The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 31, 1923, Page 1

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a me ~ he w it xara be — DSS ound he ta and sixty repped yenty. ning et a ts sid nan ale, aa tired ‘mornings De night be —<<$<— siti af Ld, | New Babies _at the Zoo te Arrivals Delight Kiddies By Wanda von Kettler weather man tells us spring Boule here—and we believe him. Rat caty because th © blue the cherry blossoms b . but of the wonderful new things | furry and God bas given the d mothers in the Woodland cages and co! few days and w little lives that > gut to Woo mothers bf them sur themselves m colt, ‘ y three days old. her mother, a chestnut Mi proud little creature called ie. This was the colt’s first day she wasn't quite certain of Bhe'd run a little bit, then 4 stop suddenly, some- i skidding. She seemingly won Eases was ail about. GLE aches Wie the goat pen, two fae contentedly watched white kid born Sun- and a black one born ey Despite the con ‘i of the kids, which, in iy, are not more than 12 phigh, and which continued a iy afternoon to aa Pe petualiy, lke little balloon Doth the mothers and fa. the kids ure their talle- stubby ones that wie: Ma—a—a—a," 50 therefor often trio the kangaroo pen the game ahd peck—not seek—ts played the day. Yesterday after- ‘Turn to Page 6. Cotumn 2) Howdy, folks! Going fishing So are we. ’ Fry is out to beat his last Va record catch—1,895,473 shad f selected Apri} 1 as the| day of the fishing season| & splendid sense of the fitness eee is Just one little fish being @ by a big one. see SPORTING NOTE patios Season opens to- morning, and every poor in town will he hooked for ‘fnew Easter bonnet. Hoquiam boy swallowed a w p uae the other day. Hix father in| 2 Sanne for him to deveop ignt- th that plug inside him the 1ad| tbe w little hoarse, oe 4 dame 1 love Ts Alice Fern ; ‘4 not very wise, But willing to tearn. eee Mar Isa man who ; ayn he the municipal railway tan IARY FOR AN AVERAGE Orr! i Loved, Paid Income Tax ses ed Veterans of tho Are to Mage a music Sunday evening, Until after you hear YOU decide that sh show at Mee Carrot and Cave bid ‘Solow, ‘Will be Jeatou: +e Jon Gosh, but Ali Masks, tt is announced Acto 2 Brown going to make a anc PREP AREDN 14s NOTH KY actors are always in {9 Pave 6, Cotumn 4) park} un-| World them man was will be WOMAN HOTS P. 0. BANDITS ‘S afe Robbers | Granite Falls Flee From Shots “Christ He is 7 This ‘Three ban caught trying The air heavy with th perfumes. clothes. Surels must be highly complimen | | Her prompt action prever sum of m Mra. Florence Carpenter, 35 of George Carpenter, postmester of Granite Falls, wax awuxened at 3:45 4, m. by a dull explosion coming frora he postoffice, a block away. Peering out the window, Mrs. Car- Penter saw a man standing in front of the postoffice and a light Inside, {with two shadowy figures moving abou Taking the Colt's from under her | pillow, she opened a window and fired | two shots at the bandit guard. The | man du By the time Mr “Ien't that hat a SCREAM DEAR—" No. That isn't part of the This ix Easter Day t of a large Yer , Wife ervic HE publie market. of Easter. home an Easter lily | 80 jot your Easter ti gathers they are deeply co all due cerem i E This is Easter Day mot you iha bowing to Ch PRETE? oungsters romy pursued them . arly morning her night gown around her (Turn to an. f) Page 6. Cotamn 2) MR, MARCH IS SINKING FAST | > | High Fever of Last Week| Will Prove Fatal | BY STEVE ht Lint ‘ is in Easter Da creams of del! ct moth for th m aqu But rathe: fs oipakake R = 4 saless ed look but The breast, fiercely nd when I thi This in Easter Ds and of thom goo . girl n AKNETT | | Mr, March, 1923, is sinking rapid. | ly and will pass out at midnight | Saturé His end ts due, according lto*Weatner Physician Geor; bury charge of the Seattie| we clinie, to an exceptionally high fever during the past week | | Mareh had a temperature of 70) |degrees on the 29th, ‘That was 13 degrees above normal. His fever | ldropped to 66 on Friday, which is} still 10 degrees above the normal temperature, Mr. March has been in exception- ally pleasant humor this year, “ac-| cording ‘to Dr. isbury. His (Turn to Page 6, Column 4) ANOTHER BARGAIN Every day Want Columns, bargains appear hard to duplicate, Star readers are active buyers, is why these be Star Columns, SMALL boy and the little Want a piece E ed—not so much on ac and she accepts “Ummm,” she changes; she give efficiency than « ‘ou naxty