The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 24, 1921, Page 1

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pesitisiisiitit bt issssb sis tessssististositsssistss prssiisitiesisistiisiscisc sh sists t ett seE Testis Ere Leta SSeS Lees IEESE Lei SSeTESE iste tS Eee tose Les heerage Paid Daily Circulation of Seattle Newspapers as Shown by Oct. 1, 1921, Postal Statements Covering Six-Months’ Period a 67,672 Second Paper, 55,945 Third Paper, 55,311 ( Sdavkvece). Fourth Paper, 40,446 BOY OF 6 FACES DEATH CASE Beattle D. Angevine, , was presented by The Star with a handsome brown valise. a weman she’s dull and dead. Md is so rough that every time the pats the eggs in the frying| along wh only a few sporadic tieups| gre _. WHATS THE USE Brent of your goed fortune, you're! compinin og your fit luck, you're head. tron gl vv! your own jokes, you're ‘Seap he: bonehead. ii EXTRA! ry “none of them, you're a t inteligent, they let me live! time the telephone company J ways gets the right they send their monthly bills. iteh to sale money keeps dy scratching. par DAILY SONG nag ro to me only with th ig off this home em Shitfer of attack, Proves F; atal _ to Lumber Worker | © Geddix, 45, 2031 tantly Heil from was on 4 crane, uring his skull, Md five children EXTRA! I know It’s pay day. There —MR. ANON . the Boulevard one general who doesn’t mind Mondgy, a pile of lumber on "was working in tha yard of | nal Lumber Co, mployed as a hook- jJones, who pleaded guilty Saturday struck on hin |before Federal Judge B,B, Cushman On the Issue of Antericanism There Can Be No Compromise WEATHER At and Tuesday, rain; mod erate southerly winds Temperature Last 24 Hours Maximum, 54. Minimum, 45. Today noon, 47. TheSeattleStar Entered as Second Class Matter May 8, 1899, at the Postoffice at Beattie, Wash., under the Act of Congress March %, 1879. Per Year, by Mail, $6 to ie ie ee - SEATTLE, WASH,, MONDAY, OMIM oe Pole 24, 1921. “April Marries November” Says Outlook for, ; - retiring city} { ' s Bright ow le ot averting the threatened rail { srt i toda: telat that th me colle reef Notiry on wuenhe IS RECOVERING The tney | Be parties should be alarmed or ir tneY | ritated by unwarranted denuncie [Expected to Be Ready’ for ‘099 | Hons or insinuations from trrespon- Sentence Next Monday The statement was the first pub ROSEBURG, Oct. “ Dr. Richard! le utterance of the board since it! yt Brumfield was believed -to be on} called the conference of the five big | the road to recovery here today. His brotherhoods and the rafiroad execu: | puise was normul, his fever consider- tives for next Wedn: ably abated and he was more rational ||. The statement of |lows: , “There is a great reastn to hope the strike will be averted. The rail- rodd labor board has settied 0 dis- puted between railroads and their em- es in @ year and a haif. ‘Many of these disputes contained | pomsibiil of strikes or jockouts. The reliroad industry has gone ‘board fol- throat in an attempt at suicidle, Dr. Charlies V. Wade, county physi- clan, said today that the abseess dix covered in the deep wound on the left side of Brumfield’s neck is local, and | that unless it spreads Brumfield will probably be ready to be sentenced next Monday, the date set by Judge | Bingham. Brumfield was convicted last Wed- nesday on a first degree murder charge for the slaying of Dennis Rus setl July 13. The jury recommended | the, death penalty. ' Following the conclusion of the trial Brumfield at- | tempted to commit suicide by slash. ing his neck with a safety raxor eg lS | Schooner Burne at jof a minor nature, while other in-| dustries, like building, steel and coal mining have suffered disastrous stoy | Pages or slow pararysis. “Perhaps the board i# not to be credited with this, but ft is a coinci- dence that there was no such tribunal | in the industries which have suffered severely from strikes. “The board is anxious to get the; Present dispute out of the way, in| ae SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 24.—The iMrs. Dolly Jeligeon |schooner David Evans, en route from to Plead Tuesday jthe Cotumbla river to Capetown. South Africa, with a lumber) cargo, Mrs. Dolores Johnson will be injhas burned at sea off the South | court ‘Tilesday to enter a plea before | African coast, according to a private | Judge Everett Smith to a charge of |cablegram r wd here today, first degree forgery, Thomas Cas@y,|, Captain Sticer_ and hie crew were | her lawyer, announced Monday, Mrs.! saved. Johnson, sister of James E. Mahoney, | convicted wife murderer, is accused) FE vict Oil W orkers of forging Mrs. Mahoney's signature | to a paper giving her brother control From Their Homes BAKERSFIELD, Cal, Oct. of the dead woman's preperty. John Stringer, former sheriff, also | Wholesale eviction of striking oii workers from houses owned by the | will appear to plead to grand larceny lcharges. He is accused of misappro- | Associated Oil company was under way here today. priating county funds. The hearing Forty-seven suits against strikers will be at 1:20 p. m. |who refused to move from company | houses were filed in local courts. | iU. S. Yacht Loses Today marked the start of the Fishermen’s Title) sevsnin week of the Kern county olf HALIFAX, N. &,, Oct. 24.—The Blue Nose defeated the Elsie this| production in one of the state’s great- afternoon in the International race! est oil soir for the fishermen’s trophy. The win- All Musicians Walk number is ner’s time was five hours,\13 min- utes and elght seconds. By her victory the Blue Nose gains possession of the trophy emblematic lof the fishermen’s championship of {the north Atlantic, which was held by the American defender Elsie. 108 ANGELES, Oct, 24.--Union musicians walked out in all Low An- | tion, today, | Jailed for Bisach of Prohibition Act Three months in the county Jail Ged- | was the sentence meted but to Gwen per cent wage cut and “open shop” Bram announced by the Qwners’ associittion Nonunion organists will ‘W. 59th at., | when the and theatre operators is settled, See- retary F. R. Woodward, of the associ ation, announced, to violation of the national prohibi. He leaves | tion act. | (Turn to Page 7, Column ) | Sens Crew Is Saved! 24—| \strike, which has partially curtailed | Out in Los Angeles! geles theatres, with & single excep The union refused to accept a 1 Theatre } furnish | the music at local show houses until) differences between orchestras | DEFENSE OPENED |More Than 50 Witnesses | : Called in Her Behalf bh pitts j H | athe desbaat it tes trlaver 2are Ly Southard, alleged opens today. More than 50 witnesses | ard’y defense, Whether Mrs. “Southard will uke |eause of war. thé stand in her own bebalf contin-4}ies would not interfere if the ‘ ued today to be the principal point! of speculation in the trial. Altho | Mra, Scuthard’s attorneys have held two long conferences on the subject, jit was authoritatively learned today | j that they are still undecided, 5 Mrs, Southard fs said to be anxi to take the stand, but her attorneys }are known to have serious doubts as | to whether her cage can be benefited | by thi« procedure, which would sub- | fect her to @ severe cross-examina on, n 3 Suits Are Filed to 4“ 9 | End ment Trust CHICAGO, 4.—Suits to break up the so-called vement trust” filed here today by District Attorney | Charles. F. Clyne, acting on -instruc- tigna from Washington. were | KARL IS RUMOR CENTE Losing, Winning, Dead, Say Wires From Overseas; | Take Your Pick | BY FRANK “GETTY NEW YORK, Oct. %4.—-Former Emperor Karl, who fied from an} asylum in Switzerland to join 8,008 | | of bis followers in a desperate cou @etat against the present one ment of Hungary, was today ly reported from European capitals to have been successful and to have been assassinated. ‘The three lant dispatrhes today re- ceived from Vienna, closest to Budapest, where the monarchist drive to put Kart once more on th Hungarian Mhrone le centering, con nde tac ony aap Rg et Misa GptradeP. Hari college, | married ery of nen al 75,| ee pres lecturer in the university | well known authority. Admiral Horfhy, the regent, contin- hold out aguinst the attack of Kart's sab ope near the Hungarian capital and that, truce was being arranged. Aimultaneously reports quoted the Morgenpost, a daily newspaper, (saying Budapest had capitulcted and | that Horthy had been force’ to flee; land another to the effect the former | emperor had been assassinated. Whatever the actual situation in Hungary at the moment, the possible success of the Karlist coup is cer: tain: to, be short lived. The allies! have sent an urgent note to Hun- ‘gary, demanding that the formor | emperor be expelled. The greatest j indignation is expressed in England | jana France over the incident. Ceecho-Blovakia and Serbia have mobilized their troops on the Hun- “Bluebedrdess,” | gurian border, ready to invade if the | attempt to put Karl on the throne | than at any time since he slashed his | have been subpoenaed in Mrs, South: | succeeds. The Czech cabinet consid | fers the success of such a move al Tt wan believed the al- “little entente” Serbia, Czecho-Slovakia and Rumania—wished to step in and |Capture Karl Expulsion a. U. S. (hi “TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE “Big Bottom’ . Killing 4 Probe on at Chehalis Coleman Lad, Held for Shooting His Play- mate, May Be First Child of His Age to Be Tried for Murder; Former Kentucky Feudists Live in Country Where Tragedy Occurred; More Trouble Is Feared. BY HAL ARMSTRONG Staff Correspondent of The Star CHEHALIS, Oct. 24.—Herbert Coleman, who, at the age of: six, has ae his man,” was charged here today with being a delin-— quent boy. His hearing in juvenile court, which was scheduled for Tuagay) with every aspect of'a fi degree murder trial, was postponed un- a November Phan ayia at noon, Monday, So material ms they cannot be It is contended by the state that Herbert shot and spostlle wound- ed at Randle last r, with his -father’s shotgun, Lynn Peters, . is nine-year-old ws Ua after a one- |sided quarrel, and that he did it in cold blood. \with premeditation and. malicious design. fey ad Vid ee ns walla Meek |olds to determine whether Herbert's youthful brain was suffici developed and keen to understand the |enormity of what he did. * : | “He knew enough to use a shotgun. He knew ‘what it was to kill. He threatened to kill. And he ‘did kill. He had that much kno .”” Prosecutor Herman Allen declared today, when "he filed the \charge of delinquen: inst the Coleman bo; | Allen peony coe ae ei “It is time we did something,” he said, “to stop these! killi of children by other children. This shooting isn’t! the first, by any means, in the Big Bottom country, of one boy“by another boy. But it is the first killing that we've, had the evidence on—sufficient evidence to give a jury.’ | | A charge of murder may be lodged against the Coleman | Is One Plan Talked boy. PARIS, Oct. 2 the former Emperor Karl of Hun- ‘wary bé exiled in the United States, ‘after he is caught was ratsed at the | ambassador's council today. | After dispatching a formal note to {the Hungarian diet demanding the expulsion of Karl, the council dis- cussed what was to be done with the royal revolutionist. Various places, including several in the western hem. isphere, were suggested. | A decision will be reached Wed- |mesday. | Ambassadors were informed A suggestion that | by | “If,” sad Allen, “the boy’s father demands a jury trial, and he is entitled to a jury if he wishes one, it is not un- likely that Judge Reynolds will assign the trial to the su- perior court, in which case the charge would be murder.” In this event, Herbert Coleman will be the first child of fhis age to be tried on such a charge in this state, probably | in all the United States, and likely in the en world, | Witnesses, some score of them, began trekking into Che-/ jhalis today for the trial. They are former Kentuckians, | "Tennesseeans, West Virginians, for the most part, progeny / |of feudists. They come from the Big Bottom country, where they | The Midwest, Cement Credit und | telegrams from Vienna that the situ-/ came and settled from the Mountain Dew districts of their Statistical bureau, whose 24 members: encsaron one-third . of, the Portland; cement made in the United States, | was sued for alleged conspiracy. in restraint of trade under the Sherman | antitrust act. \Couneil to Act on Final action was scheduled to be |taken Monday afternoon on the coun lei bil appropriating $50,000 for the purchase of motor “buses for the Cowen Park district The ordinanbe was vetoed last |week by Mayor Caldwell, It is not believed that the necessary six votes ained to’ paws the measure the mayoralty veto. $5 BILL LOST BY NEEDY WOMAN IS RESTORED TO HER ‘The $f lost on the street by |] Mrs, W. A. Headley, of 649 W. Erving st., has been returned. A few days ago the toss was re ported in The Star, and the fol- lowing day, according to Mrs, Headley, a “splendid, honest young man, 100 per cent Ameri- can, appeared with the money, but would not give his name,” "1 want to) thank. him," Mrs, naid in her letter to The May others follow his ex- Cowen Park Buses! { ‘(Turn to Page 7, Column 5) GERMANS RAID POLISH TOWNS LONDON, Oct, 24.