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SHOOTING COP FACES CHARGES! re 1) the i readers | either won't } OIA AAA ARADARA ROS are . something vital, or can't print. Maximum, 58 Today Temperature Last to Moderate 24 Hours Minimom, 47 noon, 54. VOL, 25. Is u Home Brew Howdy, folks! Gein" to the Etks' festival tonight? Se are we. A writer ered a way f Whatever t s Adam had He the modern male, it and tie How to De limbs HASHUREDLY! On the menu aboard the than, hash is called file aux haricots verts. Gosh, hasn't Mayor Brown made a hachis de volaille sux haricots verts of running the city? Leviae achis de vola After gazing upon the condition of our new wall paper yesterday, we ecitied that we'd better apprentice Little Homer Brew, Jr., nant as 9 fingerprint expert. hr a ‘The Star's Monday, & serial, to start} about ory vel has been built around | hat-check boy re een. inventor says he has a devic will abolish sleep. | Hub mall baby will do that * * sacred mac hasUe eats qe & Do bedbugs have lungs?” some body asks ( hia Grey. Mebbe, but we neverheard of one of them dying rom br P much Sure ing sident Suzzallo says th auto driving among students. * with football train. ts too Up betiaes, ‘and to the eetiling of my accounts, and I praise heaven 1 find them very clear. and that I am now worth $37.45, the most ever I owned at one time. And se to the office. singing merrily, but did spend most of the after- noon talking with a man whe fain would sell me a comb, the great being that it did have det but did not buy it on account of my baldness, which "worse dally. And to to Rippe’s with my wife and there that has been kicking around the of fice since last spring, nothing seems 80 dead and empty as the picture of a last year’s candidate tacked to a telephone post. Whea A Yout At th’ frost is on th’. pumpkin, it's likewise on th’ grass, hear th’ cook a-cussin’ th’ lighter flow gas. While we're picking out biggest business men in Seattle, let not forget those millionafres—in juding the one in New York— who refuse to contribute to the Commun ity Chest the six A style show * festival at will be held at the the Arena Friday, lion's fa. ition is on exh Grover Cleveland Bergdoll is going to return to the United States, ac cording to his mother. There is no truth in the rumo however, that he will be a candidate for national commander of the Amer. ~ fean Legi see The sweetest story Of the lot “You filled your flush, boy, Take the pot eee Editorial in The Star saya it took ox 30 years to get rid of the word dude. But what was the use? diately inv nted the word shiek. Pa “ LIL @ E GEE, TH OFFICE VAMP, SEZ: | Acrelative is’ a person who wonders why you ever married into that kind of family. % t Re } One of the many questions we } (Ain't answer is why policemen ride in Cadillacs and firemen ride in Fords, A. J, 8. to Capt, Tea-| Say s Seattle | | pirates. | will seek to have the Jones law, e first time tn his’) Alaska, amended. \rat the theater wife did wretch. did prefer the pase: om And ” to home. Next to summer resort literature |! We imme- | olicy Attorney General of Territory Help in Transportation Fight A fight new for cheaper transportation to Alaska is certain to be made in the next c ongre the word brought to Seattle by Jo general of the territory, Rustgard w Da is on | says t at (EDITORIAL) att ir ial delegate, MUST BE REMEDIED Alaska’s birthday! The anniversary of the te tory’s purchase by the United States! Weil that Seattle celebrate the event. Well t Seattle extend the glad hand of brotherhood to For Seattle's future and are interwoven. men of the North. like their pasts It is not enough that we celebrate with words; must, show good faith by our deeds. For that reason The Star asks that Se men read closely the news story story that comes to The Star, by co nce, on Ala: day from an Alaskan who is the elected represents of all the Alaskans, on the subject of Alasks pressing immediate problem. veral good reasons why oatiniae in Washington One Hindering Alaska Asks from his is orney ngte rri- hat the 8 le business this page, a ne s ska iv most Mr. Rustgard, attorney egal of the territory, not only states the problem, but