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| WEATHE ER | FORECAST < l 6. NO. 310. VOL. 26 Le | Home Bre 12. CANDID The Seattle Star _ iii ATES , ARE IN RACE — FOR HONOR = knew if wouldn't be any | Only Six Will Be Nominated Bee eed for Final City Election ite ¢> tnd that de rnin a ‘| MAYOR BROWN RETURNS \ BY, « . ‘abe a | Bettors Picking ‘High Men;’ Ss cme corns Expect Only Light Vote NM find that the bank is account of a holiday “TODAY'S DEFINITION Ni Small Boy: A young animal | | cilmani ay. Polls jwith dirty paws who peste will be t ” t you for permission to from § a. m. to § ; rabbits. The , total « e s— -- % | than u s Y Stewart Edward W famous | Tuesday vote will not exceed . author, has gone to Africa to hunt|in the opie t A D ; big game with a bow and arrow E. Fergus elect : : The real sport, however, is shoot Twe t " fg salmon with a water plstol. flots, € py eee a atitied to ads Little , mamma's dear u : Put stuff in father’s be ager 5 It was ipecac, and so othe 1 the ve Willie off to be ust mis: 2 sc . é . are scheduled fe At the rate moonshine ‘ens THREE VACANCL Produced in King county, it will I~ COUNCIL goon be necessary for the manufac | ty furers to establish servi stations “is ae: Ye fo distribute thelr. proauet Mrs. Derthns vas an FAMOUS CHARACTERS Dandy Mike Me- Goof, noted jockey, who has been se- wally jc ndidate ‘la hed a } but Plan have laun against him, prophesied thanical horse in the Belmont HMan- dicap next month. . maries. HIGH CANDIDATES IN BETTING Altho the ancestry of Coolidg.'s automatic horse has been shrouded im secrecy, we are able to announce! fers of even money ar ae at it is by Electricity, out of|to name the three high st | United Steel. These are — variously bas aos Landes, Blaine ahd F snd Beneath this sod Landes, Mi 7 ces Beneath this tree, Mira chairman of th ae Lies all that’s left of pul rounds commit A fighting Cree He crawled into The wrong te pec. oe strong north end nomination pSdientist says cross-word puzzles |, tland, educational. You bet! Before} Outlan Harrop, d Westfall together. Cigar store blackboard: following rt were introduced in this cotn-|/'" (F519 says Mra, Mirac Erickson's candidacy haw been "lected to ride Pres- | somewhat associated’ with the city ident Coolidge’s me- manager plan. Opponents of, t ayy general for Another of Do We Need a Change in the Way rage | | ‘There is at least one offer of 4-to-1/ }that Blaine will poll more than Dah! Schramme The Nev yspaper 4 Class Ma SEATTLE, WASH., Voters to Name Choice in Tuesday Council Primaries We're Ruled? YES! (EDITORIAL) NEATTLE is talking today about adopting a new form of government as a means of ridding the city of its evils The city manager form of government in itself will not do it! No plan of government in itself will do it! A form of government, whatever it may be, will be just as good as the men who are administering it will make it. And, as long as the pre rnment prevails in th nation, will function and grow wealthy, will © dictate our policies and spend our tax money, the public will continue to be misled and bled T is Primary day! Out of a field of 12 candidate ix who will go into the anic positions that are Mareh. Whether Seattle gets good government depends upon the man, regardless of the plan. And whether we get good councilmen, mediocre councilmen or bad coun 1en depends upon your vote tomorrow! Under the present scheme of things, it i bossism to manipulate its candidates after them safely thru the primaries. lassitude of the citizens in political campaigns—it is estimated only a fifth of the people will vote to morrow—it is«a comparatively easy matter for the organizations, of the, bosses. to. easily muster enough votes to defeat good candidates, even in the primaries. If you, a& a taxpayer—and we are all in a sense want honest, clean government, it is essential that you do your part by voting. It is even more essential that you vote at the pri- tomorrow than at the general election in March At that time, may already have been Jone! sent system of minority gov continue continue and is bosses bossism Norrov voters will select th council gene election , the race for t ypen at the in for get But with the present easy it the damage “S Seattle Boulevards to MONDAY, — Have Old-Time Charm ‘Landscaping and ‘Neglected Borders will py everybody thought a Thesaurus 5 not be first, second or third. F , of fee reptilian age. es te « monster of, the Fe [net te tee. second oe rec oa} 20d Paving to Be Done Over | its | AYS: | Erickson beats Cohen and 76 100 th at | | Srickson beats Mra. Landes. Coban, Masia 8 s will blow |Barkhuff, with city machinery and \who is also & former co om 1: thelr pris terial 1 begin laying a two la 106 favorite to beat Dahiby or|tine beauty and color this summer.|inch surface of asphaltic concrete | Conner. Thousands of tourist’ and conven-|over the worn boulevards, The en \ The 12 didates in the order | tion canes w will visit? the system of be will be re-! theep was some- |they ‘appear on the voting machines |city, will be to the sight | surfaced and repaired wi is ma- that Pk merly made Seattle's drive- | terial,” | £. 1. Blaine, A. Lou Cohen, E. F.| ways famed thruout the land, While park funds will not be avail lconner, H. G. Dahiby, 0. Ty Erick-|cording to promises of the park }abje until April 5, loans will be made} lson, John Harrop, Bertha Landes, | board. from the street department's con-| Kathryn Miracle, F- C. Outland,| ‘The park ‘board, after several l strution fund, to be repaid when the| ss [Hugh H, 0. Sehrammeck, Torfi| years of neglect thru lack of funds.) bonds are sold. eM ‘ y Yestfall. | {s sing inte badly needed | AMPLE FUNDS Sigurdsson and Harry M. W st fall unging into a K The pers nenatie has ares px abalone camp to revivify, beautify and) FOR LANDSCAPING Mother’, jes to some extent. It's | r he boulevard system, Presi-] «pho the malance of the special fund dad who has to put on the/ dent 0. J. C. Dutton announced | Dutton ‘, ill be de-| pla ee | Monday 6 repair and restoration of| | Thru the appropriation of $200,000 | Sublic playfieids and beaches, This! bese abe in a special ft i : iene ae bes money will enable us to put the = seessokl . . boulevards, made by city co . a ; : dx and pavemer exeel Bhe wses 500 ody of Friend of McClin- |%"\ece" 2, “tents are avaitaie. tor | emnen With xs kid he boule. | ent co dition h @ non-skid trec ‘ Ithe first time to ¢ the boule “ nables us to divert fund ; eee |tock Family to Be Exhumed ‘te fyi time require | it ise enablin us to divert fund ‘Candidate for the Poison Ivy club: | Dutton said sroximates $300,000 a year, for land. | 12 pa ad “HICAGO, Feb. 23.—It has been ; p year, | pp sink who fails to pull the plug | Pettit Stamey edhumen ti BEGIN BEAUTY. » work on the boulevards | \d ely decided to e¢ RIVE TUESD. crews - , ceo mee weet Dom Sony rat DEL Wale Cwot.. 48:8 T6| ot vara “crewh: ot: syoadt piers oe eetceners, In Cherie et} exe duce to be ciate Os, Bilin genre aul Umlaugh, head park gardener, EVERY DAY —— sult: of testimony, introduced in? la rdeners willbe will-begin thelr work ‘Tuesday. By | j | Cie ahr “Ot “WIDIAEH “BECCH AIOE. Ty drives Tuesday, and will con-| June 15 Seattle's boulevards will be "You can't ar- “millionaire orphan.” tinue until every boulevard has} restored to theif former beauty, Dut at me, officer. 1 Dr. Olson, a close friend of th¢/heen renovated and repaired, an ; | McClintock family and a brother /the flaming vistas of flow ind | UNEMPLOYED ARI of Chief Justice Harry Olson of} shrubs, trimmed and replac GIVEN JOBS the Chicago municipal court, died he special appropriation will en Seale Aotnitbe Aa pane |more than a’year a er eating |able us to divert regular park fun: has employed a crew of 75 $ fruit given him by William D, Shep-|for beautifying our boulevar continuously in cleaning up | Whenever a vaudeville actor can't! herd, chief beneficia in young| Dutton said yf the sum, $150,000 in have’ been: work over any other w he says | McClintock’s will will be used to repair and resurface crews of 25 men h d immediately the audi-| The inquest is to be continued|the boulevards. Construction crews. and were furnished with the ¢m ed with laughter, onday under Street Superintendent W. D (Turn to Page 7, Column 2) | | the siceps, one Johnny Fenker;\ eda turn without a honker. | see Gen, Mitchell says our air| Ce is inadequate. Sure, but we ys equip our flivvers with | #24 hop off. | By Jim Marshall Bah, | Y TERDAY, which was YE DIARY | Washington’s birthday, Nida Ht ith a rub- a child sat playing, w OP cum aie wire moulded in y, my wyte did prepare m roast | ber ball, semble Werkey, creamed celery, baked ham,| of a human face. Pushed and au noble dishes, and) oylled by the child’s nimble fin- 1 did pias tor ee, berry gers, the face took on varying Sixt ever sic heard, albeit she did| moods. Sometimes it a lear- eost of the time, but aihleh. when) “ing, laushing face: at other timer : +4 oe coger speared pensiye and sad. Beagy, A0d ce all the ar, merrie| OTrensed indignation and ex. bd FS | panst joy In the hands of HE Chariie Chaplin wins his suit| the child the rubber face became Biever: his Imitator trom wear: | grotesque gargoyle hagcy 5 Lilian Gish can By B court and get # patent on "It Ge Washington were ine tee live today,” sald. Horace W , eee Sampson, “he would be a