The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 23, 1925, Page 9

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Ti pRIDAY, JANUA 3, 1925 ARAGE. FIRED WY THIEVES and Building Are Lost Child Lab in Flames j MPIA LB stealing £8 automedile . oy A. Ob Me early Briday a Sa | Be ote . ig tae thieves b> believed to een severely burt auto the fire brok 7 y mean Berea deport one D 4 in fond © 1 . thier - n t a 1 for U.S.Senators Favor THE SE or Statute “« ay prop Ml their p nays My opinion of | the 4 labor amendment ° | same as when I voted for it Congresama Jor n | wired The Sta My ¥ ame wa fieated upon belief that a ral statute we nefit the exploited ehil Iren of states which have not enacted adequate child labor Other state gresumen re plied that (hey felt it was not in their province to advise the state legtslat PAN WARSHIPS IT COAST Battleships Welcomed ~ to San Francisco giv FRANCISCY training =qu time spell years © may aw a | asda freedom Instead of prison = James B. Bates, alias J Brooks, allay “Dutel’ Veiteh ‘es is held in the elty jail, su» pected of the murder of a young Seattle cirt in June, 1919. my the visiting dreadnat rn Py et 1 Bates edmember of the American squad tne tag: eee ore yewltness to the mu Westman. Engelke was t s and sab H payal © their official we Be sect th of her An L q wali joes him Justice She failed and the man sheet pwn t Detective Captain | then a Veiteh. ot her police : As Bates, held a minor When andits escaped, Who Held Grain Are charge of possessing fake jew. |the Wayne girl freed Chatlien and ;, ciry, came before them, Kent wike A Wow Getting Top Rates iy ittied “That man. is : ve Woman Sanipractor Says Council Aspirants Enrich B i: wanted for murder,” he said. tay sctive a)? . wal iene einied ane, “* No Exam Was Demanded City’s General Fund t Ht Chatlien now lives ar John. policeman to} Mrs ja Offenhaurer, forme Ke fund is enriched eu fall, instead at the M me f nd try to identify Baten, | student he Seattle American ( an a Pemult of receipt of fling | Bimmarket, reads the versity « tprac recely a n 11 candidates for the three BRR whest these days w state license for drugless healing | Council seats to be feeling that better without the formelity of an éxam-| ere! election Ma: M. ps. r lpia, she admitted to R. G. Sharpe ha rye file for the primary ele est Wheat » ! t ret n. e¢ farmer is The three in |trar hine f rfelture suit against the c Becwvcx Be Observed in Kast sotwimr nee iy sx registered tn the pits ; udge A. E ffiths’ cour istbeyes Kanms City and Chicago. ‘i : , ndes, 4 That ie, he's getting these prices mon, RNC | Blaine, 416 " . ” h she paid re bas ba erin. 1s mare'n Scientists Prepari ing to Record Im-)* we the nat. | Athen ‘Mighbor who marketed his SI d , be Others who have filed intentions of L@irect from the field is bet- pr essions of Astr al 1adow Mee - andidacy are: A. Lou Co! Bilt a dollar a bushel, —= paginas © apartments, and Oliver homa and Texas, 17 000 | BY FRANK GETTY Poit of glass or ng at tte heay./ Sharpe first m ickson, 143- Betenc former amembers of a co-operative N= Ww YORK, Jan 23.—T ywole, may, ao | When John 1 toatified munciiman, end.the ft Torti hava: veunivet e - » of acience,;)Membern of the uity intimated | sicurdason, 62064 Th El ci any bushels of | 000 f the ante erning pe | that the state ense board for drug: mer Conner, w McGraw at go far. In February an ad- nd to posterity lens healing was “Oxed" Henry Dahiby, 1 W. 59th at $2,000,000 is to be distrib. | witt be focused tomorrow mi sig not trusting | licenses to thowe holding M. Westf ¢ them. greg the eclipse of the sun. too much to the layman. Thirteen | from the Sea: school N. E. Walt Bainer nor A. AY radow will | fixed observatories, the gre it Dr. James Carroll, Tacoma sani- yd John Har ‘of the boar ¢ je for | come the earth’s| number ever to come