The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 5, 1923, Page 1

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iB & c PE Flower ever be he club iy of an for its Wash. Seattlo TTT TTT = = = = = = = = = = = = = — eee & Li'l Gee Gee says her Sweetie has SPEEDERS FORCE COPS OFF ROAD! The FORECAST ef a0 Becond Ci NO, 217. aI n Ome VAR HERO IS BERLIN JENS BSTe ws | SENTNCED TO ATTACKED BY FEDERAL PEN FURIOUS MOB ‘Kill Them!’ Shriek Angry Germans, Tearing Clothes -athetic Scene Is Enacted in Court; Judge Performs -ainful Duty Seizing Money BY SEABURN BROWN BY CARL D. GROAT On November 4, 1918, 8 nited ‘Preen Staff Corresponden small, stocky young man, with BERLIN, Nov3. — Crying x s, reckless face, topped “Kil them!" crowds rivted in INTUITION / y & mass of red hair, per the Jewish quarter of Berlin to- eee a deed that placed him | day. Furious men and women the foremost rank of hun tore clothes from residents of dreds of thousands of living the district, seizing their for- and dead heroes, Undaunted by eign money constant shell fire, he single-..| A Jewish butcher stood his handed forced his way into a | ground with a meat ax and se machine gun nest of Germans verely Injured several in a mob and returned with 17 prisoners. | that tried to rald his shop for He was Corporal Richard BE. food and foreign curre King, hero. Squads Howdy, folks! a heck of a day? . Ain't Monday “Im Memoriam” won Saturday And it was In Memoriam for our weekly pay After the Latonia race, we firmly believe that Zev couldn't even run for the city council WOMAN Voice over the "phone: “In Memorium.” “What round, please?”’ Another woman asked the score in WashingtonOre- | GON A.C peme T elephone oper. ator answered, “Washington, 14 to 0 in the third quarter.” “How many quarters in a game?" asked the lady This grave suggests That when it rains, ‘Tis always b To put on chain It ts rapidly gett find names for apartm It fs to Invent euphonious cognomen: for Pullman cars. But th | @ desperation will be when they st to give names tp filling stations. 8 Pol rioters f t 1 few strag Monday morning, a small, | *!ne de : res stocky young man, with a strong, half-deflant, half-despair- ing look in eyes that seemed to hide their shifting gaze under Portland’s city council demands; a shock of tousled red hair, that some clothes be placed about a| stood before Federal Judge Jere- bas-relief on a new building which) miah Neterer and received a shows some unclad ladies. Inasmuch| sentence of six years in federal | "Yong tinea of hungry people walte| as the sculptored ladies form a frieze,! penitentiary and $30 fine. He | ing tor bread early today broke in| we suggest red flannels. was Richard E. King, convicted | despair and rushed the shops eae wal narcotic law violator. \ STARVING CROWDS Bn Gus GEE TH OFFICE |. Tho court spoke with an effort} | DEFEAT POLICE BTL GMB GES, Xe OFFICE |. proncuncing judgment upoa} Many had been without bread ee Bboy ib Vb ktng, since Aaturday owing to the erron oe al: patted wp | jeous flestion of the price at 140. " I's ANOTHER MAN paahip ba wet Clected mem | |INSISTS THE COURT 006,000,000 paper marks instead of| ie. anette. || He examined a certified copy of! at the lower official figure. Vs al Sates Ait s Five hundred eeperate ‘men and] 35 | the prisoner's record, rushed bread wagoris in al oem by Attorney E H “Well,” said the bride at the hon-| while King waited before him. ory district. Having been out of their despair ymoon supper, turning In en ab “I do nt think that I now have| work for a long time, Police g citles menaced ¢ as the army completéd ona to combat any aggres moves by Bavaria sclat Thousands of families were In des peration as they found themselves unable to buy bread te ‘ent-minded way to the groom, “cut| before me the Richard E. King of| led them to attack furiously, » yourself a piece of cake and make|which these things are written,”|Were helpless against them, yourself at. home.” the judge said finally. “I cannot| Finaky a commandant of storm these two men—the Rich.| troops took control of the police, | ard E. King of 1918 and the Rich-;>rousht them into formation and @ Community Chest—she has seen) ard E. King of today: the man|%nt them dashing against the three young women with their heads} who risked his own life that the (Crowds. The hungry unemployed We hate to calt Tedd eee ye tnt ine Tan who ‘helplessly in the hands of the police. | On Hattle Long; that blights the characters and| BREAD IS THE CRY | Heemase she sings Placed the stamp of defeat on the| THRUOUT BERLIN | Ee geane: Sone lives of every person it touches,” |, Many bakeries kept the price of} “gphgite wah ve ppg z bread at 140,006,000,000 marks over allel of your | the week-end, following an erroneous case in court records or in lttera |ture, except in connect ‘The University of Southern Cali-| fornia ought to have a fast football team. |The players have been dodg- ing Los Angeles traffic for years. % report that the price had been fixed tevenson's story Of at that figure. It represented 33 | dual personality, ‘Dr, Jekyll and Mr. (Turn to Page 9, Column 5) | Hyde,""" Judge Neterer said. “I had A “smoking den” = a man's wee use | residents to this state, why not ad “FUE TODAY Supreme C Court Denies vertise the fact that in 1923 there | were 112 fewer motorcycle Nears | | Commander of Destroyers Petition of City issued than in 1922—Lynden Tribune | to Answer to Charges BY LELAND HA M wee GIMME DE BREAD! 5 = Efforts of five Seattle raw milk SAN DIEGO, Cal., Nov. 5—Cap-| dealers to obtain reinstatement as li- Books on etiquette are all right, but they don’t tell a person how jtain Edward H. Watson, comman-|censed dealers were successful in | jder of the 11th destroyer squadron,| week-end decision of the state su-| when the vessels went on the rocks! preme court, according to word re-| jat Point Honda, September 8, was! ceived Monday morning by Philip | to go on trial here today before al tworoger, attorney for the milkmen. | | naval court martial. |Tworoger received notice that the Vice Admiral Henry A. Wiley} tribunal had unanimously denied the will head the board which will also} petition of the City of Seattle, argued | include two rear admirals and four | Friday, for a writ of prohibition to captains, | preve ¢ signing, by Judge Ed. | In Seattle, he would) ‘en other officers of the Handa| esi yay oe sae oatans fennel pies | fleet will be tried by the same court! restoration, by Dr. H. M. Read, city | later. | health commisstoner, of the license, | “From the findings of the court,” | dec jared Tworoger Monday, “it is ap- | |parent that if Read's objection had - S eeray | been based on the quality of milk the | Federal Bank in | plaintift dealers were selling, instead | fof on the merits of pasteurized as | Kansas Is Closed | against raw milk, the petition would | 7 5 have been granted. But the court Aud in the evening to W. Mecoruys| BELOIT, Kans, Nov, 6.—The|h wranted. the ; playhouse, where I did see 1, and T.| Union National bank 2, a mil-|*nanimously held that it was not a) Owens and others well-known on the | jion dollar institution, closed gts| auestion of public health or safety,| Rialto, oingy et etter ae | doors today when directors voted|but merely a controversy over eal song entitled, | to liquidate debts and turned the| kinds of milk.” ‘ bank over to federal authorities, | The ers, James Nelson, Outstanding notes to L. A. Mer-| Austin riffiths, Jr. John Hanson, | aid and 35 Mergen. of Albu-|M: Hricson and G. Ry King, brought | | Ki 5! 1 8 tember to obtain Today's Definition: A glass of | querque, N, M., sons of Frank Mer.) Mult he ripe is 4 oe aaa water Is something kids ory for Just Ken, president of ‘the bank, were|rostoration of tielr licenses revoked | ve 6 said to have contributed to the d, accor’ oroger, on | ie ane aire 0: Seto tee tank's faire |the grounds that “they were not | in ak se cca | |Keeping their places sanitary," Wor | ticle. la Sacsen Gee ebblie Me, |this claim, he added, the court was | chanics at the camp, who admire a [Inter unable to find foundation, Judge 99/Smith granted an order to show military carriage, are now talking of the “Babbitt bearing.” “ Is “Personal One cause why the licenses should not be WASHINGTON, Nov, 5,—Tho| restored on August 23, and the case speech of American Ambausador Her-| was tried for five days beginning | [rick in France yesterday predicting | September 6, resulting in a vérd tet | | that the United States will take a! favorable to the milkmen fuller part in European affairs, was| It was following this that the city an expression of the amb lor's | petitioned for the writ of prohibition, | “personal views,” it was declared on | denied in the supreme court decision, | high authority the state depart | The city was represented in the ment today, proceedings by B, C, Bwing, avsistant Policies of the American govern: | corporation counsel of Seattle, while Stop him quick, somebody, before | ment towards Europe were the same | Tworoger represented the plaintiffs, he plunges off the bottom of the|as they have been all thru the Hard-| with the ald of W, 1D, Lane, counsel page! ing and Coolid dministrations, it| for the Seattle Raw Milk Dealers’ as was statd, sociation he is going to get the gravy off his plate unless he uses a piece of bread as a swab. phere It is fast getting so that you’ can always see a couple of buzzards hov- ering above a railroad croswing. ene)e Down in San Francisco a mayor-| alty candidate was removed to a de- tention hospital for an examination into his sanity. be elected, c is charged with| (Lord's day.) Up betimes, and ine! fflclency and negli- reading the comic strips, but Lor are not one-half so funny ns the torial columns in the publick prints. Ami so by water to Port Hlakeley. and thence to walking to Fort Ward, Plean- ant Beach and Eagle Harbor, which 1 firmly believe to be a distance of 20 miles, albelt the map doth deny me. thereat. And so to home at » Jate hour, very tired. . Herrick’ FY Speech ALS. SEATTLE, Newsp spaper W ith the Biggest Chreuls ation in Washington he Seattle Star At the Postoffice at Beattie, under the Act of © 3. 1879 Per Tear, by Mat #2 WASH., Come On, Washington! MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 19% The man behind the drive of the Washington Huskies to football supremacy in the West is Enoch Bagshaw, the “Little Giant” as he is known to the sporting editors, and “Baggy,’ as he is known by his players and thousands of friends. Coming to Washington at a time when featball was at its lowest ebb, Bagshaw, in three years’ time, has developed a | powerful machine that has an even chance to win the Coast title. - o by Price & Carter, 8 tographers GREENWOOD ST, CAR IS ROBBED Mistaking two bandits for pas- sengers, A. M. Wells, 1532 W. 58th st., operator of a one-man Greenwood street car, stopped to pick they up at Third ave. N. W. * Al ae Football M scotch Is _ Threatening ' Golden Bears BY LEO H. LAS veloped a powerful team for {6(1OME on, Washington!" Washington na «, Woouer whe. qld: Gey of the Waals ful line he has the greatest inghee aaa . | backfield In the West. Sher. out the West as the TEST thes leneaon et Ws ORR 1 ghana quarterbacks; Ziel, thé great ole eat ace on dante the pidnging halfback, and Tesreay; | nd W.° 58th ste tate Sunday games with the Califor hor pe eV ernie LL dcthe ight. The bandits boarded the Coast's best official, thinks the thawing a long pistol, and best fullback prospect he has i up Wells and three passen- scon In years, are the men who » They obtained $10 in car will: Gaees sive wut m Wells, but That Heavy. forward: wall did not attempt to rob the pas- over the University af which smothered U. 8. C. and sengers, California was no. flu the Oregon Aggies has weight, | Wells reported that he les for more speed and ins and pokes | Mm 14 to 0 score showed. posible the lerent work Of thie, {UL46 p.m. They. slanaled stor. him rondertal eaaknerd |to stop, and he did so, not suspect: tornado will sweep over the Not only {¥ the power there, | {0 that they were bandits, As he Berkely campus, and for the | ut wkill aswell, Bagshaw hag |Dened the dapr, they Jumped inside, first time in years a team will built up a fine forward passing | the leader drawing a gun face California on its home field threat and che has. nome excel. | He told Wells to put ‘up his hands, HERE. hab; thn: {evan Chance eta lent running plays, ‘The plays [804 commanded the three pass ee win, The Californians, with their | aye there and #0 are the men |{t® remain seated and make no out- warm climate, too warm for to execute ’ them. l ory hey took all the money the good football, will have all the The Golden Bears may welt | Motorman had and escaped, | Wells advantage of playing on their tremble at the invasion of the | furnished the police with a good de- home field, If the Huskies can Frublilea sa Wenale Sera Batutdess eription of both of the thugs, lick them in their own back and {t wouldn't be amias to aay |. TWo bandits who attempted to, rot yard it will be the football tri. that: Sowa er abr inkion are ies residence of Carl Hy Martin umph of the year. appearing in the already well 2304%- First ave, at 9:30 p. Washington and California are furrowed brow of one Andrew | Saturc were frightened av the only undefeated football fmith, the wizard coach of |Whon Jack Sullivan, who was in teams on the Lic Coast, the Borkele |the house with Martin, phoned for Purple and having won “Come on, Washington!" the police. Martin opened the seven straight mes, scoring a | locked door when the two thug total of 208 polnts to seven for | Knocked, but closed it before they their rivals, while California bas | F.zea Mecker Well could enter and relocked it when won five, ted one and has |he discovered their purpose, ‘The scored 148 pointw without hav: on Road to Health) mex tried ‘to force’ the ddar. ing its own goal line trope With his throat nnd bronctialate| | throwing their weight against it, The California “wonder team" age oni. | DUE fled when. they apparently hearé isn't the great outfit that ropres Borg AAD WeReSrisclitvan’ phane tar the Woliee: if sented the Berkeley institution | Ness his only trouble at Property valued at nearly $1,000 last year, Northwest fans who | (za Meeker, 98, Oregon Trail plo-}wax stolen by thieves who broke saw the Bears held to a 9 to 0 | neer, is on the road to recovery un+| into the home of Dr, H. 'T, Harvey, weore at Portland by Washing: lies setbacks occur, according to his} 2806 Rosemont place, early Sunday ton State know that the Pears + 1, {Maht. Dr. Harvey and his wife didn't. have the drive, the clasy | 8tandson and phystelan, Dr. ©, L,} jwwero absent at the time, ‘They. re- ov the possibilities that the 1922 | ‘Templeton, | turned to find that thteves had r machine possessed day | moved the slass from the front a California is at least 25. per to gain ea'rance and ad stolen cont weaker than last year's [three Oriental ruga, valued at $176 | eleven, Washington {x 60. per each; & ches* of valuable silverwar cont stronger than a year ago, lis bed for short periods daily, Doc-|_ porcolator, 10 plooes of cut glas Conch Knoch Bagshaw has de- | tor Templeton added, and other articles, Washington beat the Oregon Aggies at Corvallis Sat- they showed that their t victory of two weeks ago aw the two. outclassed the / standing by the track at about than the On November 17 the purple fection practically present, 2501 Cascadia ave., Mon: Meeker has been ll for more than two weeks now, but is again leaving A aca rN easy aaa AONE Ti TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE. DEPUTY AND WIFE PINNED UNDER CAR! Two Men Held for Alleged Attempts to Evade Arrest by Crowding Pursuers from Highway Two speeders were under arrest Monday on charges of reckless driving following alleged attempts made Sunday by both men to evade arrest by forcing the machines of pursuing deputy sheriffs from the road, and the wife of ine deputy is in the Taylor-Lacey hospital at Auburn as a result of one such attempt. | Mrs. Mabel Sears, wife of Deputy Sheriff William H. |Sears, was painfully injured near Algona when the auto in which they were chasing a ding car was forced from |the road by the speeder. Freeman Long, driver of the ar, Was later ar rested and Monday was held in lieu of $1,000 sh bail. ar was completely wrecked in the crash. Sears was forced from the road while traveling at a rate of 55 miles an hour. John E. Johnson was placed under arrest by Deputy M. C. ~ Stalleop Sunday afternoon shortly after he is alleged to ~ have tried to force Stallcop into the path of another ma- chine on the Victory highway. Stalleop was pursuing John- son at the time. SEARS TELLS STORY oF .65x9 OF THE ACCIDENT Sears*related the story of the acci- dent Monday as follows: | “f had taken the car out for a ride jand was going about 25 miles an hour . jon the Pacific highway when this | man appeared. When he first passed [ine he waa going st teat 50 mites an TWO Motorcycle Officers lhour, He was driving a rebuilt rac- Are Among Injured ing machine and it was jumping on the pavement in a manner to endan- Nine persons, including two mio- ger the lives of other motorists, I|torcycle policemen, were injured in |set out after him and after a chase | Sunday's toll of auto casualties, po- } weet lice records showed Monday. : peties calle na i my avnerien When his auto collided’ wittaal 1 RE Se ON CUE AY RADE SRE, ipa telephone pole at E. Marginal Way, jto stop, He swung his car tothe left /near the intersection of the directly in my path and crowded me | Moines road, B. M. Williams, of Des’ \clear off the pavement.” | Moines, was injured, together with | As Sears’ car hit the loose dirt at |/his wife and young son. ‘Thele tit) |the side of the road the deputy | juries, however, are not considered © |Jerked his wife down under cover of | serious. the back of the seat and ducked him-| Patrolmen F. H. Bertrand and |self. The car turned over once, skid-|H. Burt were painfully hurt Si ded along on its side and righted it-| afternoon when their motorcycle cole \self before {t crashed into a deep /jlided at First ave. W. and McGraw ditch along the roadside. st., with a car driven by I. W. - Mrs. Sears was thrown out at the | ner, 1909 Queen Anne ave. ‘The i final crash and hurley against a|torcycle was traveling at a fast jbarbwire fence. Altho bruised in a/of speed, Turner said. The inju | score of places, Sears crawled out of a his wrecked automobile and went to} Mrs. John Storgaard, 2542. 1 rs | his wife's assistance. She was un-/ave. W., was knocked down at Sec |conscious and for a time he thought |ond aye. and Union st. by a jshe was dend, driven by J. C, Hayes. She rect | RUSH. MES. SEARS an injured wrist and bruises. TO AUBURN HOSPITAL T. P. O'Connor, Grand Mrs. Sears was rushed to the Tay- | hotel, was struck at Ninth ave, lor-Lacey hospital at Auburn, where | Westlake ave. by a car driven | physicians revived her Monday her|A. G, Anderson, 3653 Francis a condition was reported as satisfac. | He was taken to the city hospital jtory, She sustained two fractured | with an injured hip and shoulders |ribs in the accident, besides numer-| Vincent ‘Trinos, Hillerest |ous severe contusions and bruis received a badly wrenched leg |. Long was arrested late Sunday by | toot whem he was mnvoked down eet |Deputy Sheriff Tom Morgan and| Fourth ave. and Spring st, by the |Sheriff Matt Starwich. He was|auto of Reuben W. Jones, secretary brought to the jail Monday and he | to the school board. ® expected to post his bail some time| suffering frem bruises and cuts jduring the day about the face and arms, Miss Bisie | The automobile which was wrecked | Sandell, 18, of 515 Lucille. sty’ was. | Sears’ personal car. It was a/ taken to the Providence hospital Sun. mass of twisted steel and broken|day night following an accident at gi Sears carried no accident in-| Fourth ave. S. and Holgate st. in which she was struck by an auto, Another of Sheriff Starwich's traf. Satie: fie deputies owly es ed (rach to. ae H ‘Colrmn 3) Policeman Killed by Driver of Auto DYING OFFICER | -P%Duver of Auta seph G, Conroy, policeman, was ran. down and killed early today by a_ | MURDERE motorist’ who refused to obey Cone | roy’s orders, given while directing traffic at an early-morning fire, W. H. Th , all i to hi Death Duel Follows Attack | envtantmomnso™ alleged to, have | on Telephone Operator Conroy, was arrested, charged wi | busca he BLUE SPRINGS, Mo., Noy, 5.— m, | Alonso Hertig, marshal of Blue Womai] IsK Killed i in. prings, and W, 8. Young, a ‘stranger in the village, shot and killed each other here today, TACOMA, Noy. 6.—Leaving Mixs Daisy Lee Raymond, tele-|county hospital Sunday evening, ‘phone operator, was the only wit- | where she had visited her father, ness to the shooting, She said |is a patient in the institutfon, | Young attempted to attack her, She | Lucinda Bashford, 51, of Wollo summoned Marshal Hertig, who was | Hay, was struck by an inbound shot and fatally wounded by Young, | cific ave, street car and almost: | | However, before dying, the marshal | stantly killed. was able to raise his gun and| The injured woman was picked | | shoot Young thru the heart, from the street and rushed into th nonin hospital, but she wus sald to have \Safe Robbers Ae died bea ch Inatade 7 Foiled by Blowout | TACCMA, Noy, 5.—Thieves who {store & 400-pound safe, containing currency and papers valued at | $4,000 from the Button Veterinary | CHRIS'TIANTA, jhoxpital, at 2909 8, M st, Sunday,|Amerfean steamer were forced to abandon the Job| stranded off Christiania when a tire blow out on the stolen | sinking, according to automobile they were using to trana- The crew of 18 have | nort the strong box, waved, Front of Hosp’ tal REPORT SHIP

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