The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 13, 1925, Page 7

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MONDAY, JULY 18 PLAN TO RAISE Graduate Nurses @EASEHOLD TAX Metropolitan Company Must, Entire Prove Valuation Is Okeh Members of the Open A ad Annual Meet way PT etar@uat escape taxation revert to the Period of ma gton extensi mental hygiene 2 motion last y health nursing of valuation should Miss Evans was Brown and Paul ‘efused to say who v nday was Mary resident of the to testify that the valuation should be raised KILLER HUNTED WITH PLANE Army Machine Used to Find “Thrill Murderer’ PLATTSBURG, Winging over the St, ley, a swift the commona night the closing sion will be held in Plymouth © a Ss at thie meeting. department of nursing ¢ | Washington, }man of the program comm! TRY MAIL PLANE Phillip Knox Knapp, college graduate | » wanted for the murder of Loula Pan is believed to have kil! in search of a “ LEADING ato Bracken, 4403 8p 8" institute are Mrs. | Elizabeth S. Soule (top), and|* Miss Cecilia A. Soule, & member of the Uni-| |New Boeing Aircraft to Beling Tested in ’Frisco Hop Lawrence yal- Mrs. | rsity of Washington nurs-| pair ff, is chairman of the| 8" automo | Carleton, betwee Mis 81 A car driven by Emma L. Starr, 1810 Dexter ave., colided with a car driven In r rold blood | [promra am committee. LE Wattter H. Sarge ing hand cuffs with wh their prisoner if they get flew here from Mitchell fie} armed and carry. pcovered from sake at the opening se: Franciseo ear thought likely to hs © is the Boeing ¢ | {Main sireet United States, Frantz ‘Dies i in Car * While Parked at sn Sj Natnern Constru his automobile in front of Clark hall | on the University campus Sunday atal departmen Boeing plant in § D, Freeman, Washington was found by Davies, campus guard. The car had been driven to the spot only minutes earlier. R. C. Straud, 5267 14th ave reported he had heard a man groan- ing, and went to summon the Wal- When they arrived, | Kiwanis Club Holds | Picnic at Fortuna. Fortuna Park i scheduled scene of the Kiwanis club's an lingford police pert pias Frantz was dead. ‘The death appeared to be due to! heart trouble Many Seek to @in Wayfarer Letter Prizes ACTS about “The Wayfarer,” great civic and religious | pageant-drama, are being sought by | scores of people in this city, are taking advantage of The Star's offer of $100 in cash for the best luncheon will A special boat has been chartered | A meeting on been set for 12:30, 4 vs Services to Open Reig Conclave ., ‘Saas ie toes | wa nven- | firmed to Apha Gamma Delta sor-|to ther at The Olympie , Cotati asicti for Rainier Boys’ Camp ' chapters were t Seward park Monday night to com-| ye were planned for |sent to Pine tion will be on a basis of ath ;| Chemical Company Established Here ‘ed by a new . Feeently incorpors own as the Verlex Products friends outside and track events, them to be sure and see the pro- duction this year. ‘The prizes offered are: First, Columpla playfield, in charge of the camp. will probably be} w and five prizes of two reserved seat “The Wayfarer.” ‘The letter must be not more than 250 words in length, and must be written to five friends outside the city, inviting them to come and see the great pageant during the week of July 27 to August 1. All letters, to be eligible for the must reach The Star office by noon, Saturday, July 18. and addreses of those to whom the must accom: {for a week. | —— established offices and a factory at| E. Mercer at. Hold Obsequies of Mrs. Castiau Today ‘The funeral of Mra. } who died Saturday Carburetor Backfire Causes Truck Blaze A backfire from set fire to a motor truck driven by George Barnes, Monday morning, at | Butterworth's mortuary at 7 seat and tried to put out the blaze. | Chemicala were used. Damage was | wholesalo by |Disbarment Hearing Mrs. Caukin Honor for Cameron Opened Guest of Democrats! . Grace Caukin, started Monday with Attorney Man-| nota a. federal office the respondent, from the superior court room testimohy was supply house. oo HERE’S MORE ABOUT SCOPES STARTS ON PAGE ONE a first woman to creiffe Camerol ¢ fan which had placed there to keep him cool. Clarance Darrow was the first of to reach the court room, and immediately removed his of the Seattle City-Wide Democ day noon in Moves’ the attorneys by tho board of intent to defraud, law examiners Elks’ Thousands Storm Portland at Convention Special Trains Roll Into Depots; Whole City “Dolled Up” in Purple and White BY REVEL 8. MOORE (United Press Staff Correspondent) PORTLAND, Interests of the Northwest.” Bryan arrived at 8:50, wore a shirt no collar and starched front, an invalid, a matron- ly woman with white, hair and a white dress, w courtroom in a wheel chair and giv: en a place inside the railing. nurse was with her. are scheduled for 8:15 tonight and the 19th had nothing to do with | 4 ig ved i hauled fa''at stormed the tional convention of the lodge. All day. today special trains rolled representatives fol lowed soon after “Bille from the four corne: an® average about one every half-hour, Some of them were here Portland was back in| eyerywh Harriette Gi Roberson Free Lectures TUESDAY, JULY 14 Taught Me in Wurop M street intersection four Wk girl stat tained the antlered herd in natlonal | #j stood facing the center, ing to have anoth forthwith started to " with bands and drill team: BROADCAST GRAND OPENING CEREMONIES Portlanders tr Baubconeclous ‘Thousands of automobiles were soon U yard Avenue and Vine Stree nies, which will open the convention, King County Accidents Twelve King county moter acct lents result in injury of t and damages to week-end, in addit fatal wrecks, according to re to the » ffs office Mon afternoon on $750 bond, harged with driving while drunk He was arrested near Duwamish n the Pacific highway, after ha juring Mrs. F. J. Rawlins, Fleming apartments, who was riding with her husband Patsy Scott, 1128 Norman at. and his two sons, were driving north of Renton when another car crashed nto th ing m into @ Carl Friedgren, Los Angeles reported his car damaged Mision north of Bothell, on the Everett hignway Both cars were damaged when W. Askell, 2720 1. 63rd at, and John Carney, of Everett, collided tn a traffic jam near Bothe nday after \ report. | ed he ran c car piloted by H. neh, 8020 War: |ren ave, fou south of Bothell lamaging both cars J. K. Krusemark, 4554 19th ave N.E., sald his car was struck at | Bryn Mawr by one driven by E. E. | Hale, 403 Roy at | Mrs, John Brunner, rural route No. 6, was badly bruised when her Ford was hit by a car drive wore damaged Mrs, W, F, Gray, 162 W., recely whe | skidded into one ope nth ave. er at Oscar F. Erickson, mn by A radger, south corgetown. R. Higgen, 2415 Irving st., was re g hin car Mc driven by Ha Kent and Renton. in Wisconsin; 3 WW. Ewing of Auburn. paiaay T= ( GRANDMOTHER TELLS OF WARNING VISIONS OF FATAL CAR CRASH Dm. ARING that she had night warning and now, either t fate, the bodies of two little girls being prepared for burial tn THE SEATTLE ‘AUTOS DAMAGED YOUTH DIES IN State digg aback at a oh IN SMASHUPS | Only Three Injured in 12|He and Friend Are Sucked ward Anderson was releaned 1 bruises to one knee the car driven by her husband | ted by Louis ote ontractor, and was engaged in busi day after hitting | ) HERE’S MORE ABOUT SEWAGE STARTS ON PAGE ONE | jthe intercepting sewer plan and telimination of the septic tanka in| ements to The Star Monday I have lways been suspicious tanks and have only a until m re con Tindall said y night! “T have always opposed septic Eastern | uk# and have made my position |known,” said Nichols, “But when over we suggest a change to our city isineer he Immediately gots a text book on septic tanks and reads long pasnages from tt The system outlined for our city | all sewage into the Sound, off }hered to. It should never have been | |deviated from.” | WOULD PURIFY GREEN LAKE apparently was crystallizing to the point where a permanent solution {to eliminate all sewage from the the park board, was perfecting a plan to purify Green lake and make it free from objectionable odors, board Wednesday 1 will suggest the the south end of tho lake, to be In- jstalled next ye in the south end to keep the water all Green lake needs to purify it.” Hold Rites for Last rites for Herbert F. Pawt ing, grocer, 900 Stewart st., who died urday, will be sald at 4 p. m, Monday, at Butterworth'’s mortu ary chapel, after which the body| will be cremated, Pawling had re- sided in Seattle for 16 years. the Ruhr by French troops was be- gun today, according to a Central News dispatch from Berlin, Virtually all troops were reported tho important centers in the great western Germany coal and tron re. L make my opposttion known While sentiment in the council! will probably be offered in a plan| lake, George W. Hill, president of installation of a Jargo fountain in| r, so that cireula-| tion will be Insured,” said Hill. “As| an immediate remedy 1 will suggest | that the board install a large pump| from lying stagnant. Circulation ts)" Pawling Monday LONDON, July 13.—Evacuation of to have left Gelenskirchen, one of RESCUE TRY Beneath Falls’ Rapids Greater love hath no man than that he give his life for hie frien iu Loren Meyers, 23, 3641 Ba ve, met the supreme tempt to reacue Theodore £34 EK, 68th at Both boys were drowned tn t the Pilchuck river, at Granite Sunday, while on a picnic Finke's r, Mabel, 24, to s cane Miss Irene MeGrath, 19, 6711 F uve F,, fiancee of Finke. After n ienie lunch, the two youth left the girla in camp while went to get some picture the cascades and canyon. Finke lly the water Without hesitating, y plunged in after him, to ald him Both ya kK men were sucked un der the surface of the river, which is still high, and in a few moment thelr lives were snuffed o Meyers’ body caught on rocks near and wan easily recovered, but ht far out in the stream between two rocks, 150 feet below tho falls, H. C. Pollette, 4648 20th ave. Seattle 45th at Me Jack Ste ls denperate at tempts to recover Finally g xtra the stream abov th by J.Jand dragged it ashor Lodin, 7729 18th ave. N. W,, at] Bothell way and 126th st, Both cars The two girls, unaware of the trag edy that had overtaken thelr escorts, [Were waiting at camp when some Jone told them of the death of the| two. The bodies of the youths were tak en to an Ey lishment and later brought to the} 405 Stewart | Butterworth mortuary. told the sheriff hin car hit one| » of Willlam Finke, Finke ts the » s with his father, He and M. ers were to be married whe me, now under construction, mpleted. He is a graduate en Anne high school Meyers is the non of Mrs. O. er, $641 Bagley ave,, and com nin junior year at the Univer Qu aity thin summer, He was to be married to Miss Finke after gradua tion ———— HERE’S MORE ABOUT ACCIDENTS STARTS ON PAGE 1 when the traffic wan light At a curve on the brick highway | * the car left the road| pinned all five th. The babies Grigg wan helpless |~ at Schillin, passengers died instantly with a broken shoulder and ribs. Jogpph Helser and Harry Loke. vick, who live near, rescued the vic- ing the living to Kirkland; tims, the dead bables to fons’ under. J| taking parlors in the same town Exact causo of the accident is junknown, The curve is sald to be unmarked, POWER PLANT Three More | Hurt in Sno- qualmie Short Circuit Two men are dead and death hoy- ers over three more at Snoqualmie Falls as the result of a short circuit in the Snoqualmie Lumber Co. power plant Saturday evening. Dr. R. T, Burke, who has stayed by the injured men night and day inince the accident, was near com. Ipt 30 years ago, which contemplates |Plete exhaustion Monday morning and was forced to take to his bed amish head and thru the|for a fow hours’ sleep while a nurse North Trunk system, should be ad-|C#res for the injured men. The dend are: Orlan Lester DeWalt, 39, chief op- jerator for the Puget Sound |& Light Co, at Snoqualmie. Nels Nelson, 35, Snoquaimio Lum. ber Co., electrician, Tho injured are: Robert Gray, 40, chief electrician | for the Snoqualmie Lumber Co, Arthur Bratlie, 40, chief engineer for the Snoqualmie Lumber Co. William Best, 35, shift operator for Snoqualmie Lumber Co. | All the clothing was tterally “At tho meeting of the. park| bUFmed from all five bodies. ‘The ac- | tual cause has been undertermined. The men wentyinto the plant to con- fer on means of restoring Puget Sound company current to the lum ber plant, gutted June 26 by fire in | the transformers, A few minutes later the power went off. Rescuers, rushing to the ene, saw Bratlie stagger out with iray, the most seriously hurt. Gray dived into the mill pond to ease his burr De Walt died at 10 a, m. Sunday leaving a widow and two small chil- dren Nelson's wife collapsed when not! fled of his death at 3:30 yesterday afternoon, She has one child. The power plant was tled up for jan hour by the tragic accident, It resumed operations Sunday, how: ever, I, R. Titcomb, general manager, is Investigating the probable cause of!y gaw fat Susie, my bootlesger friend, the short circuit, Maj. Ford A, Carpenter, reserve aviation officer from San Francisco, will leave Seattle Monday for Van. couver, He has spent three days in Seattle gathering meterological t od and plunged into ng Meyers running into body, and, by means of a lasso, chught the body ett undertaking estab- | WO KILLED IN Power ‘}earned that she had a nice room and BALD FIND OUT FOR YOUR and “PAY WHEN YOU GET HAIR” Hours: D D CURL Y 802 Home HAM. to ' . E Savings 10 PM, Hair and Scalp Spoctaliat Bldg. @ CURLEY DOEs IT! GROWS HAIR ‘HEADS OLE FREDERICK & NELSON RS_STORF) Pinan —trodatteh 6 Ndowe Servece ‘DOWNSTAI FANCY SWEATERS $4.85 In the good-looking weaves ting strip Smart for golf and other cloth sports Wear § Of wool and wool-and artifi Wk, Sizes 36 to 42. Low-priced at $4.85, Boys’ Cool Tub Suits—Low Priced: 19c— TTRACTIV. little washable Suits for s of 3 to 8 years. Quite a number of becoming yles in button-on and Fashioned color combinations and trimmed in braids—some with marine emblems that please lit- tle boys. Good value at these low prices 79¢ and 95¢. STURDY KHAKI WEAR for Summer resc ow prices Three Interesting Offerings for MEN ATHLETIC UNION SUITS 85¢ athletic type. crotch, and elantie styles of cotton fabrics trousers woven cks and others. at SSe the sult DOWNSTAIRS 95c serviceable middy of good quality fabrics, in several pleas- at beach and other ts, and in town for Downstairs Store to wear are in th -DOWNSTAIRS STORE WOOL BATHING SUITS $3.85 | In the sturdy rib- | stitch weave. In black and a number of brighter plain colors and in sev- | eral striped patterns. Comfortably - fitting suite, in sizes 34 to 44. w-priced, due to a spe- 1 purchase, at $3.55, Are our prisons humane? The Seattle Star. From Illinois breakfasted at 7:30. went to the work assigned to us sald to be the best place in the prison | THROWN to work, for it was well lighted and|AT ME Some girls worked in’ the sewing | discovered. tables and a clock. nothing at all, It was called the “loafers’ room” because many of the girls who want. ed to avoid work said they could not |e, girls. sew or bake or wash, and were sent}, to this room, where they did their work so bady that the matron gave them no more to do, Then they sat vacantly, not even had been around me, engrossed in the making of these small articles. Silence ‘Rule i in Prison | | Is Broken by Mrs. Huck |which were being wasted I could | keep a number of girls busy, and in time could teach them to make things Routine , of Reformatory I Irks the Former) Congresswoman, She Writes Winnifred Mason Huck, former )carry tales and don’t carry notes.”* congresswoman and the first woman! The girl who was measuring me to preside over the house of repre-|had a rule, sentatives, got herself sentenced to/body who is finding fault with any- lones happier. for purposes of rebellion. In another day or two, we were all scattered, jon't talk with any-/ 15's near me. Guiltless of any crime, she} We were not allowed to have scis-|One dispute over my scissors. sought answers to the questions sors, ostensibly | | because of the rule |that we might not cut or trim our) Can a girl, crushed by her fel-\nair but actually low men, regain her place im s0-\in the hands of these women were ciety? as dangerous as in the hands of chil-| This is the 12th story, written for! dren who have violent and uncon- trollable tempers. A few scissors were {ssued each BY WINNIFRED MASON HUCK | day in the sewing room and art Former Representative to Congress | class, and each gathered up and counted. a pair was miss- them in sisterly fashion, when one )of the girls from across the room | walked up, took my scissors and an- nounced, “Anne says I can have | some scissors to cut pictures.” because scissors |I was not without defenders. evening they were |!" & sudden rage. if I know it," she shouted. “I'll On week days we were upat7 and} When, one day, |get "em for you, Batty” ing, I thought the commotion raised | | : . about it was out m1 rtion. At 8 the whistle blew, and we all | Abou as Of (All BrODPKHOR | ca acantly: eithiae hrs heauas Sian | she had so much spunk, nor did Hazel, tho little scissors grabber. But I learned that ‘scissors had a Some worked in the latindry, which | Potency in jail that they were inno. was just across the court. It was|cent of in the outside world. cold wave of fear that always swept over me when these women began clean. } One day I asked to borrow a pair, one of their brawls. Others worked in the bakery, just/as was the custom, since there were beneath the kitchen. Very good|so few of them. They were thrown . beside Hazel came to Mary and bread was made there. , at me! For what reason “3 language. I did not understand her, but I did catch one English ex- prossion. room, where the mending was done| ‘‘You can pass them back,” F said and the uniforms were made, There|to the girl beside me. were 15 sewing machines, two cutting | touch them." The scissors were passed back and I had arrived on Saturday after.|I settled down to my noon, and on Monday I was sent to| them, for I would not use scissors the “art room,” another sewing room | Offered so violently, where the prisoners did hand sewing} The next day and crocheting. Some of them did|t® me ‘for my very own,” tht . After that I began to be popular. At odd moments I picked up tiny scraps from the floor and cut and made little things that were new to “IT wouldn't week WithGllt ‘Nobody can call me that! rage. a pair was issued fit. sport picnic of the Charles B. Hop- kins chapter of the Telephone Pio- neers of America, held at Star lake Sunday. The two oldest members of the organization, John Nelson and C. P. Pean, were present. how me how Elizabeth," said one of the girls who loafing for four of these loafers were gathered I told Anne that with the scraps good enough to sell. I hoped that this would make some of the listless But Anne was afraid. She scented the formation of a clique, perhaps and nane of the girls were permitted Before this happened, we did have We were sitting together, using The matron had stepped out, but Mary, the girl at my left, stood up body can take Betty's scissors And get them she did, and none The air was tense, and I felt the Then a dull, spiteful girl who sat spoke a few words in a foreign “She did, did she?" cried Mary. She sprang to her feet in a white (Copyright, 1925, N. BE, A. Service, Ine.) Tomorrow: I witness an epileptic Two hundred people attended the thinking, day in and day out, The better class of prisoners de- spised the “art room bums,” There were 60 girls In the room| when T entered it. Anne, the matron, was out, and when they heard me} coming, they thought It was she. "Oh, it is just Betty,” said one, who was sitting at the sewing ma chine, "Come over and sit by me." 1 went over and eat by Glenna until | sitting among the negro girls across the room, I crossed to speak to her, and everything was going well with her. A buzzing among the girls alarmed me. Tcould hear whispers: “If Anne | should come in," “She'll get into trou ble,” “You ought to tell her.” Susie, quite as now and ignorant as I, had begun to tell me all about the negro cottage. Finally one of the girls chitched me, drew mo up closer than was com fortable, and sald, "You're not sup posed to leave your seat, Anne will get awful mad," 1 hurried back to my place, more to ket away from that dreadful clutch than to avold Anne'4 anger T had broken threo rules, 1 had left my chair; I had spoken, and, above all, I had spoken to a n@ro, I did not get to my seat any too quickly: Tho girls hore had strange codes: During the first day I was given the following rules: “Don't borrow; don't lend; don't tell anything about yourself; don't Bring in your account on or before the 15th of this month and share in the earnings for the full six. months’ period ending December 31st. $1 to $1,000 Accepted

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