The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 9, 1923, Page 1

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WALL STREET FIRMS CRASHING WEATHER r tonight @ ale south Temperature Maximum, {i[l d Su Today noon, 59, ay; moder st winds Last 24 Hours Minimum, 55, 4 an Second Clase Matter May 3. 1899, at the Postoffice at Se w ash. under the Act of Congress Jor Year, by Mail, $3.50 NAAR SATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY {, JUNE 9, 19% The Seattle Star TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE Yep! This is the station at Sheiby, Mont., where about « million dollars’ worth of cu stomers 4 will come July NEW YORK 1S ATTACK MADE TARTLED BY ON LAND LAW GRIM MURDER IS DEFEATED Filipino Strangles Judge Rules Anti-| | Nurse; Rides Alien Measure Is With Body in Not Violation of Taxi and Ferry Constitution to see Jack the Giant Killer Dempsey and Tommy Gibbons battle for the heavyweight championship. Take a good look at it. Pr 1 Home Brew * Howdy, folks! So this is Sat- urday! | Ta ” said k I'M take @ night off, vas it broke that as it the mortgage nger than the may sto a motor car | cs | } LI'L GEE GEE, TH’ OFFICE || VAMP, SEZ a | Would you say that a missing | | finger on a deaf and dumb guy | was an impediment of speech? | | * — %} fore BRITISH ENTER INVADED REGION Artillery and Infantry Go Into Ruhr Territory BY CARL D. GROAT BERLIN, June a have entered Dusseldorf, in t Ruhr valley, it was stated in a received today A section of artillery and infantry was reported as having arrived in the industrial center, which has been | in the hands of French occupational | troops since seized. Government advices declare British the Ruhr first was infantry and artillery detachments | ‘The latest drink is the Airplane |aré en route to Dusseldorf. While it Cocktail. One drop will kill you. Some lawyers have it down so fine | that they even beat the ambulance | and the wrecker to the scr YE DIARY i | After dinner to = small gathering at | ¥. Bozarth’ and later took coach for “Paradevo” on invitation of Judge John 8. Wright. And we did cross Lake Wash- ington om the ferry, and head for Lal Sammamish, bat J. Kalina, in whose car 1 was, did love the road, gving 10 miles) out of the way, but no harm done, And | trrived at “Paradiso” very Inte, so that | could see the Inke only indistinctly, ft very pretty. And great talk of this | and that, and so to bed, and everything | so quiet one could hear the bees snoring, | bat it did not keep me awake, thank | heavens. eee Doctors are funny ndéwadays. You get a pain in your big toe and they| order your teeth pulled out. eee One Seattle man had a new plate made sea-green. Said he wanted It to look natural. oe STYLE NOTE False teeth should always be made with a non-skid tread for eating peaches, oe . | One fella who Cidn’t like corn had | them make him buck teeth. eee ‘There is one advantage of having false tecth. You save on toothpicks. eee Our idea of a foolish bird is a gink who has a cavity engraved in his left bicuspid, so that his false tecth will look natural. | { One wise cracker had his teeth made of cork, so that if he drowned they would float, . | . Lillian goes out sometimes, Ophelia plays goo! goo’, Violet strings up all the boys, Elsie necks some, too, tes Whaj traveling men desire Is a snubber that will take the bumps out of the small-town hotel mattress, eee In the old days the difference ber! tween @ nobody and a somebody was in the blood. Now it’s in the bank. . | | | Another good way to get thin to} music is to keep on working while the dinner bell rings. THE PARAGON fle never smokes, never chews; He doesn’t know thé taste of booze, rH, nor wants to fight; ay out Inte at night, He never Me doesn’t He never flirts with pretty girls, Ber carries samples of their curtis, fo fact, he's really awful nice, june from every sin and vice, Berhaps some time he'll change his ways; Tis age is only seven days, one We can’t all be Valentinos, For we are not built that way, But if we can raise the beanon We can vamp some janc some! | | |tlement will be discussed. | the allies that this lin. one of the lday competing | Bank was at first believed the movement Was only “a parade” measure, there | is now some evidence that the British intend to take over the southern sec: on