The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 7, 1922, Page 1

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Soca Tonight and Maximum, 63. Today noon, 58. super-criminals, who seize upon the raidio as a tool in their colo: WEATHER Thursday, cloudy; moderate northeasterly toinds, Temperature Last M4 Hours ’ Minimum, 51. Watered as Second Class VOLUMI NO. 88. = Matter May 3, “On Wings of Wireless” is the fiction scoop of the year. It is the work of Arthur B, Reeve, famous author of Craig Kennedy detective yarns. It isa mystery story as marvelous es radio itself. It is the story of lcrimes, It is a story that will interest every radio fan, every fiction fan. Remember, it starts INTHE STAR, MONDAY, JUNE 12. The paper with a 15,000 daily circulation lead over its nearest competitor The Seattle Star 1899, at the Postoffice mt Beattie, Wash, under the Act of Congress March 2, 1879, Per Year, by Mall, $6 to $9 SEATTLE, WASH., WED) NESDAY, JUNE 7, 1 TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE (Copyright, 1922, by The Seaitie Star) ‘ Greetings, folks! Have you no- ticed Doc Brown firing any of those 575 political incurables yet? 728 George ¥. Russell, who has made his Ding out of politica for 20 years, i» co be appointed superintendent of public utilities. Gosh! That will make 576 polit! al incurables at the city hall! ee Wonder what job Thomas will eect eee “Brown Defies Ku Klux Kian." Headline. Not so Koo Koo at that! PASS THEM BRICKS! Doc Brown's in for A life of sorrow; Rouquets today— Brickbats tomorrow, eee Be that as tt may, Thelma Finn ts ne of the country’s leading swim- Mayor Brown says no man who uses whisky should be permitted in office. alt right, Doc, but where would ‘we get our public officers? ae Mrs. Miracle, attle’s musical councilwoman, p 41 a harp at the Chamber of Commerce banquet And now Lou Cohen has volunteere to play the Jew’s Harp at future ses sions of the council. “ee POLITICAL NOTE “Dr. Brown Declares War on the Invisible Government.”—The Star. Hitherto the only invisible government at the city hall has been good government. tadio Show w open at Dream- fand. Ali wave lengths allowed in free. Lieut. J. A the world’s record, is in Se- attle. We suggest that he try an other flight to if he can find the cost of 1 IVORY IDA SNORTS: | Th’ government is still collect- in’ inheritance tax. Don't we | have enough taxes without in- heritin’ some, too? +5 ae You may sing of June and sing of the Bo sweet and lovely looking; brid GARLAND TO GIVE A IS MILLIO dy, holder of Eccentric Love Experimenter Not Reconciled With Wife and Not | Willing to Accept Fortune | | By Edward M. Thierry MIDDLEBORO, Mass., June 7.—Baby fingers are! ‘reaching out to tie again the severed home bonds of |Charles Gariand and his wife. But even the baby in- | fluence is not enough. ' The little chap, born April 24, has not succeeded. And. he is not going to succeed, says Garland, the millionaire her- | mit-philosopher whose “love clinic’ at his woodland farin | off the Plymouth Road last January not only cost him his family but failed as an experiment. | Garland, breaking a silence of months, told N FE. A. | Service there has been no reconciliation; that there will be none; that he and his family “are friends” only; that his| radical views holding marriage vows “neither sacred or} binding” are unchanged—that the coming of the baby son | |has made no difference! / Leve gone, his fortune is going soon, too, Within a month, Garland said, he will have completed plans to give away the million dollars he inherited and which for a year he refused to accept. The million is going to charity, he eh ad he declines to disclose the beneficiaries or the | | method. } DECLARES HE WILL “Are they coming to stayT NOT LIVE WITH WIFE “No, they are not. I can my “No, Mra, Garland t not here.”| that much,” Garland said, coming out of the! 4 divorce “What do you mean by reconcilia- tion?" | Asked if a divorce was planned now, if “That you and your tere cana ba replied: ve together,” it was exptain “Not by me And he intimated “No, we are not going to live © | sey Gariand had to such plana, add. | gether.” ing: “We are friend»—and will con-| “The baby that just eame—doeen’t | tinue to be. Mrs, Garland and I un-| that change things?” derstand cach other. “No—that was not wnexpected,| «No one tise is coming to tive you know," he sald, gravely. here," he said, reminded of the old “Have you seen the baby? reports about a “free love colony” “Yes—I have seen him.” and the Ph % girl art etudent ade “Has ho been here? And his| who was called hin “soul mate” when Tmother—and your little girl, Mar-| srs, Mary Wrenn Garland and year garet | old Margaret eft the farm shack last “Yee—but not to stay.” t (Tarn to Vage 4, Column 3) EVICTED MINERS | Jere for the Black Diamo: land, Dillon and Wilke At the office of the I |Coal company the only |fered on the move was th cifie Coast Coal company prop- erty near the Curbonado mine, a tented cliy was being. con structed Wednesday at South | Ferry, about six miles from the | / strikers, cific Coast mine. ‘ancient history.” ‘Trucks were hauling tents to the! and eve thing waa to be in | fectiv ersons will move into at the ited M which organ "MANSLAUGHTER iaation is prov the shelter for’ Accuse F. A. Almy of Death the evicted fam j . In: some insta according to of Girl, 13 the miners, men who hy worked ~ for the comp: for 30 years are Fred A. Almy went on trial before | being ord ed out of the homes in ls uperior Boyd J Tallman which they have brought up their Wednesday on a charge of man.-/ | Almy struck and killed with his |automobile a 12-year-old girl, Louise | |¥ackel, November The accident Aliny’s « was stricken from the Guards |the wedding ceremony tomorrow Is | jat fever hy peasant costumes giving the streets a kaleidoscopic there is takable excitement. ALL ENTRANCES ARE GUARDED reticent, but all entrances to the city are clonely trols are constantly passing thru the was tmpending, tt wag| Streets en route to batter their way | new chicken coop he has just bullt.| said, some manths ago; at that time|!Mt0 *ome. rendezvous of suspicious | \ Hi | | Garland said he wouldn't content it Characters. | the ro jchanged to confuse plans. jare taken everywhere, cension tomorrow, according to or | ders inwned today, double Manke of police and troops will form a lane of brintling steet bayonets, thru which the king, queen and princesses wilt! ride. There will be one tine of guards} facing inward toward the procession, | |and another facing outward, j thene troops will be armed with riftes jand revolvers and will be under in structions to shoot at the slightest suspicious movement SPECIAL PERMITS TO sir WINDOWS Special permite are required to] have 1, Cumber- | pe wi wmment of. | de dows, on balconies and housetops un der close watch and to arrest them any BROWN TO WAR | |Death Toll Must Be Cut, DEATH PLOT AT WEDDING OF ROYALTY Doubled as Serbian King Awaits Princess Marie as Bride BELGRADE, June 7A plot to assassinate the royal families of Roumania and Serbla, gath- ered here for the marriage of Princess Marie to King Alexan- der, is reported to have been discovered by secret police. / Extraordinary precautions to | g¥ard the royal personages’ lives | are being taken, Scores of suspects are being rounded up. Police are conduct- ing hourly raids. Among the royalties in Belgrade today are King Alexander, of Serbia; King Ferdinand, of Roumank: and Queen Marie, of Roumania; Prin- cows Marie, of Roumania; the Duke of York; Prince Alfonso and Princess Beatrice, of Spain, and the Prince of Udine, of Ital, White the galety preliminary to with colorful akan quaint an undercurrent of unmis- ‘The military and police alfke are guarded and strong pa-| The schedule for the movements of ‘al parties is constantly being | the assessing’ Most elaborate precautions) On the route of the wedding pro All appearance, | TO OUST JAPANES Seattle's Most Nationally Known Politician, First Man From Coast In President’s From State Ever So Honored, Succumbs To windows open during the pa-} rade | | Police have lerued orders that per-| sons in windows and on balconies} tuat not et shoulder to shoulder. To care for striking miners children. | No persons will be pe and their families who have been Similar camps have already been | View the parade from a w evicted from their homes on Pa established by the United Mine Work-| ory or housetop without @ special and no permits thoro are granted tion | cial squads of potice have been | tiled to keep all persons in win nvextiga suspicious actions are observed. | | UPON SPEEDERS, Mayor Declares Drastic steps are to be taken immediately to cut down toll of deaths exacted by automobile speed-maniacs, according to plans being formulated Wednes- day by Mayor E. J. Brown yo many people are being killed by automobiles,” the mayor sé “Some means must be worked out by which we can We change the tune and sing of the , - : jcalendar some time ago because his | make people drive within the groom |Severyns Thinks Policeman p»ysicat conaition was such that it} speed limits and put a curb on | Who hes'to eat her cooking. } : was feared he could not survive the| the drunken joyrider and the ir | Ph ah | Murdered; Investigates strain or a court trial at that time.| responsible fool who drives at 50 You have to hand it to the Seattle A few da later Prosecutor Mal m per ho Chamber of Commerce. Here th Chief of Police W. B, Sev- |©olm Douglas reset the ¢ or trial.| Chief W. B have been advertising the Puset| eryns is reading the transcript | Deputy Prosecuting Attorney John | conference with the mayor, charac Sound climate all winter, and now of evidence given at the Inquest |D. Carmody is representing the|terized the speed mi of Seattlc right on schedule—we get g004| into the death of Patrolman |*tate | drivers ax “auto-intoxication.” weather! | Charles 0. Legate with a view | rs : - | Brown refused to state whether re im, | to reopening official investiga- /RUSSELL MAY |forms would te made thru changes ticians: The Fiame | tion of the case if the facts war- | Jin the personnel of the traffic di of Genius Doesn't rant, he @ ved Wednesday. | NOT GET JOB vision or stricter enforcement of the yeeeees See be } jautomobile laws. | di EB! . { Probability that George F. Russell] Dr. Brown w also considering “I could have married any man In | nothing will not be confirmed by the city | Wednesday plar r relieving con w York,” says Marilyn Miller, the 1.46 this conclusion. It { council as su ntendent of public|sestion on Second ave. by a sweeping dway dancer. tirely from conversations that T have | Utilities was being widely discus: at|change in the rerouting of street | Bet she couldn't have married |) o.c4 among policemen—and thewe,|the city hall Wednesday, following Mayor Hylan. He's married already. | oP courae, could not be introduced as or Brown's announcement that} ‘The scheme under contemplation | a leviden at 0 trie ussell would be appointed to the | calls for running all cars south on} ‘The ittinherin® shoes winen th @iamends| Severyns declared that he would | Post “unless he thinks of a better | Second and Fourth aves, and north rere— {adopt @ policy of sitting tight, “with {man for the position jon First and Third aves, The ad-| ‘The Rockies the stitteting wg: Imy eyes and ears open and my| Russell's activities as a lobbyist for| vantages of the plan, he sald, were | mathe reste Of the Warm trope) noth whut,” Japanese interests and as an enemy|that it would speed up the st Come pearls with a value untold, He has not yet decided the matter | 0f Organized labor will make it hard jcars, decrease accidents and relieve an 5 oe en ee than| of who will be the new inspector of |fF 4t least four members of the | traffic congestion on the downtown | these— s hc ye re council to vote for his confirmation, | streets, Greet treasare I hold to be fair; ‘ j Dolb y ge is mn cathe there ioe, Welldetined acatismantt 5 ‘Tis found in the smile of my wee laddie's| Ho was in conference Wednesday |*itho th Alaptizgii tn een haat teste na gat ct ha nai, (With Mayor F. J. Drown and Poles |'@ confirm any man appointed by the) Schoo] Board Meet |Captain Claude Bannick T latter | i Min eyes are my diamonds, his teeth are iq known to be Severyns’ choice for m si Off Until Thursday |the inspectorship, but Bannick is mid! Worker Killed as | Because one of the members could! as |to have announced that he was satis * e | dane be phehort; tiie sensation Alanine fied with his post in Wert Seattle { Tool Hits Nitro yr ie. choot board woheduled. tor | 2 Ee ee eee see by my |2M4 that ho would not like to be| DENVER, June 7.—T. H. Smith,| Tuesday night has been postponed| nide— changed laborer, was instantly killed, and| until Thursday | No favor 1 amk for mywelf: | # Damm, the present inspector,| North Denver was rocked by an ex-| At this session the school directors | vo phite fingers held Ught I") however, is known to have sald that | plosion | yesterday, when Smith's | are expected to settle the question of im ae & old Croeeus himeeif! jhe greta he waen't relieved the | pick struck a hidden cache of nitro-| the proposed reduction in teachers’ | . . first day that Severyng took office, | glycerin while he was digging out an| salaries and to come to an under-| Carrie Jacobs Bond and Edgar A. |which makes it ¢ 1 likely that some | old fence post. Police believe the ex-| standing on other important matters| | will be made, e wae hidden by ye change plos pertaining to the new school budget. | Judge Heart Disease At His Seattle Home At Age * * *® |Seattle Mourns Passing of City’s Most Prominent Man in National By Robert Bastien Bermann Seattle is mourning the passing of its most nationally eryns, who was in} prominent citizen, Judge Richard A. Ballinger, who died suddenly Tuese¢ ne Violations of in King County |Possess land in violation of the ami jalien land law. This file is Kep lunder lock and key and includes the/ james of many white men re said to be assisting the Japanese evading the law. _ |PROSECUTOR ON 7 re | WAR PATH ve “It is my purpose,” Captain declared Wednesday, “to see every Japanese farmer who land in violation of the law is to get off and is replaced by a man. Fully a fourth of the land the White River valley is held some form of tenure by Japanese, I have under investigation at present time transactions inve 91 different tracts of farm lal ranging from two to 60 acres each, “The total acreage will be above 500 acres—and this is only a part of the soil tilled by the Japs.” Three principal methods are uses by the Japanese, often in with unscrupulous white men, it: claimed, to obtain virtual po of land in violation of the law, —— The antialien land law provide that aliens may not own Jands in this” state except such as comes to in the ordinary settlement of ‘To get around the law, companies are formed, Capt. Colvin) has discovered, A Japanese is given» a mortgage by this company on &_ plece of land he desires, In due tima ~ the mortgage is foreclosed, and the | alien gets the property, | Under the law, the alien must dias | pose of his title within 12 years. He | therefore passes it along to a fellows |countryman, but himself remains in | practical possession. | A Japanese child, born in this coun: jtry, is an American citizen, and there: fore, may own land. Accordingly, it | is charged, title to land is vested |this child thru a conveniently ap pointed white guardian, 4 a | ! colh * * * 8 '@ Western Hospitality Show a Little! Show a Lot! Shriners Coming. Welcome ’Em. Politics | JAPS d evening at his home at 1733 39th ave. A man of strong convictions and emphatic actions, he (EDITORIAL) ON SHARES cm had many enemies as well as friends in a political way—but Western hospitality: A third method used ts for the Japs as ersonally he was tremendously popular, i his death You't» bragged about it to |anese farmer to till a white man’s personally sly popular, and his dea your Eastern friends, You've ex- |ranch on “shares.” ‘The Japanese came as a real shock to hundreds of Seattle people of every | perienced it yourself. takes possession of the place, raises class. Now comes un effective chance | the crop, amd the white owner re- > » services wi 2) at o-« " nedaw to demonstrate it. ceives the stipulated percentage from Fune . ve oll al vt 2:30 Thursday afternoon Red feszes appear on our | year to year. However, the Jap, to at the First Presbyterian church, streets. Thursday and Friday [all intents and purposes, is owner of In all, 2,000 the land, they will multiply “{ was amazed at the tremen- or more Shriners wearing them of the general land office, having d © Ballinger was the first |been given that appointment under he thee Pacific Coast, | Roosevelt. | will Seattle. They come dous profit these Japanese ever appointed to the president's | Other public offices whigh he held | from stern, cities and are making,” Capt. Colvin said. cabinet, and the only citizen of | included those of superior court| © th to the San Fran- visited one ie a truck this state who was ever so | Judge for Jefferson county, 1892-96,| cisco meeting. Between the 17th on the Pacifie highway north honored. and mayor of Seattle, 1904-06, and 2ist 0 members of the Kent. The proprietor of this told He was made interior in 190 ‘Taft, in # bitter dispute with Gifford Pinchot, then eb servation policie Judge Baling port of the White House in this me that he cleared $10,000 last He raises lettuce exelu- order will pass thru here home- ward bound year. ee secretary of the | nas | Outside of his immediate relatives, by President t | Show them Western hospital sively, shipping from 100 to 400 Ie soon became embroiled |" One in Seattle regretted Judge! jty, Direct them to-the points of cases daily during the lettuce | Ballinger's death more sincerely than! interest e them a lift in season. He ships as far East as hief forester and | did Judge Alfred Battle, your machine if they want one. (Turn to Page 4, Column 4) for gov- | Say a cheery word of greetin, ee: With the exception of the time| 5#y & © y greeting. er con- | ; Hand them some flowers, Ex- FI that Ballinge: ent C + in Alaska. ano not cad penthn, Bublie office! tend any courtesy you can, Famous Flyer Is 1 a of one sort and another, he was Bat- Make them understand that Cc * N rad er had the sup. > , , c derstan¢ rossi tion (Turn to Page 4, Column 5) Seattle is a friendly city and ang 2e NEW YORK, June 7.—-Capt. Bddie controversy, but public opinion ET Bi they our welcome guests. iad ns in Alaska and generally thra- Specialist Rushes B Scor r H Ir Tit this neening: en si ae ut the Northwest, was so over. . pontinental commercial survey. it. ont ate eae’ thes oak to Attend Premier |40y Scounts Help |contininta commercial survey flight congress voted vies and he resigned, eee Before — enterin Ballinger against his poli BERLIN, Klemperer, j organs, night to attend plang a long stay, June. 7, roteneor in Earwig Fight monopiane, with Pilot Eadie Stinson, Hist on internal] Boy Scouts are aiding in the drive| Steve Honagen, a writer, and Theo- t for Moscow to-| to exterminate the earwig. They're|dore Lovington, @ mechanic. i « the cabinet, was commissioner romier Lenin, He| distributing pamphlets telling how to] Rickenbacker plans to reach get rid of the pests. Francisco Sunday, —

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