The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 6, 1919, Page 1

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Sea RRA AE PIP PPP PPL ALLL LALLA me “A BITE FOR OUR BOYS WHO DID THEIR BIT” -five thousand empty lunch boxes are waiting stores thruout Seattle for kind-hearted Uncle ima Pacific fleet reaches Seattle next thousands ¢ jackies will come ashore, and go hungry ie the housewives do their bit. 4 ~All the restaurants in Seattle could not feed the qpultitude of sai lors even if the visitors who will pack the city went without food, So Charlie Davis, chairman of the Fleet’ Reception committee, and James Boldt, chairman of the Fleet Feeding committee, have worked out a lunch-box plan, and it’s up to all of us to help fill the boxes. The sailors will be in Seattle three days, Go to the nearest grocery store and ask for white and blue empty lunch box. a red, Or get a lunch box * a OO SATURDAY shrT, 6 IP x | {| First Migth ide Fiest Lav Tide Nish , sere Tide ‘necond Low Tid ou Tides in Seattle SUNDAY SReT. T end Law Tide m, 49 An American Entered as Kecond Class Matter May 3 ——_; “VOLUME 22. NO. 164. SEATTL’ E, WASH., 1899, at the Postoftics at the Elks’ Meat Market, cafe, Chauncey Soldt's restaurants, club, 8038 First Soldiers ave., Wright's restaure Pacific Rippe’s hall or and Sailors’ club, or 308 Pike st.; nts, Eagles’ The boxes are to be filled, as nearly as possible, with the following menu: lamb chops; Half a spring chicken or two one cheese or peanut butter sandwich; one whole dill pickle; a package of assorted nuts or raisins; At Seattle, Wash,, SATU RDAY, 8 under the Act of Congress March 3 -aper That Fights for Americanism e Seattle Star 1am two pears or plums; made doughnuts, and ately in oil paper. On each box it tells when and where to deliver the “red, white and blue” lunch for a gob. Seattle is depending on her big-hearted to fill 25,000 lunch boxes. Don’t let a single sailor go hungry. piece of cake or some home- wrap each piece of food separ- housewives CENTS Late Edition PTEMBER 6, HUMAN bubble fountain on the deck; And this fix the straw The soda palace certainly never can ‘tell, ‘Recently owe 9 were watching the Arabia Maru unloading. And on the fore deck was a him was nothing life, there to brush his teeth paste, and brush ‘em sort of devotion significant. in his to ary GUESS this about fin- i iahes it. Finishes the straw hat, a And the B. V. D.'s white canvas shoes and Of the summer things ’ Sure enough chill rain ‘the ant: arrived last evening he had an excuse for her Mier furs this morning. the straw hat has been Maly holding forth for some tho often it topped an but this settles it; eum- ‘passed, and winter clothes '€a get a nice raincoat for & set of wintes underwear pms, and a hat for $7, and a Ag shoes for $12, and a a sometimes call these mil tains, is right. eee HILE we adhere to a cob Pipe, that probably is a Menace to public health, Still some of the Turk 3 2 lla Cigareta youths an- tink of a burning overshoe Of thone lowbrow gum slippers & pink wool lining, never ] PRINTERS |REFUSED | submit the TORETURN International Officers Dis- avow Strike Against Ta- coma Newspapers ~ ARBITRATION TACOMA, Sept. 6.— It is reported here this aft-| ernoon that the strike of the local printers’ union has been disavowed by the executive “council of the International Typograph- ieal union, and that the ? printers have been or- dered to return to work, pendin arbitration, which has been offered by the publishers. TACOMA, Sept. 6.— Without authority from their international offi-| \cers, the Tacoma Printers’ |" junion declared a_strike| against all Tacoma pub- lishers ‘Friday night, 30 minutes before the night) shift printers were sched- uled to go to work. Editor Pinkerton, Th was notified at home, o’eh He wi return to work at 6 told that the printers would providing he would accept immediately the latest propo: sition of the union for a wage of $3.25 and $8.75 for printers, Not un tile 10 o'clock Saturday morning was | Mr. Pinkerton able to see a written copy of the printers’ proposition President Browne, of the printers’ union, stated that had been mailed Inst night to the Ta coma publishers, but the mailed copy had not been received up to 10 o'clock Refuse to Arbitrate The printers at first demanded an increase from ay and $7.50 for night work to $9.25 and $10. publishers denied this, and offered to whole matter to arbitra printers refused to arbi- trate, but at a meeting last Sunday decided to negotiate with the pub lishers of the Tacoma Times for an- other week Text of Letter The following letter was addressed to the Tacoma Times: Tacoma, Wash., Sept. 1, 1919. Tacoma Times Publishing C Tacoma, Wash, Gentlemen: Tacoma Typographical Union tion, The of the Tacoma; ik, of the strike of the printers. | the proposition | ‘The | probably winds Weather “Forecast: rain} matte “renee STANDARD FAR FROM OIE FIND But Stock Salesmen Should Worry as Long as They Find Suckers ARE WISER AT ABERDEEN ABERDEEN, Sept. 6.— The oil boom is decidedly lan oil stock boom. There is plenty of talk about drilling oil wells. The air is = of sedan But, as far people can patie there jare just three crews work- ing, actually ae wells, on the whole Olympic peninsula. One of these wells miles from Moclips—the Olt company’s outfit. The second is at the mouth of the Hoh river, where the Swastika |Of company, an Aberdeen firm, is reported to be putting ita drills into ja hole abandoned by the old Jef- |ferson Ol! company about five years is about three Standard | "The third is at Forks, where, it tw Also reported, the Forks Drilling mpany, &@ Seattle concern, is at work. Hard of Acerss Just what these oll companies are | doing is not known, with the ex |ception of the Standard. They are | working in a wild and inaccenssible Jcountry that can only be reached by trails or by boat to the mouth of the Hoh river. There are no good roads. The Standard Oil company's well is down only 480 feet, and going thru biue sand and water. ot a trace of oll yet. Their own experts figure that they will not know if| there is of! until they have reached the 2,400 or 0-foot level. How }iong it will take to get that point it is imponsible to tell Nobody knows if there is an oll |fleld underlying the peninsula. Ge ologiats informed the Standard Oi! company that the ble, and found. T Standard, admit ting it is a great cash with sinking well But mble. some of it in the Moclips (Continued on Page 1%) Way to Stop Them HUNTINGTON, W matter was dis- Va. lishers, the whole | ure, The Times Jeussed for three bh then pr Its position in @ let ter, requesting that the matter b postponed ur ry 1, when the scales of all o orthwest print ers’ unions 0 be opened, | pret y, that the whole }ter be submitted rn }tim, the Times offering t-| deputies left Logan today for head of Jenny creek in halt an army of miners who marching toward the Guyan fields. All officers are armed | or, mat arbitra to pay which to gamble, and is some of the of! companies| West Virginia Deputies on Sept, 6— The Logan county sheriff and armed the an effort to} are coal heavily The number of miners ia re ported variously at from 500 to 3,000 | Sam Auswaks, 29, a barber, ar- rested at 3 o'clock Saturday morning while peering thru the windows of # half lighted room at 158 16th ave., just one block” from where Mrs. J. Mazalotti was choked in her bed by a masked thug a short time before, is being held on an open charge by the police pending an Investi- gation of his actions in the neigh- borhood. Auswaks was ¢ “creas ANGRY MINERS THUG FLEES WHEN _ WOMAN SCREAMS “A shudder rushed thru me and I I saw the eyes of leis my eyes, @ man staring above a mask | Jumped upon me, placing one of his | Knees on my body and grasped my He got one of his hands in |my mouth and the other around my throat throat. | Fights Thief “T struggled and finally his hand away with my Jeft hand. He struck WORE ALLEN NOT GUILTY! POLITICAL CASE, SAYS DEFENSE. (Bulletin.) * Julies Allen was found not guilty in a verdict reached at 12:40, after the jury had deliberated an hour and five minutes. What They Told the Jury “It is abhorrent to me to see the character of a judge besmirched, and I would not for ane on earth do such a thing, but I honestly believ. that the evidence in this case. shows that Tada Clay Allen is uty as charged.” —Deputy Prose- cutor T. H. Pa o 8 8 6 ee “If Judge Allen is guilty of this charge, he has turned a lifetime of honest and proper living into that of a lawbreaker in the twinkling of an eye.” —Attorney —_ - Higgins. * * * Ina ikseh bristling with barbs of sting- ing sarcasm and flights of biting argument which at time rose to the heights of elo- quence, Deputy Prosecuting Attorney’ T. H. Patterson urged the. conviction of Superior Judge Clay Allen Saturday morning on a charge of holding out five quarts of Scotch whisky for his own use after disposing of a case against August Hensgen, convicted bootlegger, on June 4. In answer to Patterson’s speech to the jury before Trial Judge Everett Smith, John C. Higgins, one of Judge Allen’s attorneys, delivered a brilliant speech, in which he flayed the prosecuting attorney's office and painted a vivid picture of the hate which actuated the prosecution of the jurist. The case went to the jury at 11:37 a. m. Jury, spectators and judge gave the closest attention to the argu- ment of counsel and on more than @ne occasion gave evidence of ex- citement as the opposing counsel scored points for and against the de- fendant. The approval of public officials in laxity of dry law enforcement, “the lying-like gentlemen” by witnesses in liquor prosecutions and the free and easy attitude of Seattle and King county courts toward persons jaccused of violations of the liquor laws was blamed by Deputy Prose. | cutor Patterson for the spectacle of | such a trial as that of Judge Allen Only Vaults “Safe” “Things have come to such a pass in Seattle and King county,” Pat terson told the jury, “that the only |place where it is safe to store whis ing attorney's office whom he thought would steal liquor from his private chambers but he was not man enough to name him. In light of all the evidence and as much as I admire many of Judge Allen's good qualities, I regret to ask this jury to find him guilty as charged.” Attorney Higgins’ reply to Patter- son's arraignment was mainly de- voted to an attack on the motives which actuated the prosecution of Judge Allen. “Picture to yourselves,” Higgins cried, “a grand jury hostile to this defendant, a grand jury influenced by a prosecutor who had himself to | protect and Judge Allen to indfet, a grand jury which had all the cards | stacked against Judge Allen, and you is in the vaults of the county|Will have the correct perspective, rk. Public officials wink at vio-| This hypocritical pretense of fair 1| ky | ft Med digestion SOME wait until he gets out chop house before he SD Polls many a good meal reeently we note that the ~ tinker has invaded the Places: He plops him- ORE Of the weented ornate that women shoppers Band atter hi, a he Tet the nostri, e ma” the place with } arrived | anng with apd the lad No. 170 yesterday accepted the | whatever seale should be proposition submitted by you t thru arbitration thru President Browne. How- | September Mr. Baker also ever, believing ample time has ing the® new scale been given in which to reach an September 1 ] understanding, the union in | asked for a promyt| structed its seale committee that [reply to its proposition, expecting it must in the next week close | thet ar other probably a figal negotiations and report next [conference would be arranged for out Sunday, the 7th of September. toaay, Saturda provivds te the ryeeey This proposition is also open Nar of the union on oe to Mr. Baker, if he wishes to avail himself of it. Very respectful BERT W. JANES, | Chairman, Scale Committee. pase notify Mr. Browne when n have a conference with ta. J. Haag while in the act of peering thru the window. ‘The police believe there 1s wjbility he may be the man who | »d Mrs. Mazalotti and robbed » other women, He i# about 5 inches tall and weighs 1 pounds screamed and the man dashed over |iations of the bone dry Mw and ap-|Mess which the prosecution alleges to the bureau, where my ‘purse Was! Hrove the attitude of men who lie| 8¢tuates it in the trial of this case laying. ‘There were two checks in|Ti\ wentlemen in cases of this sort.| deceives nobody, I hope. the purse, one from the Dominion |jriit iy why we are here today but| “If Judge Allen is guilty, he has of Canada for $40, the monthly sum| it” iy no reason why a superior! turned his back on a lifetime of ; A-me for the death of my hus:|j,4e6 should profit by the free and| honesty and proper living. Fred band, and the other was from a|iiiy onecience of Seattle and King| Brown brought about the indictment | neighbor for $40 to whom T had sold | sounty, If this case has done noth-|of Judge Allen in revenge because |my range.” ‘The screams aroused | (OO. it has shown that even a|of the quarrel into which he and |J. 1B, Whitcomb, & roomer, who |e eee ee i hot beyond the/ Judge Allen became engaged over Mrs. Mazalotti, who is a widow of| rushed to the rescue and called the | SUP hi sed of a|the liquor disappearances from the Canadian soldier killed in 1914, | police heres APO MAN WHER “ROCURES Ot Taubes, Datienat was lying awake shortly ore day Masuiéttl, wi 7 Fan - ‘ eae ining awebe: sively, latece oo =. lott, whole a French: | Says Allen Is “Cowardly’ The defense rested its case at 4 Her screams, after striking his hands | three years, She declares she could| “Judge Allen would have you be-| (CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO) from her throat, Heve that his prosecution is the re ages e ared ba ae A not possibly sleep in the house an rath is | away le left a three-pound sand-|other night. Her furniture was |Sult of a frame-up and politics. He | ¢¢ ” dag: made frocs 2 charges, but by| “0b” Minor Will Speak at Arena & woman's stocking | packed and all ready to be moved to| makes no direct on the bedroom flooy when he left.| 2311 gist ave, 8. Saturday. Her hus-|slurs and insinuations he would Mrs. Mazalotti, barely able to talk, | jy she says, was a member of |have you believe that Prosecuting} | ™ hysterically deseribed the attack Sat-|the famous Canadian Black Horse| Attorney , Fred C. Brown would Bob” Minor, famous cartodnist, urday morning juard, of whom only three survived |have stolen the whisky from his pri- lecturer and labor radical, will speak | : #. cary a hg alo in art ib an early battle of 1914 vate cheney Cag had had the/ at the Arena Tuesday, at 8 p, m., on | declared, OMeONE as he >ppot it Tha was cowar or ers t. Moulto opportunity , h ye rience: a ef house, I Was nervous and awakened | ., ci - ; foulton | ar the rok’ {because Judge Allen knew. when hig experiences in Russian end Ger dwin, who investigated the rob man revolutions, Minor was in Russia for nine months during the White and Red terrors, and was in Germany for five with a start, but could hear no one. e was so insinuating fro e with a.atart, bud. pawld bi ghee ¥, declared entrance had beén|he was so insinuating from the wit or gave Judge Allen a chgnce to! months during the Spartacus trou Jagreed to | retroactive | The Times Contest The first line in week’s contest is: “[ phoned a want ad tof, The Star.” Can you write three more lines that will jingle? See the show at the Clemmer. Win a cash prize. next Screams Scare Thog meeting jas Highest Seale Old days, when wine Mrs SO are held sway, the poppe excusable Kish indifference to Mehta of others that hax rondo Ibe for x woman to even At 4 Lover's Delight without BERG should be squelched. %, We are so to the flavor ot tage SOW utterly on Of oth wom Inet , tre after printers at a special m@eting called Friday afternoon voted to strike forthwith unless the | publishers immediately granted the demands. The time was #o short that the printers had tn fact struck to this letter the Times|on the Times be the imilt a conference with the|tes had been at notify that | for Wednesday |raper of the and unexpected tien we ¢ you In reply arranged for ommittee ania ag Here is one way to do it: habit yas of the hasty 1 phoned a want ad to The Star. Answers came from near and far If | could buy all that's for sale, "Pwould take a wagon load of kale. Tacoma per day than the n other citty ker, publisher of the other) ‘The printers’ wae wo ma > fd not join|higher by % the ¢ ference, stating » jetter | ane ol Bonds Quoted interes tating fn, a I ; the highest s Bepr to the union that he stood by bis\t jehest wale Ss, tonne firet former proposition offering to arbi-|ot any city of its class in the 20: first 4% trate try and is higher than the ay At the conference between the in 1 the scale committee and the Times pub- New Yorke and FR coun ago | largest cities, including See Classified Section for head of my bed and started to road |g PAIS inniad tre thane uatine, powerien A eat tie voto Gr ee additional details. ja magazine when I had that terrible Mrs. John Glasscock, 1813 Spruce \feeling that someone was in tho {room looking at me, (CONT'D ON PAGE TWO) eA aC Ot» ' ched on th etric light at th e r f red 0" yas ahr ogg de 4 v | shade thru a side window, which had {hess stand that Fred Brown was name any member of the prosecut: ples, Hy 894.28 Victory 3 e'u v0.03, "7

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