Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
_ Shere Is Still Time to Start Reading «If Winter Comes’: PRA ARERR AAA AAA AAA AAA AN RRP PPR PPP rEX-KING KARL IS DYING! Juin to Page 6 Joday LENIN REPORTED DEAD! The Star Goes Into 11,727 More Homes Every Day Than Any Other Seattle Newspaper, Tonight and Friday, moderat: winds. Tem; Maximu Today VOLUME 24. NO. 29. rat @ southerly Last 4 Hours Minimam, oon, 47. 43. Entered as Second Class Matter May 1899, at (he Postoffies at Beattie, Wash, under the Act of Congress March 2, 1879, Howdy, folks! Soon be time to paint th’ ol’ canoe, eh, wot? eee Councitman Phil Tindall announces that he ty a candidate for congress. | Having been a second loole in the war, Tindall should experience litte | @ifficulty in running the U. &. see Beckwerd, turn backward, Oh, Time, in your flight, And give us the girl who would Stay home at night. eee RATTLING GOOD NJ Yakima named ity new | euto tourist “Fraternal | camp park.” We suggest the follow. ing titles for Seattle's new auto camp: Flivver Flop Liszie Lounge Henry Hangout Dodge Inn The Lousery eee Seattle minister is going to extab- lish a radiophone station and broad. cast his sermon. The idea appeals to us. How we will chuckle when the Words come thru the receiver: “The ushers wil] now collect the offering.” . “Mrs. Kida Guy ts entertaining a nephew from Hastings.”——Woodlawn Qllich) News. Aw, quit your—now 0 on with the story. eee While mother is home Singing o lullaby, Dear father is out Framing an alibi. eee IT ISN'T DONE So far as we can determine Dr. C. W. Sharpies is the only candidate who has not promised to promote | greater harmony, make sweeping re- Va ductions of expenditures and increase iq efficiency 100 per cent. ¥ How does he expect to get elected 2 if he doesn't kid the public? | ae Admirers of Dan Landon have quit wearing vests. Their next step will be to put on hand-embroidered sus- venders. eee 7} PORTRAIT OF A FLAPPER | Eyes of opal. | Teeth like pearis. | Throat of alabaster. | Raby tips. Cheeks of peaches and cream. ‘i Head of ivory. “ee They're laughing at this at the Col-| lege club “What is the difference between | David and Job?” “David was a manly boy; Job wag a! belly man’ . Judging by the pictures we see In the movies, people never do anything fm the big North woods except have} fights tu front of the camera ut. EE GEE, TH’ OFFICE, VAM SEZ Well, anyway, the fly stil) gets hi | tanglefoot—even if we Murder of husbands by their wiv: Is becoming one of our most pop indoor sports lar | When I look at the lad In the collar ad Apollo's stock And Hercules To one of these Was but a puny thing. eee goes zing, . eee | William Jennings Bryan again # he is not descended from a monke: Methinks, he doth protest too much! | geet st WE THINK IT WAS ©. ATTLE | A five-year-old who was on the | train going to Seattle said to her mother as they were nearing their destination: “Mother, who is this ‘Attle’ we are going to see?"—From the Chicago News. css Victor Vivaudou, famous Paristan perfumer, says it is only a question of time until every man will be us ing perfume to enhance his natural attractions. | | Quick, boy, a bottle of Aroma de| Tideftats! | eee | Wonder why they don’t film Dr.| Read's ann health department re port? It’s about the only volume hey haven't screened eee é Peeve Lemon in the apple sance, Cinnamon in pie, Nutmeg on apple tarte | irritate = uy. | I believe that homicide Ten't wench @ view When applied to thone who soil Apple pie with spice! | United States governments for use | PLANS To FOLLOW | COASTS ON TRIP | finishing AIR TRIP AROUND WORLD! Britishers Ready to Embark Next Month on al Flight BY MILTON BRONNER LONDON, March 30.—Karty next month Sir Rosy Smith, the Christopher Cotumbus of the air, will start from London on his his long-projected trip around the world, If he completes his voyage, King George will give him higher honors, he will make a fortune from books and jectures, and he will have gained undying fame. Secrecy #urrounds the trip because it is being privately financed. The Brtish government has officially an nounced that it te not contributing a penny to the undertaking. The cost ‘will be $200,000, or approximately $10 a mile, Vickers, L4d., ts buflding plana Tt is a mew type nag the Amphibian. It bas wheels and pon- toons, eo it can land on either land | or water, Similar amphibians are being built by Vickers for