The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 1, 1919, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

en , DAYS TO GO IN VICTORY CAMPAIGN! HUSTLE! DO YOUR BIT! An American Paper That Fights for Americanism The Seattle Star Wasp aaah a aaa aco Naas tani eet ih 95 om meee ~ to Seattle Maye in 1) rRIDAY Tides Tharedey, tet thigh LATE EDITION TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE 15.00 to 1900 tnd High Tite ted High Tide out Low Tite * ft sp dekh paw Per Year, by Mail, Entered an Second Class Matter May %, 1899, at the Postoffice at Meattle, under the Act of Congress March #, 1879 SEATTLE, WASH., VOLUME ther Forecast: Under this title The Star printed a petition last nd army trucks | and be unhappy. A singing n will be a happy, cheerful & hearty one. Cheerful people respond to an appeal for the Lean. As singing promotes and generosity. Generosity @ quick and ready response.” Base Hospital 50, en route for Camp Lewis, left Omaha, Neb, at 6 o'clock ‘Wednesday night, according to word received by Chairman Frank Gates, jr, of | the soldiers and sailors’ welcome | committee. The meseage further authority had been «¢ attle unit for a stopover Seiden ex) WITH SOLDIERS questions, Albert A. Farmer, be Heved to be one of the fake offi- cers masquerading as members of the dry squad, who raided and ransacked three Seattle houses Wednesday, was arrested Thurs Stubbornly refusing to answer | | "aea | RGO, while we are singing, | let ug give. While we are <- giving, let us sing.” John i] Henry's logic appears to be sound .and his psychology j b-proof, but what must he have | thought when he took a peek at Se- le’n Wednesday subscription to Victory Loan! Henry must have ght that Seattle must be suffer: from paralysis of the purse near- epidemic in its scope. At any até, nobody around Victory Loan “headquarters seems to Lave acquir- '@d writer's cramp from making out Fy day morning by Chief Deputy Sheriff Brewer and Deputies Starwich and Campbell. The ar- rest was made at the Providence hospital, where Farmer was em- ployed as engineer. said that no nted th . in Seattle, | Chairman Gates on Wednesday dispatched two wires to the war de partment in Washington urging | that the members of Base Hospital 50 be granted a four-hour stay in attie to officially welcomed back to their home city and to par-| de nd be dined he | Unless some ufiforeseen delay oc | curs the hospital men will arrive] PARIS, May 1.—(United Press.) here turday. They are due in| —Many soldiers and civilians Camp Lewis Saturday afternoon,| were injured in clashes here this where they are ¢o be discharged. | on, resulting from May A special meeting of the welcome nti-government demonstra jeommittee was called by its chair-| 8. | man Wednesday and preliminary! Disturbances began in the | plans to welcome the medicos, if Place de Concorde and: Place they can be secur for Seattle de la Republique. Shortly after- were made. Another meeting will| ward a crowd attempted to rush be held before Saturday to perfect! the military cordon in the Rue ngements Royale. It broke thru a line of ntative plans for gendarmes, but was stopped by of the unit include a cavalry a few yards beyond, the station, where the Numerous fist fights occurred be- With a description of the automo: bile used by the fake officers, the th puties were passing the hos pital Thursday, when they saw the standing at tie curb. They found Farmer at work in the engin room Many Are Injured in Anti- Government Outbursts be | Warren Prepared for | May Day Trouble Chief of word this acec car n Police Warren resattalll afternoon that a large: | crowd of I. W. W., after 4 | the graves on Queen Anne hill of. the men killed in the dock battle in 1916 between members of the red organization and citizens of Bi had formed in columns and for Ballard. A May-day picnic of | radicals had been arranged at Golde en Garden, in Ballard, He at once dispatched Sergt. G. L. with 10 policemen, to reinforce the Ballard reserves in case of trouble, One hundred police reserves ‘Peceipts. oN solicitors have been « valorously despite *. but when it