The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 3, 1925, Page 1

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we — —— = _Are U. §S. Political Parties Drifting Toward Downfall: ? a See Page 6 | DRIVER HELD UP ON WAY TO BANK NN nee eens WEATHER \ Temperature {il . sday ” Last 1 Hours Minimum, 5 J noon, 61 Maxi 73 Today es VOL, NO. 186, eee eae ‘CYNTHIA _ GREY Mother's Cooking and | Father's Arm Chair Are Utilized by Wise Maid When She Applies the ! | Acid Test. By Cynthia Grey HEN a girl feels that a man has taken up enough of her time and that it is up to him to take her or leave her, she usually asks him over to Sunday night supper. Gorged with mother’s cold roast beef, potato salad and layer-cake, he will be led to father’s easy chair and Toot- stool and presented with a 50-cent cigar. T nto the flames a of his life istens to him t ing at } h does not do a Steve daughter will do well to store sh nd waste C ime or Sunday r= in Another One Movie-Struck Dear Miss Grey: I my career—I want to tion picture actress. ly are determined I college instead. I am exceedingly good looking and can act. Would they be able to bring me back if become a mo- But my fam shall go to I ran away? I amis. SALLY You'd probably come back of your own accord, provided you could do so. Hollywood is filled with be ‘ul saleswomen, te! phone operators and stenographers who went there intending to be motion-picture stars. Only one pos. sessed of unusual ta or good fortune can succeed there these ee Russian Dressing Dear Miss Grey recipe for Russian add finely To one cup of one-fourth cup mayonnaise pimentoes minced, two tablespoons green pep. per, two tablespoons catsup. Mix well and chill Curious Bystanders Dear Miss Grey: I should like ou to tell me how to stop the uriosity and {ll manners of some people in public place For ex- ample, when a bystander steps up beside a depositor in a bank to see how much mon he has recorded in his book. What appropriate words that at people like tl ANNOYED. ome be dircoted Ignore them. You would only place yourself in their class by speaking to them, and any you might however “appro- | priate,” would miss its point. Indolent Partner Dear Miss Grey My husband thinks I ought to press his eck. ties and keep his clothes brushed. I think this is his job. Don't WI | Anything that a woman can do to make her husband a success in his business ought to be done by her willing And clean ties and clothes do help a man to look well at his job. After all, it's not much work to take care of your husband’ clothes and it eems to me you would get real leasure from doing it Poem by Shelley Dear Cynthia: Can you advise| me who wrote “We look before and after And pine for what is not; Our sincerest laughter Kotered as Becond Ch The Nesiinane With the Bigg est Circulation in Riartivin: The Seattle Star Ii i Matter May 3, TTLE, WASH., MONDAY, AUGUST Woman Victim of GALES FAN Amnesia Held Here POLIGE TRYING TO ESTABLISH HER IDENTITY Found Wandering in Daze; Can't Tell of Family LOSES HER MEMORY Gives Name to Chief Sev-| eryns, but Forgets Past Life od hag MBING a much-worn Bible, a relatives and said she did n has she remembered t the Richm. night somev The wom: k dress and fu staying one n Ballard. dressed pi a light brown immed fr s of memory sndition common to he } held for iden tification, she has refused to eat ccordl to jail matrons SHOW LOSS |Swimming Meet and Sport Show Fail to Pay Cost Two of Seattle's major attrac tions for big week during the Knights Templar conclave have closed their books for the week the ledger showing a ig and div Lin the Lake Wash the Young Men's a deficit of $3,000 national swimmi ing meet, sts ington ¢ club, ha t take Sportsmen's care of. itho attend has fail as far os which they The 600 people mu show, 300 are said to have ed the exhibition this year expectations donations are concerned. They are $2,000 In an effort » ma ‘ood the loss, sponsors a holding the over until nesday night Members of the Young club declared they failed to the red. “in show Business get support in the way of attend ance Monday. We gave Seattle tho greatest wimming 1 diving exhibition that has ever been held in the West, and we get an $8,000 deficit four our pains,” said Norman A Bartels, one of the promoters. Several new features have been added to the Sportsmen's show for the extended exhibition. These In clude a man-hunt and new Indian feature HAYNES SHORN OF POWER tel and another Men’s | ¢ She Telephone the Police Who Is This Woman? If You Know Her at MAin-7810 Doesn’t Know; This woman, was found by police wandering in a daze. reveal her identity SBIGATTRACTIONS so who fave her name as “Mrs. Staff Phe Benner,” She is unable to} ag tributed One Killed: One Dying | ea in Week-End Accidents | t | FOREST FIRES High Winds Increase Danger of Flames Raging in Timber n thm hundred men we ected by G. C. J 1 of the Washington I t Fire association temporarily subdued the rush of the flames, but Monday more men Rh region bee « fire ¢ large area of SEVERAL FARMS AKE ENDANGERED he w Er f Washingt I t Fifte land equipment ed in Mount near Welch Baker creck, are fighting tt FERAL FIRES ARE National Fourteen forest men ontrol burning r-of Comr and the Wash ociation, have he ttle Ch andard Oil ¢ nearl 000 warning during the last few weeks In danger of leaving burning ¢ Sanuufite and cigaretes. in the woods. Most tne fires we started, nev because of human care » fighters be lieve Long List of Injured Is Toll of Sun-| Brookhart Leads day’s Auto Crashes; Aged Man Victim | in Iowa Recount 1499, at the Postoffice at Geattle, Wash, under the Act of Congress March 3, 1679. H WINDS and dry weather to the forest fire ri! s flames in ma inued to heir y Say | WASHINGTON, At iB U " lig’ Mey eA Senator Smith W. Brookhart is | RAVFIC accidents claimed the/ave., was. seriously Injured about thal acain joafing in the senate. recount life of one m over thei back and head when her husband's | ¢ ‘patos, tabulator pARatingea tb, week-end and threatened to claim 0 collieded at 12th ave. and zs ‘ike ere 4 | tela age og pane te cue atrven bY. MIke, G With 26 counties completed, Brook- jt en men, women 4nd childr ling, 1435 Broadway, Mrs urnet a hart had 105,473 and his democratic w injured in traffic crashes was taken to her home ontestant, Daniel F. Steck, 104.461 Ta Moatany, S093. WENA Mrs. J, MoGiliidatt, Oakland, Cal © figures do not include 41 died in Columbus sanitarit was cut about the head when | Phe ballote, chilenwed by" £ BOnGRY. 00: UB TIAM ROCR Te et (Turn to Page 7, Column 5) hart and 1,435 challenged by Ste Saturda when he was hi y a! Pa auto driven by 8. Jacoby, 6900 ave. 8, W. Py Hosford crossing wet ta If You Like Animals struck him, His injt a fractured skull and a serena He is survived by his widow, Ja TI ie D a S 1 f Hi 4 Li Be eea tee ald Read This Dog’s Story of His Life (SKULL FRACTURED; ° ~ MAN JS NEAR DEATH and Adventures in the Star Harr Young Mi of 906 Dori in the City hospital Mon day near death from a fractured akull He was crossing Harrison at Broad st. Sunday when he was struck by an auto driven by F T. Perrin, 421 Denny way | Young admitted he had been drink ing, police say. Perrin re | leased } spectacular crash between i two automobiles at nahi desde ave., with some pain ts fraugnt.” |Dry Chief Figurehead Under ana. Marginal wa ye VERS |two automobiles were wrecked an¢ peaiy. ja oto a sien; | New Organization veral persons were Injured, One Ss: a | of the ears wag driven by M, A | Under the | WASHINGTON, Aug, 3.—(By U. | Bert 4 16th ave With 4 P,)—Federal Prohibition Commis: | Ber were Mixy Mablo Ander: | Same Roof ee Laisa Haynes, director of national | son, 18th ave. and Russell | Dear Miss ee My mh iy Ife) prohibition for over four years, to-| Graham, 1427 16th ave. raid 7 do not et along. The house say wax finally shorn of most of OCCUPANTS OF TWO | weal live th belongs to me, butl i Sowers by a formal treasury de. | AUTOS ARE INJURED | f am thinking of leaving it and| [it Powers Oy it Leva oi teraace wag aK Ge | hoarding. Do you think tia a Following @the promulgation of | Ander son, KR. ¥. D, No, and o¢ | MRUB, the bull pup, was Hght? “MOREBDIN-LAW. "| lang’ for a botiplete “Havislan.. ot | Anise mitile wité; thaeken: Geroer | fightin’ fool, But. a mis Cartainty jt is not right. Your! veohibition enforoement methods tol three, Mrs, May Vedacit and lier two|. chiavous, lovable little buhdie of obie auby eer reags 8 Wyn{ be Inaugurated September 1 under] gong, Allon and George | dow for’ wil that with & home, You And sho will) o, prohibition administrators, Act-| Owing to the terrific force of the| Wirst he fought his way thru probab t along hha Inaint ine Secretary of the Troasury| coptision all of the occupants of (he | the kennels, ‘Then a ex-Yale stu you see less of ‘ uch ate te Insist | iy ind Commissioner of@tnter- | iWe cars were injured more or less s| dent got him, The “ex” had been ee eee eee») | nai Rovenuo Blair detined Haynes'| seriously, Mra: Anderson and Allon| attixed’to tho atudont. by sain * * | gtatus under the new regime Vv, k were thrown out bodily on| authorities but that didn't HOME BREW j | ithe order releg " ynes iplit mallee betes a ake much difference to. ‘rub. Will Not Appear While |) subordinate position in the new] ‘The woman waa badly hurt about| Sot MUCH! HOMER BREW dry regime, from which, however,|the spine. ‘The boy had a broken “pyub's Diary tt oats atory {Nanna he may be elevated by the creation arm told in. @ dog's way—astarta In Is On His Vacation of new duties, Mrs, H, J, Garnett, 1629 Harvard, ‘he Seattle Star Tucsduy, John \ Taintor wrote the famous autWor You'll like it Trub gets into all sorts of es capades, bull pup does, but he has days of despondency nd sickness and high enthu slasm, just a8 humans do, His goings and comings will give you a hearty laugh—and not a few tugs at your heartstrings Start reading the first len of the dog diary in Tho Star Tuesday, You won't miss a single installment after that, ote, ory As every ll Give Justice an Overhaul EDITORIAL AST week state superior court judges met in Seattle to discuss their problems. Mon- day the state bar association and. state prose- cuting attorneys’ association started meetings here. Likewise they will indulge in much talk about THEIR problems. Whether they just meet and talk or whether they mect and do something is up to them. Such meetings in the past, here and elsewhere in the United States, have merely dealt with effects and have ignored causes. The disposition among judges and lawyers is to charge delay in litigation to rules of court procedure. They say nothing about, and do nothing about, the real cause. Mu: Itiplicity and conflict of statutes, slavish adherence to prece- dent, deference to political considerations con- nected with holding jobs—these are the three principal causes of delay. Statutes, legal forms and precedents are the tools by which judges and law yers do their They have become old-fashioned tools, and if they are sharpened on the grindstone of revised rules they are not less old-fashioned. We live in the days of the automobile and the airplane. We can hardly speed up traffic by refurbishing the old stage coach. Yet, so far as court traffic is concerned, the traffic officers are still riding in thorobraces, and the most they are willing to suggest seems to be newt tires dnd a-repaint job. The Star suggests to lawyers and prosecul- ors in convention here that they get behind a real move to simplify court procedure. This should include: 1—Rewriting and simplification or our end- less and ambiguous le gal code, —Simplification of complaints and other satel forms, dispensing with archaic phrase- ology. 8—Elimination of precedent as a guide when it runs counter to common sense and the ends of modern justice. t—Two weeks’ vacation for judges instead of as many months. Per Year, by Mall, $4.00 * “Court Delay I Is Blamed on Public by Attorney ‘Hesitate i in Convieting Accused LAME for delay in li on and provision is perhaps Love of Liberty Causes Juries to OM EDITION) TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE, \ ROBBED BY 2 BANDITS IN AUTO Armed Men Force Autoist to Stop; Escape Easily RIVING a stolen car, two young men, both armed with pistols, held up W. H. Pemberton, of the Gol- den Rule Bakery, 4450 Fre- mont ave., at Fifth ave. and Virginia st., Monday morn- ing, robbed him of $1,273 and escaped. The loot was largely in checks. Pemberton left the bakery a short time before the hold- up, which occurred at 11:40 a.m. He intended to deliver some bread and later to de- posit the money at the Can- adian Bank of Commerce. As he proceeded up Vir- ginia st., the bandit auto drove along side and the two robbers forced him at the point of their guns to stop his delivery wagon. Pemberton surrendered the money. The bandits then jumped into their car and drove away before several | witnesses, who stood nearby, \knew what was going on. The bandit auto had been stolen from Tom Hogard, 5963 First ave. N. E. PEMBERTON IS CROWDED TO CURB just turned up Virginia st. Westlake, Pemberton said, hen I noticed a car driving along- side of me with two men in it. They me over steadily towards I tried to speed up, but y kept beside me. At Fifth I stopped my nen they turned in front he men jumped out Je of my auto. me that bag und beat It,” one of the bandits said. “I gave him the money and the other bandit took the ignition key out of my car, They then ran back to their machine and drove away, turning north on Virginia st. I chased them on foot for about a block trying to see which way they | headed. Per 7m crowded the the curb. ave. car of me. and came up tive erton said he was carrying 273 to the bank. The money was divided into $1,045 in checks and $228 in currency. ENRAGED BANDIT ~ KILLS THREE the most fruit- . . clogging of dockets, | for the |ful single source of reversal and| Fails to Get Cash in Holdup, apparent miscarriage of justice and|consequent delay. But it is per. 7 the general tendency toward laxity | mitted in tho federal route, 2 Pe" | He Opens Fire in Jaw. enforcement waslald! to.th@ |) +r aid din: favor of ang reform ting : American public itself’ by several! wit stand the test of rigid scrutiny | Aug. 3—(By U. P= lawyers attending the meetings Of | of those connected with the adminis.| Three are dead here and another jthe State Bar association at the! tration of justice, Revision of the | Wounded, while police search today Chamber of Commerce building. rules of procedure would be a move | fr 4& two-gun bandit, who, failing “The American people are not ajin the right direction,” Mr, Kizer | ‘to find money in an auto party he nation of turnkeys,” said Ben H. |! concluded held up here last night, opened fire, Kizer, a noted lawyer of Spokane,| ‘Tho first session of the two-day | Killin all but one of the group, when » Monday morning hey | mecting was opened by an address Two of those killed were women, are not as keen to send people to) ot welcome by Alfred H. Lundin | Miss Arlo Moores Wnand ee Jail as are those of some other] followed by the annual address cra Beate bsgerctonibclby SMM erties mations R. I. Williamson, of Yakima, presi.{ 22: W&s shot thru the head and died This ought not to be held| dent of the state assookenee Jon the way to the hospital, and Against thom, Safeguards of per-| °m, | Carl Perr , Was wounded in the k The association has a membership | arm sonal Uberty are written into our) gf more than 1,800, Special mere | ational and state constitutions. |tamment is being provided, ec According to the story told the They are jealously guarded. It is| 5 pay police by Perry, the party was leis- parhaphemorsvimbortaneathat thesah En CUTORS ALSO | urely riding along a highway on the apiatde dhe reROEER. CHEKS thet NG IN SEATTLE outskirts of Denyer, Suddenly a any individual be sent to Jail with:] Meeting in Seattle at the same} leaped on the running board out being accorded their fullest pro-| time, the county prosecutors of the| 0! the car and ordered it driven to tection axe are holding their sessions at! ® § Cea toa ath she Sessa ae See Turn to Page e) ; men slipped their money under the SAYS JUDGE SHOULD pare Fe th Siar S| deat op. thejoaksd VENA Ene eA COMMENT 0. YIDENCE ja lonely spot on the side road, the “T believe one of the most needed | | bandit ordered them to get out of reforms is that of giving the judge} | the car and give up their cash, the right to comment on evidence, | Finding they had none in their Yet it is forbidden by the state con | pockets, he opened fire, killing the } | Perry, 0 | | A Search was instigated by po» Good Real Estate j lice, but no trace of the man has Base Wounded by Brother, Haw-| iccen found, | kins Is Reported Improving Are offered every day in the |} g Clasaified Colunna. of The Star |Ask New Appraisal Hore! (ke apectal ‘listing I, Benjamin | Hawkins, stabbed by | of Valley Railway : his brother James in a fight at the} TEE a ae home of thee mothers Mts, ca A requost to male a new apprais RRAND NEW BUNGALOW j Hanna, 2410 11th ave, W. Satur. |S! Of the Rainier Valley rallway was | Rooma-—Paved Stroet day, Was reported to ho improving | Presented to the council Monday Garage-—Onkc Floors Jat “the Seattto. General hospital | LY {te combined commercial clubs Thia “beautiful, brand now, 5- |) Monday. Physicians held hope for | f the district. The commercial room, modern bungalow j# now Tl his recovery j clubs urged the appointment of a veady to occupy Has all the commirtee of three, one member i a Ane Fane oale poets | eater rita re is he 1d in the city | yepresenting the company, one the Ali caewasambntentecde sc ' 1 i sraielehe outcome of his broth: | city, and the third to be chosen by 4 || t's Injurios. tho two Turn to the Want Ad Columns || Jealousy between the two men] This committes Would check over and see who is offering this || over thelr wealthy mother’s favor] the appraisal made by Utilities Sus HOME to you. READ THE |] 18 said by police to havo boon tho porintendent Clark son, which WANT ADS DAILY cause of the stabbing, which folk set a value of 1,193,000 on the y lowed a fist fight, property, ‘ § {a 4 "| ae,

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