demo a J. 8. | erat. He was a believer, his writ- { ings and speeghes show clearly, .; those of the father of our na- | in a fow tariff; an advocate of | tion," a serted G. Parlow Walker, | his country’s leadership in world | “Were General Washington in affairs; a prophet of those ideals | Seattle today he could not but | h democracy holds dear. acclaim the course of this great | Were our country’s father h ry in the recent state 18 | us now I © no hesitation in | lature. He, whe advised against | raying that he would be uphold- | foreign entanglements, surely ing the banner of the democratic | would approve the disentangle- party as that of the human | ment of the state government stands of the founding | from the fortunes and misfor- fathers."’ tunes of wheat farmers, In Mr. Sampson likes to call him Washington republicanism the ‘| self a Jeffersonian; he is a prom. spirit of Washington still lives.” | inent member of the Puget * Mr, Walker has been a lifelong Sound Democratic league | member of the G. ©. P., casting oe hie first vote for McKinley and (DRE SSENT-DAY ideals tnd attending an unbroken succes: trivings of the republican ion of state conventions of the party have not swerved from | republican party. ’ wry: ew ii the Act of Congress Ma FEBRUARY W ith the Bigge st ‘Circulation in Washington Per Yew ‘Didw tConfidein Me’ Mrs. . Brandt, ' Mother Mourns as Daughter and Son Sei CRS, LOSSES who defends her son and daughter, | with true mother love, at a time when the going is rough) Face Troubles in Court BY G. LUCILLE BUTL en Sd be Hazel had only told me Teurs covfrsing rowed fac ‘not imothier grieving over the of youth Hazél didn’t confide in me ur 1 ft wa h mourns Mm. & W mot of Hazel Bond, wir will anewer Tuesday in superior court fo siding in the holdup of a Re Top taxi driver on February 14, Hazel's t followed clo: on arrest of her brother, Glenn Brandt, and of H. An Jerson, ‘companion of tr} on her taxi holdup ven rp. to which Anderson has al a guilty 1 a rob bery char and sentenced to from five to 20 years at hard labor. SAYS CHILDREN WERE OUT OF WORK “Hazel kept her troubles to self, too much," her mother nalid. “She and her brother Gienn, were unable to get work She had no more carfare to use, and Glenn had tramped WARN AUTOISTS |Fire Apparatus to Carry Double Headlights Seattle's motorized pieces equipment will carry double lights, to secute the right-of-wa night hereafter. “A set of régul white headlights, superimposed by set of red ones, have been by Chief George Mantor Police have been notified change and motorists are. asked give the rightof-way whenever they nee the double lights at night glaring red paint and appearanep the apparatus ix warning enough daylight of the working bo _squelehed “Murmurings class soon would under the government of a mod. Washington,” Whimpet. “The father of his history ern George said Peter our glorious country, proves, would have little patience with fie socialistic and anar chistic doctrines so brazenly ad- pated today. Washington, who pred hard a boy, would have little sympathy with such movements as the child labor fet; nor would jie approve the varlouy paternalistic maneuver ings of our govern- ments.” Mr. Whimpet is a prominent manufacturer, a member of the present-day vf fir lofted | adopted | | of the | d at ae al of in from here clear to Smit nd back, to. Georgetown—a ° until Nis were worn thru Tho rain beat drearily: at the the «litt win at 16th ave 1. the moth era thin t hed’ tight ove «mail, damp. handker chief. On her breast a golden emblem. of the. Rebeceas glowed “My ehlidren have always been £004, honest, before, Ged kno T tried to make them self-r ns. Glenn was al and sweet to me specting cith: Ways so good why,,he supported me when he was a lttle fellow in knee pants. They never had a father nything for them,’ TO KEEP CHIL DREN M Brandt spoke of the » to keep the children ¢ w lick of work fore uecept a housekeeping po n out of Seattle last winter, where she could keep her young- est boy with her; of Haze!'s mar- to young Bond, a sailor on coast guard cutter Snohom of a misunderstanding, and el's return to the little cabin nd her brother Glenn against better times nd the mother’s return to Se attle: ring the ish; Ha “But Hazel loves her husband 1 her,” said the mother. “I returned to Seattle and was trying to get work here where I could be with my ehil- dren at night, when—this hap- pened! “Wher Anderson told my son Glenn, after the hold-up, what fe and Hazel had done the pe me, jlenn knew Ity Instead of telling he ‘made matters worse by otiating another oldap;s with erson, hoping to get me to protect his sister. He knew if Anderson was taken, the