The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 22, 1924, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Chinese Bandits Temperature Last Maximum, 74 24 Mours Minimum Today ne + Motered as Second Class Matter A the Postottion ot Beattie 76. gz SI ATTLE, WASH., WHY NOT HELP THEM? wr BJ ige J. T, Ronald today ncoused §664 GUARD about the present Howdy, cut the folks! Congres 1923 income tax cent, and we're going to rebate and buy an ice cream | cone with it good as they were—yes, RAF cvevon wee Judge Says 64 Per} joy eee | Seeking Soldiers ; Cent of Seattle “ a tat to thon de and Attendant wit he mates « vet wectet!| SCHOOL children|| tr m2 1 van seo | Missing From ve appeared. Are Dishonest eames ak Military Post Nervou m fat hotel)—E! mean to he ah! Id 2 room with a wif dishonest; they just don't for myself t thetr fellow-classmates || think An organized manhunt for erere 7 members of the senior || | Te ner rece Rigger so three army deserters was begui [How will wom = I6ot Universtiy of Waab-}}) {hey are: trying shee by the police and malltary au | about four or fiv in ist Cie nn ee: trlo, two of whom were prison : 66," which ha n t a hr hy bogs ers and the other a guard, es FARM BULL-ETIN : I axs will be If people would apend more caped about 9:30 9. m, from “Exhibiting five hen’s eggs, aver-/ put un ta time and money help Fort Lawton and fied toward aging more than 7 inches by 6 Inches |raid by Chairman Fred dren to be honest, instead of the northern part of the city, in cireumference, Grace Thelen, |[he counct king them into dishonesty The two prisoners, George Carr, | chicken fancier of Meanwhile, at at meeting of Seat he world would grow better and Albert Pimental, 30, were| Burien City, lays J * & whole lot faster working in the post cemetery, un claim to the matin ° T. P ler guard of Private Charles Field moth-egg cham ed 64 out of ove When the sergea came pionship of King ” pb Sreuncee: of think ound he feund that the had all county. The big i Prone y 8 nd with b ar sappeared wid Fieiding’s rifle was eggs were all laid se Sishones F found in the brush near Tt had by one trap-nested hen, the poultry Bi gh mene Ronald Ene that a ser _ not been discharged, and the army grower says, and are double-yolked.” ate: per tes calculated to test chi Officials believe that the prisoners —The Star. ; jonesty, had been made in perwuaded Fielding to desert with | TEER Washington over a petiod of three { then, *, ‘ye He added that the tests were Ia it Wroper, queries Vaughn | Y*8rs . Cart deserted previously and Woodhouse, to refer to a Indies’|financed ‘by = Chicago capitalist, | Japanese Welcome Airmen} under sentence of a years Imprlane dressing Toom as a powder maga. [S08° Interest in the more s ment at Aleatran island, San Fran- pie » [Seattle boys and giris was tiot dls From America . iat cisco, Pimentel was charged with lenser offense and was awaiting} BOTH FLAGS WAVING ta» cour martin The police and sheriffs office are| lire. Martin Wil Arrive Here co-operating with the military au-| Friday closed. POLICE AISLES AT ENGLISH CLASSES He took hia tcinter He put his coat upoh the shelf, Then next he took a little cough, And now he's taken off himself. flannels off, thorities in the man-hunt “Irish Beat Columbus to America | ¢ by Six Centuries.”—Headline. the he - That accounts for an Indian we “martia Mrs. Frederick L. Martin, | } stice knew in Alaska naived Pat ing had be wife of Maj Mart of the ig io) there was no other course world flight, will arrive in Seat- | | Sign on the Rack of « Ford: Friday men will police the alsies| tle Friday morning, on the Ruth | —————% of the classroom. Pupils will be| Alexander, from California: She | “Yep, lm Licensed. Like jseated al r 1 other) ts bringing the Martin young | ” meausres will be to Insure ster with her to greet her hus + t 5 Reg Meare Laue tents ot the tenses band. Maj. Martin will arrive in Agent Hits Cocaine Run- orEce Judes commenting on the) Bellingham next Sunday. Mrs i j Dear Homer: Who was that furiny|dlahonesty accusations, sald that in| Martin will go there to cme | ers In Aberdeen Exploit looking, knock-kneed simp I saw /| his opinion the condition w due to him. what 4 ~~ % ble ror iJ sald to b one coming out of The Star building yes-|the removal of the Bible from aes most, Important narodtto sclairee of terday? AEE BMI font. He gene at the Be was BY FRANK HEDGES recent months was made in Aber- | Dear Tillie: ‘That was us. LiceesAton inet la male itl deen Inte Wednesday night when | : . af ° i anes