The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 8, 1921, Page 1

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“There is a Paste this on 9 postcard and mail it to your swelt in the attie’s gust 1 OLUM Bast higt was mt 7. At noon August § it night and Tuesday, erally cloudy; westerly winds. ‘ing friends Teli them that Se tomperatu Aw Lowest was 56. as 70, gen- moderate Entered as Second Class Matter May 3, 1899, at the Postoffice at Seattle. went sugariess and beefless the war, but now if we be Hart-less! Fa. womah finds nervy thru her husband's oT Poe pock- Routs him for infringement of | al | couple get married in pool, Yeu, and they'll) the rest of their married life | Gee Gee, the Prairie Vamp, that nobody ever got famous Brew is in favor of pardon) arose from the mob. Hagen, convicted on A good bootlegger to any community. If thi booze is an be take another drink of i on us! iy a Qeattle jitney has re to its old stand in the used emporium. . _ The to ride to the count gauge mule now who motors up . TF BEATS THE DICKENS in who aie has a P bests the deuce how the folks will weep ite Im your coffin fast aslcep, Hsing of your moodness in co Tlvarso0 preaches snd wins ant| KILLER JEERS JUDGE logize, queer how the public untlews laud you up to the vaulted skies, the undertaker biuft squirted you full of emb when you walk on the earth, I are eothing more than « plodder/and Jered the fainted or dropped down there. has called your | aiming stute,|f9ur children ewear, any praise that the public sald only when you're a lifeless # at the heartless public will att. —We Suspect ‘Gene Ski r market n there higt on smiles th These are the zestful days! the days when one feel meval urge! Who would iting in the #hade to the gi of gardening, of worki soil? Who would loaf e- not in value is on These ia the prefer jorious ng in} when | e js all nature calling to the b ike ahead? Who? of us! EPITAPH All of ua, kid; , stranger, stop, reflect and pon. der, John was here, ndér, yor n E. Ellicott says a man why the bedvug was ev ‘Ané that is just what a hairleas dog eee inks about F Are you getting acquainted oat a ur ned fieighbors? Well, yes, their in to @ musical last might. . he’s now vited up can't r cre a flea with our hey still marry in haste in this Bs rth piry, but they Mg whole jot of leisure about r 4 dither can always find out did when he stayed out m, She lets him tell Be he did ard then she kno things he was afraid ie to tion Mor Sale Ing milk % MUST BE BULL three tons of hay ickens id several stoves Wichita Falls (la, Times. a don't seem to use epent- | what until the men A full blooded cow, giv. lot of From LONDON lOT 's5 000,000 Worth of | Property Is De- stroyed Whe n| | ‘6,000 Fight | Family Is Destitute Neighbors Gather Up Kid- dies, Dad and Mother; Make Appeal for. ‘er ee NEEDED AT “ONCE Mra. A © erin They Mr. and Plokering and thelr ¢ L. child need baby They n ‘en are) clothes. | ed cash | destitute. They food Now—immoediately—-today! Burned days ago, fon worldly possessions lost, | out four all 8 was Picker. ing warmth | 8h | table, STOCKHOLM, Aug. §-—Johann! ‘ordquist was sentenced to death to ay for the murder of his wife and When sentence was Nordquist spat at the jury judge as a “kaiser." imposed me But r hed, the ister, out | ring leaped jdren trunk out from safe, bed, and managed of the house and the fire water was on hose did little fends was ct they are being cared for temporarily in LONDON, Aug §-One of the|‘M® homes of neighbors |most serious unemployment ricts of |, C“4 in garments dragged trom |the year resulted in wholesale fights | UM&Y attics and old clothes bags, band the destruction ‘of $5,000,000 without Money and with no steady worth of property here today. we! Fd Sow ge tae hed.-thia More than 6,000 unempjoyed men!” Last ‘Thursday might the Prkve engaged in the riot. [ings were more than usually happy More than 200 mounted policemen |The children were in bed. Celia, 12; fought the moo back. Archie, 10, and James, were ‘The demonstration occurred at The | reaming joyfully of the morrow, | Gilkstein lumber yard, the largest in| When daddy intended tq soll the} England, where the 6,000 men ap-| house and they could all go to the} Dlied for 59 vacancies. jcountry, where Mr. Pickering, they Thousands of applicants for the 60) i get well again Joba were waiting at the gates long | ther, don't you stay up before they were opened. ‘The 50 Pickering had tenderly ad. | successful men were picked quickly | M0nished his wife as he prepared to jand the others were shut out. retire, Murmurs of disgust and protest! “I won't,” she replied; “but I want Small potice! to look around once more and see | forces were unable to break up the | ‘M4! everything js all right. Things gathering, which became louder, and| ust be spick and span when the | began. shoving back and forth jman comes to close the deal tomor Smail fights started in the crowds | TOW ' and the mobs’ anger rose. Pickering went to be | os Mrs, Pickering took an olled rag Janda carefully put a few ff hing Boy Confesses He |touches on the woodwork that she had scrubbed hard that day. Tired | Murdered Mother sn worn out, and none too well at BOONEVILLE, Ind. Aug. best, she sat down at the dining William Deffendoll, 17, confessed to-|Toom table for a few moments jday to murdering bis widowed| “Fire! It's at the Pickerings! mother, Laura Deffendoll, 80 years| Mrs. I. M. Record, 9697 54th ave jold, officiais claimed. The woman's |§.. caught the cry from her children | | body found decapitated in a and rushed out into the night air to} woods near the Deffendoll home at | #0und the alarm. | Heilman, some time ago, two weeks It was 13:30 ™. |after she had disappeared. j At the same moment Mrs was awakened by the looked up from tHe dining room where she had fallen asleep, | and saw the curtains on fire. She pulled them down and tried to stamp them out, but failed, and turned to room where the children slept. "I want to sleeep! Let Ko ) back? the boys cr the |mother got them and SMACK! SIX MONTHS om" »'svsarenn was» MADRID, Aug. 8.—One of King into the street Alfonso’s close discov mers ered kissing Qu Victoria jd. | Seeing rs ¢ in-waitin been banished nonth 4 from court for six months Yeighbors in ont But and the truck came only balf force | PLAGUE ON INCREASE good | HONGKONG, China, Aug Suddenly Mra. Pickering shriek Subonic plague is on the incre and ran into the blazing house this district. American port officials| “Winnifred screamed ave been warned to watch closely | And little Wi rold baby of for suspects. {Mra. Pickering’s sister, Mrs. nm Jothy Connoly, of the Strathmore of no apartments, was hauled from a fiery death in the nick of‘time, She had been completely forgotten in the ex {citement, Mrs. I r was keep ling the baby for ok The home burned to the « Toodles, the family dog, locked basement, burned with Nothing wa. ed ne in HOQUIAM.—Mud minnows, food value but rare west of Miss lissippi, found by County Game War | den Jack Wislow ‘ und 1 the | it THE ONLY LIMIT TO ALES 18 ANSHIP any ud cashed tly value The day before keri a check for $1 curren This flames the f few k receiving mo: SAL S, xt pleces of day the eblidren The orgie it ship pep Reports that in some stores have in busine the last ag manship volume of your busi depends upon you found a and Mrs. P of Charle "The ct today nd your and energy Mr to the ith a othe 4 on your salesman nd > kering were taken advertiding—your hom # Olson, 9637 n were taken show some by r neighbors, whe them be shown this Ca with clot of life are pennile them indefinitely y d right now & Monda "The b rest y ome an 6 year months stores increase nding The they they corres r over of were developed advertised The Classified columns of The highly profitable the moderate-sized which to increase sales effect If you believe warding fighters, Main 0600. But the cannot keep “What cash,” mother and fresh air if They can make enough cash to th the next few week $2 bill to start it.” So The sive ne 4 and must he | if Ison wale advertising Star offer mediums for business its the them And here want the 1921 phone is us sia for the Pickering jon their feet again Address the Destitute ‘Star, and he will do the res family m Kiditor, The- t | wemoe | men | was intoxicated jtime the police prowler car arrived | other | had not My ‘SE ATTLI w ASH., : MON ‘Prisoner Beaten or} Shot by Copper; Scalp Badly Cut; Brother Arrested Jobn Bauer, a building con- tractor, feeelved treatment at the city hoxpiial this morning to close a wound In tis head, the re- sult of an alloged brutal attack by « policeman, Rauer and his brother, Arthur, a laborer, were arrested at 220 a. m., at Fourth ave. and Pike at, where | the alleged brutality occurred. | The b * are charged with dis orderly cc t Accordin to an eye witness, R A. Thompson, a salesman from Ya-| the time, ot the! head He} helpless. | nduc near at one who was | the prisoners. policeman struck The pr t the patrol bor. oner's crashed again fell to the Both prisoners were taken to the station in a prowler car, which had} during the alleged beating,| ssnerts Thompson. “I, with others in my car, was driving past at about 2:20 o'clock when we heard several shots fired,” Thompson said. “We drove down to Third and Pike where two police 2 arrested a man who evi dently was intoxicated. We follow: ed them to the patrol box where} two other off were standing with another man, This man, At about the samp} then pavement hi cers also, | at the box SAW SUCH BRUTALITY What did you do with it—drop one of the officers demanded of the men,” Thompson de Then one of the men, try to suppe himself on the call assaulted by of the the officer saying, ‘You're drunk now as you were a ity’ of one clares. ng box, was ore, one The again temple head Thomt man the to be blood to the was kne ked up box, a eriou: gash t in from pavement,” runnin on attempt officers—there thereto interfere uch brutality. unwarranted,” the police booking the Bauers were arrested by Patrolman H. W. Kemper. “At no time, while I was Thomps said, “did either prisoners sass or become the officers.” INJUR MAN OUT ON BAIL John Bauer was made were by the six of} never | seemed them aw 1 It wholly According officer, there," of the] nasty with on GETS n the injured man,| eased on $26 bail. He Main st. His brother, held were walking stopped at Arthur into affair other r pein Pike # r when down the co! declared, an argument We both continued coman we got over struck to fi at ht We f am each and when a came drinking. wanted to The him. up. The of brother hot r arrest us. | officer fired | John fell to believe he was jous and that he waa hit of the shots. We both we to the box were several other Holton, attended not ran, at pavement the uncon by on. taken there where | officer city hospital John I whether bullet havitig | | atrol s. WwW clan who he did an's wound a knife, the ver, know was from or| injuring object grazed the top of the head. ral stitehes were uved to sew wound, up the | respectable On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise p The Seattle Star Wash, under the Act of Congress March 3, 1879, Per Year, by Mall, $5 to $9 LATE EDITION DAY, AU IGUST 8 8, , 192. Girl Heads Missouri Fete 5,000 in State’s Pageant Miss Frances Kelly, of Sedalia, Mo., who will takeva stellar | part in the “Pageant of Missouri,” during the Missouri Cen-| Bay coast guard tennial exposition. scene of the wreck, and is the dent Harding, Gen, Pershing, wder, Rear Admiral Coontz nd many other prominent officials have been invited to witness the spectacle. August 9 has been. designated as/| Deseendants’ day,” when all de. scendants of Missouri governors will be guests of honor, and August 10 as Missouri day,” with M from vent » SEDALIA, Mo, Aug, 6.—The Mis sourt Centennial exposition, in cele-| bration of the “Show Me" girl's 100th birthday, is in full blast this month. The principal event of the two weeks’ fete is the “Pageant of Mix i.” It presents every phase of state's history In 15 episodes and ends with a symbolical fes resenting the Missouri of the future A 600-foot stage b the occasion, and chestra furnishes mu tory is enacted, Five sons are taking part ation ss SAILOR SLUGS THINK KIDNAPED WOMAN HERE) PRIEST IS DEAD Hat Only Clue to Identity al Father Heslin Murdered by Assailant Abductors, Theory Entering her soom while she FRANCISCO, Aug was preparing to retire, a sailor kian ouleet pag pov aby Wag still missing today unday night, and dealt blow with a blackjack, ing her unconscic steepy did not for several seconds blow in the grasped the/ sail held by polie few momen bending 0} her. and appr only being sou # beén built for gh ot creas has t authorized the coin Mi centennial h will placed in on an ¢ pte as the his thousand per © or at the expom' 8 of and SAN |Father Healin. ped }Colma |the his ice, as well ax and the p personal Py | friends members of his two |flocks, one at Colma and the other los con fol strug hat, |found When| ‘The later, | them her: | which they are had man | for his |the kidnapers to the} The police, however, fear that the with |ioved father has been spirited away The |by his abductors to some lonely spot N. Pit-|and killed and his body disposed attended |of in such a manner that it will the as-|never be found re] ‘The abductors, they came frightened at the search and efforts to them, and feared either to obtain the original $6, |which they demanded the priest to return clues: thelr identity | ments, The search for day largely resolved for an uam at Turlock, his former parish, have and n up hope that he will ever be alive, of today Colma. ot 000 citizens Italians, mos’ $ a reward a were revive racket when ¢hey hat ix th identity, lation navy inside the hat Mrs. Steepy was physician following and her condition Monday how it is with a! said the day: clerk ut the hotel, explaining the assault You can't stop him.” ‘This fellow passed Mr room Sunday night and decided to go in, He wouldn't listen when she tried to make it plain that she was a married woman The slugging followed. 1 don't believe she was hurt seriously, rained roomers trying heard the ¢ They the ached, clue marked stamp is F, offering as the return and capture of W is man’s the re name lash by a sault was be. eapread believe wid apprehend attempt 0 ransom to allow and give and move drunken s to or Steepy's alive to Father Heslin itself into rked, secret a urians | all over the United States as | | to | TWO Cc NTS IN SEATTLE RAZE FOR SPEED WRECKS STEAMER! 7 Dead, 36 Missing, 157 Safe as Alaska Hits Rock, Sinks BREEN CREW BUNGLES WORK OF RESCUE POLICE ATTACK: LINER RUNS TOO CLOSE TO COAST IN A HEAVY FOG Occupants of Lifeboats Dashed Into Sea, Survivors Say; Captain Goes Down With His Ship BY MORRIS D. TRACY (United Press Staff Correspondent) EUREKA, Cal., Aug. 8.—The moaning of the fog horns and the mournful tolling of the bell buoys sounded a requiem for the sunken steamer Alaska = —- score or more whose bodies are still un- ‘oun The day, with the sun still hidden by the same thick, treacherous fog which caused the disaster, passed dis- mally on the shores of Point Mendocino. Wreck guards and patrols paced the shore line, hop- ing to find bodies of the victims who are listed un the head of “Missing,” but who, in the hearts of be ge Eureka seafaring fol ‘s, are counted among the d Breakers thundered on the rocks as if to exult at the ruin they had wrought. Five miles off shore the tip of a mast pricked thru the oa : and driftwood, which covers the surface of the sea. | It was all that could be|* the bar of the Columbia ava of the once sturdy| 4 the names of these were not | seen 5 corded. steamer. By tonight probably idl. wn the paket even this landmark will be) ...anation of the disaster. rs gone, ‘The Alaska’s navigators lost their The Alaska is already | bearings in the heavy fog. ; breaking up, according to! True to the traditions of the sea, Capt. Ellison of the Humboldt (Turn to Page 7, Column 2) tation, who The Known Dead just returned from the EUREKA, Cal, Aug. SAC an early hour this morning nine of the list of 17 known dead in the Alaska disaster had fied. They are: Charles Dehne, chief aan steward, | been on) jhas last person who has the spot. A heavy serum of oil covers the surface, and on it is floating every-| | where countless bits of driftwood, all |broken up into small pieces—-a sign | that tells old mariners that the ship is surely breaking up. | Mixed in the flotsam are bits of . sacks of four, boxes, trunks and handb All of them rise apd fall idly, methodically, in the slow swells. SEEK LOVED ONES ON MARBLE SLABS IN EUREKA MORGUE sing crowds of elatives of the dead who are arriving by automobile and train. today surged about the marble slabs in the little Humboldt coun. |] ty morgue where the 17 oil-soaked victims of the ill-fated ship Alas ka lie artrending Ralph Mockett, Red Cliff, Colo, wee Johnston, Brooklyn, | wee Hutchinson, San Fran ciseo. Frank Comm, Vancouver, B. C, C, Pickell, Los Angeles. —— Kunazay residence unknown, The Missing EUREKA, Cal, Aug, 8&— Those now reported missing in the Alaska sinking included, Alma Averill, address unknown, George W. Bushwell, Portland, Ore, K. F, Bonnewell, Portiand, Ore. Carl Berch, San Francisco, | Ida Carlson, Tacoma. orge Edwards, Portland, Francis Eckstrom, Tacoma, John Fitzgerald, Portland, George Glenn, address known. E. Ferngold, San Francisco, ——tiustan, address unknown. | John Jakway (or Jokivoy) Oak- | land, Cal. W. L. Johnson and wife, Port- | land. Kan, Walla Walla, | \ Minnie Wash. +C, F, Menke, Portland, Gre. Mrs, A. Northrup, address un- | known, J. MH. Oliver and wife, address | unknown, hourly es took place and over a: n as friends and relatives of the missing tried, often in vain, to pick their lo ones from the line of blackened, swollen corpses Relief was mingled with agowy g! when failure to identify one of those on the slabs meant only thea the uncertainty must go on an’ that the search must continue not but among the sur- bleak shore 40 unceasing ontinue in the morgue that wher mi or ” thi ng viv miles arch for the away ‘The complete passenger lst of the Alaska may never be known, accord: ing to Frank Schaeffer, manager of the San Francisco and Portland | Steamship company, who is working telegraph from Alameda, Cal., ‘in checking up the number of dead. The only chance of havihg an of. ficial list of the exact number and s of those aboard the AF in the hope that the miss of the vessel be found hi in his} Miss B, Vige, Portland. Mrs, BK. G. White, Portland. Miss V, Wald Portland. H Giten, Poriland Portland, x PAs Portland, Charles Magnison, address um known, Ww. known, taken aboard at Astoria, jthe nal aska 1 ling pur a alive with record ly H has the official sail- | vessel when it left number of passen- The Jing list ' Portland, gers were company of the but Erickson, address un-

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