Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
(EDITORIAL) | HE Admiral Ori- 3 ental Line has been the main factor t in establishing Seattle ’ folks! The silk stock among the leaders in ct. og vos invented in the 16th ee world’s importing Fema, bot not all of it was and exporting centers. ee, Ge recently The five transpa- $B ies the only thing a fellow cific liners on this line t aia room B sma are now for sale by the nj i bow. lone that carp U. S. shipping board. rs. « If we are to forge You smisse ahead; if we are to “t maintain our standing yr the oki-fast aed to object to her Beem bed? She is ni hu wife whose fe her smoking In be see OUR BOYS GIRLS CLOTHES AND MAD? fim pictere points moral! These e Street, show whither our na extravagance in clothes is Look at those mutton-chop Those Seanty skirts! Those trousers! Can our city forge with such a handicap? Ladies i we have no hesita answering, “No " We niust ancestors—discard these frip- of a jaz-mad show the pleas generation whither craving for Mashy lading. the: My i, a low-down good musician? Teaue he's a their thes salesman eee Aman will not adm at HMige of women until he is mar- 8 & bind —Prism P eee PHINEAS J. ASPIRIN | HEADS HOME BREW DEPARTMENT Afetune awaits the man who in- MA tubber automobile that will Hack when it hits 2 telephone thru, it will mean another $1,500,000 unit on that oe f terminal. fi See pein ty Some We must keep the ships for Seattle. * #ub steps up and blubbers, MME 90 and get my rubbers! ie . ‘A honest confession i ul,” said the poet "9% years in the penitentiary eee fat Aree AUCE SAYS: b en, TM compete Pi th Seattte me ] Dy», . Buyer Equity in Property ) PROTECT the interests of; posed bill as yet, but a majority | el small home buyers, inernbers | re in favor of it, and it undoubted. | ; ws in| Oe sie judiclary committee of the|ly will be presented to the legisla ther, et it 20 any) i ae house of the state legislature | ture, legisintors said. oud Gee Gee: “A lotta yee? enning to present a bill at| ‘There is no doubt in my mind BG 0 cong ie the Old | the cor Fenton of the legislature |that it will pany,” one member of f YOU could kins a , a| he coming . . G “Tt will b i Anythi #4) +6 amend the conditional sales con-| the committee said i be a ng but girl Cae committee bill and will, therefore, Neo Yor. Tae have preference. over many others, ae run on Head runnii pad ‘unning time. water power, Bis) * the «mall purchaser who tries to rt hay become of the old they his re fe plan ould “As a matter of pee thls amend. ith at Who used to drink |own a hare of the property: equal} ment docs nothing but change the h his folendn? Kl to the amount of money he had|old law #o that {t will conform And . {paid in on it | with the general conception of what eg what's chins of the | Under the present Jaw and nl the old law meant, No one dream. Gal Gctresnes in tights we aca | recent decision of the state supreme |¢d that, imder the old law, the i pants backage tourt, the installment buyer has no | buyer had no equity in the property | . equity in the property nt all, If] until the supreme courp made the » pian he falls to make his payment on!adverse ruling Jost spring The 4 time has no recourse in court, {majority of states, with athe to the ettles | Hut All the money he has paid| laws, have held that the buyer did his contract, he seller, without | have an equity in the tand tor ene meen he hates a Me toyas ye] sUnder the present -law: the. in Kreate a many 1eM¥ | pains posseasion of the Jand and|ataliment buyer in risking all hin s tontented enuigh, to | any houses or buildings which are|money on nm personal faith in the on it geller, If the aeller turns around The judiciary committer has tak-|and re-selix the land on which the Ad B. en no definite action on the pro (Turn to Page 13, Column 4) Pursuit of Fashion be Curbed: Younger tion Doomed! q Seattle people. promenading to the simple standards of veraned | ing out of Elliott Bay. base drummert he is al Mr a poor judge of liquor until | field is awfully wet and damp g00d for Me, and it |9 often good for from iat has invented that way for| — Tides ropay SATURDAY } | | it r Don’t Give U; the Ships! as a port; if we are to retain our title as the real gateway to the Orient, Seattle capital must buy seo ships. H® aR. E are the facts: The ships will be sold to SOMEONE. Two logical purchasers are in sight—R. Stanley Dollar of the Dollar steamship interests in San Francisco, and the Columbia Pacific Co., operating a freig ght fleet out of Portland to the Orient. Both of these