The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 6, 1922, Page 1

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J THE STAR IS ELECTED SEATTLE’S MOST POPULAR NEWSPAPER BY 15,000 PLURALITY FE (WEATHER Tonight, fair; Sunday, gentle winds, mostly southerly. Temperature Last Maximum, 57, Today noon, 50, Hours Minimum, 42. showers; PPP DPI DAA ALDARA ALP PPP PP PPP PPP PP PP PPP PPP STEAMER IS ASHORE WITH 100 ON BOARD! On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise he Seattle Star | Bntered as Second Clases Matter May 8, 1899, at the Postoffion a t Beattie, Wash, under the Act of Congress March 9, 1879, Per Year, by Matl, #5 to #9 VOLUME 24. O. 61. << SAT URDAY, MAY 6, 1922. EDITION I Whiskers 1 Win National Home Brew Quit stoking So have we. Howdy, folks! the furnace yet? Vii-iipt eee City counci! canvassed the elec tion returns last night and decided that Brown had won Gosh, what & relief! eee University student's nose ts burned off in an initiation stunt. President Suzzalio is investigating. Tuttut! Boys will be boys! eee VAMP, SEZ | Be friendly with th’ people | | you know. If it wuan’t fer 4 them you'd be a total stranger. , A soft shirt is a social break. 1 like tt, It satisfies no parlor snake 1 bike tt. It's soft within, it’s soft outside, It doesn’t scratch or tear your hide, It lets your Adam's Apple stide, I like it. eee SAMUEL PEPY'S BREW Priday, May 5 DOK my wife to dinner at the White Lunch, and thence to the Metropolitan to see the Green-) wich Village Follies, for which Bill) McCurdy did give us free passes, | otherwise we should not have gone, as pay day is not until Saturday. 1 Watching the Follies girls, of! which many were saucy wenches/| and but slightly clad, my wife did take offense because I did crane/ my neck, so that the thought occur | red to me that going to a Follies} show with one’s wife ts like taking | a ham sandwich to a banquet, and} when I did tell her of this, she wus/ angry with me, but I did laugh) heartily And saw Ed Maxwell, bonds on the Rialto, mgr ag remark afterwards that saw prettier legs even on geen who sells | Contest. aa avenue, and likewise saw Wal- ter Fulton, and he would have been seated nearer the stage but sae the trap-drummer was in the way And #0 home and to bed, my Sia still very cross. . . TOUGH ON MARRIED PEOPLE “Any man and woman register ing themselves as husband and wife in any hotel, public inn, or boarding house, shall be deemed guilty of @ gross misdemeanor, and, upon conviction, shall be punished in the discretion of the court."—Laws of North Caro- lina. |M | | Mra A. 8. |tee on ment club the Peace, | Langseth’s 17-foot beard. alfe the proposed civic for Ballard Friday Progresa and BALLARD FETE | LEADER CHOSEN 0. S. "Metcalfe Made Temporary Chairman was chosen |temporary chairman of the commit improve when Prosperity » It seems that even husbands | "eek celebration in Ballard began and wives must stay at home in |The women ot the club, with the carolina, ween of the Bike’ elie, Will exper pee tara a, . the planting of flowers and The dateles wave shrubs in the parkings of the d Z yue— ne The first pls ong Set to des scheduled for Saturday Her husband's brew. | ee |interest in the celebrat ‘Tuesday Lite ts just one doggone thing af-\ under the aunpice ot, ter another. Now that the cam ie. dh: Ween er cuits paign is over, atraw beanies and | wit} be given with mu Aigo sport shirts will begin to appear on | program. Thursda Te eixa peapens Ave. entertain with a ba ert pr s—_——_—_—__—_ Kjmony in Dr. E. J. Brown says one | | invited th term as mayor will be enough | |to attend a “( for him | |dance in the | Well, one term was more | |night than enough for Caldwell! | Wednesday % Bi pices of th ose |dance will be mma Goldman declares the Rus ge bi sian revol complete fizzle. ‘The usual female criticlam when she run things. a name of PLEASE NOTIFY POLICE their new h entire the Factions in Ballard over the mans Hard high sehi name. At a night at the F |final vote wili be cere . ney have Ballard community of night, ur America held in “f ch taken home the Nations” nder the num n Legion, a the Eagles’ Is the day set for the final allard-Sun: ill contesting nging of the eting Friday ool the ‘CALLS SALES First Ave. shor store adver TAX DOOMED tixes: “Some Seattle men have . a a4 worn nothing but our shoes for | WASHINGTON, May 6.