the Japanese and on the Pacific. Smith will follow the much as possible. He will have as comrades on his voyage his brother, Sir Keith Smith, and Lieut. Bennett, a mechanic. The three’ are Australians and in 1919 made the first Night from England | to Australia. ‘The Australian government offered & prize of 10,000 pounds to the first | Australian who would meke this/ flight within a 20-day period. The} Smiths and Bennett completed the| voyage of 11,294 miles in 28 days, | December 10, 1919. As a reward for this flight King orge knighted the brothers. Smith's London-Austraiian was made easier by the fact hat during hia service in the wo he hed surveyed nes fr Seypt to coasts as m Mesopotamia, around.the-world tour will be simplified because he already has |flown over nearly a third of the | route. | HERE'S ROUTE HELL TAKE ‘The route will be from London across France via Paris and Lyons, across Italy via Pisa, Rone, Naples (Turn to Page 7, Column 2) . THWART MINE _ ROBBERY PLOT t of four men here late 1 rated one of the most dar. ing plots to rob California gold mines in the recent history of the Mother | Lode mining region, officials declared | today Feeling against the four men ar. rested ran so high during the night that they were spirited from the city by officers who feared lynching at tempts would be mad Saved Js a Dollar Earned And you can save many || a dollar in the course of a month by taking ad- vantage of the oppor- tunities in the advertis- ing columns of The Star. Right for in- stance, many of the stores are featuring month-end clearances which offer extraordi- nary economies, | | now, YEGGS All Banks Warned; 9 pennies which | $200,000 Stolen in| te A AVIATOR STARTS ON 4,000-MILE FLIGHT PORTUGAL TO BRAZIL LIBSON, March 30.—A 400 horsepower Fairey hydro-airplane, piloted by Coutinho, left on a flight to Brasil by way of the Canary islands at T o'clock this morning. Coutinho was accompanied by Capt. Sacadura, who will assist as relief pilot. The aviators were aswisted by four cruisers, sent by Brazil to stations between Portu: wal and the Canaries, The actual flying time for the 4,000-mile journey may not be more than 60 hours, Capt. Coutin ho said before departure, but he |! does not expect to arrive in Bra: ail before the middie of April, From the Canaries the aviators will proceed to the Cape Verde islands, and thence on the long hop to Pernambuco, Brazil, Portuguese crisers will be sta- tioned along the longest leg of the journey. INVADE STATE! Washington in Last Two Months) Declaring that Washington | | SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, MARCH 380, 1922. BANDIT KILLED Manhunters Think at Least One of Prey Was Shot Down in Duel By Hal Armstrong PORT ANGELES, March 30.— That one of the “peninsula ban dite” who have been terrorizing this region for the last week is either dead or desperately wound. ed ix the theory upon which Sheriff William Nelson is now working. The dead or wounded man ts pre | sumably an expert safecracker brought In from Seattle to rob the State bank at Sequim a week ago From evidence just brought to light | Noon is inctined to believe that he Was shot in the pistol duel In which the robbers engaged last Baturday with Deputy Sheriff Rex Mclpaes. After the pintot duel, which was fought near Maynards when McInnes pled three men under @ railroad trentic, a palr of gloves and an um- brella were found near a mack of the demperadoes had dropped in their h COULDN'T HAVE BELONGED TO THEM These manifestly dite—the men who held up the log- ging camp at Port Discovery the same night and kil} has been invaded by a horde of professional safecrackers, who ¢ been driven out of the » S. May, president of the | Northwest Association of Sher | iffs and Police, Thursday sent out a warning to every bank in the Nerthwest to be on the lookout. He amerted that the crime | wave which has been sweeping | the country ever since the war has now centered in this state, | and advises all banks to put on armed night watchmen and take every other possible precaution. At the same time May directed a| legram to Chief of Police James/ nderson, Vancouver, BH. C. | advising against a proposed reduct police force in that olty, wh understood, is contemplated. “The public does not realize the vast amount of crime that is going on today,” May gaid. “An idea of the situation is gained when one re. {members that during the last two months, in the state of Washington alone, more than $200,000 has been olen from state safety deposit (Turn to Page 7, Column 4) - lees Plan Defeat prepared to defeat Ge of Lloyd George LONDON March 20. is enemies Lioya political today oa in the house of common on Monday and cause his resigna-| on 2 of the three independent al parties in England laid the jto the and revision of the t and fo Ri 8 Vresbyterian Pr, for the downfall of the coali thru amendme motion on government premier’s |Rumor Viceroy of India Has Resigned | | 20 LONDON, March It was per sistent! rumored here today that | Lord Reading, viceroy of India, had resigned. confirmation er denial | of the rumor could be n Lord Reading, former chief justice, | was in sympat with the recent In dian demands for restoration of the an of Turkey ovren treaty. werainty of the # |Phinney Ridge Club | to Hear Candidates| Walter F. Meler, Im D. Lundy Charles H. Miller, candidates r mayor, will address the Phinney Improvern club Friday at} Woodland Park 70th st. and and B nt the church Hall council, Pp. m. at slatine Cox ndidates k. An the threecent-fare Ave nine for also adiress will given prapositicn CANDIDATES for yeting of the | ague of Women Voters at . A. Wednesday, | voted they have proved themselves to be expert woodsmen, and nobody ever | heard of a woodeman who went about jwith an umbrella. So Sheriff Nelson t# now sure they }must have belonged to @ third man, expecially imported to do the bank |“job"—something which the others |would have been unable to perform An it required expert knowledge and |the use of an electric drill McInnes, now recovering from the bullet wound he received in the duet, is positive that he shot down one of the bandits, who was carried off by his two compan- ions. Sheriff Nelson knows the identity of these two, He learned that brothers, an ex-convict, were visiting relatives in Sequim a week tonight and that they disap- immediately before the bank their description at has been rince that they are the that he has one ago peared robbery with the fugitives is that PURSUIT LONG neen time, sure men. |AND DIFFICULT of course, this sim- 0 makes In one way, m lifles the chase; but it a i that the pursuit will ong and difficult, ‘Th men were brought up in the woods of this peninsula and they know the coun. try far better than most of pursuers. ‘They can, therefore, hotd far longer than strangers (Turn to Page 7, Column 2) FACTORIES SEEK POWER RATE CUT [Plea Heard by Utilities certain out any Body; Decision Monday Final decision on the Moore off. peak power ordinance will be made by the city counecll Monday yposed ordinance would re. r rates 25 per cent during Representatives of all the big lmanufactories appeared before thx council! utilities committee Thursday and urged passage of the bill, declar ing that the pre nt high are eiving business from Seattle. aciiman W. H, Moore said that the municipal light plant is losing |$200,000 a year by failure to sell its \off-peak current Councilmen Erickson and Moore for the bill, John 1. Carroll opposed it, and Tindall and Cohen reserved their vote until Monday Councliman KR. B. Hesketh announced that he would vote for the measure THE FRATERNAL ORDER of A lo. U. W, will give a dance Monday at 9 p.m. at their hall at 1409 Ninth ave. free to members and their friends. could not have/ been the property of the other ban-| led Ray Light—as| latter two} the! The Seattle Star Per Year, by Mall, $5 to $9 HOME| iil BY CARL VICTOR LITTLE CHICAGO, March 30.—Rosa and Joseia Blazek, Siamese twins, died here early today. doxefa, who has been in a stupor for nearly a week, was the first to pass away. Her sister Rosa died 15 minutes later, at 3:10°a. m. Dr. Benjamin Breakstone and a staff of eminent Chicago surreons worked all night to the life of the famous pair, Their battle was lost, however, when complica tions net in, The twins had been suffering from arrhal jaundice WISHED TO DIE |AS THEY LIVED | Jomefa had been near |nearly a week. Rosa was apparent ily good health until two days jag. She made up her mind, ac leording to Dr. Breakstone, that she |wanted to die with Josefa. Frantz, the 12yearold son Rona, was with his mother aunt when the end came. boy, normal in every way, clutched | at the covers and sobbed when the end was unced Prank brother twin was present No attempt to operate |the two after the death |wag made, An X-ray |been taken to determine |bility, This was in the wishes of the | ‘the brother Frank was in of and pron Bu also F ot tal-| of | to separate of Joneta had nev the posst nccomance with si asked last jmignt If he would consent to an leration if his sisters revived | refused, saying it waa not their will Frantz, the son. id he preferred to be an orphan to crossing the de | sire of hia mother 1 aunt to go} as they had lived—insep: | SCIENTISTS TO STUDY CASE Il. Triska, attorney for the sis kept vigil all night, hoping would rally sufficiently to lgake a will disposing of their for tune amassed while traveling with | shows in Europe according to Dr. re , at the bodies will be turned over to American acientis nw will examine them in an effort |to discover the mystery of their existence, The bodies then will be leremated and the ashes sent back |to Czecho-Siovakia if relatives pers mit tosa and Josefa Blavek were the | greatest wonder twins in the world, according to Dr Breakstone, who has also examined the famous twins Jof Ialloo, the East Indian prince They were born 43 years ago. They {were educated and learned to play ‘will Wireless | WASHINGTON, March 30 | the first time in the history of politi bate by wireless cal campaigning, a will be staged tonight, The princi | pals will be Senator New of Indiana, who will talk fr Washin nm, and lex-Senator Beveridge, opponent of New for the senatorial nomination, who will talk from Indianapolis, New will start at 10 o'clock and his speech | speed today, piling up a reserve for [mitted suicide in his home bere last | Washington National Guard, af the (night by shooting, will be broadcasted via Arlington. Siamese Twins Go_ to Death Together death for) The! | hh, 4 Ot sttnanttin Sir Str Auckiand Campbell Gedde. that's é the violin. Tiy romped like other children of their age In early girlhood, the two started a tour of Europe which lasted over ja decade. They came to the United [States @ year ago to tour the coun- } IN WORLD W AR Tora was married. was killed in the world war. jects. “Anatomically, they wece two br caapeuet en ye trelyrembemrcsecerige of two organs they had in common,” said Dr, Breakstone. “They were joined together at the side and back.|to them, that I Like two individuals they had differ. |ed," he said ent likes and dislikes as far as similar environment would permit.” Overeating was the indirect cause jof the deaths, according to the doctor's diagnosis, In the oid coun try, Dr. Breakstone said, the women seldom eat ment. Since they have | been in the United States they have | waten five meals a day, f from five to six poun say a each. ~ GITY READY TO forci i | land, your abundance of water, the "| hills to give that water force and| Three of the men are believed to | power—truly, I think that great/have been killed, including Edward | —_ are in store for the near |. Hendrick, manager of the tobacco | uture out here in the way of creat ch ype others were serk | | ane ale tric development. That is /OUSly Injul _ Hendrick and the two laborers be | e thing—hydro-electric power. Program for Hero of Mame) tins wire tous. htc an were cl bed Is Arranged | pansion. ‘The population, fust a|#ebria at noon. | mere handful of people, that's all. | Marshal Joffre, famous hero of] “BY the way, what is the sauare | BE AST FAT. 1 | France, will arrive in Seatt 9:20| mileage of the state of Washing AL p. m, Thursday, from Blaine, Wash., | ton? TO TWO MEN after viewing the peace portal there.| Several reporters, and an assist- | Complete arrangements for program and entertainment of Mar. | shal Joffre and his wife and daugh ter, now in Seattle, have been made,!the ambassador, Captain Hugh|near here, was the scene of an | include a day of rest for the mar-; Tennant, private secretary, gazed/explosion today which blew two lat the residence of Samuel! Hill,| Out the car window with an appre-/ men to atoms. in Seattle, with a day of speech-mak./|ciative twinkle in his eye. Fred Nash and Ray Figueroa ing and receptions gollowiag “You know, I often obtain inter-| were the men killed. | At 10a. m. Saturday a public meet. | (Turn to Page 7 7, Column 4) The explosion did heavy property ing will be held at the Coliseum the: damage. ater, At 11 o'clock Marshal! Joffre ea will be driven in an automobile thru | the main streets, that the school chi! dren may him, The auto will} travel from Fifth ave, and Union st./ to the city hall, on Yesler way to “Now that qu very easily answered.” Campbell the ant tmffic the Climate LIMITS WORDS) Auckland smiled all” few words, ply am not talking.” Sir Geddes expressed a grasp of the industrial future of the Pacific coast which showed that he is a keen observer of condi- tions, “As to scenic beauty, I think the Pacific const is magnificent,” he declared apprecitaively. it k the possibility of industrial development that strikes me most bly. silent, British ambassador States, WILL SAY JUST A FEW WORDS ‘he people of Seattle are so kind, and have so insisted on my speaking ave gladly “Of course I shail just | really, I sim- bul manager Age n By E. P. Chalcraft wstion is one that is to the to meet the people and see the coun- ty of the West. Just vacationing, Lady Geddes, still seated at the in Sele Sines ie i the station Thursday morning, hodded brightly “Such a beautifal country it is, too, and such beautiful weather. Now down in Los Angeles the other day it simply poured. And we left the Yosemite valley in tears, as it were.” The British diplom: lyears ago was te refused it, “Your great areas of undeveloped of a that slow, STATE SCORES IN RUM TRIAL! | Testifying in the trial of the men Geddes, | United | down from his six- feet-something in height “We are just making a little trip table ae 5 . who a few ching school, and| from has risen to bis present high posi-| |tion in meteoric fashion, 'be inveigied into expressing his views | Her husband jon world affairs or on political sub- aswent “But railroad | quiz: ical smile broke over the face of REPORT British Envoy in City ROYALTY |GEDDES | FETED) Lauds Possibilities! of Seattle; Likes | AND RED CALLED? | | Nikolai Lenin was dead. Efforts to secure authentic re 'o| censorship. He was reported te meeting Tuesday night. Lenin is suffering from acute Progressive paralysis, a to a news agency dispatch from Reval. 14 MEN BURIED IN WAREHOUSE American Tobacco Company Building Crashes BOWLING GREEN, Ky., March 30.—Fourteen men were buried when warehouse of the American To | bacco company collapsed here today, OAKLAND, Cal, Mareh 30.—The explosives plant of the Coast Manu- |facturing company at Livermore, Radio Thieves Are New Police Problem The activity of radio thieves is in- } ond ave., ond on Second ave. to the indicted for robbing the government | creasing at an alarming rate, accord- Arcade building lliquor warehouse at Western ave.|ing to Seattle police. Typical of | J A luncheon will be held at noon at) ona wail st., last Aurust ofthese robberies was the looting of |fhe Masonic clubrooms 1 $30,000 worth of gover -owned | Crawford & Conover’s real estate of At 2 p.m. a public reception will jiquors, Chief of Police W. ar: | fice, 35th ave, N. E. and EB, 55th at. be held in the clubrooms. ling declared Thursday that R. A.| Thursday, A thief cartied away the | In honor of Mme, Joffre and Mlle. | Livingston had admitted that he had | phone receiver, eight electric globes Joffre, a luncheon will be held Sat- access to a key to the warehouse.|and then stole the window glass, urday noon at the home of Mrs. R.| prohibition Director Roy C. Lyle| Which he carefully removed from the / Auzias de Turenne, while at 4 p.m. followed Chief § ring to the stand. | frame, rige moved wit be ee Lyle’s testimony corroborated that! wes by the Business and Professiona ~ men's club, at. the Washington |%rered by government witnesses | Fopmer Soldier Is | Wednesday, concerning the state- ‘ hote |ments of Curtis Berndahl and Al Slugged and Robbed Sunday, at 2 p. m,, trees will be| pert 1, Dickey when they were ap. Political Debate | pated on the Seattle-Tacoma high:| jrehended , at Sunnydale, in memory of the | | (Turn to Page 7, Column 8) Cow I \Non-Union Miners | Continue Coal Work! at ake the liquor cache Disabled Vet Ends His Life in Tacoma :axen TACOMA, March 80.—Struck down. 8t/ trom behind’ and then robbed, E, W. Eckert, 26, former Camp Lewis so! dier, as found lying unconscious on the street here last night. His army discharge and $38 in money had been TACOMA, March 30.—Despondent | | CHARLESTON, W. Va., March 90, | because of ill-health developed while) AN EXHIBITION DRILL and West Virginin’s non-union coal|serving with the 18th engineers in| smoker to stimulate recruiting will miners continued to work at top) France, Sidney W. Bradford, 31, com. | be given by the 146th Mield Artillery, fields April 1. armory, April 14, at 8. am ¥