comes to fastly denied connec tion with the affair and refused to answer any questions, He was taken to the county jail, and Henry Delaney, who was held up at the point of a gun Wednesday by one the fake dry squad men, identified Farmer as one of the fake officers. Farmer's bail was fixed at $1,500 Delaney told the deputy sheriffs he ia armer is one of the pair that ided his home at 1543 17th ave. N,, tore off the wainscoating took the furniture to pleces and searched trunks in the basement for Farmer ste EVER a day passes that “4 Mrs. David J. Grant, in her double-barreled role as ex- ecutive secretury of the King county women's com- Mittee, and Seattle women's com- Mittee, important branches of the Victory Loan organization, does not “double-crous herself a dozen times a gay. She issues an order which she | may interpret for either Seattle or King county and revoke it at her sure, But she never trips her- Mf, and accept it, brother and sis- END an ear to this: To } s ry or Bridge Battle, the 100 per November, to be signed by readers and to be for- temptations of the Hyson Haus nor the comfort of the Souchons | n. Assigned to the South Park nm district, Mrs, Kelly cov i , ue | to bring to the president's attention the gross un- fitness of Burleson to hold public office. The Star's tool a flivver over the day Meeting i On the contrary. Mrs. Kelly || browbeating of those in government employment; CLEVELAND, Ohio, May 1.—Several pet |HE SPEAKS AT ARENA|] second, his failure to reinstate union telegraphers ||were shot, more than 100 were arrested and se thing of the spirit that prompt | @ woman who somehow found it leagues, will arrive in Seattle collective bargaining; third, his arbitrary raising of | former Socialist candidate for mayor. certain women in this fair A big mans meeting will be held in| The trouble began when one of the many Red pai The Star pointed out that under Burleson, ef- Gay ts known the world over as a ne ina hee 4 came a delegation carrying red flags and shouting. umh, ery and cheer, lel) arrive service. i a We Meena Stee: mpehaner bt A dozen of a group of soldiers dashed into the due this week, until a wire w : ‘. ired fights in pro; is. Men dro) treets and rushed these ceived Thureday pret po Rete day, even as Wilhelm, the Hun. Burleson’s whimper | ped ic ie aaa aaa over tie Denaiads them up as fast, as that he is being assailed because he performed his Around to inject pep into the cam. | dashed up and down the street, clear- | fray, Whenever they saw palgn. Only ten days remain for Se- hee : cession. man carrying it. n sounded, and it is gathering force thruout the Went to Publle Square jundreds United States, that “Burleson must go.” ‘ . breaking up the groups gathered for @ mass meeting. As n =| they reached the platform, two men| .“ War tank, with @ halt the drive. | In an added effort to round up the | | hind the speakers. - | b cq he tank for them. The reds day circularized every depositor, ure. | Ruthenberg and 50 other men were | tine in breaking: Up: | alles atatiean | ters. The inside of the hall was Aggressive returned service men rere ‘ , wrecked. and business exponents of seattle | Deputy Sheriffs Arrest En-|Seattle Hospital Organiza-|_ Whi the police kept the public «Twp pl seriously wounded. He was down town every night in the week bg teoe sit pig os reaping be | to a hospital. until the end of the drive. A Unt} ciate pp Se aise i “ mer ica E. Ninth st. |C. Ro Mantel of the Victory loan| ing in groups on street corners. | “Fig Morton, federal agent 4 | committee. | to speed up early returns from the shipbuilding armies. credited government agent at Seat tle homes, unpatriotic housekeepers alty ng to the latest edict of | the women’s divisi a brief “Madam ts engaged” from the maid of the house, they are . those matrons of Seattis | a} Liberty Loan work be | efforts of Mrs Margaret F.| ly, residence 9003 Fourth ave. 8. up to the plans and spect: | ‘of our old friend, the Strik: | warded to President Wilson, asking for the removal SEQUARTER of the tand pte case against Burleson was summed up in three main smooth cement? The an thry mud—TEN MILES of | w Y reas ‘ rare i spi s ‘ ; 7 Gare Kelly, the patriots out South ES ho have been locked out for no other reason than |/were in hospitals following the breaking up ing and real to mush Friday, ¢ the Vie- ; " se ies Eo oe telephone rates in the Northwest on a fictitious plea per) ; ; e the sort who “notat | the Arena at & p.m. Friday, and he| that were to converge at Public square for the m ficiency had departed utterly from stof fi e- straight . from. the shoulder, rough- | y ¥ fr the Len toffice qi 11 @. tm. Friday, | And now the day is approaching mighty near jand threw themselves at the paraders. Police fe his coming. And the local commit | head. congregated. duty is on a par with the kaiser’s excuses for start- aitle to raise $11,712,300-—the bad: | The reds went to Public Square, = | FAKE OFFICER © WELCOME FOR isccieisic ot Sires dollars every bank in Seattle yeater: | ag tha gavthat ef :4ad Week bond taken to Central station and charged | ""G.,. ‘crowd of several hundred ow’ Police Sergeant Barrett, att i 4 . . square clear, the parades which had} will Importune the populace to creas gineer at Hospital tion Due Saturday 4 United States District Att versity quartet will sound a clarion | ] beukeo up and the pation were Guard Break Up Groups ceived a report that two ef A 10plece band on a decorated | Expose Disloyal who say they hav t time to dix The women thwarted at the outs poviate of Rostmaster Burleson, It was the first consistent Famous Evangelist to Boost! charges: First, his kaiser-like policy in the post- “reds’”” May-day parade and meeting late today. jreached a downtown corner. ib and when the man at the bey te thle world with disorderly conduct. As many) utters tetteae teatanaeion ae formed in other sections of the city |'"& to disperse @ crowd at note in the appeal. These evening ing the square to see that no meet. | £4 8. Wertz got a report that @ Soldiers and sailors formed in had been shot on Buclid | truck will accompany the speakers Unless women solicitors are re cuss Uncle Sam's enn will be pluggin, this condition women canvassers are THURSDAY, MAY 1, 1919. s * # * * * * * * * ** * * * * * * *& * * * * & es 8 & * * & + £ ¥ : ' cause of the daily Oolong Contrast. Not for Mra, Kelly | attempt made by any newspaper in the United States seape ALONE. Did she Victory Bonds at Fri- qwer ia sa large, sonorous office service and his Prussianized bulldozing and her own power. Catching lark way unbuckled handsomely to Ist and ex ball player in the big || that they exercised the American right of seeking Among those arrested was C. E. Ruthernb mud for the Victory Loan than tory Lean ea stir that it was to pay higher wages to’ operators. messages to the bond sales } will be the chief speaker, Billy Sun-/ ‘ A part of the procession had sed the corner. |end-tumble oraton who makes people partment; that strikes loomed in the telephone ge) P ng i The committer didn't know he was || when Burleson will have to go. He has outlived his || 1 ® moment there were a eh args companies, p tee te sure glad to have Billy Sunday | Soldiers in tanks Boy Scouts, too, jumped 4 ing the war. It will not avail him. The slogan has jing it of the remnants of the pro-| they tore it from the hand of where thousands of persons were to generate steam for the balance of | | flags, climbed over the railing be-| ) O rowa of reds he hi eg S55 SUSPECT HELD) UNIT 50 READY sissies“ Seah tase tale walle’ traces began to arrive. These were broken |“¥®- and E. 9th st, was shog meeting® are under the direction of | |ing was held, the reds began gather- | aay beg rege bid pet detailed to the shipyards of Seattle ceived with the deference due an ac |open to an exposure of their disloy every urged to sta ir name and busi Thru a school board in regard the children, th misunderstanding of the » the care of children’s parade day, May 3, has ‘The first objection raised to the parade by the school the reception welcome at men will be} days. | Mrs. Maloney ae Ms bh a as oe fog flecked be: when she makes P HER, mind, Mrs. Grant does things. She is one worker who is