The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 31, 1922, Page 1

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= wee een showers; Maximum, 63, | VOLUME 24. NO. 161. Nowdy, folks! Har! Har! Muriel McCormick intends to show world she can get along without money. Accepts mil- | Mondollar offer to enter movies. eee British Columbia price of liquor tomorrow. gétting real Canadian clubby. Anyway, one good Dobbed hair is that your wife ts never able to find a long hair on Jour coat.-E. G. . And also, we might add, she can't) find a strange hairpin in the auto | punfire, John | hananen, each of whom leaves a wit + seat. ese RUBBING IT IN (Bion in Vancouver hotel) "EAT, DRINK AND BE MERRY, Blessings on thes Mittle dame— Bareback girl, with knees the same, With thy short transparent clothes, With thy rolled-down silken hose, | With thy red lips, reddened more, With thy makeup on thy face, my heart I give thee fjoy— the Lord I was born a boy? oe And speaking of permanent waves, @id you ever drive down Pike st? cee Any old minute we are expecting of those Fordsons to stop and Weratch its differentials. They do hing else. . . . When baby outgrows his rompers, Bis can use ‘em for a bathing suit. —* LIL GEE GEE, ™ y OFFICE | VAMP, SEZ . There are two kinds of men in | ithe world——men and those who | exclaim “Oh becuse { Sonia ott i eee ; A girl I hate Ia Bally Smoot She always says “Oh, ain't you cute.” cee I¢ you don’t age your moonshine, Jour moonshine wili age you. ee If the workers in the lingerle fac- tories strike, there won't be any mov- fes to see next year. 78 JUST A HINT Cari Gassman, campaign man ager for Doe Brown, is still out of a job, He should sue the mayor for non-support. more days until we get a Gosh, how slow the Only mickel cartare. fitime passes! . “It's gettin’ so now.” | Clem Yodel of Clem Bay, exclaimed “that a | Man can’t hardly beat up his wife Without the neighbors talkin’.” o*e There was a young lady named * &stella, beau was a bowlegged fella, When he asked her to ait In his lap, why she lit On his soft corn, then how he did! bella, . Mirriages may be made tn heaven, but the manufacturers of porch hammocks have a lot to account for. oe TODAY'S MOTTO — a* s | NOE BERK THAT Freighter Floated ‘After Going Ashore | VICTORIA, B. C.,, Aug. 31.—Re. floated on high tide ‘trom her preca- tious position on the shore of Van- couver island, where she struck y, the Nawaco line freighter was York Thursday. Deny Rhine Army | Will Be Increased WASHINGTON, Aug. 31.—Denial Was made at both the state and war departments today that an increase in the American army of oecupation on the Rhine is planned, as reported 4a Paris, officials reduce | They're | FOR TOMORROW YOU MAY Bi ‘ SEATTLE a ge —2 | jured. on her way to New| Tonight and Friday, moderate north- erty wind. Temperature Last 24 Hours Today noon, 63, noe | | thing about | } | | | | | American troops along the Rhine | without delay. “are to be increased to 3,000. Now is|companied down the mine by Nurse | | the time for Jack Dempeey to enlist. | Belotti. | | | 1 prodably Minimum, 56. 15 KILLED IN EXPLOSION OF B.C. MINE Three Whites, Six! Japanese and Six Chinese Victims of Fatal Crash VICTORIA, B. C., Aug. 31— Fifteen men were killed in an ex- plosion in No. 4 mine of the Can- adian Colliers, Dunsmuir, Lid., Cumberiand, Vancouver tstand, The dead include three white miners, six Japanese and six Chi- nese, ‘Others were injured, ‘The dead white men are Robert | Gibson, John Jo-! hand several children, Details are lacking, but reports | state that a cave-in followed the ex- % plosion which resulted from shot put In by the fire boss for “brush ing” purposws. Fire Boss Taylor is among the in-) Reseus parties were on the job) Dr. Hicks was ac who insisted on going down | the mile and a half underground de- spite imminent danger of another ex: ploston. ‘The rescue party found 12 kill- ed outright and two more died on the way to the hospital, At first reports Bmeared with lipstick from the store,|ot the accident the mouth of the mine wes crowded with groups of thy bobbed hair's jaunty grace. | terrified relatives of miners. It fs thought many miners must have been close to the scene of the explosion, as damage to the mine itself fs slight and is being repaired al TWAS BIG. TIME FOR 40 ORPHANS Golly, How Wanda Bubbles Over About ith By Wanda von Kettler Here we are—all back home, All 40 orphans or near-orphans, representative of both Seattle and Tacoma Children’s homes, whe left their respective cities Tuesday morning in the custody of « grown-up playmate or two, have now returned from Paradise Inn, Mount Rainier, Before going into detall, however, about the blissfully uproarious time | we've had, we desire to let the tele graph man know what we think of him, Yesterday morning, at long enough to write a letter to Se attie and Tacoma, telling our friends | cities just how much dam: | had so far done the moun We gave that letter to the man, and told him we in age Ye taln-side. telegraph wished it to reach the papers “imme. | IT HASN'T AS YET ARRIVED. And we are both grieved | diately.” Well, and peeved, because the letter con tained much news about ourselves | which way decidedly important! Due to the lack of that letter tn yesterday's paper, we needs must now begin and tell about our party | from the etart. It wag 3 p. m. Tuesday before we reached Paradise, We arrived in our four buses after much traveling up the winding moun- tain roadway, and after numer- ous iced outbursts of “Ohs” and “Ums,” indulged in when the mountain heaved in sight around the twists and turns. Now, the first thing to get us real- ly excited was Tenas creek, the wide, rushing, roaring creek just about three miles the other side of the na- tional park entrance, It seethed over the rocks and under the bridge on | which we traveled. We squedled and | bounced in the buses, we were #o tick led, The second thing to get us ex- (Turn to Page 12, Column 3) Have You Read Today’s WANT AD SECTION ? Star “Want Ads” Will Interest You scelenstiniibing Para: | | dise Inn, we ceased maneuvers just | On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise Batered as Second Class Matter May 4, 1899, at the Postotfice at Beattie, W: h., under the Act of Congress March 3, iT 81, 1 1922. The Seattle Star 1879, Per Year, by Mall, $6 to | PEOPLE OF THE PACIFIC NORTHWEST HAVE ELECTED THE STAR THEIR FAVORITE SEATTLE NEWSPAPER — BY 15,000 PLURALITY - ENATE PASSES BONUS BILL! HOM EDITION {ili “Two CENTS IN SEATTLE “SOMETIMES DEAD MEN TELL TALES” 1E grim old warrior had won million tn those harsh bat thes of early days when he warced for the timber and copper lands of northern Michigan. children lived in the millions fighting under the motto: men tell no tales.” and grandchildren luxury tn Chicago on he had gained by “Dead ~wthen there came to Resur rection Reck, that scene of @ great wrong done in early days, & Meutenant from the American |] army. Strange messages from the dead, from comrades fallen in France, from the father of Ethel ‘amg eahee Rt pd | He didn’t know all, but the old man feared him. ‘There, on Lake Huron, Lucas Cullen watched for him, rifle in hand, While Resurrection Rock showed grimly in the moonlight. Don’t miaa the first installment of this terse and gripping story, “Resurrection Rock," by Edwin Balmer,.starting in The Star ‘today— TURN TO PAGE 11 ENTER THE FLAPPER High school girls playing with fire, laughing at tradition and mocking at the conventions of staid respectability Excitement eaters, young mem bers of the restless sex, who had de clared war on all their elders called proper, are the actors In Zoe Beckley's great serial of youth and modern society. t | “Enter the Flapper” BY ZOE BECKLEY It Begins in Today's Star on Page 11 17 INJURED AS TRAINS CRASH JERSEY CITY, N. J., Aug. 31.—~ Seventeen persons were injured, some seriously, today when two Hudson & Manhattan electric trains | collided in a dense fog on the Hack Jensack meadows. The most severely injured was Mo. | torman Burke of train No, 606, which smashed into the rear end of train No, 2246. The others hurt were passengers in the rear car of train 246. Four of the injured were taken to Jersey City, where ambulances had been summoned to meet them at the | Summit ave. station The trains are all steel and are loperated by electricity. |Will Shift Police Every Ninety Days by all police squads every 90 days, according to Chief of Police W. B |severyns, Thursday. Severyns hopes | by this policy to make every police. [man acquainted with every district lin the city, he said. Severyns also denied the statement |made by federal narcotics agents | here that Seattle was swarming with |dope addicts again after the re police crusade against them had sub- sided, ids SIMA th | A change of stations will be made | SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, AUGU 3 SPEEDERS “SENT 10 JAIL ~ FOR A MONTH $100 Fines Meted| | Out Along With Sentences for Drunk Drivers Acting Pollee Judge Jacob Kalina Thursday opened a new and more drastic policy of action against Seattle's specders, reck- less and drunken drivers by sending three men to prison for 30 days each, fining them $100 | apiece and canceling their drivers’ licenses outright. They | were convicted of driving while | drunk, ‘The mon are: Eimer Johnson, 26, [mechante: H. B. Hibler, 27, clerk, and J. W. Jones, 24. All three were im tely remanded to jail the case of Johnson ft was necessary to bring him to court from [the city jail, where he was serving a term of 30 days in addition to pay ing a fine of $100 on a similar charg ly. At the time of Johnson's first trial, hin drivers’ leenne had been canceled, but he had apparently bor [rowed another machine, and was ar | rented « second time for driving while Hintoxicated Johnson will now serve 60 days jand pay out $200 in fines. Five speeders were deprived of their white Heenses, and together with two others, were fined, Thursday. Arrests totaled 15 in the last 24 hours, with 13 ar- charges. The od five aute Jetsore | noon Thursday, | ‘The new warfare againg | violators as begun by Judge Kalina | Thursday Je the result of a recent conference of elty and ¢o' police [officers and peace officials, CAPT. BARTLETT IS HELD GUILTY |Master of H. F. Alexander Will Appeal! Convicted of negtigence in con nection with the wreck of the steamer H. F. Alexander, Capt. K. P. Bartlett was preparing Thursday to make an appeal to Capt. William Fisher, super- visor of the federal board of in- quiry that tried him, according to Capt. 4. 8S. Gibson, the skip- per’s counsel, ‘The board, composed of U. S. Steamboat Inspectors Donald 5. Ames and Harry ©. Lord, has | been investigating the necifent | ever since the big steamer went | aground at Cake Rock August 7, endangering the lives of 300 Passengers. jot the board before forwarding it to | Washington for final approval and jaction. The decision held that Bart jlett wan guilty of negligence at the j time of the crash, and the penalty | was fixed at a four months’ suspen. |sion of Bartlett's license ag master mariner. This means that Bartlett may not take command of any ship jflying the American flag during that period, During the two-day period of the by Robert Marquart, chief officer of the H. F. Alexander, to show that the great vessel was proceeding at | full ae thru @ dense and allen. (Turn to Page i, Column 2) UNION OFFICIAL KILLED IN FIGHT SACRAMENTO, Cal, Aug. 31 | William Mero, president of the Fed- erated Shops Crafts of Sacramento, |was shot and killed jast night by an jalleged railroad shop H. B. Debolt, employed in the lo: jcal Southern Pacific shops, ix said to have confessed to the shooting. He |claims he shot in self defense. Two men why were with |the time of the shooting claim that ithe three left a car at 28th and J sts, Without warning, they say, @ shot was fired from behind and Mero dropped. One of the witnosses held Debolt until police arrived Debolt aswerts that he was attack. Jed by the three and shot his re- volver from his pocket as he was |struggling with the men, | | |Six Are Shot When Irish Attack Boat CORK, Aug. 31.—A British war {department launch was attacked by 4 party of Irish insurgents at Black Rock, on the coast of County Cork. Four Tommies, artillerymen, and two insurgents were injured, \ uss: tS a par upon which he was convicted recent. | | Fisher is considering the decision | trint last week, testimony was offered | itrikebreaker, | Mero at | Seattle Girl, 7, Will Enter 4th Grade That’ s Nothing, She Talked at 6 Months } Of OLE HANSON—tie’s «till throw. ing it-—down in Low Angeles, where he's selling real estate. BILL SEARING—The recent chief Jot police is guarding the sacred in |terests of the law—down in Colum bla City had a hatreut—but he's still making speeches to anybody who'll linten. | JIM MAHONEY—Yes, he's still in Maybe he'll be jthe county jail, | maybe not Jhanged some day Can't say—hes dead | CLARA SKARIN—Captain of De- ‘tectives Charlie Tennant is still hot jon her trail, DR. MARTINI DAMOURETTE— We don’t know—but he’s probably discovering some more turtle serums or lost logs of Columbus, J. EB. CHILBERG—Tho former president of the defunct Scandi. navian American bank $s under in- dictment—but not in jail. MAUDE SWEETMAN—Nope, she ten't ragzing Bill Whitney any more. Too busy running for the legislature. LEO DRUXIMAN—Why, he's at the same old stand, peddling bull and cigars in Spring's Fourth ave. store. WALTER McCREDIE—The erst while leader of the Indians, upon re: tiroment, emulated Roosevelt by go ing fvory hunting. Only he's doing it in the bush leagues instead of the jungles. AUSTIN E, GRIFFITHS—No, he isn't president of the Poindexter-for- Senator club this year, GEORGE DILLING—He's in Los Angeles with Ole Hanson, selling real estate, Our former mayors seem to like the City of An- gels. ED BATWELL — The veteran newspaper writer kas stopped work. ing for a living. He's with the Puget Sound Power & Light Co. BILL INGLIS—No, he's not sena tor, It’s back in the army again, sergeant, back in the army again, DAN LANDON—He's running for state senator now—and Jt looks like he'll be elected, CS OEATS rears sat EMPEROR KARL OF AUSTRIA | down | By the Way, What’s Become These Gentlemen Whe Once Figured Prominently The Front Page in Seattle | naving the stat jfome .wafe business, like bootlegging lin Seattle, {hold Scullion on a charge of murder | uncovered evidence that It was Scul- ? LOGAN BILLINGSLEY—The fa- mous bootlegKer was reported shot in 4 saloon braw! in Oklahoma—or may be it was only half.shot. LOUIE HART—Aw, gwan! Still of course, PONZI—He’s still doing time—and regretting that he didn’t go into ROY GARDNER—In Leavenworth penitentiary. Hasn't escaped recently —and hasn't been operated on yet to remove his love for train robbery DE LAGE—Warden Archer, over at MeNell, would like to know. OUR FIVE-CENT CARFARE— Ask Doc Brown, SUSPECT HELD AS MURDERER, EDGEWATER, N. J., Aug. 31.— Charles Scullion, brother of Mrs, George Cline, whose husband shot | and killeA John Bergen, movie actor, was taken into custody by police to- day. Prosecutor Hart stated ho would in connection with the crime with which Cline is already charged, ‘The prosecutor stated that he had) lon who handed Cline the gun with which Bergen was shot, ADAIR PAPERS RECOVERED DALLAS, Tex, Aug. 31.—Private papers of Sterling Adair, former hus- band of Evan Burrowes Fontaine, which are expected to throw light on | the parentage of Cornelius Vander. | bilt Whitney, jr., have been recov- ered here, according to P, C, Short, | attorney for Adair's mother, | The parentage of the child Is the | subject of @ million-dollar suit | against Cornelius Vanderbilt Whit: | ney, son of Harry Payne Whitney, | recently filed in New York city, The important papers in the case found here will never be made public, but will be kept by Mre, Adair, mons provision that the interest om the allied foreign debt should be Next Week [used in payment of the compensa- tion, Both of these are sald to be ob jectionabie to the president and that reason a determined effort be made by bonus pport! Tender Age |have them stricken out. in- Of Seven. At The Under the terms of the bonus bill a World war veteran may make ap plication for one of five optional us bonus plans—cash pay, paid Her Name |wurance certificates; vocational tr id ing aid, farm or home aid and settlement. Is Soldiers whose adjusted servioe credit is less than §50 may choose cash payments. Marienne Bepiet, oy ‘, . : rearea. |ANTI-BOLSHEVIK LONDON, Aug. 31.—Press dis: Tite, Mau''stalt| patches from Bertin today quoted Photographers. reports from Odessa that an anth bolshevik revolution had started successfully in Southern Ukraing and was spreading thru the PR Crimea. Spoke her first word at the age Sailors of the bolshevik fleet of 64 months; could really talk in the Black sea have joined the at 11 months; learned reading, revolt, according to reports, simple arithmetic and how to A dispatch to the Daily Mail sald play the piano 6y ear before she |an Odessa soviet had “freed itself of was 5 years old, and now, at the | sovietism,” and called upon citizens age of 7, is preparing to enter |to “unite against the communist the fourth grade in St. Edward's | usurpers.”* school next week. Considerable bloodshed ts under- ‘This is the recora of Marienne Red- | Stood to have attended the revolt, field, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. J. F. bind! Redfield, 4435 Brandon st. Odessa is an important Black sea No, Mr. and Mrs. Redfield aren’t| Port near the Bessarabian border, university professors or celebrated | Before the war it was a prominent scientists. Redfield is a city fireman | srain center, and still is one of the and his wife has the confectionery | Russian gateways. concession at Madrona park. And where Marienne—or “Bunny,” as she is more familiarly known— FRA got her precocity is more than they jean account for. “She was always kind of In- quisitive, and she's picked up a lot by asking questions—that's all,” her mother explains, PARIS, Aug. 31. — French From her description, you might] troops at Mayence are think that “Bunny” was a regular} orders to hold themselves im Betty Bluestocking—but she isn't. readiness for invasion of Ger- She's cot just as much pep as the| many, it was reliably reported most confirmed tomboy in town—| here today. as any of the youngsters who fre- This follows the deadlock be quent Madrona park can attest. And| tween France and England in |she's entirely feminine, too—much| the allied reparations commis against her mother's wishes, she's} Sion over granting of a mora Just had her hair bobbed, torium to Germany. “Bunny” started to school at Premier Poincare’s announcement the age of 5. It was soon learn. | that he would rather break with the ed, however, that her home read. | allies than surrender to Germany ing had made her too advanced | brought on the crisis, it was be- for the first grade, so she was | lieved, shoved right into the second, and oar? passed without difficulty. BERLIN, Aug. 31.—The German Last year she was sick for alrequest for a moratorium will um month, and when she returned to|doubtedly be refused by the allied school it was feared she would have | reparations commission now meeting to be kept back. But within a week jin Paris, according to unofficial ad- (Turn to Page 7 7, Column 1) b Se ncasall received here today, FLAPPERS DRIVE YOUTH TO PERIL IN MISSIONS ABROAD CHICAGO, Aug. 31.—The “wild excesses” of American girls are driving the country's red-blooded young men to seek perilous fields for misionary work. Young men in droves are looking for jobs that will pay them $30 & month, with no expenses, to get away from the “free talking, free type of girls, thinking, freo drinking” Dr. Paul Rader, president of the Christian Missionary Alliance and noted evangelist, in an interview today so declared, “They are disgusted with the American standards of living and the flappers’ standards in particular,” said the Rev had at least 400 young men apply to our mission: on-the-Hudson for the most perijous service They are all virile, red-blooded college graduates of American manhood.” der, “We have school at Nyack- within the Jast year, -the best specimens This Little VIC [ ORY Lady p Look Much \° uxe a |But Real Fight to ° ut Come Following etty Veto Expected Bluestocking, | From Harding WASHINGTON, A . 3" Does She? senate today passed the rica pe ayes pl yee ory bill, The ; m confer. But She’s | ence where it Is expected to diee place the tariff and be reported a back within 10 days or two Breaking All | weeks. Then it will be dis: patched to the White House. The real fight is expected te Records By open when the measure comes back from the president with a veto, which both opponents and ; pport 1 seems Entering | fured. It comidered doabital whether enough strength can be tered The Fourth poe oo it over a presi- 4 ‘Two important amendments were mi, Grade _|iana settlement option and (he lag. af

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