of the Ruhr and permit rench “und Belgians to hold north. Inquiries are. being made at the British headquarters in Cologne as to the purpose of the advance. PASSIVE WAR TO CONTINUE BERLIN, June %—Germany will continue her policy of passive re sistance in the Ruhr valley una. bated. This is the answer of Chancellor Cuno to the French demand that Germany first abandon her Ruhr policy before any reparations xet- It was expressed today in an address to the press at Munster. The policy of against French continue, he said. In Paris Premier Poincare stated the passive resistance occupation must Jon receipt of the new German rep: | | arations offer, that no effort . to solve the reparations question could be undertaken until Germany aban- doned her stand. France Dispatches New Communication PARIS, June 9.—Premler Poincare notified Great Britain, Italy and Bel- gium that France is willing to sign & common reply to the German reparations proposal, provided it 4s simply a demand that Berlin don her policy of passive resistance in the Ruhr. ‘The French premier pointed out to ‘ould constitute a first step, which he conaiders abso- lutely ne answer to the latest Cuno note. Portland Marble Players Compete PORTLAND, Ore., June $—Out city’s largest play: Portland boys are to- in the finals to. de- cide the champion marble player of the bunch. ‘The winner, who was expected to be known late this afternoon, will go to Atlantic City to compe with other city champions from all over the country in deciding the national mibs king. Six girls are competing as well to pick the best marble player of their sex, with a gold medal the token for the winner, grounds, 10 Workman Injured in Scaffold Fall Falling from a scaffold while working on the new Dexter Horton building at ‘Third ave. and Cherry st, Friday, John Wald, 43, carpenter, 4038 20th ave, 8. W., Fr ceived internal Injuries He was taken to the Seittle General how- pital His condition Is said be vericuy, to the | sary before discussing an } y Bob Dorman, E. A. Photographer ans ‘to ; Gather Here for Big Fight Trip BY TOM OLSEN to Shelby On Seatt sports fans a ick to J he tunity Demy world’s st t agal Mont plonship been d within a desirable din tance of the Queen City. Dan Salt, Lonnie Austin and Nate Druxman, . local fistle _ promoters, are handling the Northwest sale of tickets for the Shelby affair, as well las sponsoring the “Seattle Special,” which will the ‘orthern railroad at 11 o'clock on the night of July 2. SEATS SELL HERE Ly, NS PICK GOOD ONES Salt, who heads the local commit announced Saturday, that Mike Co ling, promoter of the big bout, left 350,000 worth of tickets for distribu tion among Northwest fans. This apportionment, Salt ix hore ‘Tommy Gibbons July 4. A battle haw Shelby on world’s cham never before leave over way than the combined share left to be| sold at Low Angeles nd San Fran ch California's largest cities, Sat urday $2,500 worth of seats had been sold. The high-priced tickets are going fast. The Northwest tickets aren Seo- tion B, which faces the tg from | Pre Montana sun will not glare Mito the eyes of the crowd in that section; the worst It can do ‘ts to beat down on their (backs, The ticket sale in the Northwest comes to an end. Friday, June 15. After that date fans will have to be céntent with the pastéboards that lthey can get at the box office, at | Shelby. Because of the demand. for tick- lets on the “Seattle Special," there fs a possibility that two trains may be used to carry the fans from the | Northwest |PANS ALL TO | MOBILIZE HERE |. ‘Tacoma will have at le jthat will be attached to the special, }it was annouficed, It is not likely | that special trains will be run direct | from € Harbor, Everett or Bell- lingham, ‘as all those desiring to go will be accommodated on the train direct from here The “Seattle Spec 11 p. m., July 2, arriving in Shelby Jat 2a. m..July 4, The fight is to start at 3 p.m. The special will re- turn at 7 o'clock that evening, ar riving here at midnight July 6. Round trip tickets on the special, including a lower berti, meals and fare, cost $64.71. an upper berth or drawing room 1s desired. Tickets for the fight range from $22 to $5: A wire recelved by alt Saturday morning from Jakle Baumgarten, San Francisco sportsman, who is sponsoring # special train from that city, indicated that he wouid be un- able to. care for all of the people the south will leave at f would route a number by boat to Seattle and then on the special from here. Charies A. Marcum, an’ optician, was the first to buy tickets on the special train. Keith Bullitt, J. T. Heffernan, Will H. Morris and a number of other prominent Seattle men alreatly have taken reservations. Joe Goldie and Bill Kleinert, both of Sin Francisco, who were in business |here a number of years ago, have |also pought tickets. Many are plan- Ining to make the long trip by autos mobile and a number of Seattle con: cessionalres have already goge. The fight tlekets, which Include 500 of the choice ringside, ‘can be bought at Austin & Salt’s, Ninth and Olive, or at Druxman's orting: headquarters, 1425% With ave, Tail road reservations can also be made at either of these place Great la pectil mesting. of the Clearing | The cost varies if |who desire to go-along, and that he| | body a | brown paper and tied with cord, over GARMEN’S PAY IS UNSETTLED Clearing House Will Give Decision on Monday Seattle atu wilt war Monday wage. At aibytlit face 1 that they their pay paid off monthly y unable to the com and the etreet railw ment with the members of BSekttle Clear House angociation Saturday, no defi nite decision wan reached by the banks, byt the entire ammtter was. placed in- thé handy of a comiitttee of six bankers, t6 make « report at Housé association, to be held Mon day noon. This committee. consist of J, W Spangler, Manson F. Backus, D. 1 Moss, J, W. Maxwell, J.T. McVey and W. H. Parsons, The reports on treet railway finances prepared by City Comptroller. Harry W. Carroll City Treasurer Ed L. Terry and 8u perintendent of Utilities George F. Russell, was submitted to the bank erg and will considered by the special committee, The committee that met with the} Clearing House association S¢ day consisted of Council Presiden: C. B, Fitegerald, &. Is. Blaine man of the finance committee; City ‘Treasurer Terry and 1)..W, Hender son, superintendent of street rail ways, The bankers were told that the warrant fund would total about | $150,000 for payrolls, in addition to |supplies and ‘equipment. Warrants | will be retired’ within 70 to after issue, .city: offictils sa | In the | fuse to cash the warratts on, recom. | mendation ‘of “the” committee -Mon- day the city colinglk at its meeting Monday afternoon will teke up the problem “and provide: offi¢r, means of financing the svar istic, ace cording to Councilman eral. Several courses, such an trlinstér of funds from other ¢ the negotiation of a loan from out. | wide banks are open to the council, Fitzgerald said. WET DRIVES IN 6 MORE STATES WASHINGTON, June 9.—“Wet' drives will be started at once in six additional states, in an effort to force repeal of state enforcement laws, officials of the campaign against the prohibition amendment announced today. Rhode Island, Tennessee, Califor nia, Pennsylvanie, New Jersey and Ohio will be made the immediate ob: Jectives of the repeal campaign which ix preliminary to a nation-wide anti-prohibition movement was unid at the office of Capt. W | Slayton, head of the association, H. made to obtain a membership that will give the wets a voice in politics 4s strong ag that of the Anti-Saloon league, Philippine Typhoon Wrecks Three Ships MANILA, June %—A_ typhoon, raging for the past three days in the Philippine Islands, has wrecked one steamer and stranded two other vousels, necording to advices received here yeaterd An unknown sail ing vessel was reported wrecked on the coast of Misbate, and the Jap: anese steamer Mumizuki Maru was blown aghore at Currimo, island of Luzon. ‘The schooner Ajax piled up ‘on a reof south of the Leyte coast, BOYS whey oy y AY ft | NEW her for dead. In th mo TA pino, today confessed to the murder jof Miss Blossom Martin, a trained nurse, according tc police of the | West Brighton station Loza¢ mtd he avorin woma) YORK, Jun half an hour 1 ob Then she of the constitu upon antialien land } tate failed ake the words El of Fr to kill Judg when heat 40 ural Jand by and nality meas in Ww. efforts acres in th ‘Taka wife C th court Frid © wult / valuable White Hirabashi, and the White failed bout 2 a, m to throw the wrapped Katsuma River ag owned ar as w in