The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 3, 1919, Page 1

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5 BURN TWO SHIPYARD WORKERS CONSUMED IN MOLTEN MASS PPP LPP LLLP PPP LIP PLP LPL PPP PPD PPP PPP PLP PLP PPP PPD PPP PPP rp rnin epi nn Tides in Seattle WEDN SDAY DRE First High Tide Low Tye High Tide Second Low Tide AS IT SEEMS TO ME || DANA SLEETH a they are tired of wouk ending them to us. | could do would be $100,000,000 to do if herdes, this sor would not have been neces But in the year the shouting and @xcitement have subsided quite derable, and a wounded sol bs ip no novelty Not that we'te hard-hearted fre just neglectful. and we have of our own. Tf you have ever fretted on the hed of pain, and if you ever felt ‘the tingle that a new jars record f would give when it broke the pain © Bundle your records in a corru- paper package, send ‘em out Riverton hospital. ) Or, ¥ that's too much trouble to ikke for nine ex-service men, why. your records up here and I'll Mio the rest, if I have to escort ‘em ‘mii the way in the Mivver game does certainly hate to or start to. travel, these ) days. Anyhow, [othe drab _ @ chance Which trave fr 's add @ little joy t ine, while We have an WAs ¢ : read Furip’ 3 ie day S And when f bit there Imatter and found Pthe thin bread of mustard Bo l« red expiai r brought me another the And it didn’t eclipse ‘they slice m Raay remove it the time THURSDAY pre. 4 Viewt High ‘Tide Virst Low Tide Second Lew Tide Seven igh Tide = Break With| Mexico Is Demanded Fall Introduces Resolution Asking Severance of Dip- lomatic Relations SENSATION IS PROMISED WASHINGTON, (United Press)}—A concurrent resolution directing President Wilson to sever all diplomatic re- lations with Mexico immediately, and withdraw this government's recognition of Carranza, was in- troduced today in the senate by Senator Fall, New Mexico, Fall's resolution also would put com gress om record as backing up the state department's action in the Jenkins case The resolution was referred to the | tore len relations committee | Fall declared that evidence hax been obtained that will astound the | country when it Is produced. » Mexican emt Dee. 3— behind this nator Shields declared that Asohurst. partment to the border did not @ and that it are war on Mexico. th hae un to gO to OPENS FIRE ON CITY BURGLAR Prowler Shoot Back; No One Wounded Rescuers Fail to = Mysteriously From Seattle PRP APPR PAPAL PLLA PRA ALAA PPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPPP EPP POP PL PPP PE On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise 1899, at the Postoffioe at Seattle, Wash. under the Act TTLE, WASH., W DAY, THE ELECTION AND THE LESSON The triumph of George H. Walker and Walter myer over the Triple Alliance candidates for the Seattle school board was to be expected. It was to be expected because these men offered themselves as candidates representing the gen- eral public while their opponents were candidates of a class, making their campaign largely en class prejudice. The so-called Triple Alliance poses as a class institution. It challenges the general public. And the general public, being boss, knowing it is boss, gets mad and fights. Seattle voters are not opposed to the election of union men or grangers or railroad men any more than they are opposed to the election of physicians, or lawyers, or Elks, or college professors. Time and again they have helped to elect union men in this city, but always those union men offered themselves as candidates before the whole public and pledged themselves to represent, to the best of their ability, the whole public. Time and again The Star has successfully supported union men for publie office. But they had to have qualifications for the office they sought, and the chief qualification was that they were to represent the general public, not just one class: And that is as it should be. The fitness of a man for office must not be whether he is an Elk or a Mason or a union man a granger or a shoemaker or an automobile manufacturer, BUT WHETHER HE CAN SERVE THE PUBLIC BETTER THAN HIS OPPONENT. A class candidate advertises his prejudice. He proves his unfitness to represent the general public, and such a candidate could not be elected with the sup- port of all the