free from the attacks of Chadpunds and Becky Sharps which ound in every city, Some time go Mrs. Grant strayed off the res ation and found herself in San neisco, She was commandeered, Bay City folk knowing a good _ thing when they see it, and was in charge of a squad of sun- ties —just as wish—who rated the whole city Victory Loan purposes in 12 Seattle should have seen her first ERHAPS Mrs, Margery Ma loney is in a better post- tith to appreciate the meaning of the word par simony than the layman. is the Victory Loan bond salesman, » ho employs the tulle er booth, in the lobby of the American bank. Dur urth Liberty Loan Mra Mitoney sold bonds in the sum of $59,000 in the frst ten days. What fa it now? Just a coy $2,000 worth Mrs. Maloney always is ready to make the cash register tinkle, but the crowds seem to be afflicted with anthrophobin ABOR DAY MEETING PROMIB- ITED IN ROME ROME, April 20, — (Delayed, Wnited Press)-—All meetings and demonstrations on Labor day have Deen “hited hy the government Find More Bombs in the Mails; U. S. Agents Busy NEW YORK, May 1—(United y et service agents all over the United States today searched the mails for bombs be- lieved to have been sent to prom- inent men, Discovery of 16 infernal ma- chines here, held up for lack of sufficient stamps, exposed a plot which detectives assert almed at the annihilation of some of the nation’s biggest financiers and government officials in. connec: tion with a great May-day dem- onstration of Bolshevism. Secret service men here were in have been found to contain very high explosives and the ones rr: |ed by Senator Hardwick of ¢ and by Representative Burnett of | Alabama exploded with mangling | force. The bomb sent Mardwick in | jured a colored maid, while Burnett's | was set off by a poll n planting a bullet in it the men to whom the bombs were addressed were Postmaster General Burleson, Sec retary of Labor Wilson, Attor: General Palmer, Commissioner Gen | eral of Immigration Caminetti, Jobn |D. Rockefeller, J. P. Morgan, F. © Howe, commissioner of immigration touch with agents In scores of citles|) ow ‘york: Willlam Wood, Boston the for and towns where carefully inspected Inspector Faurot’s cate the factory where the geniously constructed explosive e gines were put together, This r leved to be on the west side of Benepe 20th and S6th) ats, The district is thus fixed by the) use the bombs, they say. | boxes within} New York between police be were that area. ed in post mails were inoffensive | looking Mttle packages in department store wrappers sent from New York famous New York police “bomb squad” has been hard at work for hours trying to lo- in | Sprov n W. H. Finck, de} New York; York; W. H, La postoffice department right, police rtment of just yor Hyland, New mar, solicitor of the Richard ¥. commissioner of ‘ew York; W. J, Shafer, attorney eral of Pennsylvania; Gov, W, C Pennsylvanta; T. W. Larry Continued on Page Twenty) Find No New Bombs in Northwest Zone SPOKANE, May 1-No bombs have come to light in the Northwest | Mall collectors have been que* | ern district under the supervision of tioned, but #0 up the rounds. r none of them has! the postoffice inspector he been able to recollect having taken| the exception of the bomb infernal machines on his| Mayor Ole Hanson, ¢ with nt to Seatth | cording to officials at the offic ‘The bonhs opened by officials | day. tli ices ii linens htt’ cw sacl | board the danger of smallpox linfection, but since the disease has disappeared they gave their consent for the parade, Tuesday the schoot | announced that the teachers | oppor to looking after the students on Saturday, and they could ot therefore take any responsibility the parade wan board were trophy train, carrying blood spattered relics of the war zone rx for the ttle ay and a corps of veteran. «pe Victory Loan, pasred thru 8 . ma Wedne train will return Sunday Th and remain open for inspection all day Fail to Discover More Bombs Here Seattle postal offitia ing the mais for inferna Thureday follow ing from Washington that man are in the Pacifie Washington that » numby been Inter ) Loe postal off Not discovered any other than the the police depor ery to Ma Hanac dy 4 were search m r of bomb nferr Business Stopped Thruout Ireland DUBLIN, May 1 Except in the nort pa business was at a standstill }land today, in observation of day May wah. a fleet of automobiles. Those reiatives. here will be fur nished a machine to take them to their homes, while all others will drive either to the Hotel New Wash: | ington or the Army and Navy club |for luncheon. hidden whisky Trunks in the duplex house be! Woed, county purchasing a wert ransacked Two Bombs Are on Way to Utah Men CHICAGO, May 1 Postoffice in tors received warnl he. today York to be on guard for believed to contain addressed to Utah officia One is said to be Frank Net r, Salt Lake City uted the LW. W. in Chic basement of the nging to Chas, B t, also ‘Clouds Will Weep Today and Friday) After three days of popular spring weather, official sent m New our weathersmith old Sol behind a Not only that two packages G, Salisbury into flock of but the weatherwright promises more moist for Friday weeping Viet tle has 4 to eclipse Thurrday who addres: rain clouds ure Perhaps the skies ufter taking a slant at loan totals which Seat piled up. NOTICE are the Explosive Mailed to Sen. Cverman HINGTON, May 1 The postmaster (United at wired postoftice 1 dincos To insure insertion in afternoon and folkewing edition, Clas- must in the downtown branch, located at Bartell’s, 610 Second avenue, by 10:45 Camp Lewis Troops Arrive in New York K. May 1.—The at Hoboken to- tr mpa A morning sified be NEW YOR trans copy Kearny casuals Camy pital for Cy 1 m. ep dieing met heal tween gendarmes and civilians when a red flag was unfurled near the Madeleine. | A great crowd, ignoring the gov ernment order against manifesta tions, gathered before the Madeleine and penetrated a cordon of infantry and cavalry, About’ half the demon- strators were allowed to continue to the Place de la Concorde, These surged into the Place de la Republique, where another demon stration started, the crowds shout ing “Down Wilson! with Vive Business was pr standstill as the wo Labor 4 Even failed to publish, edent for Labor ¢ Clemenceau! Amerique!" Vive tically at a rs celebrated the newspapers constituting a prec- Leon Jonhaux, secretary general of the French Federation of Labc sent this message to American labor thru the United I “The al commercial and in dustrial cessat in France thi: day {8 more » than ever be fe i nee, idle one day, is a tangible | ration of the desires of the working class t collabor: ation of the pro:sta tries, — especially Americans, whose ideals are so similar to ours, in obtaining the following “A seoure pe for all peoples; liberty; self-determination; the right to choove a government suitable to the people; the end of imperialism; the economic transformation of the demons | World on a proletariat basis” were held at headquarters in the public safety building by Chief Warren Thursday to cope with any sudden emergency t might grow out of May day dem- onstrations here, > Word had been received that members of the I. W. W. and Bolshevik supporters were plan ning extensive demonstrations thruout Americ: No disorders had been reported up to 1 o'clock. ‘The call has been issued in Seattle ” for a “Big May Day Celebration at Muy 1, Interna. Labor Da at 2 pm” Speeches, games, sports and a dance were scheduled in the printed am ~ nouncements, signed “Joint Committ tee.” bs Warren took the attitude that ‘ meeting would be a peaceful one, i) said he would not interfere “disorder develops,” Golden Garden park is outside city limits on Ballard beach. © Warren ordered policemen of Ballard precinct to hold th in readiness for riot duty, additional reserves’ were there. Police automobiles were | central station ready for eall, entire first and third patrols of perienced officers comprised the serve. ‘ May 1 is International Labor The Metal Trades council aed pencdt | night went on record in favor of brating May day, altho officials, Thursday that the workers were on the job in the shipyares and program had been yi

Other pages from this issue: