The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 4, 1921, Page 1

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een Qeather On the Iss Tuesday night and Wed- nesday, rain; with fresh east gates, Minimum, 36. Last 24 Hours néon 40, Maximum, 45. Temperature Toray ntered as Second Class Matter May 3, 189 at the Postoffice at Seattle, Wash. under the Act of Congress March 3, sue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise The Seattle Star 1879, Per Your, by Mall, $5 to $9 JAS PREDICT WAR WITH U.S, oe x @ 7: ATE EDITION _ TU DAY, J VOLUME 2 28 JA VARY, 4, WOMAN SLAYS MAN: HIDES. BODY UNDER HER BED 2CONGRESS AIRPLANE MEMBERS IN CRASHES IN BOOZE CASE S.F. STREET Business to Be Good. So Says Rhodes. A Fair Comparison. Dollar Worth More. d aad INETEE IN ase Albert J k comfortably TWENTY-ONE,” Rhodes, leaning in his swivel-chair, going te be as good a business BEE tan avect wontnese net 64 YEARS OLD, MAN GETS FIRST SIGHT OF A LARGE CITY PORTLAN Ore. Jan. 4 Fred G 64, of Rosebure, Ove., in here today, giving a large the r for the first Being good.” just expressed his je who let them Hie had ee with peopl worrted fing back to a normal basis and ¢ America has had for business is becau at not to be time tr CRIME TO OFFICIALS ars are to Portland t was his first 4 railroad train ame tinued. “I expect to do a bi, fm tho present year thar oe business | I did in FOCLWS Te COMPARE WITS BOOM YEARS business Found Body After 2 Days Be in Ring Feet to Pavement READY TO FIGHT Sever felt better as regards business; ‘and | do ri and | conditions than I ence in obtaining the release of #¢¥-| pavement, sot heat “lin a daxed condition since the shoot-|the colors because of a threatening Rogers uttered a yell Ee etnese trend but . return |! and remembered nothing until | copcentration of soviet troops. Trou. ral thouxand barrels of whisky. | emerged from the burning wreckage js normalcy. i found the bedy of her victim | ble had been expected because of the | The ring, it was said, operated from | uninjured pane o¢; taxation .wil|‘bazworning when sbe made the bed recent assignment of Bewwarabia 0 cricago, New. York apd Jersey City. dq felt in view of hundreds of pe Rethania, . | = He Slept on a HELPS TRAMP; HE ROBS HER help put things In thelr proper shape. I'm positive that hi ich pric es | are largely caused by t excess Profits taxes and ther unusual de | mands with which the "songs say roe wel cnaurh fr, | Giant ned ‘Pwo of the hen wnder arrest were! nond on heir way to work, who were employes of a New York private de | horrified at the aight of the burning | tective agency. They gave their| plane dropping thru the air, names an John Costello and James were in turn attounded when Boge encapel practically without a scratch T a. =~ toy phe ¢had Papers found on them containgd| Boggs, who lives at Oakland, had y t . he name of one of the congresmmen, | Just left, the Marina field, en route ndvartey oh “am a victim of tou 1 epee Capt ~* e lives on the beach at 1124 Alki av brought results. an t ent gaan seam 3 ie to be a member of the ring to Reno. Ho was carrying conditions, I think a sales tax far + ep * oe Richardson plana to obtain, war-| pounds of mail for New York, which| Unique and astounding are the od ; cae ea ay on gesting It is true Asking 000 damages for person md fed b Later rants for members of the ring today. Was destroyed. |musical compositions of Lolo ew eagle out of injuries alleged to have resulted) she allowed him to use bathtub | t16 has laid the facts before United| “The motor suddenty cut out,” said /"tFons, Seattle's newest song hit a4 that it w ol ek a Crictann eblinadinn ot fn ay tsi re . “ je Us : | Writer, composer of India Serenade e the consu , pee Out | svioping beard. + West K | crime from his face. (Staten Attorney Charles F. Clyne.