The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 31, 1916, Page 1

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+ How Seattle Léoks From Mile in the Air. See Star Tomorrow ODAY Miss Cornelia Glass, The Star’s girl report- | Star's hotographer, also made a flight Saturday with Maroney. . : He took his camera along. From an altitude of nearly 2,000 feet, er, tells oe about her experiences of Saturday, he took a birdseye picture of the downtown section of the city. when ran soared 1,500 feet above the business sec- : At the Clemmer theatre this week, the start and finish, of tion o i , acobs’ flight is shown in motion pictures. omorrow e Star Seattle with Aviator Terah Maroney. | will PRINT THE PHOTOGRAPH HE TOOK OF SEATTLE FROM bebicrrtas bei! The Star is going to let you SEE just what Miss | 2,000 FEET OVERHEAD. | It is the first successful photograph | Glass saw at the highest point in her flight. Frank Jacobs, The | of the kind ever taken in this city. NO ONE HAS YET OFFERED TO BUY THE HUst- PHREY “DUCK POND," WHICH COST UNCLE SAM }EORGE, THE WRATHE 31 T $169,500, AND WHICH THE “RELIABLE” P.1, SAYS GEORGE, THE WEATHERMAN 81 AT HIS IS A “VALUABLE PIECE OF BUSINESS PROPERTY’ OLD JOB, MURMURING, “TON UESDAY, ; PERHAPS IF THE OLD “RELIABLE” WOULD ALSO PARTLY CLOUDY.” BUT GEORGE, WHO WAS 8U- THROW IN A FEW SHARES OF ITS GUARANTEED PERINTENDENT OF COUNTY AUTO TIRES, HAS & AYRES BUNK TERMINALS,” SOMEBODY MIGHT THE ONLY PAPER TTLE THAT DARES TO PRINT THE NEWS NEW JOB. HE'S MANAGING BOSS WHITNEY'S NEWS BTANDS, Se VOLUME 19. SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, JULY 31, 1916. ONE CENT °%,,7%2!%3,,A°2 j |184 DIE IN CANADIAN BUS ss &#® ®@8@ ®&@ ®@ os © * *©® *® & * TGIRL REPORTER TELLS OF FLIGHT OVER SEATTLE j + * RAIN H ALTS WORST '|MISS GLASS AND — AFTER FLIGHT OVER ay rr a WOOD FIRE AFTER a | HOW IT FEELS TO DANGLE LOSS IS $2,000,000 NORTH BAY, Ont., July 31.—One hundred and eighty-four lives have so far been reported lost in the greatest forest fire northern Ontario has ever suffered. More than $2,000,000 property damage was done. The fire district forms a territory shaped like the letter J, with Bourkes forming the end of b By Cornelia Glass vee’ small boy and every small girl in the world, | suppose, has dreamed a wonderful dream of stepping off cf something high, waving his or her arms Cochrane the junction with fhe crossbar and Pea z° 3 a bit, and floating out into spate Tike the birds. : ~~ Iroquois at either end. I know I used to. One time I tried it. All that I accomplished was a broken Se ca eve gaii ate: ankle. I decided then that flying was one of the dreams that never come true. ” OFFICER WILEY taneouay “A see ai points ‘form: Then, Saturday, 1 found that it could, tho waving my arms had nothing what- ing semicircle from Bourke'’s to : , i i | , ’ ever to do with it. Hi nundres J : * : . Drives ty Aig ering vind teal 7 . 1 went over to Harbor Island to a big, round, white tent in the midst of a DIES OF WOUNDS the souattealde Sectike. ¢ bears | ween ? jlong field of sand and met Mr. Terah Maroney and his aeroplane. — i thunderstorm coming up ahead of | : ? Mr. Maroney was working around his mechanical bird, tightening a screw here,” ~ —— a hurricane and with everything as - 4 May Ask New Warrants for|@ry as tinder, here was never a loosening another there, testing the engine and tapping the iron rods that hold the ~ ee : hance for people to save anything ings in place Billingleys in Duel a ¥ wings in place. } : Dee : Deaths che: Domes UNA oF tae wane It seems that when one flies one has to be especially attired in overalls, tied — |town has gove, while Troquot i , » ankle ed high aabout the chin. Also one wears goggles ~ INQUEST IS DELAYED |Falls has Gizabteared’ except the tightly at the ankles, and buttoned high a c goggl an |large pulp and paper milis of the and a cap over one’s hair. New warrants, charging Fred | Abitibi Power ond Pulp Co. and Logan Bilingsley with first-| A heavy rainstorm on Sunday degree murder, in connection with |providentially stopped further dis- the death of Patrol Driver Robert | ster. Wiley, may be issued Monday, f lowing a conference between May- or Gill and Prosecutor Lundin. Wiley, who is the third victim of gun fight at the Billingsley When | was all ready, Mr. Maroney and, his assistants raised one side of the ltent and slid the machine out onto the field. It glides very easily on its rubber- tired wheels. They started the big propeller to whirling. Mr. Maroney slipped into the little ~ iron driver’s nest behind the wheel and rushed off on the trial trip he always takes before he carries a passenger. Sr hie woulie ot 928 0 Sue B RD All the while he was sailing and whirling and diving thru the air above us, 7 iar, ot Providence bospitel. | | the bystanders talked to me pityingly. a ee an, oe Denecmeer paid Some tried to dissuade me from straps behind ] buckled the straps that held q Mayor Gill Monday. “I expect to oe 4 » flight. Others gave me much Talks With His Left Hand me. : talk Mt over with him today. I be Mex. Bandits Slay American iviia ae to wht to do and how || Occasionally Mr. Maroney would My first flight was over. : ee n ec cone ae bole e| Soldiers in Fight at was going to fecl, from the depth | turn aroun and talk to me with 1 shall never forget the in- 4 result of as oe one sage Ranch of the wisdom they had gained tn | his left hand, pointing out our bird-| gpiration and thrilling joy of j wet the ghooting of standing on the ground and watch: |like shadow far below us on the] it, and 1 have promised myself : 1 ro - nd 0 ‘ “— nd ground, or ‘ndicating with his fin-| it will not be my last. That a second Japanese is in| PURSUED INTO MEXICO 3 the machipe had agaln|gers the number of hundreds of " A volved in the shooting, Is a new | se . a est on the field before | feet we had risen |18-Y. fe) 5 susie being investigated by Chie? | EL PASO, July 31—Two witha’ ~ ome te rest On tind up onto the| Five hundred feet—and every -Year-Old Girl eckingham, wi.o says that three} Americans were killed in a Mi he tent, ambled uy iv-|thing was perfect in its detail! ‘ . » offi iss Glass, of The Star, and Aviator Maroney, photographed just as they alighted after their success-|iottom plane, just behind the driv. | thing was perfect in its ¢« Dr ‘ Women were with the officers in| clash between a detachment of rus tight, Saturday, over Seattie’s downtown section. Mite Glass ls garbed in overall Bnd bathe eee eaneng they strapped me| I could see te people on the ops 1,400 Feet : the automobile just before they! Troop F, Eighth U. S. cavalry, reached the scene of the duel. and a party of Mexican bandits | '"@ CaP. | there. field from ‘which we were rising. | and Enjoys Feat meenannniepeneennnenpieeehieereneeeseramesinntit sine — , » propeller n “One of the women declares| at the Sanchez ranch, one and the propeller fngham. “There were three wom- " rl i" : . 4 f M of the band, were killed In ‘The last thing I heard was *) | Higher and higher we rose. Mr.|qven Harbor island and floated to : i ; Gets Plenty of Advice Boat Looks Like Toy 1,400 feet Sunday from an aeroplane | T e gful of air with you Three times the height of the on “a Wiley was to have been the chief/line into Mexico was contemplate: | “Take a lungtu $ h Tiny” Glenn, another of the Ha BD. rec daring the eovones'é {0-Htor 0 time. D was contemplated | BY J. P. YODER As the flameg died out this aft-;whose arrest a warrant has been|he shouted, “It'll be the last you'll Smith building tower , bor island aerial colony, plans por quest into the killing of Sergt.| Robert Wood, a customs in.|United Press Staff Correspondent|/ernoon and searchers prepared to] issued, did not appear jget for of the engine | roig could stil! see the man in th®/preaking into the “dropping” game alm Weedin, who was shot down by |.