The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 6, 1923, Page 1

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BOY DRAGGED MILE BY JAP AUTO! Entered as Second Class Matt or May 8, 1 at the Postoffice at Seattle, Wash, under the Act of Congress Merch 9, 1 819, Per Year, by Mall, $2.00 The Seattle Star _W ASH., The Truth About Mr. Waterhot IRCUMSTANCES ——<— l Home Brew Howdy, folks! people say Friday isn’t an unlucky day, but you can’t get a fish to be tieve it Some LI’ Gee Gee. THE LYON'S DEN Hugo Kelley, candidate for the city couneil, has opened offices Me the Lyon building. What an priocala: wamea "for a. Wolldieg containing Hugo's headquarters! oe The aver the cosm u cosmetic urge, who seems to be *~ comic urge, ge coed is not ge. but rath tec ted J a aly cted by The gum-chewing gal and the cud chewing cow They look alike, pron D¥ferent? oh. yes, I can ace tt now,| Wa the thoughtful look on the face| of the cow. Restaurant orchestras no } “. longer | play “How Dry 1 Am” because so many men’stand up, thinking it is! the national anthem. e+e INTERESTING FACTS This column is about 100 lines jong, but it is not as long as the Mason-Dixon lina A thing that rsakes us mad is when We get on tie Capitol hill car at night and find that somebody has got our accustomed strap. You can't believe anything you read in the newspapers. The othe day they ran a headitne saying that the greatest actress in the world was dead, and the very next day w saw where Theda Bara was only suffering trom a bad cold. oe EVERY-DAY HEROES . The man who can get into a bathtrd without Lnocking off the wire soap holder. of Spring: The discovery that three ings of your” tennis} racket have snapped during the win ter. Sign Sie James Dewar, who died recent: | ly."wwaa the inventor of the thermos bottle, in which auto tourists return-| ing from British Columbia. used carry hot coffee. Many stock thinks he is emb nity is merely an oil sucker who ing an opportu. hugging an tilusion. “2. LEGAL NOTE When ran down by a motorist | it is almost impossible to tell how badly you are hurt until you have seen your lawyer. eee Another sign of spring ts professional up! @pout the leng fag suits, when rs begin to worry h of women's bath: Chicago physician has originated a method of bringing the dead back to life, so there's council The Average woman has a vocabu lary of only 806 words. It’s n small| stock, but think of the turnover. TH OFFICE Many a man thinks he is over: worked merely beca he has to wash the dog every Sunday mort ing. In the Kast tne to answer this question they call it a.shipment ina and in a ship.” re now trying “Why do} when it goes @ cargo when it goes The 'n ipal 36,000 a . but more it would railway is losing think how much lowe if it wefe by an efficiency expert! TAves there a Newlywed With soul so dead P Who never to himaclf hath sald, “My Gosh! What breadt” ABSOLUTELY, MR, WATSON Conan Doyle says that Lord Carnarvon was killed by spirit guarding the tomb of King Tut ankhamen, Mar-vebous, Mr, Holmes! Conan Doyle but old-fashioned calla thene irite think they are ha'nt,” Just One thing theve cake-caters—nome would make good veal, of them ithe a still hope for our city) run} ay in favor of| shipping man, The bankruptcy of his great business institution, Frank Wa- | terhouse & Co.; a clutter of litigation in state and federal courts over the asseté; a deadly personal feud between him and other big business community; the indictment by county grand jury, the trial and final acquittal of a bank officer -/as one outgrowth of the feud; Mr. Waterhouse’s election and re- "' eleotion as president of the Chamber of Commerce—these and ‘'whole train of other events figures in Seattle’s have into the spotlight’s forced Frank Waterhouse, hot circle. have made him the center of a dis- turbance that is of vital interest to the whole city. His enemies charge him with | all ‘manner of scheming and WARSAW MOB ~ STORMS RUSS but they're different Poles Angered by Suspect Vicar’s Slaying Attack Legation| LONDON. April @—A mod of more than 10,000 Poles attempted to storm the Russian Wegation at War-| saw today, in a demonstration of protest against execution of Catholic | Prelate Budkevich, necording to this} | afternoon's Evening News, | Polish mounted police broke up persons were reported to! been injured in anti-nsemetic |demonstrations in Warsaw last night before the military intervened Indignation over the execution of jear General Budkevich now ts aingled with apprebension over the probable fate of the Most Rev. Dr. Tikhon, former patriarch of al! Rus sia, who will be tried April 11 for resistance to the soviet syetem | | have Russia has informed Great Britain that it Ia impossible to revise an j original soviet reply to this coun- t protest againat execution of the } Catholic dignitaries, Hope | preswed tha jand now | frain from interference with Ru | internal aftairs."* med the idea of protesting gainst the recent execution of Mon- | signor Budkevich. Patriarch Tikbon will be put on trial next Wednesday” on charges of high treason in con- nection with alleged counter revolutionary activities. With him will be tried Vicar General Gouriev and. Bishop Arseniev, | all of Moscow. | Prosecutor Krilenko charges Tik- jhon kept in constant contact with |the foreign clergy in occupied terri. torfes*and made public sermons in | which he quoted as stating that “Christ loved the armies fight- jing the bolsheviki.” It 4s further |eharged that at the holy sabor, held at Karlovitz in the autumn of |1921, the patriarch advised passive and active resistance to famine re lief measures in the Volga region. Dr. Tikhon forqerly was tried on charges of speculation with church candlesticks and other precious ma terials of the chureh lat one time was a bishop in Canada and algo in the United States. |speaks English Papal was | Housa of David's | Head Flees State? | LANSING, Mich., April 6.—Ru jmors that Beng in F. Purnell, head }of the House of David of Harbor, Mich., has fled the persisted here today. Quo warranto proceedings have been started against the David leader to show why the cult should. not be Aabanded, That House You Want to Rent may be in today's Want Ad Col enton state, Here every furnished nighed, are listed, as wel umne. day many houses, and unfur- ia many furnished and unfurnished apart ments, can arent deal of by watching Star Want Ad save f time | |] you | | |] Columne first Running up one |] street and down the other tires, |] one and gets you out of patience | STAR WANT ADS WILL LOOK FOR YOU! |the case. al _Pope Pins ts understood to have ‘The patriarch | He | HELD SLAYER ( IN AUTO ROW C harged With Shooting) Man in Quarrel] TACOM: “April 6.— Pat O'Donnel, 40, was to be a raigned before Superior Judge W. D. Askren at 10 o'clock Fri- day morning on a second degree murder charge in connection with the shooting of Martin Gb son. Obon w ing in a car near Elbo Wednes day night. O'Donnell was placed under arrest | by Deputy Sheriff Ben Gaisford am} he was returning to his cab’ the woods Alder afternoon was brow and Cc. K. also on the fatal ride and pla in jail at FE Thursday morning, were to Te An starte near He Clyde Graham brought | argument over wationalitien | the artel between O'Don nd Olson, who were sitting on seat of the car driven by according to Deputy Prose: yi who investigated | made remarks and Olson criti | is reported. o left and OT the Swedes cised the Irish, it O'Donnell was on jrewar, an Elbe on Ws right. Grewar’s 4-year-oid grandson sat on the front seat with Graham. | O'Donnell Is accused of whip. | ping # small automatic from his | pocket and firing one shot into Olson's left side, Death is be- lieved to have been instan- taneous. y Upon reaching Elbe, G drove to Olson's shack men realized that Olson seriously shot, probably cording to Teats. However, Graham and Grewar did not report the af. fair immediately as O'Donnell is al: leged to have threatened them, ac. cording to the deputy prosecutor O'Donnell carried Olson's body | from the car to a bed in the shack. | An hour later someone called at the place and advised taking Olson to the Hatonville hospital. There a physi clan declared Olson had been dead | five or nix hours, it 1s reported. ‘The party started at Alder Wednes: | day evening, when Graham asked O'Donnell to go for a ride. They} drove to Hibe and picked up Grewar Jand his grandson, Later they met | Olson on the road and he was taken | into the car. Olson had been drinking | for several days, the others declared |'The party then went to a roadhouse acrors the Lewis county line, The shooting occurred on the return trip, aham| three been Lenin’s Condition Reported Improved | MOSCOW, April 6.—The latest bul. letin on the cond@ion of Nikolai Lenin said the premier's lungs were better and that he generally improved. Lenin's temperature was given as 96.8 Fahrenheit. LEADER! Semiannual statements of newspaper circulations filed this week at the Seattle post office The Star's daily paid average for the six months ending March Sist was 73,111, wu gain of 1,426 copies over te previous six months, And that The Star continues to hold lis lead of MORK THAN 15,000 copies a day over its afterno petitor, anid near show | terms, \according to \structors, has ly as much over the morning paper, PRODIGY AT U Mrs. Birdeena Tuttle, who has just finished do- ing three years’ work at the University of Wash- ington two quarter-year and who is now look- ing for new worlds to con- quer. Mrs. Tuttle's record, university in- never been equalled by any other atudent of the institution. Photo by Prien & Carter Stor Staff Photographers in se FRIDAY, AP RIL 6, 2%, 192 Seattle wrong doing. NNR PARP AAR PPA AAPA att tt R PP Patt ttt a Two CENTS IN SEATTLE. integrity and his sound judgment. a c it be “for” him other