| Boggn, dercribing the accident, “just | {hq “Counterpane Waits.” of the consumer=—for that ma orgy Pewintal 1. dee vvald to pollen today. Clyne assigned two of his assistants | as I wag getting altitude, It came) Signor Glauco A. Merigzioll, to cH are ALL consumers filed sult te federal court As mond ring is missing from | to ald Richardson, |*o suddenly that the plane was UNA whose studio in the Peoples Savings SALES TAX WOULDN'T ngaiast the diskaship, ‘Th yt bengge ee Scheid jm able in « minute.” Bank building. she tock the original rf jWELL COST MUCH amended to incly n the clean bathroom floor are the een baw been flying three years, | score of the rendae” for help and “A sales tax of, say, 1 per cent only clue j and for the last six months haa been | criticixm, looked at the oddly scrib fe i wholesale and retail eer | lin the mail eervice. He had a record | pind gheets she handed him and in ide would not > of 1,100 hours in the air without an | quired, smiling Oc ing eff cident What, please tell me, are these?" le infinitesimal, | a ssic,”” said the composer, blush initial cost of ing oe . r. A sales On De Music?’ he repeated. “Can you MEX BANDITS and | just gone,” the president of th dottam for the Ko Pasa Says “She Was in BOLSHEVIK ARM Officials Are Accused of Aviator Is Uninjured When —" Daze Following Murder; Bootlegging; Said to Machine Falls 1,000 | rc ates pe AS CITY, Mo, Jan. 4—Mra | CHICAGO, Jan. 4.—That two con-| SAN FRANCISCO, Jan, 4—Fall-| y 3 of com ald contes Kreaamen, several governmen ing 1,000 feet when engine trouble 4s foolish to compare th < today confemed, utes the crest of captain Frank|200;000 Red Troops Are) cia and many prominent men are| developed, © government mail plane, That was a temporary condition 1t she killed a man| Massed iy ong Rumania | th backers of a huge bootlegging | piloted by 8. @ He hit the pave Every business man =e a eA : rT hid the body beneath | ring engaged in a million-dollar bus! ment at the corner of Gough and ntion to the news has had be- 5 b i pers: ‘Warning rush of bust-/and Monday nigh 200,000 bolshevik troops have been | #¢veral men under arrest here to As it dropped, the plane caught ess and seemi is tem! The slain man believed to be| concentrated north of Bessarabia, ac. | day. | fire, Boggs attempted to land in the} porary. It wo cme mig’ Bros Mea | rank (Rats) Miller, @ bartender. | cording to a statement today by the| According to tho confemsions ob-| Civic Center park, but failed, and| i goers — no hae {Mrs - : 1 sett Captain yng Balkan agency, |tained by Federal Prohibition Com-| the machine crashed into a network | y warning. that she knew the man a# “Frank, | } 2 | i am glad the spree ts over. Iona: he was & bartender, Rumania on January t was report. |minsioner Frank D. Richardson, the | of trolley and telephone wires, which Mre. McGiMl dectared she had been| 4 to have called three classes to two congrensmen used thelr influ-| broke the fall, As the plane hit the Ino ae IN Writes Dreamy Songs INVASION And Does i by Shorthand ‘Suetem of Her On the Beach at Alk srs gd L ' olo Armstrong, Seattle’s remarkable song writer, and two | the critical moment approaches,” be _lines of her India Serenade, just as she originally wrote them. i Bould not swe of the « a WASHINGTON, Jan, 4. — Over y itr consumer by wa nt Wilxon'a veto, the house Vor answer she sat down at his es 1 per cent on r him passed the resolution reviving piano and played. He sat enraptured price Aga al-| EL PASO, Texas, Jan. 4.—Pancho! the war finance corporation. as the notes came tripping out. It I am # € oft a is on again. E Th of the houne gave the neo was a dreamy thing, soft, low, en ministration n ile out | this time b former fol. exsa thirds majority to over | dicing. iB, of bisiness ere bees tee | of 5 * who ¢ rn ae Cae | PUNE Ce Oe ee ae Man on Trial "for Murder |irs a wustean F wame had the change n nore y The outlaws « war ince resol pub! to democratic—there was . are said to ha Joing consid-| signed to prevent agricultural bn Creates Court Stir | Pe remarkal ‘ a Se ae bound to be ange and the change erable « stealing about Vgila's| pression by aiding farmers to export is lds vertua of araceral. “ay wor h . banditry hands because of low prices ‘ i — Be te We minds tha ugenio Martinez of Chihu: The vote on the measure was 250) BRIDG Conn,, Jan. 4 re ee ag pants prof lower, that bus Rests 1 Villa a band of federal| for and 66 against, ‘There was no |The court room was thrown into wild | | “Tut.” he aaked: “are sow plains to the tosses alwa , panying @ use El Charro, and re ate preceding the vote, When |contusion today, when Elwood B.| // sabchae cane auialeale’” oes: Pea Hing market m . tha rts her re that the be was announced Members 4D | wade on trial charged with the Mur: | «heets mean something to you? Do ns luxuries tao ‘ - i Vila led der of George K. Nott, foraibly kissed | you read them fer magna. “ the! H. Nott, the murdered |" «OF course,” she replied. “1 can't : stag | man's wibee as ho was being led| write music, so I havea sort of seer yah hee from the room during @ receas |nhorthand method of my own inven ¢ 4 ma Mra. Nott screamed and fainted. |tion that I use instead, I can read 8, ee. we Mra Wade, the defendant's wife, | < sitting four feet away, toppled from her chair in @ swoon. CHANGE TODAY — BY CHOIR GIRL MORRIS BROS, A deputy sheriff knocked Wade down. He was carried from the room v Tuesday afternoon, at 3 o'clock PASSAIC, N. “<i Jan. 4- Charging | omen ehrieked 4 the crowd 0. the council Iq scheduled to meet | that the Ret. Cornelius Densel, pas: | Wn! App rsd ee pe he eee al on m to der ch arte r\tor of The Nethe + amg Pg pert yo Eager throngs of spectators | me tted to the| church, hag betrayec t. Trina {crowded the courthouse today in an-| |: people at the Mar ection. Am promise of marriage, Mise ‘Trina ticipation of hearing startling teath the amendments are measures provid: | Hannaberg filed sult against him mig a eva" tonad & oy elt tors of ing for : C r bod th coger a ~ for $25,000 ey = | Mrs. Nott, it had been reported , r e hand t bre i} a 4 j Utilitie artim the crea h oO Phe ment of Jomin ould 1 01 o es atand dur p, 637 B buildi FUNERAL SERVICES FOR MR®, | increas. f the corporation counsel's urch, created a sensation a fe | band was «tabbed more than 20 ke to ELIZABETH FARROW, 60, whi ry from $4,800 to $6,000, and wee £0. |times during a scuffle in his house tied Provider ital T Suncing the tax i © park pur |with two men, one of whom is al i “~ present represent abe ere 1 vp feo he sa aoe cae Gee a ee ea |loged to hi been Wade, while $40,000 of Morr ficate 1 apel. Burial in Lak " ree-qu ts € mill tax or more | Jazz tunes were played on the plano | Individual « ts present ranged land :the phonograph to cover the H from $500 to $5,500 , ° | lerime. Mrs. Nott is «aid to have d hs An adjourned ve neit|| Dorothy’s Diary | jbeen the caure of the killine—the il Tuesd: B. Str n, Se Psat fighting about her. It was re :. ] attle fir has be : 4 t When da@ came home t |ported she had turned state's evi tend and give the creditors sans the most wond | With the first quota of 500,000 | dens Poy ‘ r 5 metal tokens delivered Tuesday, the| The prosecution, which ts in| ble that a be appor municipal railway department is|Charge of Homer 8. Cummings, for- ¢ ; MADRID, Jan, 4—Two hundred! guarded against a shortage of the|Mmer chairman. of the democratic file ¢ ee mn 4 believed to have perished silver diske when the 8 1-3-cent-fare| national committee, was expected 7 hac reck of the Spanish steamer ordinance goes into effect also to put on the atand the police-| - : ‘ Isabel, whick nded Satur’, Whether the increase in fares be-|men who found the corpse of Nott, | . or . day night, off the const of Villa Gar-| comes effective January 8 or 9 haa | stuffed in a trunk and half sub P : cla, The cl was bound here from not been determined by elty officials. | merged in the dirty waters of a dis “ye on the Canary islands with a crew of 45 mal swamp. nd a passenger list of 2000 orty But he was relieved when I ry | “oe ste cert ma | St ieee” WILL RULE QN No Receipt for 1 to The Star and find a good . . . ; Can't ase E> aie pala Special Deliveries au ura xpense | Special delivery letters will here, Ine gt Pi ~é Father fell right .in with the Jafter be left in the regular mail re \} my ag pies hg he’ Jen of tinting a houne PASSED DOPE ceptacle when a personal delivery to -daude how to 1 i pat m houlder sistant Corporation Counsel | cannot be made, according to a new , ls t n t | ne 1 naid, “Good idea, Do ean cennedy will rule on the | Dostotfice regulation, Receipts will | ot be required for lal delivery ele re uppro aidan ae ie “ted legality of the proposed city narcotic t | priating $ ya ft 7 a “4 ath 4 ty I Charged with 5 ng narcotics to| jaw now before the public safety | letters in the futur department the cerem tt : taeee weet “heat at 1 prisoner, Mrs. Hertina Tingwtadt| committee of the council, The ordi-| holding that the purposes of special duced by S¢ r Knox { ee tae thas eR eenen atl? Judge Fverett| nance was referred Kennedy | delivery ix to get the letter delivered the sons: pundpeane And ther Smith in the superior court Tuesday | Tuesday by Couheliman Philip ‘rin-|# speedily a# poxsible, and not espe , ee, went over untll lomorrow, morning. She was fined $50 bail [oially to safeguard iy | | vere biti THREE AIRMEN IN SNOW PERIL MATTICE, Ont, Jan, 4.—The! United States navy aeronauts, who broke the “farthest north” record for a balloon flight and who are now en route back to ctvilization with dog teams, are not yet out of peril. They traversing a sparsely habited stretch of territory between Mattice are tn. and Moose Factory, where they found shelter after their balloon December 13, came down and a se mard would again put their lives in danger, Weather conditions were watched with considerable anxiety by the peo: ple bh who received first word of the mifety of the areonauta when an Indian runner arrived with their tele: m to the naval authorities The navy airmen, Lieutenants Walter Hinton, Louis A. Kloose and Stephen A, Farrell, with Indian guides and dog teams, are somewhere between the most northerly railroad with her mother, Ne but nobody else can.” Signor Merigzioli confessed that he could not. He would write ft for her | would be readabig to any mu- n ‘That was very kind of him, in fact. it was what she had come k him} to if he thought the composition ad m For two hours she remained at the playing the notes over and a time; for two hours pi over, a few at he sat transcribing them onto paper The song was published. In a week every theatre in town was playing | it, It was on sale 1 the music | stores. composer had a new fur coat But her manner of writing the | music is not the only peculiarity of b ngs. Unlike other composers, st snot sit down at her piano and laboriously pick the melody out. | |1t comes upon her like a gust of wind, all at once. COUSIN WRITES LYRICS; SHE SUPPLIES MUSIC ‘My cousin, Pearl Cardwell, of Auburn, writes the lyries,” the com poser sud, “I have a lot of her song- poems lying around at home right now, I memorize the words, They keep running thru my mind and then, suddenly, comes the music. It always comes at night, when T am I cannot say whether I} dream it or how it is given me, Take the ‘Serenade,’ for instance, I woke up at 2 o'clock one morning. The} song, just as it is today, was playing | itself to me, I got up and went to} the piano and played it thru from be ginning to end, Then I wrote the} words on sheets of paper and over| them wrote my shorthand charac: | | ters. The sheets laid around the house for a year before I took them to Mr. Merigzioli. ‘Counterpane Waltz,’ my lat ce, Which will come from the | publishers very soon, was composed in my sloep when I wae in the Swed ish hospital, a few weeks ago, All | the time I lay there I kept singing it| | to myself, As soon as I left the hos. pital T went right to the plano and} wrote it, just as I had the ‘ renad “The reason I can't write mus | the way others do is this—I never had a music lesson in my life, But! | when 1 4 I could play the piano. | asleep. |My fingering is faulty. Any one |who knows anything about piano playing would see that in an instant But 1 can play, I play the pipe or: gan, too; just learned it by expert