In the path of | Practor and member of the state r Union and Co-opera- | surface Minn., [©/a total eclipse, will unmask their bat-/smipractic license committee, took le Mfiitisting association, believe|Montauk Point. X. Y. 0s as |terlen of cameras and telescopes and| the stand Thursday afternoon und Oregonians Frown Row any undue speculation |tronomical phenom place. | go into action tomorrow morning. | dente that there had been any * eg finceenent cogent Oe cat al ttcnane eo. canny oeruaton tetwern the state commt- On Bird Refuge Act answer to the present high | totiat eclipse has been witnessed by | CAMERAMEN tee and the school in granting ll: | SALEM, Ore. Jan. 23.—Only two tad is “world shortage.” any millions of Am Md! sfuch is to be learned ning | *29e* persons appeared before the house " n 200 5 He could not remember names of 4 he inst chanee in * most intimate of our heavenly long liad of similar schools cat-|committee on resolutions ‘Thursday | F ined ighbors during thelr juxtapost-) 5,004 al over the United States,| MIEN. to oppose the passage of the Fated var Bale © prom tion. Ere fs gery Ps or whether they were accredited by a “ int men brn No. 1 oe the state board. MOON CUTS OFF oceasiona for the most important "Wa adoaiied that he had frequent|state of Oregon not to enact into LIGHT OF 8UN lastronomical discoveries, will not be) conversations, since the state case/law the “migratory bird refuge Whereas the Chinese, during the) earth-bound this time. wun filed, with Lydon, but no testi- | ¢ ee firat eclipse recorded in hiatory, some) Astronomers, trained observers! mony was brought forth as to the) On the other hand, men deeply 3,000 years ago, beat their drums to) and expert photographers, will #9) nature of these conversations. j interested in the bird and gume life an, Clay Co. Artists jarive away this astral dragon that|into the air to meet the eclipse. if lof Oregon, appeared to urge the| | not halfway, at least at a distance adoption of the memorial, and to! |appeared to be devouring the sun, Over KFOA modern scientists will bend every ef a |fort to catch and record upon all Chay & Co. offer an-|manner of instruments impressions of thelr programs over |of the brief period—varying between BA Priday eening. ‘The program | 30 seconda and two minutes in differ. @ solos, duets, quartets andjent localities—during which the Rumbers. Those taking | moon cuts off completely the light B-Alma Daley, soprano; Alma | from the’ sun. contralto: H. H. Clark,| And some unnamed amateur ob- BSCE Mattison paritone; G. F.| server, peering thru a home-smoked ‘olinist. The accompan- ——— fe Velma and sions The program follows Hettet—seineted Clay & Co. stringed sextet brid coder SELL CARNATION CONDENSERY — High Freight Rates Force Sale of Chehalis Plant Announcement was made Friday by E A. Stuart, president of the "| Carnation Milk Products Co. at Beat- tle headquarters that the firm has larranged to sell its condensery at Chehalis to the Borden Co. This an- nouncement confirms rumors that been current for some time. have arranged for the sale condensery at Chehalis to the d Stuart. “We have to save money f the finished + Johannesen, Giark, tenor Bows fe O14 Count of ot Borden. decided on this m' transportation in «|For many years we have produced more Carnation milk In the state ot °ek® Washington than was needed in thi section, and we have sold thin sur- plus largely in the Middle West and South. Naturally, the transporta- tion costa were heavy, but since the war freight rates have increased to the point where It was necessary Bond for us to increase our production in the Middle West and East, where Puce Bpeake lower freight rates permit us to reach our markets more econom- ically. E “The selling of our Condensery does not mean that we will discon- | tinue packing Carnation milk in the | ntate of Washington,” Stuart con- . | tinued. “We take pride in the “ oru that we started in Washington @ | Kent and that our company trolled and largely owned by men P mai advertising forum| eattic Ad club will meet and women living in Washington, Pannary 23, at # o'clock in| practically all of whom are em- ly room of the White! ployes of the company. We do not ad men will study, contemplate any changes at our re- a atvertising of salmon | maining six planta in Washington ; as our sales on Carnation milk dur- thoes 6 tames xo nearly re-|ing 1924 in the West, and in fact Of cattle that they are | thruout the United States, were the q Saint om Western | largest in the history of the com- i pany. TIME MAY FREE MAN AS MURDER SUSPECT Picture Once Identified as Killer; Wit- ness Can’t Identify Him Now product to our out-of-state markets. | ATTI E Looking re Kent it ‘ the mm « of en ntertained ane night party As a judge of feminine beauty Dr, Robert A Bachman The tro suddenly drew. gune and | diagnoses rightly When he met Miss Beatrice Clough, 22, shorting nd two girls, Mrs) of Kansas City, while he was writing articles on beauty, he gicke nnd trier declared her the most beautiful woman he ever had seen. ‘ bureau | Recently they were married. The doctor doesn't practice 6 contain St a profession, but as a beauty expert you will agree he can that will permit escape from the dense atmosphere near the sort, Even should clouds and inclemen weather Interfere with otmervation | from below,, camera men, in speed: | |Cattle Grazing on Indian pers fuse of the Klamath Indian reserva tion grounds as the grazing lands for thousands of h sheep by the trib ath Indians and many Bandit Suspects Are Held in Jail) council of Kiam. are virtually Accused of robbing H. M. Con- | threatened with ruin, according to ners, at Yester way and Post st.) word rv ved from red A. Baker, Thursday night, Berl Whitfield, 26, | superintendent of the Klamath reser and Anna Burton, 20, both colored, | yation | were held in the city jail Friday. tribe occupying a reservation is given the right | to permit or refuse the leasing of tribal ranges. Many big sheep. leattle men in this district have been Conners identifigd both as bandits an Indian who took $15 trom him. Jeit of | trea’ To i ih iiss witnesses to the $22,000 Bon Marche holdup, last October, were to be In- dorsed by Deputy Prosecutor Harry | Rhodes on the information in supe- | United States treasury rior cou Friday afternoon ‘The | trial of t six defendants will be | set for ea in F wary. They are: | Ross C. Watson, former city deteet- | “Denied Veterans” Urged to ive, now facing extradition for the $40,000 holdup in Nanaimo, RB. C., File Claims last December 12; Mr. and Mra. Fd] fetes" | Fasick, Mr. and Mra. Joe O'Neal) oLyMPtA, Jan. 23.—Claims of go and Norris Lockwood called “denied veterans” of the world | cca Re war may be included In the omni- bus appropriation bill, These vet |Runaway Tacoma érana were refused the state bonus . on the ground that they were pro- Girl Is Nabbed Here finns sien in soe army when class have filed claims. into custody here Thursday for her previously within the past fortnight. Manslaughter Charge best known feat was the of the Niagara river Just below the falls in 3.6% dence, R. 1, officials Friday, asked that Coleman be held until their office could take chargo of hit, BAR WHITE MEN : le ad of cattle and} and | charge of t [night at the ‘heart water in cattle sheep and Hazel Froman, 15, who left a note|*ar was declared. Many mich were ltelling her parents she was going to|Pald before court decision ruled) jump into American lake, was taken | them out. So far only 202 in this} crossing | wife contin’ denounce any attempts to place un der federal control, any further wreas of Oregon lands, thus increas: | dureau- | ing the power of federal cracy nad interfering seriously with ing airplanes and atop the great en-| |the plans of Oregon for conserva velope of the United States navy| Reservation Forbidden {tion of its bird and game lite, dirigible, Los Angeles, will be film-| as ing the greatest movie nature has| KLAMATH FALLS, Ore., Jan. 23.| *Te e produced in these parts |_KLAMATH PALES, Ore JU tom| Youthful Filipino Held on Drug Charge Roy Atizado, 20-year-old Filipino, was held by the police Friday in connection with narcotics. He was arrested by Patrolmen G. W. Christy nd H. D. Kimsey of the special detail at Fifth and Jackson st. ave, Under federal laws. the tribal coun) Arrest Auto Driver After Bridge Clash) J, & Wil, 44 arrested on & Kless driving Thursday north approach to the was leasing grazing land within the reser-| Fremont bridge. Hill's auto was in- of Holdup Witnesses | vation, which has brought « consid-| volved in « crash there. Don Hem- ‘ ble revenue fo the Klamatha,| rick was booked by the police as a b hi n additional | *"" y Names of halt dove which is credited to them py the| witness against and. ‘relensed. Hill, DISCOVERY Jan. 23.—Dis- | IMPORTANT JOHANNESBURG, t Cow ay been made by Dr oral ty from the Rockefeller instit in aay York. Scientists here claimed the finding one of the most ra PAGE 9 YREDERICK & NELSON “DOWNSTAIRS STORE Depardatbe oeds ener adcias Fivdernh 6 Nedvw Suieeday is Children’s Day —and boys and girl opportunities to save, 4 viceable girls merit at These $7.65 like vorkman. planning to accompany to the Downstairs Store will find much of interest Hine” will be interested in some of the offerings—especially Girls’ Coat Values: $7. 65 WOMEN'S catia ir $9.65 OATS years ( coats and materia such Many of the pretty styles can be worn for nd $9. mother on snoppi - Moth those that — AT SHARP REDUCTIONS broken line of style Reduced to $3.95, $6.95, $8.75 50. of & to for girls in the » hip of WOMEN CLOTH SKIRTS in very desirable and unusua ’S prices les spring reduced prices HATS in vel- vet, plush and other ma- WNT AIRS BTORE Women’s Knitted Vests Gand Bloomers $1.95 RTIFICIAL silk knit Bloomers values at this low have just been unp in the style pictured, and vests are the orchid, shades, $1.95. ming, and spring heels. toe last. Sizes 214 $1.65 pair. to 5 and | | the In | bloomers waistline and knees. Pink, peach, brown Vests Special Purchase of Little T ots’ Made on a broad- 5g DOWNSTAIRS STORE \ Little Tots’ Play Suits In Plain and § Blue Denim At 75¢c Pair | Bg .E BOYS (and girls, of ™ the freedom less Play Suits. xketeh, plain white stripes, piping. terials. Reduced to $1.95 and $3.95. BOYS’ BATH ROBES in sizes 4, 10, 12, 14 and 16. Reduced to $1.45. 11 PAIRS BOYS’ CORDU- ROY KNICKERS, re- duced to 79¢. Vests xood These The are pric ked. 18 BOY KHAKI SUITS, sizes 7 reduced to 15¢. PLAY and 14, with elastic at and or navy blue bloome OW NSTAIRS 59 JUVENILE’ BOYS’ , HATS in tam and roll- brim styles, reduced to 10¢. STORE 11 PAIRS BOYS’ CLOTH KNICKERS, sizes 11, 12, 13, 17 and 18. Reduced to $1.00. DOWNSTAIRS STORE INFANTS’ WOOL SUITS of sweater, cap and leg- gings. White, brown, red and blue. At $2.75. —DOWNSTAIRS STORE peat and brown elk- tanned leather Shoes in the style pictured. With cut - out saddle trim- Boys’ Overalls $1.00 Sturdy blue denim Over- alls with double seat and knees. Bik style overalls in sizes 6.10 15. Unusually good value at 81.00, —DOWNSTAIRS STORE to 8. Special Children’s Three-quarter Sox At 50 c Pair Medium weight three-quarter Sox in drop-stitch weave. Log- cabin, Cordovgn and black with roll top. Part wool camel color. Striped to 4 years will enjoy of these sleeve As shown in to put on, blue with trimmed in red Good value at 75¢. —DOWNSTAIRS STORE sy and Sox in brown and Also wide _ ribbed three-quarters Sox in black and gray, with fancy roll top, Sizes T to 9%. At 5SO¢ pair. —DOWNSTAIRS STORE bine AD MEN TO MEET Plans for Convention to Be Discussed | | Visitors from the “principal cities | of the Northwest were to attend the meeting of the Seattle Ad club The | Olympic Hotel Friday, when the cam: paign of preparation for entertaining annual convention of Pacific ‘Ad clubs, to be held in Seattle 20, will be launched. Kelly, of Spokane, gional vice president of the coast as the Coast July Raymond re important in. year sociation; Guy Llewellyn, of Taco. vice pt de: r Vestern BUENOS AIRES, Jan, 23.