he charges the Seattle Chamber 6f Commerce and the entire Washington con- gressiona] delegation with having deliberately forces to aggravate it. joined which discriminates aeeinst| Rustgard makes sensational charges of unjustly high| panies. Also, he accuses the W: gress of opposing the best interests of and unduly big profits on the part of steamship com-| ngton state delegation in con-| Alaska, and the Seattle Chamber of Commerce of assisting and indorsing both the high rates to and the legal discrimination a the territory. Under one section of the Jo t from Alaska points can be shipped in a Canad! steamer to a Britih Columbia port and thence on a Can to American citi nm of the fact thet the Pacific Coast states can, and often do, route reight in an exactly similar way. For instance, Rus ly all the au rd says, near. * that ce HOW THE magnificent | BAN OPERATES | This discrimination burts the ter-| ritory, Rustgard says, especially in the fresh fish trade. The numerous ¢ ports of Southeastern Alaska with ‘PAPYRUS CETS | LAST WORKOUT Great Horse Champ Thrills Seattle are uted Crowds That Watch Him over th dian lines and r brought om Vancouver, BY FRANK GETTY B.C, by Canadian boats. Dress Mliaft Corréapondent)| Alaska ts specificaisy excepted, BELMONT PARK RACK + under the Jones law, from enjoying) TRACK, N. Y., Oct. 18—Papy- such a privilege rus, English champion, had a workout today for the international purse race on Saturday to the post He bids fair to go the betting most naturally send heir mont, Foxhall and other catches to Prince Torrington Rupert, less than 400 miles m re thrilled as Juneau, thence over the ( n|the biack son of Tracery, hard held, . 1 io Chicago and other Amer- | reeled off a trial mile and an eighth an cities. jin 1:51 This would save heary icing costs,|_ 2¢¥ did not appear, Sam Hildreth : in time of delivery (a|having given the American cham high impo nt factor) and it also | Pion a la test yesterday would add an element of competition | JOCKEY AND TRAINER beneficial to the territory ARE ENTHUSIASTIC But under the Jones law these, Steve Donoghue, the diminutive " gvihy Irie jockey a shipments are obliged to come to| Fish Jock had the leg up on Seattle, 1,020 m here re-loading | ’aP¥rus and swung from his saddle Ss neéce: and when the fish|! grin at the finish into the arms reaches its destination jt 1s at least | % Rr Jarvis, the tralner. two. daya older than by the Both wore broaa smiles and were route. enthusiastic Commodities destined for Ala from the nd other products nm market, | ber seeking y handicapped URGES SEATTLE | TO BE BROAD Whild the first result of eliminat Jary pleasure | been The wd ¢ 1,000 out in the chill f mi despite thelr Brit of early morn- ing this discrimination might be to « when F us and his stable cut down Seattle's business a trifie,|companion, Bar Gold, went away. R rd urges that a broader view| A buzz of excitement as tho it had ught-to be taken by business men | been an unl race arose as here. He argues tha rus, coming igte the «tretch, ing to profit from all le away carily from his pacer mercial progress Alaska makes, and| and turned off his mile in 1:3 |that by helping build up {ts native| going easily to the next furlong industries Seattle will soon find new| post lines of business developing in the | DONOGHUE WAS North which would far more than| HOLDING HIM BACK If anything, offset the temporary loxs. | ing him back The result of opening the Prince} The © derby SATTLE gun of Patrolman S. H. Short, 2, WASH., The of these 5 THURSDAY, ¢ ICTOBER 18, tar 1923. RARAAAIAAY continues to rank reasons 1s that e1 something constructive, something interes Unless you read The Star every day REBOOT LE CLINI, OITA: a critically wounded the woman. years old, her brother-in-law’: DANCE GIRLS LAUGH AT RULES ery $19. Per Year, by Mal, $9.89 117 of day ting you il i SUSTALTL atl These are the little tots who were grasping the hands of Mrs. Violet Davis Wednesday evening when a bullet from the fired point blank into a crowd in which a suspected The boy is Junior Davis, 3 years old, son of Mrs. Davi daughter, whom she hasmothered since the death of thé little girl's mother. —Photos by Price & Carter, St oplifter had just disappeared, , and the girl is Betty Bayard, 4 Staff Photograph: GERMAN RIOTS Matrons Are All Right ARE ALARMING But Slow, They Declare BE * Police Fire on Severe Out- break in Mannheim ministe BY CARL D. Oct. 18, president of Saxony, openly defic federal dic GROAT The radi al Dr.| the! or of Muel today opposed answering the gen i demanding. the vow the flery speeches of Saxd ance Minister Boett-| | cher } | Zeigner declared in the dict. to- | day he twas ready to fight for a dic-| Donoghue was hold-|tatorship of the proletariat. | winner OBJECTS TO. Rupert outlet to Alaska is startiing| was running better than ever be-| INTERFERENCE in its results on the price, as past/fore in this country—and wanted| Zeigner read the letter from Gen.| experience has always shown, Rust-}to go faster. | Miller dema x disavowal to the J says. When the fish can be| “He x does better when he's diet, asserting he ot 1 to such sent that way the fishermen profit] allowed to run,” Jarvis. said. attempts at Interference with his |thru receiving a much higher return.| “He can't show his best when he| government All the southeastern Alaska commu-| ix going slow,” I chimed} Altho he swore allegiance to the nities boom, the box piants are busy | in. |constitution, he sald the rights guar: | and money flows in, Such a ¢ | ‘Thé fractional time n thelanteed by the constitution had heeh tion, he points out, redounds to workout was 12 48;| broken and that he was prepared for tle’s benefit, even tho at the same| 1:00; 1:11 4-6; 1:26 1 2 ruggle if it became necessary time Seattle might lose tho eredit/ 1:61 2 Mueller’s letter, while making no for some of the halibut transship The tattered rail birds set up @|definite threat, firmty demanded a| busine: chatter of prediction that the show-| reply by 11 o'clock today (Turn to Page 5, Column 5) | (Turn to Page 5, Column 3) Turn to Page 9, Column 1) 2 ne eit sesame ie ner tgeer emanate A 4 tetroneetescadhnincene ce Yonreireine tbe reine (irene nadie are ni Star Reporter F inds Painted Dancers Smoke] and Drink Whenever They Like Several days ago the following news item appeared in The Star: “Matrons of Seattle dance halls were complimented on the caliber of their work by Mayor Brown at a meeting of dance hall matrons in the ‘supervisor of dances' office in the public safety building Friday night.” \ This item brought the lowing letter fo The Star: “Do you or Mr. Brown know any more jokes “Were you ever in one of these places? not, you bad better go and see what the duty of these matrons is: —A_ mother whose heart has been broken by Brown, his dance halls and booze.” fol- BY JA matrons couldn't # K HALL, TH fat the most anything A dane girl breath reekin liquor, her eye tut to," the Strand, with the smell Why they are so| change, 'll get some, us from doing her of seml.bloodshot from tating |the apparent effects of alcohol, part: | The ed her uhevenly rouged lips in a sar: _ castic smile as she passed her homely | judgment of the women who are | hired by the city to supervise the | girls who dance in the halls “below | the line.” I had never been to a dance hall |“below the line,” so I took the | mother’s suggestion, as indicated Jabove, visited these places and }learned from the mouths of the girls themselves the duties and the activities of Brown's dance hall ma- tro First I went to The Dreamland, downstairs on Fifth ave. 8. Scarcely |had I checked my hat and coat when | several girls tugged at my arm with |an invitation to dance. One led me to the floor and for minutes we danced, “You owe me 30 dances,” she said. cents, three “T haven't any I handed her a dol She disap: peared and never returned, Several minuites later I,saw her dancing with | a Filipino boy. Every race mingled together at Dreamland, Whites, Chinese, (Turn to Page 9, Column 6) 4 | perhaps three | tcumbent body of the 3 {boy's mother she added as! nee ve ny inant nantcmtnbilgtnanr me menteianntalvednt toss, |year, his mother, one, tearfully asserted that her boy | SAYS VISION OF “HEALER” SEEN Boy Goes to Kirkland to Verify “Cloud Picture” BY LELAND HANNUM Testifying that he saw a vision of