The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 21, 1922, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

{POPE’S DEATH DENIED : y f 2 ' 4 Renner nnn nnn Eq WEA At an Maximum, 38. Today Temperature Last 4 Hours THER folks! Great weather for swi ", wot? so. Eastern tourists to come to Seattle from California next summer, says ba J. Carrigan, to eseape the South Not to mention, we sup =. the Southern earthquakes. e- By the way, do you know that Mrs. Drum gives plano lessons in Seattle? * ur. a é Bk, TH OFFICE | SEZ: Now oor the holiday season | fs over, let's go back to the a Ce ee — y Your Bills Promptly” ‘think the holiday will be hilariously celebrated. cee We can't pay our bills promptly ‘They're all about a year old. “ee 4 Borer turned conductor, but Then he lost his head. He meant to punch a transfer aad | He punched a guy instead. “The discussion of ‘petting’ parties | fs now closed.”—Cynthia Grey's col umn. Discussions may come, Dr. Hubert Work i to succ cod | Postmaster General Will Hays. Rol! | your own—pun. cee ar society department asked ¢ and Oxwald, the office boy, brot them one gotten out by Bull Brothers. During the recent floods In the White river valley, a hungry fish got at J. E. Smith's tractor and ate the worm gear, = 7% Toda: pay day at The Star office, and gosh! how we dread | ' | itt von s . eso Jere was @ young lady from Natchez, Who sat in some nettleweed patches ; | With @ heart full of gloom, Bhe sits in her room And scratches and soratches and) scratches. cee Sign in a Second ave. window: Ready to Wear eee YEAH! Back in Wisconsin there is a movement on foot lo change the name of the Rum river to Vol stead river, Better leave well enough alone. Should they change the name to Volstead, the river migif. go dry. MORE RULES FOR F TRIANS 1. When an inexperien driver is made nervous by a pedestrian, he shall indicate the same and the pedestrian shall behind « lamp post until i passed 6 must register », hefore re to walk upon ig, leaping, crawlin himself from auto- chinery. ht qu Bign in Third ave 0 “Pants—One-third Off.” WHO SAYS 7 Y NEVER COME urned to Dorr T day-—Pervonal in The Southeast Missourian, nnn nnn nnn enn ARAL AARARAR AAS SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, ~»y . First i in News—First in Circulation (by 11,727 copies a day)—Call Mi Main 0600 to Order The Star at Your Home—50 Cents a Month—Why Pay More? ' nnn ) On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise <=. The Seattle Star Ratered as Second Class Matter May & 1899, at toe Poatoffice at Beattie, Wash, under the Act of © om March 3, 1879, Per Year, by Mall, $5 to 69 AAPL LPL DL DS PPP PPP PP PPP PPP PPP PPP PPP PPP PPP a aaa hanna AAA Aa anne | ) x f HOME! til JANU ARY 21, 1922, TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE By Wanda von Kettler Seattle has three boy heroes walking its streets today. They are three boys worthy of Carne- gie’s medal. They have - risked their lives for a friend. Those boys are: Lawrence, 13- year-old son of’Mr. and Mrs. Carl A. Gustafson, 2044 N. 78th st.; Coleman, 11, son of Mrs. M. W. Hicks, 7813 Meridian ave., and Hilding, 16, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Anderson, 8215 Meridian ave. They are the boy heroes who saved the life of Loftus Atkin, 16- year-old son of Mrs. Henrietta At- kin, of 8040 Wallingford ave. Thursday afternoon, when Loftus broke thru the frozen surface of Greeen lake and was nearing death in the icy waters. Men had seen him fall, but had Dope Case GIVES FIRM AWAY Suf f erl n § ‘Broker Presents His Whole Business wos to Three Employes After | Hamer Heari iq Is Put $2 000,000 Off When Butchart | Netting 82, a Girl Grows Ill NEW YORK, Jz hee Pech gee 000,000 Id you quit work? jon | If mut ade $ would rk? By Hal rae y= Soa is YE S to both questions,” porch John Borg. 1 at. broker who Wall at. by stv 21.