The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 7, 1919, Page 11

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4 te R-34PLANSTO |Passenger BY EDWIN HULLINGER (United Press Staff Correspondent.) Return Trip of Dirigible Be- |" LONDON, ‘dane 30-—ity al ing Arranged pas the Atlantic )}—“An England to o, within . will grow in- nd dependable . began with of the R31 to I Island,” Howard B. Cotfin, cil of national defense of the aviation co fron Continued From Page One| @nd there was enough petrol to @s Sure a safe landing Mineola, "80 Soott kept on The R34 arrived over Roosevelt | field at 8 She circled abou altituae of 2,600 feet until after 9| Clared to the United Press here clock, her officers studying the| today. Keneral contour of the yund.| In an i w which hae the ¢ Wireless communication established! Unetion of being the ‘first regular the fact that Major Hugh Fulle news story ever rie® across the an} v Who had been in charge of 4 Atlant by air cruiser, Coffin fore. Ments for landing, had gov cast that peace will speedily brin ton when the firet S. 0, S. calls were | tremendous achievements in this Bent out by the R34 | new art of transportation, so unique. lumps From Airship ly @ product of the war John BE, M, Pritchard, exec: | » United States in a like period of the R-34, descended | cro chute to take charge of the | trans Tanding in the absence of Major) Fuller. | perhaps less, should When everything was ready the! seo a intercontinental alr R-34 was brought into position, a| thorofare between North and South Breat quantity of sand shot out from | America he rear of her gas bag, her stern ted upward and she slowly sank Crowded Air Routes p the ground. A drag rope was} “All the continents will be con Thrown overboard while she was| nected by crowded air routes during about 200 feet up. This was secured | the next decade to one of the concrete anchorage| “What this involves tn internation posts. Other ropes followed and in a] al comradeship and prevention of few minutes she was safely anchored. | wars is obvious. For the history of The officers and men aboard the} civilization’s advance is largely a wed nd crisscrossed by the continental air limited,” he pre R34, 30 in all, were tired, dirty and | history of the progress of transporta hungry. After exchanging greetings, | tion Posing for pictures and talking to] <The alr era is already at hand, the newspapermen, they ate, bathed,/ “This is the practical significance shaved and rested. Lieutenant Com-| of the third crossing of the Atlantic Mander Zachary Lansdowne, the/ within a month.” American observer aboard, said he) Coffin, a national authority on had obtained valuable information re-| navigation, was one of the first big garding aerial navigation conditions! aytomobile manufacturers to offer Over the Atlantic, which would be! his services to the government in Made available to the navy depart-|i917, The American aviation com ment. | mission arrived in England recently Major Scott, his fellow officers and | on jts research tour, thru the allied American naval representatives, at) countries of Europe. & conference today wero to de| “several years—perhaps two or ferraino whether the proposed flight | three—should suffice to place cross- | to Washington should be made. In) Atlantic flying on a commercial ease this trip was made, the dirigible | jasie,” said Coffin. Would fly over New York city, Phil) «7 believe a large volume of pas- ‘adelphia and Baltimore. | senger traffic will) be released into aeatesenprer arian the Atlantic air channels the mo MURDER CHARGE Monday Pete Perkov' first “news stories” ever transported have pS csicarg ag pine a | across the Atlantic by airship. They Pete Corack, and the stabbing of arrived in the British navy dirigible George and Rosa Krammich and | 8-34. Before he stepped aboard the Pete wing an argu. |2itstiip at Kast Forune, Scotland, ment oy Pat acer a card | Lieutenant Commander — Zachary mich, 710 Dearborn st., at 5:30 | an envelope addressed to the United Tuesday, . | Press at New York, containing the Mie inarden Sen of Hae does following news stories and several lise Moaiag dporning. photographs. The transportation of Krammich and Sutia were reteased | *his envelope by airship across the | is significant of remarkable the city hospital Monday morn- | 9688 3 where they have been since the| further possibilities in carrying writ , recovering from their| ten and pictorial news between the and wero delivered to the | Old World and the New.) seity fail. Louis Krmpotich and John Carcan, who were in the house at| oNnDpon, June 20.—(United Press.) _ the time of the OR, Fo hep 2 ay airahip across the Atlantic.)— the knife, have been held as Wit) whe “copy” and pictures in this en- hesses since the fracas. velope are the first regular news Bota dhe he edger, spell. matter ever sent across the Atlantic id ‘lta z «| by air mail. fl ogentiomdlagad severely stabbed | ‘miru the courtesy of the United This is the third alleged murderer | to be held in custody since the cap- ital punishment law went into ef- fect, i. first was Harry # OS ee taccia, Rave ie J. F. Kit-|_ Lieutenant Commander Zachary “toe, 71, proprietor of the Albany Den- | L@nsdowne, U. 8. N., the only Amer- ister, they were placed aboard the R-34 a few hours before it cut loose from Scot!» nd. Air Service BIART TUESDAY Over Oceans Next Step wei Pictures and News Stories Sent First Degree Charge Is Filed Over Atlantic on R-34 Dirigible (EDITOR'S NOTE: Here are the can aboard the British alr dread. at the house of Kram- | Lansdowne, U. 8. N., took charge of | cident forecas: States navy and the British air min- | “Convinced they aro not risking | their lives any more than in ordin ary surface passage, a large number | of "business men on both sides will crowd into the New World speed uld think the first fares would be about $700 to $1,000 on way, from New York to Liverpool Income from this alone would virtually cover operating expenses: \ line was established rsonally I expect the first et of ‘passenger liners’ to be sea rather than dirigibles, Owing | sters, I w to the great t of constructing dirigibles, I doubt whether capital ists, at first, will want to risk such se sums in initial outlay when they can draw profits from air planes carrying to 30 persons and costing comparatively little to | build and less to operate. | “The air palaces will come later.” Coffin plotted the probable routes of the first transcontinental air| lines, Three from east to west Jone across the north, a second half! }way down and a third from Florida] jor Georgia to Southern California |largely following rails, Seattle on Route Of five north to south, he drew one |straight down the Pacific coast, thru | Seattle, Portland, San Francisco and Los Angeles. Another traced the course of the | Mississippt. A third connected Clev land, Buffalo and Washington, D. C. The fourth skirted the Atlantic coast, and a possible fifth supplied the Mississipp! valley along the base of} the Rockies, “One of the most important ser-| vices they will perform, will a porting money,” he added. ow, several days’ interest must accumu-| late before a check deposited in New | | York can be cleared in Kansas City. | |On large sums the interest lost| |in this interval is astonishing. | “Bankers tell me an air express | from New York to Kansas City, thru Buffalo, Cleveland, Detroit and Chi- | cago would pay for itself just in money saved in interest, “In the case of transatlantic traf- fic, the interest margin would be cut | down between 500 and 700 per cent.) This would go a long way toward de- | fraying cost of maintenance, but of course, the transatlantic operating jexpenses are proportionately much | heavier, x | naught, personally took charge of | | the package. A United Press rep resentative carried it from the Lon-| |don bureau of the United Press and | handed it to Commander Lansdowne | at the British alr station. The in a new epoch in prac | cal journalism. It representa the | first application of a new method of | news dissemination which, in a few years, will be one of the accepted Practices of newspaperdom on both | Sides of the Atlantic, The importance of this in future Journalistic possibilities is patent. It proves the feasibility of promptly supplying a reader on the other side of the ocean, not only with bare facts, but with photographs assisting him to visualize what he is reading. Pressed tightly in the envelope | against the sheets of an interview | with Howard BE. Coffin, is a picture |of Coffin, with the American avia- tion commission in London. Co- | ordination of picture and story is an | ola device in local fields of journal- ism. This is the first time it has been applied to the foreign field | while retaining speed in transmis- | sion, tal Parlors, who was declared re- _ sponsible by a coroner's jury of kill- ing Leo Price, 27, his father’s chaf- feur, at Kittoe’s home near Sunny- the night of Sunday, June 22. The second is BE. J. Swiger, who and fatally wounded F. R. a brother street railway em- at the Jefferson st. car barns Sethe fourth murder to be com} Law Would Prevent ted since June 1, was that of Ryan, rent car driver, whose sy was found in the Duwamish : on Monday, June 30. His mur- d@erer has not been apprehended by Ee police carload | proposed scheme for the city to buy lots of the army tinned al department is offering to muni kets, n. Members of the city serted the state law will anything city fers from Asiatic service can be) of the pls hased, Rear Admiral Jayne to-| council ¢ © @ay instituted a rigorous investiga-| not permit the city to se )Gion of conditions on the Goat| other than perishables F Ysland receiving ship Boston. Three| market. — hiet yeomen are under arrest al-| The millions of pounds of tinned ready following investigation by| Meats and of smoked hams and ba Maval officers. Further arrests are|©ns, according to the war depart ected ment anno B hocording to enlisted men at| Of at a substantial reduction below Goat Island, it has been rumored | the present market pric for some time that discharges could | Bs ps al be obtained for as low as $10 . | Reveral seamen reported that tuey| Much Booze Seized “had been appr F could obtain e: mavy for certain sums, The in-| Thomas Gilbert, vestigation, started as a result./and A. R. Munson, bie ad were ar Cleveland Strike}'e »v° MBCLEVELAND, 0., July 7.—Disor- |S eriy conduct charg Bers followed the strike of 2,609 | unutie to furnish bail street car men here Sunday. Se George Worl, 94, 40 ral persons were injured by flying giass, and six strikers were arrested. The striking men demand an in- erease of 12 cents an hour. Thé| gaye anth ave ipompany “has offered increases of §| 427-19 13th ave. N cents an hour, which was turned | ‘ree down. bl President John J. Stanley, of the |" , company, announced the 12-cent in-|Piomauist. They were New York sexsion. Parker Apts., of whisky in his po: In a raid on th en were rrested Sun- bottles of grapo and apartments, w * a 3 a enetra | cai the same com) 4 “ mach, although he may not know the crease would not be granted unless |SPUNMEnN ve Gerly house, ‘The|the finest Orient was sold for $166,-| bifllet hit Snow and penetrated "*! Milliner Buye: cauien rasenae Police can Chuse of his ailments, feela hie hope, courage, | Svarantee by all druggists, the city council advanced the stock-|" 1. were charged with disorderly |99 at Christie’s. A pearl necklace | lung. cad to ‘iloat cite houmiea| y yer i 1p SORES 8, dynamit: | ambition and energy sipping. and truly Bie | ne holders’ dividend from 6 to 7 per |?" of 56 large graduated pearls of the| He was taken to the city hospital | ¥ ng. dark—not worth much to the man or Treated 0 cent yearly. This is the second street ree ES ees ig finest Orient went for $108,000, and died there on July | ‘ on Her W ay’ East mt wma 9 Bee Beat Tak peat ehoce hal Sinkd ax Rytteie|) ie aise litte tx‘ aléet monthe. Hoste ichdel Swiger had been held in Jail, pend-| ‘The Hon Marche millinery buyer | vou back, wreck your health. make yur daye ing relieved inawe " ses ing investtigation by the prosecuting | Miss Olga Brandenburg, is leaving : : uiserable, make you a victim of the "blues" a few . |Horse Runs Away, WOMAN STOCK BROKER | 1)fotney's office. for Now York, and Charles A, biden |C@lifornia Yanks snd glooriy thoughta! ‘Theres a marvelous | swelling reduced in a few tae eee K Bargain Buyers | Peddler Injured LONDON, July 7.—London now pS SOIR AR |man, ready-to-wear, altho just back Killed in Siberia | et ate eles trom your mack | and heart, "Suritin "the Mea é | boasts of a “lady” stock broker, She | | from a long trip. in the East, expects miseries—sets your stomach to rights—makes | tren; } Depart for East} © piinip cingirita, 67, 0 truit ped- | deals only with ellents who ha been | Victory Buttons [to return to the market within the] WASHINGTON, July 7--cUnited | tae ee eee Mmeet and comfortable, Helps |for Wes ‘rial Treatments, Vet Bert Brown and P. J. Kelly left|dier, liv at Atlantic st., | introduced and recommended by per- | next 10 days. Press.)—Home addresses of Ameri-| 22thusiasm and good cheer, Bo many thous: |COLLUM DROPSY REM, CO» Dept, Monday morning for an extended| sustained bruises when his horse|sons who have already transacted Given to Yankees! Sanne fan Woldlere Killed or wounded in m| TAROWiO te mene co coeeane pare used AH, Atlanta, Ga. buying trip in Eastern markets. | ran ay on Western ave. Ging business with the firm. The clientele 7 py: ac! a wults that we are sure the sams | ae taeda “ onal a be Seattle Gen. oh vit oe al ea tons to be distributed to the Ya ry 25, f y by| Ocent box of Ea’ erat penn, henenget, and [He was taken to the Seattle Gen Tie Culacha WEB War wouter: ARE GUESTS OF CLUB | the war department. ‘The names in. ablets that you eat likes bit of candy—from | y no 4 2 $280,000,000 IN BONUSES 1 1,000 bronze buttons for Ameri-| Seattle OW. R. & N. employes | clude: ot even anaes than toe st e bargain base eal ene Or ; dt, | 3 ‘noney if results are Hot even mere A furnishings for the bargain bas LONDON, July War bonuses|can soldiers who were not wound-|were guests of the Transportation| Killed—Dart A. Balch, Turlock, a be herliad yp | DUBLIN, July 7.—Pot-still distil |ters in Ireland are i She may be a thing of beauty un-| after two years’ inactivity, and the } til you see her emerging from the | quantity of whisk sure augmented rapid Jone Fy a “ed in the city) Mayor and Councilmen Say|Now He Faces Charges Mayor Ole Hanson and members | of the city council are opposed to the meats, bacon and hams that the war | pivq | e S. F. Navy Yard ties for sale thru their public mar-| 5:19” ys” Cherry at. Thuved | “Men Under Probe} “1 reaa a government report re- |. SAN FRANCISCO, July 7.—Fol-| cently which declared the canned) gaturday by Capt. E. L. Hedges, who Jowing startling charges that dis-|meats below par in nourishment,” | titeq the charge. Ngharges from the navy and trans-| Said Mayor Hanson in disapproving | on $05 ball, a mechanic, | whe chauffeur, | ted Sunday by dry squad * officers at 714 21st ave, Sep when | ¢ ‘a insane . jtions, a laceration of the leg and | gree Seve lurt , 1 hist . 4 a tule bes mer: ral H In 168 pints of whisky were alleged | bruises. The wheels of the machine conduetor’on thé East Madison line, | Vit iiustente his lecture with a rests have been made, and others are s Tite bottle. $2... 1¢ sist eae found in their pos- | passed over her leg. by Deputy Prosecuting Attorney ” astra’ his lecture expected, in the search by the police oe om after using, your money will be res session. They were booked on dis-| Joseph Zimmerer, 38, of 1317 typical Prussian Hun skull from the block, was arrested with 11 pints six men and| man, 921 ‘Terrac d as evidence. A, FE. | manager of the " a g a Pm charged with run.|Well matched and graduated pearis of | Swiger drew a gun and fired. gain working |than $70,000,000 a in bond is being | ure: |AUTOIST FAILS TO MAKE REPORT Filed by Police | Charges of failure to report an ac- cident within the time preseribed by law have been filed against J. E. | Brashears, 36, of 3225 Mt. Baker | Brashears ran down and seri- ously injured Miss Beth Shaw, 26, of ‘ac: cording to his report, but failed to report the accident until sent for He was released According to a report made Mon- day by Miss Shaw, the accident oc- curred at 10:10 p. m. Thursday, when she and her sister Alice alight ed from a street car. Miss Shaw 2 attempted to cross the street in rear 4 rea i ,of the car when struck by Brash- ' Psycholo st to Bee toe Ere ; she was 4 ‘ged half a block by the Brashears declared that he was | traveling at a speed of only 12 miles "ina ium tie| By Dry Squadders _ The girl was taken to her home, ere her injuries were dressed by Dr. Grant Calhoun, of 1529 36th ave. They consisted of three gcalp lacera-| Che John hospital, suffering from cuts and| ing 4 bruises about the head, He was in-| man. jured Sunday, when his Ford auto- LONDON, July 7.—A rope of d to pos ants totaled more|ed, hi ar during the] recru pean conflict, according to fig-|of th just tabulated. The total for lee four years was §280,000,000, day THE SEATTLE STAR—MONDAY, JUL’ | be | fantry will meet in room 411 of the ra tae ee ee bee | Soldier Lecture | County-City building, Monday even- : a ha er siste ‘ | | ecm ce ce “why is the Hun a Hun?" | ing at 8 o'clock. All members and | h Thomas st., is in the Seattle General | charging him with shooting and Kill | t 2 o'clock, on the morning of June mobile overturned, after striking an-| 9g grating was blown into a bi m . fy uuilding | to an faternal source—acid-s Nor is Eases CMS ceived ty FW. oe ise aud dacttine oot LGN eols and & Vocal Holo. arine in| #cToss the street from the pay of.| ire be wondered ik, “Ackd-stomach. beginr Bon-Opto for the Eyes > 21 1 EEN ot 4 liam Malyeux, got into an argument | 41) uty Ia urged te ated the en {fice ‘The loss is placed at about | mag with such well deGnedeymptomeas ind! | Physicians and eye specialists pres) at the barns on that morning, | tortainment. Mothers, wives, sisters, | *°;00% fior checked, tn time affect tosomedegres | scribe Bon-Opto as a safe home $166,000 FOR NECKLACE pir latathtete nt awectheaees uattin:| ‘The pay office was a newly com. | oF other all ie vital organs. Fhe nervous |remedy in the treatment of eye. 151| Snow tried to settle the dispute. 7, 1919. FILL YOUR COAL BINS! Prompt Action Necessary to Avert Most Serious Fuel Shortage Ever Confronting People of City and State It is an unusual thing for the leading fuel dealers of the city to write an appeal like this, but the public so little realizes the seriousness of the coal situation that quick action is imperative. You will be vitally inter- ested in every word of this important announcement. ITY, state and nation are approaching one of of coal per men has come down as wages have the most serious fuel situations that they gone up. Now thousands and thousands of miners have ever faced. of foreign birth are planning to leave the country and establish themselves with their earnings in Coal is getting scarcer; coal miners are dimin- Ghite old homes; ishing in numbers and their output continually lessens, and fuel bins were never so bare of the Thus the labor situation is critical, and as fall coal that will be vitally necessary during fall and approaches transportation systems will be con- winter. gested with crop movements; a car shortage is in sight and bringing coal to market will be increas- A number of factors are fast bringing this situ- ingly difficult. ation to a crux. Only the quick filling of coal bins now while facilities are available and coal more : abundant than it can possibly be later, will avert duction, and the shortage of men, the public has a getiina housdeold shortages ti aie ouidion: held off buying, hoping lower retail prices would . prevail. The facts, as outlined, show the utter Though industry is speeded up to the highest impossibility of any drop in prices. pitch, coal production so far this year is "way be- Our advice is to BUY NOW and take advan- low normal. The mines of the country are falling tage of present prices, If tha mov t of codl behind last year’s mark by 3,000,000 ans a week into retail channels is not speeded up vigorously, —a drop of nearly 30 per cent. In this state far there will be such a rush later as to put coal at less coal is being mined than in 1918, as the rec- a premium, and leave the market largely ne Yet in the face of the higher costs of coal pro- ords of the producing companies show. isfied. The ranks of coal miners are not being re- These facts are set forth—not for alarmist cruited as in the days of unrestricted immigra- purposes, but that the public may understand and tion before the war, and the average production by prompt action accomplish self-protection. Ayres & Sisler. Green Lake Fuel Co. Northwest Fuel & Supply Co, Bayles Brothers, Heckman, Henry, Occidental Fuel Co. Blair, Will, Fuel Yards. Holmes Lumber Co. Pine Street Fuel Co. Blossom Provine Lumber Co. Holmes, E. B., Lumber & Fuel Co, Queen Anne Fuel Co. Breene Peabody Coal Co. Independent Fuel Co, Seattle Coal Co. Carl, Emil. ‘ Interlake Fuel Co, Spokane Grain & Fuel Co, Carstens, J. A. Keating Fuel Co. Spring Hill Fuel Co, Cascade Coal Co, Keene, W. L. St. Marie Fuel Co. City Fuel Co. Kindred Fuel Co. Stuart Feed & Fuel Co. Clark Fuel Co. Leschi Transfer & Fuel Co. Sunnyside Coal & Wood Co. Cornwall, W. B, & Son. McMullen & Co. University Coal & Wood Co, Edgewater Fuel Co. McNamee Fuel Co. Valley Fuel Co. Kighty-fifth St. Fuel & Feed Co. McNaughton, D. W., & Co. Vining, J. 8. Fremont Fuel Co. Milligan & Nesbitt. Washington Wood & Coal Co. ee Green Lake Coal & Wood Co, Monks & Miller, A Wainwright & McLeod. Nelson Coal © This great psychologic question of friends are invited. res : D mt and future relations with | ductor Accused Of Kile se nko aver at Vari a iee (Three Arrested Following és 9 | Hon'tuhe arsd, be sil eet ing City Motorman ture before. the “American Legion Sunday Explosion gine ‘Troatment relieves All fear of arieeey, or Rite, We want the most. = : The entertainment meeting will be — sacptical to try Kosine, for the sues age arges of murder in the first de-] noia in the auditorium of the Sol-| pUDTR, Mont, J Caused by Seat of tne treaiment tn the coma were filéd against BE. J. Swiger, , 3, nt., July 7.—Three ar- t ‘o be of unusut ty diers’ and Sailors’ club, Prof. Ayer funded. Write for free treatise. 9) for culprits who dynamite: e y d the pay Kosine Co., Washington, D.C. 9 ‘me ‘dun battlefield, showing rifleand | o¢tice of the Anaconda Mi e o mf e Ana la Mining Co., Millions of people who worry, are despon- . shrapnel fire. jat 4 a. m, Sunday, dent, have spells of mental depression, feel fe 1 Beatle Sy. OW iTS ame Along with Prof, Ayer's lecture,| windgows 4 blue'and are often melancholy. believe that | Madame Harriet C. Saunderson has | ‘sin surrounding build. | tnese conditions are due to outside influences xs inane Wane ‘i cai ° hich they have little or no control, 4 | promised to play a viclln solo, piano |i2ES Were blown in and a heavy tron | Qrer which, wey have luxe or no control: | Doctors Recommend - | ite D, Carmody Monday morning, | *, R. Snow, another street car at the Jefferson st car barns as the discussion waxed hotter, | system becomes deranged, Digestion euffere | pleted structure, an annex to the en- The blood is impoverished. Health and |troubles and to strengthen eye- 4 _ vited to attend, sa Pein gineering and timekeeper's office of strength ure undermined. The vig of acid: |sight. Sold under money refund © The | distribution commenced Mon-' spoke on “Why the Railr Are In-| Butte, Mont; Private Louis G, terested in Better Farming. Camini, Stocktoa, Cal, ‘pect, ave been rec 1 by the army |club at its regular meeting Monday, | Cal. iting office on the fifth floor| when “Farmer” C. L. Smith, agricul-| Slightly wounded—Corporal Geo. A T ON 1c e Mutual Life building. Gen-|tural expert for the O.-W. railroad,|W: Starham, 410 Warren ave, E chi

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