The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 12, 1925, Page 1

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STEAMER IN ICE CALLS |. FOR AID; CAN'T GET IT The Newspaper’ With the Biggest Circulation in Washington he Seattle Star Eotered as Second Clase Matter May 2. NO, 171. 1899, at the Postoffice at Seattie, Wash, unde SATURDAY, SEPT EMBER the Act of Con by Mall, $2.00 ‘1925. “VOL. 27. s ome) CHANCE: [Aid for the Drys! | | | | EDITORIAL ] IQUOR commerce has now been virtually swept } | from Puget Sound by the coast guard fleet under back to the land. On the land now lies the remaining problem of pre- venting its importation, Dry agents, under Regional Director Roy Lyle, say that one of their big tasks now is to stop the ship- ment of illicit liquor as a part of consignments in box cars. One such car was “turned up” by the agents only this week. Box cars carrying booze are as subject to confisca- tion as are automobiles. But there is a slow market in used box cars, and as a business proposition it could not be expected to interest Mr. Lyle and his workers. Captain Dodge, and booze has gone SHIP! Cries for Help Come by Radio; Ice Is Crushing Sides Howdy, folks! The summer fs over, and the cabaret season fs again in full swi Bothell closing for the sum-| ; Hot-dog highway are S 0. S. messages from the Brit steamship ish Baychime, mer, But they'll open again short:| arty Saturday, told of the veasel But, as common carriers, the railroads could be sub- ee toeeneee pve . ght fast in Aretic ice jected to penalties for carrying contraband, just as A roadhouse ix where you go Arete aa steamship companies are penalized for carrying dope teith 50 gats in your gas tank and) row. ‘Tha cries for help were and aliens, whether the owners know the nature of one gal in the seat beside you; with) received by the harbor radio sta | the contraband that is being carried or not. Loogpegey Many steamship lines can give the radiator and one} tian here after having been re- | rueful testimony to Int inside of you. 3 wt “ent ! Aino. of || the success of this means of enforcing the law. Etiquette Note; Never fight with] becuse of the lateness of the se And Mr, Lyle and his workers might find their atte | ness of the sea : £ your wife at a roadhouse hat | son it will be impossible to send an work of enforcing the prohibition law considerably have you got a home for ship to her rescue and she will have lightened if they were to adopt this means of enlist- WHERE IS YOUR WANDERING [2 SP°"! ite Bee Kees ee || ing involuntary ‘aid from the railroads. BOY TONIGHT? prgpiedo ele Lesa himo ts ope ! by - —_ Bay company and was a er, B. C., loade Kupplies for the fa rest north base of the Canadian mounted police Herschel island near which th ship is caught has been an old from V with food whaler’s wintering station on has Seattle roadhouse! been occupied by w Night life in Note the young flappers and their “Listen to the Mock- | '8t 25 years. There are two Eakt he Bit ane “Don't You Remem:(!° villages there and no anxiety om Sweet Alice, Ben Bolt!" Note; '* felt by men familiar with the the jazz leader at the pianoforte! | Country oye Ne watt ’ nt ithe sless pleasure | CT*¥: Reports from the ship state And the spirit of lawless p! Degg ekg se Bla ard hite men for the and bacchanalian excess that per: | vades the scene! Parents, has this | badly and that there is a posaibility TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE. Idea Obtained in Colleg: Flapper Wives; What of ’Em? Here’s the Story of What Happened to a Lot of Advanced e Life Home | Edition FIGHT ==” ON WATER nd Daphne, Mr zanne offer to prove to any challenger that the so-called mod- William Purce ll and Mary Virginia, and Mrs. jern flapper wife and mother makes just as good a one as the old-fashioned variety. RIFFIAN LOSSES ARE HEAVY 2 Franklin Stephens and Su But Lyle Has Problem| With Customs in Shadow of Doubt BY ALVARO SHOEMAKER The sea battle ugainst booze seems to be nearly » Puget Sou and the struggle now devolves up | Tribesmen Fail to Stem Ad-) the land forve Chief of these ts Nis Spephnttions sccerocan cera | vance of French | under Roy C. Lyle, new regional di | Riffian | hours of the rector FEZ lonsen in the Morocco, Sept 12. As right and left t 34 wings to Lyle's central £ the customs gréat French drive north of the Salvage hariablgtey al ea Ouergha have been very heavy to hold the border against the Iquor ‘ ts running invaders sipty | due to the fanatical fury with base in Canada | which the Krim men sought to stem wUreN cau loubt French thousands tical value of DE the futalivm and « 1 the two adjunct gove which their religion ment h exam, She n them, the Rifflans résisted at ff Ca What oun points wh from the start, re nargen that the boxcar ¢ ingles) sistance was futile. In some cases taining liquor, selzed this week & even when they Seuttle, got across th 1, ten to Thus because of laxity or co-« wh! the the part of immigration French losses. are described as| toms service guards | “trifling CO-OPERATION BUT | ‘The French are continuing the NO LIAISON Asked Saturday morning if he be Heved co-operation was being given Lyle by other governmental agencies. Jone of the enforcement chief's |Ues said, with emphasis onward push | | Bombers of the American esqua-/ Grille, fighting for against Abd El Krim, mowed down 100 Ri flan troopa in their onslaughts France depu a st Checaouen recently, accord- a of the ship being lost Yes, we have the most thoro co- | *#8!n picture no lesson for you? = 2 es W ‘With F nzied operation—but I should say we lack |!9 to official announcement here. Sten ed | gh fey Spat Ni sind dgaet Citi Go ild ith Fre Joy asi. 4 oa ee cian In addition to the 100 deaths, the Old Joe Bungstarter says he us "i = The BAI antpe I A le ¢ left Onalaska h nt was reminded that L, | accura: of A rican fir 00) hasn't been able to get any really | Satta ta ls exp 16:days ‘time, ; |bonda to answer Hquor and dope | and barracks, { old stuff st ned Lite’ ution | Capt Dodge said ¢ BY R: ANDOL PH TA TATUM charges, visited the local office of the ——_— FASHIONS FOR MEN | _The steamship Oduna wan’ 74s (United Press Staff Correspondent) (Turn to Page 2, Column 1) | Steel helmets. lata hay tego the ea Poli : ONOLULU, Sept. 12.—Five na flyers, battered but EVIDENCE FIGHT Dechy Wats: | ‘The U. 8 Bureau of Education | 4 well and happy today rested here, the goal of their DIG FOR ls one of the |Sh!P, Boxer, Inst to leave the North ill-fated flight frora n Francisco, | Bulldogging steers is one Me iern areas | d the circle, is en . ‘ ae te a A Salat eh big attractions at the Ellensburg cater ak Pat Commander John Rodge : and the crew of the P} Ginks who have cranked} er asabs arrived in Honolulu from Kauai last night, but the wild Steam Shovels Used to Re- on cold mornings ere barred ssionals, however. crowds were forced to carry out their celebration without the participation of the guests of honor. ®: : |High-Speed Love . Physicians aboard the destroyer;at the corners of ¢ happed lips: there At that, it tnt much satisfaction | Affair Is Ended Stkatetouer ah ecuent ie pit: Na Nadiad aeer, UOTE RES BY MR EO AT RRO iat he met ‘hin wife {a | aviatorn from the:laland where they| Reachins the MacDonough that the green light was on ee ” York ut 1 & m. married her! Were taken aft i rescued from | and its burden of heroes precipitated ae | at 9, and separated from her almost | the rolling wastes of the Pacific, |a burst of greeting that would not | Boys who wear Little Lord Faunt-| immediately thereafter, Frederick S.| insisted they have complete reat |die down. Even when the joyful] leroy suits and long curls are al- Camp, Jr. secured a divorce from/ “nd barred them from joining the |throngx were told that physicians ways the best fighters in the block. | 4; Morten Camp, F' Presid. | revelry would not allow the airmen to join} They have to be. ling “Judes erett Smith granted} Admiral McDonald, Gov. Farring-| them, the cheering continued. i Hag ah: the decree. ton and other tables were among Rodgers d his fellows left the Sign on the Back of s Ford: —_—_— the thousands thronged the | neighboring island of Kauai in the pier at Pearl Harbor shortly after jafternoon, following eight hours of Flock Backing Its | 7. m to greet the argonauta, com- | pleting @ new epoch in marine avia- Pastor in Courts tion. ‘The congregation of the Seventh | CITY FRED Day Adventist church, of which | they were protected from curious and happy crowds by armed guards, They were awakened in the morn- Phy- ~ — x "XS WHEEL MOVIE COMEDY 4 $$ ZED | jing and given a light breakfast. The Test example of poetic jus- tlee to date. is that. of the lady who WITH WELCOME -| restful sleep in a little hotel where} Way and hurled him to the bottom move Tons of Dirt | Dry Agent Charges Olmsted t! Home, Booze Office CHICAGO, eam xb Sept. 12 added to their equip dug rapid-| The preliminary y that has | legal battle in the much-delayed Olm ld Thomas Zyxil | sted booze conspiracy case will take rnoon. Virtually | pce Monday in Federal Judge Ne ng the alive ha ‘ense attorneys ment, rescue quads tox most important ly into the mound of entombed 14-year jeince Thursd. all by lbeen a boy | terer’s court when ned. j will attempt to have the evidence Thoma as buried under tons o: thered by federal dry agents sup. clay when a bank on which he was} pressed. playing with two companidhyx gave An answer to Roy Olmsted's peti tlon to quash the search warrant and His companions | suppress the evidence, filed about | two wecks ago, was filed Saturday | morning by C. T. McKinney, assist: | ant United States district attorney. | of a 25-foot pit. escaped uninjured. Prepare Warrants they were: rapidly It consisted of an affidavit from | siarpened a pencil with her hus- TT McDonald was the first to sh ke |Micilans declared ia: aylor G. Bunch {s pastor, has erp) qk - N ws RS es Pepssae brates favs tia thle court Mght| the Tand of Commande? Rodgers [TSuperarme trom Lis + sag Repel for 65 indicted |" POR a eee er eT 5 ‘ : i Hf WERE 5 | * nated's home, a7h7 R | phaye the back of her shingled) tween Mra Anna Bouk) Pallant the sew wieH she ateate | THs tf Aah duesee i ; 1 RRARTAREG far the arent cf 86 te. | RI i iy Rider: | neck <SPunch Ps . masseuse and Aurea, and the pas. | 20%R the gang plank A* the crowg |fPRE THAME HME & I tHe estos at ier fix the” tend) | Hits MEXINAGE Pir 1854 z ay : | macwed odie thom “the adrolnal | Rak RED, EG Hea fg RAY hd Abty ‘warps, WoalclileAtel PCLAW dthndcunterinetet LV1 Gee Gee says she ordered afi, restraining order| AURRested that they retire to'a hos Re AWARD, Uy ODS \Feturiied hi 4M Netorer's court, Xt STi Cert ca ete salmon trout at the Greasy Apoon| | ued by Judge Everett Smith,| Dital, where they might talk quietly. | "board the Mac vow hours tater |Friday. were being made out by U,|“M his place of business, which was yesterday, but had to throw it dack| Wor Immed by Judge Everett Smiths} Pie ving at the naval howpltal, fe |fternoon and a few hours, Water ia” starshal XB Donn's, offic primarily ‘that.of dealing: in’ intoxt because it was too small Troha fh itandise osrvicde at’ the | NaS. declaed” none: of” thet airmen | Tea hed the city tor whlch they d®| aay. Ball tor the 6) deten eating liquors S 1B a is viet £ aia Ray ed from San Francisco o wil: total about: 4900,000,. ae i {e also charges that agents tapped church. Mrs, Bouk recently sucd| Should further describe the eple ad Britis aocning albeare| , 2 jarshal | Auto tourists are using a better ove fo! CE ian damages for al-| Yenture until more’ rest had been $1. Barly this morning rn wee Benn said, His force will rt| telephone wires to the offices of lass of machines, it is reported, | Punch ane. obtained ugain sleeping the peaceful peep Of | sc naing up the indicted persons im.|Jerry Finch, attorney for Olmsted, They eto, ., Somietimes ‘they | 1esed-alandere «i It wax a city become frenaled | Men after a job well done mediately and to the Olmsted home, and over are forced to drive continuously Set that massed at the docks to wel heard conversations, the bulk of 300 miles before they hit another |ecome the quintet who had vived | * C . which “related to traffic in intoxicat: | Beeiieee ooes Infant Falls 30 iene dyn in in cried wn | ACtion Swisler Strangers Genial)" #9, © : ; } * . TODAY'S Feet to Sidewalk} plane, to he saved only when hope Plane Sept. 22) Until the Dawning 4 b ‘0 thet cue it aban arsha 7 a se one 7 ® - ay | Escaping death after plunging 30| donoq ne AM ME Dub abo Marshal E. B, Benn will sell on; Invited to spend a pleasant eve Stenographer Sues | fect to the sidewalk and landing on | jairplane to the highest bidder On| ning with three cordial, strangers f | lhis forehead, Friday, 4-year-old Eli! Harbor salutes .were deafening. | September 22 at 11 a, m. on the|two attractive girls anda man 1, or Back Wages is foreheac , Ay Ul) vaca ih Ob oh the | ut 1e Postoffice building, he| ¢ | Benbeniste was taken to his home,| Every manner of craft riding the steps of the Postoffice bullding, he} G. Hamilton, 21, a clerk, accepted! Helen May, stenog apher, seeking | 165 | Saturday morning, by | cM water of the bay shrilled Its! announced Sy ane ane tas {and later regretted, he informed po- | to collect $489 wages, Saturday’ filed his mother, Mrs, Katharine Ben.| #reeting to the returned aviators. | selz Augus ) by pr iL. H.| Ue Saturday, The party, he said, | ‘suit for a receiver for the Self Ball- haieta, was a bediam of bells, /agents when they arrested 1, progressed from cafe to cafe and! ing Lifeboat Co. and the Metatlie| Gink who refuses to talk over) “yi. mother was playing with the | siren whistles and guns, (Carl) Swisler und others a ioe: rather early Saturday morning, | Lifeboat Co. She alleges the latter the radio unless he is wearing ®|. ) the window of the second ALLOWED rum runners on aS ea. fF shore , when he awoke, he said his $80| company has taken over the debts para ‘ 6 4 eto! The p cis a 1 ats trock coat. | story of their home, when the child | BRATION Tak be a ida tea af ye aie watch and erstwhile companions] of the former, which employed her ae Abs sity | lost his balance and toppled back-| The grim, grizzled, tanned faces of | ened to aM . rite vovernment | Were, gone early this year. Two entries in the Atlantic City | varq to the ground. He was picked|Commander Rodgers and his men|but was forfeited to 8 — Ae oe *, y' | proce i a Friday ity Contest threatened to with:| | ith a terrible gash’ in his fore-| mirrored appreciation of the amaz-|!n court pr lings Frida -unleas a profersional entry | +044 and taken to thé city hospital. ing tribute, Nervous smiles twitched 7 fore eae aT 2 Phone Lineman A professional beauty, we take it, is one who poses for tooth pov Falls From Pole, der advertisements, 9’ ° ° Arthur Benson, 24, 321 Cpera A Bimon-pure amateur, on the ee ee rae ay GlesHeRe other hand, is one who has never | [AER Ta AR a tn ar vewev sor Dog Proves to Be Lost\ fg SR eet, i? | the General hospital, suf. “ett fering from shock and. bruises mustn't let the women have f ooded toc all the glory. After all, Samson up 0 was the first human to get his! i a elated 12.—(By U. F the princet HE piuneidoa! FOR A GOOD see POKANE, Sept, 12—(By U. P}—| saw the princely mutt of the dog | YE DIARY NS) er show and recomnized him.. An in-]| USED CAR i A homely Airedale dog, with a iy quiry was launched which estab:|| At the price you can afford to ee eee er emai contagious. mmile, was crowned) aed the dog‘, Jdptitity pay, consuit the Want Ad Col- Reyes Oh the, beroeees Br: patane| he the | “Prince of Mutts” at the Inters °)} “1 found him in the street," ex umns of The Star today, Here is red nailing shippes neross the harbour | fair here. | plained the boy. il: Weabontht: inti lo be as if painted on glass, And a grey re fie sboy wood ATT PIL Ala” Wade “for enim. | mist doth hang over the hills, and the| A. little frecklefaced boy ste Pe Dae ko nigh. pe Vag 1016 GARDNER SEDAN, 4-cyiin crows caw on the eandsplt below the | by to receive a huge silver ctip of: | sald Clinkenbeard, "He comes from || 1925 GARDNDR SEDAN. 4-oytin, house, and the foghorns sound from far! fered uy a prize for the homellest,| royal blood, registered stock. He is The. modal: with: balloon. tires, meross the bay. And the coantry roads) vttiegt kiyoodle, He called his| a king instend of a mutt, His name bumpers front and year, trunk ‘lo be white ribbons between the tall | MUTT FAME, sas tail] iw kK (i and rack, automatic swine, rear fire, and plump grouse do rise, whirring, | dog Rags, The Alredale’s tail| is King ‘Tu SI AEASier AUST ALBEE from the underbrush, and from afar off| wagged joyously when he saw he| Clinkenbeard felt sorry for. the er cast eebila: oweste veriiaoo Nad no ey tcertul barking of dow! was the center of the ceremony boy, tearful when he learned the nomical to operate and hax ing irliage hata a tae Aid fee tddenel| ‘Today \t was learned that the dog) animal would have to be returned} abundance of feo nueey Py a is in reality a “King” In the canine| to the orginal owner j Ul ddled Axiom: Birds of « feath-| world, A long time ago C. Clinken-| “You keep the cup,’ he wald.|| Turn to the Want Ad Columns or brew together beard, dog fancier, purchased o val-| “Some day, when King Tut get and see who ts offering this dandy oe uable pup from an Orang-Airedalo| married 1 wee that car to you you get | —A. J 8 Sitter, He lost the dog, But he! pup.” } ( Church Weddings Fail | to Stand the Wear and | Tear of Marital Life | BY LELAND HANNUM | | | | of 200 marriages Isn't quite so high, | He found that of the last two hun. dred ceremonies performed in King jecounty, 164 were performed . by clerics and 46 by civil authorities, Of the 200 divorces, only two | | HE tradition that marriages per | “~ formed by ministers of the gos: | pel) “stock” better than those at | which efvil authorities officiate, ap pears shattered by compilations} were performed by Jewish rabbis, made by Divorce Proctor Bartling | and only six by Roman Catholic | Saturday. Bartling is strongly in] p*lests ! favor of marriages by men in clert But thor © still lots of persons | eal garb, but his divorce figures | willing to the chance, accord: | show that the odds are two to one} ing to Van Ferguson, in charge of agalnat the ministers |the marriage Meonse counter, He | Wigured on the basis of 200 di-| has granted Heenses to 2, couples vorces at which Bartling officiated | during the first eight months of during tho past two months, 188| this year, despite the fact that 1+ couples had been married by min-| 649 divorces were performed during listers, rabbis and priests, and 62] this «ame perlod in King county. had sald, “ft do" in front of jus:| Comparison between January and | tices and judges. August, shows a slight advance in | Abe Olson, chief deputy county} the 1926 divorces he sald, and about ‘clerk, however, says the average] the same number of licenses, | south of here, Photo by Carter & Bradley, Star § oe BY MARG or BUNDY COUNTHAT’S ev come ng to be and of th wives?” may before appers lapper You words only the heard somewhere. to th those The question in minds of a lot of censuring individuals is: ‘They'll be young and beautiful corpses: Again, you hear: “What is col lege doing for the modern girl? In it equipping her in any way ¢ up the duties of a houne- hold?” The answer in most minds is * what are you going to do when there is vidence such as beams from the above picture to pel these gloomy theories? Lite Daphne Dowe, Mary Virginia Purcell and Suzanne Stephens insist that their mothers are just as 1 urs, even if not so long ago saa? teve Mappers, d even if they are branded as th college graduates, A few ago Ellen and Emmie and Mary who are now Mrs. Leander Dow, Mrs. Frank Stephens 1 Mrs. William to that much. of feminity known hey frolicked on the Purcell, beloni maligned cl as co-eds campus, skipped classes, stayed out ufter hours, discussed very modern, advanced {deas — \deas that only came into being with the disappearance of laces and long hair, ~ and a¢eumulated dates with the same enthusiasm that a miser gathers coins. when Em Then the day came mie and Mary and to their names a di ided to their families a few precious pounds of babyhood in three daughters. And rec ly they « thriving little north of the Now, in community, just Univers! district, there are three tiny bungalows, within a few blocks of each other, which Mary and nmie and Ellen have made their homes. In the afternoon when their tremen dous household duties are done, they get together to discu: diets, clothe husbands—or whatever it that young mothers discuss. And to see them fondly com- a new, paring their children, all of whom, by the w were born in the same month, you can't help but be reminded of little girls and their dolls—what with the bobbed hair and scanty skirts, They call their infants their “fiends"’ or “tigers,” and on the whole seem mighty satis- fied “with” Quiet honté ilfe, deopiin all thelr early training, S Ware eve ape ta Heaeqma ~ ot Khe Mabnarer. , Wejly Us 90k od y, at the picture, and ie yourself. STRIKE HALTED Mayor Meets Laundrymen, in Wage Conference Mayor Brown's prevent the threatened laundry} strike were at a standstill Saturday, but appeared brighter than earlier in the said, Fri noon he conferred with shokesmen for the laundries, and proposed that they arbitrate wages differences with the 1,400 workers, who have voted over. whelmingly in favor of a walkout. The laundry men’s committee, J. C. Hagen, president of the Troy Laundry Co; H. B, Bowman, of the New Method laundry, and C C. Nissler, of the Supply laundry, report to him ly next week, he are to week Man, Mistaken for Deer, Shot to Death) NEWPORT, Ore,, Sept, 12,—Mis- |taken for a deer, F, S. Hinkle, Corvallis, was shot and killed by fellow hunters on the Yachats river it was learned here today, This is the first casualty of the season, which opened September 10, to be reported here, Alleged Swindler Waves Extradition J. 1, Robinson, 45, having swindled George aged lighthouse keeper, of $10,000, his life savings, walved extradition and was returned to Vancouver, B. G, Friday by Capt, Jobin Jewitt, of the Vancouver police, Robinson was caught in Seattle after a chase on the waterfront, accused of Alexius, an Negotiations to | y after | three | inside} head | aff Photographers MAGEE PLEADS NOT GUILTY New Mexico Editor Denies | Murder Charge N. M.,, Sept. 12— | Carl C. Magee, editor of | the New Mexico State Tribune, of Albuquerque, is today under $10,000 bond on a charge of murder, await- ing the December session of the | grand yesterday pleaded not o a charge of murder in con- on with the accidental shooting of John B. Lasseter, before a jus- the pei when for- arraigned. The bond, signed by eight Las Vegas citizens immediately after the | shooting, was allowed to stand. er was shot he interced- pull Judge vid J. Leahy from Magee, whom he had ed to the floor and was kick- and beating. Magee shot at hitting Lasseter. In two ots he wounded Leahy in tice of m: e here, more the arm. TEAMSTERS DUE SATURDAY ‘Convention Del Delegates to | Arrive From East Coming to Seattle to attend next | Week's convention of the Interna- jtional Brotherhood of | Teamsters, | Chauffeurs, Stablemen and Helpers, 0 delegates arrived Friday night in special cars starting from Cincinnati. The principal body of representatives will be brought into Seattle over the | Milwaukee, arriving Saturday night. This special is due at 7 p. m., and 180 delegates are on board. Delegates already here, together with the Seattle entertainment com- mittee, will meet them and escort jthem to their hotels. The convention will meet Monday at the new Eagles’ auditorium, Head- quarters are established at the New Washington hotel, and conferences and committee meetings are being held there Saturday, Bank Clearings ere Increase be 1 Bet of ine aes citles: et lteae sa increase in bank clear. | ings for the past week over the corresponding week in 1924. Seat- tle was one, New Orleans the other. ; Clearings in this city showed a 7 | per cent increase over 1924, The total was $41,325,000, San Francisco was down 18 per jecent; Los Angeles, 16 per cent and Portland 19 per cent. Philadelphia's drop of 32 per cent was the largest | decrease from 1924 figures. |Woman Injured in Auto Collision A woman was injured and two cars damaged in a traffic jam be- tween Auburn and Kent Friday jnight, EB, Dinkelman, 6314 42nd |S. W., told the sheriff's office that his wife was bruised when their jear hit an auto driven by Miss |Doris Mitchell, 1232 E. Crockett st. Mrs, Dinkelman was not seriously hurt. i | SPORT PAGE’S | GRID SERIES | STARTS TODAY HE diagramatic series of foot- ball plays by Enoch Bag- shaw, head coach of the Uni- versity of Washington, starts on The Star's sport page today. The plays, with a story of their ex- planation, should be valuable to those beginning the game as Well as to coaches of high school teams thruout the state. | Weather Mostly cloudy tonight and Sun- } 1. day; gentle west and northwest | winds, ‘Nemperatures Max, 08; Min, 63 Today Noon, 69 Tides TODAY 6:61 a, m, 1 Hy 2:18 p,m, 10, I, 7368 pom, 6 SUNDAY

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