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The New iS) 4 Temperature Last 24 Mba \ieaney st Mints Today noon, 44 \ APT. Gi omc ijpre rc— SEALERS ON PUGET | SOUND AWAIT END OF RUSSIAN TREATY Ti BOY, PLAYING ON HIGHWAY, IS AVaS howdy, folks! Payday's ar fed again. Here comes the jabier with our weekly in ve TORTA, B.C bo T ~ 14 ~ Coaster Wagon Pushed Un- |] 3°2").0t 2 , der Wheels of Auto Truck fe Nes had Heal a ade CHILD I$ NEAR DEATH ] tse soning iret» wilt vo abit Driver Wrecks Car Trying | comtaction here of threo sealing | to Avoid Accident ; : aetiitey Hea of a good ae n's “Moonlix with Irving Berlin's ° QHHOVED accidentally . MISSING PHOTOGRAPH id brothe FOUND! ster Crooke Considered by | the Taylor Sheriff Starwieh | Saturday an important tink n the Great Sally Mystery, a photo- graph of the miss ing girl was dis- covered Saturday. Sally has been the Young Wood, “ Speculator, “: Now Missing eriffs Herbert Beebe and object of a nation- | Gibson. They dech Schietzebaum wide search by |innocent of all blame } ; radio tenors fot) Mferrill was riding in a coaster| 21.—Osborne Wood, the past two! wagon pushed by his brother %& General Leor ane months. The pho-| Luther. Behind him thelr $-year-/ sappeared from } fograph shows! old brother, Lawrence, was riding; aving vies ae an a tricycle. He saw the truck come cund a corner and called a warn the girt in her fa- vorite swimming suit, which the | ing censory barred Ist) Luthor gave a last shove t summer from the} wagon, intending to push it off of) Bi bathing beaek. the road. Instead he pushed it di } af rectly under the truck wheels. We've got to protect our in- Schietzebaum piloted his truck tidustries,” says Ll Gee Gee, |into the diteh to avoid the chil- Rot help out the safety pin|dren and it was wrecked after facturers?”" striking the ee Willie, how he crows! @ brick on grandpa’s tors. leg is in a cast, Ropes he'll, die at last! eee s very tearful, and Wood has otel Crillon for now been the |Misning from the max days. year ago young Wood wa ed up a fo spectilating Philippine liows confli ket opera t th he some that ported to ha }tune by long in Wall «t., while His disappears ing reports of new ns, some to the had profited furthe WOMAN IS FOUND BLAST KILLS 3 le no trath to the rumor| Believed Burned niowe Baris, My Hoy. famous radio) Was Staying in TOWN | gi) Tanker Is Wrecked by Explosion at Philadelphia for | | Charley rar | After firemen had spent seferal " searching the fire-swept ruins} feeepes CHARACTERS ee a tastatect fr me house at Mth) pi ape: . Alomo Q. Ban-| ov... and Stevens st. Saturday, for! 6. wore. kille ana, whose ‘ap-| Mrs. Gertrude oe apt its Lesree: .tuere: Sits jinker, aie was Giecovers’ © hive when 60,000 gallons of fuel of! In a) pointment as vet-) wei at the ¥. W. C. A. where pe bacamahata aaa pews tooth ing because she was afraid! conuyiKil river today jone in the house during} an, dead went down lbarge, which sunk an Firemen thought that the woman,|the explosion hbors knew had been liv-| ‘The injured are all colored. ling there, had been trapped in the) The barge, according to eyo wit- been announced. |picze which leveled the structure! nesses, opened up like a tin can and] Men about two hours after midnight Sat-/detonations came within a second) fee erate ate Kioking |ustay marine of each other cand were heahe. 16 cost $700 to. execute # 6 cen rented recently | miles away. The injured were cat by the lethal gas method. 7m dome ta oe ie “Knudtson’s| pulted Into the river and were later could have saved this sum | qiughter, J.J. Smith. They had left) rescued by police Bae Nesnie fing the man attend a session | scr there as caretaker while they|thru the blazing oll on the surface) ee Cotten. went away on a vacation trip about) of the water, | oe LPHIA, Feb, 21 Three | four injured and} reported missing, | erinary surgeon to was #te President Cook | niente idge’s mechanical | horse, has just | "hom nels with the} hour after . a week ago. | The fire was discovered about 2:30 Skagit Commission | by Mrs. Ida M. Price, a neighbor. An Starts Work Soon! the tazes kept ascending | «utomobile stored in the basement} |With their old alacrity. was also destroye | ‘The rece: appointed Skagit en oh hs | SaaS Bs gineering survey commission, formed | Gee Gee's o di t jover the mayor's veto, will start | Pye | functioning next week. Joseph Ja | ic Societies une in: Seep Inemenine. Hellenic cobs has returned from Spokane, | i Klars the piano, but only Celebrate Sunday | iiicc his tas been working on the| t2ed into the future, @s human eye could sec, * A banquet in honor of Washing-| Columbia Basin irrigation report. | ; ton’s birthday wilfype given by the | W. Chester Morse and 8. B. Hill are | the other members of the commis- | y in co-operation | Hellenic club, the | sion | You will kindly Ian us, | American Legion and the Chamber ‘EMEAET | Epty you back the very day|of Commerce at the Chamber tet our soldiers’ bonus! Commerce building, Sunday, Feb. sae Le wih. to ae Sail for Alaska | do a I ‘tainmen' pre 1 7 yet ia: to rhe being Georss, Rogovoy, ‘cellist; Mrs. Fred- atsceutin’ Hae wicca Siw eae | fation lawyer” is something erick Bentley, Segal eee : i | ting on the Puget Sound. Southern | | 4d Mabel Hawkis, dancers, | ® rots peat dess te ened oF mre x. Torchinova, and| California route, will sail from here| % ae Techn Swaney, soprano, accom-|about March 27 for all pote in Alas-| v i Cfoseword puzzle craze will or Marv |ka—Seward, Anchorage,” Pott Gra-| complete until some nut has |ham, Seldovia, Kodiak, Uzinkl, Alitak | epitaph placed on his; jand others. | |King’s Progress Is | “Slow, but Steady” LONDON, Feb. 21.—Altho bis tem [perature still Is unsettled, King! George’s condition continues to im- | prov , said a physician's bulletin is j sued at 11 a. m. ‘The progress in fighting the bron- | chitis attack was reported “ “slow but| | steady.’ To OUR READER Hellenic Civic soc Pure a ten-spot in your pay | w iththe Woren’s Admiral Perry to be any |Hart t Is Delegate to | Maccabee Conclave |: |W. G, Hart, 125 Aetna st., ra | name 4 delegate to the state conven- jtion of the & bees, March 6] land 7, by Seattle Tent No, 8, Fri- day night. L. A. Hotel Owner Lee A. Philips, owner of the Bilt more hotel, Los Angeles, arrived in Seattle Predicted Seattle with a party of friends Fyl-| Moderate gales for Seattle and vi-) 4, tre ig staying at The Olympic, |cinity were predicted today by the) waich he thinks ts a wonderful hotel, + static; that's just | weather bureau. Southwest storm j lind pig arnings were ordered hoisted by the Sepertinent here at &a..m.. A mth Lewellyn Jordas over British Columbia moving bb A Wins Oratory Prize ard is the cause, yea Liewellyn Jordan, Garfield high! |uchool, Friday night won first place in te annual patriotic declamation Emma Alexander to ' 4 ‘ contest aged by the local ¢ e| Sail for San Diego |‘); doa ot the Arto Havel Tte steamer Emma Alexander was | tion. | to sail from Seattle at midnight Sat-} Second place went to Elmer Ras. | urday for Victoria, San Franclgco,|mussen, Queen Anne high ‘school | Los Angeles and San Diego after|orator, and Helen Snyder, Franklin joading at Pier D all day. igh, won third prize. | Moderate Gales 7h: in this -vicinity, ve prany ; (Webruary & Mies, nnd to brenkfasting of aged I biked not, it knife, bf day, and early home, a 44 read the biography of In the Satevepost, us inti be better at Mibeit good at both. —A. J. 8. ape With the SEATTLE, WASH., SAFETY COUNCIL IS ORGANIZED FOR ACTION Will Spread Propaganda to Decrease Traffic Deaths PROTECTION IS URGED New Club Formed in Meet- ing With Mrs Landes M A a traffic accident tment was freed of & r wave of 1 " fonenta her as can train ans alike to protect therr Four of t have been ur 20 victims thus far six years of age, it ted out by Deput ne and Dr. George Mclaughlin, ealth commissioner matter rests squarely with it was presenting insuranc riters; M Todd, of th Parent-Teache Jation, and Dan Trefet the Chamber of Commerce committes, An organization committee of five persons will be named to appoint the members of the proposed safe council the citizens themsel J, T. Taber, INCREASE BONDS ATURDAY, Seattle Citizens Will War on Auto Danger Circulation in Washi The Seattle Star FEBRUARY 1925, RT OES I ENED EVERYBODY STOPS | WORK ON MONDAY BUT SCHOOL KIIDS He Receives 3000 Off ers of Marriage FO? RAVER Ore., Feb. 21 n Mooney, modest husband of 11 years’ standing, has re 9,000 love letters recent Th from all parts of England Ap et ica. Bome friends wrote a “burning” letter and put itin the apple box he was packing last fall, ‘The box wa opened in London. A reporter got the letter—and Mooney got the let ters. see Sé]QREEZE sort of froze him out of $65 wan the cot int made Friday night by Robert Perkins, of the New Home hotel, to police Freeze” happens to be the only lored Kentleman Perkins" me known for a co wi who made a cash. Tim Kinstrup, 1. Tim lost his T TAKES a burglar to put y your feet, & Great Northern h shoes to a slicker who entered his room with a passkey, Friday night Tim's socks are thin. | | e150: | Fasicks and Dooley Must! Raise Higher Bail Ed Fasick and J. M. Doc vieted Thursday of the $ new trial. Mrs, Fasick’s bond was increased Saturday to $10,600. Sen. tence was deferred on the trio by Judge Gilliam until next Saturday pending arfuments on the motions for new trials. Fasick’s bond was $10,000, Mrs, Dooley he bonds were ralsed on motion | his overcoat | of Prosecutor Colvin because Mr. and|an encore the thieves paid him Mrs. Joe O. New o-defendants, last | week forfeited $ appearing before the trial Colvin charged that Mra. Fasick was present at the Rivoli apartments on Second ave. last week aiding and counseling Mrs. Neal while she was | preparing to disapr New High Mark in Hog Market Price CHICAGO, Feb. 21.—Choice hogs sold at $11.75 at the Chicago stock sands of soldiers thru his port ord. Dwindling of herds and a shortage of stock were given as reasons for the record Sincerity Valuable in Salesman’s Work Plain intelligence and sincerity will get a salesman further than all the frills of “sales psychology,” the Seattle Ad club learned from B. J. Williams, well-known West ast sales manager. He spoke at the club's meeting at The Olympic Hotel. A salesman to succeed, Willlame said, must have “intelligence, sin cerity, honesty, sympathy and Justic | Likes New Olympic! TODAY’S WANT ADS Will help you secure the used car that you are looking for. Here is a dandy LATE MODEL HUPMOBILE Thin car is evagything one could expect in an automobile and reore. Har a finish like new, Is absolutely perfect mechan- feally: top curtains and uphol- atery Ifke new. All nearly new cord tires, ani other extra equipment. We will guarantee thie car and you will find the most value for your money in thin buy than anything you can buy. Trades and terms. Turn to the Want Ad page and see who is offering this one. k's $5,000 and con- | ) Bon | that she Marche holdup, must furnish $20,000 | Federal bonds each, pending their fight for @| son visited her in her cell at tho} jcity Jail jcipitately when they saw spots on 900 bonds by dis-| urday. ja new 'Says He Forced Hee | from N18 COOK, 28, thinks that she has} \—O all the bad luck in the To begin with, she world. was arrested a week ago by the federal narcotic} squad and Saturday she wax told had contracted ‘smailpox Agents Brown and Patter- Saturday and fled pre her face. Sho was quarantine. then put in| eee | HITEVES visited C,H. Rosa, 267 | Mth ave. N. E., Friday and stole | Despite the lack of a return visit at 0 a. m. Sat- Rosa was held up and rob-| 8 erage by two men and| which he had saved to buy overcoat bed in lost $4 to Commit Bigamy Charging that he compelled her to enter a bigamous marriage, Eve Dorothy Bradley instituted divorce action Saturday against Frank E. Bradley, a wholesaler, at 119 Boren ave, N. She asserts they were mar- ried October 30, 1914, while she still was wedded to Thomas J.| Snelling, who she married in 1907.| Snelling obtained a divorce from her | January 5, 1917. | Bradley, she complains, influenced | her to “surreptitiously leave her first husband and marry him.” She says Bradley threatened to kill her re-| cently. | Parti Belief Bill Out of Committee | WASHINGTON, Feb, 21.—The} Capper-Haugen bill—the first mea-| sure in tho president's farm rolief| program, accompanied by a score of amendments, was reported out favorably by the senate agricultural | committee today. A fight lasting | more than two hours preceded the | committee's action, which was| without a record vote | Smith, South Carolina, and F Indiana, dgmocrats, led the fight uit reporting the | bill | |Many Plan Trip to | Mt. Rainier Feb. 22) Washington's birthday will be properly celebrated on Mount Rain-| lier this year. Reservations for ot have been made for Longmire and| 65 for Paradise valley. There will| be a party of 3 by Everett arling and Thomas | Stimpson; another group from the Hiocal telephone office and a party Garfield High Prof. Cunningham ung people headed school, under | ngton * HIS LAST VOYAGE Jame Ca pt. S. Gibson, hipping man Pacific coast and Seattle, who dropped dead at Manila, while on trade mission in Orient. The Seattle Chamber of Commerce was notified of the death by David Whitcomb Photo by Bushnell Dig on for 33 Miners Rescue Workers Speed Up as Danger’ of “Squeeze” Threaten Them IVAN, Ind., Feb, 21-—-With the 51 victims. A record compiled} the hoisting of the body of Harry | by the mine's check welghman Anderson, mine superintendent, to | showed that only seven of the dead the top, sh before noon today, | Frank Smith, one remained in the mine | is reported as leav: recovered SUL) of the victims, jins a widow and 2 children. 3 uxties y Anderson was’ the 18th vietim to! be taken from the mine that took | the lives of 61 men In the gas ex plosion yesterday Rescue workers came to the top at 7 a& mi. and announced they feared a (eau eg | Olmsted Case to Be Opened | Within Two Weeks If the slide occurs, some of the bodies will he buried in the earth slide, they say, and the lives of pare the rescuers will be in danger. | A¥ immediate trial of the 58 per- This report tended to speed up rescue work, men racing with sons arrested Nquor Indictment is sought by U, 8. time to carry out the remain- | District Attorney Tom Revelle, he ing 314 bodies from the west | announced Saturday. entry rooms. Revelle said that he ts waiting word from W. M, Whitney, assistant A “squeeze7 following an explo- sion, ix a sinking of the earth, and| Prohibition director, who is the key all. man power ‘cannot check its | Mind in the Olmsted case. Whitney course. It is reported to be sinking | Saturday declared that he would be | ready to bring the prisoners up for | arraignment soon. “There are three or four more Seventy-six children and 44 wid-| Members of the Olmsted gung that I ows are known. to be survivors of | hens to see in jail before the indict- —— | ment is released,” Revelle saic. | “I hope to bring the accused be- | fore the court for arraignment within the next two weeks,” Whitney sald. one inch per hour, In this section of the mine rooms are but four feet, 10 inches high. F ile Liquor Charke on Hijacker Victim | EVERETT, Feb. 21.—Liquo ube tak | Péstionster: Charged fmanufacture charges will With $3,800 Deficit in superior court here against Roy | Thompson, as a result of the al- leged hijacker shooting at a Sno-| Charged with a $3,800 shortage, homish farm house Wednesday, |John Maloney, ex-postmaster at when Albert Kimball of Anacortes, | Marysville, was bound over Friday was killed and Thompson and an-|to the federal grand jury by United other man were wounded States Commissioner Elliott. ‘ASK TRIAL SOON under the Olmsted} EL HOME! § TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE. SON DIES IN ORIENT JSUDDEN DEATH IN MANILA Was Head of Trade Tour; Whitcomb Cables Chamber of Sad Event Carr JAMES 8. GIBSON, of Be J attle, one of the best known 1 dead from heart disease on | ht of Feb in Manila. m y from David Whiteomb, pre of the Seattle Chamber of Comme told of his jamber's second commer he Orient. Manila w lace to be visited on tl p and from there the turn home. The e outward party was mission left on the liner President Me. of the Am nO e nuar The body of eteran will be brought home burial aboard the McKin- ley, which is due in Seattle March 17. | No det of the death were given the , . Chamber of Commerc entatives th repr aid th ught death was sudden, because > news of any illness in the party ad been received. ar bie Captain Gibson was 70 years old, but still, when he left Seattle, a0 | tive and healthy as a schoolboy. He was, other members said, “the life lof the party.” Living hix boyhood in the South, the veteran skipper was educated first at the University of Missis- jsippl and later at Oxford univers. |x. He studied for the ministry, but later gave that up as @ vora- tion and went away to sea, sailing |from Atlantic coast ports, | In five years he had fought his |way up to captain, commanding as jhis first ship, the old sailing vessel Spartan. Later he skippered the Belvedere, the American, the J. D. Peters and the Colorado, all famous lold ships. In 1902, Captain Gitson was Am- jerican consular agent in Chemanus, between Victoria and Ladysmith, on | Vancouver island, where he was em gaged in the shipping game. In 1905 he moved to Seattle and be jcame president of the International Stevedoring corporation. He was for years closely associated with {Frank Waterhouse, former presi- dent of the Chamber of Commerce. . In 1917, when he was 62 years old and had retired from active life on the sea, the captain offered his (Turn. to Page 2, Column 4) Sues Lamping for Campaign Printing Suit for $2,979 alleged due on “campaign dodgers” and posters, was filed Saturday against George B. Lamping, port commissioner and candidate for governor at the last election. A. L. Laing is the plain- tiff on assignment from the Pigott printing concern. He charges Lamp- ing agreed to pay $4,679.75 for the work and did pay $1,700. Ocean Liners Crash in East; No Damage NEW YORK, Feb. 21.—Swung by the tide as it lay anchored In a heavy |fog off quarantine in the lower bay here today, the Cunard liner Tus- canta crashed into the Rochambeau of the French line. No one was hurt and neither ship was badly damaged. Fighters of the Sea! “COME here, you putty-faced whelp—!” Drake suddenly wrenched free. The knife fell to the floor. One solid, snappy punch landed flush on the oth- er’s jaw. Then Drake struck again—a straight left-hand jab to the mouth that drew blood. But he knew little after that. A terrible, white snorting face came close to his own, two trip-hammer fists drove into his body.... There’s action galore in “WIDE WATERS” _ Starting T Tuesday i in By Captain Dingle The Star