concerns have built up complete freight and passenger gatherings in the Orient, with- out which operation of a ship line would be unsuc- cessful. But— Should the Columbia Pacific Co. take over the line with Portland capital, it would mean one of two things. The ships might be transferred from Seattle to Portland. Even if this did not occur, some of the freight ships would have to be taken off, as one com- i] pany could not use efficiently all of the freight shi on the two lines. Should Dollar take over the ships with San Fran- cisco capital, the chances are that he would transfer them—or most of them—to San Francisco. This would be only natural, as he is now operating a pri- vately-owned competing line to the Orient from that port. Should he purchase the line by interesting Seattle éapital with him, it would mean that the ships would stay here. Dollar is coming to Seattle next week with that purpose in mind. age—throw | The Star believes Seattle money should buy these the shackles of Dame Fashion | ships, and that the American flag should be kept fly- ee RIOR to the inauguration of the Admiral Oriental Line the great volume of silks and furs, which demand quick transportation, were brought to Amer- ica in foreign bottoms, landed at a foreign port and shipped east on a foreign railroad. Typifying the business the Admiral Line brings to i| Seattle, last year alone it carried $128,000,000 worth of silk and $50,000,000 worth of tea into this port. It carried out of Seattle, as typical examples, $10,- 000,000 worth of lumber, $10,000,000 worth of autos and $15,000,000 worth of flour. . ** 8 EATTLE needs this ship line. » This port is four days closer to the Orient than any other United States port. It is the official mail route to the Orient. The Admiral Line has been a big factor in making Seattle the second biggest United States’ port in number of passengers handled. It lms meant more than $5,500,000 spent in Seattle atnually for wages, repairs, supplies, etc. It has meant a $1,500,000 steamship terminal, and if a sale to combined Dollar-Seattle interests goes vA ’ | ERE is a chance for the old-time Seattle spirit to H assert itself. After all that is what made the Seattle of today and build the | Seattle of tomorrow. that is what will Protect Home Buyers if | Contract Law Is Amended \Legislators Plan Measure to Give Small amendment would change the | la that the installment plan | | purchaser of real extate would have in the property. That 1s, Any bill proposed by © committee | generally passes and all legislators, |f am sure, will be in accord with | this one. an equity | | tiled | Walsh, alias ‘Tom Tvans, | tion similar) yitted, and ¥ SEATTLE, WASH., Ship Breaks Loose; Hits Tacoma Bridge Breaking looxe from her m ings in the fog that covered the Tacoma harbor, Friday morning the steam schooner Dugdale drifted down the Puyallup riv waterway, doing considerable damage to shipping and 4 the wa rding to @ report to the chants’ Ex change here. * It is said that the « tra ed the foremast “” under the 11th at. bridge in t i final rammed the A. W, Ster eh a house The Dugdale in owned by W W. Mitchell, of Seattle, and ha been used for the past year ir attie-Los Angeles t At Liberty 2 Years, Man Gives Self Up tf or about two years after j 0 bail on » bootlegs WwW. ¥ Avery came up to the federal building to give himself up Fr day morning. He was arrested by U Marshal Henn's depu tles on the old bench and held for hearing Federal Judge Néterer. | Shoots Sister for warrant before DETROIT, Noy, &—(By U. P)j—Slight hope was held b: physicians today for recovery of five-year-old Mary Safont, shot yenterday by her seven-year-old brother Peter, “Becaume she called ma a monkey.” The quarrel resu from ef forts by the boy to take a doll away from his nister, he sald retaliation, the girl hit him with a stick and called him “a * according to hin story |Meat Daclers Hit at Turkey Raffles, Turkey, turkey, who wants a turkey? If you want to get one this | ‘Thanksgiving you'll have to pay for {tin good hard cash and full price No more fi) the fortunate be able to geta nide, fat pobbier or fh 106 of B50 ticket If the Beat- tle Teall Meat Dealers’ anwocia- tlon have thelr way Friday they announced the adoption of a resolution which 2 neeks to aupprosn all turkey raf- fles or lotteries this Thankagiv- ing. They urge Chief Severyns to tertained at dinner at the Olym ple hotel at 6:30 tonight by the Stanford alumni, A tour of the cily was on the program for the afternoon, with a workout for the players at the stadium being scheduled for 9 o'clock MURDER CHARGE TACOMA, Noy, 6—(By U | rivet degree murder charge ‘ail (i | here today against Charles in connec shooting affray in a local hotel yesterday, during which Victor Nelson, the proprietor, wan ank Shehan, his friend, was twiee wounded Walsh, under the name of Evans, | also in wanted in Fresno, Cal, on kn | ausault charge, and ix suspected of | having \dlled Pat Gentile, Iresno taxi driver, whose body was found | near fipon last March, loca} police announced, with a ing completes Calling Him ‘Name’ |The photograph shows the ruins of the warehouse at the lower end of the dock. men are pointing to the mass of grain, stored in the warehouse, which was a complete | log Church Deacon Hangs Self i in the Great Northern Railway Co. It ased jointly by the Seattle Magnesite Co., a San Francisco con |cern, operating mines in Spokane Gar Cal, Nov. 6—(By U. P.}—Fred C. Crummett M ered, devout ahd a deacon in the church |and shipping from here. 60, for 10 years a deacon in a local church, today | for years, Crummett took one fling at the wild lite | About 4:18 m, the pier hanged himself in jail here, where he wan held follow. | and was held in jail here, pending filing of formal! watchman, M. Pride, saw In, |the bed. ing his plea that the officer » The Newspaper With th® Biggest Circulation in ner the Act of FRIDAY, Rui NOVEMBER 6 ins of Railway Terminal Fire Washington Me sens epee LATTLE PUI LIBRARY 1W0 Cents IN REMEN INJURED Waterfront 5, 1925. SEATTLE. SEATTL “’S SECOND CO; wrecked the Flame Loss $400,000 Two Immense Piers of Seattle Port in Danger Zone NEATTLE ng hit hard early Fr Northern docks at Smith C with a 10s $400,000 and $500,000. Two port the largest in the 4 valued at several millions re estimated at t piers, dramatic anti-climax ‘0 firemen, ries 78th st, and sefiow in an auto crash while ret from the fire. ONE FIREMAN FEARED Fire- | FATALLY INJURED Coming to the LY CONFLAGRATION within the past week Friday morn- | eat Northern elevator, warehouse and dock at Smith Cove. The small auto in which they were 5 an Unsuccennt He wan found jround. ‘The deacow had been watched t fer Kin arrest. yeatertiay. A guard ii the cell was called out for a tow moments During his absence Crummett {the noone, atta } waa dead when the quard returned, after not more than | chéed it to a bunk five minutes’ absenes, attempt to rob a mail truck Crummett made a noore of his suspenders [it to a high bar, slipped hin head thru and jumped off dead by jatlers making their morning “go ahead and kill ime,” Photo by Carter & Bradley, Star Staff Blatt Photographers riding. skidded: Injavowling.: anotbae ____ | machine at 20th ave. N. W. and W fae st., rolling over several times. lene has possibly fatal injuries and Starrett has less serious hurts. Both are at Providence hospital. The dock that burned was the cen- lter one of three s controlled by to rob a mail| flames up inside the building op- posite a point just vacated by the gas tug Skookum. He turned in | charges accusing him of attempting | truck carrying @ $2,500 payroll. Crummett decided to gain his fortune in one bold fastened | | | stroke. He purchased a false mustache, a beard and| an alarm, | everything “Diamond Dick” used in his biggest adven. | While the fire boats Duwamish | tures. ! and Snoqualmie and several fire Then, (Wily dinguined. he leaped onto the running | companies were rushing to the hru the night, | | board of the mail truck and ordered H. T. Webb, the| scene, observers heard loud ex } | foliow. river, to turn over the wealth he was transportmg. | _ plosions, But Webb didn’t act like a regular bandit’s victim | At all, Instead of throwing nia bands up, he disre. | fen yy Boor warded Crummatt’s revolver, shoved him to the street | | and, ax the embryo bandit sprawled inthe dust, Jumpea| Tike & great dns tie * tes | on him. jmendous building belched forth @ hurriedly constructed near the celling and FREE 1,000, 0007; yphoid Cases Traced see to it that all raffles are done ig allow aba is indo vee % away with this year. i iS; Bee ‘ss ate ee to the Pollution of Lake ws!" . ws | flue for the flames that wrapped |\Fails to Hear Cr. |the building, Residents of Mag- | f ‘Timb r’; Killed | This Is the Plan in New Health Officer S ava nD idende P ] |nolta Byute and’ “Intetay” “werk to) imbe illed | Hhoomes tit ‘Brondeals ealth icer Says Disease Prompted Ulti-|irousea and watched the aweine Failing to heed in time the spiring sight. warning cry of “timber” tn the matum to Curb Sewage Dumping The fire boats were forced to forest a few miles east of Red- | WASHINGTON, Nov. 6.