The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 26, 1925, Page 1

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hit FORECAST cred as tt (1 the Postofficn at Heattle PyoL. 27. No. 2 ome D ar: zi») fj A! Howdy, folks! Do you like Biery fiction? Wait until get your income tax blank, fon engine hill on Blanchard st. from Westerr Herbert L. Bunion, whose stop /*¥e- He failed to see the street ca for pedestrians has done much , as in front of 4 A. MeVicker, Pio give the traffic problem in Se | ay a ground unde a = against ef. Gas wheels street car. Howe was y sorheod | taken t with in t on ens in | tern s ribs was when he met cack ad liked co: ihe found out eoan't first-ch YE DIARY to the y Lord! there be @ thoa- song. and this be the | dewn and ery, 90 $ And v0 ry bedi. 8 President Coolidge is just dng on his mechanical horse he will be able to grab the Ting the next time he rides on pgoround rar Gee says the trouble (Rome brew is that it takes so Tay in the ash- Bile she was in jal it was s€ terrible a the tears flowed free! Me md-eyed dame did say: Twas a Press club widder. important date. the dineer hoor approached AI saw that it was late, ¥ te the tetephons always busy, can’t get you at all; a half « dozen times— you the same old stall. inner groves cold on the table, a co home at last; rary by Tif he “eyed and green— Seeger, de you wonder Wethed in the loafer’s bean?” tea, Thad to see a man, ete.” —Bereaved. Viesar 4 this should + fornerstonen B Coolidge 6 tor ui a Gee Gee's awertic is ambidex- WHe has cigaret stains on the Of both hands a EVERYDAY , and if no 6 laid by Presi will the news @ air, | got Calgary on my st last BRM and cians f fe an aer: attached Mt to the bed . < FEAR DRIVER IS Collision , MACHINE wis | Automobile Is Ground Under | Sesscnt vic testes. operating one of nails, | ® small pick the raisins out of your) a eee BM a Wiss woman who never Mt her hushand before break did poople eat peanuts be- EMRE movies started? —A. J. 8. | SEATTLE, WASH,, Auto Wrecked by Street Car! ronznay cans 70° MAYOR SCORNS rc AUTO SAFETY =) COUNCIL RAINIER COMPANY | | Declares Educating Public FATALLY HURT |... nae IN SMASHUP ess Brown Laughs at Plan Orig- teak inated by Mrs. Landes : ow VICKER FIGHTS Attorney Opposes Efforts of |! tes Examiners to Disbar Him Occurs as Car) ; The Breasts Edge of Hill cB a over the long runs my, with no Wheels of Street Car s claim Howe was drivi e steer whman at ma i st. Wednesda ted Howard Find whose last name is said | ley to be _MMeMu! jay and show. cause * the mayor explained, ‘but atk has been going en for » thay ong time, fas to why MoV ker should appear newer to a b e him by F ing worse. “What we need ia 23 more motor ¢ men and an officer to patrol nd then hit offenders mum city ordinance nalty of $300 fine and 20 days in and @ 1 make thelr} gight om was knocked down at N and Pine st. Wednesda the automobile of A. ( |to the tra arged with having] tice precine lients' money. Helare held at } geney calls ~| Swallow This One, Folks gM state might as well learn, first as last, that it’s got to stand up and take its medicine like a little man. The motto down in Olympia is: ‘No babying!”’ When the state proposed to protect children by ratifying the child labor amendment, the edict went out: “No babying for the children. Let’em fight it out. It’ll do ’em good!” So the children weren’t babied. When the state proposed to help wheat growers the same snappy order issued forth, ‘“‘No babying for the farmers! If they can’t make good, let ’em move!” So the farmers weren’t babied. When the state proposed to save a few forests from prevent- able fires the same stern dictum was vociferously yodled the length and breadth of the land: “No babying for the forests. Let ‘em stand up and take a fire or two. If they can’t stand that they don’t deserve to grow!” So the forests weren’t babied. When it came to appointing somebody to be public printer, the fat plum’ of the administration, the state wasn’t babied either. The governor merely said, in his best top-sergeant man- ner: “Here’s Jay Thomas! Now, no monkeyshines. Stand up and take Jay like a man.” The state said: “Well, but for the love o’ Pete, governor, Jay Thomas is one of the most notorious lobbyists in Washington. He’s been on the side of every corporation that would hire him for years. His name has been synonymous all over the state with backstairs legislation. On the pretext that he is a newspaper man he gets on the floor of house and senate at Olympia and jonsi and the rest quartera for emer does his lobbying with an air of abandon and derring-do that makes other lobbyists, outside the doors, gnaw their nails with envy. He’s made a living for years by spreading propaganda for public service corporations—or anybody that would hire him to spread propaganda.” “Hoity- toity,” says the governor. “You've been babied in the past. Now you're going to have a taste of ‘a business adminis- tration.’ Open your mouth and hold your nose and gulp it down like a good patient.” If anybody ever had any doubt as to what the governor’s idea of a “business administration” was, Jay Thomas’ appointment The Newspape r With the Biggest Circulation in. “Washington The SeattleStar fi 2°" THURSDAY, and conditions are get./ as public printer, should make things clear. WEE aetna cma TIEUPS RELIEVED! the Act of Congress March 4, 187%. Per Year, by Mall, $3.00 FEBRUARY 26, 1925, A” Ty | [ay Stranger Within ‘Our: Gates” She Isn’t, but She Represents That as She Stands in Handsome Doorway to Chamber of Commerce | E | | ‘eas Qyng of the most beautiful doorways in the Northwest, and one of sweeping, heroic proportions, is the portal of the new Seattle Chamber of Commerce bunildiig on Col-| wmbia st. at Third. It follows the Romanesque type of architecture in vogue in Italy during the 11th and 12th centuries, and with ite quaint metal bracket lamps and metal grilles set against a background of Oriental red marble, it is a fitting setting for the: icharming younge woman in the Oriental shawl, Miss Tyna M. Franks, who, figuratively | speaking, might well represent the “stranger within our gates.” The building was de- signed by Harlan Thomas, and Schack, Young & Myers, associate architects. —Photo by Carter & Bradisy. Star Baff Photographers ‘cerman Present tot Ex CASE OF TRUANT SENATORS | pected to Live Thru Night = Republicans Try to Force Democrats to Return to Indiana Senate _.. | BERLIN, Feb. 26.—<1 p. m)j—The leondition of President f£bert ia so DAYTON, 0. Feb. 26.—Deter- mined to “stay as long as neces- jtne night, the United Press learned | [from a@ reliable source this after. ° | noon. INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. 26.-— The The president's wife and relatives | caso of 15 democratic state senators A conference of physicians will be | against a gerrymandering bill in the | senators, in voluntary exile from In- | held this evening to determine who-/ senate was placed before the Marion | dianapolis, rested comfortably in | ther there is a chahce of life for Prea-| county grand jury today. their rooms af the Gibbons hotel to- | {dent Ebert. At 1 p. m. his condition| William Romy, county prosecutor,/day. They détled Jerome Brown, 63- | to be very grave and there was anja republican leader, presented the to force their return to the Indiana latmosphere of great tension about | case to the grand jury under a state | capitol. | the hospital, }law making it a misdemeanor to ob-| ie z a ; | Whether or not the president | struct legislation wilfully. |, Brawn. Was, ermed_ with, warrants tors to restore normal activity of|action to obtain extradition papers | tie found ee powerless to serve | his intestines,” a hospital attendant | for the fugitive senators. oh outside the state in which said. “At lls hour his condition| The majority members of the state |'hey were Sey, Z {continues very serious.” senate were in constant caucus on} &. DAYTON, 110:40 a. m, admitted that the !——————————— |by a message from Gev. Vie Dona- president's condition is serious and | hey of Ohio, urging them to visit the | that peritonitis had set in, following | jOhio capital, the bolting, democratic the appendicitis operation. Symp: | state senators from Indiana were to | Drunk Driver ( Gets Maxi- | ;mum Penalty From Dalton; serious that ha mgy not live thru/ have been called to tin bedside. [on strike in Dayton, Ohio, in protest |sary,"" 13 democratic Indiana state | was held by the attending physicians | way summoned and Senator Harlan, | year-old Indiana senate doorkéeper, lives, depends on the ability+of doc-| Republicans hope thru grand Jury |‘ the arrest of the fleeing senators, The official bulletin, Issued at} the situation during the morning. — Ohio, Feb. 26.—Cheered | toms of peritonitis first became ap: hold a conference at noon today to determine their plans. Donahey’s message read: “With my 2wo democratic senators, I welcome you with open arms if you come to Columbus.” It was understood that the Hoosier solons who fled from Indianapolis parent Tuesday, The condition is general In the abdominat cavity, the bulletin said “The night ident passed a restless } condition yesterday | Jevening had been considered sa In Mine with a recently announce | M1 | factory, but today it is serious. camipaign of more severe penalties | vesterday as a protest against a re. | | for traffic law violators, Justice C | publican gerrymander measure may ROME, Feb. 26.