son hit into a double play, Jackson { fore Bh board ps inquiry, en, A ge to Page Pg ar on 0 | | conditions ideal for the opener, had |to Frisch to Terry. McNeely walked. A @PAYTON, Ohio, Oct. 4—Burt Suspect Is Arrested |n. perfect: baseball setting. | Harris popped to Jackson. No runs, e was killed in mid-air today Se Pp |SUN ROUTS no hits, no errors. hen his. pit p in one of , 7 RAIN THREAT } FOURTH INNING ’ Hoover and inchot May : ws : ! sta ae the int raatial Joe Young, 70, was probably fatally wounded at noon} : y4{ ‘The fog and early autumn haze) Glants — Young fanned; Kelly Saturda gun duel with another man whom he said} nat haa eaused anxiety in the early | fanned; Terry hit a home run into the Tri l d | was Marti ss, 40, on a ranch just outside the city limits] ours of the morning threatening |!eft field bleachers, dropping the ball in for Washington's first big base-|!to the same place Kelly put his; | Wilson fanned. 0: , one hit, Young was taken to the city hospital, where he was found, ot ae (Gaih oe adeee ag ark Fe een See ae to have two bullets in the abdomen and one in the neck. He | seemed hg Naver Baek aeeeeaa tot » Druggist Recognizes Them is believed to be dying. | ela atterhoGn® May Use His Testimony | a8 Former Robbers races tearwaess (Californian Worked With Rosenbluth; Red as a fire chief's Liz; Washington—Rice flied to Kelly; Goslin out, Frisch to Terry; Judge |singled over Frisch's head; Bluege out, Lindstrom to Terry. No runs, one hit, no errors, Young told police officers that he works on a ranch owned! With the weather agreeable, it | by Mrs. Mary Neidmeyer and that G was apparently |was certain that every seat in the (He hopes you believe it isd St ae jjealous of him, and had ordered him off the place several] stands would be filled because more LL he F 8 a di F double the number of tickets Cisne eee) oleae = e.8 BY JIM MARSHALL jseas with the First and Second d+! Two bandits, who a month ago! 2 " {than double per of tickets The w 6 t at most well | Visions, seeing firing line service. He! held up Leslie Molin, dru in hin times, altho Goss does not work there, P pides : available had been ordered weeks ai =3 ’ short. of ‘kick ely tively in| 88 returned as an instructor, a! pharmacy at 17th ave. and E. Jeffer Young declared that about noon Saturday, Goss. drove UP | ago:" ‘The bisachers. in alittle. seo! YORK-—Lindetrom, She iborts Welters senth, of Mat. Alex.| ened to Camp Forest, Ga., and {t| son st., walked into the place Friday | in an automobile and told him to get off the place. Young} tion that seemed almost lost in cen-| | Frisem, 2b) Youngs rf: Kelly, fs ven a : ingle iat arian va : itnere he at is A exander | night appar ity bent on trying an-/refused. Both drew pistols. Young fired once. Go emp. |ter Sy Ae filled * the a ae ! or Ghat eee: at jackson, city council i sod Pe onkhite us due to Cronkt other robber olin told police. * 3 un » old fell i he road while his gail-|hours before game time and th WASHINGTON—MeNeely, oft RPE nd yoict acorn, ana} ® Measure, that he was included| The men became. frightened at ee hase The old man fell in the road e his il |inore expensive seats in the Ieft| | Harrin, 2b5 Mice, +f) Gonliny Wty moking ne balan d Neat wana anit {tt ngineers, to which tae| something, for they turned without | aN BC 4 | field pavilion filled almost as rap || Judge, thy Bluege, 3b; Peckin- z yyeay did Ls 4 Sepeyh for which Capt. Robert Rosen dead officer wa hed, and a%| saying a word and ran out into the| Tony Depino, 9305 12th ave. S., and C. D. Miller, heard | jay. Paugh, way Ruch cy Johnsei | > Say, I want ‘to. ask you face tris J sige ae le street, Police were unable to locate the shooting, picked Young up and rushed him to the hos-| Looking neat and classy in new Behind the plate — Connolty RENT. 7 ; 2y| Herbert r y of After the war uth served| either of the thug A ite uniforms, the Senators were| | (American). | q AREN'T THESE MODERN . r pital. pfyroce wan | . J vie Sekar Gittord P chot, of | with the Bast: Rellef I : eae area On first) base—Klem (Na- | GIRLB A FRIGHT? s = Seika anaes Whe lta naerer Sane The Georgtown police arrested a man shortly after the|*tst on the field. They were given! | donany, i j eta , They | Hoover. Later he was in char ; 3 jan ovation when they emerged from] | “Om. second base — Dincen | | { come to Ta-| gy distribution in Russia, un erage and sent him to headquarters as a sede lthe dugout and started shooting|/ (Amertean), ( Gee Gee declare is expected |the United States grain corporation. =< |around a dozen balls, | ert tBe Rese—Quigtey “(as i pa ee cae Cant, |e, 20 Worked with the American | | (Turn to Page % Column 4) bak aash he she with Capt: | Red Cross. At present he ts connect | * a *% ear lone” oe Hiram Joh scabriage ot |e With the New York City Institute British Vessel Taken With | ‘Po OWS La Ollette hi She knew Pa | $500,000 Cargo D | ° t : Hiram—it wa t Tac | | : ately ot Tacoma youn, acct 8 ot | on, soe Taking Democrat Votes||President an ite Are | . the fathers of the two men the slayer of Cronkhite, will be| NEW YORK, Oct. 4.—Prohjhition | re DIARY ed, §. Rosenbluth, born) 59 on October 18. Hix attorney,|®8e@nts today captured tho British |S al bs | This evening, being of t Odexsa, Russia, will face Ade sourice Langhorne, saya he js un.| Steamer Frederick B off Monmouth HE Literary Digest straw vote claimed by both Coolidge and La e€ere a ertes ame i imake all bert Cronkhite, father of the y pee educated and partly illiterate, He| Beach, N. J., and seized 10,000 cas for president, while incom. Coolidge 10,617; : officer so mysteriously shot and three years of parochial] % Mauor, valued at upwards of a plete and hardly to be considered La Follette, : Davis, 1,864. killed at Camp Lewix in the closing and was, for four y Balt-million dollars a safe guide in predicting the me voters in 1920 gave RIFFITH STADIUM, Wash- tators in’ the stands stood with pestle at days of the war. The elder ( Mert in an orphan asylum. He Joined the| Thirty persons, two of them wom-| Gutcome in November, . shows 11,476 and Cox 2,969, Ington, “Oct. 4.— President bared heads at attention. Har- ibd “Wap of hite, once in command of the 18th) navy in 1913 and served in Pr ama, | ©, Were arrested and brought in} several interesting angles in a showing 1 Follette, among ris shook hands with Mr. Cool- unk a octin fivision, in France, resigned his p0-| Titer he served n Kiteh with the| aboard the vessel, | campaign that. is :keeping even these voters, pulling more trom and Mrs. Coolldge arrived at idge, who examined the ball and my wife ah ition as major general foll At the outbreak of tt | veteran politicians guessing. the democrats than from the re- their box in the grandstand five posed for photographers with Oa tadome on ik h | the armist war he joined the army again tls | The Digest, poll, to date, in- | publican: minutes before 2 o'clock. The his right arm raised. bumpkine,” ned * * | mother died when he was a boy | cludes 689,019 votes in 18 states, | Only four of the northwestern president took off his light gray The umpires grouped them- gail the tenes did F en elder Rosenbluth homesteaded| Another interes ator at the neludin= only a small part of | and western states, that it was felt. hat while the players of selves around, calling for him to. te as he wes in Oregon in 1881 cing \trial in Jonah J joldstein, rat tho Burglary looted three homes in the} the democratic South. It shows | figured La Follette would carry, both teams lMned up and the throw it to them, and he made Wd did wet the here Rogue river valey soon |New York lawyer and friend of the! same district and in rapid succesion |. inn sts a La aro listed in the poll to date, band played, “Hall, to the @ short pitch, Umpire Connolly throw Mt in the tire, alt his ar In this country.|Roxenbluths, who in at Tacoma’ to| Friday night. B Reyburn, 714] lotte, 164,366; Davis, 118,269. ‘These are Washington, Oregon, Chief.” Jumping into the air and cateh- ret Be 7 ed lea bat vols that te be rete x to the Bast, he be atch, voluntarily, for their interests.| 20th ave. N., reported that an Ort The same voters gave for pr California and Minnesota, Mrs. Coolidge was attired ina | ing the ball with one hand. bed, , came supe ulont of a Jewish hos: |For Rosenbluth, L. L. Thompson | ental rug was taken from his home,| dent in 1920: Harding, 402,186, Totals for these four states white dress with short sleeves Babe Ruth and other celeb- ; | ee pital in Philadelphia, then of his | former attorney general of Washing-| Shortly after the home of S Borden, | Cox, 141,868. show Coolidge, 81,831; La Folk and a large white hat. Stanley ritles “crashed” the presidential Another candidate for the Pojson|Pltala In New ¥ state. At the) tan, is appearing. | 610 20th , was looted of $117 ‘The editors of the Digest have le 58,207; Davis, 12,096. In Harris, manager of the Wash- box while the band and soldiers Ivy club Is the gink who springn| Present time he is fleld secretary of] rhe American Legion pont at Ta-|and some jowelry not announced What mailing list 1920 the same vote in these four ington team, brought out a new marched off the field and the the old one about Jeff Davia being the Jewlsh Consumptives’ Relief s0-|coma ts helping Pothier, one of {ts | Mrs, Verna Grandy, 2608 Taylor] is used in the collection of the states showed Harding, 93,370; ball for the president to throw in. umpires called the captains to- | ton old to run for president Iclety of the United States members, in his defense, under direc-| ave, was also victimized. She re-} ballots—what class of persons Cox, 28,414, again showing La Before this ceremony, how- gether and the first game of the eee Robert Rosenbluth is 37 and was|tion of Harold Hayward, post com | portea the theft of a valuable fur| are solicited Follette cutting heavier into ever, the band played “The Star- 1924 world's series got under ! A> J. 8. |lborn in New York. He served over | mander, and some Jewelry. The state of Washington, democratic than republican votes, Spangled Banner,” and the spec- way. |

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