The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 17, 1921, Page 1

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| First in News—First in Circulation (by 11,727 copies a day)—Call ll Main 0600 to Order The Star at Your Home- y More? -50 Cents a Month—Why Pa The Snowshoe Trail A splendid story of adventure in the forest wilds, in which a woodsman and a city girl fight for life against the forces of the Northern winter. In The Star soon. Eg HOME) ii TWO CEN * MAY BLOCK 5-C On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise The Seattle Star Kptered as Second Class Matter May 8, 1899, at the Postoffice at Seattia Wash, under the Act of Congress March 8, 1879, Por Year, by Mail, $5 to $9 SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1921, MAHONEY WILL NOT HANG FIVE-CENT carfare, which would require the general fund to pay a heavy street railway deficit, is a step of major i 4. Seattle. It involves a question of fundamental policy. The plan should be submitted to the people for Aetaten. The pounle ovariie [|| railway; let them decide how they wish to pay its costs. The ordinance should not be passed by the city council—except as a referen- Weds Twice in 4 | dum measure. Let the people decide. F lappers Vamp Prof essors BI QWIIP B AT TLE pede wice i EXPECTS ol D UE | N foal tDinonced ee SAVE | Charge Sets College Agog ine COUNCIL SLAYER! Pe tate waite’ ince Groce Lane Big Objections to} re Nickel Rate Up any ae Oe FARE! } WEATHER Tonight and Sunday, fair; moderate northerly winds FORECAST IN SEATTLE _ College Humor| What Do You Think? Is It “Snappy’’? Or Just Juvenile? Look Samples Over. No other sections of the country te and of 7 vogue ‘colleges, as indicated srheel publications. « i Uh rs fish can enjoy pure drinking iff . If mpite of the socalled beantsiens | depremion, the mint is still making money. ) W— | eee Man ix known by the company he keeps, woman by the company she it would create In thé city’s | hues, | Gy That it would weaken the city’s legal defenses and open & breach thru jwhieh the bondholders could launch |a probably successful damage suit. | (4) That it would merely be fixing fare extremely dangerous under | the circumstances without consent of {the people, who must stand the con- | fequences—a fare that, wt best, could | become effective only two months be- {fore the people themselves would | have @ chance to vote on it, express. | ng thetr: own destres for or againat it, | ol Prom the parchment roll dated Reamove thye vysor O, ser knyghte, Awnd lette me see Thee burnyng lyohte ! ets a) That flyta forever 3 Inn yours eveso Whereywn I reade My Paradyste. THE MAIDEN SPEAKS ees he 4 Ami Lole ‘ake off yer Kia Lemme see ‘The pash In your eyes. ‘Take ove in your arms. Gawd! but I love y: Ooh! Smack-h-k! “Them gum chewers!" eae The above pome ought to be seiling ‘ on the street corner--it lacks couple of feet. } cee ‘There's at least one good thing you! about Adam: He never made do all the Christmas shopping. | eee “And will be there’ a long, long time,” said Johnston. « “I iar ier ‘ f yy notice of appeal. Well, we don’ Mrs. Leslie A. Lind have to file the papers of appeal im i ay. the supreme court at Olympia uatil | CHICAGO, Dee. 17, — Married! January. And the appeal won't be bist 2h 09 vs py ery argued until next spring. ¢ same’ husban a ‘That's the experience of Mrs. Les- 7 we eg yA cost |lie A. Lind, 20, social leader of Chi.) Sve ei Sead ‘should |caxo's “younger set.” ried, what. Then, | “Tie second ceremony ' was! bess ben tren that by ” } bomen Bh a conscience,” says the | try another tack, ‘You see, Leslie and I eloped and were married by a justice of the} Fitzgerald's ordinance and sheive the car fare issue until a special election or until the regular city election next May. The resolution will go to the Anrver' council Monday at the sane (time ° | Gah; Wreck'th"t0 told 8 a» the Fitzgerald ordinance. peace. That lacked solemnity. | ¥ pA sons Many offict | , BILd, HART: JAP pretty coeds "vamp their way Thr dence in a conversation between the| "We accumulated a mane of evt|tecting the Filipinos law and order. laud without having looked ints the | tine « bride.” #o we decided to do P ihe “wrest trom” the ‘sropeta | aoe Eileen Eyre, more than dence. Much of it concerns Woite|*P4 then go to the Univerulty Of) street car problem carefully, jumped |it all over again, only this time in a Be film of Rill Hart in “The |ordinarily attractive, ‘van nonteibuted (manicure, in which the latter asserts: | Lindenfeld, We have been in Tb tae Sips geld ab gaaaeh Going | astride the b-cent fare as a popular | church.” . | WILL, APPEAL TO to “The Occident” University’ of| ‘You love'to think that these col-| "1th Lindenteld. or Linde, as he was | _ oe hag on which to ride into the office} “Marriages made to ordery as| ©. S HIGH COURT | California publication, « biting farce |lege girls follow you around because {KNOWN In New York, for a long time. | ur. 35 3.» New Orleans, Texan— of mayor in the May election, |Mrs. Lind styles the kind pertafmed| “Meanwhile, we'll appeal the case lin which flirtatious eyes and flapper |they admire you, ‘They don't. You When William J. Burns waa appoint: 1 oo, going to. propose to my girl.