The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 6, 1921, Page 1

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« 41,727 Fere08- Neen nn nnnnnnnnnennennnnee ? Planalety The Sar it Dak Eheled Seales Broil PPP PPP PPP LDP PL PLL PPP PPP APP PPP PPP PRP DOCTOR AIDS ROY GARDNER! y * WEATHER Tonight and Fi ate nort Temperature Last 44 Hours Maximum, 55. viday, fair; moder casterly winds Minimu Entered as Second Class Ma On the Issue of Antericanism There Can Be No Compromise The seattle Star er May 3, 1899, at the Postoffice at Seattle, Wash. under the Act of Congress March 3, 1879. Per Year, by Mail, $5 EDIT APPA PLP PLL LPL LLL PPP PDP PPP P PPP PPP HOME) # ION ,W /ASH., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1921. { bs a series day in the history of America! . With almost every member of the/ Yanks and the Giants writing their impressions of the games, it ts diffi eult for the poor devtis to find time te run out to the Polo Grounds in| the afternoon. | . If the Giants can't use the bat any better than they use the pen, the/ Beavers could lick ‘em eee Seattle police arrest man by name of Dave Trotsky for violation of the | traffic laws. Dave must have been trot-skling too = Little Willie, ruffasell | Bhoved his sister down the sell, And his mother, drawing water, Baid, “It's hard to raise @ daughter.” ove Some men kiss their wives; others don't shave. cee JOSH WISE SAYS takes more than 2 clove te th’ breath uv nd Seattle citizens. who plan to raise | & $750,000 community chest, are praying that it won't be @ hope chest. as . LiY Gee Gee, th’ Prairie Vamp, ger: Why not go bare kneed? Don't we have knee caps? j . ere is no denying that some. of is Seattle moonshine would make Weal snakebite medicine—if it could | be applied to the ke in gime. . UR SPECIAL SALESMANSHIP | COURSE | Suggestion is a wonderful ald In| salesmanship. The man who comes | to buy barbed wire to build him- ff a fence may have a grouch| painst his neighbor. Try selling him | shotgun. | eee Onehalt of Seattle does not | know where the other half gets | its likker. | | | | } 4 | } see San Francisco man, by the | name of Roy Gardner, ets ' divorce. That's two of ‘em at liberty. Grover Cleveland Pergdoll, draft dodger, is writing a book. Trying to| get under cover again, Grover? . . A Zion City woman has been | arrested because she wore a dress that showed her neck. The authorities at Zion must be very observing. The Second ave. boys never notice a woman's neck, ee Ore ea i FIXED The government announces grimly that it will fix the price of bacon It has already been | fixed by expert fixers. What we want is to have it unfixed. 1 | é 7 Py Man testified in the diovrce court here that he hit his wife with a chair and she turned the tables on him. McCormick, daughter of John Rockefeller, is to start a school of psychology | in Chicago. She'll have lots of | pupils if she can teach ’em the psychological trick by which her | dad made a billion dollars. oe Mrs. A 0? CONVERSATION for Octobe: | “Pretty warm 0 nted the man from Puget ‘Sound, proudly “This wouldn't be considered warm in California,” said the Native Son from Los Angeles. 1 reckon not,” returned the gentleman from Puget Sound, “and it wouldn't be considered very warm in hell, eithe WINDOW JUMP | chase. INTRODUCING “MAIN STREET NOVEL that has set the whole nation talking \ begins i in The Star October 12. Hundreds of thousands of copies of the story are being sold. _Tt has aroused debate thruout the United States because Sinclair Lewis, author of the story, says that “Main Street” of Gopher Prairie is a continuation of Main Street everywhere. It is a narrative of a small town and of the effects of a woman to reform it. The aspirations of the inhabitants; their jealousie their conceits and their deceits; their loves, their hate: their bigness; their smallness—all are most entertainingly chronicled in— “MAIN STREET” It starts in The Star Wednesday, October 12. Do not miss an installment of this great novel. SAYS HE SAW BABY BEATEN BY WOMAN! Alleged Witness of Murderous Act! Describes Attack Te aero len | wend, maintaining on absolutely Marie Wilson, 8 months old, te | stoic sxpresston, She didn't even 16 been beaten to | %*M Interested in the proceedings: pnspth ~ smother. Mra, |2h8,appeared to be bored by the death joster oy whole thing. Ivey Osborne, was graphically Tight-lipped and defiant, Mra. Os Figen = Bp sapere d aps borne went on the stand and told ‘5 session coroner’ the jury the detailed story of her quest. which ts being held over | version of the death of the baby the baby’s body. | Thru a@ grilling cros»examination n F. Storms, 4037 Seventh | by Deputy Prosecutor D. C. Bartling, ave. N. E., the etar witness for the she maintained her composure state, stood before the jury and|stuck to her story that all of the showed them exactly how he had child's injuries were due to accident seen the child mistreated on the The principal injury, @ severe night of Tuesday, September 27, blow on the head, she declared, had when he rowed past the Osbornes’ been inflicted when her husband. | boathouse, on Lake Union. after bathing the child, had tripped Rising from his chair, he ius over a dog and fallen against a door. the way in which Mrs. Other injuries she attributed to the alleged to have (fact that her dog had stepped on/ |the baby during an automobile trip. She testified that on Wednenday, September 27, when the baby first | | became violently ill, she had rubbed | the child and that “wherever my | |hands touched, they left a dent that | |turned brown.” Storm had explained that he was! Homer Osborne, the woman's hus rowing with his father, between §| hand, preceded her on the stand. b and 8:15/o'clock, on the evening of | described the manner in which the the tragedy, when he observed the! pany was injured while being taken | woman's action thru a small, high from the bath room. | window in the boathouse. ‘Testimony in the case wax ‘ieee HELD UP BABY; HIT shortly after noon and the jury be | IT REPEATEDLY NM considering the evidence behind | “[ saw a woman holding up ababy closed doors. | and striking it repeatedly,” he test!-| ‘That the baby's body bore numer. fied. “Then she held the baby aloft ous old bruises as well new one® | and flung is away from her. I be-| was brought out in the testimony of | came aroused and told my father to} Dr. C. W. Davis, 4147 Brooklyn ave., swing around so that I could neo! jto whom Mrs, Osborne’s husband, what took place next. Just then @ Homer G. Osborne, carried the child | man stepped to the window and|/on the morning of September 28, the snapped down the blind, and I saw day after the alleged beating. ) no more | “It looked to me,” the doctor said, “] told my mother about it and de. bong if somebody had stepped on the cided to inform the authorities, | child.” | which I did next morning.” | Dr, Davis said that Osborne had Mrs. Osborne sat thru this testi (Turn to Page’ 1 Colima 2) {Gardner, * Mr. Man, do you and you MAY BE FATAL Tavern Man Critically Hurt|| matters? : Escaping From Raiders || Have you any idea what Leaping from s second-story window when deputy sheriffs raided the Black Cat Tavern, on the Everett road, early Thursday morning, Ollie T. Kelley, mana- ger of the tavern, plunged over a high embankment and received injuries {hat may prove fatal. | Deputies Joe Hill and Harl Ramadge went to the tavern to search for booze. When they’ entered, Kelley heard them mounting the stairs to his room, He hastily rained the win dow and leaped. The two officers heard the noise of his fall and gave Kelley Qicked himself up and ran. He stumbled and fell, rolling to) the bottom of the embankment He was found to have sustained a fracture of the skull, “a broken jaw and nose, and severe lacerations on the body, Kelley was taken to city hospital, where hig condition Is sert- ous and his recovery doubtful. A quantity of booze was seized in the store room of the tavern. No charge will be made against Kelley until the result of his injuries ts de- | termined, This applies whether you thentic studies on the family should be divided to the best the coupon below. Washington Bureau of The Seattle 1400 N. Y. Ave., Street and Number.... City ‘or Town...... State .... |story which the Los Angeles Record | will print today | HE DISAPPEARS business basis, or do you just “fight it out” over money ought to go for rent, food, clothing, amusements, savings? Or do you just guess about it? Do you know that no matter what your family income may be, there is