The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 30, 1925, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

| "WEATHER me | Generally | Ww | tees Temperature Last 34 Hours | Maximum, 73 ‘Minimum, uo} | Today noon, 56 | Ratered as Second Clase Matier May 599, at the Postoge: atthe, Was der the Act of ¢ ‘TTLE, WASH, TUESDAY, JUNE 30, 1 vee “ ro » Pr Ti eee > {SANTA BARBARA, HIT AGAIN CRAWLS OUT OF THE WRECK | The Newspaper. With the Biggest Circulation in ‘Washington ~The Seattle Star & ress March 3, 1979, Per Year, by Mall, $2.00 TWO CENTS IN SE: TTI ~ folks! Ob, heck, let's re bad she “Hey “The st peach!” ns drought « little} The nurse said with an aly 3 “How glad I am,” the poor dad| 7 said, ) “He didn’t bring a pear eep. cool,” says a London This shows Helen of Troy, Li'l fiee Gee's prize hen, inspecting the hard-hoiled egs she laid during the recent hot spell. During the cold Shap lant winter, the hen, according | to Gee laid an ice cream cone. says the land at her ranch so rich that a 10-penny | nail she buried last May is now al- most as big as a railroad spike. mn: An optimist can see the silver e's clouds. Li'l Gee Gee says it will have to Ret considerably warmer before the thermometer will read like her golf Lf score. Bhe snubs Does Helen Hincken Her papa went and Bought e Lincotn the girls Boston, min says there will be Motorcycles in Heck, jn’t heaven he's talking about that . Baptists Ask {¢ . for Peace in wee | SL SETS CORES eee aa | LI'L GEE GER, TH’ OFFICE | VAMP, SEZ: } Th’ man who said all-women | | are vain never saw any of these |girl hikers in khaki breeches. SY SAU ae arate 4 On these warm days, a person has Pa choice of two kinds of Turkish pp aths—the reculét kind and the = you get in a telephone booth. | * A Divorced are Mr. And Mra, May; He didn’t come home With his weekly pay. ~A. H. A. Northern Baptist convention met for the first seg: sio Tuesday morning in Masonic temple “2 * i One of the most prominent mem-| ¥ yp ers of the Outof-Luck club is the} Pzink who is still making payments | on a flivver he wrecked six months | ago. at Harvard ave. and Pine st. CANDIDATE FOR THE POISON | IVY CLUB |] Gink who presents his fiancee, with a savings bank in lieu of an Mgagement ring. | * cluded in t dress of come, given by Dr. Ambrose Bailey, wel- | A son was born to Charlie Chap- | lim Sunday. We understand his lay- | #ite consists of a pair of baggy |} Pants, a bamboo cane and an under- mized derby hat. Dr. Bailey j church. “from the heart,” Dr.| riily welcomed the. dele in the “name of} ¢ Christian Bap: | nd then referred to the rudience 8s whot When Charlie Chaplin, Jr, geta,™ Wither uses on the act. the heads of the officers of the eee | convention. “1 welcome you to that tto,"” valid Dr, “and 1 believe that | the discuss in this convention will be on the high plane indicated | by that mott UN | There is danger of a water short Age in Seattle, {t is reported, Gosh, Won't it be horrible if home brew- Sts, with their water suddenly shut | Of, should try to make beer out of| milk’ Ye DIARY | Following the opening details of |the convention, the report of the} jexecutive committee and the inter address by President Carl , of Maine, the desire for | peace was ngain emphasized in the | keynote address by the Rey. Clinton it tifal city in ruins Mt he so bad as the dispa' tin > pedaling tecthe ead of the | Wunder, of Rochester, N. Y. Hin| F harbor, and did there ser the Dyn Wrn, subject was, “On Karth, Peace.” | The tone of the opening conven-| tion was strongly one of peace, but thero was an undercurrent of tense (ler talking with Dame. Brew it alter th Dame Brew, wel noss, nugwesting the probability that dp onan rr f ehureh Thaps « fint-bottomed rowbont. And | tli of the | & hurehy to home. gather y not be ent With + out conflict of opinion Ne Old Silas Grump, the sage of| It was the belief of some that ys he would 4 peace may be disrupted durin, mferences of the committee | enrollment and credentials which med Tugsday, with Attorney (urn to Pago-Z, Column a) Ne eather have hin hlow a safe | Hen to blow » ixophone LEASES AND THE U. OF W. EDITORIAL IB IS gratifying to the people of Washington— owners of the University of Washington property —to see the apparent co-operation between the univer- sity board of regents and the officials of the Metro- politan Building company in the matter of the Metro- politan lease. The Metropolitan's lease on university business prop- erty in the vicinity of University and Fourth does not expire until 1947, but clauses in it stipulate that cer- tain things must have been done by June 24 of this yee Numbered in these things was the elimination of all temporary structures on the site, to be replaced by new, permanent buildings. The Star, along with many other folks, knew of this and other provisions in the lease and watched the approach of June 24 with interest. It admired the despatch with which Metropolitan officials acted when the matter of the lapse was called to their attention by the regents. And it is sure that the officials will be just as glad to co-operate in the other matters that ave under consideration by the regents and will be submitted to the company. Seattle is complimented on having a progressive, thoro-going, fearless organization like the Metropoli- tan in its midst to lead the city’s growth. The state is favored, too, in having a board of regents that has proved its ability to look after the publ interest in university affairs, With such a board as R. R, Rogers of Spokane (president) ; John T. Heffernan, Seattle; W W. R. Mil- a Seattle; W. A. Rupp, Aberdeen; O. A. Fechter, Yakima; James H. Davi coma and Mrs, Ruth K, MeKee of Kelso, the people may know that theingaf- fairs are in good hands And The Star believes that when thes: vod folks sit down at the table with Metropolitan of the further differences in the Metropolitan an bag ironed out as easily and amicably as the present ones have been, . Herve i J} waitten lou Lhe Seattle Star. | Mis. nd Hk | MORE PICTURES SHOWING WHERE THE EARTH- QUAKE Monday toppled Santa Bart , Cal., into ruins. Left, above: State street, main thorofare, which is almost all in ruins. The First National. bank, in-the right fore- ground, was demolished. The Great Wardrobe store, across the street, also was destroyed. Left, below, a bird’s-eye view of Santa Barbar showing the type of surrounding country. Right, above: The Marcos building, which collapsed. Center: The Hotel rillo, which toppled over in new shocks Tuesday ; ; be low,*the Santa Barbara postoffice. umento, Fres WRECKED nny nears Chicago and New York: Clearing House Asked to r,: St Phila Cleveland, Boston Only One Seattleite Injured in Temblor| Help $2,000,000 Fund Cheek of dead and injured at t Santa, Barbara Tuesday — showed | Ssatiniridae't to only one Seattle man hurt. He is Appeal ° for *) Louis J $2,000,000 earthquake fund for the Dioner, reported from se attle, but appearing in neither city relief of the ruined city of Santa'| nor telephone directory Barbara was recelyed by wire by the |, Ole Hanson, former mayor, and) house association | Thomas Murphine, former — politi- clearing y ning | clan, both were in the stricken city, but neither was hurt send the aid to} & house or!S, P, Santa Barbara Trains on Schedule loan, will be] All Southern Pacific pa r “used at the discretion of the: asso- | train: operating In iiafoutiof Banta ciation, with the probability of re Barbara are running on schedule, in- | turning 60 10 75 pér cent at the on aici the San Francisco-Los An-! of seven years trains, This was th hnounce: | Other cities which h ment. Tuesday of, Carl ‘Taylor, gon-! to aid are San Fran eral agent at Seattle heis in Addition to the $20,000,000 bulldin © been asked ,» Los An+ » the earth literally Hammers Sound Thruout City as scaffolds Go Up /|Tuesday’s Shocks Send More Buildings Crumbling, Endangering Lives of Reconstructors June 30.—Santa Barbara took heart this morning, after the first four-hour period without a shock had elapsed since the first devastating temblor. A bright sun dispelled the murky gloom of early morning, and the work of clearing streets and build- ings began again, in defiance of the countless set- backs of the night. Hammers sound everywhere. Temporary scaf- folding and a forest of props of every sort were be- ing set against the crazily leaning store and build- ing fronts that lined the streets, and in some cases nearly arched them. The Santa Barbara Clearing House held a meeting in the mid-morning, as the result of which a call was issued to bankers of California to contribute to a $20,000,000 build- ing and loan fund, to finance reconstruction. The loans are SANTA BARBARA, Cal., | requested at a rate not to exceed 6 per cent. The city council and Chamber of Commerce wired the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce, accepting an offer of assistance, and asked for a corps of structural engineers to guide the rebuilding of the ruined city. ANTA BARBARA, Cal., June 30.—Three distinct earth tremors spread further terror among panic-stricken Santa Barbara residents today. Strict martial law was established thruout the city to safeguard life and property. A severe jolt, accompanied by rumblings and rolling of rocked the entire city at 1:22 a. m. Buildings left standing but in a shaky state from the dis- astrous upheaval of yesterday morning, crumbled to the streets. Two recurrent shocks at 4:42 and 5:55 a. m. spread fresh panic among frightened Santa Barbarans. The last jolt toppled showers of brick and cornices to the streets, endan- gering lives of police and wreckers working in the quake zone. Stricken City Awakes to Face New Horrors More Buildings Leveled as Three New Quakes Rock Santa Barbara BY FRANK H. BARTHOLOMEW (United Press Staff Correspondent) ANTA BARBARA, Cal., June 30.—Beautiful San- ta Barbara, sleeping wearily but warily among the ruins of Monday’s quake, was shattered and shaken by another new and devastating earth tremor at 1:20 a. m. today. Again, at 4:42, a jolt of less violence swept the city. And then a violent shock, equaling in intensity the ‘original quake at 6:45 a. m. yesterday, seized and tossed and rattled the city at 5:55 a.m., an hour when inhabitants and rescue workers alike had believed danger past. For several minutes following the initial crash, the earth continued to tremble violently. The din, as walls collapsed further and new build- fe came down, was terrific. Then followed cries, shouts and screams of the people who had thought |to snatch a brief respite from the terrors of yester- day. Out from houses and from tents, in which many | had taken the precaution to sleep, poured Santa Bar- | bara, to view the fresh destruction. Hundreds of special officers and marines were at their im n to Pago 7, Column 3) Winnifred Mason Huck, | \ former congresswoman and ithe first woman to preside over the house of represent- 108, got herself sentenced m in Cleveland, O. | 1 sought answers to the her first story, Coneribcwonas Goes to Former Rey {UT your hat over there {dingy corner of the cell room, prepa he shot Winnifred Mason Huck tne daar, » Jail for Star ) MASON HUCK | The smell of stale tobacco smoke, ntative to Congress) mixed with that nm Tlinois the vermin-infe: | room, accosted n BY WINN rotting food in prs of the breath, Fr cor at eve * sald toward a} And the stench of cooped-up bu |manity pervaded all the matron noing as she “Haye you any money? matron across the dark asked the dd to search me 1 stopped gingerly ques: | THbbn teste: Hagerable } As 1 showed her my pocketbook | tions: ® ‘ i migvant rie nine hands trembled, 1t was not alt | 4 A wild assortment of femining FAR thei uadliroas | Are our prisons humane? han ronted me, One pa@| ecu for the cockroach greeting | f x | had startled me Into some dismaying Can a gitlgcrushed by her | was as, From that t vantage | anticipations fellow men, regain her place i Ran @ lusty cockroach viowed the “Is that all?’ she asked, sus in sociely? wore iclously One cock-oyed glance of weleome | “1 have $10 pinned on the inside of 4 Column, a at me and scuttled off inte ry (Rurn je Page

Other pages from this issue: