The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 26, 1922, Page 1

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tre, tom LL has tuck,” feally tuck as Allen has FOUR Pit M4 years ago. 4 “right hard as he lacon describes it as 4 result of which himself, all his life. God designed them. Lots of folks have Tt “right hard luck” that couldn't be helped. now and again—but, blame, But—it was fortunately enough, Allen, few have such un But intermittent hard troubles, had home of wealthy parenta, It started, s Possible—just barely porsible— matter of fact, even Tonight and Sat erate sou: wt ‘Temperature Maximum, 55. VOLUME 24. NO. 78. Eq WEATHER Today noon, 50, urday, fair; thwesterly nda. Last M4 Hours Minimum, 43. (Copyright, 1922, by The Seattle Star) Greetings, folks! American Le gion Poppy day starts tomorrow. Say it with flowers! | eee } We have only one criticism of | Chauncey Olcott's new Irish play Nobody got killed tn a riot. cee A wanton young wastrel named Juan Met a girl with the neck of a sjuan, Bo he started to soak And when he awoak Wine, watch, wealth and woman were guan, eee Redotph Valentine's title, “The Perfect Lover,” will have to be| amended. eee | OH, RODOLPHL “The American people have been) to kind te me and * dave accepted me at every turn for more than I con- ceive to be my veal worth.” —Ro- Jolph Valentino. eee Mayor Caldwell vetoes appropria- tion ordinances and 5,000 city em-/ ployes get no pay. They can now sing the old army ditty: All we do is sign the payrolt, All we do is sign the payroll, All we do is sign the payroll, And we never get a gosh-darn cent! | see / At last there ts harmony at the eity hall. All the city workers join in cursing the mayor. | see Caldwell says the council double- | crossed him. Yep! Double-cross marks where the body was found. “ee THE CALDWELL TOAST Here's to the city council. They can’t read, they can't write, they can't think—but, oh Lord, how they can double-cross! 7 The mayor even vetors wn pay iH. © 2 y cr to invest Patrotman Legate He ix now in a pos the death of Julius Caesar Be that as it may, Capt. G. T. January is commander of the Key- stone State, Bet he's a cold-blooded cuss. eee EDUCATION He married five before he learned Each female quirk and whim; Then he announced to all concerned No wedding bells for him! {Capt. Amundsen’s undertake. lfrom the cept eating. cipal—I may almost we should carry the very best food obtainable. at-the North Pole! In the words of Sadie, the beautiful sten- og, can you imagine it? If you’re a normal human being® you) cannot. But Capt. Roald Amundsen isn’t a normal) human being. If he were he never could! South Pole and the! Northwest passage and other regions known to the general public only vaguely, thru the medium of the magazines and the Sunday have discovered the supplements. |HE’LL MAKE IMAGINATION |\COME TRUE AT THE POLE } Therefore, Capt. Amundsen not only can imagine walnuts, bon bons and similar dain- ty viands at the North Pole; he can actually leat ’em there. And unless his plans go very h awry, that’s just exactly what he’ll be doing a year or so hence. He has it all muc planned out. One of the most important items Nans before he first saw the Mght of day, some ‘There was an accident when he was born— his twisted and maimed instead of the way that was one of tho#e unfortunate affairs “right hard luck” for that was just the beginning of his If he had been born tn the city, fn the and care that only money can buy might ¢n and Shackleton and other past heroes of ition to prove the frigid zones may have been satisfied with such heroic fare—but not Amundsen. “Good food,” Amundsen explained today, “is one of the prime essentials of such a trip as we are about to Remember, we are to shut ourselves off rest of the world for a number of years. The ordinary recreations will all be denied us—ex- Therefore, as eating will be our prin- y only—form of enjoyment, But he wan't. country, far from the zone of orthopedic hospitals. en, his parents would have to pay for his treatment. little legs were Nobody was to to biame body grew and developed—even tho his legs didn’t boys and girle—and tried not it might have been that the elill omy, SEATTLE, in the cargo of | Not | of mandate from Judge Calvin 8. morning, requiring urer Ed Terry and And have made him like other boys, He was born out tn the And even if he hadn't Another misfortune for whieh nobody was but “right hard luek” for Allen, The years passed on and Allen's brain and =~ and he got along aa best he could, He went to school and associated with other much about those irksome wooden crutchos that had become almost @ part of his anat- GET COURT WRIT | Argument on Vetoed Pay to Be Held Today Carrying into superior court the fight for their pay, city om ployes secured an alternate writ Harry W. Carroll to make pay- Tn a mild, stole sort of way, specialista and for a little while, been too poor Hin futher, tired of poverty, tired of being ible, of ree, to give him the attention fo his mother has come to The Star for ald. unable to provide the things that his crippled that he requires, This len't much—becauee, She wants someone to offer Alien a tempo won needed, decided to take direct action. He =!” te of his infirmity, rary home, near the Orthopedic, so he can violated certain sections of the Volstead act weals story oy can pet arotnd Keeiese ingly safely make the trip by himself, nat in apeeegane ee, OY Oe, ee eet te salghiy impopinnt, uniee It’s only temporary — because interested Maybe there were extenuating circumstancer; trips & week to the Orthopedic hospital for {i Att Sirs ty Mm in MNOa A eM ney to think too maybe not—according to the way you hap: treatment. Unless he gets this treatment bis Sens to look at it. father, Allon, , WASH., FRIDAY, MAY 26, 1922, ally Approved WASHINGTON, May 26.—Prest- dent Harding today signed the Miller. | Jones anti-narcotics bill, which pro-| 1 Presiding | vides for the deportation of aliens| Oy Friday |tound gulity of violating the federal | Comptroller |Rarcotic laws, : “Folks who don’t put out earwig| | 199 ment as required by law. | RT al et, wave LARSEN JURY, “ y the state.” ' An ey have! at 1:30 p. m, when it will be argued | Y it should be om The Maud, lying at the Lander st. terminal, has been! before Superior Jue Otis = W IS DEADLOCKED) r . 4 3 in dep No. 6. e — ose loaded up with such a vast cargo of food, light, heavy and Prinker in department No, 5. If the! ‘TACOMA, May —26,—Hopelessty| * assorted, that, to the casual visitor, it would seem that the) po ney exists, and that the claims of ep on the ipo jury trying) = usiness , Ole 8. Larsen, former president of| explorers would have to eat at least nine meals a day, with the petitioners are vi alid, city em. | | the defunct Scandinavian American | Fes Ky. ving. ieory | plenty of in-between snacks, if they hope to eat up their ployes will receive their delayed pay | oii was expected to be dismissed 4 Pcs reba ak x whole supply in the next seven years, M petition for the writ wae made by | hy Ry gy Aig 2 Siok teal | Ee aie EACH MAN TO DRINK HB ‘Thomas, an employe In the | right, waa reported standing elght to 4 Bast Seattle citizens kick to «rand 98 POUNDS OF COFFEE |himseit and of “all other employes, four fOr conviction. | 4 Mona iittie ferry in your town? | ‘There are, for instance, 62 cases of coffee, each contain-| “fiers and agents of the appomted, | alleged illegal borrowing by Larsen | 7 Pe ing a dozen one-pound tins—or 1,944 pounds in all. On the} ana whether under civil service rem [of 200 trop Se sg oe ae ten 3 mea Catitornia |2aSis of 10 men on a seven-y cruise, this would mean ulations or not, and whether ciitla | wilt not be tried for several Shep ihieagie.”—Hentiien, 28 gig a per year, or nearly two and a half ree ne ete een ee nand except. that | preci tab abn nl a | pounds a month, iis application is not made on be- | . He stood on the bridye at midnight,| There are crates and crates of canned and dried fruitas| batt of ugh aks Caldwell; shayer Of Prisoner Says ; Waleed be tee jall from this country, by the way; hams and sides of bacon) "Js city ihe, He Killed Taylor} Ls seared jaf uoeks |by the dozen; every conceivable kind of canned and potted ,, je pa heen Mag ta ib and due| POUGHKEEPSIE, N. Y., May 26. But he had no alibi |meat, put up in the Norwegian style; hundreds of gross of | on May 25 has been held up because | Advices from i Ppragbared pate q i eR ge A 5? egys—flaked, of course; huge quantities of pickled walnuts| ot Mayor Caldwell’ veto of council |were being awaltel today by loetl) ict oe Genet when | and other Scandinavian dainties; hundreds of pounds of whi aiatildty taveesieande ad Ppa with veani to » man giving the 4 othin’.” sugar, candy and other sweets; tea enough to start an im-| "4 {otal of $422,882.16 in salaries Dames of Frank Doran and 0,” our” then, what are you going porting house, and so on, ad infinitum. has been held up, together with [who says he killed William emmond | fy eS But food isn’t the only luxury that the adventurers Wi rey eraa totes of SEAL ETE Dt eld ine eanvtiersmend snooadencat é oie enjoy. They are sure to encounter so many hardships that} Hn a lag , | charge of holding up a taxi driver WHY THE WILD WAVES ARE |nothing has been overlooked in the way of compensating| ‘rhe city employes’ side of the ease | Police are inclined to believe he faked q Tee WILD comfort will be presented by Attorney Rob |the Taylor murder story to get il matiante gicos deme doses | One of the most important items of the cargo comprises |°T 1. fvate. while pera ng yl oa oye A ae ae urn to Page 7, Column 1) urn to Page 7, Column # Cltye charge, . > Pte taut NNED UNDER AUTO | He’s a Boy With a Run of “Right Hard Luck” and Wants Someone to End It By Aileen Claire CORRADINE Indeed, he might almost be said to have been happy— But his evii omen hadn't deserted him yet. But, no matter how gullty the it was “right hard luck” again for The paper with a 15,000 daily circulation lead over its nearest competitor The Seattle Star Botered as Second Class Matter May 8, 1899, at the Postoffice at Meattle, Wash, under the Act of Congress March 8, 1879. AMUNDSEN BUYS TONS ‘OF SWEETS Great Explorer to Eat Bonbons and | Pickled Walnuts at North Pole on Epochal Expedition BY ROBERT BASTIEN BERMANN Pickled walnuts and chocolate bon bons) POLAR EXPEDITION LEADERS AND SHIP n c Capt. Roald Amundsen, intrepid Arctic and Antarctic explorer, who is about to leave ship, the Maud, now being pre-| Seattle in an attempt to “drift over the top of the world” (left). At the right is Capt. O. pared in Seattle for a seven-year trip thru the vast | Wisting, commander of the Maud, in which the trip will be made. Below is the Maud. and hitherto unexplored Polar Basin, is food. just ordinary sea food, like salt horse and hard tack, |but the most inviting delicacies that the market affords. —Photos by Price & ( CITY EMPLOYES [HARDING SIGNS (METERED PHONE ~ ANTI-DOPE BILL, 700 HIGH, EDICT 'Miller-Jones Measure Form-| Commission Orders Lower Rates in Everett for measured telephone service at Everett too low, the state de- partment of public works today ordered the telehrones, Tw ty lines, from — Thursday, was recalled to the stand 300 to 400 telechrones; wr | EMPORIA, Pa, May 26—Nine em.|/"iday morning = and | eubijeciad ty lines, from 150 to le- | ployes were reported killed and many! ‘ © Series of questions on Legatais: chrones. y bm |others injured when three packing! PHYsical condition 60 telechrones, © | houses blew. up today at the om 2ror. © fle death: changes are mado effective on | Cameron Powder Works, at Sinema-|1W2zed, independently, the past month’s service, for | honing, about 21 miles from here, | WhO wanted to make sure oh } bills will be rendered ‘The cause of the explosion is un.| Where Piclow was at the time @f june 1. i. 2 |the tragedy. Six and elghtparty -Iines are | {OW Some of the injured will be) Piclow said Logate was a physlonl ordered elimin “i and |dead wero killed instantly by the} reck and that he was a heavy mam of the minimum is preserib only rate Millionaire Baker Son Held for Trial WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., May 26 other near-by towns. ‘Two witnesses, Mark Hall and Bya Justice Young this afternoon dis . ig |Gunn, both colored, living at 124% missed the writ ;of habeas corpus | BIRMINGHAM, Ala., May 26.) Main st., were then called, Both brought by attorneys for Walter $.| Ten miners were killed in a gas ex-| testified that they were awakened Ward, and ordered the millionaire Plosion in the Margaret mines ofjearly in the morning by three baker’s son who confessed to the kill.| the Alabama Fuel and Iron com-|noises in the garage across the ing of Clarence Peters to jail without | Pany, 20 ™ ast of here, ac i- street. The noises sounded like bail. jing to |shots, the third one being plainly mee Sa i The bodies have not been recov-| from a revolver, ‘The jury then ex- LOS ANGELES.—Funeral ar-| ered. amined ate’s pistol from which angements being made for Gilson = it ns two shots had been fired. Willets, author, traveler and war| PARIS.—Rev. Dr. A. H. Haiga Corson testified to finding four robbery | correspondent, who died suddenly in @ hotel here yesterdas OLYMPIA, May 26.—Finding original The changes One-party li But the trouble f* that Mra Corradine can't work and also make thene trips—and it simply isn't safe for Allen to attempt the long trips alone. As a remult of this last, crowning misfor- tune, Allen's about at the end of his rope. His mother, Mrs. A forced to go to work Corradine, has been which makes it impos aren't, weeks. If you're interested call Rainier 0303-W. Corradine, er, will be out in a few legs will keep on getting worne, If ho gets it they won't get worse—and they may even get better. Per Year, by Mall, $6 to $9 S$ Watch Companion Die Slowly, Powerless to Aid Him Pinned beneath an overturned automobile, two men and a woman watched witl. horrified eyes Friday morning | the driver of the car was slowly choked to death by weight of the machine upon his neck. Their machine had turned turtle on the Black Diam | highway, six miles out of Auburn, trapping all four ben j1t, Arthur C, Hubbard, of Auburn; was thrown si | by the impact and his neck was caught between the door the automobile and the ground. His friends, powerless to aid him, were compelled to |on while the life was slowly crushed out of Hubbard. David Rae, of Kent, was caught beneath a seat, suffe internal injuries and probably a broken back. He yas. lieved to be dying at the Taylor-Lacy hospital at Aubut over and miraculuously escaped waited, huddled together, with a and turned completely over. | |Where He Was on Mrs. Rae suffered severe lacer- ations to her shoulder, but was able to go home after being treated at the Taylor-Lacy hos- pital e All thre of the survivors, however, 3 were in a state of nervous collapse } as a result of their terrible ordeal. 1 The accident occurred at 4:30 a. m. ! A man named Armstrong was the| first to reach the scene of the trag. but he was unable to pull the Fatal Night Is dead man for their companion, i j r'gartamnig sot n''yen| Big Question Armstrong returned from Auburn— +4 but it seemed like years wine ttree| HLearing’ under the machine. The fourth member of the party, Jerome Uder, of Kent, y car off the wreck victims and to go all the way to Auburn to T arty had been returning to n at the time of the a was thrown to the floor of the get assistance evidently trave at tonneau as the machine went Meanwhile Uder and the Raes » of speed, skidded into the | arter, Star Staff Photographers | “Where was Police Sergeant | E. W. Pielow between 12:30 and o'clock on the morning of ditch ‘Pigpersl March 172" ve machine, which was demol ished, was the property of Frank} That question, fired time and Patterson, of Auburn, Patterson was|again at Pielow by members of the not in the party Hubbard's body was taken to the ;Connell Undertaking company in Au- jburn, | coroner’s jury as well as by Deputy — | Prosecuting Attorney T. H. Pattere son, has become the all-important issue in the investigation of the murder of Patrolman, Charles Q. Legate. Legate came to his death Be tween 12:30 and 2 a. m., March 1. Pielow, who, with Patrok man Tom Walsh, found the slain officer, has declared on the stand that he was unable to produce a witness who could say that he had seen him dure ing the vital period. Pielow, who was grilled severely 19 ARE KILLED IN EXPLOSION |3 Packing Houses and Mine in Wreck minimums prescribed Puget Sound Tele reases: mes al , from 600 to 800 cont per telechra and ate very heavily. He also sald that three days bee bi |fore Legate was shot Legate com. The powder works are now run by| plained of being very sick and said. the Graselli Powder Co. a Cleveland, | that it affected his work. ‘The jury |0., concern, | was shown Legute's bloody clothing There were three men fn each of; by Deputy Coroner K. P. Corson im the three houses which blew up an effort to prove that the bload om First ald trains are being rushed) the running board on the auto did here from Lockhaven, Renova and) not drip from his trouser leg, blast, the concussion of which was | felt for miles. xian, president American college at Konai, Asia Minor, is dead, finger marks on the rear of the aute (Turn to Page 7, Columna Q be. 6 s o

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