an economical method of apportioning your expenditures so that you can make some savings || and spend to the best advantage? | If you want a pamphlet showing how YOUR income Washington, I want the pamphlet on KEEPING A FAMILY BUDG close 2 cents in stamps for postage. ANDIT OUNDS Letter to Friend in| Los Angeles Says Fugitive Is in This! State LOS ANGELES, Oct. 6 andit of bandits turned up again as dramatically he disappeared under prison guard fire, according to a copyrighted oy an Gardner recently spent a night} with ® sympathetic doctor, who dressed his wounds, packed a junc! for him and watched him disap. pear, to rum for a hiding place some. where near Newport, Wash. accord ing to the story. DOCTOR'S LETTER TELLS OF GARDNER The Record claims possession of @ letter written by a Newport doctor, Gardner's protector, to « physician now wintering in Los Angeles, who tn also a friepd of Gardner. ‘The Newport physician ts called “Dr. Leyden,” altho the Los Angeles paper admits this to be but a college nickname. An effort is being _made to protect hin identity for fear be may be prosecuted for alding a crim: | inal “That poor, unfortunate lad Gard- ner, whose case has Interested us so long and #o deeply, aroused our xympathies, appeared at our back door, out of nowhere, Inte Saturday night.” the letter ts quoted “He was suffering from lack of food. Hin resistance was gone from hunger and malnutrition. He had a couple of superficial gunshot wounds, healing unclean WOUNDS DRESSED; “J dressed the wounds. The wife fea him and put him up’a box of| aneh We outfitted him with some | clothes and he slept on a bunk tn} the garage until daylight and then | disappeared.” The letter goes into Intimate de tail in describing Gardner's condi | tion ‘Emperor of Japan Is Losing Memory} TOKYO, Oct 6—The imperial household issued @ bulletin today declaring the condition of the em peror’s health was unfavorable, Tt sald he was experiencing difficulty in walking and talking and was low ink his memory and power of con centration “The emperor's condition in gen erally worse,” the bulletin said. “He bas entirely lost his former health jand energy 3 China has ‘contracted for $1,500, 000 worth of radio telephone apps ratus of 45-mile radius j The Family Pocket Book) r wife run your home on a || proportion of your earnings { are single or married, and whether your family is big or little. The Star’s Washington Bureau has collected some au- budget. advantage, fill out and mail Star, Dp. © ', and | | hospital, ‘cost us close to $2,500,000," Tindall | bants.”” | the city engineer to submit figures as “TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE _ MAHONEY’S SISTER Mrs. Dolores Johnson, siater of the condemned murderer, James Ej Mahoney, as appeared today when photo- graphed at the police station, fi ing her arrest yesterday afternoon on two warrants charging forgery and grand lar- ceny.—Photo by Price & Carter, Star staff photographers, es OPPOSITION FRESH CLUE TO SKAGIT DEVELOPS! Contracts on. Tunnel Con- struction Ordered Held Up That construction of the city’s big hydro-electric project on the Skagit will be reconsidered, at least in part, was indicated ‘Thursday when the council utili- ties committee acopted a resolu- tion ontering the board of public works to withhold the awarding of contracts on the $2,000,000 tunnel at Gorge creek. Councilman Philip Tindall, sponsor of the resolution, charged that the city engineers were going ahead on far more elaborate plans than wére contemplated by the council or by the public “The propored tunnel would be 21% feet in diameter,” Tindal) said. ‘A far smaller tunnel could take care of all the water impounded behind the orlb dam at Gorge creek. Construction of the $2,000,000 tun- nel would place us in a position where we would have to go ahead with the masonry dam at Gorge creek and with the Ruby creek project.” Councilman Lou Cohen, who voted Against the Skagit development plan, said the Stone-Webster estimate on the entire project sight years ago was | $48,000,000, “The tunnel at Gorge creek will DEATH CASE Tennant Holds Secret Said to Be of Vital Import to State “Dolly” Johnson had her pic- ture taken for the police gal lery, Thursday, and was taken to the county jail, and Jim Ma- honey, on the eve of going to the gallows, began preparations “my writing the history of his life, L D, Atkinson, arrested jointly Malcolm | morning, appeared at Prosecutor Dougias’ office Thursday puffing a fat cij Atkinson was closeted for some time with Douglas, then waited in conferred with Captain of tives Tennant and ‘Deputy ov T. H. Patterson. Tennant emerged from the con ference and said there was nothing new. A moment later, Douglas an nounced that Tennant had discov #red something which he could not disclose of vital importance to the] State's case against Mrs, Johnson It was learned Thursday that Ma. honey has asked Sheriff Matt Star wich that a desk be placed in his cell in “murderer's row.” “He told me," sald Starwich, | “that he wanted write the his- tory of his life, guess I'll give him the desk.” “I hope Capt. Tennant will live to rue the day for all of this,” Mrs, Johnson remarked Thursday, when she was waiting to have her picture taken, At first she demurred at for the camera, “I don’t know whether I have my picture taken or not,” she said. “I have been convicted of no crime and I am not a criminal.” Questioned as to her age, Mrs. Johnson refused to answer. She was (Turn to Page 7, Coluinn 4) to asserted. “This may. place such a us burden on the Skagit ag will prevent its being placed on a sound financial The committée resolution orders to what size of a tunnel will best utt- | lize the power at the Gorge creek | crib dam, and asks him) why tt would | not be in the interests of economy to dig the smallest sized tywenel at Gorge creek which will use ‘the aver age flow of water of the Skagit river. WOMAN FALLS; BREAKS BACK Mrs, Anna Mathis, 30, housemaid, | fell from a third-story window in the | Fifth Avenue hotel, 1107 Fifth ave., at 11:16 a. m, Thursday, Mrs. Mathis was washing windows on the third floor, sitting on the sill outside the window, when she lost her balance and fell to. the street. She was taken to Seattle General | where she was found to be} suffering from a broken back and! several broken bones-in her foot. posing VERY good and suc- cessful thing must begin with.a plan. Lay your plans for a cam- paign of advertising thru The Star Classified Ads, They will enhance your capital. IN MAHONEY with Mrs. Johnson late Wednesday, | an outer office while the prosecutor | Detec:, Prosecut-| should | 40,000 FANS SEE YANKEES WALL GIANTS, 3 T Champ Up Stride and Take Second G Game; Hoyt Is Brilliant Star of Day POLO GROUNDS, NEW YORK, ( Oct. 6.—Pitched |state of helplessness, the New York Giants were b for the second time and pushed farther away from the b ball crown when they went down before the Yanks here ¢ afternoon, 3 to 0. Close to 40,000 fans saw the victor and the vietim i |thru a brilliant game in which the battling Yanks | the great game that gave them the first battle of the series yesterday. | Waite Hoyt, the boy veteran from Brooklyn, lout of the Giant bludgeons. the hard-hitting National champions to two hits, one # little drive that dropped between the great Bahe Ruth and Peck. He held less game and they showed symp- toms of being whipped from the first all the dash and spirit that marked their drive for the pennant in the National league race seemed to have evaporated, Art Nehf, the star southpaw of the McGraw troupe, helped to pull [game and bring down upon the Giants the second bucket of white- | wash In two days, In the fourth in- ning Ward singled and reached sec- ond when Nebf threw ally's | grounder wild to second pile for a | force. | The Giant | by his slip and walked Schang. Hoyt pushed the first run over with an/ infield out. Frank Friseh, the Giant hero of the cams, was the first player to appear | at the club house. Harry Harper, the \only southpaw member of the Yankee pitching staff, was the first one of the Huggins clan to arrive. While the band blared “The Yankees Are Coming,” the American | league champions came thru the big right field gate at 12:35. | The Yanks then took the field for | batting practice. |cowboy, started serving them up to | the plate. Elmer Miller hit the first ball he pitched into the left field bleachers and the crowd showed the first symptoms of life with a lusty cheer and a scramble for the ball. | Nick Altrock, the champion clown of |baseball from Washington, |into the Yank locker room with a de- mand for @ large size uniform and an announcement that he was going |to work this afternoon Altrock answered a call from the Yankee club owners, who wanted him to come and put some jazz into the/ game. In blue road uniform the Giants jappeared at 1 o'clock Squatty Jess | Burkett, one of McGraw’s lieuten- ants, strutted out in front of the squad, carrying a bag of balls. The Giants were given a good demonstra jtion by the crowd, which was rapidly | increasing McGraw's men looked over the cee who were at batting practice, jand strolled into their dugout on the ve base side (Turn to Page 7. Column ees ‘ASKS FIGURES ON 5C FARES Fitzgerald Wants Statistics | on Probable Effect | Councilman C. B. Fitegerald, {chairman of the council finance com, |mittee, requested the department of |public utilities Thursday to submit estimates on the effect of the pro- |posed 6-cent street car fare ordi nance Vitagerald asked. “Taking jnto consideration the in creased trafic, increased revenue re- jsulting from the elimination of the jjitney, | payroll and material accounts and other economies which your depart- ment will be able to effect, do your traffic experts anticipate that the revenues of the railway under the |5-cent fare ordinance will be able to pay all the expenses of the street car system? “If a deficit will resdit which must be taken care of by taxation, what will be the amount?” took every ounce of drive | league | The Giants again played a heart- | inning. Their heads were down, and |} the props out from under his own | | hurler seemed rattled | Rip Collins, Texas! the prospective reductions in| FIRST INNING | Glante Burns fanned, Bancroft went m | Hoyt to Pipp. and Frisch went 0 Ward to Pipp. No runs, no Pte no errors, Milter: walhuann cy aaa | him, Nehf to Kelly, and Rutl ® pase on four straight the crowd Ni ings. a are No runs, no hits. one errer. - SECOND INNING Gtante \e Young ws Pi err ‘ann: ri sisted. oe ae No runs, no hits, no errors, P Ikea) "Ward ipp we “a out, to Kelly. Pipp pull McNally pp pull oe ba) at. tagged Pipp out pian the smart Stealing, Smith to ae No runs, no hits, no errors, lamte Rawlings sin eled PB lett, . | popped to Peak f fanned, sw nd Raw! ‘nee | nipped off feet. 3 Le Wy Pec ie gH No runs, one hit, no errors. Yankees Schang popped to Bancroft. reached first on a single, that fly which Rewlings ran er maki walked fl walks filing the bases. popped to Bancroft. No runs, one hit, no errors, - FOURTH INNING Glante Bancroft out on strikes, one called. Frisch P | Pipe. Young out, McNal ‘oO runs, hits, no core, Yankees ry Pipp flied to ws Ward jto right. Ward reac! McNally wi dashed | Beze ing e run, one hit, one error, FIFTH INNING rike. M Rawlings filed to R. sel, [took the catch up against, the of sieitn "ete B. Mew holding fi no errors, con Miller out, Frisch to Kelly. lcumbled the grounder but just made the throw. ck Bancroft to Kelly. Ruth walked and stole sec- ond, making a beautiful slide iat second. The Bambino then atole third." R. Meusel out, Bancroft: to elly. No runs, no hits, no errors, SIXT ING Gta Nehf walked. Burns popped to — Ward. Bancroft out, Hoyt to Pipp. 7 Frisch out, Pipp unassisted. . No runs, no hits, no errors. Yankees Pipp out, Nehf to Kelly. Ward ow Kelly unassisted. McNally po to Frisch. No runs, no hits, no errors, SEVENTH INNING Frisch 3 Gtante Young walked. Kelly forced Young, McNally to Wafd. EB. Meusel forced Kel Yard to Peck. Raw- lings out, Ward to Pipp. No runs, no hits, no errors. Yankees Schang flied to Young. yt was given a big ey when he came to the plate. sere popped to Kelly. bor Miller out, Nehf to Kelly. No runs, no hits, no errors. KIGHTH INNING Glants Smith out. Ward to, Pipp. out, Ward to Pipp. and, was out. stealing, Schang to ‘No runs, uo hits, no errors. Frisch's muff of Ruth forced Pe sant Bo a to Bancroft. R. sel singled to center, Ruth third and Meuse! reaching nace’ t teh Ri Hawise, to ally, run ‘acon tak: Lh ihe fargoned ergPhed eohomen 8 by ome. furried "Soe fouled — Kelly. ‘Two runs, one hit, one error, NINTH INNING Gene croft we rd to Pipp. ging a to Ye Kelly hit inte double p to Ward to Pipp. No runs, one hit, mo errere.

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