The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 27, 1923, Page 1

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ou pam MINERS TO STRIKE dx 4 WEATHER "VOL. | ome ARREST 17 IN CHARGE FILED Brews) TACOMA RAD AGAINST JAP ON NARCOTICS, AUTO DRIVER Suspects Netted in Oriental Whose “Company openeta wee | Sensational Dope; Car Killed Boy Ma a Cleanup in Sound) Now Defendant ma| City in Manslaughter By John W. Nelson A jury of 12 men and women didates for cheer } Grand opera ba will say what penalty the state s. You'd have a it you ate s of Washington will impose upon a man, be he Japanese or white, es 57s, who strikes a Gyearold boy with | LAST MINUTE NEWS Queen Anne residents demand that the name of “Mad: fly” be changed to wig.” his car and then fle . leaving | several months of ¢ him to die. Bert ugh artment The Seattle & R way is going to a tem. rd one of and pass o' company has used the pass!’ m for years. The cars pass peep against arrests are expected to fol All persons arrested charged with violation of the Be , recently ps afraid to go hom persons arrest Home Brew axain scores sensa- tional news deat. In its special rotagravure section today it presents exclusive photographs of the famous | * 5 le Patrolm ts persed Glgnore Bhean ene) sl purchases witnessed by city |Makgr was mai ansible when 8. P operatives have been made from | Duynea, who was driving behind the| Jeach of the 17, it is said |death car, obtained the license num-| During the Investigation preced-| ber: Ito had shaved off his mustacho| ing the raid the city officers, wark:|And had discarded his spectacies, Ing In co-operation with special ap-| [to falled to report: the accident to eratives, with federal and county | Police headquarters, and the search authorities, have themselves pur | for him lasted four days, until he was | chased m [Work of investi hed peed laws in t away from the spot arrest of Ito rp ature, the arresting officers say. | tore wed by the state ators has cost. the ity nearly $1,000 to date, it is sald. ‘ |most of the money having been ex pended for evidence. ME. SHEAN MR. GALLAGHER veral of th wr n | Beals ion of drugs time ¢ quiet at present, but it will soon be|lwere arrested on information pre | time to chase. carwigs again. viously obt: nief Carry-the-Kettle has died in gina, Sask. Probably he was a} eon of old Chief Rush-theCan. |American Legion Moves to RUNAWAY CAR CRASH 4 Force Ejection | WRECKS TWO AUTOS, DAMAGES ONE MORE |) | | | | ees ie | (Baptis | ave. hi Pola Donna." ihe eyes. eri is appearing In “Be! No doubt she’s a treat fo BY BOK BERMANN | ed to drive out the Japa: | ¢ farmers who are staying on at m st. to||the Yakima Indian fiance of th es of the part ment of the inter A. Norton commander of the Wapato post. of | down the Minor |/n from Un te Monday nig’ owned by Minor ay ervation, in de- | ASK US esta: 0 Lord Carnavon, finder of King : Tut's mummy, is suffering from blood poison after having been ‘ : 7a , { nt of A. Strout Co, a||the American Legion. ved In Se | bitten. By whom? King Tut? || oreeatbent neo firm, far-||attle Tuesday, to obtain relntorce- | rowly missed several pedestrians || Ments in the fight. | and autos and ended its wild Kis primary motive was to get speakers for a iriant me to be} | The winter almost slipped by with out anybody repeating that hot! career on Pike st., when it wr Water improves @ cold bath. ed a large Packard touring car || held in Wapato Wednesday night, for | |] standing at the curb the purpose of crystallizing public | ee The auto was insured in one ||sentiment against the Japanese One is advertised for sale} in the Wellsville, O., Union. PRING POEM bas” tters.” of the companies represented by || “Sua | < to the police. pt. Ewing D. Colvin, chief depu Strout reported. that he had left || {¥ Prosecuting attorney, and City Councilman Phil Tindall, both of ‘out, accord his sefan parked outside fi Ah, gentle spring, Hheditaee kino That HGMtK axe ¥ Aden Ne a |] home and that it slipped its |) Whom are amor tr prominent ‘ou are s0 meet, etes ead ay down the || ltders in the antiJapaneso move The little Yirdics Ese aga i -4 || ment, accepted his invitaton and wilt | Bing “t tweet.” |} Bill. ‘The Packard was owned || roe ieee ea nato Tueadn fs || by Jack Donnelly aman for Cases diteation om theres batt es the Packard-Scattle A monkor : “I 3 situation on the reserva- the way, Grosser & Dunlap | Pideka owned by Harry Mills, ion has become intolerable, Norton declared Tuesday, “We've won our fight. The government has ruled that no more leases to | Japaneee can be renewed, Yet we still have the Japs with us | “They either # P on the ; land, after their leases have ex. : pired, in deflance of the secretary of [he Weather Man’s ter Intesieni or valbevtloee tevciee other lands by devious means, in convictions—because we n't get have just a salesman, was damaged tion of * n Street.” that much |] 75° ponnelly talked-of book by A. S. M. Hutchin-} (Turn to Page 11, Column 4) | bout sued an inexpensive edi | | ked, |) 8 car was wr a Strout’s The Rain Dries Out the Atmosphere VhLat te iautiey. 