than the facts are on his Returns to U After 16 Years; A. B.in Six Months And Student Finds Time to Teach, Write and| Act at Same Time BY BOB BERMANN Nee three years of under, graduate work at the Univer ality of Washington in two quarter year terms, And, at the same time Teaching a dramatic rom Putting on plays in Tacoma for the Drama league and the Associa tion of American University Women art class in Directing and acting In a motion pleture play i ‘Translating German falry talos for publication Writing poetry ani— Looking after the welfare of husband and three small ehildren, Such, in brief, are the accomplish: ments since last October of Mra. Hirdoena ‘Tuttle, who earned an A. B. degree wt the university last month, After looking over the list, you might expect to find her @ sort of Niotaschoan @uperperson— but the jan't, She'n Just a big, wholesome looking Woman=-not at all, pretty, but animated and full of pep, She's the Kind of woman who weeps at the right time in the movies-and might, even, speak impulsively to her neighbor in the audience with out wailing for an introduction, that quality In her—her im: pulsiveness, intensity, pep; call it what you will—that has mado her remarkable achtevernent pos sible. She's simply so full of “vim, vigor and youthful enthusiasm” that there's absolutely nothing that's past her, As a matter of fact, her entire adult career has been just about as out. of the ordinary as her expor- fences of the last year, Sixteen years ago she was a stu dent at the University of Washing: ton, Then, all of a sudden, she awit to become the bride of Hiram Tuttle, son of a prominent Tacoma family, and left with him for tho Hast, Therein New York and He ton—lw studied voles culture and she the plano and dramatic art. Presently they progrossed so far in thelr work that they decided they'd have to go abroad, and so they did Norway up until 1914, when the war made It impossible for them to stay uny longer on they returned to this coun. try, living fivwt in Seattle and then » Where Mr, Tuttle is at nt teaching voluw, Instead of cuvtailingsthelr aotiv tiew, thelr homecoming seemed to (Turn to Page 16, Column 6) studying in Germany and} draw your own conclusions S! Miss Irene Adams as she appeared at the Municipal Golf links Thursday afternoon in her usual golfing costume. (Golfers at Munic- | ipal Links Get Real Kyeful | By Wanda. von Kettler RENE came from Glasgow. That's why. the kiltie Irene is in a “Scotch Revue" real Scotch maids ind men. Jalso why the kiltlos, But why the golf club! | As sald, Irene carhe gow, and in Glasgow one }in kiltios, Irene says it's-all right “when in Rome’ to do “as Rome does om jtimes, But whan it comes to play: ing golf—well, she just won't wear ankls length skirts, nor will she wear knickers, “Kiltios,” she insists, I'll stay home and play dominoes, Thursday afternoon, Irene, who this week Is appearing in Stuart's |Seotch Revue at the Palace Hip | (Torn to Page 16, Column 5) of They ‘s from Glas: plays golf “otherwise |Claim Man Menaces Murder Witnesses SAN DIEGO, Cal, April 6.—New sensation entered tho trial of Dr. 1. 1, Jacobs, for the alleged murder |of Writai Mann, dancer, today, when | pollee took into custody a man sus pected of having threatened witnesses in tho caso, He way taken from the jail to the office of the district attorney for | questioning. | Several witnessos, It was sald, had | reported having beon threatened in connection with their testimony, ‘Tho state was closing its case today, HITS AND | } Friday morning Doctors Taylor and Lacey, of the Taylor-Lacey cue Moelbryne arms of death, youth's bed thruout the night. | Melbryne was in a semi-conscious from the which perched at the | OF rec | use His friends loyally proclaim their confidence in his The Star has been gathering FACTS on every angle of this controversy, and is going to present them in a series of carefully prepared articles beginning Monday. Mr. Waterhouse as completely as it is possible for a newspaper to set it down—his early business career, his serfsationally successful war-time speculations, his widely-reaching business ventures, their collapse and the tangle of lawsuits which resulted. The story will be frank and fair. Mr. Waterhouse, except as the facts are “against” him; nor will — They will tell the story of It will be neither “against” — side. Read it and LAD RUNS Auburn Youth at Point of Death; Nipponese Dairyman in Jail By John W, Nelson Melbryne Wiley, 17-year-old Auburn high school student | was struck by « truck driven by B. Itabashi, Japanese dairy- man, at 8 p. m. Thursday and dragged under the auto for a mile and a half thru the streets and alleys of Auburn, while the frenzied driver sought to shake off another car attempt- ing to stop him and rescue the stricken youth. pspital] Where he was being held Friday on at Auburn, were still fighting to res-|@ tentative charge of failing to stop hovering | | after an accident, pending the death very of his victim. Wiley'’s condition was watched by anxious crowds thruout the night as’ |condition Friday morning, suffering | "8s physicians cared for him. The | from concussion of the brain, « frac- scalp was completely rubbed off his: |tured right leg, a body) that was a| bead where it bumped over pave- solid mass of bruises and contusions. | ents and rough roads in the wild) de in- unfor- Physicians were unable to termine whether fatal ftnternal juries were sustained by the tunate youth during his terrible ex-| perionces, | RETURNING FROM BIRTHDAY PARTY Wiley is tne son of Lioyd Wiley grocery store proprietor of Auburn. Melbryne and his chum, George Al-| lerdice, Auburn high school football star, were returning home at dusk from a party in honor of their birth: days, both boys having reached the | age of 17 Thursday. sar the city limits of Auburn, while they were walking down the cast highway, a truck, driven at a high rate of speed, bore down upon} them. Allerdice escaped, but Wiley | was struck down, The projecting handle of the crank of the car caught | underneath the car sped away into| the night. plight, following. pursuit started. Itabashi, apparently —_ knowing that he had hit the boy, }aware that he was still drigging | his victim, increased his. speed, | dodged into alleys und by-streets in |@ frenzied effort to escape the pur- suing car. Finally he ran into a blind alley and had to stop. ANGRY CROWD THREATENS JAP An angry crowd quickly gathered, the unconscious boy was hurried to the hospital and muttered threats were hiirled at Habashi, © Someone called Sheriff Matt Starwich from the Auburn theater, where he was attending a performance. “Come with me,” Starwich said, arresting and rescuing the Jap at the same time. The Japanese was hurried to the county Heh PAR, in Seattle, SUGAR UP! Sugar goes up again Satur- day. Cane sugar will juiap from $9.70 a hundred pounds to $9.95, while beet sugar will ge ‘from $9.50 to $9.75, Wholesale grocers) here’ ex: plained that they had nothing to do with the increase--it was simply in response to advances made Wednesday and Thursday in the price of raw sugar, Kast- ern refineries ralsed their prices Thursday, but the increase doesn't become effective on the West Const until Saturday, “The increase shouldu’t mean anything go the smatt buyer,” wholesalers said, “Phe retailer can atill sell at dL conts.’ but un-/ | | | in Melbryne’s belt and with its victim | | that has been shed upon our organ: capacity of exalted cpclops. | find that t attempt of the Japanese to escape. ~ His right leg was fractured and his” body cut and bruised in a score of | places. The skull Is fractured. Itabashi, the Jap, operates one of) | the large Jeff ranches, half a mile north and Auburn, and another large © dairy ranch at Faucett KU KLUX KLA KLAN HEAD RESIGNS | Exalted Cyclops Deplores Unfavorable Publicity Declaring that “malicious publicity 4 ization is such that it has placed me | in a false light,” W, W. Woodbridge, Allerdice, seeing his companion’s| ® Seattle business man living at 4511 hailed the first automobile} First ave. N. E., tendered his resigna- — He jumped into the car/| tion to the local body of the Knights and excitedly told his story and, the} of the Ku Klux Klan Friday. “I have no quarrel with the or ganization as I have found it,” Woo bridge said, “I havé “held member~ ship about o year, and during the past 10 weeks have acted in the “But T he Klan is held in such disrepute wt such a great section of © the public that my connection with it is costing me many friends. For this reason, and no other, I wie draw XPLAINS STAND HIS LETTER Woodbridge’s letter of resignation follows: “Seattle Klan No. 4, Knights of the Ka Klux Kian. “You will please accept this a »|my regisnation from the Knights of the Klu Klux Klan, both as Rlansman and an official therein, “This resignation i& brought about due to circumstances over which T have no control, “Unfortunately, the —_ malicious: Publicity that has been shed upon | our organization is such that it Placed me in a false light, givit rise to the opinion that IT am one an association of men banded toe — gether for the purpose of creating | race and religious hatred. Durkny my association with the Seattle Klan ~ T have seen or heard nothing that — would be objectionable in any way 7 to any American citizen or to any true man irrespective of religion, race, or plave of birth, HOPES FRIENDSHIPS WILL NOT END “However, my motives have been. attacked by men apparently singera and I deem it advisable to withdraw — altogether from this organization with the hope that, in thus resign« ing, Twill not altogether end the many frendehips which have de: veloped among tho splendid men that compose the membership of Seattle Klan No, 4, Sincerely yours, “W. Wi WOODBRIDGE”

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