The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 29, 1921, Page 1

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are nt I vd le re % ne Gad . ° nam j ' ‘way eee RRA PLR PRR ‘ALLIES ARE DISRUPTED} FRANCE AROUSES BRITAIN AND ITALY; BALFOUR TALKS WARER HOM EDITIO VOLU ME 23. Mntered as Second Clase Matter May 9, 1 ~ SEATTLE, WASIL, THURSDAY, DE C EB MBE R at Meattle, Wash, 9 29, 1921. Postoftt: at th First in News—First in Circulation (by 11,727 copies a day)—Call Main 0600 to Order The Star at Your Home--50 Cents a Month—Why Pay More? _ On the Issue of Americanism The re Can Be No Compromise iii The Seattle Star Mor the Act of Congress March 8, 3979. Per Year, by Mall, $5 ‘0 #9 TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE Tin Can May Convict _ Gal in Murder Case going New Year's eve? We'll sce + you there, | | Howdy, folks! Where are you | Another good thing about€trist- mas is that one spends so much | money for presents that there ie nothing left to squander on New Year's. . DON'T TEASE THE ANIMALS eee Tos os turkey, thin season | Of the year seem lke Just one | darn holiday after “another, 4 girl-a ates habeas poor Part Thought that the way to treat her; | When next she wants to auto ride | Het let the tarimeter. eee As uncomfortable as a ted nose to @ temperan ther, ax the 5-cent fare to 'a councilman, as inflamma- tory rheumatism to a jellyfish, so is the wife's Christmas necktie around the collar of a natty dresser. } ee | AND ITALIAN TENORS American movie magnates want 2 | high tarifé pls foreign made | films. Might extend this to include | European acrobats. eee Waiter in First | Viscount Shibusawa, Jap finan- ier, cays Japanese American | marriages are the best way to preserve peace. Nix, Count, pix! Marriage is not a disarmament | conterence—it’ a battlefield. eae Maicic has a pair of big snowshoes, | And a brace But never wears the shoes bera She thinks they're tennis rackets eee of winter jackets, Remember The Star reporter who for facts since eee & * I « abot time for Mexico to —— —_————-* Dear Tomer: “How hot t# a hot ta-| male “The Beggar's Opera,” at the We'll bet a lot we have seen were in the original east. | | Metropolitan this week, was first | | j DIZZY JINGL It was midnight on the ocean Not a street car was in wight ; The sun was shining brightly And it rained all day that night. Ge sven ie p ar, and we do Hoon th demand see Irate Golfer ist take your ‘ , madam— ‘ | yu worry crit the harmonics — Wellavitie ‘ne ) Optic. my il ‘BABE DRINKS Bar All Japs for Next Three Y ebr's —and Then Forever! (EDITORIAL) On the Jap immigration question the American Legion is right. The Japs should be included in the terms of the new bill pending in congress, a bill that would STOP FOR THREE YEARS ALL IMMIGRA- TION TO THIS COUNTRY. In its letter to Congressman Albert Johnson, of Ho- quiam, who is chairman of the house immigration com- mittee, the Legion states the case well. The “Gentle- men’s Agreement” has not been effective; it has not heen lived up to. Definite legislation to halt the influx in its tracks is required. As The Star has pointed out, such a step must be taken to supplement the 4-power treaty and the other results of the arms conference if we are really going to eliminate the likelihood of war in the Pacific. For the aggression of the Japs in these Coast states is now the one biggest cause of such a war. Unless it is halted it will bring on the war. As the Legion’s letter points out, “A reservation to the 4-party treaty excludes from the operation thereot ; of purely domestic concern, in which class { e question of immigration is included. “The pending bill furnishes an exceptional oppor- tunity to initiate a complete stoppage of Japanese im- migration, because in prohibiting immigration from all countries it leaves no ground upon which Japan can base a charge she is being discriminated against.” Congressman Johnson should make his bill cover the Japs, and congress should pass it—over the presi- dent’s threatened veto if necessary. Women Here Assail - Jap-White Matings*:: ‘The framk statement made to The Star by Viscount Shibosews, mae and capitalist of Japan, mddenly injects @ pew and important element iato the Jap problem of the Pacific const. The sgrd multimillionaire nobleman derharre that the sotution of this coast's problem is intermarriage of the Jap immigranta with the whites! ‘That means one thing, marriage of Jap men with our white women, for there are no unatiached Jap women here for white men to marry, even if they cared to marry them. This statement of Shibusawe is highly important. It is in direct contre. diction to all that white adverates of the Japs have been telling nw advice that, berause of the viseount’s position and the reverence with whit Jape of loser dearee regard him, will be eagerly followed, wa far as possible, by the Jap immigrants, Head what some Seattle women leaders have te say on the subjert.—Editor do not believe the two races can EVER intermarry successfully.” Henry Seattle Fee Landes m of Women’s « “IL am absolutely opposed to president of} tubs Mrs. Phillip Marion, who has. vis the intermarriage of the Japan- (jro4 japan and has had close con ese and the white race. Where | tact with its people the @wo races are so different, “The entire proposition is the result could mean nothing wreng without ques! The | white people must N Rin. more than incompatibility. termarry with ANY yellow race.” Mrs. J. 8. Bureh Women's University club secretary of the) ire. A. KE. Le Ballister, soctety ed itor of The Star “The Japanese are like ts “There ig only one answer, It neither spiritually nor physical is absolutely impossible.” ly, Our ideals are not the same. - I would certainly hate to see | ytey John Collins, president of one of my daughters marry @ | gonwet cluly Japanese,” “The result could never be happy. The customs and the hab: Mrs. H. A. M. Bor “There are too many years of | | | its and the people themselves are so different. I do not betieve wide hereditary difference be hind beth races to ever make possible relationshlp 4 that even the Japanese people— the great mass of da Nese peo successful marriage be in fa between the two. I |CROWDS VISIT from a aick bed to greet her husband ushered many where Debs lounged callers into the library, FROM FLAMES NEW YORK, persons were imperiled during the Beer, Wine Favored by fires in New York tene Dec. 29.—Scores of Many thrilling rescues were} bY Chicago Council CHICAGO, be hicago's city i two tenements burned. me) in fa ‘or of t rand ‘light wines » to FVote the council adopt: dragged trom! 14 5 on demanding manufac: lay suflo | cure d distribution of “whole- ~_pome beers and light win of the tenants were they op. heen thelr siecp | thelr beds where HOCHBRUNN GOLD HOARD MISSING | | | IClara Skarin Is Seen After Slaying With Box That Had Contained $1,000 | By Hal Armstrong } Ferdinand Hochbrunn’s hoard | | of gold was stolen, probably by the io per who shot the | old Prassian to death room of his home | oF by the murderer's accomplice, | | Ht was tearned! today, | This new evidertte that the Wot | was committed with a motive of rob }bery was discovered by Ralph Mar, jmer, epectal investigator for the of | fice of Prosecutor Malcolm Dough, | land is sald to haye led to a bowt of| new dinclowures intolving Clara Skrr- lin, grandnjeee and ward of (he mur dered maw. # GIRL 18 SURE TO BE CHARGED With the evidence now In hand, Captain of Deteetives Charies BE. Tennant said he was so thorely convinesd of Clara's guilt that, as seon as she is found in her hiding place, he will charge her with homicide, Tennant 4 fochbronn was to bave had a habit that ted almost to an obsession for collecting them awa Searching the Hoe 2520 F In gold coinn and hoarding brunn boune, at igator Hammer box, aa announced Star yeaterday ax form fth a found a large t in The brunn as @ recept go! ax empty when Ha er found for lot of worthless nd newspaper clippings plowing Hs discovery, Sam off, police reporter for The | , went to the apartment of | Mr. and Mrs. Pierre Chedotal in | the lower part of the Hochbrunn nt exe papers house «# was told by them that Clara had several times been seen with the tin box in her hand after the night the 1 der is believed to have beer mitted, and that she had her possession also a considerable | amount of gold coin. THINK SLAYING DONE OCTOBER 19 The state is depending upon Mra. | Chedotal to fix the time of the mur ar | der the night of Wednesday October 19, when ahe says she heard Hoek and yer person up n, tho his voice Mra, Ched about al says, k that oune sand was not seen t turn dent of the loud voices oc some nthe carpenters Hochbennn had en ployed to mend his roof, making the paymen She told Mra. Chedotal, the latter says, that her grand-uncle had giv en her $150 in gold before he “went to Porth und made the remark that like to stay in the house alone while ge was away, but that he had asked her to look after the place, which she would do, call ery few days ne POISON DOSE DEBS AND WIFE "9/202, everal other occasions, Clara is Baby Glen Stanley, one year old,| TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Dec. 29%—| (314 to have been ween with the tin Thomas at, was In critical con-!Terre Haute called on Gene and Kate | money xx in her posseasion by ition way after drinking from | today. Mrs, Chedotal and Mrs. Frank K tt apo-cresolene that was! A steady stream of friends of Eu-\Gladwin, a neighbor 4 an asthma treatment. gene V. Debs, rece rel dfrom| It was the lust Mond in No. Physicianw from city hospital were | Atlanta prison, called at his home on| vember, Mrs. Chedotal say that tefl and found the baby in a dying | the first day of his stay in his home{Clara told her she was going to condition, but prompt setion with a! town California to attend a telephone atomact 4 effective. It was| Debs arrived from Washington last operators’ convention, | impouatty the child from | night and was greeted at the station TOLD ATTORNEY | his home i chance for re-|by 10,000. OF CONVENTION | covery, physicians mnid. He was ¢ ed to his home by a About thie time she is sald to have band which uyed “The Marseil © convention to | | lais her grand-uncle's SCORES SAVED Debs’ wife, who pulled herself! attorney and legal adviser Tobel that #he rt id to d to To Von whe also is sa have ren meet Ho arke x runnin P After ng Seattle, it is now the theory of the state that Clara herself became “Ferdinand Hoehbrunn,” and that the letters signed “I, Hoct our lirecting Von Tobel to send Zoohbenns ections to Califor nia, were forged by her Pr from whyt h brunn secutor Dougla estimates, learned of Hoch- iffuirs, that there noney box at Column 5) business was probably in t (Turn to Last Pi One Kills for Love + One Kills Fo ‘Hate Two accused women slayers and their alleged victims. Mrs. Lillian Schaeffer Raizen (above), indicted for slaying Dr. Abraham Glickstein (lower right); Ellis Guy Kinkead (lower left), and Miss Alivia Stone, accused of killing him. BROOKLYN, N. ¥,, Dec. 29.—In pher the city prison here are two women | preye charged with killing men. The state relations with on her mind She went South for a time. the physician came alleges jimck wuddenly, and the tragedy fol-| One kilied for love | lowed. ‘The other Killed for hate Mise Stone was a Kentucky nurse Keparated by a couple of Yacant| working in the Scarlet Qak sanitar coli, Mra. Lillian Schaeffer Matzea,fium in Cincinnat!, Ellis G. Kin charged with shooting Dr, Abram |Kead, a corporation lawyer, caime Gilickatet and Miss Olivia Stene; | there as a patient held for the shooting of Ejils G, Kin. Miss Stone fell in love with him. kead, Cincinnati Inwyer, are await She says she thought herself his ing action © courts leommon law wife “L wanted to do somethine Mm"! One day he married another Warden Harry C. Honeck says Mre.| +7 ever a woman loved a than,” Raizen a him, “Ll wanted to Reilly, counsel for amount to something ‘Olivia loved Kinkead.” | had been n bookkeeper: The traced him and found that he family physician was kindly. He be i Brooklyn | came interested in her work—too in-| she met him in the «trect~and terested, * Mra. Ralzen hot him. Kight ye later she married a| Her defense? The unwritten law, | Prosperous toy manufacturer, . She: probably told him of her past hie expects to walk out of here There was forgiveness—but that! free—with her head high, too,” add: was not enough. The thought of the warden. = OOWEN PARKERS BRIDGES ESTATE. ~ DENIED JITNEYS TOTALS $32, 000: Council Grants More Pay to Widow Is Chief Beneficiary Buses Now Operating in Will Probated Thursday | Thru jitney service to the | The will | of Robert Bridges, downtown district was again de- former candidate for governor of nied to residents of Cowen Park Washington, andthe father of by the elty council Thursday the Seattle Port commission, who morning, | died recently, was admitted to The counell voted to grant opet-| probate in superior court Thurs- ators of buses now running as feed:| day, ern at the University bridge 74% cents Ry its terms Bridges’ six sons instead of the 5 cents that they now! and one daughter receive $5 receive for accepting transfers front] ch, while the remainder of his the Kastlake lines estate, valued at $32,000, goes to his widew, Mrs. Agnes Bridges, intendent of Railways D. W udergon submitted nis report to the counell, recomending that thru} of Orillia, jitney service be denied to the North This nominal sum was given land residents, each child, the will SAYS JITS AND CARS CAN'T MIX | Tt has been demonstrated in other cities,” he said, “that jitney service and that of the street cars can not both exist at th ve time.” Henderson stated that the © is held that w will amply provide for all the children, the will says. Mrs. Bridges is named exccutrix of the estate. reve. nues of the Mastiake Hnes increased, R. B. Hesketh ss $1,440 the week after the Cowen Park} Councilman Fitzgerald — declared jitneys were barred |that if the jitneys now, giving the He alo declared that other see|North End district feeder service tions of the ¢ © similar claims | could not operate on their 7go sp! for jitney ser Cowen Park he would introduce an ording The vote on thd proposition to! providing that the city, should pu grant jitney “ervies to Cowen park \elase motor buses td give — the was as follow North od district a municipal Arainst granting the permite: | feeder tem, Councilmen Lou Cohen, C. B, Wits I. M. Peterson, representative of gerald, W. MH, Moore, R. MH. Thome) the feeder Jitneys now in. oper! von and Philip ‘Tindall tion, declared that his. t could To grant permits; Counctimen|not operate even on the T%e fare John KE. Carroll, O, T. Brickson and'as promised by the council, mee | ACN NATUR GREEN TWeuiy ee tee ¥ FRIENDSHIP OF} U.S.IN DANGER hose: Debates Over French Naval Position Tend to Disrupt This Country’s Traditional Love ENGLAND ‘ABLE T( CARE FOR ITSE British Delegate Speaks Mind Witl Surprising Frankness; Meanwhile © Paris Reported Standing Pat By Carl D. Groat | WASHINGTON, Dec. 29.—Italy may b forced to an entente with Great Britair against France because of the French ‘mand for a big submarine fleet, the p: spokesman for. the Italian delegation hint today. F Coming as it did on the heels of Arthur Balfour's utterances regarding the possibil ity of an Anglo-French war, it caused a di | tinct sensation in conference circles. | The Italian did not put his suggestion with |directness employed by Balfour, but by innu jimplied such a course could come. e “hoped” such an entente would not be n sary; and that France was “really sincere” in| protestations as to the purpose for which she y use a large submarine fleet. Balfour, surprisingly direct, has let the conference ki there might be a cofflict between the two powers, # | Britain would prepare against France’s submarine progral und that his nation believed it could “take care of i \ There is no doubt that the long standing friendship be tween Great Britain and France has received a severe blo las the result of the bitter debates over the French naval ! position. ‘, + Likewise, France, by her wrecking of the program abmarine and auxiliary craft limitation, has endangered histori ic “gcaiea pamicad with the United States, many ob IS PREDICTED. the views of his delegation, was ex- tremely pessimistic and disappointed. Federal Reserve Go Optimistic for 1922 wh He inclined to picture France as seeking mastery He felt the French blocking of the sub- program had the hopes of the world for an ending of | war. “Instead,” he continued, “pub- | lie opinion will be directed to the | possibilities of war, A race for armament will be started, and there will be in the world a gen- eral feeling of unsettlement, and a disposition to wonder why governments are increasing their war forces.” hen, with a hidden thrust at France, he remarked: ‘The confer e has been useful as showing the sposition of the different nations | aged in it “Italy had expected, on coming here, that all the nations of the world had abandoned the idea of predominating over Europe. marine dashed vy the United (ON, Dec. 29, — The t ring in 1922 will usher & business revival that will d in due course into a “new era € prosperity” for the United States, | This confident prediction was | today by W. P. G. Harding, go jot the federal re: weighing his phn tered them, Harding told what his ex ceptional opportunities for surveying the nation’s financial condition have | shown him, “Business has passed thru the pre mary stage, the acute period of me. | Hon hinted, France evident! ” phe Bh tga | he said, summing up his ob wax dreaming Napoleonic dreams of | ® prev ge u a Buroy et. British states: sober. conta tior a e fi pot gy o hha ranes rey jon that basic financial conditions are very bch better than they were 12 months ago, “There are many indications that 7 the beginning of a revival cycle if” not far distant. When Sit doe” \ definitely set in, it will be followed” jin due course by a new era of prose — perity.”” Harding sits here in Washington, but his eye is everywhere. He can j tell you at a given moment'the state | of financial health of any city in the 7] | country, or of the country as aw! 3 High railroad rates and high taxes, | high vosts of fuel and rent, and the impaired condition of agriculture are now the chief barriers to complete economic restoration, Harding said, “But,” he added, “I think the outs 9 look for the farmers is more hopeful, — Also, for some months past there Ras on a marked easing of the onan situation. Notwithstanding some features of pur revenue laws, the ket is absorbing se rates which would not h Everybody's, sidered a few months ago, pound, Liberty bonds are at or approach: of the rs in her diplo y believed she Franc they lienated much British and} ympathy matic history | would quickly id, had a American |} France has given ne sktisfactory |reasom, British and American leaders |said, why she needs so many subme rines and auxiliary craft, and ha’ jaroused the suspicions of t world jregarding her future military and |naval plans. | A plenary session soon to be called |will attempt to place upen Fra 'the responsibility for a partial failur of the program. France will defend j here f. | The proposed plendry. session to | Jannounce the 5-5-3 acceptance and | faitur submarine limitation prob: | ubly will be held | Doss ALL LIT | UP IN POU | DENVER, *Dec, 29 contented at the cit trie Hghts were installed yesterday | r. Good railroad and indus. and the dogs imprisoned there are | ¢ bonds have gained, as have plainly happier than they were be-|some standard stocks,” for the illumination, Superintendent These facts, Cox sald, money health The arms conference, he declared, has had @ stabilizing effect, and will do much toward restoring prosperity, “The noteble advance in sterling exchange when the conference ame sombled Was not_mere coincidence," “When money once ex — for non-productive armament ed for productive use, it will | stimulate revival of hapees | tions,” Harding said, show | WEATHER Vonight and Priday, rain; fresh 4 winds southeasterly ‘Temperature Last 24 Hours Maximum, 45, Minimum, 37, Today noon, 41.

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