| Carroll's resolution to block the |ip offices, are ill-omened gtarts to the supreme court of the United ‘ tactics are pictured as having consid-|talk as if it all annoyed you, but jed director of the bureau of invent! | o.ouig 1 say “Will you marry me-—|Fitaserald bill, filed with the city | tn matrimony, |States. We have already laid the Jerable bearing on = coed’s standing | you're really enjoying it. You hold |#tloo of the department of justice, or "Would you. marry me—| rk today, follows: ; “But a church lends lasting re-|foundation for doing that. It was [with marriageable professors loffice hours oftener than any other |W? turned over to the government | 64. +> | Whereas, there is in this city an/| spect for the union to both man and |with that idea in mind that I mado Coming shortly after The Daily | professor—you talk with these col oe _ <vatonee the Burns agency |""" 7 should say, “Would you mar- | agitation for an iinmediate return to | Woman so many objections during the early Bobby Hurt. | Californian, another college paper, |lege womeh—ere them on.” collected on the case, including | py meet?” In that case, if |4 6-cont fare on the municipal street | “And now I'll get another honey- part of the trial, These objections Bot t don't| bad made direct charges of “class | And Prof. 8. C. Pepper, of | . the | What we had on Lindenfeld. The de-| she accepts too hastily, you can | railway system; and | moon were made on the grounds that Me- room vamping,.” the question has philosophy department, tn his usual | — — — e ir 34 ir | fla And Miss Eileen Eyre, University of California co-ed author, ‘under- | whose “vampire” farce has set the~college city agog. { iheery. ‘eat |HAD WARNING OF | BERKELEY, Cal, Dec. 17-—De| One of the most discussed incl | BOMB EXPLOSION lt year F |“amson” and a worldly wise blonde you RECKON ME TODAY she says. TOOL GATE 1 TELL YOU THIS 18 — BEST PLAY. ME. But oe ‘Dear Homer Brew: works in a bank. @hy he got mad when I told some Wiis friends that he had forged to Mart. overlooked by the prosecution. = = “We will be able to show the fenfeld in Warsaw, worked on the/ possible fatal mistake, Whereas, a 5-cent fare, in view of | front-T. K. L. . ltenging serious consideration here. | play The face that Miss Eyre has “By no means read it.” he \says, “particularly if you are a case for us and was transferred to! the government when the depart: | present conditions, will net produce | sufficient revenue to take care of out: | | United States supreme court that the What has become of the old-fash- ‘woman who made her punk'n in a dripping pan and served it tquarey? (My Elverat [people of this state are against capi tal punishment. They so expressed , themselves by repealing the old capl- tal punishment law. It was not the |people of the state, but the legislat- jure, that passed the law that would |hang Mahoney.” Johnston denied that there wis “a bunch of money” behind Ma+ honey. “This is one of the most econom- ically fought cases you ever saw,” written, in collaboratior, with Hu- | faculty member,” bert Wykoff, another student, is en- As for Mies Eyre, she smiles in titled “Delilah,” and shows a pro-|nocently and insists that she had no- fessorial “Samson” being sheared of | body particulariy in mind and was his strength by designing flappera. ‘merely trying to write a faree, FORTUNE LEFT BY RAG-PICKER Albert Lichtblau, the rag pick- er, is dead. The alleys and back streets of the city will see him no more. But his will, filed Satur day in superior court, shows that the old man left behind him more that $30,000 in King county prop- erty and had $15,000 in cash in Seattle banks. Lichtbiau died Thursday at Providence hospital, after he had been picked up a & pauper on : . | the streets j p Maver Caldwell ix planning to visit | MADE LIVING ane in. Wonder if he can get along | WITH RAGS the Tokyo city council? | ‘The old man made a living by col. .-. |tecting old raga and scraps that BOW To nexsuner Names _ |Jecting old raga and scraps that had been thrown aside as uselens. ment secured the evidence we had. Tam the Quen of F “In June, prior to the Wall Street |} am the @ explosion, we had a direct tip that | fran” an effort was going to be made to | Upon my explode a bomb eo ancial dis perchance ey super vende of railwi pproxt- : rate sete edo hie raptor RSE |mauing two millions of doar, ana|Would Down Americans, Says Councilman Tindall Whene-er my | ing bankers in Wall Street and told | Whereas, the street railway sys-| Branding as pro-Jap and anti- Is by a breess | }them € the warning we had re-|-- }tem will have to be placed on a war | ceived.” | jrant basis, even with the present | labor the recently organized Washington Union League club here, Councilman Phillip Tindall standing obligations and operation of | |the system, unless taxes be levied | }in a sum estimated by the general partment immediately took up the! gag on, “If 1 should ask you to,” | WON'T PRODUCE } honey’s constitutional ts as a }become more than a matter of |monthly criticism of the publication, |trail. Cosgrove, who arrested Lind:| and thus save yourself from & | ENOUGH REVENUE | United States citizen being |mere campus chatter. It is chal-|has advised that readers “skip” this . "Which arm?” asked the vaccinat | MS physician. | _v rm | eplied the absent mind- and i sles | p Bren if we do get the municipal | on its feet it will still be on é ; with eyes oe UL GEE GEE, TH’ OFFICE VAMP, SEZ It’s not much of a compli- Ment to say a girl can operate sf atehlgeed faster than she Most girls are fond of cold coun: | con: cially Lapland j ee tri When will the prohibitionists at tempt to do something about this wet weather? MISTAKEN IDENTITY BY RENDER WHITE LARD I seen you walking down the st, With knockout slippers on your ft, na government | les we | your The rush to the line Hooth, is nrent cities, shipped to thi Yeu—expecial- | \ i a lr seen you stroll the ave, | With some old friend that I onct| knew My cts were stunned @ such a site, witted I to think me rite} i |Twitl wet my braugh four daze to When you have to hang to a strap ng (0 @ StFaD | eM should be gent to the poor farni lalmost at once and for a long period CHICAGO, Dec. 17.-William Hoff the rush 4 . rather than to jail. used Lindenmfeld as a decoy on his} OMe of Pete Witt's recommenda-| “Have you any money own ‘red’ associates, Tt was thru Was that the people on Capitol | as a matter of form, jthis connection that some very valu | man, notorious safe blower and hold. |jable inf up man, escaped from a police sth Most of the men named by Linden. |, ¢ tion here today. He rawed the bars|feld in his statement to the depart \To tar line were not entitled to a| The old man reached into his pock- te wervice let and extracted four bank books. needn't wort They showed that he had $15,000 de | ing it | posited at the various bauks | onie cell and walked thr the cor-|ment of Justice operatives in War.| *Watst——part of a scoman, B . . 1 Lichtblau asked to be taken to the] ridor out of the station. He passed | saw being associated with the|be confused with “waste, PNW that the arm. con. at|home of Bd Price, 830 W. Sist «t., a} thru several doors, which | offic I9| Wall treet bomb explosion all of a woman L has given the Japs the Pacific | friend, xaid should have been locked, An in-| plot, now in Europe, it Is sald ‘ maid ipation of the jail guards was|Only two are believed to he stil in} Why iw it that woman, so adept in (Turn to Page 4, Column 5) (Turn to Page 4, Column 7) she asked, | i% mation was secured,” he body of Mrs, Andrews was found Thursday, while the oldest son, | John, age 7, was found Wednesday. ” The bedy of Thomas was found 4 F They're not e 1s is T. C. € | It tas been established that Lind- | « {rate of fare, early in the year 1922, on | lenfeld was related to Rowa Luxem- |account of the lack of funds; and | anarchist, who was killed in Berlin |’ BOt ut of Jolnta, |mediate necessity it would be un-| today addressed a warning to Se- |he said, “For instance, we had to in 1919. j business-like, if not ridiculous, to re- a * e attle ns, re tad In. New York Lindentetd waa{ .Th® Kood old daze did not entirely | quce faces simply because of popular | Pep aa Bare. aetiain Seca Seen é { demand brought about thra a mis |e goticitin ‘ i members thruout the/didn't have the money, so I did rag picker summoned Attorney Stan. |News agency and is alleged to have | understanding of conditions; and business men of t |the work myself.” ley Padden and made hie will. It was | Used this connection to cover up hia) Whereas, under the purely “A Jeaflet addressed to prospective * r " . al activities in connection with not unti] Saturday that the contents | Te ah us thaintain adequate tates of fare t0| Jeeta are the advancement of civic, | Destroyer Floated, $15,000 in cash, Lichtblau owned real | lived in New York and cities in the Everyone ought get into | |t#ke care of outstanding obligations, | industrial and political welfire thru vatate in King and Pierce counties |East for over three years to the jand the maintenance and operation | out the state, and the encourage- totaling in value over $30,000. definite knowledge of the Barns | 5g ye |of the system; and SAN FRANCISCO, Dee. 117.