The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 30, 1921, Page 1

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On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise The Seattle Star at the Postoffice at Seattle, Wash. under the Act of Congress March 3, 1679, Per Year, by Mail, $5 to $9 "WAYFARER’ NOT TO BE REPEATED HERE NEXT WEEK Paste this on a postcard and mail it to your sweltering friends in the East, Tell them that Se attio’s highest temperature July 29 was 73, Lowest was 34, At noon July 30 it was 6%, Tonight and Sunday fair; moderate westerly winds, Tt EW EDITION TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE FOUND FLOATING ven sreece| OFF FORD PLANT PLENTY OF SEATS LEFT/Nothing Inside; Use of Quick Lime Plan to Continue Pageant) May Explain This, Says Tennant Few Days Abandoned ; — Wrapped in cable, a trunk that may be the Mahoney m: FE pc na-vtha a apr By Pod tery trunk, thought to have contained the body of Mrs. Kate bw? Clean Meseee Web. |Mooers Mahoney, was found in Lake Union at 8 a. m. Sat- ster announced at noon, win at oyna of a st., near the Ford plant. was pic up by Fire Marshall Ford, of the shippin, repeating jboard hulls. It was half floating in 12 feet of pt ontae week, but this was definitely |the lid open, near the county dock. The trunk was empty abandoned Entered as Second Class Matter May 3, 18 20,000 PERISH (an. DAILY WITHOUT FOOD IN RUSSIA Starving Hordes Set Upon Each Other : AMERICANS | Soviet Government Makes Promise to Get Relief VOLUME 23 a STRANGE DUAL LIFE REVEALED! n Keeps Two Wives, Ignorant of '0 FRE Each Other, in Adjoining hth the arrest of John Kolosoff, 40, Russiatt laborer, 0G eld of charge in city jail, one of the strangest stories) nrc, suly 30.—The central soviet y, by the | at atoscow has decided to release all u vealed was made public Satu: heed vt Boris Bogoiavlensky, who caused Kolosoff’s | Americans interned in Russia, in ac- cordance with the American demand almost side by side, in two vine-covered cottages, that they must be freed before fam- Here Ricsoft is alleged to have maintained two fam-| mncd bee wang. n= 5 . le: o have ‘oday, d ee ilies, occasionally going hack} "s MAHONEY TRUNK? Joined the Kia * Seattle statistical sleuth advocates ‘Home Brew a Prikian News Nugget. ’ tar ™ eo wiv. ; Many wives. “in h 1 Be and forth between his two aomes, keeping the women in \ignorance of each other. HOWDY, FOLKS! Have you | Klux Klan yet? | hair for women because he girls waste 6,545,000,000 hours year “doing up” their tresses. advocates clipped Because girls waste 9,657,987,- hours per year powdering that eateitk gyFsee Ht Fy than 1,000 Seattieites to go August 6 to attend Jubilee. Yeeeen! Plenty of and not a little jubilee! cee as ‘amp, | it many a flivver sounds | & skeleton having a conges- | # chill on a tin root. ot of her deceased friends fraternal brethren were moved away.”—Texas John M. Hart of Bremerton divorce here on the grounds | Wife won't bathe his small | asks custody of the child. ¢lects to stay with hi eee Solomon and King David, merry, merry lives, Many, many qualms, gpg age crept over them » Many qualms, ing Salomon Wrote the Proverbs | King David wrote the | ent, Dei} each c a my chickens In i oF what 1 have» | tanta Crus “aia | i ee Moetor at a Lakeside, O., health | Yead a paper on “How 100 Years.” What tor? foe We tre now tenin ee Wl arrive (> Vacation, fee 2 (Aria.) & that our war ime for next | olds Kolosoff was arrested at First ave. and Yesler way, with a steamship ticket In his pocket and a firm desire to see Russia, never to return, When his common-law wife, Ephy Maikivich, pretty Russian maiden, found Kolosoff missing, she called the Russian consul and had Kolosoft picked up. Both women had begun to suspect Kolosoff, so they said, josoft's wife and five chidiren| live in Aberdeen, Miss Maikovich is | now in Seattle, Kolosoff iy said to} have induced her to come to him in eft git reli! San Francisco society people have palatial homes. Both Monticito and Mirimar are practically within the city of Santa Barbara. PHONE THIEF RING SMASHED? Suspects Taken After Run- ning Fight on Street With three men in the city jail on open charges and quantity of 100; and pass keys held as evi- dence against them, police be- lieve an organized gang of pay- phone thieves is safely broken. After a battle in the Elysium hotel | and a running fight for four blocks, | Motoreycle Patrolman George F.| Reynolds Saturday captured A, Mon-| ger, 30, driver, alleged head of the ring of gangsters, at Tenth ave, and Union #t., as Monger, it is alleged, |) was stuffing a large amount of nick els and pass keys Yown a sewer grat ing. Harry Little, 35, a sawyer, and/ Earl Barber, 22, mechanic, were ar- reated ag they entered the Yesler ho-| tel on a confeasion to the police from ‘Monger, after Monger had been jailed, | Monger was caught thru a call) from the telephone company, saying | a pay phone thief was robbing one of | their telephones in the Elysium hotel, | Reynolds answered the call and al legen he caught Monger in the,act of breaking into the phone box, In a desperate fist fight in the hall of the hotel, Monger escaped from Reyn was recaptured by Reynolds four blacks away. A tourth member of the gang, Jack King, is serving a sentence on Mec Neil island for burglary | | RIGA, July 30.-Fighting has begun between starving hordes in Russia and inhabitants of districta un- touched by famine, according to un- official dispatches received here to- day. A party ot bongry refugees was massacred at Ekaterinburg when it tried to rush the town and selze food, one report sald. Twenty tnounand men, women and children are dying daily in the fam- ine, soviet newspapers admit. Scur- vy and other epidemics have brok out. As the long column of ravenous, alt i ing to a copyrighted cabled dispatch re cetved by the Baltimore Sun today jfrom its correspondent, Mark Wat son, at Riga. ° Harding Cruises Up East Coast WASHINGTON, July 30.—Prest. dent Harding was cruising up the Atlantic coast aboard his yacht, the Mayflower, today, on his first ex tended vacation since entering the White House, last March, After reviewing the pageant at Plymouth, Mass, Monday, commem- orating the 200th anniversary of the landing of the Pilgrims, the presi dent will go to the summer lodge of Secretary Weeks, in the White mountains, for a week's rest, riding horseback, golfing and climbing, Mrs. Harding accompanied president on the Mayflower, Where Are You Going Sunday? "Try These: Alki Point in the afternoon, the beach, the boats and the swimmin”™ the water's fine. Fiivver “up to Snoqualmie pass, Take a picnic basket and go across Lake Washington. There are heaps of places to camp. If you like to walk-~and not too far out—try the Magnolia Bluff boulevard to Fort Lawton. Get out the old fishing tackle and try your luck in the White, Green or Cedar river. Or if you like lake fishing, where the family can plenic, try Lakes Sammamish, Wilderness or Sawyer. You'll see some new scenery if you take your flivver, portage across to Harper on the Vashon ferry and drive across country to Hood canal Did you know that there are as good fish in Lake Washington as were ever found on a menu? Listen: GO TO CHURCH! the Battered and worn with the water, this trunk w icked up, half afloat and empty, in Lake Union early Satu: it the Mahoney myste ba ‘aptain photographers. trunk? Detective Chad Ballard says, of Detectives Tennant says, How a Girl Can Land Job in Seattle Store Pink Cheeks?Drug Department! Pretty Hands?— Gloves! Tall, Stylish?—Suits! DON'TS FOR GIRLS SEEKING STORE JOBS Don't act flustered when you make your application. Don't have an extra dose of carmen on your lips. Don't say things that really arn't quite so—about year wide ex- perience and the clerkships you have held. And don't talk about sistant emplo; Marche, expl: the ready-to-wear de poised and nifty, an wouldn't look it manager of The Bon to mre, “all saleswomen in ents must be well- they must be tall. It just right, you know, to have a little girl fitting a dress on a six-foot wo- man. “For the food departments,” she contin- disposition.” Biss von Kettler asked her. ‘Do you have any And Miss Marshall replied, must be practical. That is why we like to have older women in the bargains—we want those who can advise and be sympathetic with the many different types of peo- ple who come to the bargain counters. “A lot depends.” she continued with a laugh, “on the department | managers. Some of them object to red-headed girls; others want all | brunettes and won't have blondes while still others insist on All blondes and no brunettes. There is la difference, they claim, in ability land in the effect on the customer. ¥ one type of girl that none ant,” Miss Marshall contin ‘She is the one who tells all ‘her family and neighborhood trow bles while, asking for employment. | There's no doubt about it, she'd be a trouble maker.” I next talked to J, V. Hopkins, |store superintendent of Macdougall Southwick, “Of course,” he told me, “we have to go a great deal on the girl's general appearance, but we try to use psychology at all times in judging. titude and the initiative:she uses in applying whether or not she is the | type who really wants to sell, You know,”« he confided, “some girls don't care whether the customer buys anything or not—they're just tickled when she’s gone so that they can stand still again. Others are just the rever I asked Miss Hazel Mederaf, who We try to tell by her at-| ued, “we judge differently. The main thing there is a good complexion and a pleasant “What about the bargain counters?” I spetial types for them?” “We certainly do, The cle only Mr, Hopkins’ assistant. don't—-—" “Yes,” I sald, “you do. How about choosing these different types?” “Well,” she begun slowly, “it de pends mostly on the girl's person- ality, If she's the type that insures confidence, and is at thé same time tall and has a certain amount of style, she's very good for the sult ! department. “In such departments we must have people in whom the customer has jconfidence. Older women fit this | position best. “If a girl shows taste in her dress,” |Misy Medcraf continued, “she is lia- ble to be sent to the trimmings, or }fome place where this individual taste of hers ean be of value to the | customer.” At Fraser-Paterson’s I talked with W. N. Phillips, store superintend- jent, | “We pick out our girls,” he de. clared, “just as we might pick out jthings to buy—by the sign on the joutside. _We want personality, we | Want neat appearance, we want girls |with good complexions for the drug |department, we want girls with good looking hands for the glove depart: ment. | “We want girls with good health, good morals and good smiles for every department in | the store, And we want girls, | when. they apply, to tell the truth about the amount of expe- rence they have had. But it is so,” he assured me, returning to | the original topic; “we certainly | do pick salespeople specifically for certain departments.” So from all this wé gather that if was seated near the main entrance one desires to work in suits, one had to the employment office, to tell me! better grow tall and be dignified, or what she knew about choosing dif-|if one desires to sell bargains, it is \ferent types for the different kinds | pest to cultivate the practical streak, [ot work Because the applicant is “sized up” |” “Goodness,” she exclaimed, “1'm! trom the very star* today. Webster emphasized the fact that there were still large blocks of reserved seats for tonight's performance, Tonight will be Army, Navy, Vet erans’ and Picture night. It in ex- pected there will be a large attend- ance of army and navy people. Elaborate preparations have been ‘made for taking both still and mov- ing pictures of the scenes as well an the vast crowd that it is expected will overflow the arena. Gigantic flares such as were used lin the war wil! be sed to {Numinate | jte scenes. These will light up the lerowds like brilliant sunshine and — Photo by Price and Carter, Star staff protuce novel effect that it is be- will be intensely interesting to thore present. Just how moving pictures of such an event are made will be shown, It ts declared that this will be the first attempt to make night pictures City detectives, who rushed vestigation under the person- u direction of Capt. of De- tectives Charles Tennant. NOT IMPROBABLE IT 18 MAHONEY’S Altho the trunk was square and did not have a curved top, as the one for which the detectives have | been long searching is said to have | had, offi were inclined to at- tach considerable significance to Saturday morning's find. “It 4s certainly not improbable,” 4 City Detective Chad Ballard, hat the trunk might be the Ma- honey mystery trunk. We must make further investigation.” The trunk had evidently been in the water several months, according to detectives. ‘That the supposed Mahoney trunk to @ houseboat on Lake Union “The | Where Mahoney is alleged to have taken charge of it, placing it in a It was a good natured yet solemn throng that went thru the gates and saw the great pageant. There was generous applause for the great spec tacles of the performance, yet there was profound silence during the striking scenes of the pageant. Great credit is given the repre sental of foreign countries for ner in which they have ap- peared in the march of nations every evening. It is expected more than 3,000 persons will be in the proces: sion this evening. | Eagles Asked to ‘urn Out Tonight Because of their good showing as @ unit in‘the “March of Nations” at “The Wayfarer” performance Thurs- day night, members of the Frater. nal Order of Eagles have been asked by “The Wayfarer” committee to, make their appearance again to- night. More than 700 members turned out for the part. The secretary of the Eagles urges all members of the club and drill team who turned out for the Thursday night affair, to do so for the Saturday night perform- ance and in the same uniform. Club members are to wear their white uniforms. For further information members are requested to call the F. O. E. secret: "RL CASHIER TRAPS SUSPECT Keen Memory _ for Faces Lands Sailor Behind Bars An alert girl cashier with an eye for faces ix responsible for the downfall of M. ©. McCarthy, 46, sailor, held in city jail on @ charge of shortchanging the girl two weeks ago. McCarthy went into the Chauncey Wright restaurant at Seventh ave, and Pike st, where he ordered a meal. His face looked familiar to the cashier and she finally placed him as the man who had robbed her, she said. She called police and) McCarthy ran, He was caught after a chase of four blocks thru the down-town district, When searched at headquarters, |McCarthy, according to police, |slipped $250 in his hat brim and the officers failed to find it until Pa- trolman J, Hogan happened to think he had not searched McCarthy's hat. He is held for investigation. EY! DIOGENES! WILL A LADY QO? Roy, page Diogenes! The search for an honest man may have proved fruitless in the days switch lantern, but Seattle police have found—AN HONEST WOMAN! She found a dime on the street at Fourth ave, and Pike st, She walked down to police headquarters and give it te the desk sarenant far sufe- keeping, when Diogenes crawled about with a |F row into itement made to The Star, Detectives Charles Ten- f i i i i it : i ! Lil ‘fe fy i rf } ? 7 Bit iy Fr f Hf E F i Z f i i ly have de- body anyway.” Wild confusion reigned at head- quarters when the trunk was report- ed located. A squad of detectives and policemen rushed to the scene in fast motor Cars, The trunk was lying on the county pler at the foot of Yale st., where it ii Ford, after in the lake, The trunk was brought to police headquarters, wheré Captain Ten- nant examined it carefully. It Was then put in storage and will be held pending developments. HISTORY OF MAHONEY MYSTERY The police made public the mys- terious disappearance of Mrs. Kate Moores-Mahoney, 72, on Tuesday morning, May 25, when her husband, James E. Mahoney, 37, ex-convict bridegroom, was arrested for an al- leged forgery of a note of authority to enter her safety deposit box at William D. Perkins & Co., Alaska building. Investigation by the police led the them to believe that Mahoney had murdered his aged bride of a few |months, packed her body into a |trunk and thrown it into Lake Union, Mahoney was booked at the po- lice station on an open charge with a set bail of $10,000 made by Justice of the Peace Dutton and has been held in the jail ever since, a few weeks ago being transferred from the city jail to the county jail, The police began dragging the bottom of Lake Union on Tuesday morning of May 25, and have been operating divers and dragging irons (Turn to Page 2, Column 4) ie had found it floating Mullicane Girl Must Face Jury LOS ANGELES, July 30,— The case of rie Mullicane continued to- day. Despite a dramatic plea by the prosecution late yesterday to have the court dismiss the murder charge against the girl, who is accused of strangling her new-born babe with a handkerchief, Superior Judge ouser ruled that the case must go to the jury for decision, had been hauled by Fire Marshal | from | save for some rubbish in the bottom. to the scene, conducted an in- 100,000 VIEW MERCHANT SHOW | Buyers’ Week, ( Closing To- day, Breaks All Records the best attendance the Seattle Sales Managers’ associa. miles. Many merchants have begun to claim the refund, thus proving that business was good from every angle. There were guests from thousands of miles away. Ben J, Akerstein and Mr. and Mrs, G. J. Akerstein ‘were there from Harbin, China. BE. | Bjorkland brought Mrs. Bjorkland Coeur d'Alene, Idaho, H. J. Christoffers, of the U. 8S. fisheries department, but handling general merchandise in the Pribilof islands, is another. California, British Ce lumbia and Montana are represented, General Chairman Paul T. Ken nedy is today a much and favorably discussed man because of the suc cess of the exposition. He gives the credit to his committee, Yesterday afternoon the active staff of the industrial bureau of the Chamber of Commerce ,with Vice hairman Carl E. Croson, J. H. Car+ ter, W. M. Campbell, C. L. Cragin, R. F. Weeks and A. M. Young, of the executive committee, visited the terminal, and were loud in their ap- preciation. Miss Lorena Trickey Is Champion Rider CHEYENNE, Wyo. July 30.— {Miss Lorena Trickey, Pendleton, \Ore,, today retained her title as the world’s champion weman rider fol- lowing her sensational riding in the wild horse relay race at the frontier days celebration which ended here last night. Spokane Editor Is Threatened by Klan SPOKANE, July 30.—A_ letter signed Ku-Klux-Klan, threatening ‘tar and feathers, was received today by the editor of the Spokane Press, | following publication of an editorial denouncing’ the organization, which is said to have organized a Spokane Jocal with 100 members. JUST SO, FRIEND Frank Crosby, jr., deputy clerk of | the district court, was looking for @ bottle of champagne Saturday, vant to christen my new sail- Erio herself will be spared the or-| oat" said Frank deal of testifying on the witness {stand unless unforeseen circum: A BOR stances develop, her attorneys an. Capture of the tunny fish affords nounced at the opening of today's an important means of livelihood im court session, the Mediterrancan area,

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