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r become final.” one One of the great mysteries of rarer YE DA (Beptamber 20) c_— || } fr | Weather f ruth Is Stranger—’) "=". warmer — except) ‘ Bows TT, Mic F Faithfu @ death of the late ||| 27 Tuesday) ruRADAY Fred * animal playfully “retrieved Temperatures} ii. Tit a! c ace ard au ' oon , LES, Sept. 21 so@rt here ts going to tina || VOL NO. 178, x really mean®nythime, Mra, Ethe ; i ) Totten, 24, and good looking o is have Alleged to drive , © times i affic off » a downtown street when he ito s ater to have tried to hug and kiss a 1X , 3 ogswald skirts and sleey It mi s them wash swimming —/ | Another Arrest in Alleged Forgeries | of Police Bonds! oE. S. Turner, Sid Brunn’s Partner, Taken Into Custody; San Fran- Home Howdy, folks! Only 96 more ve ; @ays to do your Christmas | ° = allfhe cisco Officials Arrive More than three-fourths of th EPUTY SHERIFFS “made a second arrest Monday in world’s supply of gold is now tn this country If you don't belleve it, watch} some of our leading pugilists when they smile, the probe of alleged fraudulent bail bonds when they took into custody E. S. Turner on an open charge. Until recently he was a partner of Sidney Brunn, professional bondsman. Brunn was arrested Saturday on an open jcharge and released on $3,000 bail. While Turner was closeted with Deputy Prosecutor Mac- farlane Monday, Prosecutor Colvin announced that no {formal charges would be filed against either of the two men pending definite developments in the probe. Until rece: Turner and ae in, eee These snappy autumn mornings are excellent for late sleeping, So ore spring, summer and winter mornings. Little Homer Brew, Jr Ing quite a cynic. He is becom. says the nished t ds from the thing a girl likes best about a boy | sonar ys a mck of = acer aad | Last week, however, George W S Allen, vice president of the « “BIG BIL L” "TILDEN DE- | pany, FENDS TENNIS TITLE! reorganized the local c jand repudiated 18 police court t IS HANDED 10 San Francisco office of the National Surety ordinate Monday to take up totaling $9,000. They are declared to have been forged. Co. together with two sub officials, is in the city the investigation Municipal League Submits |e oe error: fare Peeal’ Revised Amendmen | Lake May, criminologiat and handwriting expert, has been called] WANT [T ON THE BALLO into the case, and further action will probably depend on hs. report on signatures to the bonds, cecieret Changes Made in Proposa forgeries in some instances. as It Came Up Last Year | Prosecutor Colvin declared Mon- day that all bonds filed in superior jcourt cases were passed as genuine HE MUNICIPAL LEAGUE Mon when posted, and that casual ¢xam.- TS day submitted its revised city |ination indicated the signatures) anager ame to the city hae genuine council! with a that the { il] have it the pallot at the com Here is “Big Bit " Tilden putting id Preston. the national tennis tournament out that the plan has been consid. it Forest Hills. It is “Little Bill" érably ‘changed’ since’ it was voted on last year and beaten, 00 to president, Johnston's turn at the wicket, but) he has little chance of dribbling | 23,000 into the basket, as it iy the third hee! down, with 10 yards to go. Tilden ag ow won the round handily with a birdie and an eagle. This photograph was rashed to Bellingham sak ean sake nana ty car, and carried to Seattle by re-) le Jays of Evinrudes. If you want the| 4» determined effort was made | Monday by Mayor Brown to p' nt i ye to read Home Brew! os gent gia mere . =a a threatened strike of 1,400 lau workers, mostly women and Another group of Heniapaioteng 27 closed-shop Seattle laundries have joined the great army of un-| 41, was to confer with a committee employment are chaperones, owners Monday morning} The the opposition to t Mayor Brown Trying to Pre- | Raa dcie tothe tae Abas vent Walkout of Workers [2c Ss, i comptrt ae te This, | : the city manager clared, would § opponents er the the ma power to dixch the two men who yuld check ‘ 5 administratic | CHANGES MADE IN CIVIL SERVICE CLAUSE leaguo has tof laundry committee pro. Lah etd on his request, to which the union-| vided now that both the comptroller | “Butter Quict.”—Market note, | ists have nted, that the wage dif. the corporation counsel shall “I'm glad of that,” comments! [ficulties be arbitrated and an agree |be named by the city council | Adeline. “I never did like dutter| ment reached without a walkout. | It chas changed also the clause that moved around.” Brown believes he will be able to| relative to civil service, which, un eee gain adoption of his arbitration plan, | der the old plan gave the city man- | Adeline says her friends are aw-! but there is still some doubt as tol ; r the mnal say in removal cases, | fully deep and subtle. They call) agreement on the scope of the issues | and which now remains as at pres-| her Fostecript. |to be thus settled. ent, The civil service commission, | ding The unions are putting most of junder the new plan, is appointed CANDIDATE yor THE POISON |their strength on the wage question.|py the city council instead of by IVY CLUB | Operators, however, are also insist-/the mayor The Boss who rushes into the of-| ing that recognition of the unions fice at 5:30 after a hard afternoon | and open and closed shop issues be yiy4 or referendum, such as the of golf, and gives his stenographer | passed on by an arbitration board. oon system and pay Increases all his, work to do when cite agit arded police and firemen, are not} else has gone ame rss the day to be affected by the new amend-| ment \° wail will carry homing pigeons, is announced. | This 1s a good idea. In case of necident, they can be used to carry | messages, or can be made into chicken tamales. * [ia that the city auditing committee, | J established by the present charter, Methodists Say He Betrayed is unchanged, except. th ty tan | Party on Child Issue | fer 'wecomes one, in. piace one, in ‘or, as now, but not id the functions of the find comittee of the city council, es lished by the present charter, are unchanged. ‘The council appoints mptrolier, so the matter of| auditing accounts and finances |taken enti y from the \trol of the city manager | Preston writes: a whole, the new plan is based becomes shitcnibis| nce | Will it come to this? | TACOMA, Sept. 21—(By U. P.) “Mr. and Mrs. Herbert J. Thistle-| Failure of the last legislature to} seaite announce the ‘marriage of|adopt the child labor amendment their daughter, Bacteria, to Mr. J.| was scored in a report adopted by Alphonso Hamhocks, as soon as|\the Methodist iscopal Puget their divorce decrees from former) Sound conference's 42d annual ses- here ov. Hartley ‘aying party promises and of Iack| modern life 1s how people who live|of leadership in opposing the amend-| the ¢ is | | con. | sion was accused of be- jn countries where there are no|ment. The report demanded tho| Upon the true thoory of placing the automobiles get killed |next legislature pass the proposed) Whole power, and with it the whole | oes Jold age pension bill | responsinbility, upon a single el | nody, the city councll, just as ABIGAIL AP AUCE SA | Two women were ordained as t aA Dyers as “You can't be | deacons Sunday, Mrs. Nellie Clulow, | lag Moin i‘ oe Masonite te too careful what Tacoma, and Miss Hesse Dawes) The work Of tin ctw est | you name your Aberdeen. This is the first time | fem ‘ red fetes free ache “dt vante ave been so honored by| that, by resolution, same be ee ee women have been so honored by| vacod upon the ballot for the com Amos Sassafrass | the conference. named her two ling city election, Many conflicting | ideas have been reconciled in a apap hiere (Tent | sincere effort {0 prepare a city man. Peenence | an practical to fit existing conditions rene noe a | in Seattle, Therefore, we hope it J ] will be submitted to the popular " |Janitors Reqtest $10 More) win without change.” | Motor Hints: coupe over rough bumpers off the on top of your head . If you drive in a take the| for County Service | pot ‘enn | ; Chamber Chorus Wage increanes of $10 a month are A to Invade Fair asked by the 25 county-clty building | janitors in a petiton filed with the| | | county commissioners Monday Al Lundin will go to the Western | ‘The janitors, thru John P, Rankin; Washington far Seattle day and | secretary and business agent of the| will take along his famous Chamber building service employes’ union, de-| of Commerco chorus, It is predicted | clared that thelr present wage of $120| by the wise ones that there will be (Lord's day.) After dinner 1 to my ne-| month {# not a living wage. The| no blue ribbons given for big pump- eounta ull the afternoon tll it was anite| increase, they claim, will put them| kins, fancy roosters or twin babies darke, and thank heaven T do now! on a par with privately employed|on that day, It will take all the | ity $25, und forty one cote srey to. Janitors, who are paid on a $6 day! blue ribbons they have to go round “4 4 t us, nod doth relleye my minde much, — cule. to the’ chorus, roads, car and A shot in the dark And the fellow was dead; "Tis the last time he'll believe What a bootlegger said, @ e] Ordinances enacted by the Initia. * The Newspaper With the Biggest Circulation in Washington i The seattle Star Materea as Mecond Class Matter May %, 16 |, at the Powtoffics et Beattin Wash SE ATT LE, WASH., MONDAY, , SE P TE MB ER 2 ender the Act of Congress March 8. Home - Edition SEA’ ATTLE. 1478 x Per Your, by Mall, $4.08 TWO CENTS ~NEW MAN HUNT! _--- QUTLAWS ROB COP AND FARMER “Keep Cool at Hottest Fire” F resh Clues Spur That’s Advice of Oldest Coast Fire Chief to Youngest _ Veter ran Tells of “Good Old Days” (“K E) nag ef. cool at ‘That's the big Jo the hottest | ob far the and thanks for the pu Are, rker, of Monterey, Cal sint of ser 5 talking Auburn, the ention of fi in ingest men got Under way attle ‘I've been fighting Lots of tight p test one was in 192: fires for 3 cs, Hot n the Stand Hard fire t best to keep it fire. Had to do my Oil tanks cau Had to think fast and right nu know veteran. 1 was rting as a chief sngster, who is 21 ed-at the veteran admiring! with the old-f. * always used tarted out one carte ing races with men from 1 times the y t fires wit » old-fashio Many hanges in firefight They'll keep ‘ll see a lot of cha time. I'm nearly thru.” . = ¥ ve ge js That's mighty Interesting,” said W. E. Parker, oldest fire u t chief, “t sure do like | yy chief Jump into my car and| ** chief race Seattle every time th Thanks tor the have a big fire here. IRE e.g = as ASK PROBE OF COAST MEET Mitchell Is Convention at Olympic to . Further Safety Rules Relieved of KELSO LAW 'Todd to Tell Governor En- forcement Is Lax Eight million lives and fifteen bil “ 4 Beg j time causing the arrest of a guarded t chiefs who met * SP RE A nent k , former Monday opening session of, WASHINGTON, Sept. 21.—(By Rurle Todd last night ws the 3d I convention of the|P:)—Col. William Mitchell, crite of! run out of town by a mob Paaital Coent! Asstolalicn (oto ire y departments and | citizens after he had nt chief of the army | Norris, city engineer, in connection Chiefs, according to Commissioner with the murder of Thomas Dovery Gk of Portland. ‘They was relieved fr edltcr ot this’ ety ure meet The Olympte Hotel. |" duty as air officer of Todd left today for Olympia fc The which opened at|Eighth Corps area, Maj. Gen, John | conference with Governor | Hartle 104.7 vaealion by the|1«. Hin hiet of staff of the |in which he will seek a special in- army, was informed in’ ate vestigation of enforcement in Rey. Dr. J. EB. ( by 300 chiefs from 11 tates and owther of Seattle, Cowlitz count He said he was going to tell the that authorities re- n Maj, Gen. Ernest Hines, com r of the Eighth area. wns 2 Western two foreign governor Kelso || Posses On in New Hope of Success! Kilbourn and Ward Force Aged Man to Cook Supper for Them; Hold Up Everett Cop and and Take Gun HE hunt for Alvah Kilbourn and and Joe Ward, two of the six escaped King county prisoners, was speeded up |into renewed and determined action by Seattle and Everett | posses Monday, following the bold reappearance of the fugi- tives in the holdup and robbery of an Everett policeman and of a Lake Stevens rancher. The two gunmen stepped out from their hiding place suddenly Sunday and robbed Patrolman E, M. Pedersen, of ‘the Everett police force, of his revolver and then again | disappeared, with a reinforced posse roaring on the search | within a few hours after the attack on the officer. They also terrorized A. Lessard, aged rancher, last Thursday |night, according to his report announced Monday by effi- cials, forcing him on penalty of death to cook supper for them in his rancli cottage. Informed of the robbery of Patrolman Pedersen late Sun- }day night, Sheriff Matt Starwich personally organized a posse of his deputies and raced to Everett to join Sheriff } James McCulloch, of Snohomish county, and his deputies | |Moonshine Flavored With | | puntries. ier this action was to per- | fused to meriously consider the war. Mayc welcomed the yisit-/ Mit Mitchell to come to Washing- | rant he swore out for the arrest of following which he| ton to defend his charges before the | Nore, cted an honorary member of | special aircraft board or was Pre-| moag to an affidavit charg: | liminary to court martialing him for the amociation, Ing that 3 spired with other British Columbia and Mexico are | insubordination was not known [Persons unknown to. urge, ald and) the two foreign countries that are abet the killing of Dovery and sug- represented. Jose Robles, chief of addition to being relieved, pee that Dovery be bumped off Mexicali, Mexico, ia the first Mex 1 was also ordered to report) ana put out of the way.” Justice of {ean fire chief to ever be present hington to appear as @ Wit-/ 115 peace McCoy, of, Castle Rock, at a convention of this nature, jnesa in the aircraft inquiry Mon- | thereupon issued a warrant for the | The convention will Thursday of this week Inst till | day Jarrest of Norris 1s ig! ‘ It will take| According to plans, Mitchell will) “"O* f Norris last night, Washington, going by way tL enti yn thir api but , P fly to up all of the details concerning released an hour later when the war- of Muskogee, St. Louls' and Dayton 7 modern fio fighting an tes f Muskog Les son | rant was held invalid by Prosecuting the business seaston: the chiefs Attorney Hite Imus, Hi be entertained by t # thruout Immediately after Norris’ release, | |the surrounding country and with! Jan angry crowd gathered in front of da s and muste. “ the Sily Grill, where Todd was at oe ae hopniied yee jdinner, and with shouts that they c ach fighting for the honor | | would “take the law into our own Be Haleig the nese) penvenue. | Seek: Change of Venue for} nands,” threatened to run the ex. he place w 0 decided a { may r out of town Thursday pension | Boxley Canyon Case "da was saved from very -pos- * | sible violence by the arrival of a Supported by 26 voluminous affi-| guard’ of deputy sheriffs. They TWO WOMEN IN davits, charging unconquerable | dispersed the crowd and Todd went prejudicd against it In King county, | into the*Merrill hotel, next doo Ithe North Bend Lumber company | Norris smiled after he was re- Monday filed motion for a change of | leased. “It's just Todd's {den of | venue in its $185,000 Boxley can | politic he said, “He's trying to yon flood dar e case against the | Pe rsecute me, that's all. I~ had city of Seattle. nothing to do with Doyery's mur. aed With Four Men for Tho affidavits charge that the | er." Daring Theater Robbery | claim was mado a political issue | last March, when a referendum va Raword Is Offered SAC ‘t Sept. 2 to pay the amount was defeated | Be COL Tae Workuit end. sour | by & vole rot 10,060 toilTdat, for Bandit-Slayer mon were held tncommuntcado in| Tho affidavits are signed by R. KANSAS CITY, Mo., Sept. 21,— jail here today in connection with the| W- Dinnadge, Rev. Mark A. Mat-| Rewards totaling $5,000 today have daring robbery of the Senator thea-|thews, L. J, Colman, Nathan Eck-| been offered for the arrest of the ter last night \stoin, Frank Frye, E. I. Garrett, | bandit who shot and fatally wound Approximately $4,000 was obtained| i’, G. Frank, J. C, Black, 0. D.|ed Edith Krumm_ and severely by the robbers, who first staged a| Fisher, A. B, Stewart, A. 8, Bur-| wounded her escort, Andy Loftus, smailer holdup on the outskirts of| well, B, A. Strout, Roy Kinnear, near Overland park, Friday the city to draw attention of the po-| Henry Broderick, V. D. Miller, W.| lice from the scene of the theater) W, Miller, Caspar Sharples ©. B robbery. Cox, Frank Hull, A. J. Misken, ©. ‘Tho suspects were arrested early} 4, Lilly, W. H. Lilly, W. T. Laube, | this morning in rooming house|\’ § Kerry Marion Kdwards and ¥. near the state eapitol when the auto-| w, ‘paber, mobile in which the robbers escaped from the scene of the holdup was At a price you can afford to pay is listed in today's Want Ad Col- umns. Here is a good listing. found parekd in front of the place. Law Examiners to Decide Allen Case, Members of the state board of law Vi HOME, ) TO SELL NORTHERN LIGHTS THRILL CROWDS IN jexaminers Monday were’ to declde |} goo this ely modern plac | whether Walter B, Allen, prominent |] — with PLAY OVER CILY)||Gostas atierny: oncwe ker veriecal piste; vameet BYaNNe motorists Sunday ||the right to practice his profession MP LAO C4 saw the Northern lights The state supreme court recently | No doubt the fi durora borealis--for the first time ||!ssued a restraining order against | wy | bargain, Phone this year. ‘Tho tights could be ||Alen when it was discovered that} Aedes : casily soon from hilltops and || he had neglected to obtain a state || Turn to the Want Ad Columns wore a spectacular mixture of |}license tho he had practiced law] and see who Is offering this dandy groon, yelloy and red, playing |] here for nearly 20 years since com-\} home to you, RAL HSTATH on tho northern horizon, The |) !n8 from Alaska, Recommendations |! PIRMS OFFER THEIR BEST of the board the supreme action. will be placed before court for final official BUYS IN THE WANT AD COL- UMNS OF THE STAT. __——$ 3) i, phenoménon was the most beau tiful in several years, M. Leslie, youngest fire| on the new chase, The search thruout the night failed lo lead the officers to the lair of the |daring pair. Sheriff Starwich, with Deputies Coffey and Parker, return= ed to Seattle Monday morning, leay- ing Deputies Hill, Holmes, Stalley Sears, Gibson, Beebe and EIHott a oan working with the Snohomish | county force. A complete “‘shake- | down" of every possible hiding place | was in operation during the day, with orders to get the two men at all costs. Meanwhile, Starwich Monday morn- ing announced the reorganization of his jail foree. William Hanley, Se attle man, who has been on duty at j the stockade, was named definitely as the permanent successor to David Morgan, jailer of 13 years’ service, who was dismissed by Starwich after he had been held up by the guns of the six fleeing desperadoes, : | J. A. Anderson, for eight yearsia | guard at the Walla Walla state penile tentiary and four years on duty at the Monroe reformatory, was ap- pointed to fill the job held by Peter Johnson, who was off the force Sates BOOZE PARLORS, * FLOURISH BY HUNDREDS Speak-Easy Saloons Open in Business Centers SCOTCH PROVES FAKE Prune Juice ‘This in the third or a series of stories In which Jack Hall of The It of the results the anawer to the old, o! thon, “What are you urday after nine years’ service, Stare '—Eadltor. wich said he had fired Johnson and eee | Johnson declared he resigned. BARR CAN RESIGN WHEN HE WANTS TO The announcement that Will HL Barr, a jailer for seven years, had resigned was “on the air” at the county-city building, but Starwiheh said Monday that Barr had not pre sented his resignation. The opinion was, however, that a new man They are in of- | would be in Barr's place. fice buildings, in hotels, in cafes “Barr can resign any wants to," said Starwich. a man to take his place, Anderson, who takes Johnson's job, is a thoroly experienced man, Starwich said, and has his family | in Seattle. He will quit the Monroe BY JACK HALL E of the most unusual fea- tures about the booze busi- ness {n these prohibition days is the large number of speak-easy saloons that have sprung up. You find them in the most un- expected places. time he Tl have and of course in so-called “soft drink” parlors, There are scores, hundreds, scattered thruout the city. The procedure of operations Is standardized, There ts a “look- | Service and report here Tuesday, out’ hole in a double barred | Starwich was fighting mad as door, ‘This opens into an ante- he returned from tke new hunt room, where the lookout scans around Everett for Kilbourn and Ward. “We are going to get those two men,” he said. “We are going to get all of them. And when we get them, I'm going to make them tell how they got those guns to stage the jail- break.” WARD FLASHES GUN AT OFFICER The holdup of Officer Pedersen the customers before they are ad- mitted. In the event of a raid, the warning is sounded inside and the booze is poured down the sink Drinking parties congregate in them. The drinkers stay around until everyone is drunk. But when anyone starts getting noisy, the lid goes on tight hag hal TTS them: “Jpy Kilbourn and Ward at Everett bottles. from a nearby: cache... | Wes \Suamem aWiohly,. Rid eri bie ia One n rries it to the place, | Sbout: 10. o'clock Sunday night. man carries it to the place. | pedersen was walking his beat When crowds get noisy the bar- tender simply says he js all out of booze and the party ends, We went into one of there speak-easy bars in quarters on (Turn to Page 7, Column 4) HURT IN CRASH the second floor of a business block at Third ave. and Mar. jon st, | AID "Got any Scotch?" we ins |Five Are Injured When quired, . “Sure have,” the bartender Street Cars Collide replied, We pald $2 for a half-pint Five persons, were Injured and 20 Botuss aie or more shakén up in a streetcar Is ft good?” we wanted to | crash Saturday afternoon at Third aay ave, and Madison st, when an “Sure It's good stuff,” he said. East Madison st. car struck the “Guaranteed—pure Scotch, You | rear of a Wallingford car. can't get this stuff every- The injured were: J. T. Willlam- where.” gon, 64, 5181 Graham st. operator This was one of the samples of the Hast Madison car, cut and we took to City Chemist Jacob: | pruised; Robert Slocom, 27, 7000 son, He branded it as artifi- || Aurora ave, head bruised; Mrs cial. s George 1. Meade, 49, $985 Ashworth The chemical — analysis ave, head injuries; Katherine showed the stuff to be raw moonshine, artificially flav. ored with prune juice to effect the Scotch flavor: and colored with caramel, The | Meade, 10-year-old daughter of Mra Monde, ¢ on head and bruises on limbs; William Tucker, 43, 333 1-2 Westlake ave, contusions about the body, alcoholle content was 40,65 Slocum, one of the injured pas- per cent by volume, The sengers, Was arrested on an open extract content: was 0.198 charge following the accident, Wil ms per oc, Namson claimed Slocom was drunk (Another story of this series | and caused the mishap by talking tomorrow.) to him and obscuring his ylow, &