—Is 2,000,000 enough money for Mae Butchart, the govern ment’s chief pawn in the prose. cution of A. EB. Hamer, agent of has ® the United States treasury de- | ing his business to bis employes as] | partment, was saffering intense | a gift agony today and could no) ap He in only 40. When he was 16/ pear to testify at Hamer's hear os a ‘ @ messenger at $4 ing before United States Com- eck a made his fortune ia missioner BR. W. McClelland, The girl, whose company Hi her affairs with the ac rnment official, | A letter to Commissioner McClel- | sAKES PRESENT land frem Dr. C, H. Hofrichter, of | 7Q EMPLOYES jthe public health service, caused the hearing to be put off until ne letter expl ain) Butehart t I It will years befor e able to get her in uitting? Well, for on wons, One i that I've got a 1 a furore in the!» 1 her ia that 1 . sympa for |the money I need. beneath them when they started forward. Not so with Seattle’s boy heroe their ears to the threats of the ice and courafeously sped across the thin Surface to their friend, whom they succeeded in saving after the boy had sunk twice. Seattle proudly calls them her heroes. They are the kind of boys she is proud to call her own, and rejoices in the promise of courageous citi- zenship ahead of them. Today those boys deserve the medal of honor for the work they have done. They are men—-real sen in short trousers. Just young- sters themselves in yea have braved danger that grown men and women feared to face. The boy heroes are walking our hung back because the ice creaked Lawrence Gustafeon, 18 streets today. They say they Coleman, Hicks, 11 Photes by Price & Caster, ter Statt Photegsashars Woman i in HIS “Pp ILE” MADE, Actress and Woman Mayor SEATTLE BOY HEROES DESERVE MEDALS FOR BRAVERY The three boys closed s, they Champion the Modern Girl \Salome Made Jazz Dance)Jump From. Frying-Pan Look Like Prayer Into Short Skirt, Meoting ---- -~ | »—- Is Advice >= BY KENNETH W, CLARK | BY CARL V TOR LITTLE FAIRPORT, Ohio, Jan. M%1-—— | CHICAGO, Jan. 21.—The s& Charge gainst the modern cret—why men leave home—is girl or 1 wrong, Dr, Amy out Kaukonen, pretty girl mayor of Men want their eyes pleased. ¥ told the United Press If they can't get the optical exclusive interview todag. iMusion at home they will turn in “Too mifPr7ine peep? ot ome sweet home” motto today have too narrow-and too upside down and steal out to exacting star Mayor | knock upon the aesthetic thresh Kaukonen deck old. . ‘Why shouldn't a girl bob her | In other words, ¥irls, if you hair if she wants to? Nobody | vould keep husband, jump seta up a howl when the men | f the frying pan into—the 4o it—and look at the men you hort skirt see in the front row of the Francine LArrimore, star of theatre and the back tow at on F said so today. church with a head as devoid Francine should know, During of covering as an ex! her stage career she has seen “The girl of today is criticined enough stage door Johnnies to for wearing short skirts, I don’t fill the hall of fame. see why @ girl should hide her Says Francine: ankles any more than her ei- “L never heard of a man bown. ‘going to the m “There isn't a man living who with a greasy doesn't approve of short skirts hand. on some other man's w heart “The first thi will do when she at buy the best dress an find, She will live on doughnuts and coffee and make *%\ am every physician knows, should have been abol- ished long ago. “What do I think about dane | her husband lke ‘em, for a long ing? Well, tie crash of cym- | time, in order to wear silk and bails, the moan of the saxa- | feathers. phones and the joyous melody “If the ever-enduring house- of the v always make me | wife knew what the women of feel like moving my feet, so I the stage know, they would econ- certaiMly am not antagonistic sider good clot to dancing | tial than butter, e si } When Salome started thru | We know. We seen the f i ¥ | e made modern jazz husbands in action around the i w i | - - | ae KILLS FIANCEE CRAIG TO MEET « I for Ham tting the} | ae communit My newspape hi 3 , a veh himpigasi ann th vee | Unrequited Love Ends With | Premiers of North and Sout G his er far eration | of Ireland Confer hip Be 4 so"aeemie in Hackensack, N.