—(By U. : CTR take up positions along the burn- mond, Thursday afternoon, |P)—The compromise tax plan ex- A TYPHOID epidemic, scattered | 8 county nealth commissioner, | ing pler, where terrific heat made Charles M. Richards, 33, was |empting one million persons now entirely around Lake Washing-| Seattle in its relation to Lake|thelr crews labor under great crushed nm the falling giant | paying income taxes from further | ‘0M. nd consisting of approximate-| Washington {s under my jurisdic.| handicaps. The dock is old and fir tree crashed in a miniature | federal taxation, will be adopted by |'¥ ® "core of cases, was announced | tion," Sparling added. “The city of | has little facilities for fire fight- earthquake to the ground. the house without any extended ar by Dr. George H. T. Spar-| Seattle will be treated exactly as|ing. Owing to the lack of hy- vA y y With hia skull fractured by a gument, both republican and demo- county health commissioner. any other community if its officials! drants, 1,600 feet of hose had to y ou broken limb, the logger was |cratic leaders admitted today Some of these cases, he :|do not show good faith in elimin-|be laid from Galer st. to get placed a car and rushed to The democrats intend to submit a/ Are directly attrib ating sewage from the lake. | Water streams, Redmond hospital, He died en | minority report urging exemptions |'® Lake Wa : summer.) «Tam more concerned with the) SAVE OTHER PIERS route, The tree limb had struck |up to $5,000, but the project will be | '? ie i get bes ve eneee ene Se) small towns and farms where the| IN DANGER ZO him squarely on the head in jonly a gesture ley towne und dente te s{ change ‘can be made more quickly) As the fire broke out on the land- ite fall. He was a single man, | Later there will be a battle in the! ‘TY tow a Seattle and the problem is not so large.| end of the dock, firemen were un- employed by the Siler Lumber | sonate, but until then at least it is! Sparling formauy served notice on|/But 1 want assurances from the] able to get at the blase. The tire €o the general impression the rates will | Mayor, Brown and the city council /mayor and council of Seattle that! boats were the main weapons in the baie stand as written late yesterday by | Friday, 1 upon all country ‘towns | there (will be no more delays in| war against the fire. Police re- , : the house ways and means commit-| and villages, that pollution of Lakes | abrogating the evil.” | aebvea weave. viking “t5ith } y ie : | : shed to the scene by Haynes Assistant tee. | Union and Washington must be m-| sparing has sét no definite time| Capt. C Dolpbin iti a ould re exemptlo: ely d, of he w 0} ‘ Gets His Position tr pian wi etnstead ot te | tothe neat courts fon & tanndames |i, TRCN the. pewage dlsposal in| Fire Chet George MC. Mantor, As WASHINGTON, Nov, 6—(By: | OC:S1,500 Seams Men comnticns ot | iddunetion : ams! the lake must be stopped. Further | sistant Chief W. H. Clark and Bat U. P.)-Jamen E. |. assistant pSenoatg iarrigg. men. instead’ of | The most virulent outbreak of the | Setlon will depend upon the at-/ talion Chiefs 0. H. Ebbinghouse, P. Se oer Ur, oe Re 00 ‘The normal taxes would be| disease is at Bothell, where Spar | Htpde fot the. {yartous communites.| B.: Taylori'and J, W. Carmichael A. Haynes organization, today tof the first $4,000] llng 1s studying. 11 cases. ‘These, | 2°,.D## no quarrel, with Seattle's! were in charge of six engine com recte ot one-half per cent of the fir: | ‘ | septic’ tanks, he said, if they treat | panies, three t “ a was appointed director of prohl. | MOI yO Sresent two'ahd one | bowever, are not due to lake water | y panies, three truck companies and a bition by Aasistant Secretary of | Trai De. per cent on the next| infection, Sparing said, He has| he *ewase and render it innocuous, quad wagon. They labored hero- the Treasury Andrews, superced: | half, ated Chi foWr par duak and i Gacha thei {to ia typhoid base (ee! Oy ee to sanitary standards, | jeally with their slender means and FRR is Cena Ley ate five per cent on the balance instead} Inst June in which house files act- | Tien ia | tages Se errs ae sere pee who has held that pont, be: |five per woul t ed ax carriers when the patient’s|Man Bad] Hurt i cr by playing hose on the sides ani comes ‘‘leader of the fleld co r dependents would] family failed to take er dis y j.teots ordithattia work. Heath re | ee ar ee eee he mixl-( infection oroentinna. Ok 234 | Colli f | ‘The pler continued to burn late tains the title and