The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 16, 1925, Page 1

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tt tt pt ae ~~~ — The Newspaper With the Biggest Circulation in Washington The SeattleSta j; Temperature Last Hours Manion 10. Minimum. 7 | Today noor we —— a | Boiaved as Second Class Matior MAY 2, 149%, at (he Pomoffice at Geattia Wash, under the Act of Congress March @, 1478, Per Tear, by Math 6600 Pie SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, JANUARY 16, 1925 CET BLAME FOR | EVIL LIFE OF ee ue Carousals at Night by Girl ese Lead to Slaying Mother teed ST! fale START OFFICIAL PROBE Sh etn the Sunday School Pupil Flaunts ag Advice for Wild Companions The Closed « spit tANCISCO, Jan, 16.—De Bettere 2 obi enon, aged'lé yOpAY’S NEWS PICTURE A agp shee Ome « tain of Detectives Duncan Ma hy's delinquen: In the meantime, steps te ne nined me to her & Fietegraph of Jim Fenton at the we way shel of one of the new models at the ante salon. This closed car ls exenting the pro guranteed free from rhuretion » to be chosen by fables, and iis gasoline consump- exnmine mn: thelr report we or not she ty to be anupderess or nent the unusually fow. It be equipped wih a splendid two-horsepower em | te Mileage: 30 miles to a quart | of tats. May accessories. designed to add Tfasty to a car, have been mad FROM SUNDAY SCHOOL TO WINE PARTIES Wekerd equipment, but there ts Opinion differed widely as to the 0 ote las! f elegance that exact responsibility of Dorothy for Minefacturers have overlooked her crime—the apparent! cold bloodad hoot! death of her A fair of spats for tire-boots mother, who ted to the girl's Women's faults ore many conduct Men Rave only two Dorothy fe in a Beerything they say. and ne 12 ru the (Brerything they do! fates hax tts own law of com yamtién. Men with tong whisker a gebereliy bald. early school grades in Portland, Ore., then to Alameda, Cal., where she was church attendant and then of 12, saw her on her first It waa then that she, ar at the age a PEERING INTO THE FL TURE aurn to Fuse ¢ first time, told her mothe: A Hollywood hy al is spectaliz ying with a girl friend 2g in making faces of SEEK T0 - 1 for the night « » her tay be reading advertisement: | bu elry and sl male = pi ke Oe When Governor Hartley raised his right hand during his inauguration Wednesday and |" that AEC eng? BULLIAM MONTANA said, “So help me God, I will,” the first person he thought of was his wife, and the first | manta to her, became an | teers ag ota : thing he did was to turn around before the big crowd and kiss her. . She was pretty hap-|sctual mania, running the gamut of in Legislature Gets Bill to/?¥ after that. The picture ix that of the wife and mother, who has stood Malic: the |v citey aces tac mate wreccheso’e governor in all his political battles and ig now able to rejoice with him in the realization | cyinatown | of his ambition. Photo by La Pine-Rogers Studio | ‘Then } final qua 1 with the mother, who \War Vet Dies After tried to Keep Dorothy's foet on the Dental Anaesthetic right path and Tuesday morning H in BEAUTIFUL, MEN — —___—* RLS! GIRLS! / Seen Him? Sophisticated | | Refer Amendment LYMPIA, Jan. 16.—Al. by the growing sentim: favor of ratification of the labor law, dim Marshall t in ehila the legislature today Have You The Gay, Dashing, she shot to death the mother who r,and became the first mat bore hi é Lover of the Boulevards! TACOMA, Jan. 16 Haft, in Caligaie m aie i on ale E SEMON sought to dodge the issue and 45-year-old war veteran and Sumner | ‘| i Roy edie gage Ve ony | At the LAberty Theater in | # the buck to the voters. | postal clerk, died here late yoster-| | ! a a 5 , ,_ Tals was tnevitable,” sald Di in Seco is Renato tevtaWeatal, of po tay a dentin’ tren ater a | | s\ ORITES HOME ABOUT THE | | wue'ttnce'y Biss } by ! kane, introduced a bill to refer nacsthetic t given fe 1 ve \ : i Elinor Glynn the ratification, on an advisory minor dental oper f 4 hinted eo a %| ballot at the November, 1 The coroner de rie | 1 1 Pp ‘ election avoidable accident iv Wis camica Lavcsaaker ot oe] 4, Westtalts reason, ie waht, was | Sas e § a ur e Main Street SB Me Greatest Love-Maker of the | | that he thought “the matter is | Columbia Highway y : | , Screen || one for the péople to decide | 7 narra ie or % | 2° BENJAMIN L. TURPIN || The resuit of the balloting, how Now Open for Travel OLYMPIA, January 16. ee td Dyyonres Bann. & Co : iat Pumsodes LLL ae ee ee The Colu highway (9° again bee FOLKS: Having accomplished in five days what) je Myers, lawyer, hurrying ‘ot Tropic 1 Passage of the bil t pen to traffic,’ reports «the local any. two bright business men could have done in 10! north on Second a George ihe tead ane beams ‘ automobile club, The° slide which| 73 F ; | i - ——} would be a temporary victory | Automobile clit. Te et. River | minutes, both houses of the legislature quit today for the) 4. Turrell, merchant, seeing the ture han une) {ry t#ende of ratification. Tt |e been cleared away and automo-|Week-end. They'll he back Monday. | automobiles at the show. dacob ature has would stave off almost inevit - , " sia Mt Pete 5 » merchant, feeding i @nsideration a measure which | able defeat at this session bile are now passing thru without’ When I came down here they told me they wanted a! the pirds. Mr. and Mrs. J. T. compel. motorists to pass a This defeat, of course, woula | “fficulty picture of what is going on, and what a fellow really need: Henry, of Cashmere, enjoying for that is one of these slow-motion movie cameras. Here’s a whole week wasted in ceremonials and talk and not a thing) done. A lot of bills have been introduced, but the state could | Reital test. | What are they trying to do? Bur 8% actors from the highways? home life at The Olympic Hotel D. Austen, naval official, on leave at the New Washington. not prevent the ratification res olution coming up again in the in Aged Resident to ! Be Buried Saturday 1927 legislature, and every colt legislature subsequently, until it A Eee ee b John F. Reed, lawyer, accomp. THRIFT NOTE finally. passed. | Rites for Mra. Rachel G. McCar. | get along just as well if none of them ever became law. \ anted- by» his wife, taking Jn has been introduced into ‘The bill was referred to the 88, who died Wednesday, will be As these bills are introduced they are referred to Floyd! automobile show. Thomas J. state “ eamesbe fa J for} judiciary committee, of bs held urday, at 3 p. m., at a Danskin, who is speaker of the house, or by Senator Cleary, baat bon peepee SE insurance for all auto- Westfall is chairman, probably |Home Undertaking Co. chapel. ne | are 7 sae f thin : | along University st. J. L. Mur- : a ensuring favorable action in |terment will be at Mount Pleasant |! the senate, to 1 anagee ne committees. These committees Are) pay, paper merchant, seeing the Tet We'll take a 20-year en-| committee | cometery supposed to go over the bills and make a report on them.| automobile show, accompanied ~ | If the committee doesn’t like a bill it kills it out of hand. | ick of the} aste more H. for « Rohrer, mer. on his wife. waiting by chant, Madison st. Clint W. Lee, print ; Policy on ours, thanks. | i car Some of the members down here are just as time wasting as you are—and some want to w Tie Btingiest Man in the World: | Be oc cane > sstdg renee r I e islator: time. Senator E. B. Palmer, of King county, wants the| ©: Senety Phiten tances: SBM, ‘Panes around his old pipe s s minutes of the last session read every morning, for instance, | turer, taking lun at The r Unites on 2 RE YOU planning to vote against the child labor ee rept arkccar| age le he Py yobed) Guaericttiee, ecteah Moke Sone are consumes 2, ‘ Pp he Fed ated Tadasteias t |down and the reading of the minutes, a useless procedure funnies Olaice Macntem, eke ews print er amendment because the Federated Industries is anyway, is sidetracked. | building. Q ® eer, smiling his way south on Fourth av Wear. Of which 2,799,999 tous, * 2 ° . rs. | timated, are used in printing || °PPosing the measure? | But, on the other hand, Maude Sweetman, who is from} Of bathing girls. Is YOUR vote going to go against it because you | King county, too, strolled into the press room and. told us| —— Abi -ld believe the big business interests of the state are un- |/that she was thinking of getting up and demanding that/|/ MGATL, API animously against it? _members,— especially the older ones — refrain from tellin, | their life histories every tinie they get up to speak. “I'm tired,” said Mrs. Sweetman, “of hearing ’em get up and say: ‘Now, when I was a boy ora farm . I don’t see what it’s got to do with lawmaking, anyway.” It looks pretty blue for the child labor amendment. For some reasons or another most of the house and senate members seem determined to break their prom- | Today’s || Want Ads |] Have an unusual variety of good |] homes. Here {s one that might sult your particular need, SAUCE SAYS Then read this letter, and reconsider: Editor The Star: 3 hoe AO Your open letter to the legislature in The Star has come to our attention, and we wish to state emphatically that the Manufacturers’ / i of Washington has taken no action and expressed no opinion either for or against the child labor QUEEN ANNE New 6-room bungalow with won- amendment. . $ ‘ i ‘ ? |] derful view. Oak floors, fire- Yours very truly, | ises to support ratification and to vote against it. If place, cabinet kitchen, hot alr 4 ; Vashi a business man broke promises like that nobody would | etl padetdord Ercan ie CaM, Pre taesoike A | do business with him, but anything seems to be all right | y Foye er Ad tal BS te A | in politics. | Be Goethe jittie madcap | Prodte-o00' Now turn to the Want Ad gage and see who is offering this one. BRE RA Ser DAE re RED KotH (Turn to Page ¥, Column % ha Monday night came the | ‘Here's Woman the Governor Kissed Round Up “Sheiks” Jazz Murder Hubbies Tries to Shake Both 1 court to her Pickett mentalyy Way in Arcade Building Neer "te be eaMted Wetore | ‘The coroner and the police Friday | Woman With 2 TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE in CONTINUE CASE ON TUESDAY Postal Matters to Be Considered; Dry Squad Cop Is Fri- day Witness NHE federal grand jury took # recess on the Olmsted boore investigation at noon Friday tll next Tuesday The jorning. was evidence mail utes ‘Attorney request, a Tom Revell believed, however, t f the evider dry squad, we! nd jury Friday alice before the first. police. of- the” jury: He works under Lieut. Georze Com- stock on the special police detail were investigating the mysterious; Patrolman W. J death E. W. Battorff. who was|town precinct, was c for ad on the stairway of the|t Arcade building on Second ave. early | is believed the men were called Friday morning. lto substantiate evidenc iy pre Battorff had apparently fallen| » showing the extent of ‘the » stairway to the landing | jiquor nd methods by which 4 ruck bs head on &Jit operates sharp corne t is unknown whether my the blow caused his death, nether gchar Brnsd ter gee "4 he wan attacked by thugs or] t? conclude the taking of testimony. whether he died of heart failure.| W. E. Boeing, president of the ‘The fall was of no great distance. | Boeing Airplane Co., was recalled Battorff's body was found by a jani-| before the Jurors for a short time. tor after had been dead about | Boeing is one of a number of prom two hours. He lived outside the|!nent Seattle business and clubmen city at R D. No. 3 Box 135,and/that have been summoned as wit had nded a union meeting in the | nesses. Arc building Thursday evening. | 2 Die in Chinkac Chemical Explosion, CHICAGO, Jen 16. burned to death here today, {a fire caused by an explosion chemical} azed the Frank which Lewis Varnish plan T nty explo: still missir men were ocourre¢ Several a: at work when | Seattle Climate Lure Irresistible After living in Alberta, Canada, for ‘Two men|!4 years, Edwin Auld, who ts at the in| St. Regis, has returned to the Puget of |Sound country, where he had spent 8, | most of his previou rs, and says | he would rather have a 50acre farm with a million dollar climate than a re| thousand-acre farm and a zero cll- mate. | Says Dry Laws to Stay Author of Amendment Reviews Results After Five Years of Prohibition | EDITOR'S NOTE: Prohibition celebrates its fifth birthday today. | The United Press asked Senator Morris Sheppard, of Texas, author of the 18th amendment, which broaght about prohibition, to analyze its results, past accomplishments and looks FS By SED Press ASHINGTON, prohibition. |tion since | went into effect the people have nified their by increasing the dry majorities |both house and senate | ‘The congress has evidently reflect- | an, 16.—January | 16 marks five years of national In every national elec- nation-wide prohibition | | approval of prohibition | In the following article Senator Sheppard gives his views on into the future, Prohibition has closed many or- ATOR MORRIS SHEPPARD phanages and crowded the colloges Written Exclusively for the United and schools, It has doubled the num- | ber of investors and made it possible to save $30,000,000 out of the daily | wage of $200,000,000. With nearly 16,000.00 automobiles on the roads, we must choose between liquor and the automobile. Drinking liquor always was harm ful. Now, in addition, it is unlawful to make tt, buy it, carry it or possess \it as a beverage except as to the small residue purchasd and stored in} ed accurately public sentiment of the | nefore prohibition was adopted. nation in adoption, first, of the na-| tional prohibition act to enforce the} the supple-! {mental prohibition act to strengthen | 18th amendment; then T 18 not only a bad example to use any of this residue for bev- erage purposes, but every reason it; the appropriations to sustain the| for total abstinence in the past is prohibition enforcement department; | reinforced today by the fact that the ja measure to rehabilitate the coast|grinker of illegal booze furnishes a | guard and support it in its efforts to! precedent for the encouragement of prevent rum smuggling; the concen-| ai) jaw-breakers, creates disrespect tration warehouse measure. | eee Hige sete) is now pending to| work of falthful public officials, eub- put under ivil service and co-ordinate enforce- legislation has large majority prohibition agents | ment activities, | passed the house by {and is now before the senate. | During the tion, the decreased arre: fenness have numbered 500,000 jnually. There have er industrial acc e ents, operation of prohibi- 9 for drunk- ah- been 260,000 few- OD mortality rate has | for law, gambles with his health and life, makes more hazardous the jects this country to the critimism of nations hostile to our American policy of government, undermines the faith of the people that a ma- jority can enforce its own laws, j teaches the youth the first lessons in anarchy—disrespect for consti- tuted authority. Americans who love this republic more than a drink of liquor will obey the law and will Insist on Ike | obedience from others. Good sports- eloped which adds three|men play the game of democracy s to the average human life. The | fair, Prohibition is the law of the 275 drink cures qf license days have | land. It will remain so. The per- lawindled to wering drink-|petuity of the nation depends upon | annually is gaving $74,000,000 | obedience to and enforcement of the law.

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