CHILDREN America’s round: | $3,000 worth of aine was taken | "Tis nice to ride in a motor car. oMP’ Z i at Kasmi ‘01 io wten Mac cto: outer ieen: \T0 STEAL MONE from th amship Milan Maru and} Tokyo late! Japanone, a gigantic tween said to be a member of ring operating be- and was placed under arrest. The we But it gives one an awful jar To go back home as freight. eee The cheapest looking thing in Seat- | tle is a man waiting for his wife at| Judge Ronald described one of the }honesty tests on which his figures are based. By arrangements the students were given money that only re- dope Lieuts. first of reach the Smith, the Nelson and Wade, international fly Japanese c this coast the Orient, ers to pital, winged h wag the result of in-| down from the north to a tremen. conducted jointly. by a bargain sale, | cently had certain sum and | doug reception e federal customs office and tho | | ez } Which they were told would cost | Representatives of the Japanese CANDIDATE FOR THE POISON | that sum, by the teacher. The | government and war and navy de Agent Harry V. Williamson IVY CLUB | storekeeper told the students | partments went to Kasumigaura to The lady neighbor who, when ? Three folks in a boat and a cat and a goat 1 local narcotic office under Narcotic |/f70m Seattle to Skagway, Alaska. The ‘Newspaper With the Biggest Circulation in Washington wader the Act of © THURSDAY, MAY 1924, nerees March &. 1510, Per Tear, by Mail, T =/3 FLEE (Seattle to Skagway — slay American! ME |EDITION| ui IN SEATTLE. WO CENTS 1s Called Cheats Lose ua Code BATTLE PROVES in an Open Catboat| FATAL! Nar. |along with Mr. and Mrs. Pentz, his parents, on the trip. cotic Agents Ballaine and Hoffman, | Baby Jean and a map of the route they'll sail in a that the cost had decreased and | greet them. of the ttle headquarters, and you tell her your new baby that there was change to be re- The flyers had flown from Hito-| Deputy Customs Collector W. H.| With hia. wife, his baby boy, a weighed eight pounds at birth, turned in each transaction. kappu bay at dawn, stopped at Mina-| May of Aberdeen made the arrest |milch goat and a black sat, Linder says; “Oh, that’s nothing; my Sixty-four per cent of the stu- (to for fuel and then continued south-| and selsure |B, Pentz, of Anacortes, will make Saran weighed 14! dents kept the change and did ward to Tokyo. Williamson stated Thursday that|a 1,000-mile trip from Seattle to ip Neen not report it to the teacher. A stirring sight greeted the airmen | the Japanese belongs to a dope ring, | Skagway in a small open boat. He What has become of the old-fash. Then a further test was given.) when they landed on the bay at Mina-|a number of whose members were | will leave in'a few days. On the foned trains that tsed to be called) examination questions were given|to, reaching Japan proper for the|arrested in a federal raid last fall.|trip he will write of his experiences “Fast Line” and “Cannonball”? childr and the teacher left the/first time. From every houretop|The ring ts said to deal only in| for The Star. ie oe (Turn to Page 9, Column 4) (Turn to Page 9, Column 1) large salea of narcoticn. | The story or his plans for the trip “f went 20 miles on a gallon yes- terday.” “That's nothing; I went two months on a quart.” | eee June—the month of weddings—wil! soon be here, but don’t expect to find | a groom like the collar ads—or a bride like the corset ada, SATTLE hens knocked the Cask | S fornia world’s champion big eae | hen’s egg into a last week's mn Ne Pnivnty omelet Wedn’ hen The Se: AROUND THIS tle ed, among other " of White Wyandotte parentage measur 8% inches around one va nd 6% the other | | Gut, objects the meticulous city! /%, ry) editor, how can you knock an egg} /}47 WHO LAND Ibe es: tack OMIT The’ adgwere| LE This 6 sed a fine suburban cot, of course, is: If you can knock an able And thought he was in luck; egg into a cocked hat, you can ay He found the cot was stucco, with | knock it into an omelet.) The accent on the stue. | It all started with the claims of cee a Whittier, Calif. scribe that tho | The Star reports the arrest of u|the oranges really small, ins! pretty girl for making home brew.