salary of pro. [be cetaliiéd at $400 each. The maxl-| Infection precautions. | \ | st! ollision of Cars) y:iicy mornin, Ptleg somunialane? mum surtax would be 20 1 t. | here are cases, however, scat-| 1 3a ana ' 5 hibition commission ‘The scheme goes further than Sec-| tered ‘entirely around. Lake Wash-| ‘TACOMA, Nov. 6—C. W. Lind Estimated losses, as given out reinry of the Treasury Mellon ri ington,” Sparling said, “and some ain at ety inline ae Lehane Peas eee W gested to the committee, The reduc-| o¢ them had their origin either in ik Sy ad re be y) s Football Warriors ppc fs to more than! a in| day, when his car collided with one| hanks of the Seattle Flour, Mills tion provided amounts to more than! bathing in polluted waters or in| “ay a ie | bs Guests of Chamber | §260,000,000 2 yenr. Mellon advised) pites and stings from insects feed-| driven by W. P. Bonney, 1210 N.| Co,, are: ne Stanford Cardinals, 24 |a reduction of only $140,000,000 on! ing in the sewage laden lake.” Prospect st. at N, 12th and Steele Northwest Magnesite Co., 2,000 headed by Coach Pop | these rates | Sparling deciared the typhoid sit.| 8 Tindstrom’s| car overturned, | tons of ore, valued at $80,000. BONG, HORNET: BUA) Monch: OF f 4 ne | pinning him beneath it. He is re} Equipment | and hine Warner and hin staff, arrived in | ; [uation is not yet. alarming, but) ad: 4" (5 have muttered a tractured | star evo, LA aes aff Seattle Friday morning fortheir | Blame Cigaret for | mitted that it Was ono: of the Tea |e een len, He was! out $50,000, game with the Washington Hus bile Blaze Kons prompting his ultimatum to iver MeSthe pany Senet hos.| Seattle Flour Mills Co., 1,500 Kies at the stadium Saturday Automobile Blaze) diminsve swage pital | (uen to Page 13, Column 1) Warner and Axsistant Coach PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 6.—(By 1 ——— : Kerr were to be the honor guests P)—Fire, probably started by a cle at luncheon at the Chamber of | arot, swept thru the Wentworth & Commerce at noon. Irwin garage last night, burning 39 The Cardinals were to be en utomobiles, with a loss of about 000. o firemen were cut A DANDY USED‘CAR Today's Want Ad Columns help you to pick out the partl ular car you want Here is apecial listing: w 1924 OL TOURING This ta one of thore are that elim sport touring Queen Anne coun in high xear. ft haw lotw extras, and with Ite beauttt diac Wheel equipment ts Ju about the prettiest sport mod in town, ‘This car was trad to us on An Oakland closed va and has had only one owne & business may of KAM Turn to the Classified and see who I offering this ea USED CAR THEIR BST STAT BUYS IN TH and bruised. Who took yar Columns DEALERS OFF) wave of fire sweeping skyward. Tho terrifying sight sent crews of | nearby steamships scurrying to re- lease their craft. The ship Pro- |tesilaus, moored at the next pler, “DIE IN FLAMES “FOOTBALL GAME FACTS | Time—Gates open 1; game starts 2. Fire Breaks Out During || Place—University of Washington stadium, campus. | Night: One Child E e || Teams—Stanford University vs. University of Washington. | Night; One Child Escapes || Ofticials—George Varnell, Seattle, referee; R. Morris, RNY NS Seattle, umpire; Bill Mulligan, Spokane, head lines- ei 508 Bk faniity man; KL. Klawens, San Francis 0, field judge. | thetr lives in a fire which destroyed | How to Get There—Street Cars: No. the home of George Kemp in Ballston | Hil s Nov, 6.—8ix, of seven lost * ; 6, running north on Third ave. and east on Union st.; No. 10, running north on Third ave, and east on Union st.; special | rN | cars “To University Stadium” on saa ave. By auto- ® 1) Spa early today, and the o! 6) S-year-old daughter, is] A ; nt es hep ‘ ane eye We mobile: Out Pike st. to 28rd ave. N. and over Mont- ant ae 44 tee i " bin lake-Stadium bridge; out Bastlake and east on 40th Py [Bed plesrhvecetel deo Aah plchehy e : at University bridge. chimney, awakening Beatrice, the 16-)] y pI ys ST) year-old daughter, who, after arous-|| Seats—Reserved, $2. On sale at 1207 Union st. until Y [ling the family, rushed from the} noon Saturday; on sale at gate at stadium 12 noon | . house with her night clothing afire, | Saturday, lng: fot: help. || Coac i, W. Bagshaw, University of Washington; | ‘The charred remains of the othep| Coaches—E, W. Bagshaw, : ashington ; r. rR n “Pop” Warner, Stanford university. || Captains—Elmer Tesreau, fullback, Unive ington; Ernie Nevers, fullback, Stan six mombers of the family were found huddled together in a room near an exit by firemen after they had ex tinguished the blaze,