The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 14, 1919, Page 1

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VIURDER OR ACCIDENT FE DROWNS; WALT “> sheriff CENTS Late Edition Per Year, by Mail $5.00 to $9.00 a I a a nn ener oon ag cea Oe SRS Y Tides in Seattle On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No a prrearemee TUESDAY | WEDNESDAY OCT, 14 OCT, 15 First Low Tide First Low Tide * est tte | Rit, 9:68 © BALE A. | 11:00 8 m, 1 fecend Low Tide | second Low 3 ? $23 pm, 102 lon nm, Entered as Kecond Clase Matter May 1, 1899, at the Postoffice at Heattie, Wash., “ the Act of Congress March 3, ~ SEATTLE, WASH, TUESDAY, ocrosen fh » 1919. Weather Forecast. Tonf?' and, Weancadey, fairs SEN. LODGE WARNS OF*"""., COOLLY TELLS STORY = GERMANIZED JAPAN! ===" OF TRAGIC LAKE TRIP WASHINGTON, Oct. 14—Warning that unless a “very ir tn mah ane my on HIGHLIGHTS IN TRAGIC MYSTERY Walter Miller, ex-deputy sheriff, ac- Pe. navy is maintained in the Pacific the United iin penitentiary. tt kita - |States may some day take the place of France in another |=, “mat wie « trite septem cuses his wife, Mrs. Bertha Miller, of being addieted to the use of drugs. Di- ber 2, because her dog chased nis great war to preserve civilization, Senator Henry Cabot ier decared tania) 35 to tw vorce proceedings were impending. They start Monday afternoon to cross Lodge today urged that nothing be done to increase the| =” bg yor ey coe Lake Washington to visit a private |siraneely since the day, of the mur sanitarium near Kirkland, where Mrs. Miller says she will prove that she is not an habitual narcotic addict. Miller, alone in launch, hails steamer Atlanta and asks to be towed to shore. He says his wife has fallen overboard and drowned. Miller phones to friend and asks that police be notified. He also phones to coroner. Police officers A. J. Hill and George Reynolds go on motorcycles to east shore of lake, and find Miller in a row- boat attempting to locate wife’s body. Officer Hill says Miller, while aiding the officers, who drag’ the lake, de- clared that his wife during the launch trip admitted having gone to the sani- tarium in an attempt to cure herself of the drug habit. Blood stains are discovered in boat. Miller’s se a er He says he was inju ie rope thrown f, the Atlanta. r <i hy Miller returns to Seattle, is ques- tioned by Lieutenant of Detectives Kent, released and later arrested at his hotel by deputy sheriffs. an hour was a Sn > eae sods loit Chi nd make herself ~ in to. exploit na and make-herself a power that will iifciten the safety of the world, he charg: “BANDIT RETURNS | _jed, in protesting against the Shantung settlement in the aay. for the tal man, who, wearing mask, entered the Sallee | peace treaty. meee tbe 4620 Fremont ave., at) Seattle police are hunting, Tues- ‘a . r is § o'clock Monday night, and held up! Parl Sallee, one of the proprietors, | It 1S IMpPOSS1 re iacneines condone “The case seems so complete,” he said, . ble to see how any conscientious American can Consent tO) cm rcewer unt 49 tem the cus | |tomer, besides a new gun Sallee waa any act or treaty that will extend the power of such a ma-|justpurchasca: "the ‘gun ‘was un The bandit made his encape | tion as Japan over a country like China, especially when |= motoreyet | Ballee wax robbed Friday night by | the United States deliberately drew China into the war, |xmn.% indy wits Wriee with at least an implied, if not expressed promise to a S, IN DANCER’ ‘assistance and protection at the peace conference. | , coolly and:in detail, Walter Miller, former deputy sheriff and of- —the (ficial photo; her with Explorer Dr. Fred “Japan is steeped in German ideas. She means to ex-) MAMse es ena ae ‘Kinley expedition in 1906, today told his. coach ros noone 'ploit Ni “aap ang age oy becomes a power) “ “iierntlonal velba ‘drowning Monday afternoon of his wife, in Lake Wasting, formidable to all the wor e will utimately use the es of def : Ineanures of defense are taken | Deputy Prosecutor T. H. Patterson and Detective Captain C. E "Ten ‘practically unlimited man-power of China for military pur-| nant in the county jail. poses.” ie pote a Miller insisted that his wife was accidentally drowned while he and she were en route in a launch to Kirkland where they intended to visit Dr. G. H. Davis’ Ng around to the back of ‘Grit was the recently fash- Foadster, all right—we urb the rent hog is enacted by the will be waged by the association, | lelty council at once NEW YORK, Oct. 14.