an ancient man's face in the clouds |Inst Sunday morning while praying to be relieved of tonsumption, Lloyd Briscoe, 18, of McCleary, » Wash. Wednesday afternoon was treated by “faith” and Jef: Kirkland auto park declaring that the vision was of Brother Isaiah, and that he had been relieved of all pain. It was the first time in more than a Mrs, Elmer Bris- had been able to walk and stand alone. y had the patriarchal “mir-! completed his ministra- tions and ceremonies ‘over’ the re- uth, when the asked aid also left the platform, ride, testifying that she had been relieved of severe neuralgia pains in head, ‘shoulders and breast, ‘The au- |dience, which packed the tent despite |the intermittent rainfall, and stood In the rain olitside openings in the tent, was hysterically enthusiastic (Turn to Page 5, Column 3) cir ulation The Star brings its Y that the other papers tome i TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE. «| this Week. the huge tent at the| She} for the homeward | of all actual loss. WOUNDS TWO ON STREET! Man and Woman at Death’s Door; | Policeman, fired, to Be Prosecuted | BY S. B. Groff | Patrolman S. H. Short was facing manslaughter charges Thursday, as the result of the sensational shooting of two pedestrians, Mrs. Violet Davis, 28, and Isaac Ham- © burger, 60, on Westlake ave. 3 Wednesday evening. The charge will not be filed un- less one or both of the vic- |tims dies, according to Chief of Police W. B. Severyns, Short was indefinitely suspe by Severyns an hour after th fair had occurred. Severyns de glared Thursday that Short would \“never wear a uniform again” as ltong as he could prevent it His dismissal was expected to be signed ied | Mrs. Davis, who lUves at 2146 |Highth ave. W, was taken to the Seattle General hospital. Physicians |said Thursday she “had but @ small chance to live” and in case she recovered, would be a life crip- ple. One of Short’s bullets severed her spinal cord. Hamburger was shot thru the lower part of the abdomen. After an operation at the city hospital Thursday, he was taken to the Providence hospital. He a has an outside chance to re : cover, doctors said, altho his condition is critical. Officer Short was on auty at the |traffic semaphore at Westlake aye. jand Pine st. when, about 5:30 p. m., a clerk from Carmen's store, jacross the street, dashed up to him jand asked him to chase two men and a woman that had attempted to ‘steal an evening dress. FOLLOWED TRIO INTO SHIRT SHOP Short followed the trio into Cop lin'’s Shirt Shop and tried to ques- tion them. One of the men broke and ran, and Short took after him. They dashed thru the dense crowd that thronged the street, and headed down Westlake aye. Allan Frank, floor manager of Frederick & Nelson's downstairs Store, told of the shooting. “I saw Short coming on the run,” he said, “and saw the fugitive just ahead of him. The crowd was very dense. Suddenly, just as I was about to put out my foot and trip the fugitive, I saw Stort pull out the gun and level it at the man. As it flashed, I stepped back, as I was directly. in line with the bullet. “An old man (Hamburger) struck his hand to his stomach and crumpled up on the side- walk. He had received the bul- let. Short paid no atiention and continued to fire. His last two shots were fired within arm's | Tength of me. He did not fire at the pavement, as he said, but. directly into the crowd. “Then I saw the woman lying on the walk, bleeding. The old man |was lying in a puddle of blood’, sur | (Turn to Page ¥, Column 2) Here Is Another Dandy This little home is one of the bargains that appear in Star Want Ad columns tonight. THERE ARE NO DOUBT Several hundred people in Seattle, if they knew about this house, they would buy it, but any ony that reads this ad will not bi lieve it, but it is true, never- theless. 4 beautiful rooms, in splendid condition; living room 32 feet long; beautiful fires place; full cement basement, with ‘cement garage in bi ment; splendid bath: one bi tocar, They are asking $4,500 for houses no better, And you can't build this one for jess than $4.500. But our price 1s | columns will selling this The Real tell you property. Estate | who is