boy “April fool! April fo True, just the C This is Easter Day ount ¢ lightedly remarks a 4“ in queaky er ar AY" he leak walls of Walla Walla ates swing open, and thru. young woman cheap-look lude of caresses. ... “Joe, you're going put in an anxious, *Straight—hellt “But Joe! Don’t you know what omen.” The man looks at her perplexedt: all at once his expression changes is high-pitched / in Star Ad that Because He is 1 are BRITON SLAIN BY ASSASSIN! LONDON, March 31;—The British gains appear in | | | | | | FORD COUPE, 1924, only driven 3,100 miles; has all kinds of extras, in cluding disc wheels; tooks “ tike Haws runs delter, “Will lt kere \ dabei | was xtabbed to death and his wife |wounded by an unknown assailant, | who escaped, ding to a Central | Newa dispatch today oldie and his wife were on their way to visit a grotto when they wero attach kod. | You will find the party showing || this coupe by tuming The Star Want Ad Columns to Christ Is Risen —In Seattle A Study in Easter Contrasts BY BOB BERMANN ps ent FASHIONABLE chure Thousands of dollars’ if God is looking down upon fashionable folk turn out to do Him honor. lavish expenditure of money. It is open—especially on account Maybe somebody obligingly stay at their stalls to meet the emergency. med lest Master be candy?” politely, chortles gleetu jendar man’ ght this ti Look what they done to me “Christ is 1 sen! This IS Easter day!” vice consul at Naples, Robert Goldie, | {TWO BOYS DIE IN SHOWCASE! SAT RDAY, “GRINS HARBOR JAPS RAIDED! Arrests; 15 Held for Deportation AD Japanese igen! ster day! h, crowded to overflowing. he blended incense of many worth of brilliant new DEEN, Mar fteen I ie at Com n Into ew r : ed: Grays Har mopolis t the church, He ted to think that many And ‘such a will face 80 indble to feht nterpreter 1 LOVE! 0 alno wan take “ echnical charge ing the Hapkew Maru. when [the «hip wa in the harbor, February | 23, witholut permission of the eap- | tebe, Deputy Murshol Frank Burrows, | aes eight customs officers, unde leadership of W. A. Ma and Aberdeen and Coamopolis police | officers, staged the raid, which oo K, Just ag the shifus FOU HELD AS | OLYMPIA YEGGS Quartet Taken in South for Probe of Stamp Theft SAN But y on the has forgotten to take the Japanese merchants ur lily t. One 1 with ter abbit tough on the FRANC Mar 1 here inspec t them with ™m: Wash 18, which pont mpted t wbery of the 0! toffice, on March in 00, largely in stamps, ‘4 to have been stolen, men were found in a room at }a local hotel, with three suit cases | contalninig $3,670 worth of stamps. | They were: Alfred Fi | Francisco; € J. Scant on . | he more | T the woman hugs the bundie to her to waste! ¢ ‘ 1 eggs goin’ jawd. eS ext door he ttle offer ts Decnu ¢ girl Is » of his chiv: one; Ww aver Olympia robbery, postal au- thorities daid, is the only recent one in which any large amount of stamps |had been taken. Investigntors said they had le | that anion and Conley each Alfred Conley Katz, San Denver; R. of the candy but guddent am and expectorates her expr with # Joke, but- had fow days, prison. pena Ae grayfaced man, and cach had paid cash, | Conley and Scanlon were said to [have admitted that they came here] from Seattle. Figone refused to talk, while Katz said ho was a realdent of Francisco and had not been ay All four dented thelr guilt, fered “no. definite explanation |whére they secured the stamps, say: ing they had “bought them.” BETTER CARRY AN UMBRELLA SUNDAY ASTER hats may be safe and they may ndt. It 1s recom- mended that all people wearing them carry umbrellas, since eather ‘report says Nght rains” ‘The man isn't certain. He says just “probably.” As yet, the * that threatened from the ific ocean Is still on the ocean and no sighs indicate just now that it is coming here, ‘The tem perature Saturday noon was degrees, It would probably be a little lower Sunday, according to the forecast. stooping, shoddily- greets him with ecstacy, An inter. me, ain't * the sudden question volee. but of. How can I?" | today tx? Don't yo know? It’s an y F i oor girl, she’s goin’ © is a light, batty, But isen! f \FIRE TAKES | | TWO LIVES| NEW YORK, March 41.—Two men were burned to death, another was badiy hurt in a leap from a fourth: | |story window, and eight others, in | eluding a Woman and a child, 0 [Injured when fire swept a fivo-stor | bullding hi ‘Two firemen wore among the In: jured, weather By Staff Correspondent, WAPATO, March 31.