—Twelve |constantly increasing rents , sp | With the release of thousands of #ked by parties who have become) troup of honey producers _ sedge glo din ges raat Mat time a crowd was gath- Bel in abundance was at ‘We went our way Are still wondering. narcotics. Y was taken into custody by De Ss fees! to. arblivene, dove and | tte Police ‘he ly by Deputy Sheriffs Ramage and Wilson, who as- Each Side Is A Awaiting for|Fear Situation Will Force, ‘Call on Mayor and Pledge) st, the “American, capitalist and lodged him in the county jail. No charge has been filed against Miller. Federation of Labor, just return: ‘ ‘ The ning of Mrs. Miller, who A IA Gaze ae tho she were | ™Ained deadlocked Tuesday. No con abie to pay advancing high rents at| als, representatives of several Labor council meeting last night. | oo’, former wife of Mayor George orc ne Precani: buy dope with the \terences are scheduled and both g peti ment houxes met Monday and ori lament. <Sibetian: a presenta [money T gave her to pay bills, and| Weddees, serene ina | side, say they are waiting for the| Present will become public charges we were always in debt rae, was her | following the ultimatum of the mas ding to M. Cramer, -secretary| taxen up residence in the rear of the |ing smoothly as man and wife for years. I may| | The Building Trades council said city officials Tuesday, who are In /ants from various apartment houses| Helper reported the arrival of the|she kind of dropped her head, She/*0% went to Kirkland Tuesday to| Are Out of the Race big bus leaving a | union men back to work with non extortionate rentals. now being|«tand by calling and identifying the {and I went back to fix it, The boat] In explanation of the bloodstains | all ering vorkes ¥ nid , te leases" | he [had bothering 14) hinyerd: workers which. it te sald Folie head. and she seemed to be holding | tempted to pass a line to the steamer | Heted the first half of the down a couple of cars || Howe st., Wednesday, from 9 who will have been forced into the|Cramer. “We hot you wili|, NEW YORK, Oct. 14,—4United | pick her up, The side of the bow | swathed In a handkerchief Francisco, and five at the east- M up; the woman slowly cy |" Observers @ven predict a “bread|to regulate rentals in Seattle apart confidential adviser, was slightly im | was caught, and rushed to the stern, | launch was towed ashore near Kirk- | race, eight having crashed. Eiit als aantniy ; ; OE teh er coe | - Jit. ‘The engine was stopped, and her|George W. Miller, an automobile | D. H.-4; Lieut. D. BE. Queens, D, H.-4; earners can mee r ex-|tenants will be compelled to vi | in Strike Rioting |(ir7.." | ; | lfeet under the water. ‘That was the| Miller urged the automobile dealer One man was shot, many beaten and aimed at rent profiteers will be ready | Operate. He told the delegation | \| Westlake, how that car made | Dielascapenillin | “ye , -| Lakeside sanitarium. The wife, Miller said, had volunteered to go to the i Under that car?” we { /sanitarium to disprove his accusations that she was addicted to ha use " (re woman. led ‘BUILDER ST eR IS FORCED If FORM | prow ori sib wa $ ek ” replied the | and malicious murder, suppres: | son of the truth, bribery of the Miller was arrested Monday night and grilled by the police for two hours but satisfied legistative, executive and judicial |them that he was blameless of his wife’s death. Two hours after Miller was released by | branches of our government, re. | evasion, were the charges hurled |Serted that they found bloodstains ‘inside and outside the launch in which Miller and his wife were riding. The deputy sheriffs took Miller from his room at the New Arctic hotel ij } monarch” by President William Move by Other Side Bread Line | His Support Short, of the Washington State ; — | | Miller Faces Doctors the world to me, but I ‘couldn't! Strike of building tradesmen re Hundreds of humble tenants un-| Driven to bay by extortionate rent.| Oa from the East, #t the Central stand the trouble caused by her! . ized th nts’ Protective assoc . * * ) seem, Sther aide to take settlement steps. |upon the bounty of Seattle this win: |io0 | ante’ Protective fa LOSE ANY BEES? ™s ating features: ie front of| “There was nothing much to A Mar; it tle el ey | Negotiations between master builders | ter. unless an ordinance designed to| War to the hilt against rent hogs P ar told Tennant and Aeoure one of), my. relations, with AT GOALS ny; and, jana strikers were severed Monda: vagabond family of bees has | Patterson other women. We have not lived| tikewise unfiurried, un ir Fl ter builders, which demanded that ; newly formed body ssidence of 8. G. Helpe 2|there's six weeks more of it,’ mean-/have done some chasing around." : " eg” BO especial hurry to do |men return pending arbitration. | This was the opinion expressed By |" cramer and’ a delegation Of’ ten Frankia a “ ag ing the stay at the sanitarium, and| Deputy Prosecutor T. H. Patter. 19 Derby Air Flight Starters right ov : rthe | Over,” was all a dete ode master builders br oe Lie ideed wg close touch with renting conditions |catied on Mayor C. B. Fitzgerald! bees to the police Tuesday and said|had been there before lovestignte further details of the union men, And they would not send |i out the city, and the effect of |Tuesday morning to protest “agninet| that the owner could obtain the| “Then the engine began to miss, | drowning MIB toot eons UP | union men. a lureh and I saw her in the| found on the launch, Miller said that| of the 63 aviators in the trans my in the | ee sai had cut his hand when he at-| continental air derby, have com- ne, tite was “one | i| will reach its height by Decem We believe the time hax comé ‘ ‘ Ne e . a do 4 fighting the| Atlanta after the propel the | “s ee te that | eg ao fo pa lle aa it is believed mgs ms gg will . oo geet dare Oa > be srg see ai HOUSE IMPROVES «2 down an zhting the Apt ge rode swk prove ler of the aeven ‘hhantnn based ah ta ieee wad is «6circum- i ater o the situation ot having to care for) © Uy nie Class (0! spec on . e ok v e: B,. < v || Magnolia Bluff, south of West destitute men, women and children,|Mayor Fitzgerald was told by | “FE circled about and came back to} When arrested, Miller's hand was| ern terminus, the Presidio, San S Preas.