The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 14, 1920, Page 1

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wee ro =F RAINMAKER TAKES CREDIT 4 FOR SOUTHEAST WASHINGTON Wash under the Act of Congress March 3 CLOUDBURST On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise The Seattle Sta (es 1879, Per Year, by Mall, $6 to $9 DN ESDAY, JU L Y 4 | oe form! had RAR ARPA AR RAR ARR AR AAR ARR AA RAR AAR RDD DARD DD DDD DDD DDD DDD Note nn mS Ed . _ Weather Re t, showers; Thurs- and fair, m derate ame westerly winds. His fie Temperature Last M4 He was, Maxim 73. Minimum, § van Today noon, 68 a Botered nd Clase Mattor May 3, 1899, at the Postoffice at fa attle dim ~ = BEATE SS se Gy a co ctor _SEATTL. F W ASH,, WE vurt, ———__—_ ——_—_—_—__ a —- a — » of tik @ tes ee M nt ‘ ” Sais = DANA SLEETH ago. one 10 HAVE found an abso- will lute cu eee te Tene eerin Square dea ds Nobody. A prow! mab caine ‘She Puts o oa More Clothes to Ples se "Judge $83,- Would be dep * i 3 3 for % they now ha | Would get exac | ° . a. eersboaly wait enitence Vins Freedom 7 everybody longs to are Of trade in the w« the simplest, | a the most honest 1 no profiteer aes Pirns bart ‘ » | Split Seems Certain as Re- ar ‘The bart m that today ts i | ee Setpne vale in every term drafted Platform Fails | pees Fegulates more business transact to Please 48ers | for tions today thgn all the banks and re | boards of trade on earth. CARMEN’S HALL, Chicago, July —— In my ye Iw taught at x i the barter system w: a relic Th joint convention ¢ third barbarism. Today I am beginning party groups faced a #p today to think it is the perfect answer to | when 48ers declared they would with. | a Sar ridden. draw unless a leas radical platform | For instance, my neighbor pas oe tures four cows on my cron; | WS adopted. The platform commit: | ber of quarts of k @ day, and eeavensee vophe ye 0 many hours of labor a month indications. this’ afterneon were My pasture ay be $2 or $5 a the redrafted platform would not ap Month, his milk may be 5 cents a | Pease the lead of the diera, who quart of 20 cents; the ratio remains ;‘¢clared the reported new product the same. }even more radical than the first. t te 4 The convention was to select @& Bee the. odbc Baty tun a | Presidential ticket if the difficulties fan's labor with this saw equals | between the two groups could be! two days’ work for a tone hand. prened out. 80, when I cut wood one day for a George Le Record, Amos Pinchot worth, what gasoline goes to—we have fixed Teasonable basis of trading. ‘we Keep the ratio and are sati fied. work for his horse is pastured. If I double up teams with each plowing or hauling, he returns m him. nized relative Value between labs Méighbor, he works two in return. It makes no difference what wood labor gets, what ae ‘ a ne eee LA FOLLETTE’S He gives me tive hours’ | NOMINATION month neighbor for an extra heavy bit of | hour for hour for the time I gav There ts @ certain easily recog: finished products, raw materiil’# } m. <7 commodities. When you th, |. The rdemonstration began while translate these values into dol Bario president of the and have a thousand siento w NEW PARTY | Della. Pattra Sorry and Gilson Gardner, leaders in the committee of 48, formally stated to day they cannot join a third party with a socialistic platform and a rad- feat jeader \YELL FOR a | CARMEN’S HALL, CHICAG a |July 4—A monstration which 1 to stampede the joint con- | of amalgamated liberal} ° into nominating Senator F Nette as a new po- this @ Now 1920. ATE TWO C CI ITION. INTS IN SEATTLE TO B Acting as Go-Between for Nipponese SACRAMENTO, Cal., July 14— The method by which Japanese evade California land laws was bared before the house commit- tee on immigration, in session in the capital building here Last night. M. Landsborough, Florin rancher, told the committce that he had bought land in his own name out of funds that were fur- Rished by Japanese, and for the exclusive benefit of Japanese. four canes in which he acted as in- termediary for Japanese, enabling |them to necure land, despite the pro- vintons of the California laws regard- jing the ownership of iand by Japan-| oo Under crossexamination he ad- | mitted that there were six cases in Jail in which he had acted. According to his story, Japanese came to him whom he had only known thru: business anrociations and gave him money to pay down on certain parcelé of land. He did this, and was given a deed in his own name. Then he executed a docu [ment by which he was to turn the land over the éhildren of the | Japanese furnishing the money, | The Japanese, he said, paid all the money and made all arrangements for the purchase. |JAPS IN AMERICA |LOYAL TO MIKADO | | Charges that the Japanese gov- lernment would not allow Japanese |to become citizens of the United | States even |were made by V if they were born here 8. McClatchy, who Rancher Witness Tells of He first admitted that there were! JAP TRICKERY EXPOSED - RUN INTO. | | Risk Lives to Save Dog Airedale, Cini in Jan, "Pulled F. rom Lake * * “ * * o, ©& | ‘Boys Swim to Rescue, DAMAGES IN FLOOD MILLIONS: Ephrata’s Satisfied, , ever, Even With Water=” works Washed Out SPOKANE, duly 14- crops, flooded basementa, | and uprooted orchards and | ganized power, light and | phone lines greeted a bright today, following a terrifie burst and electrica: storm at night. The entire Inland Empire wag damage amounting to millions of lara. 4 Most power and light lines are operation again at noon today. Many basements are flooded in kane. Sewer manholes in many of the city were forced off by floods. Damage estimated at $250,000 done in the Yakima valley. On Union flat, four miles Pullman, a wall of water 10 feet swept down a narrow valley. families had narrow escapes. ‘Thousands of acres of rf wheat in the Palouse and Big belts have been washed out and 4 in many sections are total losnes. In the fruit belt orchards, cases, have been com) stroyed. WALL OF WATER SWEEPS FARMS A wall of water several swept down over farmlands at Flats, four miles west of | washing away outbuildings aging houses and crops. At Pullman the farm of the lington State college was 4 | $50,000 when the wind unroofed #t | blew and blew down poultry garrying them, in some fi |half-a mile A number of a |in Pullman were unroofed |grain warehouse demolished. | Farms surrounding Winona | Wawawai were similarly d | Lightning and heavy | Moscow, Idaho, on the edge of storm center, put telephone and ws and trades and c¢ resumed the witness stand at the fancy pi dot y Delia 5 ae [hearing of the congressional commit- [eeseh sings ent of commit re labor also fixing far Chatrma wa ker docks K] GAN FRANCISCO, July 14—;thera a year ago, 84 who was wont| tee on the Japancse situation in the Pittis otmar satacent <a rd oct 1d ¥ ten deesenael becouse of ob: | “Princess” Delia Pattra, self-styled |to do dance specialdien on areal tee oday i [Th tap “Yakionn, valley, le oe ws “ sat we tae yeaaiaaa | Gaushter of an yptian Khedive, | nights. : pBeecerecare Fyre: sears Nae aggre: lern Pacific tracks between Nass @mmi oe Piola ie ure af La Pullette west hela here on charges of defrauding| Huetile ‘shyn' shies too good a! ron awh Ms |Granger were washed out by ape : + the stage during Bar.|Etich Buehie, mining engineer, of spender for a garden variety Ameri-|Voluntary expatriation of Japanese flow from the irrigation canal, enor So as : fae cites & | $10,000, was at liberty again today, can to tag after was practically a fraud. | crrant 80 fit <7ineonn work, and ones the = ye faie pee eager 39 Gace fe irglicowe ltollowing reduction of ball from| She won his fortune along with| ‘The law only allows Japanese be feet deep poured down, washing each party would get a square al ° “a ahetaene 4 a {$15,000 to $2,000 when whe appeared his heart and then called it quits, Is|tween the ages of 15 and 17 to make several smal] reclamation canals 42 so long as the ratio was main . ine tates wliietasd i Bar [before Superior J Ward. , | his rueful complaint Japplieation for expatriation and flooding ranches. apie. eae Racther indue pleture:dé La Pesan xis peared in court! He says he spent $105 on one din-|thege ix no assurance in the law that| Fifteen ‘atres of surface sell eal T MAY be argued that te was planted in front of the|%2ay in a chastened mood, rather|ner for her, Japaness officials would grant the |rahch of A. W. Swigert was a cieiiiitied atnte | piattor |than in her Oriental costume, whieh Th Princess,” on the other hand, | request even when the application is | Jaway, with the entire crop. On ) that of a nation ¢ 7 demonstration was increased | 7°*terday led down the judicial | say she gan’t help Miing. Byehia made. | |P. W. Armstrong ranch, the 000,000 people, when a 20-foot red banner was drop- | Wrath of Judge Ward and which altho he's “too caveman-like.” 8b*, Aq) the Japanese,” he sald, “there-| was washed from several acres cannot be conducted. | ged from the west galler caused her to be held for contempt |assured Bushle that his money 18 ‘tore, haw the privileges of the citi-| | trees uprooted and borne away, Well, sometimes it loo! ke te tandarda grouped | © ROG BENE tee joa - ‘9 ris oi poe verte “ 1 zens of the? United States but none) Northerp. Pacific wrecking ef present system 1 La Follette’s picture as dele-| After spending the night in jail,/ ona se is an outgrowth Jealous | of the’ obligations of an American. | were at Wotk today, It is hoped @ ducted, either. Ma | at and ered. |subsequent: to the court's wrathy |fUry. acroas the continent “Prin.| international law authorities state canal will be repaired by Th - an afer | 7 frafted fp rm of the|°fder, Delle Pattra was allowed her} oe ony Sets cones poo sical that Japanese in this country, even ystems @ bit = jer ra ee STOUDA, 89 Dre eee eee orders famously with officers who escorted |*P? hep pa otal neg wa bea /EPHRATA honest dea. Ip y the conference committee |! fe SemGnEn anfattvenitien newerel™? * n case of wa Da | * No man can say that the basic | toda Js in part now scheduled to be ee et towing her indictment vy (SAYS JAPS KVADING | DOESN’T MOURN gett set coe because it | wa: Batis’ ween. 908 = his charges tn the twean-|‘2e 808 Prancieco grand jury. | CENSUS LAW. ¥N 0. 8 WATERWORKS j D # — ;| “She's too pretty to escape," ar| McClatchy also declared that the SPHRATA, Wash, July’ been i . 2 with hand and 0 prneys today said) — 4 her attorney, in asking reduc-|Japanese birth rate is gaining by } E ash., e bu s t united e (blank) party of nt was in no mood to P®l tion of her bail, and Judge Ward| leaps and bounds over that of whites /14.—A downpour of rain wre yy ag ea My ; t ‘ ty bg pe | SA¥S pain pad pest pr m $1 voeet 2, Arve nd "Prin oe ibealtte a ten i rts | tes ae wh es (above) and his companion-hero, Har-| without precedent in the” x oe ae ot by Big bust § ' ered from $15 0 $2,000, and “Prin-| He submitted voluminous reports 4 tior finance Te task of funda-| PRETTY TO ESCAPE |con: Pat” gave his honor a bewitch-|to the ‘mentee, won whieh te old Marchant (below). memory of the oldest set~: pe the one ft . r n of democracy! ‘The “Princess” says she has cre |ing smile in gratitude. read extracts ahd explained. He of. 1S° MANY times has some trust-|ing in, made his way under the jam/tlers, washed out the town: Anges tind the tinits to restore alll entials to prove her royal blood.| The “Princess” cut a wide swath | fered the report of the board of con.|\) worthy dog plunged into the | to the place where the dog was mak-|waterworks and reservoir: it - 1 oe. a ; “ a _ ao up a | There are however: folks up in Reno | here a year ago, when sho a nnounced trol of the Sacramento county grand — Pnicatntce grill oe —. ing Being last desperate struggle to here last night, flooded cele 6 who my that the “Princess” beara a|she would spend $50,000 on a ward-|jury and of several investigators. ra nger | & | dh and 4 time w ever zure henceforth of that/wtriking resemblance to a plain|robe, and was anxious to marry “al He supplemented these with state-| considered @ront page stuff in the} Howland, meanwhile, forced the|!ars of stores and homes © b a ck a few unscrupulous men.”| American girl, who used to clerk m|young and temperamental Ameri-| ments of his own newspaper offices. logs apart and the two 12-year-old | made a river of Main st. i rt i] ow in large part the|a cigar stand in the Golden hotet | can.” McClatchy declared that these re-} But when two little boys risk their /jads pulled the now unconscious| Charles M, Hatfield, the “ c ed to the separate con- | hae —lports showed the great increase of {lives in Lake Union to save an Aire-| Airedale from the water, maker,” had jyst concluded his thousands ars in Jay with some of the ' Japanese, and that if the present rate | dale terrier from certain death, i ‘They carried him to the bank,|@emonstration at Moses Lake, bet out rece a che ones strengthened. of multiplication and immigration | then work for nearly an hour empty- | They thought he was dead, But they | miles east of here, and the delui farmers, who come cir It was on this account that kept on, that there would be 120,000,- |4ne his lungs of water and restoring |) new gomething of the manner in|i8 «ttributed by ranchers te dressed ve r n > |eroup of 48ers dn the conference 000 Japanese in the United States In| his breath—that's @ real story |which first aid is administered to| field's process. Sy and be nd their 4 or prepared the ment | }120 years And here it is, It wouldn't be a8 | awning persons and they applied} A gauge maintained here regis= egss ot and f tting their reasons for not | McClatchy anid that from hig orig- | 00d apa. ettnee, | i tae. dog DO lie: vigekouily.to this don |tered an inch. T. J. Cook, haga onw rural st ad inal investigations he believed there | longed to them, but the Airedale w a elt trade ier ¢ of both ratlre ar aa ea - for| Fares on Seattle's street car lines |OUt of a population of 3,300,000. | Harold Marchant, son of A. Mar.| Worked a his mnie free of: water, and| oss years reports that rng buys under wi uded. The capital ttle will have band concerts, for | Ap ‘The census returns, he said | ea of 3815 12th ave. N. E., and| still he gave them no sign of life, | f0F 82 years, reports, t ik ae a double profit 6 nt c w tted the summer | will be automatically increased next| not indicate this, as the Japanese | Howland Giddings, of 3711 24th ave,| Bending down and placing his ear rds. erage Vee * on the sale of the 1 to q nk f taxation of land| This was definitely decided, folow-| Monday, when the council ordinance | jad been notorious in avoiding the | N- KB were swimming last afouled fe payee ah eg ecto cooks Tt te “eatimated (that Gane 20 per cent mc r ain ing a ‘conference between Mayor | passed last month becomes effective, | ce be pr bi pees 2 pital Jumber mill na again hapcaneten wine | crop will pe benefited “Saami uff. That t a 1 ganizations whic Japanese yjat the foot of 12th ave. id age et to. wo — wing Maoh As Ai ganizations rich | caldwell and Park Commissioner R.| Unless petitions now being circu be ae epetort: hry ove Rex Marchant, Bert Johnson and| They raised and lowered the Aire-| Per cent aney va ected ' Pega in |J. Fisher and J. D, Lowman, Tues-| lated, calling for a referendum vot ramento is approximately 46,44 |Ernie Falkhoff were with, them, nle’s forelegs, inducing artificial! Mphrata is installing @ new. pro t ¢ league, Veterans, Rank | day afternoon Jon the increased fare ordinance are| per thousand. The birth rate of all| Farther along the lake shore were respiration. For half an hour, and ee ae lent mourned % ‘ and F . tion, | ‘The sum of $7,500 will be appro-| filed before July 19, patrons of the|others—mind you, gentlemen, all oth-| treacherous floating logs. Knowing longer, they labored thus, working the damage to’ the oda en 1 Arr ‘ a urty and|priated from the park board funds | system will pay 10-cent cash or |ers—is but 16.9," McClatchy said. the danger of falling between them, | bis legs like pump handles. Aadthea) . An arty of |to defray the expenses of the con-|6% cents if metal tokens 4 Carolyn Webb, Sacramento county |the boys never ventured out upon|he spend his eyes. HATFIELD AND i oS cert chased. | superintendent of schools, is exp them. je was a homely dog, with his could no bard t SINGLE TAX | owing ck of funds. it-was| D. W. ‘Henderson, superintendent |ed to be called as a witness today. But the airs, ne powine| po Ri pig Slade pebivamae BROTHER PASS ort to do without con-|of railways, announced Wednesday | Senator J, M. Inman suggested that | this, went out boldly, jog rolled | . . sneezed President etl PARTY NAM et but insistent de-|that for the first few days men| she be called lover und he was trapped beneath| and shook himself, spraying his | THRU SEATTLE A ES mands on the part of the public haw | Would be stationed on the principal) ‘The committee last night held an|the jam. Vainly he struggled to} saviors with water and wet sand Charles M. Hatfield and his Message to France OWN TICKET led to a reconsideration downtown corners to sell t 8. The |executive session, it was learned to-|climb back to safety, but each time} and followed Harold home for | prother, Paul, passed thru Seattle to — WASHINGTON, Final plans for the concerta during | tokens also will be sold by the con | day, at which plang for the state|his forefeet touched a log it would} rere day on their way to California, They dent Wilson in a me to Pre CHICAGO, July 14.—A new nation-|the summer months are expected to | ductors, itinerary were m They will re-|turn over, the Jam would close over | 4 twas ahappy boy andahappy [were highly elated by the heat dent Deschanel of | ared ticket in the field today,|be formulated at a meeting of the| Tokens erdered by the city pur-|main in Sacramento today, going to| his head and it would be several) aot aoe slept side by side in rains which have fallen in the F that Bastile ke our own De hed by the single tax party.|park. commissioners Friday after. |chasing department are belng deliy-| Florin and Stockton tomorrow, They | minutes before he could get another| Harold's house last night, and | included in their contract with wi tion of I , ted the new “third party.” | noon ered at the rate of 60,000 a week.| agreed that it would be proper to ac: | breath, the dog often woke the boy by |growers of Douglas, Lincoln | ae 2. tao wer , hou comprised More than 2,000,000 of the metal |cept the hospitality of George Shima,| Harold saw the Airedale first. The| licking his face in gratitude. |Grant counties. = = subse t Robert C. Macauley, Philadelph The reason Luke, why women | disks will be cireulated, They will|Japanese potato king, in Stockton, |dog was fagged and nearly done for, But this merning the dog had “We are given credit for p Tee aeupoth m of arbitrary power,|for president ré_ wo foolish is that they were|aell at the rate of four for a quar-| They will go to San Franciseo Friday | Without haeitation. Harold ran Conpnearee. ER ? the rainstorms which I ‘at jaws should be just aud) WC. Barnum, Cleveland, for vice|made for the companionship of|ter, eight for 50 cents, or 16 for a|night and probably return to Stock-|along the bank, sped out over the “Pa k before would occur immediately fol j agual 10-all” ' naaaik | men. dollar, n for 4 bowing there Saturday, Log followed by Howland, and, .div-| got up,” sald Harold, dolefully, (Tura fa Page 2, Columm-@

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