| Murder and Suicide | r himself. . | rgen Evening Kecord. : : 2 ames Cra} of th t ONLY THREE, ear and a half ago.| ‘Los ANGELES, Jan. 21.—Unre-| , YONDON: Jan: tM ere of the ; may under 40, He has gray | quited had ax its climax a mur-|north and south of Ire respec be taken t ; “ 4 : clipped light hair, wears | der and Ae when Ralph H.| tieely. dan f and lik ars, He is mar-| Hart, of San At Texas, cut the | Nore sion ‘6 ried and has two children. throat of his fiancee, Mrs, Wilma Hy |, Ulster have been presented | stots, proprietress of a confeetion-| ” ,’ issued by hips in ‘the newly or BANDIT OFFERS TO H, Borg, a nephew; William Gilmour Ir, cast and Charles W, Halden that he would do nothing of the]! SERVE 2 TEN-YEAR _ ||wan. ctordone cry WANTS TRIAL TERMS IN PRISON [TO BE RAPID Young Logger Dies mond afid Will ee tr as H Under Falling Tree iv he’ p KUGENE, Ore., Jan, Lawrenoo | t But the governn Young, 18-year-old logger of 1 t w because our us Killed in thé logging to ‘ “ a at Mabel esterday when a tr ? tertiary ae rath Wathe |fel-on, him. He leaves a sister Fast mment sufficient | penitentiary at Walla Wall, | Mrs. Gladyn Morely of Aberdeen, th th » Wash 4 his mother, Mrs.| 3 a i cnmenrll. closely guarded | yisig Anderson, Eugene ne witnew ny f t 4. After sen sued, Redmond ssvsenitl these ts OCIETY BUDS “and nave a n of being a TO RUN HOTEL } government prefers to go ahead with || bad man. If your honor so wills all $ © og it fit would ike to serve both #én NEW YO Bick ‘ buda will arts cl, while (Zurn to Page 4, Column 5) The men were taken back to the || Of February county jail to await transfer to || from alia Walla. ares girly a w York hotel in aid of jlocal tuberculosis relieg fund, yuldered — figur ery store, and then slashed hig own {the le jugular vein fete The woman died instantly on the! jing been f floor of her establishment satival ce tie Hart was breathing last beside | ory imposed by Sinn Fein in retalia her as the police ambulance dashed! tion for the killing of Catholics in| up. | the Ulster capital Collins and Craig will r posing factors hat agreement nding the re. Ifast boycott and oth- et in Ire. [RUM-RUNNING ES epee tardaghe meeting of the premiers was WASHINGTON, Jan. 21.—Chiee| event (the south of Ireland never be Prohibition Agent Yellowley’s, secret fr® having been represented by & investigation of booze smuggling | S!MHAar officla), as a happy gugury »|for the future, Great possibilities along the Mexican border, is nearly complete, it was stated at the pro- hibition bu At th between Craig and Collins, today ; prohibition bureau today tt was Yellowley. i« somewhere| Apostolic Delegate along the r between the mor hip Hears From Vatican |. jof the Rio Grande and California. ue WA 2W YORK.—National council of | this morning ¥ 1 churehes announces $24,-| Cardinal )/0 in contributions during 1921, | stating condition of Pope ain of $10,481,000 over the highest! dict XV continued ‘extremely grav ¥ were seen from friendly discussion | ; have done “nothing.” That is modesty. We know they have. The waters of Green lake have been deprived of a victim because of the real, red American blood that intermingled with mighty © boyhood and manly courage, surges thru their veins. Seattle takes off her hat proudly to Lawrence, Cole- man and Hilding, proclaimed the heroes of the day. And Seattle asks again, “Should not these boys be decorated with the Carnegie medal? Have not Seattle’s boy heroes, in risking their lives on the treacherous ice, done enough to Fj them this greatest honor? Have they not— — when it is not out of place to quote: ‘4 Cee love hath no man than That he ta down his life for his PONTIFF ALIVE, SAYS DISPATCA. Westminster Cathedral Bells ‘Toll |-~Sotenmr- Message but Official- — Announcement Is Lacking ROME, Jan. 21.