--The | Whereas, the lines were acquired | geous patriotism in sustaining our| United States destroyer De Long, \ne left to Price, the entire property | LINDENFE (Turn to Page 4, Column 6) | Fepobiienn stitutions.’ which went ashore more than two lwaa bequeathed to his sister, Mrs. - ‘ | & | PRESIDENT of San Francisco, was floated shortly ze 4. “Under r sounc pros 1 a, m, today by the wrecking Lichtblay lived at the Russell | rectly represented 1 Third ntet ‘Under this lofty unding pros,| after j Set ieiaied’ seswaeds teal | ec iie te te Ganka situa pectus appears a list of officers | steamer Homer, | house, 617 King st. ws 68 y nationale in the United States,” it gly was said today by a detective assign will seek to advance industrial wel | Francisco immediately, arriving prob- } |pudden, accumulated. hls fortune|”" i.) 0. tima it’ was known that,| ’ \fare by crushing organized labor, and | ably this afternoon, Born, to Mr. and Mre, Charley Thorn , lby practicing extreme frugality, He stort “ pwn that | your looks 1 no 1 can’t diact, RN ARIE IO ART 25 b fine st On December 7 he was picked up| DY Practicing On ne Over 62 yearn | Of effort to ascertain what the) iy, 7 fear my bank acct lism by putting out of office every Ent Cortempondence, and certain private iO tae m ; . lic eta c doing Di Min.) Bye | A a > abhi ain private | Would never satisfy your taste Wife of Prominent Lawyer} Pic, officta! who is doing his bit] | was taker to th the old Moran shipyards. : pt |to resist the Japanese conquest of dectares |and & vagrant. rhe eaah near wort the chiatic activity in this country, he|WOr thing Succumbs VICTIM FOUND couse of | that the old man w yb . ‘planted’ himself as an employe of a | “The president of the club is R.| Hens knees | Waterbury _ 1A. Ballinger, formerly secretary of |, The body of Thomas Andrews, Sas county welfare division, decided that his agency ascertained his purpose Mrs. Maurice McMicken, wife of|the interior under President Taft, |5. the third victim of Sunday nightis at tle lawyer, died early Saturday morn-|the Associated Industries sinco its|Uel C, Andrews, at 1910 Fairmount Walks Out of Jail! ing of heart trouble, after an illness | inauguration, who has been always |@Ve., Was found Saturday by Frank of only two days, Mrs, MeMicken jactive in behalf of the Japanese in. | Ls Rice, 2011 Fairmount ave, and come, coming here in 1885. state lepislature as the spokesman of | Pt ink this guy you call your 3on.) she was an active figure in|the Japs in opposition to the alien Not to | musical, social and charitable cireles. | land law three sons, all of Seattic, Funeral|man, vice president of the at services will be held at the Bonney. | Northern railway, which first Watson chapel at 2 o'clock Monday | prought Japs to this state and which bourg. the wellknown German}, The World may be out of joint, but/ Whereas, in the face of such im- | Dp prohibitio “This organization,” sald Tindall,! would have cost us $1,200, ° Shortly before he died, the aged | Presumably associated with a Mavic | “sappear with prohibition ry we ltract the city has obligated itself to] members states that among its ob- became known, ‘In addition to the'@Narchistic propaganda work. He ait echee os tinor wanere: weal Ashore Two Weeks |ment of a steadfast, firm and coura- With the exception of $500 which | @ency. - _— — BALL 18 | weeks ago near Half Moon bay, south Martha Ramp, of Waterbury, Conn.|} “Lindenfeld a that’ hes MRS M’MICKEN . 5 - | which suggests that the orgahization| The De Long will be towed to San Lichtblau, according to Attorney! eq to the case. that it will seek to encourage patriot: | on the street by Peter Mayberg ahdter a Willd’ worked in| a: Sere ree ‘ doing to combat a y drape upo ci a Lola ee vg ty the Pacific const Mra, Mary ker, of the King By i he ‘ nationally known detective Safe Blower-Bandit Maurice McMicken, prominent Seat-|who has been the master mind of | Slide that crushed the home of Sam- jwas a plonecr resident of the city, | terests, and who appeared befor the | C annick, West Seattle which 4a|8he is survived by her husband and} “The vice president afternoon, (Turn to Page 4, Column 3) bomb ‘ near the spot from which that of his mother was recovered, near the edge, about half-way down the hill, After a few days, however. the school board » thrown | his condition hecamé so serious that I school building gratia. he was removed to Providence hoppi-' started.

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