—Presk 25 years.” dent Harding waa told toda So o--e Senator Watson, Indiana, « It should not be very difficult fora | the leading members of the medium to fill her ice chamber | finance committee, that it is im with } er music these days,| possible to pass a bill thru com what w radio and everything. | «ress providing for a sales tax as e+e the means of paying a soldier SYMPATHY | bonus Bandits at Seattle have stolen The president has Insisted that newspaper pay roll. We trust the|the sales tax ts the only feasible capital punishment law ts operative at Seattle—Kansas City Star Yep. Saturday we didn't enough money to buy lunch, that when hundreds the have! the to pay means of financing the adjusted that’s the way we felt last | should provide the r of soldiers th mill e bonus and compensation bill ns of raising ns necessary * # * Page Hans N. Langseth, of Barney, 8, D. He is wanted down in Sacra- ment k Hans ts the winner of the ard Contest whi b been staged to locate th est beard in the United He's got It—by fa Se perfectly good feet of wh sprout from his chin. And 8 result of b Td Hans t# entitled ortation to Sacra that he may urn attend the “Days 49” celebra > be held in the California to 28. When he arrives, in Sacra © he'll be presented with a one of the nix id va he will be p ul of $200—Just for dis his prizewinning crop of whiskers. Langseth’s beard got its start Norway, for he lived In Wilds. 1, when he decided to “let ‘er It is the custom at Eldsvold, as Langseth explains, for men to permit their whiskers to grow during the winter months and to shave them off each spring. He did this up until he reached Then, emboldened by the as tonisht uxuriousness of its growth, he decided to let the chest protector sprout Just wa to see how long And it has dan aver. age rate of 4% Inc a year The extreme end of the whis kers, which, years ago, nestled close to the chin, still form a mat of Viking red, their color when the beard first reached the United States in 1876 Gradu the color fades and the upper section is snow white. Langseth takes an active in terest in his farm near Barne When he i# not using his beard » the distance between (ust about a rod, ou know) he keeps it tucked beneath his vest when it fe thus hidden merely think he had a crop of fluffy whiskers For, in truth, he has a double growth, While the main cham pion strands run to the full 17 feet, a shorter crop still bushes out in the ordinary beard man ner. It took five and two-thirds stretches of a three-foot tape to get the measurement of Hans Langseth, of Barney, N. D., is winner of the Nationa! Beard * * Friends enjoy the sight wh Langseth, “I pull my beard, in the tug atyle, Not any hurts my neck.” And so, © beard that out in the days of ‘4 hand to help Californt brate the “Days of '49." used to le “When I was younger,” will RECEPTION FOR CHINESE MENACE WHITES (Defeated Rebels! ; | Threatening At-| ; tack on Foreign : Quarter of City SHANGHAL, China, May 6— | Ten thousand mutinous Chinese | troops are reported marching upon Tien Tin to loot the for- | eign quarter, The whites are preparing for » desperate de- fonse. These troops are the remnants of the shattered army of Gen- eral Chang Tso Lin, seeking re venge for their crushing defeat by General Wu Pei Fu's forces. A dispatch filed from Tien Trin at 3 a. m. said scouts had observed the mutineers near tho ror One American and one Mrftish ree) the! |tment were cooperating along | outer line of defense, the messages | sald, and the French Annamite troops were being strengthened by rein-| foreements of French citizens. i MUTINEERS FIRE ON VILLAGERS Scouts reported that large bodies of the mutineers were coming from the direction of Luofa, They are ut terly disorganized, marching lke jarmed me The mutineers are fir-| jing on villagers and shooting at their own troop trains, the scouts said | ‘The news direct from Peking is |not alarming, altho the legation of the United States and the other pow, ers have ordered foreigners to aban. don homes in the Chinene districts jand take refuge in the compounds. This was done for fear defeated Chang troops would get into the city, seize the arms of the gendarmerie * Langseth washes out his famous | and begin looting Growth. He uses « curtain Looting was reported in some of stretcher, And, take it from | the outlying suburbs, but it Hana, it’s considerable of a 30d | quickly suppressed + Poss @ comb thru 17 feet of | ant ipaRy MEN | PRAISE VICTOR led about his body VICTIM AC TWO oT 19, were the other negroes burned. was |Fhouted nish “Coomer Ali,” Within a few weeks after it his short stories. stories and permit it to be town. Soul” was the result. too soon. 12 and 13. WATCH “The Color of H By the Author of “COOMER ALI” written by S has been one of the literary sensations of the year. it was one of the six most popular novels at the public library and its book store sales have been phenomenal. For this reason Mr. Hurst's earlier work has been much enhanced in value and one big house has already started to make arrangements to publish a volume of When The Star heard of this it asked Mr. Hurst to,pick out the best of his short Mr. Hurst agreed—and “The Color of Her “I don’t say it’s the best,” Mr. Hurst, “but I like it best because of the girl But there, if we go on we’ “The Color of Her Soul” will be published in The Star in two installments, Friday and Saturday, May TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE er Soul” . B, H. Hurst, of Seattle, had come from the presses published in his own home said ll be telling you the story FOR IT! BY TEXAS MOB der of Young Girl KIRVIN, Texas, May 6— Three negroes were burned here at dawn for the assaalt and mur- der of Eula Ausley, pretty 17- year-old school girl, whose body was found near here, mutilated by 30 stab wounds, Tied to the seat of a cultivator Placed in the center of the city square, the three negroes met their death before a mob of 500. “Snap” Curry, 26, who was cap- tured after a 36-hour chase with bloodhounds, was the first to be burned. He was alleged to have confesned match lighted. As the flames mount Curry shouted: | Lord, I'm coming.” | SES | BLACKS | Mose Jones, 44, and John Cornish, ‘Oh. After Curry had been ignited, “Burn Jones and John C they are as guilty as I am His chant, “On Lord, I'm comin: he r |rose higher and higher as the flames anys American military observers were leaped e fe loud in thelr praise of the humane|, J0ne# was roped and dragged over of war attitude of the troops of Wu's vic. |e hot coals and more wood thrown ho. It |torous army. Ther are busy ren.(°% In six minutes he, too, was dering ald to the enemies’ wounded, | 1°84: started |The wake of the great retreat is| Cornish was Inssoed and dragged Ibe on | marked with scores of dead soldiers |OPto the fire, Again more fuel was s cele and camels, wrecked dead wagonn, jand wounded, disabled artillery and) jall the debris of war. le TOYKO, May 6.—Chang Tao Lin, leader of the defeated Manchurian }forces in the Chinese ctv ! reaching here war, was reported in dispatch today, as withdrawing with his men reports All tended to show the added and the lowed @ thrilling man hunt | were beaten all day three bodies burned together. The mob heaped wood and of! onto he fire, keeping the blaze going six |hours. The capture of the three Blacks fol Farm 1 of three coun day morning to! Creek bottoms rs and business m: ies began early F un down the slayer. | remained Yo THREE BURNED {MONEY LEADER DEAD IN EAST, Negroes Lynched for Mur-| Henry P. Davison Dies After Operation on Brain NEW YORK, May 6.—Henry P. Davison, of J. P. Morgan & Co., died today following an op- at his home, Peacock Long Island. operation was of the brain. following bulletin was eration Point, The tumor The for a 1 o'clock this afternoon, tumor of the brain, uld only be partially re- O11 was poured on his body and a| OPERATE IN HIS HOME The a room on the second floor of Davi- son's Long Island residence by Dr. Charles L. Elsberg, the same sur geon who operated on Davison for | the same tumor recently. J. H. Morgan, Davison's partner, reached his home shortly before the operation was undertaken. A gathering of other well known) financiers and associates of Davison in the house waiting for| the dutcome Dr. Blsberg was assisted by Drs. Riley, Kenyon and Stockey of New k, as well as by Dr, Fred Til ney, Dr. Evan Evans, Dr. John E. Weeks and Dr. Medwin Leale. The had been equipped as a hospital op- room with all necessary. ap- pliances, SPENDS EVENING WITH FAMILY Davison spent last evening with | his family as usual and did not ap: ar at all worrled or agitated. This morning he chatted with mem: bers of his family until shortly be operation was performed in} chamber on the second floor | RESCUE. ON WA ‘TOS Hawkeye | State | Fast Agro | Tourists Fro | West on Board — | BALTIMORE, Md., —The liner Hawkeye St of the Western Navig: company, with 100 gers aboard, is fast ag off Kedge’s strait, 40 \below Cove Point in Ci |peake bay, according \wireless message here. The message did not details, It is not however, the ship is in Tugs were it to seni sistance. Most of |sengers are tourists, jing to their homes Hawaii and California. ‘CALL WITNESS IN KLAN PROB! Grand Jury "Opens in Los Angeles »LOS ANGELES, Cal., May | Lifting of the mysterious white enfolding activities of the Ku Kian in Los Angeles county here today when agents of the @ | trict attorney's office started | subpoenas on the witnesses at grand jury investigation which | Monday More than 200 persons will be: to tell what they know of the and the events which led up to | now famous Inglewood raid, Despite the failure of Klan clais to produce the names of @ | who participated in the raid, Dist | Attorney Woolwine expects te [indictments against every man took part in it, Since the shooting of Deputy Sher- iff Marinor Mosher, which ell jthe masked outbreak nearly two | Weeks ago, district attorney's opera. tives claimed to have secured evi dence which will unquestionably identify the participants and fix the responsibility. | Among the most prominent wit: jnesses will probably be W. CG. Cov |burn, grand goblin of the klan's Pas - | Curry was captured about 6:30 | cific realm, and W, G. Price, who im jcivil_war ie at-an end. lp, fore the arrival of the surgeons, |the inner councils of the organization Mayor-Elect to Be Guest at} Arrest of Chang Laan Hyt, one of | Me ies kiana when it was necessary to prepare|is known as king kleagie, it wan Gime oe Sunday Function |Chang Tso Lin . chief Heutenaats, | OO aie QUICHE him for the operation derstood, Many important witnesses — has been ordered fe | Mans ce Gb Gaustinle. wren ranks Davison died on the operating | who wif receive subpoenas today, — lip. and @ithid ie hour 6 woe rawa | able after the operation had lasted | however, have not yet been connects |” | To celebrate the anniversary of CHINESE CIVIL |gathered around the jail, ‘The black (2 hour, it was learned at his resi: |ed with the investigation publicly and’ |two years’ occur by Mother was slipped out and placed in the/**8e* The only persons present | authorities expect to produce start Ryther and her children of the new WAR IS OVER! State Bank building, where he was| "ere Members of the operating | ling new evidence. brick home on Stone Way drive, and | put under guard jstaft. The family and close per-| 220 ——————-——— to show apprect nm to Mother | ’ MARSHALL 1" sneritt HM Mayo, of Firestone ig a and business friends were in| Ryther for her 40 years of servi PEKING, 6—Gen. Wu Pel) county, had been notified and arrived | room in another part of the |to Seattle youngsters and their| iy entered, Peking today and visit-!tn Wortham about 11 p.m, The mob house mothers, a reception will be held/ed President Hsu Shih Chang had grown to such an extent that the| JUSt before he went under the in her honor at the Ryther Child! Victorious over the Manchurtan| sheriff decided to move the negro to|!Mfluence of the anaesthetic, Davi. Home, Sunday, from to 6 p. m./army of Chang Tso Lin, th °m-! another town. The sheriff started to|*92 appeared to be very confident FOR BASIN PLAN | According to Mrs, Peter Bettin-|mander of the central army assured| Waco with