| nificant things this year, the hen Another case of Beauty and the/eses are unmistakable booste since one biddy had eaokingly | Senate investigating committees may drop such imma- | Re Be fariogese the ae Aa re | terial matters as oil reserves and departmental regimes | Nowadays every smart politician| stranger meas 5 6% by 4 ’ ee Gr of tate bapa eg piney inches in iis circumferences. jto probe the present epidemi , of huge eggs : which everything. lw outdone in ego (or is it proud hens of Seattle and vicinity are showering on! +e erested trapnest in-| their boastful owners. Rivalry is keen among the Puget| hers don't have any trouble about lowering the pres | Sound barnyard songsters since The Scattle Star set out to mutchers: ¢ B ; a the southern feathered gi making ends meat 5 z und Wednew- | discover the biggest egg of 1924. lo 'B, Wise, 7ath | There is one bad thing about home| \t” giscoyvered and. Pho | Rhode Island Neds thought nothing | instead of turning out standard brew recipes, You can't get them!” the champion jof two eggs measuring 7 by 6% and | eggs weighing 22 ounces to the dox patented sar inales aad aly 4 wyan.|7 bY 6 Inches, en, regularly produced dozens patented 3ut before Mrw. sca . "4 ’ 2 cighing 28 ounces A.J. 8. |aottes got on the Job in’r carn: | Mrs, C. H, Carter's Barred Rocks | Weighing 28 ounces. |went In a booster lition” measure 3, tom. ’Ray for Us! World Egg Champions Live Here PTET SLR STAR HUNTS BIGGEST EGGS IN NORTHWEST; ‘SETS’ CONTEST RULES 1 All eggs must be fit for con- * sumption golian desert articles accepted No setting hens may be en- tered in an effort to set record, no prehistoric Mon. a new Raw materials only allowed in contest. nest eggs. 4, This bars omelets and None of the ‘‘nkid road’ hard- Attaboy, Then in came five mouth Rock ancestry, ranging from | a emall one of but @ by “speckled botled variety are invited. minute denizens of ‘‘smilo’ lors, and ond and Pike are barred. Pedigrees are desirable, not necessary exhibit 6. The enough to stand on Its own bot but not too strong. a. Three * par. from Sec. or ORES’ but The egg itself is enough ons must be strong Auburn{ © Thelen, a representative of with Ply Lake Burien, of uties" 5 Inches In aay m He sald he was considering buy est, there were:many others woram. | q its two clroumferences, to a near MRS. WOOLWORTH DI bling for the double-yolked honors |!nz 6%4 by 7% from their hennery |ing larger cartons 4 ‘ ol}, out at $111 W. Spokane st i jechamp measuring 7% by 6% inches. NEW YORK, May Mrs. lof Puget found. Geo 1, Nell, | Spoka Mrs, George: Hart, of Auburn, Jesslo Creighton Woolworth, 69,15618 Kensington place, ¢ ited an} Tt, Vape, of Cedar valley, came to} rays she can go w lot of oggotista| Whittier, Calif, Isn't the onty widow of the late F, W, Woolworth, leak of barnyard fow! origin which |the bat with the product of one of one better. Her prize, specimen | place where’ you can get one ¢ millionaire orgunizer of f and 10-|mensured 6% by 7% Inches: Hel hin Rhode Island Reds, 1t measured, | measuros 61% by, 7% inches, and fry half and soft boil the other cont stores, died at her Long Island | way quickly followed by W. W. |Mtar scientinty ascertained, & by 64 | “How ix that for Auburn?” asks {and have enough left over for. the bos hare vaaterday, i ry, $260 O8th ave. 8S. W, Whose jinches, ape said that his lene, Mrs, Hart, daily baking, ArH vill soon be The goat 1 follows; eee BY LINDEN B. ANGEROUS? Well, somewhat, but at that we will feel a lot safer on that trip than we do when crossing Second aye. during the rush | hours. Among the people who know PENTZ us |D® YING that "the mammoth size {47 of hens’ eggs recently laid by chickens in Seattle and janother result nd universal prosperity under the |present city administration, J. Dash- jleigh Fitzhugh, Homer Brew's famed |chicken expert, Thursday gave the {scientific causes for the “world’: record" endeavors of Puget Sound | |barnyard cacklers. | “Climate, tion and the Japanese the California mouth epidemic have little to do | j with it," he charged. “And Doe | | Brown's regime has absolutely no | | ground for praise. That's a bovine | |matter, The real, underlying, scien- tific explanation rests im the unmit- |igated ambition of our feathered sis- terhood, immigra- since Roy Chapman An found those age-old dinosaur Mr, Fitzhugh — explained, has been a recurrent aspirations on the lof the lowly hens. ‘They |hope to achieve such longevity |their shelled offspring so they centering their efforts on size. “There is no truth in’ Wall Street rumors that the greed of | Pacific coast hens has been | fired by misundersatndings of the bonus bill,” he added, “Why, Washington has had a mothers! pension law for years and there was no untoward aspirations. by our hens.” That there may be an Oriental (Turn to Page 9, Column 3) “there of similar part re ill prov ide food for the baby, who's