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BARE MATTICE DUAL L > News spaper With the Bigg est Cireul: stion in Washington 1e Seattle Star ane Ma at the Postoffice at seattle EATTLE, WASH.., Pe MARCH 6 TW FRIDAR 1925 25 ome Telephone Pictures of pre Coolidge I nauguration 4 have litte use for It B aay saltly return your neigh e's snow shovel | Sa Meteight of Econom teothpicks serve ifres in the (BWAIL APPLESAUCE SAYS deme modern al m are con « enough, , met to Parl out their in pub- evagten needed u new « Pk ai dired Mike to pRrxton came hoi "he sai pb. The % « of your » mn jobs. see Wille, seek @ core M6 tack on prandpa’s « ‘wamma says thet he 9 great originality! eee Year the council prepares «| mys Councilman n Another remarkable speed achievement in transmitting news pictures was recorded in| | Seattle Friday, when pictures of the inauguration of President Coolidge and Vice Presi-| | dent Dawes arrived in Seattle, less than tivo days after they were made at Washington, The pictures were sent to San Francisco by telephone and mailed from there |to Seattle. Upper view shows Chief Justice Taft, himself a former president, adminis | tering the oath of office to the president at the capitol. Lower view is an intereat-| ling glance at the Coolidge party leaving the White House for the inauguration, Mrs. | Coolidge seems very happy as she affectionately rests one hand on the president's knee. | IRTY-EIGHT. hours after they transmission of a pi and intense beam | Pras taken in, Washington, D.C.|great distance was sry ¢ {iim ob the | pictures of the inaugural ceremony ‘This speed is made of President Coolidge, March 4, are|system developed b doe” Garlic, who was wie shed in The Star y¥ laboratort by Judge Wright 10| Tie 6 were. transmitted Will appeal on the | telephie rom Washington t of fruel and unusual punish: | rancisco and then rushed by t aes Aerested on a charge thru the joint services: of Telephone & Telegraph ox were published in San Francisco about two hours after the inauguration ceremony was per: | formed |D, Cc. ) cture over the ord h | its} “ plet ure of a st ve by seven inches. Po: line drawings, handwriting ing can be sent over the A great time-saver is th a film can be sent whi The method of trans follows: Tie film ia placed in a cy? Maile Of steel are now being eS fatoous Krupp facto: yy ‘Heel tooth de test is sgid to dem. wo with’ which pic anamitted over long The length of the line | fc New York| speed. At the 2,600. miles,|of a screw m which | cylinder is caused t paral o the axt. trically Thia cs a om The total time consumed in thel phonograph needle playing on a rec Kids, Lookit! Here Is Chance to Play Clown, Earn Money, See Show! EY, kids! Time to get out and paré ade again. Prizes for it, too. Twenty dollars for some kid; $10 for another, and $5 for another. All you have to do is dress up in comic costume, come down to The Star office on Saturday, week—NOT this Saturday— and march in the parade. Best costume gets the $20; second and third grab off the other prizes. And every kid in line gets a free ticket to a show at the Metropolitan. The parade is being held in connection with the Grotto Society Circus and Passing Parade of 1925. This show is to be put on at the Metropolitan three times Friday and three times Saturday, March 13 and 14. It's staged by Angora Grotto, of the Mystic Order of Veiled Prophets of the Enchanted Realm, which isn’t so awful as it sounds, being merely a social Masonic order. Better start in now and get that costume ready. And remember the date: March 14. There'll be more details between now arl then. Watch The Star. of light. | © rotate at} hington via }to San 20 was one at the gre distance over photos have ever been sent elec Mumber on our special teill be Li Gee. Gee, sing- MA favorite, the refrain| between Wi miles aw WHY THE IDEA: ly of Washington Shaye? eet sine dee rorations | fore the onty| they boasted was Om their vests —Lynden ng to the telephone com they will install the system as mand can also be used for atm: em rie condition: Gloria Swanson Is Gloria“ Swan- star, today PARIS, March 6 : ifm ae man ners gion lerachet Bates even hike @ stratghts had been confined with nearly four weeks. to Versailles for‘’a | which she nd plans to sail WEATHER Fair tonight and Saturday; low est temperature tonight, 35 degrees. FORECAST } — ——S © to home and to A. J, 8, \Yeggs Spend Strenuous 1 About $150 was taken. “JEWELS. STOLEN rapidly and as widely as there is de-| sion under proper | Out of Hospital |’ | was discharged from the hospital to} ™ for | : How J.R. Justice Will igo 10 | OVE By “Vic” | Home Edition (cu T THE TIES THAT BIND OQ CENTS IN SEATTLE. ~ CLAIMED BY TWO WOMEN Oculist Engaged Two at Same Time, Jury Hears D" ALBERT F M Y OL2 FASHIONED C1 GOVERN AMIENS to ATTICY tied f LAWYER GRILLS GUL WITNESS Why | Does a Politician Change His Spots? WERE not zoologist enough to know whether a leop- ard changes its spots. But we’re convinced a poli- tician does! For we find Former Mayor Hugh Caldwell today stumping the city, pleading for the defeat of the city manager plan on the ground that, with the mayor abolished, the city council is granted control of the city and that we'll be headed straight for the rocks. And yet, as recently as 1922, we turn to Caldwell’s an- nual message as mayor, and read: “Any six councilmen may run the city in any manner fn ches ant a0 titers tonay|| FRO in conflict with the city charter or the state law, ‘ ~ | and the mayor becomes practically a figurehea Today we find Mayor Brown up in arms against the | an to abolish the mayor and permit the city council to name a manager to run municipal affairs. Too much power for the council; the present system is the best you'll get, says the mayor. And yet, in his annual message in 1923 Brown com- plains: “While in theory the mayor is expected to wield Thief Takes Girl's Vanity | executive power, I find that he is held responsible for Case With $2,000 Gems | many conditions over which he has no cotnrol.” Why the sudden outburst of fear now over a hay- stuffed bugaboo on the part of these men when both admitted, from the mayor’s chair, that the city coun- cil was all-powerful even under the old system? What made the spots change? 1 | | é | (Turn to rag SMASH 4 SAFES Evening to Get $300 Arr robbe hounes early F ing over $300 in cash and hind them t ands of dolla checks and bon Two of the safer were in the Of the Seattle Automobile East Pike st. The yergn b window to gain entrance The combinations safes were then hamme the of the buildin fice of the Western Motors was entered and their safo broken into. the safecrackers but fatled to ob ¢ told police Friday Miss Cohen was acting as cashier The vanity case was lying near her. She did not miss it until about 11 p.| Someone must have taken it while her back was turned, she told| Detectives H. M. Barton and C. L.| HE city manager plan is simple and plain. That’s what makes ' r case contained two tray | holding 12 diamond rings each | Another tray, with four onyx rings, a Lined up FOR it are those who want clean government. ug ilts Cohen, who is daughter of | ing it are those who would have the citty government run on a || basis of business efficiency rather than ‘gang politics.” | Tomes. ' I it workable. That’s why new cities are adopting it steadily. a few wrist watche, nd two othe ribadd, Was, the ease! ‘ om | Pioneer Safety Deposit vault and al heaters, had bee ne} . crit ry ee Hubitvot “carrying thelmeene whi That’s the only issue: “Gang politics” or business efficiency! Pie ae” The Lined up AGAINST it are the “gang politicians.” are valued at between $1,700 and Urg- | | oe gems, which | E elect a city council as stockholders elect a bank’s directors. These directors select a general manager. Naturally, if he must get results, he must have authority. And so we give him (Turn to Page 12, Column 4) Fa