--Bands of arm. {ed Germans, were attacking Polish ages and have clashed with | French soldiers, an official Polish dispatch from Beuthen, a Silesian town, stated! today, Central European Situation Is Grave PARIS, Oct, 24.-Premier Briand / |may be prevented ‘from going to Washington to attend the limitation lof armaments conference by the at- |tempted Karlist coup in Hungary, it ‘was said here semi-officially today. The central Buropean situation is leonsidered very grave. Czecho-So- vakia, Jugo-Slavia and even Ru- jmania may march ‘upon Hungary |within 48 hours, |Memorial Mass for MacSwiney Tuesday! Memorial mass will be held at St. James’ Cathedral Tuesday morning for Terence MacSwiney, mayor of Cork, who died just a year ago after & hunger strike of 74. days. Father Staffor! will be the celebrant and '¥ather Madigan of Kima will preach, |native states. The Big Bottom is a country of hooked-nosed’ }men.and ‘shy, distrustful women. | j Randle, the se@ne of the shooting tuk it to uphold the law. jef Lynn Peters, is the geographi- | so. | cal cen of the Big Bottom. | Ww. ell, a feller went my bond. 1 At Randle there is no peace. offi.) had to arrest~him, and. in. court my cer. Joe Hatfield, offered a sheriff's | ups and withdraws the bond. |deputyship, declined i | Hatfield was w sheriff once in the | ti peer tt | jmountains of ‘Kentucky: At Randle| «hey ike to done for me. They | }he ish blacksmith, and more con-| snot my clothes offen me, they come | {tented that a iw Yesterday Hatfield told me why he jal full peer Rae Ray mibapeann veg {OS oS Pétere, 9, sla left’ Kentucky. ‘The Hatfields and) “phat night my wife say@# ane is| bullet fired by Pi Fey the McCoys had long "been killing | go te jone an ther, according to feudal | #7" gt neh. apt bigaeal prt man, 6, in child iqua: A put up a. sign that our farm is for 3 } panied sys tox) an eye, @ life for jute, 80 we come West,’ Randle, Wash. d There were tears o., Ld |FEUD STARTS field’s “steel gray eyes OVER A SOW |. told. of thelr leaveiaking. “We come here,” he said, “to be} “It all started over a pore ol’ sow,” | jhe said. “A McCoy owned her and | peaceable. They was a lot of folks; She run ina Hatfield's grain, MeCoy | from back there ‘here ahead on us. 'woutdn't pen her ‘up. | ‘They was more come later, ‘. “Words led io Then a Hat-| “1 ain't sayin’, y’onerstand, eld boy marri a McCoy girl and| ain't sayin’ nothin’ about nobod: two McCoy boys cut him up with a| but it looks to ine like My fw too, todas by Judge ‘Alfred J. Knife, ‘They tuk him to a cabin,/ many young uns ‘round here knows |So°SiNe the name of where two Hatflelds finds ‘em, too much about guns, Ss 6 ge Aeon “If he lives,’ says the Hatflelds.| 1 ain't got young una, and. 1} “te etl we'll let the law take its course, If} keep my two guns standin’ in the | Des Moines’C jhe dies, we'll settle it right here,”/ closet loaded. That's my own bi |He died, and the Hatfields roped the | ness, But if } hod young uns, Run Afte two McCoys to trees and. left "ém wouldn't have no loaded guns. That DES MOINES, riddled ; Would be my motto, “* Street gar servieo, halted. 10° weeks “That was the start of it Thes's| “Back where I, and most of t} e| age, Will be resumed late this after- been killings ever sence, Ever time | here others around hy come from, | 200n, when things has settled down quiet,! the first. thing a boy learns he Des Moines’ ‘eity’ council to: somebody Ups and kills somebody; about @ gun. day passed a new franchise, drawn “Several Hatfields was. sheriff] “It's prone right into ‘em, arse | ip by the stréet car owners, by & afore: me) AVhen 1 took the oath I (Durn to Page 7, Column 2)0)) 9 unanimous. voter: 5 “1 tole ‘em; we’ Roosevelt —— Puts Woman ‘in Pen NEW YORK, Oct, 24.—-Emma Richardson Burkett, Hilisdale, tnd. Pa Pht: 2 grape: to from, six months — years in. the ‘eh ings y is

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