The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 19, 1924, Page 1

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OVER VETO! HOME Til TWO CENTS SEATTLE. ONUS PASSEL WEATHER -| The Newspaper With the Biggest Circulation in Washington he Seattle Star Botered as Heoons Clase Matter May 3, Per Year, by Mail, #150 Tempe Maximum, Today ee | rature Last a8 2 Hours mum, 56 A498, at the Postoffion at Seattia the Act of Consress March &, 1179 N SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, MAY Mill Burns; Loss $ 19, 1924 x 300,000 SOLDIER ‘BILL IS OKEHED ‘Senate Overrides Coolidge Veto; Insurance Plan Now Is Law WASHINGTON, May 19.—The bonus bill became a law today The senate overrode President Coolidge’s veto by the two-thirds majority necessary. The house overrode JAP CROWDS tere tis Bors IT AT BAN! oie Wins New Battle Against 4 American Envoy who in anyway? : j, folles: feck invented M nday, Gee Gee» yesterds walt. The htt igirks are swimming Teach. Sunday p TOKYO, if magazine coy nour Sagebrush Desert to Tokyo Quits, Pleading Ill Health as Cause lutions de-| WASHINGTON Ameri America Japanese im: | J t jon were adopted at two mass lay, T resolution to the American public ter leniency to ns desiring to May 19.7 May amb 19. gress toward asked to be however G NOTE re are like or engine ‘ ool hit when you to. ed ball player They ng D appeale nd for wards Japane: enter the L nation has beer here today, be of Mrs, Woods’ connection whateve ally exp of the ther, and has no with the pr th ined press iM health tune ™ ni One ent Unit resolu n State re Japan | jetermigation exclusion provision of the | avoidance of mob action ation Dill. { the Japanese + President ifter condemning between | et | admon | excl over Plant Destroyed by Fire; 100 Men Are Out of Work More than 100 men |out of employment and between $300, }000 and $400,000 worth of property |destroyed early Sunday in plain view f half a hundred Lake Sammamish rmen when the Campbell Lum ber Co. mill on the lake outlet was troyed by fire. Starting at th southwest f the mill from an unknown e flames in the course o! led the e jude it Saturday. The vote came within half an hour after the bill was called up by Senator Curtis, publican whip, shortly after p.m. with, and resignation jeved that Woods be granted. | en lee ate ate Hughes | 1 Woods iS penny in the ly raised his eyes He reek 's rent wos de tisiona in the skic pl was in sim! epte Kansas, re v paid altaing t ts Wood, b Japan only a short time bassador to Spain he w by President Harding to Charles Beecher Warren, now ambas sador to Mexico. extending aid to sufferers {Turn to Page has all debate being dispensed know why married men|tional lines, emphasizing t) bobbed hair Sines | tion of congress must not Sat fad, not a single wife in|®* representing the opinion of the has gotten 9 people as a whole. that she fou Japan’s salvation, fit on the beck in arousing the Americ nerally to the inte . pm the Bach of » Ford: ; EARWIG | The vote was 59 to 26. wucesed ‘This was two votes more than the voree on t 4 a strange tei sided eal Wied; Whe’ active necessary two-thirds of those present an public ot J in id voting. When the re bill was called up § stor Reed of Pennsylvania, anti bonus leader, asked unanimous con huge mill, destroyed | sent to let it go over till Saturda: of lumbe two drying | but Senator Ashurst, Arizona, demo- log chute nd the engine | crat, and bonus advocate, objected, | forced the vote. Crowds of house members thronged He was | into the chamber and crowded aroun the fire t fisherman, |ihe walls. The galleries were filled. swothe blaze. The two} he bill provides life insurance corner source, an hour foe the Poison Ivy club SUSPEND ANOTHER ico. COP IN WISE CASE ee Officer Who Failed to~ Make Report ‘ Gets Five-Day Layoff ae Woubles Adam had, Wise's auto. crashed into ned another car driven! t NO cause to mourn; | B h, injuring Mrs. Bar * house 7 night watchman was at the | mill when the f ted. Down on the White Blaffa-Hanford veterans’ proje ot Ed Ponsat, former artilleryman With | i porised the A. EB. F., is making good ax a farmer, with the state’s help. Here hevis with “Bonus,” | who first hie Pure-bredl Holstein cow. Kdeand many-other veterans went downto the sandy waste |" altempt(ed to-check the Mames, | policies for veterans on the ‘basis.of st a day for overseas service. compensation of not to e | ceed $500 for home veterans and $6: for overseas men, is multiplied by arbitrary figure to arrive at the face | vaiue of the insurance policies, lroughly two and one-half times the basic compensation. KILAUEA POURS OUT LAVA ‘One Hurt, Two § Sold¥ers Are Missing From Pit Edge HILO, T. H.. May 19.—To the ac- companiment of violent rain and lightning storms, the crater of Kilauea, which started _eruptine last week, today continued one of the most spectacular outbursts in recent history. One person has been seriously in- jured in venturing too near the scene of the eruption, while two ping Lammen, star BY FIELDING 1 Ed in a Yesler car | . ped on his corn o- Another suspended list 3 of last ‘Tue PWills is training to fight|in West S , but x0 far no sport-| Frank A bes said that Wills is in/and ove ‘eondition by 8. W. o-6 ish. ptficer was sincad on the Monday as th night's auto acc who were in the at the scene of «© made no report of blame by Severyns Tt was not affair [the duty of Geiser |such a report for Lieutenant Carr. | Patrolman Mdward Geiser, who] which he did not do. It seems the} wan in charge of the West Seattle | whole thing was hushed up.” e prowler car ash, and who not freed pol the « cMMON result * were Two years 1d on sounty art oft the Battery their part report FS he eryne sa I was ever, to leave river, JOBS for plays given ‘wit Help Enforce the New| Traffic Ordinance th s¢ason for animals as required b: cows in California on hoof and mouth dis- pigs in Seattle have been time, and Doc Brown's | ong as it used to be. tate’s ott up were opened up. Everything did not took the beat | Boys Will Be Stationed on on the afternoon that Ed got off the | Arterial Highways train at his future home. He had} Paid down the $612.50 required for! |him to secure a tract. The state) had erected for him one of the three: | troom houses, the barn and the at te Sixty new traffic policemen will go on duty in Seattle Wednesday. Their jobs will be to acquaint | indication president of the & Light Co., $650,000 1919 street rail. ceived no Leonard. from A Power the Sound whether as to lt 1 lon the Columbia river a few yéars ago and dug in harder than they ever dug in in France.| nD nM seo se iome adjusted compensation at the rate - Practically all of them ave making good on the project. The state helps them with a house |\ & stiff breeze | $1 a day for home service and $1.25 | was blowing, the fire spread rapidly. ‘and a well: they do the work Photo "by ¥ Staff} James Campbell, owner of the mill, = rned of the fire r his plant | er been laid waste by flames. He} 5 3 late} resides at 1605 16th ave., Seattle. The ; Date har plant, which was partly covered by ‘ya gpsia dee ted the insurance, will be partly rebuilt, train at Wh itt Co | Campbell said Monday it ae Rit | Logging operations along Lake ae f |Sammamish, which supplied the mill | It was in the Inte summer and | with logs, will be held up. The mill | the thermometer hovered around | has been running at full capacity and «Jn charge of the West Seattle | whole (hing Wan ued ee eo par.(Head Of Threatened Plant tie uncomfortabie mark. Ponsat | sare SHAE EE ubbeeee erica station that night i e absence | ie e payme: 160 to Bi wus one the first’ world rot. | store = is | Lieut. ¢. G. Carr, and who is charged] ish by Wise neither of the men made Won't Tell Plans eek gue digk ng thine abel pe 2 hae Iie "Groutisetees tat wae oe | with falling to make a report of bey any report law Wht Bluffs-Hanford land troyed. The* planing mill, set some affair to Carr, Waa ordered suspend ent ad « ance fro e plan so td. for five dass by Chief of Polle ULTIMATUM NEAR END <*tiement coi, cnet | BEGIN WORK WEDNESDAY |: sea pe i elt sald me Meee) Officer Wise, who is employed in| Up Op County Prepares to Distrain the headquarters traffte bureau, will B th H Sper be given a 30dny suspension ‘with on Power Company a ouse Fikiny wel hear is that| Ot PAY. Severyns sald. also for fall j ure to report the crash. | County officinis Monday had re! Seg sag Oakland Molc| ” Severyns declared that altho many| ; * pie aw Kea y players will be afraid | nese eon go te eee bre Airmen Add 500 Miles to Pie os the “Kitty” on account| e” drinking before the crash, he} - fi Bet hicken house that go with each | Motorists with the new traffic or-| ted "¢ oula not prove that the officer was| Their World Flight Jaunt traee Ae had ait Pee well and |ain co that went into effect Mon or ction jintoxicated,""and . for. . that . reason inatatled the pump for his irrigation. | day, and to enforce {ts provisions tiie be | May 19 The three \ ake The 60 new cops will be Seattle boy | Will st mie our ta feces bie | ° sage parior vice evil wa begin flicking his cigar } American round-theworld flight Armed scouts, : ; Share Haney Cane chalimuan ot| hinted planes arrived today at Hittokap ob + At the suggestion of Tho Star, Ser. |to Mrs. Henry Landes hes o. a, bay on the island of Yetorofu. onsat | geant Frank Fuqua, head of the|the Public safety committee of the| | would not dismisa him. Patrolmen | peck is over, 90) 4. n Stone and William Nail, | TOKYO, way tax bill will be paid before & | o'clock, tum given by W ie was in. readiness for his battle against ands and the sage brush the time limit on the ultima W. Shields, county GEE, TH’ OFFICE . SEZ, dye young. see ‘Perhaps Fatally Burned as itrouble in golf is that we! off the tee and drive off mang troubles, ° ion there are only solution Napsilie car! Mi Wife called up the club and imy husband there?" fame the teady repiy. tola you my name} “st S¥right, lady; busbun’ es rpidemc of bobbed-hatr ig the country, it F that no reformer has law passed against they eah.”” . nevah cs 6 TODAY'S PUZZLE 4 bloke who runs a ranch always give and cabbage for ne Published by Ct As called the “Liberty in, however, tee Dee Gee RAYS whe calls he “sy uke whe Iiken to| Bh calls her second-bext | use he dexerty her. we YE DIARY (May 1%) of long abed, iacine| by Youne Boawell, A Wat doth er ait fie Witite. a ie etails of isthe lest ever a » Tolwnn, W BF Barts, and we fo ile of s Meynotds and Hct . to 4 hy ® great peat, nnd Aud. & } loll well on its holdings. that it] The = flyer Licutenanta Smith, Wade and Nelson, took off from Paramashiru at 7:40 a. m. and land. ed safely at Hittokapu bay ip. m. SIX MEN SEARED YETOROFU ISLAND, Kuriles,! i May 19.—America's three round-the- world air cruiser anded here this afternoon after a 500-mile hop from Paramashiru island in seven hours. | They came down on Lake Toshimoye, jon the southeast shore of the istand. Carload of Gas Explodes ST. PAUL, May 19.—Six men were burned, perhaps ly. when a car load of high test gasoline exploded | and set fire to the Craig Oil & Re fining Co. plant here today. Flames destroyed 200,000 gallons of gasoline, 100,000 gallons of lubri cants and 40 tons of greases. All buildings and tanks were razed. The loss estimated at 0,000. | Jaccording to the destroyer Pope, of the United States fleet, and the Japa nese destroyer Amatsukaze, who crews assisted in marking the bay with buoys and_receiving the three flyers and their mechanicians. | At Tokyo, American Ambassador | | Woods was to confer today with the prince regent soon after the arrival of Lieutenants Smith, Nelson and Wade, at Kesumigaurs, their next | |landing plage, American Editors Visit Ponca City PONCA CITY, Okla, May 19.— Oklahoma was host to the jonal Fditorial association today. Three hundred editors from all} parts of the country were here to- day for a week's stay before going on to Mexico City. | Old times were recalled to the vis-| itors by the roundup at the 101) ranch, near here, while modern Okla- homa was demonstrated by. the Mar. land Off company, which “shot” an French Airman Now | at Canton, China| PARIS, May 19.—Capt. Peletier Doisy, French ‘flyer, has arrived ‘at | Canton, China, on his flight to Japan | from Indo-China, which he reached last week Bobbette’s Angry Mate)\ Fires Barber From Town| EATTLE barbers faced a new NS) peril Monday. They won dered if the example of the pro- prieter of a: Lester, (Wash.) ren taurant would find # responsive spot in the hearts of Seattle hus- bands, Lester is Not an hour later appeared the angry husband of the new bob- bette, ' “Outside!” he ordered. "Get out of town—and,STAY out!" } “Yeuwsir,” said-the innocent bare , | her, realizing ,that the shobbing had been againat orders from the lady's husband, Now he's naking Bilenshure lawyers Just how fara husband's | rights go. | And Seattle barbers Monday had a weather eye out for pe sons Who appenred to be angry husbands, 4 a helper engine sta. tion on the Northern Pacific, 4 of the Cascades, The barber rbeved there Mondays and Fri days, Last Friday there appeared at his shop pretty Mrs. Getty, of a veataurant proprieter, “Hoh ‘omy she ordered tersely, ‘The barber bobbed ‘em, at 2: gel |our attorney,” [thought this morning,” jing stalled on the the | fasion lveing direct treasurer. Leonard himself said that he had nothing to announce on the matter. It's in the hands of James B. Howe, Leonard said. “There are only two things you can do, one is to pay the tax, the other is not to pay it, Which of there will you do?” Leonard was asked. I haven't given the matter Leonard said. I can't say." Sheriff Matt Starwich expected to Ideal conditions were encountered, | confer with Deputy Prosecutor HOW: | sagebrush, ard A, Hanson Monday night if the company's tax bill is not paid during the day. Hanson hag prepared a list of company property that Starwich may be forced to distrain as a gua antee of payment “L will dist power plant and the comp fice building at Sixth ave, and Olive st, as’ being the most salable of its property,” Starwich said. Wo will act strictly according to law, if Coun. urer Shields directs us to property for non-payment the sheriff said Train Wrecks Car; Oregon Girl Dies WOODBURN, Ore., May Miss jarsaret Miller was instantly kill- dd here late last night when automotste in which she was in the Snoqualmle | ny’s of- of taxes, Railroad tracks. An onrushing train carried the machine 200 feet, smash. Ing it, to. pieces, Jess Wikes, driver of tho car, was knocked clear of the wreckage and escaped with’ w ‘few’ scratches, |Baby Is Saved by Blood From Father | SAN baby FRANCISCO, May, 19, boy, husky and thriving University of California hospital os its life to a remarkable trans: of blood from its father's into it heart ‘The transfusion waa made al birth when transfusion by regular ods had failed. Four ounces of blood were injected into the heart by means of « hypodermic needle, A * any | the) rid-| Southern Pacific) at} meth: | |moved his family from Walla Walla and began to battle, TRACT TESTIMONIAL TO HIS LABORS ‘Today the 20-ncre tract {sa graphic ltestimonial of his labors, Where the | fic squad would begin its work Wed-|the license and public safety com- sands |nesday afternoon, and from then on |mittees for immediate consideration. winds once into dunes, one of the finest the valley. Where the sun once} at down on a barren waste land, | it now puts a red blush onto mam-)} |moth strawberries. Where sage rats | jonce scurried in and out among the| pure bred Holsteins now'| the hot now rustle alfalfa fields in drove they thru | | erage din green pastures. | The “magic wand" of Priest |ley water has turned a barren jacres into a means of living for exsoldier, But the water would] jhave been useless without Ponsat's untiring labors and his ¢@letermina tion to stick to his place until he | had made it a productive unit ithe soldier land settlement plan. What Ponsat has done, others have done or are doing. There are | now approximately ex-soldiers | who have settled in the White Bluffs. aa district under the state's set- val 20} an (Turn to Page 7, Column 4) | posed of 43 men, | 100,000 population. police traffic department Monday re- quested the services of the boy scouts | in aiding the inadequate traffic force. Scout. Executive Stuart Walsh and Fuqua decided that the juvenile traf. vould be on the streets daily for a | week, The new traffic ordinance provides for ¢ight arterial highways, has wierd parking provisions and establishes other revolutionary methods with |which Seattle motorists are totally unfamiliar. | OUTSIDE HELP 18 IMPERATIVE Fuqua realized that it was impos sible for his department—one of the smallest in the country for a city this size—to enforce the new or- dinance among more than 70,000 motorists in the country, at least without a campaign of education, The Seattle traffic squad is com. only 14 men_ per And only 14 of these men are available for duty at street Intersections. That's where the Boy Scouts will (Turn to Page i Column 3) |What Can This Man Do | | Cee ’ May 19.—Ar- | thur Nash, “Golden Riue” blothing manufacturer, is ask- ing the world to tell him what to do with @ million dollars. Nash is about to become a millionaire, And he doesn’t want to be one, The “Golden Rule” plan un- der which he runs his factory giving his employes their share of the profits, has paid, Short. ly he will own more than a million dollars’ worth of the company’s stock "Tr have seen crimes committed protection of a cloak,” says care to be one In a few days a 100 pe too many under the milllonaire's sh, “EL don't cenit With Million Dollars? stock dividend in his company will make him worth $1,250, 000, So he is asking, “What shail 1 do with my million?” in 33 religious periodicals this week Nash believes readers of these papers have a better concep: tion of the Golden Rule than others, “This question,” said Nash, “ig a test of thele Christianity. From the answers I receive to my questions L hope to discov er whether professing: Ci tans have a real understand: Ing of the application of Chris tianity to the industrial prob: Jems of the day.” He expects to give his own anawer to the question later. lcity council Monday, by Deputy |Corporation Counsel Ray Dumett. | The ordinance will be introduced jat Monday afternoon's meeting of} the council and will be referred to |These committees will sean the or- |dinance during the coming week and report It at next Monday’s meeting} of the council for final passage. | The ordinance was formed at a conference of the chief of police, | the city license clerk, Mrs. Landi and Dumett, last Saturday, follow- ing an investigation made by The Star last week. Establishing a year as the ice, the license completely bans the employment of women attend- unts in places treating men. ‘The orditanes also provides that} employes ana attendanis in such institutions must make a full] report to the ehtef of police an to} their former empicyrient, the'r age, | occupation, experience, and there ad- | dress. This feacvre of the \s. Landes believes, will ¥e a big: Juid in Keoping a check on the }cople operading such institutions. The ordinance provides certain equipment and incrages all kinds of bath houses and massage parlors |in its provistous. \Woman Is Held f for | | Slaying Widower COLUMBUS, Ohio, May 19.—Mes. |Grace Dobly, 87, was arrested here |today and held on charges of slaying |George B. Hackney, a widower and ther of four children. Jealous of his attention to other women, Mrs, Dobly, who. has a hus: band and four sons, threw carbolic acid in Hackney's face in a motion picture theatér last night, causing |burns and shock from which he died, | '$1,600,000 Loss in Ship Plant Flames NEW YORK, May 19.—Piremen | traveling on huge moving cranes} battled flames early today which | caused losses to the plant of the Federal Shipbuilding Co. Kearney, Ny Jy, estimated at $1,600,000, i | 5 soldiers are missing, having been last seen standing beside the open pit of the volcano. All roads leadink to Kilauea have been ordered closed or are blocked by the flow of ash and lava. Hot mud, lava and great boulders are being belched high into the air from the crater. 250 Barrels Beer, 30 Men Are Raided CHICAGO, May 19.—Two hundred and fifty barrels of beer, 10 motor trucks, several automobiles and 30 men, including two beer leaders, fell into the hands of the police in jan early-morning raid today. What Will When You Are Gone? While you are on your vacation some BIG NEWS may break— something BIG may happen back home and you'll wan> to know all about It. Have The Star follow you on your vacation. Sent by mail anywhere in the United States or Canada for Only 50 Cents a Month Tf you cannot come to he Star office, use the telephone— MA in-0600

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