going | Above: Pentz, Mrs. Pentz and\* small open vessel. vicinity is} of better conditions | hoof.and- | wave | cannot for | afloat and northward bound | we have the reputation of being al-| ways up to some crazy stunt, but n our friends ar ‘ot “this plan they will no doubt unite in declaring it the most foolish | yet of a number of foolish ide: Really, there's nothing particularly foolish in it, and as for the danger, | we don't consider that it is an thing to compare with the dange: that many of our pioneer relatives underwent when they came to this coast from the East. At least we won't have any Indians to fight, un-} less it should be to fight some well- jintentioned but insanitary squaw away from the baby. | BOTH DESCENDANTS | OF OLD PIONEERS | My wife and I both feel that we} have a legitimate claim to pioneer | (Turn to Page 9, Column 2) Have The Star Follow You on Your Vacation When You Go Away in Search of Sunburn and Freckles You will enjoy your vacation a lot more if you arrange to hear every day from home. It is easy to The Star sent mer address, Just telephone the Circulation Department the day before you go away, MA in-0600 arrange to have to your sum: | | | | nounced. |tax is paid in the meantime or Star- ja void obligation, \dition exists which makes it equally | impossible |Widow of Chief | Comstock marched a special polio Brigands’ Attack Is Reported; British Subject Wounded in Fight BY RAY G. MARSHAL L U. P. Staff Correspondent PEKIN, May 22.—An American named Dinsmore, agent for the China Import & Export Lumber Co., was mortally wounded today by Chinese ban near Shahsien and died of wounds after escaping, according to reports to the Amer- ican legation here. The legation is awaiting confirma- tion of the reports before taking action. Dinsmore's. Christian name was unknown here. The report said that brigands at- tacked Dinsmore and a British sub- ject named Mackay, the American escaping after a fight, only to dle at Shahsien. Mackay and three Chinese made prisoners and carried off. TAKE PROPERTY FOR TAXES ‘Plan Sale of ‘Power Company ! Holdings Unless Stopped Iseex CARLINE MONEYS ‘Restraining Order and Law Suit Are Expected Notices of distraint of $2,000,006 |worth of property of the Puget Sound | Power & Light Co. were to be served upon company officials at 1:30 p. m., | Thursday, Sheriff Matt Starwich an- The property will be post. ed, advertising its sale in 18 days, or on June 10, to collect the 1919 street railway tax bill of $652,000, The sale will be held, unless the wich is restrained by court order, ‘The company will continue to retain use and control of the property up to the day of the sale. If the sal is held the property will be sold to the highest bidder at public auction until the full amount of the tax bill is collected. It is believed that the power com- |pany officials are waiting until for- |mally notified of the restraint ae. tion, when they tax bill and sue the city for this amount or obtain a restraining order preventing the sale by the sheriff pending the outcome of a suit against the city to establish the city’s Ha- | bility. F While under Corporation Counsel Kennedy's ruling the city pay the tax because it is a physical con- cannot to pay the tax, ‘There are no funds in the railway treas- ury that can be used to pay the tax. The obligation has been drawing 15 per cent interest, whereas the state law. prohibits the city paying more than 6 per cent interest, One path open to the power com- pany in collecting the tax is have a law passed permitting the city to pay more than 15 per cent interest and then submit the question to the voters as a proposition. Unless this is done councilmen see no path open to them to act in the contro versy. Leschi Succumbs Mrs. Mary Leschi, 85, widow of Chief George Leschi, one of the famous Indian warriors of the Northwest, died at her home at Milton Wednesday, She was born at Tenino and played a prominent part in the early struggles of the Indians against the advancing settlements of the whites, Funeral services will be held at the Buckley-King chapel, Ta: coma, Friday afternoon, at 1:30 o'clock, ; It was Mrs, Leschi's husband who unsuccessfully directed an attack against the town of 'Se- attle in the winter of 1856, from his camp on Lake Washington, ‘Police Nab 27 in Raid on Gambler: ‘Twenty-seven men were arteste: late Wednesday when Lieut, G. detail into a gambling establishmen at 606 King st. Pour of the mo are held as conductors of gamblin ganes, will either pay the

Other pages from this issue: