The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 6, 1925, Page 1

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| i Do You Read ‘ ws . x @ Wasthas ; —= . ) e Newspaper With the Bi | |: de wansianan | VOL, 27 NO. 191 ale SEATTLE, WASH., TWO MEN CHARGED WITH KELSO i Tells Legion That ™ 5. . pavers Coolidge WILL START WEDNESDAY Pittsburg on Edge as Crucial Day Nears ing up their insomnia tablets, He’s Happy Because Humane Society Gets Community Fund Aid ally persons from Osh. Ypsilan Mich., or that laugh loudest at It's gen kesh, Wis, Kokomo, Ind. Western Skykomish or names kind of a when your wife finds a ai rpin in the back seat of SENATOR STARS READY ner Odds Favor Pirates, but always! Little Money Is Offered o Gy . Pittsburg to- Oct. 6 the of a real P= TSH Ra Ballade of Old-Time Boats ok of preparations Where are the cruises we essayed, | *°" se ie s tov vet A gti 4 And where the winds that used to! “ “epee ws lat vo ate phi a? {with the Wash ators to de Where are the harbors that we “ide the worlds t bie fe rary made Waa « ‘ Ras At nightfall in the sunset glow? t 2 olelock Wednesday afternoon, Still sweep the tides so sure and/! stow Vrom Silverdale to Faraway, “orbes field, the best American le Where are the boats we used to) c winners know— will field; the Where sleep the yachts of yester- | © Pic day? - ' the honors for the first Where is the Kelpie, neatly made? Calista rocking to and fro— ; The Drift’s new engine gave us aid When we were looking for a tow)! . The Rambler tipping to a blow, The old Bonita. fresh and gay, lled that has preva H Roger Peckir nd Stan ( ante infielder Olympic, too, Lord, see her got hone, bf was eee sleep the yachts of ect o| ap 7 32 yet CRY Gan ele sgt able to play, altho ENVOL pha woe pit a at Cap, where green waters ebb and his acini flow, plans, so In open sea or landlocked bay, i t There rest our dreams of long ago, eats | Where sleep the yachts of yester- BETTING ODDS | day! FAVOR PIRATES | $e} A taped Onger will be the only ‘There ow 8,000,000 Fords in that Herris will have to the United States, it is announced. that h was injured re At the moment of going to preas, of 7,999,999 of them ter dean of. major | to find a place to park s the choles to-| vhe'se n the opening i a x Dance Definition: The Eee : | Charleston is soccer st to saan’ oe music. ¥ t "i n erg Mea pase ae PTY ate « ae os | T odd: were 6 You can say hisky: You | ‘his alters gens 3 ver #0 our it into a P “sgiatiy aly arg Le cet it coot, | backers of either t bso Soe ean 5 Hotel accommoda were not to deat ri be nd many people are being TODAY'S —— turned away how as train: all parts of the country em eball lust and smoke of th PALMER OUSTED from; their | the crazed occupants into Gink with insomnia who goes out on the back porch at 4:30 in the morning and growls at the milk man, “Where have you been all Emergency Fleet Head Re- day?” tae moved by Board Vote I west barbers are contem- | plating calling themselves “chiro-; WASHINGTON, Oct. 6—Admiral , ‘ ; 667 TELL you," said Fuzzy the slenty of Yonex. Got some of tonsors.” If this fad for fancy, Leigh C. Palm as relieved of his y 5 3 r n t won't be long! duties as president of the emergency Mutt,, curling up in- the em buried all over the rose i e men will be call-| fleet corporation by the United at the King County Hu- | plot in their backyara now ing themselve nitation engineers. | States shi board today | mane soctety’s barn, “there are Then they moved away—forgot e009 Tie Sepie. Seton atlonted he g | Worse things than being a mutt | me, 1 gu Before automobiles cross the Ca-| P' We le, asi “a se rt a ret ; , dog in Seattle Thé town was a sort of des. ne pie they go 20 een Oe ower tha of thel “t had a tough time, at that ert to me after that, Thad a a gallon. After they cross the bor-|V0r¥ ype sed ‘to shave 'wood folks ahd. | ie 1 der, they go £ miles to a quart fleet. corporation Used to have good ks and hard time getting enough to ene | eat. Then this hamane society Tntéreéting. Facts: In the Arctic of yours picked te up, A Haircut Is Now a Work .of | regions, me fon out all me down here and as the nights are six months |» Toom’ ard) board. ‘The | S B b . S . i} ing now to find me another ts Art, Say Barbers in Session) *»:"! YE pIary The Humane society is even Scissor-Wielders Must Know Their Susiness, | ate children Now That Girls Demand Many Kinds of Bobs)?" of them BY MARGARET BUNDY HAIRCUT is no longer merely a It's a work of art than it is It rescued 19 from brutal That's veasons why it name has been included jn the list of charitable organizations Up very betim: mate irew pack hous sirons to take everyt , he rubbish never I saw, and there be hardly n the coach Tor my keg of pars er, but did make Littl st year tful one of the parents. Hotel Tuesday strong, to wise up all its members on the latest innovations, the newest styles and all some $00 4 sit on the radiant ow enough. “Anon sadly to Remember the days when all that| that sort of thing. for the Community fund. loath to leave the countel was necessary w pair of scissors It's the women that have done it The society handled more and a round bowl? Well, those are| “You see," explained Phil Cook,| than 10,000 casos last year ows on the sandspit, and the; ome more of the days that have| secretary of the association, “wom Its employes discovered’ more int methinks, It he! gone forever. ,/en's haircuts haye grown more and than 100 horses which were be. * interesting a, and so did try Association convened at The Olympic | beauty shops have found It necessary fheedéd’ tho ‘worvices off a “yat," ‘eines Wes cael ’ at x ona ee ae ae ——w———— (to keep expert barbers with years of It looked out for them tether I mere golng to Jalle! Ar experie Lots of women simply The same number of cruelly tf sy ‘ . Rancher Dies at climb up on a chalr In @ regular} treated dogs were cared for; Giledtic ve eaak| ave eee Wheel of His Car} vartier shop tor their shingies.” | many others nin down by braing than women. Thats cjte| HLT, Harachey, 63, who operated] Girls, the boylsh bob Ja wed heedlens motorists, were pain “ Ite way om and more Into f lonsly put out of their anisery explained, Look how many a{# chicken ranch at Tukwila, died at ‘ ‘ I Cows, chick suffering woman ha n @ man é the wheel of his car Tuesday morn-|!ne favor, So if you have |. Gower ol Kens and cata, suffering, |! het mind, ing on the Duwamish road, ut the| looking ears, mow's your ehanec wore looked after to the number of " Puy alt Toellner gasoline station, Seeing | Prove It to the: world hondr 2 ri y|the car swerve as It parsed the sta Then, there's the dip shingle, the} ye of good work the soclety We'd lke to meet the man | (tion, Justice August Toellner, pro-|semi-shingle and the fonther edge | does, beside ooking out for us de who manipulates these trafflo | Wrlotor, ran out to find Harschey| shingle, A barber what 18 @ barber sorted mutts,” says Fuzay, curling Honals, Perhaps ho would en. || breathing Mis last. Dr, F, G. Nich-| has to know all the fing distinctions.) up in the straw nt the, humane plain to ua why he always‘ |olls pronounced him dead |The associnlons haa Invited the | barns turns on the red Wght just as Harschey had lived at Tukwila! public to ite style show Tuerday| Three thousand volunteer workers we reach the corner for about 10 years, He was un-|night in the junlor ballroom of|thruout the clty are collecting this | married and lived alone, Heart dis-|‘The Olympt week for the Community Mund—one cA diag case was given as the cause of} As for men, they really don't} big drive, and you won't be bothered A, J. 8. dewth, (Turn to e 9, Column Y) [by charity solicitors for a 12.month, TUESDAY, O¢ | ! forcing government der th ress Mar OBER € SAYS NATION IS MORE SECURE THAN EVER — |Sees No Merit in Unnecessary | Preparedness Expenditure PLEADS FOR TOLERANCE Says We Must Seek Justice in Paths of Peace BY WILLIAM Jd Teron convention here, the pre Our people have ha all the t tion and all the military © that they want.” President Coolidge conclut peech at 11:25 a. m. He } jatform thunderous he Omaha clut ervic amid a nd waa dr luncheo Solemnly warne t militarism, berties and relig y The results of-the war will be lost| and we shall only period of prepar the presiden a ration n the public m: the earth id of the peoples of ggest Cireul: ation in Washinton The Seattle Sta {il 9. Per Year, by Mall ‘The Spudz Family” on Classified Page? You’re Missing a Daily Laugh! nS Wn (Lat Edition TWO CENTS IN § EATTLE. It’s Time to Stop Theorizing! (EDITORIAL) SOME time Sunday evening two young men and two still younger girls, one only 14, “drove into a beer joint” in King county. A few hours later their bodies were found, huddled across a bed in a Renton hotel. Be- fuddled fingers, apparently, had flipped open the jet of a gas plate. Befuddled minds didn’t know enough to turn it off. Four homes are in mourning—one at Kenny- days, one at Renton, two at Snoqualmie, where the young girls had lived. So the state of affairs in King county is this: Any young folks, out for a pleasure trip, may “drive into a beer joint” and there obtain stuff that so befuddles them that they are inc apable of taking care of themselves. Sheriff Matt Starwich, who has theories about almost everything, ‘probably will have some theories about the deaths of the four young folks at Renton. The public hasn’t any theories about the whatever; it has the facts. And for those facts it holds Sheriff Starwich responsible—because he IS responsible. If the sheriff would stop theorizing for a while and get down to brass tacks, it might be- come impossible for young people to visit “beer joints,” run in violation of the law, and obtain brain-battering liquor in such quantities that they kill themselves accidentally. You can’t theorize a “beer joint” ness. "ase out of busi- ": Seek Source of Liquor in Four Renton Deaths Coroner to Launch Probe of Party Whi PROMOTER AND PAL SOUGHT Post $500 Reward for Arrest of Hart and Smith ELSO, Wash., Oct. 6.— Frank Hart, about 25, partner in the prize fight promoting business with John William Smith, is the second man sought under suspicion that he participated in the murder of Thomas Dove: Kelso newspaper editor, it was revealed by authorities here today. | Warrants have been issued for the arrest of both Smith Leh Hart. | both May h or Hart, or is expected hourly Luke 8. Seattle criminologist, who con- ducted the probe into the death of Dovery. May returned to Seattle Tues- day to take up the hunt for the two murder sus here. He also expects to announce the ar- rest of a third man who is im volved in the case. Smith has three» fingers missing from his right hand, He pects SMITH is described as 6 feet inches tall and weighs 171 pounds. It is as- serted that he is a known “stick-ap and forger May who has had charge of the investigation of the Dovery killipgx m: ch) | 1c bak country. ete babe any. oo. Preceded Deg ath of Tw 0G ouples | almost since the occurrence, and WAo ba Ok aus: t tual ities ie work@l up the case against’ Smill be in that direction, and I bee €) A SEARCHING inqu nto the room. He appeared be: alone, | eon eae revolver, <ouaamay that the place where it should t in path fo ty " NW > | the street afte e 8 i. spat saa death of two young met) Mise Costello went back to bed. | inmed to Seattle Monday night Hip After praising the patriotic valor of hotel Ae ee nye nday she smelied | said another arrest may be made im he veterans andthe military pro- |; Me he coroner | eter Deeaom the room. With | the case: within the next two Oamms feed. OME. Coolidae | expressed aioe a A a ad al Be = Dullanank + and Dr. Adolph | Sheriff Studebaker of Clark county: trong opposition to increased mill-|” wy et : : nson, deputy coroner, she broke | announced Tuesday that the county patti ile the : ur (Turn to Page 9, Column 4) | (Turn to Page 9, Column 3) m mealies ae hig anaes) Sh In spite o n eck —— ae a Lt yielaeg seqe ae lay dead Tuesday, the au Sos ee an Ge ea were investigating the kK in time of pea vietory in time of war. No na ever w Pe and security © likely to result from fair able dea are m and hi and mutua agreements for a limitation of arma ments amopge nations, than by any attempt at competition in and battalions.” POINTS TO DANG MILITARY DOMIN, At this point the president warned | squadrons hose who are trying to force a larger nilitary establishment upon the country that “whenever the military power starts dictating to the civil pever means jes of the country ure beginning to end.” Any organization of men in the | military service bent on inflaming mind for the purpose of action thru the (Turn to Page 9, Column 4) the public Amundsen Ship Maud i in Port After Arctic Trip Explorer’s s Schooher ‘and Crew Survive Perils} of North and Are Happy ource from which they which played a pi obtained the nthe party hich immediate preceded™ the tragedy William J. Jones | will conduct an inquest into the case either Friday or Saturday, The jury has already viewed the b In front of the hotel w mobile containing a few Deputy Coroner the auto- | bottles of | | home made beer The party which ended tragic: for the four started, Chief Dul hant, of Renton, says, at North Bend. A “beer joint was visited and the four stopped, aboyt 1 a. m., Jat the home of Clarence Holmes, brother of William, in Kennydale. Willlam repaired a puncture and the party drove on ina Ford coupe | At the Washington hotel one of the men awakened Miss Mildred Costello, proprietress, about m rented a _light-housekeeping and BY H. F. KRETSCHMA iN 7 asatstant engineer, died about 18 HAT grim old warrior of the|months ago, and lies now ina burial polar seas, Roald Amundsen‘s | Yault cut out of the solid northern | J exploration schooner Maud, docked | !°¢. jin Seattle Monday night after an) on the long trip was generally jabsence of more than three years. | want, the hardy son. Viking During most of that time the There were few dangers or Maud remained locked In the {ce iships, Each was happy and glad pack of the Arctic ocean, trying to bo back in civilization. Bach Hae eiths isvaukesh the hole and longed to see the faces of loved ones {out on the other side of the globe, |!n Norway or America und cach | ut Amundsen's guess was wrong. [already was planning his journey | The ship Instead drifted 2,600 miles | back home | west of Nomo, but very little in the} “Would you go back again?” one | D. il S direction of the pole asked, | al Y> t: Defeated, sho was ordered to turn] “Oh! Yes, perhaps, It Is not bad| jback, But many months passed | you know," ho replied in broken in " We Wefore the hold of the ico pack | nglish, with a smile } The most enthralling jcould bo broken and the famous} And with thar same display of romance- ship be freed to make her WAY | tho foarless spirit of the adventurer ave “ahe 1 als 0 ‘ | when blood va ot ¢ back to Seattle, where she started | these Norsemen scoffed at tho dan:| hen blood ran hot from on June 3, 1922 gers from the clute the weird flicker of But winning or losing, the Maud made a glorious try ar@, battered ind hammored by thousands of tons of jee, came back the heroine of the Aretle ‘ SEVEN LEFT ON 'TRIP | ONLY SIX RETL Seven men manned the ship when \t loft Seattle, Six guided It into itn dock at the Skinner & Wddy plers in the dusk of carly evening Mon= day, The great teo cap of the world jx the cemetery for one of thowe in {ropid explorers, §, Syvertson, the ing, crushing HG pack, laughed at the long, lone | ly night and insisted that their | Journey was merely a pleasure trip. | PL | "Oh, we had lots of food," sald} T. M, Olonkin, engineer and radio) operator, "We had enough to last) | five years more, And it was good! Tn Gener The Se te Fresh meat wo had almost | | ev day. Polar bear, walrus and | seal, I'm anxlous for some hot| ; Weather, tho, It was cold up there, | (Turn to Page 9, Column 2%) \ | Laure—siren of the gold land Winds of Chance By REX BEACH arting Friday romance of a land of super -the Klondike during the gold strike— und gold fever mounted with the northern lights over the destinies of strong men in the cold, lawless Yukon, rus Installments attle Star Sueycues cog

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