The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 13, 1922, Page 1

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ii Maximum, 74. Temperature Last Minimam, 52. Today noon, 63. WEATHER Tonight and Wednesday. moderate westerly winds. cloudy; oars iT Enored as Second Class Matter May &, 1 n ™——> THE NEWSPAPER WITH A 15,000 CIRCULATION LEAD OVER ITS NEAREST COMPETITOR <—a@ On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise he Seattle Star , At the Postotfice at Seattle, Wash, under the Act of Congress M 19. Per Year, by Mall, $6 to $9 VOLUME 24. NO. 93. the Way-Down.¥ onder-in-the.Old- Corn-Pield-S wee t-AdelineSay- r You'll Be Mine Until-the-Sands.of- the-Desert-Grow-Cold season, eee ‘The summer season is opening slowly. Nobody drowned yet from going in swimming after a heavy ‘meal. bs eee Never owtm after te 6 drink water right after eating cee THE 19TH HOLE (Being the wnezpurgaied report sent in by the golf editor who cov- ered the Northwest championship golf tournament at Victoria, B. C., Yast week.) “Bon Stein enageled his fron on his putt. On the next hole, how- ever, he succeeded in dropping his gutty into the p agie, but had little @ifficulty in snoodling it out with a niblick.” eee New writer on The Star ts named June d'Amvur, No relation to the ‘The United States is shipping Swiss cheese to Switzerland now. to the Eskimos next. “-* Newepaper. Must be training to be a matador. * AL STUFF The saddest words tm a reporter's life— ‘ This is true, or you can garrote me— Are whee some guy gives you a big yarn, Then, finishing, says, “Don't quote mer” o- “How to Be Married, Tho Single,” by Rodolph Valentino. ee fign In Second ave. clothing store: “Come Early! Big Bargain in Wom- @n’s Stockings. Won't Last an Hour!” eee QUENCHING LOVE’S FLAME Mayor Brown says he is going to have i city parks i lighted at night. What's the difference, Doc? Love is blind. . You'a think Wooa- would be od with all arking going eee * | These fringed skirts the flap. pers are wearing will be useful | during the fly season | * Do you remember at the close of school when you used to rf ‘ y, scholars; good-by school by teacher, you darn oid fool, In 17 more days the will be an old married woman LIMERICK WRITING MADE EAS |quote the first letter—tecause it | prize he can t red of being mar-|that there'd have to be some beta | gamvganianecirnvnminint oe parr i emonoecT 4 “ot two sorta, ancred really might have stood @ chance of ried free—if he finds a bride. cratic appointment to counterbalance y! R 4 “ . Sdmericks of two sorts, sacred | vi ning if the writer hed only look Because, under the rules of the {the Job for Parish—if he gets it | ly ARTHUR EEVE ‘ yet of |@d to the little matter of finding a! contest, every couple sending in i xa is a sample limer- | bride for himself first. | an essay will be entitled to one y op by A. 8 at may be filled in or not His letter follows: | free marriage—the only differ ‘CAN > START HERE |fraction and she knew that that al. There was an old man poodles| “Miss June: Am writing to the ence between the winner and the a bo Gorrie and his (wireless expert) ways makes it nearly impossible to Who. . noodlest [best of my abilety Why We Waat| losers being that the former gets | cee Bad & bist whe perpetrate & ayec- | CD one. t . day, jto Marry | # big wedding present and the WARPAT ltacular holdu; able radio! A bend in the turnpike toward the And "i away | “Every one has a different oppin latter don't. | south and a dirt road forked off. — Whieh ..-. monkey-doodlest |ion regarding matermony. We write| The wholesale wedding will be held Ruth slowed up just a bit, turned The second, or inane fety, ‘e|acording to our dispersition, and Aa ay — . a the — — | — | her head with a pearly amile. ue dro} Perso » 4 vrite | abjletys. am one that wants a| low on the fifth floor of the Stand. | j j | a huneh,” she called back teasingly, very Grol, Persona who can write | abi ard Furniture Co | Mounted Police Rushing te Ramee Gide con hoa Order of Parlor Nuisances any time We find it nature to have a lhe a “ why went oe od Intercept Tribesmen | 7. the demon ftp ald of her hans erry 4 ood € ar should addressed oO uth's mother uth shot away on the side road to ee See Renner WMT EY | ne i ics pnepenn—tibeing |June d'Amour, ‘The Siar, Gealtle. - Gud istrnated by themacives, the right, to the north, in a pillar of 1) nag | . — SEA CLIFF PARK, Ontarto, June| NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY A dapper young man........Jacqnes| troubles wich comes to the best of BA CL ap el | duet cloud Like. amber uid called “Bacques,” | us. 13.-—Possibility of an Indian war Garrick had no desire for a wild. But too full, “4—For a home and look forard Madalynne Hears loomed today on Point Pelee, which goose quest. He stuck to the con- Was. by « bull, jto the future, wich makes things M d "4 lis « government park projecting out With a siren blast and a swish of | creted turnpike And now.........key in the lacques,|Jook brighter day by day as we go urder Testimony | into Lake Erie, 19 miles south of austy air a yellow racer shot past] “What's, the matter, old man? cee |thro life something to work for some-| Log ANGEL Turora | here. |Garrick and Dick before they wore | Why so silent?” queried Dic Toda ing candidate for the |‘thing that changes your chrector to| in the trial of M ichain} Scores of Indjan. families, mem: lig @ down the turnpike, leaving] further on, “Suppose you' Poison club is the gink who|@ life of steadynus and happynes! today heard the “death watch” de.| ¥ers of the Potawatomle tribe, camp | only a kaleidoscopic impression of 4| ing, like me, how Ruth o annoys the sweating citizen: eat-| builds you up by helping each other, | scribed by the state as having been|@4 on the outskirts of town last) girl at the wheel and a fellow lolling | got meshed in the wheels of this Ing corned beef and cabbage and fol-| life long palls one to look up to, too! Kept by Madalynne and Arthur C.| Might, all headed for the point, which | back tensely in the other bucket seat, | gang, if that's what it ts, eh?” Dick lowing it up with « double order of | trust and obay and honor, That 1s) Burch, her alleged confederate, over |they claim as their old hunting) “Ruth!” exclaimed Dick as Gat-| gazed hopelessly off at the hill and hot plum pudding. my defernition why { want to get| John Belton Kennedy, the day he) srounds. {rick mechanically threw in more |forest north of them with their es ig married if you can get me a pall I! wax murdered from ambush at Bev.| Troopers of the Canadian mounted | poy er | mage of side roads, “I wish, by gad, Newspaper report | will be great full am 42 yrs old and! ery Glen, police, summoned from all over the Vho was with her?” & girl wax like a car or a boat ° lere to the gov. lan American, of good nature fair in Madalyane sat sad-eyed and listless | Province, passed thru here early to- "Glenn Buckley.” something you could steer—right!* Guent is bo Gaveer jbusiness and can make some one jag state winesses told of her ag wav-| Gay, pushing thelr horses, endeavor.) Garrich's motor leaped ahead as he} » enough to worry when v Po hag ae a | happy ab ust be @ bruenett not|ing pignale to Rureh from « hotei| ine to get to the point by noon stepped on It. Straight away down than we think we know cee jover 85 years old no drinker or bad | room opposite Kennedy's office | ‘Tho Indians claim rights to Point|the turnpike they raced, Garrick was| returned Guy, negotiating a lett POLITICAL habits I don't care what she han - Pelee, and have o ed a councll/ just about holding his own. But|turn that required some skill to Governor Hart has come out | been or her past it is the present | there next week to negotiate with the} Ruth had the jump and there was|make the succeeding hill on high against the poll tax. Next thing , and if she is worth any| At the time of the last census there| government authorities. not a chance to pass her, She was| "After all, Ruth's just a stunning we know Loule will want to pro jsning at all she ls worth every thing | were 6,445,366 farms in the United The tribe left the government rea-‘too wise «# driver Having shot / little flapper—tacing a very eold 4sibit tobacco chewing! the fifth tee, forcing him to fuzzle | Seattle will be sending Eskimo pies | June bride} eRe i | from } { | j tame HE first entry in The Star-Herb Schoenfeld rimonial ask me contest. And tne barred because he isn’t # ¢ | He thought that it was a matri monial agency instead of a mat and wrote to find him # girl. ‘That, of course, is a whole lot more than I bargained for not finding wives—or husbands —for anybody. to go EVERETT, June 13.—Twelve years im schoo! without ever being tardy or! phenom, He hasn't made two or| “have confided do you think of that It ts held by Harry W. |Rymond, who has just the Everett high school and| gle subject lwho plans to Would-Be Groom Merely Lacks Bride! SEATTLE, WASH., TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 1922, {_ PUNCTUALLY PERFECT nya Harry W. Rymond, Who Has Just Completed A Perfect Attendance Record In The Public Schools ot Everett. He Hasn't Been Late Or Absent In 12 Years! Do You See Any Wings Sprouting? graduated | that. But he's never fatied tn @ sin Seattle league, thruout the latter years of his school post jthru the university next y By June d’Amour sey matrimonial sweepstakes has appeared. Tes contest da; Harry hasn't been an Intellectual from the fitet grade on this | thru high school—and he's batted an autumn to enter the University of | even 1.000 per cent in the attendance | Washington Everett teachers are unantmous tn | declaring that the record is unique tn ithe school history of the city “Jess Willard Training in Los An- ial ct tap econary And, what's more, he has worked ing and has $800 saved up to help bim MOORE TO GET > New “Mystery Witness” in Patrolman Murder HOLDS KEY TO LEGATE DEATH ror! ll PAINTINGS BY SPIRIT GUDE ARE PUZZLING University Girl PLUM? By Robert B. Bermann + Rumors were current Tuesday that Judge William Hickman Moore, who was recently defeat ed for reelection to the city | council, will be appointed coun- | sel for the port commission to | succeed the firm of Robinson, Murphy & Murphinen, whose resignation immediately followed the election of Port Commis sioner George F. Cotterill. Cottertil, who holds the deciding | vote in the port comminsion, refused to confirm the rumor, but admitted | that Judge Moore was “under consid. eration.” According to Cotterit! “at least atx | or eight” individual lawyers or firma) are in a mad scramble for the port Job—and fts $6,000 a year salary, SEVERAL IN RECEPTIVE MOOD “At lenat that many,” he dectared, to me that | three grades « year, or anything like | ¥OUld—well, at least te in a recept: |), ive mood if they were offered the appointment “Yeo, Judge Moore waa one of j theme. I don’t feel at liberty to name | the others. “Hut nothing definite has been de. | cided as yet. 1 doubt If any de-| cision will be made, or three weks—as the resignation Jot Robinson, Murphy & Murphine | doesn’t mo into effect until July $1."| In | there are persistent reports that the | ew counsel for the port comminsion | has already been chor j|tudge Moore is the man, | | Proponents of this theory point | jout that Cotterill and Moore are po- | Nitleal bedfeliows—both are staunch |@emocrats—and that Cottertt would | Undoubtedly like to do something for the judge. | json galleri |the University of Michigan, without | Says 12 Artists of Other Days In-| struct Her. BY J. W. T. MASON (Written for the United Press) NEW YORK, June 12-—Weird spir {tualiet off paintings, purporting to have been produced under the direc. tion of famous artists in the other world, and establishing @ new form | in bas relief ol] work, are pursing | peychic investigators at the Ander. | ‘The medium thru whom the ghoat- ly art i put on canvas in Minn F.! Marion Spore, aged 27, graduate of artistic ability and @ practicing den. int until her spiritualistic exper. lences began some three years ago. She has never studied painting, She says he is under the control of 12 artist spirits, beaded by Della Rob. bing, who died between 400 and £00 years ago, They direct her work, sccording to Mite Spore's belief, te! her how to her paints and guide her she produces her color The paintings are butlt up by the ers of olle applied on top of one Snother, Some of the objects stand Out @ couple of inches, lke miniature | colored sculptures framed on a flat} surtace In this respect Miss Spore's work | me feel creepy— ———— FIEND SLAY KANSAS CITY, Mo., June —tius Grimes, Omaha maniac, was sought by pollee here today following the murder and rob- bery of Mr, and Mrs. Gerhard Blomster Sunday. Two men, including Perry Engwall, friend of the slain man, declared a picture of Grimes “looked like” « man he had met prowling about the wooded hill where the bodies were found. “The look in the man’s eyes made nd those are the eyes,” police quoted Engwall as saying while examining the picture, Detectives were both interested and skeptical as to the accuracy of Engwall’s identification, MANIAC SUSPECT IS SEEN IN HILLS At. the slayer wae not Grimes, It was another maniacal’ terrorist, they believe, The bodies of the Blomaters were found shot thru the head, and the clothing of Mrs. Blomster, who had been choked and bruised, had been ripped and par: tially torn trom her. Other persons in the neighbor hood told of seeing a wierdly garbed ty novel to the art world, Most of the pictures would serve | nese and Chinese ghost stories or | tales from the Arabian Nights. | There are flowing reds and gold, | pite of Cottesill's statement, somber biues and deathiike blacks, | *0url, but the identification w | verified. with occasional pinks. floral greens an Castles that seem to be the| Hand that|home of phantoms; temples for ex-|1S BARRIC otic worshippers and dwellings of the | dend are the dominant themes. They suggest a land of perpetual night- | mare, Except for a few pictures of flow ers and frulte done, according to Misa Spore, under special direction | murder. individual roaming the hill Since he ts known to have left Lincoln and Omaha, Grimes has peen reported in other parts of Mis- un- ESERTED HOUSE DED Police, led by Sergt. Harry Cham. berlain, last midnight broke into a donerted houre near the scene of the It was kept similar to the Gexcription of the “terror shack” near Omaha, where Grimes chained two women and one man. He} wore a white shirt and overalls and | in fact, for two \for futurist illustrations for Japa-| Carried a satchel US. SENATOR FLAYS JAPAN IN ADDRESS Says Government Should Inform; Nippon of Stand on Immigration FAYETTEVILLE, Ark., June 13—The United States should frankly tell Japan that this country will never tolerate “the Japanese position touching immil- gration, land ownership and race equality,” Senator Joseph T. Rob- inson, a democratic leader in the senste declared in a speech here today at the semi-centennial celebration at the University of Arkansas. Frankness in defining the Amert- can position, even if it annoys Jap- an, will avoid the breach certain to occur if the United States misleads Japan to believe her position in these {matters is approved, the senator said jin an eddreas full of sharp attacks on Japan. “At no time during the past 10 years has complete accord existed the United States and Japan,” he continued. “There have ‘been threats and counter th: with secret preparations for “Unqnestionably this government [should make every concession con- |sistent with national honor and jus-| | tlee to other friendly powers to es-/ tablish amicable relations with the Japanese empire. “Further than this we need not, | | wé should not go,” Robinson said. “No justification exists for a pol-| icy toward Japan in conflict with the| fixed convictions of our people con- | jcerning the differences between the two governments.” Robinson asserted that the con-!),, Kress the exclusive ‘right to de-| termine who should enter the United | States and that the states had the | pen’ #8 Poe Rati right to establish the conditions f | \ orabty haw th, frida,’ land ownership within their limits. {Seong pewed the key to the As to racial equality, Robinson |) 1°? patra ture ae ni ald: . cite “The American people regard theo |S ee tee department, Caucasian as the moral and intel-| 0° are bits of his story, ag jlectual superior of the Mongolian | °° | ‘ar reporter: race, and they would condemn as ‘The slayer of Legate has county and when found brought before the grand ba The only trouble y. is th The couple that writes the best essay of |out of pubiic tte entirely. less on “Why We Want to | COTTERILL CAN Get Married” will be given a free wedding |?LACE MOORE —preacher, music, flowers and everything! —and, in addition, will receive a handsome! and substantial present from the Standard | missioner W. 8. Lincoln voting one 18: 300 words o Furniture Co, They contest is uple, for themselves, After not until then—they'll be eligible to enter the wedding | However, it might be of interest to for what she is. “See what you can do for me. A country girl prefered.” Isn't it a shame that this letter | be ruled out, just because | n't got a bride selected for himself? But it has to be done— } op because my contract doesn't call for running a matrimonial {jk to win Cotterill's support rabies There's the new!y created job of However, there's still hope for|director of pubicity for the port, for him. If he'll go out and find himself |instance, Rumors link A. B. Parish, a girl and then write in another | former managing editor of the Post exsay—why then he may win the|Intelligerfcer, with this post, Inas fir |much as Parish, like Lamping, in a And even tf he doesn’t win first republican, it seems likely veh is that he’s auto- matically eliminated, because he didn’t ob-!cuniary st serve the rules of the contest. The agreement, as I announced yester- net #0 muc ndpoint as on account of | |the fact that, after 25 years in poll. | mystical as ruperior judge, mayor of |herself with spiritualism, because she fears quacks and frauds. | thes, |Beattle, logisiator and city counctt |man, it would be hard on him to get | If Cotterill does want Moore tn the Job it's almost a foregone conclusion that he'll get {t—because, with Com: |way and Commission Lamping the other, in his power to block appointment t Lamping is expected to vote with! le tterill, if the latter comes out in |favor of Moore-—as Lamping is gen lerally supposed to have some ap |pointments of his own for which he'd r George Cotteri! has it or pot over any at comes up. dium,” ed all guage And Judge Moore needs the sob -}0f Delia Robbias, all of the paint h, possibly. from a pe |ingn have a mystic significance. But Miss Spore herself te not at all She ts Anxious not to ally “I have never attended a spiritual intuitively tures: gether thru artist jarchitecture. meaning 1 told me. I heard voices. oom in my this for me does the grass, They just project their| thoughts to me and I receive their | own English told to buy artists’ materials and |would be guided ao as to make pic My mother's spirit haw direct. | She communt. cates with me and the spirits of th artists tell me about her. “A group of dead artists work to-| For instance, anothe list seance and never consulted a me “T had always |beon able somehow to foresee events in dreams and I know personalities 1 was I lan one} the | Bales of hay in the shack had | been used to barricade the door, and they were raised in such a way as to form a tunnel to the small exit in | the rear, presumably for a quick get | away As the raiding squad came out they met Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Wil Hams, tourists, of Sioux City, Ia, who told them they saw an unkempt figure leaving the shack shortly be- fore. He was barefoot, wore long hair and a week's growth of beard. The abandoned hours is In a heav lly wooded district Mr. and Mra, Williams declared | the fleeing man was running toward the state line Into Kansas. Engwall gave a lurid description of his meeting with a man with “starry eyen” near the scene. It was about 9 o'clock,” he sald. “IT saw a man get out of some bushes. (Turn to Page 7, Column 2) ‘OnVingsof | stator ervation on Walpole island Sunday, ahead of a car she did not slacken a reless (Turn to Page 11, Column 1) contemptible and treacherous any course of dealing with Japan which would involve this well-defined con vietion in uncertainty or compro- mise,” Robinson bitterly attacked the four-power treaty of the arms con ference, declaring it contained little of value for the United States. “Japan will retain in China ail she desires of the territory already occupied, and she will advance when she chooses,” he said. “She will un- dermine the democracy of the old world by destroying the Far Eastern republic and by establishing a gov. ernment by the yellow race over the people of white blood who adhere to the enjoyment of liberty under tn- stitutions as liberal and glorious as Caucasian civilization has granted.” by Deputy Sheriff Tom Morgan on the East highway road Tuesday, charged with motorcycle speeding at 50 miles an hour. THE STAR HAS 2,000 PACKAGES OF FIREWORKS For the Boys and Girls of Seattle Turn to Page 4 And read how to get yours. for the Fourth of July WALTER W. HOYT was arrested | [come under official suspicion, Hie fa | Walking the streets of Seattle, enter ing many fine homes every day, om {hie rounds of delivering | whisky. | “Sure, he ts a bootlegger. Some of his pals were talking of the af |fair one day, I heard them, and [did not deny it, when I q e them. “No policeman killed Legate to keep Legate from sq knew he was not a squealer. I'm not saying some policeman wasn't connected with the case, but the shooting was dona by X——" If the “mystery witness” test! indictments may loom for coe ae * possibly more persons, % His testimony dovetails with is {alleged episode between Legate Pre bootleg .er a month or co before — |his death. } Patrolman Tom Walsh, t jst the inquest, gave a graphic 7 scription of how he said Legate ha@ “asked him to join him tn kn over a bootlegger for a huge cam signment of smuggled booze,”* Walsh at the time refused Legate’s — offer, he said, and tried to persia |his companion to give up the idea of — robbing him, The motive for the murder would Ibe made apparent If X——, the ae {cused bootlegger, proved the same — ‘as the one mentioned by Walsh, jand provided of course that the boos: robbery actually took place, |HERE IS CRIME | RECONSTRUCTED Reconstructed, the crime would have taken place in this fashion: (Turn to Page 7, Column 2) 4 KILLED BY: TANK BLAST DETROIT, June 13.—Four men |were killed in an ammonia tank ex+ plosion at the Parker-Webb packing: plant here today. Fire followed the explosion and spread rapidly thru the buil The explosion wrecked the engine jand refrigerating rooms and spread ammonium gas thruout the entire plant. ' Firemen wearing gas masks at: jtempted to force thelr way into the gas filled rooms, searching for work- ers but were forced back by the | flames, The conflagration gained despite many streams of water and sho after noon threatened the destrdo- — tion of several main buildings clue tered around the engine room. ‘ WITHOUT a cent of EXPENSE

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