his prisoner, but,the mob| the operation would be a success. | ger and Dr, Frank R. Loape, mem-|the president there would be no) followed closely, and on Tf hing | He laughed and Jol with surgeons | Fe a a bers of the committee on arrange-| interference with the Peking gov-| Fairfield he placed the negro in the| 4nd was in excellent spirtis. \Irrigation League to Try for ments, s¢ hundred Seattle citi- | ernment Jcounty jail, Under sev question Henry Pomeroy Davison, of J. P, zens are planning to tribute He showed the president a num: | (Turn to Page 7, Column 1) | Morgan & Co., Was among America's $200,000 }to Mother Ryther during tho aft-|per of telegrams from leaders pledg | » (Turn to Page 7, Column 4) = jernoon. Among the guests will be ing support to a policy of recon-) - Plans for the campaign to raise Mayor Caldwell, Mayor-elect Brown, | struction 125 NAMED IN panes 00,000 in the Pacific Northwest and all the new board members of| ‘The president will probably re-| || FUNERALS FORCED TO} / suring tho next two years were the Ryther Home. main in office until expiration of| INDICTMENTS! discussed at a meeting of the ex: When asked what downtown mer-|hix term, next year CARRY UNION LABELS } | ccutive committee of the Columbia, chants might contribute toward the| ‘The Chinese civil war t= over,| OMAHA, Neb, May 6-—The fed. ’ Rasin Irrigation league, held Satur | celebration, Mother Ryther replied,|Chang Tso Lin's once midable|eral grand jury Friday returned al IN DRIVERS STRIKE day noon at the Rainier club, }“Oh, if they must send something, |army ts broken into trolated de [blanket indictment against men,| SAN FRANCISCO, May 6.—All “There is nothing to announce tm | just send toys for the children.” tachments which are fighting oc-|charging use of the mails to de-|] tu s in San Francisco today ||regard to this meeting,” sald | So new toys for the Ryther chil-|casional r guard actions as they|fraud in connection with the fail-|] carried the union label |Charles Hebberd, chairman of the dren will be featured among other | fall back on Mukden. ures of the Guaranty Security com:| On either the first automobile || committee, “except that we ane | \things at the home Sunday. During} Chang Tso Lin, himself now def-|pany of Omaha, Des Molnes and|| of each cortege or on the hearse, || working on the campaign for the | 0m the afternoon the guests will be |Initely eliminated from the political| Denver, the Midiand Savings bank||® large card bearing the word financiat fund and are reviewing | lentertained with a musical pro |situation, is in flight to Manchuria,|of Lincoln, the Pioneer State bank ghivg Brgy dre , || the general pfogress of the work ee gram, and refreshments will’ be| Dr. Sun Yat +Sen, pr nt of|of Omaha, the Farmers’ State bank his was due to the chauffeurs’ |) +5 date. panes {the southern China government,| of College View, Neb. and the Col-| peace leclared yesterday, It was The fund of $200,000 will be rate jwith headquarters at Canton, in|onial Coal & ‘Timber company. of] pipet ar lgperitobag oa led at once, Hebbart said, with pay | {sa the only prominent opponent of| West Virginia |] tnust be to marked, ‘This devine {{ments to extend over a twoyent UES HUBBY FOR nleto unification. Dr. Sun Yat} All these organizations are in|] Mus! be so marked. This decision 1) period, n raised funds for Chang's cam-|hands of receivers and involve! | Mh erat were athedahed fe ||, The Columbia Basin Irrigation NEW YORK, May 6.—Mrs Bertha | otherwise White ts suing her husband for | - $25,000 damages because he sued| Lotteries are sald to have orig! her for divorce | natea in ancient Rome ASKING DIVORC E| paign but failed to support him of several millions of leased on bonds ranging to $26,000 each. it Is charged, | dolls men were re-| from $1,000] wes to stockholders, All the indicted today, union agreements made two years ago, having ended the practice of holding funerals on Sunday in San Francisco, league was formed at Pasco for the _ purpose of uniting the Paelfig ” Northwest in the movement behind the Columbia Basin irrigation project,

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