police would get Hazel, 1 he tried to keep Anderson away from her but of course he couldn't get away with that wah! If they had only told me." Save-Our-State an admirer of Charles Dawes and well speaker at banquets of the Fe 1 Industries. o- league, Gates as defunct erat owe os he alive today,” claimed Walter E. Long orge Washington would again e leading a rebellion—this time the rebellion of the working class against the fetters that chain it. The father of our country agair. would be in the forefront of the battle against oppression, seeking once more to right wronge of the common people. He would fight brave- ly in the battle to free little children-from the treadmills of a, “REPORT "WOOD'S “SON | POISON | iN SPAIN AFTER BIG IN GAMBLING SOLONS WOUL CONTINUE AIR INQUIRY Member Asks Congressmen * to Pay Expenses ONE OFFERS TO DO SO General Mitchell May Face Court-Martial We r ntative Bloom, New | osnumed LYork. to finangs tt Yor the Tetimin- |" Casain ene r of the fess “oti Attention today was focused oh] po. pha} Secretary of War Weeks, who said | cae pice recently: he would act in the Eo prea tira a8 Te Brig. € hell ime a mover ; tna| Dr. Turner annouhced com ’ . on a formal inquiry anno hie refuent| Whether this inquiry will be con- reappointment of | @ucted jwill be announced, Prosecu- 1 as assistant chief of the air) t* coo said, after he and th coroner have completed their in- Weeks may go fr ling Mitchell and order a court m try him on charges of ins jon and conduct jan officer Floating in Sound H to WV iaertity | Coroner Mond: Corson was try the body the end of pier 4 Sunday |In the clothing were found papers jbearing the name of Charles Mc Knight. A gold band ring encircled! Jone finger, engraved “From May to Charles, 1913." | The man was about | slightly bald and heavy McCormick Rescued MIAMI BE Feb. 23.- From Disabled Boat | CH, Fia., | After drifting for five hours in the | rough waters of the gulf stream, | John McCormick, noted operatic \tenor, and two companions were rescued by a fishing launch which Joverhauled their }late Sun | McCormick hotel tod: | ness was confined to suffering from nerv by caused the experience. Storm Predicted for City Monday | Strong southwest winds and prob- | | ably gales we |weather bureau noon and night, © predicted by for Monday in Seattle, day. The storm is said to be mov- Jing eastward over British Colum: |bia, Storm warnings were order [hoisted in Seattle at § a, m., Mon day. f Washington Were Alive in Seattle Today— the factory. He would seek con- stantly from the federal govern- ment greater protection for the individual.” Mr unions, spoke from the ,rostrum at a meeting called to consider Long, an orator for labor a strike for higher Wages. eee | Yesterday, which was Wash- ington’s birthday, a child sat on the floor pulling and pushing a rubber ball, moulded in the sem- blance of a face, Under the child’sefingers the face took én varying moods. In the child's hands it lost all its original ex- pression, becoming aoe a grotesque gargoyle, .., OME] EDITION two ther in disciplin unbecoming FIND MAN'S BODY « Discover Unidentified Man | moments ing y of a man found floating in the Sound off morning. 5 years old, disabled motorboat his the after: with the |storm diminishing in violence Tues CENTS IN SEATTLE. = INQUIRY PLANNED ——~ Engaged Girl! Dies Suddenly; Traces of Strychnine Are Discovered by r polwons , n. M lL r Ed- | ‘, last } i liss Bitt HEEL E Hump te monds re Ace j t, Mrs. J. B. OW i a ' it ‘ j n le s in He GOSSIP CAUSES 4 OFFICIAL } & in vul r, died about and signed The body was buried. Mea ame. the talk mt William H JOtto final sked a reopening of |the affair and Dr. Paul A. Turner, ordered the body state health office vestigation. Monday con- two Ed- They have to inquire ring a quarre!) between monds youths, said to © pre- olet the death, and find out this had nything to do with tee case. The lads ure said to have quarreled over the girl Dr. 1, H. Kretzler, of Edmonds, who attended the girl in her dying gave the cause of death as strychnine poissoning. The cor ner gave death caused by. poisoning from food,” altho there was apparently little upon which to base this finding. No note was left by the girl and ho poisoned. food could be found, altho a thoro. was made. search | FISTS FLY! | | (ih. O weel hurt me, ha?” demanded || Tony, stepping nearer }and touching Joe’s bending back. “Ww || “Leave him to me, || Joe,” Drake said quiet- ly, and methodically went. to work upon the || spitting Tony. He used his fists entirely. Tony was almost blinded by straight jabs to the head and body. . . . | Captain Dingle’s || “Wide Waters” || A Great Sea Story Starts Tuesday