|spector with che cavalry patrol NEW YORK, July 31—Com- [#9 thru the ruins of the Lehigh; The condition of the area of The sudden r sar of ‘ Sh pge9 rowboat, but his boat was & toy|.oon She has Deen flying for Same F Buehiro, the Japnrese watchman,|was one of the first to be killed In| prehensive investigation into docks, only four persons were/devastation made {it impossible to-| swallowed up ali other ¥y wet hewn from # chip now, and he WAS | years, but has yet to make her first after a duel with Wiley. |the engagement. Private Join J.| the shipment end of the muni- |known to have died day to examine the scene of the|we were gilding along the Broth. ja apeck in the center of it \jump. . ES ‘The coroner's inquest, scheduled|Twomy also was killed and Ser-| tions business of the country They were Leyden Conrad, the|first terrific impacts. At 8 o'clock! Mr. Maroney turned his Hudl.) A long aray crutser farther out | oovncalinidnianoae begin Monday, has been indefi | geant Louls Thompson was wonna by state and federal authorities | Lehigh Valley's chief of police; Ar-| (Continued on page 5) and his lips formed in the harbor was like one of a side every day. The fatal relapse among the bandits, and pursuit plosions at the Black Tom mu- Twenty-three men are reported But { wasn't worrying. | W&as) 46 pooks of cunning workmanship. came at 6 p. m. Sunday. was abandoned after the remain-| jitions terminals early Sun- Ml . of blocks of cunning anshiy Wiley joived she police depar!-\ing Mexicans disappeared in the é 1 surety , y ke * i hole fleet I had received for! Ptely postponec ed. The accuracy of the American| geemed certain today, ae a di- |thur Tossen, baby, shocked to Don't worry 7 gy ile been at the bed-|cavairy fire tool vy to ‘ . |death, and two unfdentified men I couldn't hear a . Christmas several years ago, Mrs. Wiley has bi a . k a heavy toll! rect result of the monstrous ex H AND the clatter of tho engine. Wis Sty whe a teantha edi city| 4 we no | beginning to realize that [ was ®X 4, world was my plaything,| re. killed These were the known facts as to | By iden ot 3 won ‘ ment in December, 1913, and was) trush ay whieh ten we: i. loss of life more than 36 hours GETS STEAM UP ices ing th raaileniian Of On | spread out for me to take or leave | J | missing age. Fe ‘a | Jerful dream Has Feel f Confid | 28 years of ag For six months Capt. H. B. Cushing of after the explosion. der an aarey jas Feeling of Confidence he has acted as police chauffeur. | Eighth Massachusetts infantry| Hint of such an een : | and tron and fabric that was corre | que" ting” pushing against my'| j He lived at 1609 24th ave. and/made an offivial report of the|came today, when Prosecuting At-) Dynamite in Harbor | tne ne, Gaware. ee Ne face, the glorious, sunlit world be-| Scores of young women who went 4 fs survived by a widow, one child. | fight to Gen. Bell at Fort Bliss, |torney Hudspeth, at the preliml| 4 .oiious aftermath of the disas-| alive in every P low stretching one way into the/out canoeing Sunday evening on , meng ‘ into BALTIMORE, July 31.—At in Long Circles leben pig's iy F : nary hearing of two men arrested! 14) Geveloped today, when many! 1:30 the lie Subenae ¥. Tim. A ae rae ak ick easy circles, |Sleaming blue of the water and the|Lake Washington talked very fast his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. J = eet cab or Arlington, and R. J. STAY THREE MONTHS on charges of manslaughter in Con) 1.4. of dynamite and other high| ‘ bs to be drifting Other into the gray mist of the|Monday trying to explain to their a brother, at Arlington. | nection with the resultant deaths, mins started its engines and |the earth seemed to b Our | bills, all brought that wonderful|parents why they were away from Wil Wiley, »xplosives were found floating, | ’ f declared every railroad terminating | “xDiostves: : we found floating.) began clearing away the barges |gradually «way from us \teeling of inspiration, of ability |home all night ] ared © oo flagrant| neatly submerged, in the harbor.