Garden Ac | Attorney tionality to the be t to D. Deputy Colvii law he rait at Arling State He bi him fer 4 ferryboat p Prosecuting | F of everest inl i carried the body hours after the crime and on ferr of New Yorkers, many of whom stopped to look cu ly at the short, squat little man struggling with the big bundle. Lozade, police about with riding thru that t nd jtorm. The precedent under it, MAKES FOUR ATTACKS nurse in the base) «GAINST LAND LAWS riment house in up:|" jt Dal Halverstadt the ie Japanese comprehen: cu upon all of them upon the all law will future believes crowds courts w prosecutions in confe that wa d he strang! ment of town > Yor EMPLOYED AS BUT BY PHYSICIAN The }by Dr nides an ap A by for At up ments were made They were 1, That th Filipino was a butler employes George B. MeAw who re-| in a fashion le neighborhood jJust off Central park. It was there that he met Miss Martin, who was a trained nurse on the doctor's staff. | ‘The body was fully clothed, |P"" cen doubled , up, trussed with clothes [line rope and wrapped in a biue cur, |Afticle 1 of the atate constitution tain, covered with brown paper, the | that it deprives the Japanese de whole held together with heavy: cord.|fendants of equal protection under p-Carrying Mix bundle, whieh |the law |wetghed.140 pounds—the man weighs} 3. That Violates (the 14th about 120—Lozade entered ataxicab|®mendment to the constitution, land drove down thru the New York/Which prevents confiscation of | theater crowds to the Battery, whore | Property. lhe boarded « ferry for Staten Island.| 4. That it violates the treaty. be- The taxi driver offered to help him|tween the United States and Japan, learry his bundle aboard, but he re-|which permits Japanese to hold fuged. agricultural lands, The spectacle of the little man! LAW 18 SAVED | wrestling with the bulky packs IBY COURT DECISION tracted so much attention from pas:| The defense set forth liy the Jap. sengers on the “theater boat." that /anese attacked the law in every one HTaaade had no chance to dispose of lof jt vital branches, Deputy Colvin the body. He entered another taxi-| e jsaid, and the arguments consumed cab at St, Gi Sto sland, and | * y ab at St, George, Staten Island. andlajmost the entire drove to Arlington, where he boarded | Frater ruled at the conclusion that a ferry once more y mor the state law does not violate any Thin time he was so weary that |, ik. Me he permitted the chauffeur to heip {ee ine four defenses ‘xalzed by, Hira~ him lug his bundle abount. The chauffeur felt body neat thts the | Had the efforts of Hir wrappingn, and he realized that the |Uccesstul In obtaining 2 dis lburden was limp and soft. He has.{0% the case, it would have blocked tened to inform, Police Sergeant future prosecutions under the alien John Miller land law, Colvin declared. \18 UNMOVED BY | SHOCKING SCENE c te alien land law violates Section Article 1 of the ution, which preven n of property of Inw. t it violates Section 12, consti it without due | Judge | marc) BANKRUPTCY res NET CATCHES. CURB HOUSES Inquiry of Broker- age Deals Is On; “Underworld” to ~ Be Cleaned Out NEW by YOR the June 9. of on Sherman, state's atter general, today announced hey would drive the “underworld of) Wall street into the open and out of business. 4 | | “We clean as eclared emphatically. pphasis was given the Shere g man inquiry by the collapse yes ™ terday of L. Winkelman & Co. 74 and of the M. 8, Wolfe Co. today. Sherman started a quiet investigat tion some weeks ago following the crash of BE. M. Fuller & Co, Rus kay & Co. Jones & Baker, Dier 92 Co, and a number of others, nearly 9 all of them with nation-wide con- ections and offices in the prinete” al cities. on coll: brokerage Carl houses days, | ney street as Sherman” make Wall hound’s toott will Clova Kinne, 16, a junior . at Owosso, Mich., high school, established a record when she wrote thru an entire short- hand test at Kalamazoo uni- versity without a single er- ror. ‘SALESMAN HIT ~ BY AMBULANCE Speeding Car Hurls Him 30 Feet to Pavement cit Sherman is making his investiga tion under the Martin law which gaye him broad inquisitorial powers: lout does not provide him with the machinery for prosecution. Hie |however, put shady | brok | houses out of business by suppl; | preot of his charges to the The ambutance,. speeding | *#Preme court. : along Yesler way at First ave., Sat-}, yhile Sherman is digging | urday Heats in answer to an| Wail street on behalf of: the Jemergency’ call from the Colman|the government thru Federal dock, struck W. W. Gifford, 42, sales. | tet Attorney Hayward 1s m man, living at 203 Bellevue ave. N.,{% Survey of the, situation. D toxéing him 30 feet in the alt to the | Attorney. Banton, sof Ni pavement and inflicting paintul in-| City, i also conducting ; variant ‘injuries. |gation, while the consolidated Gittord was picked up by the,am.| Curb» exchanges are conducting bulance gnd rushed to the ity’ hos- | Vestigations of their own. : pital, where’ he. regaitied conacions-| “Creditors of M. 8. Wolfe £.@ ness while the doatérs were attempt- | filed a petition to have that co ing to ascertain the extent of.his in- | Placed in the hands of a receiver, Juries. Physicians declared that his| , The creditors are the Metropolitayy | condition was not serious unless com. | Advertising company, Dispateh P | plications result of internal troubles. | 7& & Binding Co. and Joseph” |. The ambulance at the time of the | Brandenberg. : aceldent was on the way’ to the Col-| _ This follows failure of the Te man dock, where A, J. Young, 912% | Winkelman company. yesterday 22nd ave, fell down the steps, bruis- | Jones & Baker a few days ago. = |ing himself severely. K. Janct was| Investigations of recent failure delving: are now being conducted by the fe Gifford told the police that he was | Tal and state district attorneys) ‘id had stopped |D¥ Attorney General Carl Sh when he saw the ambulance coming. | "presenting New York state, | Suddenly, he said, another car| |. 8. Wolfe & Co. were me |dodged in front of the speeding amo |f the curb market. jand it swerved at him in an effort| Attorneys for the Wolfd compan: lte-avola-a Golliadn: | stated the firm's liabilities would 1 “L lived a dozen years: in a tow | °*CCe $425,000. seconds,” Gifford told the police from | | i days | . fvent Ahat the banks re-) partments, or| 24, it! iiipino hoisted the bundle to the jrail’and tried to shove it into the water, but he wasn't quick enough. He was seized and hustled into the |ferry house. Sergeant Miller. tore jopen the package and exposed the |blonde head of # young girl, with [red marks of strangulation on her | throat | Tozade looked calmly at the dis- torte face and shrugged. ‘The “nightowls" in the ferry house 'naled and backed away, Rushed to & police station, the Fillpino at first | refused to talk at all, Then, little ny little, fragments of the story were | obtained. | He was unmoved as the body was | Unwrapped and straightened out. | Dr. George E, Horde, medical ex |aminer, was to perform an autops on the body toda arraigned in New York. AFFECTION FOR GIRL WAS KNOWN Lozade's affection for the comely nurse had been known to the Mc- Auliffe family for some time but [it whs regarded there rather in | (Turrt to Last Page, Column 1) | Induned dit Ball: Into Empty Tank PORTLAND, Jur ® Injured | when he fell feet to the concrete | floor in a local swimming pool lust At the same time efforis will be) Might, Ural D, Whitlock, 21, is dying} here today. || MAN WITH WOODEN LEG ALMOST RUNS _ AWAY FROM POLICE ILLIAM HARKNESS, 23, negro, was a victim of his own wooden leg }riday evening when, in fleeing from Detectives L, C, Harris and A, ‘A, Brown, the point of his stump caught in a sewer drain and tripped him, ending @ foot race that up to that point had been a dead heat. Harkness way jailed ax a suspect in the theft of $200 worth of ems from a Yakima jewolor, | Lozade wilt be| As Miller ran upon the boat, we WEIRD STORY IS TOLD BY BANDIT Murder in Detail Five desperate, drug-crazed bandits crept thru the window of an elaborate Hollywood man- sion and, covering William Des- mond Taylor, the mystery man of the screen, with their revol- vers, forced him to deliver to them thousands of dollars’ worth of securities, cash and Liberty bonds and when he sat down at his desk to write a cheek, one of the bandits fired a shot into his brain and all fled, This is the story that Otis Hefner, 6-foot Texas stockman and alleged bandit, told his attorney, George Olson, following his arrest at Ry- erett a year ago in May, on a charge of stealing an automobile. according to Olseis Saturday, It is Practically the same story. that he jtold Crawford EB, White, another |Seattle attorney, a few days. pro- vious. AYS LOOT BURIED |IN NEARBBY FIELD Later Hefner told Olson $200,000 in loot and a valuable dia: mond ring belonging to Taylor were buried in a field south of Seattle on the Pacific highw Olson, with Hefner's consent, told Sheriff Starwich and Deputy Prosé cutor John D. Carmody, that cer: tain securities were buried in the field but made no mention of the fact that they were supposed to be the property of the murdered movie director, “The authorities wene told jthe loot had been taken from a haul made by a bandit gung in a series of bank and train robberies in California, It was never found. The directions were so accurate that Carmody and the deputy sher: iff§ who accompanied him on the search gave eredenco to the story (Turn to Last Page, Column 1) a Describes Movie Director} that | his hospital cot. “Knowing that the worse than actually being struck. The car bore down on me, the fender struck me, I was tossed into the air and lost consciousness when I struck.” Almost at the same instant the |ambulance accideht occurred an aus |tomobile driven by William Capatis, of Kirkland, ran down Mrs. Anna | Westlake; 75, of New Castle, at First ave, and Marion st. as she was cross- [Ing the street intersection with her husband. ‘The car struck her and threw her a few feet to the side. Mrs. West: lake was also taken to the city hos- | pital, where it was found sho was suffering from a dislocated shoulder and a paralyzed leg. ambulance was going to hit me was |. Premier Kato Pro Anti-Japan Rioti: HONOLULU, June 9§.-—P Kato, of Japan, had requested an terview with M. Joffe, Russian df | matic representative, for the | poses of expressing Japsn's views: reported anti-Japanese disturb at Chang Sha, in the province ¢ | Honan, China, according to a dispatch to the: Jiji, local Jap language newspaper. Mee The dispatch was not confirme from other sources and did not. fy the reasons for laying the matt before Joffe. It said that Japaneso at n Sha had been forced to seek refu; ‘on steamships as a result of the ported demonstration. ng Ne iter Spell Death PORTLAND, Ore, June %&—A note of cheer was sounded today in Oregon's battle aguinst the caterpil- lar and the earwig, While a “war chest” of $16,000 is being spent in Portland inan effort to wipe out the’ earwig host which has gained control of some 900 city blocks, Professor W. J, Chamberlain, a learned entomologist at Oregon Agricultural college, Corvallis, came forth with sclenfific glad tidings for the rural district of Yaquina valley, overrun by the caterpillar host, According to the professor, the caterpillars will be kept from much additional increase in numbers by a small parasitle tly, which lays its eggs in the head of the worm, caus: ing death, For this reason, the scientist says, the invaders have about reached their full numerical strength, and will xoon begin to disappear, Unaware of the fate awalting them, however, the caterpillars were The Star Is Going to Give Hundreds of “DAN PATCH” Coaster Wagons to Enterprising Boys and Girls. Read the Announcement on PAGE 1 New Weapon for Battle © _ on Caterpillar Is Foun Oregon Professor Discovers Fly That Wii 4 for Invaders today slowly proceeding on /Way across the valley, leaving thind them orchards stripped « \ greenery and vegetatién caten {0 the ground. \ +e HEADED FOR PRUNE AND GRAPE DISTRICTS di more fruitful prune and grap triets of the Willamette valley, 15 miles acrous the mountains. Tl will reach ‘there in 1925, it is dicted, unless the parasitic Mies, 1 ing on their foreheads, get in th deatly work. a But with no forces of nature? aid) them, Portland residents an nightly continuing the bettie the earwigs, hoping that thi |000 will not be spent in vain, The 60 North Pacific college dents conducting the drive re 45 blocks last night, searching o4 the insects with flashights 1 Apreading the poison banquets | pared for their extermination, Evidently not: so. well. know al sections of the country ‘caterpillar, the earwig 1s” [less of a. curiosity elsewhere, | Janders have learned, Avcording to all the noture the earwig belongs to the shi ay

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