—Atter |™& Vice president for Western fait audience with President Alvear, |Wsshington; John Condon of | tie ‘| Condon-Milne Co.; Joseph Davidson, who wished to be remembered to President Coolidge, ral John J. Pershing went to Montevideo for a visit, prior to his departure | Rio de Janeiro Sunday short from TELEPHONE LOVE LONDON.—Five y of long tistance telephone between calls State Auditor Clausen wants any| Liverpool and London have resulted | parents, Mr. and Mrs, Austin Fro- |man, 4811 N. Defiance at,, Tacoma,| Veteran who comes under this head|in the marringe of Ida Bath, Lon- The girl ran away from home twice | #4 who has not tiled actaimto rushidon switchboard operator, —_ ark! the application to him. Unless the|George Moore, Liverpool operator, claims can be audited and inspected, | Moore wax attracted to the girl by they cannot be included in the bill. |the pleasant tone of ner vé e, came L. C. MecLauchlin ts secretaty of ajto London to see her, and ended by Held on Eastern denied veterans’ association, with of-|marrying her. fices in the Hoge Annex, Seattle. “NAGGIN! CHARC Richard §. Coleman, arrested} FAMOUS SWIMMER DIES CHICAGO.—"She — nagged — me." here, is wanted on a charge of| LONDON, Jan. 23.—Isaac Daven. | said Allison Reynolds, a deaf mote, mansiaughter in Providence, Mhode| port, 77, a Tamous swimmer of the |in answering « charge of non-sup- Island, according to local police. Allast century, died at Surbiton, fol-|port filed against him by his wife, telegram received from the Provi-|lowing an operation. Davenport’s|also a di mute. He said his ally scolded him in the deaf and dumb language because he did not make more money, jot Portland, chairman of the program |committee for the 1925 convention. HLloyd Spencer, president. of the coast association, and H. J. Ryan, chairman of the entertainment com: | | mittee of the convention, will attend The entertainment committee num: | bers 200 persons and they will be an- | nounced by Chairman Ryan, who | also will preside at the meeting. Balloon Elimination | Race Set for May 1) ST. JOSEPH, Mo., Jan. 23.—The/| annual elimination race to deter mine what balloons are to be Amer. jea's entries in the international bal- jloon race, will be held May 1, Carl Wolfley, governor of the National Aeronautical association, announced today. FREDERICK & NELSON Broken Lines of TOILETRIES REDUCED FOR CLEARANCE Bath Tablets Bath Soap; nr 3 cakes for 25¢. French Bath Soap in lilac, violette to 10¢@ & 3 cakes for 25¢. Sterne's Narcisse Soap, 3 cakes for 65¢. Sterne’s Fougere Soap, reduced to 10¢. Joly’s Imported Soap, reduced to 15¢ « Imported Tooth Brushes with bone or handles, reduced to 10¢ each. Hair Clippers, reduced to 50¢ each. Imported Perfumes in pocket flasks, reduced to 15¢. Imported Eau de Cologne, reduced to 25¢ and 45¢. Imported Tollet Waters reduced to 95¢ bottle Imported Toilet Waters in several varieties, reduced 1 81.35 bottle. Caron’s Narcisse Noir Taleum in glass jar Andrew Jergens’ Sterne’s Vanity 10¢ cake, reduced to 5¢ each. lavender, almond; and rose, reduced 3 for ke. transparent 25¢. . O5e¢. ~—Frederick & Nelson, liste § yuare First Floor, ‘he race will start from St. J seph. At least eight balloons are expected to enter. ae nee anita Ps IR test tat Grown elas

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