The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 29, 1921, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

TPOLICEMAN SLAYS ATT | On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise The Seattle Star 9. Por Year, by Mall, $5 to 99 TH EW EDITION TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE SHOOTS DURING COURT! Officer Slays His Victim, Wounds Self Before Big Chicago Crowd CHICAGO, July 29.—Just as Judge Charles A. McDonald - tenced Desk Sergeant Harry D. logg to serve 15 days in jail today, the policeman whipped out a fe volver, killed Lemuel Ackley, an at torney, and then shot himself. Five shots were fired in the ~ crowded court of gomestic relations, throwing the spectators into @ panic. Four struck the body of the — attorney, killing him instantly, white the fifth was fired by Kellogg |into his own body. He was |in a dying condition when rushed | to the county hospital . The judge, after hearing the case, in which Kellogg had been ordered to vacate-some property, sentenced noon July 29 it was 66, Tonight and Saturday fair; moderate westerly winds. Entered as Second Class Matter May 3, 18! SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, JULY 29, 1921. JAP TRAIN BOMBED IBERIA(?=*«|READS DIES! 000 hours every year “doing up” at the Postoffice at Seattle, Wash, under the Act of Congress March 3, 1) = He Saves Playmate’s Life In Makes Dive" Deen Deck ites Who Hed Seek 3d Time He’d Like to Save’Nother Here’s Where We Make OLOG HOWDY, FOLKS! Know of streams where the trout are _Most of the prohibition jokes show the U. 8. is suffering from dry thelr hairt Bobbed hair would eave 613, 58 working days a year, suf- it tite to build paved highway 15 feet wide around the United States. J ‘These are the sensational fig: ufes compiled Friday by F. W. of The Star, in answer to charges of The Star, In answer charges made by business men that bob bed hair is not conducive to effi clency. If women ured the time they now consume in "fixing up” their tresses in self-improvement, this country would soon be a race of super-women, according to the ef. ficteney expert, Here are Webster's epochal fig- ures: Estimate an av@rage of 30 min- utes a day consumed by women and girls in combing and “pretty. ing” their hair, year. 365 days at 20 minutes ie 187 hours per girl per year. Eetimate 35,000,000 girls and eee ys women who cigarets are charming. be charming if they smoked cigars, bless ‘em. | headiine. “That's where they to keep “em,” snorts the girl next desk. eee ‘Tokyo cable says the Japanese is preparing to evacu- Siberian. “What's the matter TOKYO, July 29.—Outlaws blew up | & Japanese milMary train near No-| kolsk yesterday, killing Colonel Mi- wa, Japanese chief of staff, and many other Japanese officers, ac ‘Mayes, Misevs Made! Lump and ei Bland attended church at Omega Why Masel Blond wee oe cording to meager reports received |] women. fi the policeman for contempt of court. here today. 25,000,000 times 187 hours ts Of cou a rw Pegi pulled bis revolver é Extensive military operations be. || 6,545,000,000 hours per year, oe De pried pose pr ag vg bo a ye Bese pees toward : tween the organized outlaws and the Boy ny Ayn pol: tielan to be freed from a. peniten-| crawled under the bench. te Hunghuzes are reported in progrens, || 15, Per Sunt of ile time, OF a! pente: A bailiff rushed between the judge On a basis 9 lay the Japanese plana for the evacu | ies Meh toshalentiae: re in a faint. Seeing his way ‘eseful in beating the of = |the judge blocked, Kellogg lation of several portions of Siberia. a in service man out of the | and fired at the attorney, who Pek ak e EE IER Later Miss Nizon rushed from the standing five paces away near SA RA KED room screaming, “My mouth and see bench. RUSSIANS DYING FE C H Gnd did not regain Francis M. Skidmore went to war.|fowd in the court room as they — She died on her way to the hospital. [They cheered him and made him big| Pushed and jammed toward the — A partly empty bottle of lysol was! promises when he marched away. | 40ors. i B.C, Lanter, 5617 Rainier ave. was| there wasn't any money. The poli-| ss turned the gun on himself, : pont itro Used in Meat Co. Of called and made a desperate attempt | ticians in (he legislature had forgot-| Kellogg was a member of the Ch Dust Stifles Multitudes Flee-| Nitro Used in Meat Co. Of-| >> © the bonus bil, ing the trial he ent mumbling. t9, ” ing From Famine fice on Pike Place The body was taken to the Colum-| After a year, a bonus bill was| himself. Lie dia Undertaking Co. passed by the legislature and put up| After the shooting Judge McDon- |” ° . .|Struck Ackley were intended To Mail $77 000 were more interested in their patri- ™ ‘ LONDON, July 29.—Russia's fam 2 otic pledges than they were in re F in fight continued today, " Pfan|_ The land which Kellogg was om throat burn!” Bhe fell on the Moor} Consider this case: Screams went up from the : consciousness. IN WILD FLIGHT) $450 IS TAKEN) .cofi%.ccxtssc'ore ie] "rair, "chance | ate amteg em stony, Og to save her life. She died at 7:15/ten their patriotic pledges and killed | C60 police force for 30 years, Dur. to the people. And the people, who | #/¢ said he believed the shots BY ED L, KEEN in atri. Grain of Radium)! rasea the bonus bin by an Introducing Mr. Sherwood Heinke, 11-year-old hero who saved his playmate from drowning by plucky, cool-headed| Cross roads in parts of the Volga ae Fame ond ene Be af | nevER, Jély 29-000 grain ct |e SAE, Forte Rermenrdieaa cles 2 work. Mr. Heinke consented to pose as per above for po nA tag gyal icone ee, pei amo escaping | radium, value $77,000," will be sent Five days before the long delayed | ented in court by Ackley, by registered mail today to Philadel- | ponus bill went into effect, Veteran | Previous notices had been ‘W. C. Willard, the proprietor, dis | phia, for use in the municipal hospi-/sxiamore died. Mra. Catherine| Kellogg to vacate the premises covered the looted safe when he/ tals there, This shipment soon will | gxidmore, his widow, filed her appli-| 2 had ignored the court’ Price and Carter, Star staff photographers. + + * & destrians. The wildest confusion reignéd at these points. * % *# the constitution gives them right to vote but not to hold r Likewise the constitution ‘ "¢ may fools have the right to hok but a lot of ‘em are in, ae : eee “HJess Willard,” says a Chicago pa- r, “is furiously angry because he Vean't get a fight with Dempsey.” 3 ‘should save some of his anger mare re. . MANY HAPPY RETURNS was present at the ‘morning to witness united for life Mr. na Mise Annie tama ‘The groom hes for a number of successfully operated his fi ferent families, and spent working in « Kansas howpita! 3o°E fatthtul worker in the church. ity beth spiritually and me ‘go with them. May their her to increase as did the groom when he reported to us that he ‘two pairs of calves in the stable.— (O.) Courte eacent ove A epeaker at the business wom- [en's convention in Cleveland says 2,000,000 women in the, United are earning salaries. How py are working? o- General Helen Maria Dawes Is to save only $112,500,000 after paring down in all branches of government service. More than that could be saved by not building four battleships. eee Attorneys for the defense in the If, by any chance, you need a good life saver, The Star would be glad to supply your We have a first-class one in stock. Guaranteed to give satisfaction. Has speed, light draft, is seaworthy and re- sponds quickly in an emergency. Experience? You bet! Read on: ming suit. But this one is special. mate, Elmo Campbell, went swimming in the Duwamish river at South park. All three! down. By E. P. Chalcraft» Sherwood Heinke, 11, has a new black and yellow swim-} at the crossings and fell dead in the Of course, lots of other boys have new swimming suits. It has a history. Great clouds of dust rose as con- Micting lines tried to force their way thru each other, ‘The stifling dust descended again to the caravans, leaving the miser- able travelers choking and dying. ‘The cross roads became centers of death, Even cattle which had staggered along attached to their owners’ carta, failed to survive the heat and dust road. Thé carcasses were stripped of flesh and used as food. While the caravans heading to : i s ; Its proud pos-| ward the promise of harvests in the sessor received it as a reward for saving his seven-year-old) ukraine and companion, Franklin Barboe, from drowning. i Wednesday morning Sherwood, Franklin and their play-| (rei ont there were millions more of “I knew that's who it was,” said Sherwood, “but all I could see was his hands as he went It was the last time, I Rusela's boundary countries continued the most mis erable victims of Russia's great sufferers, according to reports reach ing here today by way of Reval, Co penhagen and Berlin, ‘The principal developments, ac opened the office. The mfe had been wrapped in quilts and nitro-gtycerine poured in the cracks where the com- bination had been knocked off. The safe door was shattered by the |charge and the office was in wild confusion, the yeggs having turned everything upside down in their search for cash, The inner door of the mfo had looted of $450 in checks and cur. rency. Detective P. T. McNamee, who is investigating the case, an nounced that the job had been done by expert safe crackers. A thumb- print was left on the safe. Motor Truck Runs A large truck, running wild on a been pried open with a crowbar and | Wild, Injuring 2) boys live near. there. “We dressed in a boat and started home,” Sherwood re- lated, “and after about a block Franklin found that he had forgotten his cap. So} he ran back after it and we| walked on, slow. “Franklin didn’t come, and so we kept going. Thought %.« had sneaked | back and run dround the other side of the block to beat his brother! home, like he likes to do, and fool jus. Then we heard a scream, and believe me, we hiked back fast as we could run.” guess. I swam out as fast as I could, and when I got there he was gone, Then I saw a hand at the top of the water and made @ muskrat dive and caught hold of him. “He grabbed hold of me at first, but 1 got loose and towed him to shore, and Elmo helped me take him to my house and I put him in bed.” First aid was applied to the young victim on the river bank, y, he was so cold his face was aid Sherwood. regiments cuts, exsa, tary camp. blue, look right thru his ears and see his hair. There was no blood in them | I rolled him over and tried cording to those reports, were: | The extension of the soviet's relief! cement bulkhead in committees activities, Threats of mutinies of differen’ ‘The establishmeent of a heavy guard around the Kremlin, in Mos- cow, where soviet officials stored pro: | visions to withstand @ siege, if nec + “I never saw ansthine like that before. 1 coula; Facoma Carmen | Red ° Miaoki was cut about the head. Refuse luction ae TACOMA, July 29.8 Members of j hill on Bellevue ave. N., Friday, struck a tree, a telephone pole and a its wild rush, {and injured two Japanese. The truck was driven by G. Yagt, 24, and G. Miaoki, 25, who reported that the truck's brakes refused to work as they started down the hill. ‘The Japs clung, terror-stricken, to the seat, while the truck plunged over the side of the roadway and crashed into the bulkhead, demolish. ration Moscow became virtually a mill) iw’ tne truck and hurling the two Japs into the garden of a house at 311 Republican et. Yagi was severely cut and bruised. At the river bank Sherwood did|at all his clothes on after Franklin. not hesitate, but plunged in with 2 get some of the water out of his (Turn to P 7, Column 3) lthe Street Railwaymen's union were conferring with officials of the T. R. & P. company here today in an ef fort to reach an agreement on the Ordained Minister Jailed Third Time Cc. J. Fair, who was ordained as a be followed by another of like size | trom the radium company of Colo- rado, The two grains of radium, ac cording to W. V. Kithill, vice presi dent of the company, comprise 1.15 of the world’s output for a year, |Alleged Attempted Slayer Is Arrested PORTLAND, Ore. July 29.—Jess Boydston, alleged attempted slayer of Mabel Baker, 20, and her hus band, Thomas Baker, near here, | April was arrested yesterday in Bozeman, Mont, according to word received here today by Sheriff Hur! burt, Bosdston's arrest brings to a close @ search which has extended into almost every etate in the Union. | Bryan May Become University’s Head | COLUMBIA, Mo., July ,29.—Wil- liam Jennings Bryan may be a presi- dent yet. A movement has been started here jto have Bryan named president of the University of Missouri. To Inquire Why U. S. Army Is in Germany WASHINGTON, July 29—Inguiry as to why American troops are being kept in Germany at a cost of virtual- ly $1,000,000 a month, will be made in the senate within the next few days. The inquiry will be along these | lines: | Why are the troops not brought cation for the state bonus. Her sol- dier husband was entitled to $360— not a large sum as state expendi- |tures go, but a mighty welcome one to his widow. of And Mrs. Skidmore’s application for ‘the $360 came under the hand of a state job holder in Auditor Clausen's office at Olympia. Eyes that had never squinted down the barrel of an army rifle nor peered into a dugout caught | the technical flaw in Mrs. Skid- more’s application for the bonus. Veteran Skidmore had died | before the law for the paying of the bonus money went into ef- fect. That, you see, was the technicality, eee So the state auditor refused to pay the $360. Mrs. Skidmore went to the Thurs- ton county superior court about it. But the court saw the legal technic ality, too, and passed the buck to the supreme judges who sit in the big stone temple, “Justice.” The supreme court judges solemn- ly found in favor of the legal tech. nicality, Thus Auditor Clausen was official- ly and legally affirmed, eee Mrs. Skidmore can't bonus money. Of course, when the legislature passed that bonus law it intended that widows of service men should get their bonus cash. And the people, when they voted for the bonus law, certainly did not jplan any discrimination against the service men who were dying. But never mind. There was a technicality—a legal technicality. State officials used it to beat a have that each time, ohieetieiaetasaliia DEPUTY KILLED BY MAN HALTED. J. F. Chatfield Slain; His Assailant Surrenders BELLINGHAM, July way eae with having shot and fatally ed Deputy Sherift J. F. Chatfield fyesterday, Alfred Anderson, of Blaine, is in jail here. He declares that he mistook the peace officer for a “dope runner” who was trying to hold him up. + Anderson's companion, F. In Took, son of a deputy customs officer in Blaine, is also held by the police. ; The two men were stopped on a forest trail close to the international border by Deputy Sheriffs Chatfield and Dick Drain, who were in a hunt for booze smugglers. Chatfiela grew his revolver and ordered the two men to throw up their hands. Tool is said to have complied, but Anderson, it is alleged, answered with a shot, Both Drain and Chatfield fired. Chatfield, tho wounded, continued to fire at his assailant. Tool and Anderson fled, when the deputy sheriff dropped from a gun wound. In a few minutes the fugitives re turned and submitted to arrest, With the wounded man and the two others, Deputy Drain returned to Lynden. Chatfield died several hours later. | he proposed | minister in his youth, pleaded guilty } Biack Sox trial intend to try to | rejection last night of the prop minist y . | home, now that peace with Germany 2 Dy ‘ a According to Anderson, he and prove that none of the basetall ex: | wage cut by the union men, |to forgery in the first degree Thurs | has been re-established? eae ane Widow out of’ Det lroo! were starting: on en outing ti ‘perts suspected there was anything | ; The company proposed to cut/day before Judge Austin E. Griffiths} When will they be brought home? WE WERE MISTAKEN |the woods, when they mistook the crooked in the world series, That wages 3c without a contract renewal, |and was sentenced to from one to 15| What steps are being taken, or| aRoUT THE USES OF THE | deputies for dope runners. Anderson | won't mean anything. A lot of the 4 9/11 ts thought the men will accept the| years at Walla Walla, will be taken, to obtain from Ger- AL TECHNICALITY AND {is @ rural mail carrier, A searcR Lexperts still don’t suspect it. cut they are given a year contract| phig will be Fair's ‘third trip to| many the $240,000,000 now overdue] Wr APOLOGIZE FOR THE 7 ra SB thi on that basis, prison, He escaped from Deputy | for support of the American army of] ERROR, of their packs revealed neither druge nor liquor, Henry Ford has been —— Wenn’: ie “ene: ears, thik a onl nye Net f + | Sheriff William Downey two years | occupation? iibadi lionel out a car every 614 seconds in 4 st ago when being brought from the | ——— duly. “He's crazy!” “He'll go some whe nape ee ean i persong could be accommodated, Dar. Haul 24 Cases o County jail to.euperior court for ar e 4 an Th How Would You p |win Meisnest, in charge of ticket s 1) heed dium Thursday night to see |sales, sent men to the car lines to Whisky From Sea ay ygepeberes we Parag oes lho E “The Wayfarer” were turned Twenty-four cases of whisky, | Answer This? Are you good at offering ad. Doughnuts Don’t " Stop Ida’s Speech| “‘K. K. K.” Warning BOONE, Iowa, July 29.—-lIowa is| LOS ANGELES, July 29,—Ke giving Mrs. Ida Crouch Hazlett, New |Klux Klan in California? Between 3,000 and 4,000 per- Clock manufacturers have sent inform people that it was useless to Portlan to see pectacle wr by Downey in Portland. out circulars showing a 10 per cent away, unable the | | walk over to the gates. Many|/dumped into | shallo water by|ago by I y in Por } turnedback disappointed, but de-| booze runners who escaped amid a “ sc of the enormous crowd Piss soe . sidedly r today oe ces” ee en pe 000 within the great area. |clared they would try again tonight. |fusillade of shots Wednesday, have { N Vi t vice? If so, t to 13 and ay soit leader, a decidedly un. Boe a ite, “near, 39 cee At 715, three-quarters of an hour| ‘Tonight no automobiles will be al-|been recovered at Port townsend, | Denby jot to Visi rend, the first letter In Cynthia | (en, jecring crowd tried to obstruct {ceiving two letters directing him te O18 Laty— yefore the performance started, the lowed to park near the rim of the| according to reports reaching the lo- irey’s columns. you figure || ‘ hn R. B Sods 19 cents a Coot “abies seta uate, mopped selling tickets |stadium and it is expected many|cal prohibition office Friday. ‘Two Seattle Next Month’ out 9 erie to be endl bade tabby gine Bay cub ha berate te cabig Bor: adie 2 fs 4 ates % y those nad |more spectat: pan be ace . } prohibition agents and a} Secretary a + || problem: 80, ol |) ; ihopman—"Yes, ma'am, best injat the gates | gee sen aby ban a frat ‘ors can be accommo: eatin Bi s. marshal are in Port|Denby’s projected visit to the Pacific || swer to Miss Grey. The writer of ||try were thrown at her, but she per.| ‘The letters were signed “K. K. K.® “hand aati ‘ t | , Noagan, as-(coust and Seattle next month has || the best letter will receive « five- ||sisted and finished her talk, altho al-| White said he intended to defy the Angeles today. F. ©. | sistant U. S. district attorney, will|been definitely abandoned, Denby leave Saturday to investigate, will stay on the job all summer, Old Lady—"I want to get some|crowds continued to pour off the| It was emphasized that the unre for these boys. They're dreadfully |trect cars and in automobiles long served seat tickets are good for to fpard om thelr socks.” after & o'clock. |} (Purn to Page 7, Column 3) imost drowned out by the shouting|/warning and stay. His wife was Set Pete of the crowd, hystericaL

Other pages from this issue: