The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 28, 1924, Page 1

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pdeattle’s } Mystery Man Still Walks Abroad, Uncaught--Page 10 AND WHITNEY ENJOINED e Newspaper With. the Biggest Cir EATTLE, WASH,, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 2 LS Maybe This Is Reason Why Ruth Garrison Is Still in State Prison does ds at tity bui unle one is able to And it probably wouldn't be regarded wouldn't it wort! But wouldn't be <ie Home Brew costes LANDS ON the read a belie of space i newspaper, judge Say They Threaten udges unless they affected conservative notions, so k were going to tell the -story just as it is being Destruction of || buzzed about the corridors at Third and James ANOTHER ALL-AMERICAN Broadcaster at His fas th ; ee way, Pred, Wet igh au udge the worst way. Fred i Ve ttri¢ F and Mansion d of Douglas, wanted to get Ruth Garrison out penitentiary at Walla Walla the worst The friendly offices of the prosecuting attorney w qu necessary in the fulfillment of Mr. Wettric ambition SECOND TEAM trie of t way. Wettrick Well, anyway, Mr « presently as Malcolm appeared on the scene Douglas’ rm ager in Douglas’ ae ae he be cee campaign for a seat on the superior t h : Stk Seas eerie r crenata} es It was a hard job to put Douglas over, but Mr ; we'd like to play against] » { ¢ the telephone < trick succeeded, and then . ‘ pa Then came the superior court action to obtain the . ntly w the nett ! release of Ruth Garrison. : a: ~~ oe “ geo wo _ Deputy Prosecutor Patterson was assigned the case. h are Gnd Gethelea teet ' F Newspapermen were told the prosecut ttorney’s When fue office would make only “legal gestures” in the mat re ey b ter, the office being satisfied Miss Garrison was sane THE DAY AFTER Little Homer's sick In bed, Wonder is he isn’t dead No, it's not appendicitis, Doctor called it Turkeyitis t and doing fine and everything. The prosecutor wished only to see that the formalities required by law were complied with, ee Be [ here a little fly fell in mussed everything up. The fly was the job of naming a suc colm Douglas as prosecuting attorney Douglas recommended Ewing D. Colvin and resigned so the old board of county commissioners would be sure to name Colvin Deputy Prosecutor Patterson, in charge of the Gar- rison case, which Douglas kinda wanted decided so it wouldn't hurt his friend Wettrick, had looked on his boss’s job with some longing himse He wasn't id near-beer ed for broad id In awe, as Mal- cessor tc THREATE? The affida Lyle and W tant, have up and de jwhich ts ¥ bard The his as titloned to make « I like cold turkey bet-| the fn hibit! consulted about it and so— hot.” The “legal gestures” which were to constitute the he pen a oi BS ceranines prosecuting attorney’s fight in the Garrison ca be- ) “ earefal, father, don't ent came real body blows. on found a lot of flaws Aunt Hannay in Campaign Manager Wettrick’s petition and point them out to the court with characteristic vigor. Th started other opposition and Ruth Garrison probably will stay at Walla Walla quite awhile. But then. Malcolm Douglas got to be judge, didn’t he? d jarkey that Why, father, Willie, you stop Laura at \ J “THOMSEN WON'T =-| Difference Between ulation in Washington ~ The Seattle Star She Had a New Idea ia a Mrs. Willett Put It to Work for Her; Edition | She Answers All Questions by Phone | * TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE. _ RUTH IS ANTI-JAP TO STAY WAR MEET IN JAILFOR CITY! Judge Refuses to Nations of Pacific! Grant Chance to May Gather Here Prove Slayer Is to Plan Defense Sane and Safe Against Orient R! TH GARRISON, Seattle girl | I slayer, will not get a chance | to prove her ECLARING openness that permits no mistaking, Japan has begun her offensive against the white peo- ples of the Pacific,” the Chicago Tribune editorially calls for im that “with an ity and gain re lease from Walla Walla prison, unless she can show that she was insane when committed in 1919 and bas expertenced a change to mediate conference in Seattle by white nations of the Pacific to formulate a plan of defense. | The Tribu ude y wer the length of of Oriental farmers r ward a LEADERS HERE the statutory provisions |ENDORSE SCHEME G The idea meets with approval of € n Miller Freema ¢ t f | men t art to gr |w OPENS UP NO Iman» NEW ANGLES “The From the statutory I} course > am reed nm sald 1 ah i be attended by entitle toa must have | broadminded men and women, open to conviction, illing to study the Mon @irwt tband'end forcauhets a] program on “The facts face—they in this country, y going and emotional ap propaganda b the mental c endant nin charge mu t bass unt be looked in i ) ttle: understood | ‘nd people are too} suspectible to the| of the pays. ve | the Tribune, | Mid-West dailies, | “Japan prepares} ase that she ts gerous to be he has been at large. It the spirit and intent of th the effect that werful ¢ res that | ith “Her war at pres-| the and elsewhere to sce America in the a drive in Ethel M. Willett, better known as “Elliott 2600,” once a | stranger in Seattle, is now a “friend in need” to hundreds out for| of others seeking information. She answers their questions es in Asia and for gold. It is! over the phone. Journalistic, a campaign to break (Turn | to Page 10, Column 4) role of ag “It is economic, a reachi) IDEA! Something that nc one thought of before. And if} t's a good one, then it will bring nt you success. Ethel M. Willett had an idea ee ee WHOLE STUDENT BODY OF SCHOOL TAKEN 30 MILES TO DENTIST’S was never the me “(urn to Page 10, Column 7) and she put it to good use. KELSO. 1N $.—Tt tH It was like this: BLSO, Nov: 36-07 Gia wath ies AID MACFARLANE SHEATSLEY sn THRU CROWDS © Sho came to Seattle almost friend.|| student body of the St. Helen's eae x ioe dls s. One day she found herself|| School, on Upper Toutle river, . eer cin ma a fall THOMSEN, Fri % in need of a lawyer, Where to go?|| Tecently had the toothache. So Bly : fs 1 the difference She didn't know a single one. Soon|| Mrs. Bessie Hooper, the teacher, standing, when aft Ma Psy yt with dhe: ome dismissed school and took her xebiies nagar agg a a ‘Many Serious Trattic Acct thing. eat hhere'e the ideat || tip required two days, but the automo ac Bah oA ees coor ti dents Occur on Holiday | decided ‘that there must bel] gene nouy, finally was, relleved, dent bo finally s relieved. llots of tie Rexte heran parsonage people who are just as , ‘ ago last Monday, wae mon ‘0 SAYS YOUTH WAS DRUNK v= h atrangers as she was People| 1 ass | tor further qu dideonse, Why Sot iprovidel it Hee) BERYL 6 CA E eae ; 5 ness 3 xedto| Negro Musician Attacks |tnem, tree of charge! 1 sepals ‘ j t ¢ Sheat “LT canvassed business and pro- - intareete t am . ene . Victim After Car Hits Him |rcsionat men.” she said, “telling A LowsKow’s persmnce | Arraign Quartet pee jag deal up and them I would like to list them in| I may be a chump, I may be a sap ‘ . t body CCUSED of driving an automo-|pusiness and professional bureau.” | My ideal of art is a Coles Phillips on Murder Charge efusal t : football field to A Wie’ tats wi cerowa peoptlll Rie secure the co-tnerabion “ce miest f sist; see et nao boarding sa cunml|Ehe secured the cooperation of dec. Habeas Corpus Plea Will Be , For Rubens or Whistler, I don’t give aor ¢ t . marke ieee luced Int youth, v a host of others. They saw in it al Heard on Monday oie “4 t t t t Clyd time ulong with P Aen | I may be a chump, I may be a sap,ihere on Ju for | mone 1 up marnet ape : ; us a with hay strian| sy Ke © “for this Sa. For hosiery ads T throw op my cap— pare Bio eae’ ' hor with stabbing him in the wntectsl ee to aye “ving| Attempts to tree Clarence Cheat: Let highbrows call me a reg’lar eng Nara ar Raat a o x a Borne 4 he had knocked the pe-lnng keep my bibies with me, wood, accused in connecton with the chari, and Ora ixgle. ‘Tug i a ; r Withulite cat a ; hijacking of the Beryl G and the A fat-headed chump, a thick-headed|'s accused of firing the fatal shot;| Deputy Prosecut H r fe outstanding fea is how the “voice on the|™urder of her commander and his sap— |the others as members of the hold-'Friday said tt pal ee ea giving day traffic! .), fe able to tell you about so/17-Yearold ‘son, were halted again MY IDEAL OF ART IS A COLES) UP © ed cor ‘ , nmer said. [hie ator aceldents in which half a dozen| none” is able to tah yon things Frid Arguments on habeas cor= PHILLIPS GIRL! SEAT ona were injured Ber t weckine information, | PUS Proceedings started in Cheat- isha rnon n, 16, was ar-|“ hea Ht idee,’ folka. bine ‘woken, (70C half were postponed until It’s only a question of time until healed Monday by some educ of the younger word puzzles, ) t tor blames the low morals | generation on crosw. (Thankegtving day.) Early up, and to the office, where working till the after. THAT IS REAL GENEROSITY EVERY TIME: IT GENERALLY HAS A BIG KICKBACK © ce home, 4567 13th ave. Judge Mitchell Gilliam. n drunken condition, ao-| eter Known as ~"25L lot-2609, make | xtradition proceedings against cording to the pollce, on a charge of|%se of, a6. unforturinfe vexnertence wood, meanwhile, are under ng into a crowd at Firat. ave.|S2¢ once had and turned It to good} © must be recorded ad ad Virginia st. ‘The boy's autonyo: |PoCust transmitted to the Canadian g ment at Ottawa and then ri okeh of Secretary of State Charles 1 into the wd boarding 2" EXPECT ARRESTS Evans Hug of 208 es at Washington noon. Home, where did find the house BY SAM GROFF | = feet. He was cut and brut eit le the search for Owen Fra iy comes a Crone cad'e | THOSE who, know watts | Foy RESTARAUNT 4] HOLT ME OLD, COtLEGE |: |Oleery's sister, | Mise mlleabethic 2 ais merly a Smith ballotig, cigae tela D, Shannon, the chirngeons, and we did chief of polige will not won- | DIO YoUSE Gir DAT In? t! [CHur P- DE CHIEF O'Leary, wa tting on the street Working on Murder of Cal. § ding 4 Kk have six noble dishes for them, dreesed | der at this story. Among his | GMOK ar when the auto fender tore her " had shifted to California, Frid ay reeg, Sad mighty merry, and 3) wcores of friends, Chief W. B. | om GIMME Dis ont from her back. Two other per- Banker in Canyon | They aro now the only two of a things mighty rich and handsome about | toriously soft heart. But “Bill,” | the police also wero injured. yy s may be made today in| implicated in the murder of Capt. | me, which is more than ever my parents! while minus an overcoat, is not SAY BOY ADMITS the murder of William 8. Feo, bank. |W. G. Gillis and his son who are at | bear Ip te coco Bae A great deal soft in the head | DRINKING CIDE! er, Whose body was found lying un-| liberty. The Canadian woverniaaay i ner, with extraordinary grent pleasure, A few days ngo-a shivering | Police say the boy adm he! dor a bush in rustic Lytle creek can: es bide meaear ae especially to myself. And no to bed. | trusty in the city Jail ad) Ween. Qrinking: Nand Cows: jivon ep etins 1 © seeki he sibs | Severyns for a coat to cover his | town and was so @© oxleated and) Probability of one or more persons | Officers stil or - sa { ne ‘ attle has eight powerful broad-| thin shoulders from the chill of | k that he could make no report./ being taken into custody within a/| corpses of Captain ais nd his or, casting station winter, And with the quick | 5 utomobile was Ing} few hours in connection with the] sald to have been thrown overboard SE endeared him | uway from the “scence i-lerime was admitted by Sheriff Wal-| from the Beryl G after the battle { sympathy pt ieee See ae | dent, a street car conductor, B, W./tor A. Shay of San Bernardino coun-| which culminated in their deaths, | jourd and tried to stop tt, but the) here. | 7 Maal See an eine S| Iriver hurled him into the crowd, San |Mine Flooded; One made his muck to his Wash n area ington st. Haunts when he was | ai: at f The boy was tra Mrs. Harding Gives | Drowns, 9 Missing released. Mtrutting back and | 1 the Ne man forthrin all tho glory Of thé no Ralph stevonson, negro musicien: | $50,000 in Her Will] canvire, watey Now = quite-shabby - and ~ very - woolly { liberty on $1,000 bail, charged) MARION, ©, Noy, 28.—The will of} Righty. miners were imprisoned to= overcoat, he was the immediate | a swell feed wit’ him tonight zens of Washington st., all fight and he intended to keep it Ith having Knocked down with ul the late Wlorence Klingy Harding,| day when water rushed into. the objective of tremendous envy | G'wan, git away fum moe, you ing for the priv of being Attar this,’ Bilt, sasscinnien | Queomonne: dames * ena rie widow of President Warren G. Hard-| pentan colliery at Dunvent “Hello, hello. What's for dinner?| among his pal You aln’t in my social tate < (diaroiow Gin ven ech th alvatanve ri) tail {SRD ANE ANG AURORE Connelly | ing, was filed for probate her todays} Seventy succeeded in escaping, one Hamburger steak? Dearie, Ive got where'd ‘jor get de swell | give anything away tail’ | were oni | Cosh bequests in excess of $50,000; was diowned and the body recovers 4 Fs j + f a an important engagement at the of-| blanket?” they chorused. ‘a The next morning when Sey | subject of nice woolly overcoats. the fellow who gets it that if | Connelly was crossing Wifth ave.) are distributed generously among! ed, and nine were still buried at , fice. 1 won't be home,” | “Alieheh-h,” grinned the coat- | eryns went to his office he | After much difficulty he tells where ne got it, rH [at Pike st, when Stevenson kne her relatives and el friends, No] noon today. Rescue partion were ie er | ed one, “de chief o' police his- | found his ante-room swarming | oryns cohyvinced ‘om that he had | send na policeman out to take a down, AN argument foto complete estimato of the value of the} doing their utmost@pwith little bs , A.J. 8 | wolf gimme it go's 1 could go to with 26 or 30 unwashed deni- | one—and only one~oyervout left, | it away from himt (Turn to Page 10, Column a) catate is yet avallabl lehance. of success, es

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