ence. | “T can’t even read music like oth er on. can, but if I hear a plece played *, Tecan go home and play it right |off from memory. I wish I might have had a musical education, It | would have been wonderful. line—which runs thru this town, “It took me a long time to learn and Moose Factory. They are believed | that my compositions had any real to be following the frozen Missanabi| value, Tt was only after two of my river, songs had been stolen by people I | had played them for t I began to Sau ANDERED IT _ |wonder'why' couldn't mate mone . s’ thing of them myself. So I set out to} ON “INTOXICANTS” |aa it” aerial Rumors of wiipng out the liquor| “I'm almost ashamed to show my| traffic notwithstanding, Mr Lulu A.| crazy-looking shorthand to any one Pease charged her husband Tuesday | but Mr, Merigzioli, He understand: with squandering a salary of $100] it and doesn’t laugh at me any more, ‘on himself and intoxicants.” She is} but to others {t must seem childish suing for divorce from Guy A, Pease and silly, don’t you think | either imbeciles or blind.” | Tazukawa's book, originally issued in | MONROE DOCTRINE | Jap legions | stands for Seattle! $1,000 BOND ‘OF WEST COAST IS Book Portrays Attack and Capture of American .- Pacific Defenses ~~ "BY MILTON BRONNER LONDON, Jan. 4-—“Those wi haven't foreseen future war between Japan and the United States are This is part of the preface by Kavassima to a revised edition of $14, under the title, “The Future. War Between Japan and the United Both writers are Japanese, Paris is aroused over the preface, ch further says CALLED HANDICAP Look, for instance, at the Chi nese-Americhn question. Isn't it * burning one for us?” i Look at South America. Isn't the Monroe doctrine a handicap for us? “Consider again the question of |the southern Pacific. Haven't New ealand and Australia offered the | United States an alliance against us? “If our compatriots are blind, nothing can be done, but if they are | wise, won't they admit this was ; menace and becomes more so ack, ‘day? ‘The, Japs shoald aveid. present, as thelr armaments are ready. ‘When the armaments are ready, A He deems {t strange that people | on‘t understand this, and has cab culated the chances of the two na tion’ according to their forces. ‘The book pictures the capture — | of the Philippines and of Hawaii at one bold stroke, the taking of the Panama canal, and the disembarkas tion of Jap troops in California, ‘RISCO BATTLE IS PREDICTED ; It predicts a battle at San Fran cisco, followed by invasion of the entire Western American coast by Typical chapter headings give ag | idea of the tenor: “Are Americans civilized” panese are not dogs.” “Rising Sun banner floats over Manila.” ; “Heaven protects us.” “Loss of Philippines.” “Feebleness of the Americas army. Direct attack on San Franciseo, “Rattle to death.” “City falls.” ‘Tazukawa also directs attentionte California’s restrictions on Japan residents as a cause for Agerosslve | aetion by Japan, MUNICIPAL SHOE SHINERS, IDEA Municinany cporeted sho-Diacking: This is the solution offered for the unemployment problem here, In a letter to the city counefl, signed “Worker,” it is urged that the city take over the shoe-polishing business and give employment to those in need of work. The communication was referred to the judiciary committee, IS FORFEITED Charged with possession of naroot- ies, S. G. Wong, 29, Chinese restora: tor, forfeited $1,000 bail in Judge John B. Gordon's police court Mon: day afternoon Forty taels of opium are alleged to have been found in Wong's pos session when arrested. WOULD REVIVE HOTEL DE GINK Revival of the notorious Hotel de Gink was suggested Tuesday be: cause of the stream of hungry hobos who are trying to break into the city , jail without committing a crime, Many men, failing in this, are pur getting soused to get their three meals a day and bunk from the city “There is No Way of telling the reat drunks from the frauds,” says Chief Jailer Sergt. G. E, McKnight

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