| obstructing the passage of the |perspective incrensed. The sweeo |feellng of, tnepirition, Of | abill call t , nN EL PASO, July Three | in New York has been ne ag ton Marine officials issued warnings tol supereubmarine| Deutschland, |of the Sound and the city came |‘ acoomplish an rage pha A squall which sprung up sud: ILL HIRE months, it 1s est!mated, wilt be re-| violator of statutes regulating SOF | iy owners and established a har-| pow snuggling at the foot of |into the picture, then the lakes to pa sometimes at music from an denly early in the evening swept at ' lor completion of «| a&e O ch explosives r De all bo: seyoud thé ,, [Organ Hleast 200 « 8 acrose Three hundred laborers will Péter trainin nee eae cours Bi een List Binal bor patrol of small boats, nh vay.| Andre st. There Is every indi. jand the m nantains beyoud thi m, i me a ake to lonat bo ontone Sa points acne : fae ererkon ths of training for the militiamen tr Xe let Be pete pert Ackman, Lehigh Val-| cation of immediate departure. |one glorious unbroken panor rhe ea a htan ha asi pesca] s pierapn onl é f ietlway in Alakea, A|the El Paso district, projected in| Agents from the . ipogibrn sae) ley agent, and Alexander Davidsov,| The Bremen will reach oot three-| My sensation was not one of rapid ate herd pti d ego | which the occupants found it impos- rablegram was recived by Seattle cf-| OFders received here tod | Justice and the interstate comm superintendent of the Nationel mile iit tonight, and then, or|totion thrn the air, but of being| The hewn « ' agala: became a|sible to return against the wind, ; ficlals, asking that the men be| Army officers predicted it might |commi sion spent rly all day on were arraigned beforvlearly tomorrow morning the|in the path of a 60-mile gale It |rowboat and the speck a man | Twenty canoes were beached on : report will de mean the militfa would remain on. the scene. On the’ The painted city became alive,|/Sand point, across from the Uni thing difficn 4 * oe din doe * ark A, Sullivan and| ‘ ° my did not make | | E Ad al at abet ses 6 Crook | the border for the next three|pend whether the commission will Tennant today, charged cole tae ane tb eens ae It made it, rather, a pleasure | with humans moving on its streets./ versity Canoe club, alone. The "1 s f work cight hours and | months |xo more fully into the case. This| with manslaugater In connection | menhor nt tub ete: Ccobah'e a ne 4)" Once I tried to lift my hand to| I could the round, white tent/canoeists built a. campfire and ¢ | phase, however, will not deter state| with the Black Tom explosion fs rew in} it the cap tighter about my ears,/and the people in front of it spent the night there. Other small- Der the Tarneaaet (ee OR T 6. FRARY DIES |*": Jersey City officials in their|case were continued until Friday |88¥!"& good al to'w friend on, Lo land I found that it gave me a| The wind lessened its rushier parties camped with less com: 9 | ae vetivosa eon tr aaahorene! js be Ue | probe and prosecutions | morning at the request of Prose: hie point today fierce sort of joy to tug agains: }against my face X fort and greater solitude. Wau the cause of the sudden de-| HOQUIAM, July 31.—Dr. ‘Thos | Most amazing of all the startling| cutor Robert 8. Hupsteth. The d @| the unexpected weight of the air We struck the sand and glid- | Only one canoe was reported to rthing il C. Frary, former mayor, is dead | features of this greatest explosion|fendants were released und TODAY'S TIDES AT SEATTLE *| | found, too, the absolute lack of] ed across it with ever-decreas- jhave capsized, a boat belonging at A epecial emplovment office will|here today, He dropped dead on|on record is the growing bellef that/ $5,000 ball car te aasae 219 v, | [need to hole and | let go of the| ing speed |the University club, The young opened at the Hell st, port com-|the street. Dr. Frary was 75 years|the death Ist will not exc 25 or! ‘Theodore B, Johnson, president! | 3/35} in ia te ier N iron bar in frdut of me and let the Then the great bird came to |men who were in it swam safely to @ filed yt \ old , at the outside of the Johnson Lighterage Co, for @ @ wind push me back against the! a quivering stop and they un- ‘shore.

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