-—The condition of Col. Ed-|hit her, and I heard a peculiar chug| After Miller's wife sank. Miller| ern end, Mineola, N. Y. ee oer engine | Behe ee peel on B a: ak gpmme low be PR se Picadas vonember,|Ward M. House, President Wilson's |from the propellor. 1 thought she|hailed the steamer Atlanta, ‘The| Nineteen starters are out of the Out. and stood, foemennrc $s ‘ . : part! proved this morning, physicians at|and reached under. I felt her coat,|land. Miller entered a home whose| Yesterday's arrivals: aa without aah ors lOne Shot; Many I Hurt seed Magis i tuaspoint Whacetvace ta get’ pellet i kod eat el ve colonel's home here said. and, thinking it was her, tugged at|owner was absent and telephoned to| At Mineola—Captain L. H. Smith, ae vest oetin \coat came free. I looked for her and| dealer, a mutual friend of the Mil-| Lieut, R, Worthington, 8. E.6. iT presen premises. : Me va D lers, m i it YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio, Oct. 14. It is expected that the ordinance} Mayor Fitzgerald promised to co: Only One Dairy, the | | saw her « short distance away a fow|lers, not related to either of them, | |several arrested when #trikers|for consideration by the city council that he believed an ordinance aimed Owned ga gg bed pen bent ek nal Sonn hip sivte ote te nt oak: \clashed with city police at the Ohjo|some time this week. Scores of at rent hogs would be drawn by i " I need a first-class serving maid, Altho they are hard to find, leap; why it left a bed of @ sudden; how the d without a scratch; woman's face had turned ind pale yellow y after the accident; and, how any human being in een: Jap was, could and stand idly canine ened giving prow Oceidentat mind, who says he can ; the man Pe etands them, or stoning returning workers, knows what they are going to do today, tomorrow, or 50 years hence that man is a fool. The Hast is Bast and the West is West, and God help us all if we | works of the Carnegie Steel company | protestants have filed petitions with Corporation here early today, The riot was pre-|Mayor Fitzgerald and other city of-|Meier some time this week, jeipitated when police attempted to fictals, urging immediate action mi | disperse a crowd of men who were|a view had scote! hing the rent hog. HOME I$ ROBBED Counsel SHIP 1S TOWED IN HALIFAX, N. 8, Oct. 14-—The early | left New York for Genoa, September | obtained | 30, was towed in here today by the $50.35 in cash, a $50 Liberty bond, a| Bannock, also a shipping board ves: ruby brooch, surrounded by 32 chip|sel. The Polar Land sprung a leak The motto of some men is, “Give | diamonds, three ruby rings and a| October 6 and has been in tow nearly me liberty, or give me debt!” quantity of clothing. seven days. Walter F.) Hie Polar Land, of the United | Thieves robbed the home of Mra.| States shipping board service, which 1808 Eighth ave. Tuesday morning by Japs; Others, Not Only one Seattle milk distribu tion dairy, the Westlake, 1s con- trolled by Japanese, altho 65 per cent of the milk consumed in Se: attle is produced by Japanese- owned > cows, according ®o ab: stract records, When Japanese interests purchased control of |] the Westlake dairy they took the first Ktep toward gaining control |] of distribution, it is believed by observers of the situation. ALL other Seattle dairies, at present, are American-owned. [heed my calls, Finally | picked me up, As she came along: \side, I tried to unfasten a thick |rope from the stern cleat, so she Jeould tow me with it. There was a |smnall rope over the big one, and in cutting it free, J cut myself. | | ‘Tells of Troubles | “Our whole trouble has been over her use of morphine, She would become hysterical and once or twice I hit her to keep ner quiet. If she had controlled the habit I would have lived with her, “She was the dearest person in the Atlanta}edy was given to the police by George Miller. Police Answer Call When the police were notified of the drowning, Motorcycle Officers A. J. Hill and George Reynolds hurried to the east shore of Lake Washing- ton with grappling hooks, “We found Miller out on the lake, (CONTINUED ON PAGE TWO) BOU RGROIS LEAGU E DELEGATE PARIS, Oct, 14.—Leon Bourgeois was today appointed French repre- sentative in the council of the league of natiog» A first class Want Ad in The Star Will always bring its kind, F. Z GRAU, Mabton, Wash. is the author of the above jingle, NOTICE If more convenient, Want Ad Rhymes may be left at the downtown branch lo- cated at 610 Second Ave., Bartell’s Drug Store.

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