The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 11, 1924, Page 1

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The oe With the Biggest Circulation in Washingto a HOME EDITIO ul VOL, 26 Home <a SEATTLI Find Clew in $10,000 : Daylight Holdup Here ge t AKS MULE) “In Capital Romance | MINE BAS, OF NO. 221 WASH., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, to Scion of iz irst We're still eat 19 Others at Lodge Home Not Expected to Live ARSENIC WAS IN DRINK “I Cider Sold to 50 Inmates for Party by Store Man Eig t RECOVERED Chief Censures Cops for Laxity in Handling Case CALLS THREE ON CARPET Precincts Were Notified for Over Three Hours amily” Sen here PUZZLE police declare Claws, whieh will be a big f Ing the four bandit the daring $10,000 daylight rob bery on Pine st, between First and Second aves.. Monday noon, were unearthed Tue Lima, Ohle sland, 0 Marion, 1 ar his home at P. EB. O'Connor, I The monry Thomas F. Madigar when found, but A ity, N.Y fon ‘ontained the loot c W. Slade, 8 aw, M y from LeRoy Johnson theater, and of the Col F. Whit B. F, Allen, ¥ All avatlabs Horizontal. Vertical. near Lake uA ine. 1-24 ine Nae te- <t : n “ from. th nidio station. —\_ radio station. sford precinct police at . . Shortly before the money ngs A treatin the Weet In were reported found Police Chief 6 : ; Severyns had severely repri st manded Captain Hedges, Ser ‘ geant Griffin and Patrolman A Cline for negligence in not noti ‘ . fying precinct stations sf the nappy. dentist holdup, Hedges was in command la ‘James Mochien of headquarters when the rob: is tandlor bery oceurred, with Griffin under , For a pettent him and Cline on the switch ‘ s " were tified b t w t for thre 4 Sign on the back ef = Ford ' whether SKIDDIE CAR ‘ eZ ives x Copyright by Harris & Ewing ; ; ar The engagement of Frederica McKenney, one of Wash- failure to act ington’s moat prominent socicty maidens, to Blane Mallan,|,,°o'120* Phoned meager details Co Pa. member of one of the capital's oldest families, has just qs to heard of the holdup. Captain oe t been announced. Duncan McKenney, Miss McKenney, daughter of made her debut two years ago. Frederic Hedge id chief Where the worst is like the best “HEAT LAW ES Soattle Divided on “BROWN ATTACK Snow Hastens Compromise Ordinance Monday Uti lities Tax Plan COWARDLY" Hasi ee a =< — Re: Anti- Saloon Man Says May- f : : § athe <eity bifc util or Misquoted Harding DEARIE, WHERE'S , THE CAN tax ¢ put jes may make OPENER?’ xy Councilman Campbell bistieee' to"! M n made a cowardly ( i Goods week ought to entiment appears more 1 reduce th ate tack on a dead state who is be carefully observed by bride posed measure Hares: Dra . able to defend himself Monday grooms. Canned goods have rit PP saat the late President saved many of them from starva Nathan Eekstein, — man a5 t saying that if the ad tion abacher dhe wixhe i had kno how th oF ONY ORE t was t enforced : H. 6. Clark f D\they would noth paswed it eek Dearborn I ve not studie 10 cha nae th ttle Hi B J going to} , Alfred H. Lundin, wno BCAN" | Tt aa aait Ni ! ; th pchacae= made) by)) the ies of the Pe Gazette bound ilso declined to comme 4 ce . nay 1 ok ent @ f E mn 4 compromi. a ; a nals CHL Bickel, ele ‘ pplie Anti Le Am } - Lit Gee Ge ¢ b €) da anid cold, Dr. A. G, Snow, dentist 14, 1 ' x sins ‘ : Children's Boo “ y Mon had t ht ex Exchange buildin I think the (Turn to Page 9 Column 1) Ae, sie de fh ay OE DROP IN ANOTHER KAILSIN, t nly council member regi think Hardin the constitution, pune managers mu heat apart MeBride t Tuesday fol these people who ents to 60 dégrees from 7 to Wi lowed up an ck he made upon want to stop a mi 65 degrees from 8 to 9. They Voted to Disineorporate, but the Old|the mayor at a Monday night meet m getting a 63 degrees thereafter up to EES Dali pa aa oa “ 1g of the Seattle Interchurch coun din coat be Guard Refuses to Disband the “City” ‘ail: followitte te Mayera apesen te burning — people was approved St mine he veteran ative George McLaugh BY LUCILLE BUTLER for certain until the formal report| ‘I'm not hore to argue the merits them in oit Mayor Brown. cit health depart 0) t 0 the Vacific highwa and recheck of last Tuesday olec-}of the ct with the mayor of Se ° d that “only trait sbout six mi outh of Seattle |tion js turned in to them by the /attle” he told The Star, “nor to at 1 tent tae) olf at artment holies MAN \ine little town of election. board here tack, him for his sonal bolief? " olf ; the measure Jon use it's Just You seo, as fa last election's | But I do want to defend the namq bil orf tail lent etly! I's going to be retur ww, the disingorporation |of Harding from this cowardly ‘ani ’ Mrs. Harding Feels fjewlt. to ako ouryel ; fin won | 10 vagaltipt 96, or a {t ules Ailotatten and tema ‘ is approach the subject fro a dif- | eae ot nd-nolorally, af-| MeBride, who Is touring tho Weat Weaker, Is Report ores: tér helng-ag, iheotporatall, oity for{with Dr. 1, HM. Chorrington, authat WARIO Ont 0 .-Mrw The nd yf \the past 16 years, the elty fathers |and general secretary of the World oe ay rren (. Harding today ia we Tukwila i kr oj) didn't want to se@ tho little town | League Agdinst Alcoholism, als: (as Dogg Aa Rasrdinsee sa olen Wie and haust ifter a sleepless | whether they really haveta town to | lowe its identit quoted from Prosident Coolidge hath a 1, seeing WF night, Dr. ¢ awyer's official take care of or not. Half the pop: The “back to ‘the count ide law enforcement addre and sald great ne te PAINE ciatemont on her condition sald to-| ulation of the former—presont (draw | declare they won the oléction and | "Your mayor should sit at tho mivaby ‘picked from our own back | “Mrs, Harding had a poor night,” | delete) ttle city of the fourth class, |county only, The “stick to Tuch alts uccessful statesmen say. Ivident yar heat ever Fates and thenee 16 6. Hutoti tld believe they are living in the town |wila’ faction are equally certain|ly his political aspirations are not reading Hergerhelmer's The Lay Anthony eed i oak and exhausted |of Tukwile, ‘The other halt stoutly |they are Tukwila town ip spito of [high for such opinions arent, carry is Riera his toornings Her. general condi.) maintain tiey living only in| the returns, claiming i /tukes noting anyone to the White House o A, J, 8 {tion Iw not wo good.” ounty, Nor will they know to the governors’ mansions,” (Yuen to Page 9, ial i) The Seattle Star @ VETS IN CITY TO PARADE! Seventh Armistice Day Celebrated; WEATHER Original Uniforms Are Scarcer Temperature Last 24 Hours | Tad eevee fh BY JIM MARSHALL 2) ttle fathers and ' M* ri s riving home TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE Pus g work, * I vill discover the o d army O. D melling of moth bails, aid out on the be y by wives preparatory to celebration — of | Brace Bridge Cracks ea rm: , mistice day. t is the | Heavy Timbers Support Breaks i the cite ae West Seattle Structure Pillars oF the ulcheations. han ale proached the the first— N 1918, wild hilarity of ovember ll, \. arrows SHOW WHERE CRACKS ARE,» in line when the the tune police band, from Second and ceed south ch north om Pine to ave, and and at Had al of the parade be seven divisions: departments, nd the marshal. sec troops, marine navy reserve, na R. O. T. C. units First, police Fort La deatchme nd fire ird, veterans’ organizations, “with members of the D. A. R Daugh ters of the Confederacy; fourth, other veterans’ bodies and the Salvation | Army; fifth sixth and se fire Girls and bands ai All banks and public offices were wed for the day, which is, by proc amation, a public holiday, In addition to midnight shows at weveral theaters, the American Le | clon's “Night in Paris" exposition, at the Hippodrome, was to wind up in ® gorgeous celobratiqn. CONCRETE HAS THANKSGIVING CELEBRATION Ghost of Centralia Affair Lifted From City W. W. ARE ALL GONE This picture shows the location of cracks in the concrete | Residents Glad No Blood- shed Resulted work for the viaduct connecting the west approach of the HERMAN new Spokane st. bridge to the bridge proper. The heavy timbers used to shore wp the overhanging sidewalk until the BY A cracks can be filled with new concrete, are shown in the (Gyr RETE, Nov, 1 oe hotograpl Photo. by Prank Sucobs, Star Biatt Photographer |,., EVIE Gay in Concrate todiseaay photograph. hoto by Frank Jacobs, Star Statt Photographer |the ‘ehost of a Centralia Ammistien bloodshed, that has been stalking jaround the jlittle town for the past week, has been routed. With the The bridge, Blackwell s how serious open for Thanksgiving. ks in the concrete aid, will be \ ANY are several visible in the con Some ¢ and} crete work, on the, viaduct to the) Steel beams for the roadway already | more than 100 of the men who were west approach of the new Spokane | Have been filled under pressure. Th€| keeping the strike at the Stone a two worst. crgcks now are at the|.. t. bridge | Webster Baker river project at fever junction of two pillars with the un-|) 0°) heme City Engineer Blackwell, however,| der surface of the howe, { Heat, came the break j : The jungles where the men said nid they were not seriou u safety measure, timber | r : jto be members of the I. W. W, had he brid, will be perfe pports have been erected in two} mped is deserted. Th ‘eti that ¢ © not unusual es, reaching from the foot of the| ou Pt. tT eee ee ° oat ridges » the present cracks ne ler side of the sided} ne Which has been mainteas a 1 be forced under bh Biong the ross baie ° pillars on} are to be} also is de erted. The strikers’ very jridding of the town yesterday of — to the plant - Ac el support pra n “safety fac-| removed when the eri ave been | “ause seems to have been: desig r will not. be impaired in the/ filled and the concrete forced into|, But the main street of the town | ighteat Ria eae is alive again, with the townsfolk, Ibers of the sheriff's force that blood: shed has been averted, Mayor Ole Nelson, in a statement Tuesday. expressed the of the town Guess How Many Tons of Rain Have Fallen; Try Again; You’re e Off): gratification No one was hurt; no strikers, no | deputies, in the handling of a situa: tion a looked threatening, And at all of us must be most | hankeut a |who have been keeping close to their = homes, joining in thanks with mem: ; to The Star , a fi At the office of the power plant ~UESS how many tons of rain have fallen on Seattle since!G. c. Jessup, superintendent, November 1, pressed his satisfaction, too. “We | ‘i i ’ Seis are law waiting for 250 men and Guess again; you're ‘way off. jwill keep right at it until we get | The ure is 25,220,600 tons. Experts figured Tuesday | back to onr full strength,” he said | that, he id it all fallen in one splash, the city would be flat) ™ a yeas aa a war vet: i : re 5 ~ sag (eran, said: ‘All of us here sure are | on its back. But we're not, It’s the rain and the filtered | oi.4 erything turned out so: peaeee sunshine that keep us going when the other fellow’s down. In October this year nes fifty million tons of rain fell on the city; more than twice much as fell in October, 1923. The figures are: October, , 2.05 inches; October, | "5: 1924, 5.03 inches. In the first 10 days in November 2.7)!" She says inches of rain fell this year; last year only .07 of an ineh| fell. To date, Seattle has 1 2.1 inches more of rain than in jthe same period last year, but the fall still 67 of an} {inch below the normal fall over a period of 34 years. iby The tonnage is figured from the fact that an inch of rain, over an acre, Weighs 139 tons, Seattle’s area is 67,200 acres and the comnutation is simple. Atap and for some distance down each side of Snoqui aulmie pass there are about four feet of snow. The road is being} hapt open and will be kept passable as long as possible, | Blewett is reported still oper? but dangerous on the west side} to “some place else because of wet, slippery roads, A foot and a half of snow) 1: appeared that forces the summit is reported from Wenatchee Tuesday, At)strikers had the lo tunnel, on the Northern Pacifie railroad, there are| he. ne AAS i ‘a aranctnae |several feet of snow, but trains have had no difficulty as| {CWS Sia that dohn Marrymauy & yet, deputy, hung up the Dag, | fully. But there is one old lady in town, shakes her head, “Tt eanont For she feels that the men who run out of town were treated ‘0 iMegally, and that they may come |back and stand their ground, | ‘Tho some of the deputy sheriffs stil! hanging around, meeting all rains and watching all strangers, | thote is no other evidence of activity, about! BH. B. Cl © of the agitators who addr W. W. meeting in the Concrete theater Sunday and who was held in jail over night, was released Tuesday morning and told to got out of town, Tho last heant of him was that he was on his way were | fighting the | over theater in control | who, while joining in the thanksegiy: |

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