—Premier Musso- | C. Dalton Wednesday afternoon af. | go to Columbus this afternoon, lini, who bas been ill several days, | fixed the maximum penalty for | from influenge, continues to improve| driving while drunk on Martin | ——————____. y e 4 sho if | premiers ptynciaps aad afer vii | 120445 Sixth wee “| GOOD ACREAGE CAN BE BOUGHT | ing his patient this afternoon, It was the second time within two | pea week that Dalton has handed out | ROM*, Feb, 26—Curdinal Gaspar-|the maximum sentence to a man || at reasonable prices. By watching ri, secretary of state of the Holy See, | Convicted of this charge. Christen. | Star Want Ads you will be able who was stricken with Influenza; was | #0 got 60 days in jail, a $90 fine, || to choose for yourself. | considerably improved today and able|#nd was deprived of his driver's li. | } to receive a number of callers. cense for a year, He gave notice | eee of appeal. | Here is 1 BEST BUY WAY; 800 F “IFIC HIGH- ent ON Haateaiis’ Sick All Show Improvement | LONDON, Feb, 26.--King George | Is recovering so satisfactorily from} his bronchial attack it Is understood; | he will leave on the royal yacht from | | Portsmouth for his convalescence | cruise In the wediterranean about March 3 | LONDON, Feb. 26—David Loyd- George, virtually recovered from an | attack of influenza, is spending a | few days in his home convalescing eee | HI This tract is very teeth easy to clear and in an {deal location for poultry and berry farm Ny We consider this the it buy between Seattle and Party owning this to let go. ALDERSHOT, England, Feb. 26. Prince Henry, third “son vf King George, slept soundly and spent a tcomfortable night in the military j hospital where he is confined with | intueneag abi Turn to the Want Ad page and ses who is offering this property. a ee et 4 jopen’ draw. | minated some weeks ago in a publia E ON} VO CENTS IN SEATTLE. ‘OFFICIAL ORDER IS RECEIVED Drawbridges Will Remain Closed in Rush Hours, Says War Department IPRAFFIC « on and near relieved rtment ing of the spans to water traffic is to be curtailed during rush hours W. J. Barden, district engi- neer for the war department, said that the new rulings were “a gom promise between complete closing of the bridges to water traffic and une of way thru them to limited right tment have time about frequently undreds of nd the usands at various s g puffed slowly Dissatisfaction cu hearing. | NEW ORDERS | AFFORD RELIEF The new orders, in brief, are: Ballard, Fremont, University and the new Montlake bridge wil! not be opened on week days, from 6:45 to $:45 a. m., or 4:80 to 6:30 p. m., for | any vessel under 176 gross tons. This will eliminate most tugboats. New and old Spokane st. spans, over which West Seattle traffic goes, will be closed during the same hours to vessels of less than $0 tons, or tugs towing 100-ton barges, or 30- ton pile drivers, or rafts of four or More sectiona. Formerly the Ballard, Fremont and University bridges had to be opened for vessels of more than 50 tons. A great deal of shipping that form- erly claimed right-of-way will be un- able to obstruct street traffic under | the new order, Col. Barden sald. He | added that importance of waterborne . | traffic was such that the compromise | sttected was the best that could be secured from the department. ‘WOOD IN SPAIN Young Plunger Disappeared From Paris, Leaving Debts BARCELONA, Spain, Feb. 26.-- Osborne Wood, youthful American plunger, who disappeared from Paris, leaving several debts, was found in the Hotel Ritz here today by a Unit- ed Press correspondent. Wood arrived at 9:30 a. m. yeu terday, the hotel sald, and talked with an officer of the United States Ship Scorpion now in Barcelona har-+ bor. He had planned to leave for Valencia this morning, but at a late hour had not left his hotel and pre- sumably had postponed his de parture. KEARNS WINNER $200,000 Suit Brought by Woman Is Dismissed LOS ANGELES, Feb. 26.—The $200,000 damage suit brought against Jack Kearns by Mrs. Mary C. Tens ney, in which she accused the fight manager of assault, was dismissed by a jury in superior court today. ‘The jury returned a verdict of not guilty after 30 minutes’ deliberation and completely exonerated Kearns of the accusations. Mrs, Tenney, a former screen ac tress, claimed Kearns drugged and attacked her in a Hollywood aparte ment nearly a year ago. She demanded $200,000 personal damages in civil proceedings instig- nated after the district attorney’s office refused to prosecute Kearns on the strength of her story. Want Payment of Lost Man’s Bills Tho mysterious disappearance of Capt. Harry De Gueldre, shipping man and cannery superintendent, last December 31, was revived In ste perior court Thursday when the Arce tic club filed suit for $161.20, for club bills for meals and room, alleged un paid when De Gueldre disappeared. The club also asks custody of his per- | sonal belongings left in its care, Founder of Tacoma University Is Deaa TACOMA, Feb, 26.—Death Wed. nesday took the Rev. David Gous- such Le Sourd, 83, one of the founds ers of the College of Puget Sound, formerly known as the Puget Sound university, of Tacoma. He died at his home, 3401 N, Eighth ste here,

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