6 so iasan eee We See the Sun Before It Rises ieeieekieitda at some ce tee Aone South Pole Gets Hottest Sun Bath tc n residents, i 5 | “If we can only arouse public More Air Goes Up Than Comes Down sentiment to a. high enough pitch, jhowever, I think that we can put BY ROBERT TALLEY |them out—and that's the a HINGT¢ March 27 weather man's daily job is full of para: |why we're holding the mveting.”’ Prof, William Jackson Humphreys of the United States weath-| All the American Légion posts ae ture jin the Yakima valty will be repre. The afr is drier after a rain than before; we see the sun before it rises|sented at the meeting, according to and after it sets; the world’s greatest 24-hour heat supply is received by the |Norton, and more than 1,000 per- South Poie; more alr goes up th comes down, |sons are expected to attend. fain dries the air,” Prof. Hu + explained, “because precipitation! Norton was leaving for Wapato robs it of mucl) of its moisture. Thus, rain prevents the air from becoming | Tuesday afternoon to complete ar and remaining reckingly humid everywhere as it otherwise would be." | ents for the meeting. We sce the sun, moon and stars before they actually ris ove the horl- | won because light rays reflect, or bend with the curvature of the earth. Like a mirror that deflects a beam of light at a sharp . the artvs| Would Ban News of re WA doxes, # rangen . | atmoxpheric belt bends down the rays of the rising sun—not a sharp angle, | but in a curve, caused by the atmosphere's varying density, which gradually | _ Betting on Sports |," increase; from its outer boundary to its maximum at the surface of the |, OTTAWA, Ont., Mr If the earth ‘ | bill Introduced by Sir ¢ jouln, Alternately, the sun shines on the North Pole and the South Pole 24| Minister of Justice, yesterday, be: | hours @ day for six months In the year, As the sun is closest to the earth | COMes & law, publication of all «port ur winter (when it {4 shining on the South Pole), the South Pole, | news on which a bet could be calm iotier. rayal Dian (ha North. Pile |made will be against the criminal incredible among any paradoxes in that more air ascends | °e 1 ever descends, utterly shattering the old dictum that “whatever goos| Up must come down.” | As everybody knows, air heated by the earth's surface ascends aa the re-| wit of heavier cold alr coming down from above, The earth's heat expands tie ascendiy and henee the yolume of the ascending air is always greuter than the yolume of the descending air, However, it might seem that the mass that soos up and the maay that ‘event comes down must be the same, But, on the contrary, they are for from it, because this mass of warm, ancending air carries up trom 1 to 2 per cent of moisture ¥ but descends as a liquid in thie form of rain, or # #olld, such a6 snow or hail, Thus, elther way you figs ure it—in volume or in mass—tmore alr goes up than ever comes down, f Famous Scientist Is Dead in London LONDON, March 27. Sir James Dewar, famous scientist, inyentor of the thermos bottle and of cor- dite, died here today, I AKCENds AHH & tered as Second Clase Matter May 8, 1999, at (he Postoffice at Seattle, TUESDAY, Wash., under the Act ef Congress March &, 1979, iii — The seattle Star Per Tear, by Mall, $4.60 MARCH 2 Two CENTS IN SEATTLE, evidence, they declare, | Picked up by Officer Hulahumaker, | § | Patrolman R. B. Colby, police dive u ; ; j in search of a pair of narcotic scales, wanted in connection with the trial of M*s anborn and R. is, under the Beeler narcotic kneeling in front of Sever 2) Submerging him Colby a bit. 6, W, FISCHER DIES SUDDENLY Away This Morning William Fischer and one of} Tuesday at his ers “at 940 Harvard |ecover | The scene of operations was beside Last week he He | ams, of the nar condition beca wit 10 o'clock long and useful career . Macher had been ¢ Seattle and t| in lead, in » of the 1 third of a cen was born In Holland . ark | olty | tury {1., | Macher of the Chicago whole CAME TERI Wduewted at brief upprenticeship under bis father (Lurn to Page 11, Column 2) 3 it. Plunge Into Icy Lake Water to Get Evidence | Memories of the famous Mahoney trunk mystery, still fresh in the | | minds of attle citizens, were re sident | Vived late Monday afternoon, when huge crowds gathered on Lake Union »/ to witness police diving operations to narcotics from the lake bed, His death, coming after only four}a houseboat at 1606 Wostlake ave. | yy days of iliness, was a surprive and an| intense shock to hundreds of fri and associates in the business world, was apparently in the |best of hedlth, when suddenly he suf 1 hemorrhage of the lungs. 10 0 be improving, but his | TAOURRE $908 BE} aunt | Born Wax alleged to have thrown used for |N., where, last Tuesday, Mrs, Anna [sun rn, 97, and Robert hte roll 41 p arre |men N. P. Ande 1 ina raid by Py n and BR. H, Wi} rtle detail At the time of the rald, Mrs, San. overboard a set of geal ching dope, and it was thought | that a quantity of narcotics, wrapped had been dumped into the lake by meaty of a cloverly concealed wooden chute that opened into the |order, lake thru a trap door, and which was | 4lfficulties: j worked with a atring «| CROWDS WATCH 1b gro: | DIVER WORK &| Chiet W. 1h, Severyns Monday ot dered diving operations to recover | the evidence against x (furn fo Page 41, Golumn 6) law. lf in the waters of Lake Union doesn't His smile indicates that he lik 3) Colby is shown just before the lake waters worry swallowed him up. Photo by Price & Carter, Star Staff Photographers recent boost in the price of sugar of WORLD JOINS 2,000 MINERS IN MOURNING ORDERED OUT BERNHARDT APRIL FIRST ‘Simple Funeral Is Wage Agreement Planned; Weeping! Only Can Now Throngs Paying} Stop Action, Is Final Tributes | Claim By Webb Miller | Officlal strike orders have been is March Those who | *ued and 2,000 coal miners in the Bernhardt in life v is are preparing to see her in re ; ounced Tuesday eath is afternoon by Harry Alsop, secretary-treasurer | fea éoofh or the’ notices ia re | of the State Coal Miners’ union, ig |thrown op d crowds moved up | 'F beh |candle-igt stairways to the dark- ee: ened death cham | The “divin been acting of to strike, it w © order Monday ngements favor- e miners can be arrived at will be a strike of every union ™ I je Elum fields,” said Alsop Tuesday. The order takes? effect April 1, according to Alsop. | The mir re employed by the ovement CO. ary of the North- > Railway Co. nts arrived at in the 2 will expire Saturday stipulations in renewed the he the whi was heaped high with whit roses and Ijile WEARS Li OF HONOR IBBON white hair was un- nd lay across the coverlet A brilliant spot of carmine on her | breast was the cross and ri bon 1 Alson the Legion of Honor wt de epi seen vay minimum of a day. to be Women burst into tears ; sight of the greatest of TK orsiest ibe by while women lytr ; sobs f the miners are cut $150 per day im death ch: .' Haracou wages with no corresponding reduc dent of y sock | tion in rents, cost of explosives and old friend of Bernhardt, stood at the | fuel has been offered by the come foot of the “bed struggling to con-| pany officials and refused by the trol his emotions. miners, according to Alsop. Bernhardt's last wishes regarding | J, H. Wallace, commissioner for the funeral will be carried out 48]|the mine operators, and Martin Flys far as possible, It is feared the | zik, of the Mine Workers’ union, are rosewood coffin she had in the ho&se | now in Washington with members of for 80 years, prepared for her death, | the United States fact finding com- has deteriorated until it {s no longer | mission, appointed by President serviceable. Harding to look into the coal mining The funeral will be extremely | situation in the country and to settle jsimple. There be tions, | amicably the difficulties between but many flowe - | miners and operators, enne specified “In case the findings of these men, Just before her death Bernhardt | who are now in conference with asked that her personal belongings, | commission, meet with the spproves souvenirs, photos, statues and sojof the United Mine Workers 0&8, forth, be distributed among her | America, we can do nothing but¥ friends. | agree with their decisions,” says Al- A mourning France honored | sop. Bernhardt today in death as it had | SETTLEMENT honored her in life, And the entire | MAY BE MADE world joined in the homage. nould a deadlock occur in the Thruout the night her son, grand-| situation, we can do nothing bub children and most intimate relatives | walk out," he added. kept the death watch. | Attached to the strike order issued GREAT CROWDS by Alsop is a proviso which states PAY OMAGE: that in case the difficulty is settled: Outside in the streets great crowds |in Washington, the call will be aie gathered, staring in sympathy at the | tomatically canceled and the men great by Is that harbored the| Will continue under the new agree crushed flower of France, their mod-| ments suggested by the owners and ern Joan d’Arc, nd the greatest | Officials of the mines. actress of all time. They cameatthe| “We hope to avold a strike and | rate of 150 an hour to pay homage at |#t¢ trusting that the operators will Saar anita’ OF “aeath |realize the futility of cutting wages The funeral probably will be ar-(@d crippling the coat producing in- ranged for Thursday, Early this|@ustry at this time,” said Alsop: morning government officials, cabl- | “However, in case a strike ts neces: net members and those of highest es-|S@7¥, We shall fight to the limit tate in the land called at the reel {ad will have the combined forces dence, The subject of a state funer-|Of the national coal miners’ organis al wag discussed among the relatives. Fates behind . us.” No definite decision has been made. rane Later members of the family started| Coal Production in to remove the movie scenery from | the living room, to which tho body | Alaska Increases will be brought later, It will lie in WASHINGTON, March 27.—In- everyns is adjusting the helmet over the head of (Turn to Page 11, Column 4) | creased production of coal by private , who is about to descend to the Lake Union lake bed a Anna May Be Unable to H. M. Barton is | operators in 1922 on A lands was reported toda: | tary of Interior Work by B. S. Stews Prosecute Grafters |: art, supervising mining engineer for WASHINGTON, March The | Ae icc 5h otal wa federal government may be unable| Production of coal in the territory under existing laws to prosecute | 2™Ounted to 84,403 tons in 192%, as those alleged to be responsible for the | COMPAared with 76,285 tons In 1921, am increase of §,118 tons, Government operations on reserved | approximately 60 per cent, it was in-| SEATTLE NOT HIT BY CUTS pe ae a Says Federal Board Postoffice to Maintain Same Service Here or is passing thru local postoffice handled before ever » according to Postmaster of this fact, Seattle's mail distributing and hit have |been sent,out by the postoffice do- jpartment at W: Jnounced by Assi shington, it was ant Postmaster ©, ) Superintendent Williams Tuesday a Middle ed to cut down of) have been for department | and aro now operating under In Kansas City [collections In all sections of the city {have heon discontinued helng Sanborn | operated Jand her brother, Curtiss, both of | a | Whom are charged, under the Beeler nareoties law, with Nhayly lope and it will not be ni (Zurn Wo Page 1, Column 8) dicated at the department of justice | UMts form less than 10 per cent of and the federal trade commission | ‘Me total production, with private op: here today, erations producing more than 90 per nt of the tonnage. A definite decision will be reached Boosts Sugar Price Condition Grave} WASHINGTON, March 9 27.— > mm| Charging that the federal resorve MENTON, France, March 27.—The) hoard, by ftiancing speculators, is re condition of George J. Gould, ill at) sponsible for inckeased sugar prices; [his villa here, continues serious to-| Represontative King, of qinold, @ day. ‘There has been no change and me of the: house thantelfiuaim jit red Gould will nutiiye: currency committee, today demanded m ——. | that the board force banks to quit alding sugar speculators, | “If the federal reserve board re- | fused to rediscount further notes and Acceptances based on sugar transne. | tions, and ordered banks not to aid in |financing sugar speculation, the | price of sugar would drop at once," | King said, Another Bargain Is Offered A real home doesn't last long when it ts placed on the market to sell, Today's offer is BAC: rifice due to leaving the city. lSeutiveler’ Suspect Is Held in South | LOS ANGELES, Cal, March 27—= Jack Miller, said to be the treasurer of a large Vancouver Nquor firm, |who was arrested at Long Beach jduring a raid on alleged booze smuge xlers; is under arrest gain in San Francisco, according to telegrams re. ceived by the local prohibition en: |forcement office, Miller was released on $10,000 cash bail, the condition being that ho re {main within the jurisdiction of the federal court hore, He was arrested 8 he was about to board a boat for Vancouver, it was reported, ‘The charge is that he violated Ao terms of his release on badb 6 larwe tooma; living room acroas en front; ‘hardwood floora: fire: pookeawer; cabinet kitchen one ini} breakfaat nook} plo mag coment Havement, furnace and laun dry; 2 airy bedroomay nice comporition atone floor; fu with stair; cement drive to lotx of shrubbery; (ine lawn; grand view. Furniture consiate of § pleces over atutted tay Just Like new, library table, mahogany flor lamp, Blo, tO ‘Turn to the Want Ad Columns NOW and you will find more about the details of this home.

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