—The agitation to enforce the ruling that bars Japs from wie Yakima Indian reservation jhas split Wapato asunder, Business men of the community |have divided into separate factions and feeling runs high. |Undeniably, the situation is bad, But it is not nearly go bad yet as it threatens to become. | The devil's cauldron is boiling. Behind the shadow of the Rising Sun of Japan, which has already cast its blighting shadow upon the valley, a second and even more sinister omen is crouching. | Klan. | The Klan has not yet got any real hold on the town— but its presence is indisputable, It is the hooded figure of the night-rider of the Ku Klux] | An organizer for the Klan has taken up his residence in Wapato and already one big mass meeting has been held. | So far, the movement hasn’t spread widely. But there must always be a beginning. to everything—and the time seems ripe for a veal Klan war, the first that the state has experienced, At present the situation is something like this: The anti-Japanese agitators are conducting their cam- | paign along legal lines—and have the law on their side. | But they are rapidly getting tired of seeing the law evaded {and violatec nd there are more than hints that, if law is powerless to do anything, they will have to direct action, The other day one of the leading busin said to me: to 8 men in town of | the} revert | 150 Surrounded in| Wh | was re:| | rned | purchased automobiles within the last | | Klu ‘Klux Klan May Take : a a Hand i: in Yakima Valley Jap Problem | blackmatlers su SIX DIE IN TOWER CRASH | since February 1, 1920, _ FINAL EDITION | ‘ ATEST FLASHE AGED MAN, STRUCK BY ree MAY DIE MARCH ¢ 1925 Tsanc between t thrown njurles.| urday afternoon Bur. lingame Z itomoh was fatal 1 revealed that fracture of the 4 A | i ninath j e ible rm. CALIFORNIA “RAFFLES” GETS * $45,000 FROM LOOTED HOMES SANTA BARBARA, Cal h has demor palatial Mission Ridge home of ng many 4 of dollars’ worth of valuable nouncement of} the amount of loot taken was made public. night police and] lunteers were unsuccessfully guarding the out ads.and drives dur. we the night in hope of apprehending the el & gang of ordinary burglars took advantage of wituation by loéting the Rochester clothing store, obtaining between $4,000 $6,000 in stock, carrying their | loot away toward Lon Angeles in a big touring Police admitted today | that the total umount of Joot “Raffles” has obtained during the past month ix valued dt more than $45,000. For tactical reasons they are concealing he itemized Ist of lonses, Ni MILLIONAIRE SEES PROSECUTOR IN MODEL DEATH PROBE NEW YORK, March Kears Asst Attorn questioning rothy King case. With him came a number| b strict Attorney Benton's 1 there! ‘ora to return from lunch. Pecora recalled] to throw more light on identity of the} Miss King when she refused to participate against Mite Iphia, millionaire, appeared this afternoon for further ( office him in case pected of kill in a $100,000 shakedown plo’ * Two CENTS IN SEATTLE. FIND BODIES OF 2 LADS IN DEATH TRAP! Kidnaping Murder Feared; Mothers of Victims May Not Recover AN BERNARDINO, Cal. March 31.—Investigution started today to determine whether Dick Jensen, aged 5, and Dean Meacham, 4, whose bodies were found last night, locked in a wooden showcase at a local store, were victims of foul play by kidnapers. The murder theory of the boy: jdeath is based on the fact that of- ficers investigating today found the door of the death crypt unusually hard to close. It is the only en- trance to the fatal showcase, about a foot high and 10 inches wide. It took all the strength of one of the officers to close it and police con- sider it doubtful that the two little boys playing within the box could have pulled it shut unaided by some third party outside. They think that either a kidnaper, feeling the tightening cordon of the citizen posses, chose the box as a means of hiding his victims, or FRENCH SEIZE MONEY MAYENCE, March 31 Th French today seized 10,000,000 marks and 490,000 French francs whi being transferred from the Frankfort branch of ichsbank at Weishaden. This is the second lar it seizure of German fv © occupation of the Ruhr began tion is} ved by Germans in the occupled area to constitute inauguration of| her repressive measures by the invade ere the re nd fui T. K, LEE RIFLE CHAMPION WASHINGTON, Mareh 31.—T, K. Lee, of Birmingham, Ala., winner of the title Jast year, has again won the national individual gallery rifle champlonship conducted by the National Rifle association, according to results announce Lee's score was 594 out of a possible 600, Lee also won the individual gallery pistol championship with a total score of 546 out of 600. The champlonship ‘at was won by J. 8. Dixon, of Sheridan, Wyo., with a new record score of 599 out of 600. HEARST BUYS 2 PAPERS W YORK, March 31—Formal announcement is expected momentarily purchase by William Randolph Hearst of the Baltimore newspapers | of Frank A. Munsey, the American and the Ne the American is a morning paper and the News its evening edition. dlitor and Publisher” today declared the transaction {is belieyed to have involved at least $4,000,000, GIRL OF TEN IS MOTHER March $1—Mary Cavendar, ion home, the mother r of a family in Hidalgo county, which took Ma’ when her mother died three nd her fathe by the sheriff of tha today 10-year-old girl, i A man, a into their home ppeared, was held utory offense. HARTFORD, Conn., March $1--Six workmen were killed today collapse of a water tower at the Fuller Brush company plant, beams gave Way and & huge tank at the top of the tower fell, the victims. NAME SEATTLE SHIPPING DIRECTOR WASHINGTON, Mafch $1.—Tho shipping board announced today appointment of E, P. Erckenbrack as district director at Seattle, succecd- ing Robert M. Semmes, resigned. Hrekenbrack has been at Rio de Janeiro in the Several crushing $20,000 IN DOPE SEIZED BELLINGHAM, March 31,—After a sensational five-mile chase In autos, Joo King, 65, Oliver Wise, 60, and Joe Wormly, who stated that, they were Seattle men, were arrested by customs officials here last night, Opium, valued at $20,000 is said to have been hidden in the men's clothing and in the car. The threo are be ing held in the city jail here, “We're trying to kick out the Japs by legal means. But if these means are inadequate we want to show them we have others at our command.” And.a visiting speaker, a law enforcement officer from another county, declared: “This thing (the Jap problem) has got to be settled. We'd rather settle it with ballots than with bullets.” Certainly fertile ground for a Ku Klux organizer, {he’s right there on the field. And This is the third of a series of special articles being | written for The Star about conditions on the Yakima In- dian reservation, The fourth and last article will appear Monday, |that some pls | them. jm ymate had locked tiny Dick and Dean in and then forgot The box bore !ndications of jong struggle that the boys to escape death that slowly overcame them. Most of their |clothes were torn from their bodies jand little Dean's body bore many jbruises, with handfuls of hair torn from his head. Physicians expressed anxiety today as to the condition of the mothers of the two lads. Some fears were felt that Mrs. Jensen might not recover from the shock of the tragedy, The only other explanation offered was that the boys crawled into the caso while playing, and that the spring latch snapped behind them. The boys had been missing since last Saturday. Scores of persons had joined in a wide search for the two boys, comb- ing the waste lands around San Ber- nardino and patroling highways, Officers thought gypsies had kid- naped them. Authorities in many. parts of the state searched gypsy camps. The store where tho boys were found was being remodeled and thé showcase was one of a number which had been pushed aside into an out. of-the-way corner of the building. It was of peculiar design, being 50 inches high, 4 feet wide and 3 feet long, terraced like a stairway and built of glass and tight, groove-fit- ting boards, Dean had been dead about two days, physicians said. Dickey was found to be still alive, but uncon- scious. Physicians detected faint signs of breathing. He was rushed to the hospital but died two hours later, HEIRS MAKE SETTLEMENT ST, PAUL, Minn, March 31.— Heirs to the $5,250,000 estate of Mary T, Hill, wifo of James J. Hill, the “empire builder,” agreed today on a division of the property, Each of the nine heirs will recetva one-ninth of the stocks, bonds and other property under the agreement, Howard Wheeler, probate judge, an~ nounced, IN IMPROV March —31.--Premler Lenin's general condition was im. proved today, ‘according to the offi- olal bulletin from his bedside. Lenin's temperature was 8 degrees Centt- grade (approximately 100 Fahren+ helt); pulse, 120, WEATHER Probably rain tonight and Sun- day; moderate to fresh southerly winds, perature Last 21 Hours Minimum, 46, the

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