newspapers in the country. The Star hopes that this election will serve to discredit those mad leaders whose sinister purpose seems to be class warfare. The Star hopes that arganized labor of Seattle will be able to see more clearly that its welfare is synonymous with the welfare of the public. There is no excuse and no reé array itself against all other class so doing. It undermines the confidence of the general public by so doing. Itgnakes of itself an inefficient minority instead of serving its real pur pose—that of being a worthwhile part of the progressive majority. DECEMBER 8, J. Sant- son for organized labor to It‘injures only itself by ARMY STORE WILL STOP DELIVERIES 16-Year-Old Girl Disappears rders for goods carried by One month and three days ago Mabel 16, disap at 720 Jer today Gray y by pi peared from the hom epted 1919, BY PARCELS POST retail store The Seattle Star f Congress Merch 2 Weather Forecast: Per Year. by CENTS Late Edition Mail $5.00 to $9.00 night and Thursday, fair; moderate easterly winds: Santmyer FLAMES TRAP MEN IN HULL Two men were burned to to. death ath when trapped by fire be- neath the boilers of a steel hull under construction at the and Walker Win Easily Roll Up Majority of 10,000 in Race for School Board Here RECORD VOTE IS CAST| « - —————— eR tner (who withdrew) feated Triple Alliance carry lead in 42 po ; | Walker and Walter J are elected school diree George Hi Santmyer tors for three-year terms each, it was shown today by complete returns from the 128 polling places where | Seattle yenterday cast the largest vote ever recorded in a city schoo! election. George P. Listman anA Mrs. Lorain | Wiewell Wileon, Triple Aliiance -can- | didates, are defeated. Returns «how | the following vate: 27,779; Walker, 27,219 Wilson, 14.907. John R. Edwards, who ran as an ndependent labor candidate, without | asking the indorsement of the triple alliance or local unions, polled 1,481 Professor C w Kantner, altho his pame was withdrawn from the nce He Jays ago, when he threw hie ® tto nd Walker. olled of 462 Santmye ret to repeat the y's port elec when it be triple allianc lefeuted. ‘oln port « time Satur nim candidat must elect W. 8. 1 anioner « had bee We Succeeds Eckstein If jneee tor. the Light and lawyer apqer action Walker i udidates ers in 42 nt shows. Power carried a polling 0,000 the oday that 2 cdl uaa voted baure ‘noot reest early turnout ever expert need here. The largest vote hoo! board candidate up to yeste Jay was that polled by Nathan F ever en a Their | Salvation Army Duthie shipyards Wednes bodies were ay morning. submerged by molten bitumen, an asphalt preparation, which cooled under streams of water | from firemen’s hose. Workmen this afternoon are cutting a hole thru the bottom of the ship to rescue the bodies, frozen in the congealed substance. The victims are: Lioyd M. Jones, 23, on. Juan Espinola, jas a “passer. The fire started when a hot rivet) was dropped on the coating of fresh bitumatic, a highly inflamable sub-} pta used as a preservative on the water tanks -in the ¢ tom A crew of men was at ~ ca in the hull at the ume. The flames | ined such rapid headway that the workmen were forced to abandon ef. forts to extinguish the flames in order to get away from the heavy | suffocating smoke A hasty check on the crew re vealed that two men were missing. It} in believed that they were overcome; and fainted before they could escape | from the flames | The fire started.at 10 a.m. Both the city amd. the shipyard fire de- j dantmmants: Tenponded. Sacks of sand ; were poured into the bumping hold. } |The flames were extinguished by 10:30 a m. ‘The coroner was called | A crew of waiting workmen were |detaited to investigate the interior | of the hull fust as soon as It cooled | and search for bodies pene section wheres the | flames| oke out ts almost itfecensible. En-j trance to the tanks {s obtained by awiing on. the For thie reason le may 99 shunds and knees, | it is believed, the their haste to reach the out-) have become jammed and by the bitumen Names were of terrific | Yamato race.” 904, Fifth ave., employed as a “holder- 1210 Second ave., a Filipino, emplo FARMERS FACE Senator Exposes Astound- ing Oriental Scheme OAKDALE, Cal. Dee. S— Farmers were urged to demand a— specis! legislative session consideration of Japanese \| lems by Senator J. M, president of the Oriental Jeng te. at & meeting of rin Farmers’ Co-operative olen f i Inman quoted recent Japanese itorials to show the urgency of situation “Even if we can not expand country’s borders, let us expand the: says the Japanese. — “For the next hundred © Beget! Bet those who — live In separate houses immediately | live together in one house,” Buy every bit of land possible in |order to get an unshakable founflas American years beget! |tion. urges the paper - NEWBERRY CASE UP FOR PROBE Senate Orders Investigation of Michigan Charges WASH ON, Dec. 8 a niet t the elegtion immediate in pe in Michigan, im 1 Without debate, the senate the Po olution prov! for a sweeping inquiry mary and regular ele of Henry Ford and Truman H berry, the latter under indictment ahepuial ng into the of. ‘tion camps merene re on charges growing out of the eam- ta. begin as! Dillingham, chair elections Sen estigation ts nator the privile cominittee, returns to the city ator Pomerene said, man of es Plans Christmas The New World threatens to prope agate the Japanese race by with Americans, Indians or negroes. © laws of California are net r unchangeable,” says the pas “The day will come when I make a clean sweep 6t " oo armed laws.to stop corporations thru nd marria present ‘med of jam the ceremony is MEXICAN BANDIT CAPTURED H Battles | Thag After Chase ’ Patro!man Weathering an onslaught of brass | knuckles, Patrolman E. W. Pielow,. | following a chase of two blocks, overs came Juan Ysquerdo, 32, after he fempted to hold up J. Wy yal,61, at Ninth ave. S. and Jack~ to the poor ehildren will be carefully investi | the hearty co-operation | sted parties is requested The Salvation Army will not be od by any public solicita The public is respectfully ve. n even after 8 p,m. to! needy gift AN. case s made their! Kated, and }of all inter tuzging Offic chine The thru streets toc vied | Jot Iwation ata Pie Breathed ce City]? oh’ chain, gf A on | w Teaped from the: Mexican took Mate continued for two) blocks: dark alleys and uplighted Finally Officer Pielow overs the fleeing Mexican in a vacant a jested not to give to any s0-« The Mexican did battle, and |representatives of the marked up the officer considerably Army Should anyone to before he was beaten down with a contribute to this worthy t classes. Be ‘Those which charge price for a sandwich before de wah, and Dleft off the butter, a the meat. PALO ALTO. Cal te the crowd The winning tes rm of Ameri candidates 1 Kin a upon | early Wednes y down to 28, fay mornir npaign on anism, All themselves in favor of high race ent the me Germany Notified mere microscopic « to Cut Down Army ‘Those which . PARIS, Dec prices a few hu oe $ ome rontinue t ome for f ome day of the year joa | represe or cheese tion to be effective! rON C., Dee. adopted the Wat tion calling for an investi of charges that federe! trade | tributions could be insion employes advocated | Colonel T. W alism and bolsh Seattle, HuMerOUS superstitions that rows One of the talian th hung oround the children st which thing And those which hav or neither; that | an caeinanel teed fave boosted the price and cut | he redw quality will continue stick, aval, who is a night watchman, at WIT K on altho he does not} matic ‘op in tempera f the antry is me necks of 3 tt Scott, 3 living f St. Was given hospital. them in effective teething oun ulso on the nent a note to rmany regarding war prisoner Pistol Shot Ends Freedom of “Baffling Bill” Carlisle where he was familiar with every He bad dinner and supper that day at Frank Day's, near Bs! On leaving he said he was going to Frank Newell's place in the LaBor jcountry, The posse lost his here, but took it up again from ¥ ow Bray's. { Brazil nuts grow in such profusion wasted drome and have © halla that t ands of to re Frank Williams, 18 miles southwest back of a pack horse and taken down of here, in the Laramie Peak coun-|the mountain trails to Douglas, where | and the trip esult Dec notorious Wy- CASPER, Wyo. liste, trail and cabin. Many Fake Letters Numerous letters and telegrams purr ing to have been written by j the bandit announcing his arrival in) San ‘ancisco, Chicago, Seattle and other cities, were either the work of his friends or admirers, it is sup- posed, or a hoax perpetrated by per sons possessed of a queer mania for doing something unusual, Carlisle ate Thanksgiving dinner at the ranch of William Hill, He made no attempt to conceal his iden tity and, according to Hill, acted the | part of a perfect gentleman, Tues day morning he breakfasted at Jim Shaw's ranch on Horse Shoe creek. und hospital at Douglas, Wyo,, where an armed deputy sheriff stands ” wil st beds: ond summoned aout rater atate. was insid after # pursuit of four| Sheriff Roach, gun in hand, stepnea| th dy and in below-zero | auickly up to the front door, shoved | by posses héaded by |it open with his foot, and as Car) Roach of Wheatland |lisle looked up and r ned quickly | gen-|for his automatic the sheriff's revol| At no time since his daring rob ver sent a bullet ripping thru the|bery of the Los Angeles Limited | lrobber's lung. Carlisle sank to the| train near Medicine Bow on Novem- t romantic bandit in years | floor. peer 18, had Carlisle ventured out of He was tied with a lariat to the|the Laramie Peak country, a section ted times Want Ad Section not by mistake scanning for news, but with the settled disposition to see what is offered there. That is why a want ad will get results when no " other advertising will. ance escaped from the posse ear jay by jumping thru the of Widow Bray's ranch He made straight back into ras unable to unt of the Carlisle When the | Mer in th ded that Car-| window Escaped November 15 : ‘The bandit escaped from prison on November 15, slipping out in a box of shirts shipped from the prison tory. He was serving 25 to 50 sentence for train robbery in. He showed up three days later: be robbed passengers of geles Limited of $250, ing he was wounded in hand. The bullet is still the flesh. has bee and © « have likewise the frantic sult urroundin: earehe It cost the dealer 3 hundred, and he not ¢ but mother and, the boya}éay, ate ranch 18 Mile you the 3 cents cents more to And a0 caliour ind police and de-| of Dougla u bl temperatures without re te are constantly on the wateh | days th for he Mabe told her we A working in a downtown Jewelr Charie day or two before her diss D a ent She is said to have had $20 the ‘day sho went aay, having| ‘The mos |told members of the family about it! was surrounded im the cabin of . 916, ape from that time n mother she waas|§ in, t fpewepecting pase Find U. S. Vessel) fons: ae her as ann¢ tein In 1916, when he received 1 ig e-. mother, brother and herself ica votes. Keepy | n last year's school election only ROB. an LY * Despite efforts of her family and oo pel sea ; to December In a . } Jad ipep cohen e : night October * ne 8,685 votes were cast. This year the Officers Piel lieve that; but th mu S o peliée to she ix still 7 5 to teclivd omtaiteration 's Pielow and J.J. Haag were jt aaa cat? cides f coast of Holland, according| the police to find her, she soto er e searchers rat polls opened at 8 a. m. and closed nt| for Needy Poor scouting around In a police car at’ 2 do, or you would og- |t the state department) missing 8 p.m The ‘Salvation ve a bac geionran 4 a, m, Wednesday morning when they ' s - ° m t Mr ‘ br heart st ’ The after-dinner vote was unusu-| to give an annua ristmas basket | saw Yaquerdo bend A the truth § ‘ ¥ nding over the Sle cincse appthr to be ¢ ue boat reed to have ae eee eee ee that the, Boys Won't Talk to Old King Boreas ¢ Special permission had to|dinner to the deserving poor of Se | almost prostrate form of Duco, The ee, vie io “hires [returned without finding coffpestang we ani Girls; Bobbed Hair be obtained in some precincts to keep | attle, Ukewise arranging) for suitable | Mexican was choking his visthn and ‘Will | Recent! wean jam L. ¢ try, by two posses of men, while he}an auto was obtained grands of cl Our Readers “v9 oming train Hit, shot thru the | sae eating dinner yesterday after joantintied The party arrived here Prents a thousan another of tt right lung"Wnd in a critical con | poon |late last night And then w Read the ng th dition, is a captive today in a | Two members of the posse saulrm ‘Tracker in Snow | was the consurn did not offer any irwin of Cheyenne, of the Union Pacific rail jean public is robbed is becaum it

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