—(6 p. m.)—The following bulletin on the condition of Pope Benedict XV. | was issued here this evening by physicians x visited his holiness at 5:30 p. m.: ‘Pope Benedict XV. is now in a comatose con- dition. He grew worse during the day. His heart was steadily growing weaker, and he was breath- ing with great difficulty.” . * The above direct ‘United Press “urgent” cable- gram, filed in Rome at 6 p. m., Rome time, today, disposes of rumors of the pope’s death to that hour. * * * | LONDON, Jan. 21.—Pope Benedict XV. is dead, a Reu- jter’s agency dispatch from Rome announced today. As |seon as the news was received, the bells of Westminster | cathedral were tolled. | * * | No confirmation of the London report has been received. ;A Rome dispatch received by the United Press London — jbureau at about the same time said the Pope's physician jhad a hurried consultation at 9 a. m., causing a rumor that | his holiness was dead, but that this had been | denied. * * & | WASHINGTON, Jan. 21~—The papal delegation here has , received no official word of the reported death of Pope * Benedict XV., it was officially stated at 2:30 this afternoon, The last cable to the delegation stated his holiness con- tinued critically ill. * * * . | ROME, Jan. 21—‘We are momentarily expecting the end,” was the bulletin issued by physicians at the bedside of Pope Benedict XV. at 2:10 p. m. | No bulletins had been issued since 1 o’clock, but the papal entourage was prepared for the shock when Cardinal” sparri emerged from his holiness’ chamber 40 minutes fore, weeping and declaring: “The end is imminent,” The pope rested easily during the morning, sleepi for an hour and taking liquid nourishment at 10:30, 1 ing to a renewal of hope for his recovery. He lapsed into semi-consciousness, however, and at 1 p. m., shortly after liquid nourishment had been administered again, the Vati- | can announced that all hope had been abandoned. a ‘ardinal Gasparri said that his holiness was delirious this afternoon and insisted on resuming his work. | * * * | | | e BY HENRY Woop Jecrowding the antechambers this ROME, Jan, 21.—Pope Benedict | morning had been plunged into deep. V. was sleeping quietly this morn: jest gloom by a statement from Pro | ing when his physicians visited him | fessor Marchiafava that Pope Bene- at 9 o'clock ‘dict’s death was a-question of min- A statement that his death was | utes. only a matter of a few minutes,| ‘The physicians who Were in con 4 been issued earlier, WAS stant attendance upon the pope thru: withdrawn. lout Friday and who retired early to It was declared by the papal} day only his holiness’ request vis- physicians that hig holiness might] ited the chamber at 7 o'clock’ this for some time, as was the | morning. » with Pope Leo. | An official bulletin which was fie” At noon, however, It was an-/ sued by them afterward read: nounced that the pope's condition| “His holiness’ condition became jhad become worse. | worse during the night. The pneu A statement as to Pope Benedict's | monia spread, The perature is asued at 10 o'clock, de: | 38.4 Centigrade, the pulse 120 and the hat should the unexpected | respiration 60.” p into which the pope had sunk| At 8 o'clock word came to the gath- mtinue for several hours, it might | ering t 8 outside the Vatiou justify hope for his recevery [that Pope Benedict could live only” Praying throngs outside the Vatl-|a brlef while, the death agony can and cardinals and attendants] Turn to Page 4, Column 4 — 3

Other pages from this issue: