The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 23, 1924, Page 1

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rary & Dear Homer: Isn't it Ryan, 4. Baldwin, and lores Howdy, folks! Congress is go ing to reduce the 1923 income tax 23 per cent, but it will make little difference. If the go ment doesn't get the money, landlords will see Vhat's become of as tle ¥ sunset’s gt ou must know, ld too Some men con der that they have done a hard day's work when they ka und put t ball in the side pock perfect man a safety razor without swear. Heroic deeds are never aa good a warn y ¢ when it comes to borrewing me y on them. oes. Sgn on the Hack of o Ford Well, Why Don’t You Say It? | Re about the time of the Year to.use the joke about the chicken crossing the road?} It's @n. old standby, but please don't! pullet.—Trixie. see More people are tide this year than last, and two thirdy of them are men. Bad golf scores are supposed to be at the bot tom of the trouble ee What has become of the oid fashioned man who couldn't feel comfortable at home with his shoes ont? go's FOR THE POISON IVY CLUB Press Agents. “ee Some poets write verses that are #0 mechanical that they have to get them patented instead of copy righted. Who ts it, when I’m sad and blue, Aud friends are cold and kind words few, Who soothes and comforts me—ah, tho? { wish T knew. see Li'l “ Gee says the feminine of | “sheik” is “chic.” * “ee YES, INDEED Editor of Home Brew—Will you take a good joke if I offer it to you?—J. E. Bing. We always take good jokes whether they're offered to us or not, cee We sometimes think that the city Ought to change the name of the Capitol Hifi cars to the Banana Line ‘They always come tu bunches. Another baby . has arrived at} WEATHER i | The seattle Star Batered as Geoond Class Matier May 8, » committing sui we FORECAST || Postoftion at 6 SEATTLE, WASH., SEIZE POWER PLAN Sad Wife Seeks Death Ask New Alien AT DEATH Barriers Here Wanted to Stem ‘Note Asks Hus- WHOLESALE smursiing of aliens into Washington from British band to “B Columbia and other Canadian prov UIE’ |inces wil! result from the new im migration law with | abaolute «x Me as You T'|ciusion ‘of Orientals and” reduced tas for Southern European races. it ts declared by Northwest immigra ” } }. To cope with Because she preferred death to di-/will arise along vorce, Mra Jasper A. Smith, of Agul-/der, Luther Weedin, chief of the mi lar, Colorado, took polson in © room| Misration service for this district has made a request to headquarters | nt the Rivet ppartenants Thuredey | oF asaitional- autemoblies, boats] [night to end a Hife that in her sight and men to patrol the boundry line. had been ruined by a faithless and cruel husband. A great influx of foreigners are - entering the country ieguily all ep Pectin hr anti bon fpand %. In the north the centers will the situation that Washington's bor s lesson to the world on divorce. |4 ‘ ‘They should never be granted to any-|* 4t Detroit, opposite Toronto, and one. T could not face the world alone |!" the sound cities. English, snd earn my living; I have now mans and Chinese are com Canada while Mexicans, Greeks clans and Italiana are com Mexico, LIEN SMUGGLIN INCREASES RAPIDLY Weedin says that ways been more « Sy ing from joclared that Smith had threat ened to kill her, Bad ruined | health and her life and turned hei out to make her own way. To Smith she wrote Bury me as your wife. | Dnt tell the world who I am. Neve | let my poor mother and father know ne trouble I've had. My body tn one but my soul is at your home." | At the city hospital where she was | taken physicians declared that they | electrical equipment and apparatus ad hopes of saving her life, despite i ic ee ithe fact that she had swallowed a BBN eng ier epeab deseo hs domain pad | morning, cou of. live tat ‘o Homeopathic Institution, F irst in the leet Aa 0 jonger. Mrs. Gallaher ts hourly ates srowing weaker and with the ap. State, Is Organized in City it ISTED TO BE SOLD proach of death she is sinking into x coma. Mrs. Gallaher tried suicide |the death of her baby daughter and worry caused by a police raid on her | home Her husband oyer| The first homeopathic hospital in the state of Washington Ww to be ea tablished in the immediate future at last Saturday the northwest corner of Summit ave jis Mi ae her, chauffeur. | and University at., it was announced | They Friday by Dr. C. P. Bryant... Four prominent Seattle physicians, headed Dr. Bryant, have purchased the ommodious three and one-half story | building on this site, which was for. ‘RANCHERS DEFY | merly the St. Theresa Home for / Girts | The hospital is to be known. as the Homeopathic hospital of tle Proceedings for the incorporation of the institution have been initiated by lane Blamed d for Blast in ‘Walter Metzenbaum's house, accord-| the organizers, who, in addition to ing to the papers. This makes 17,1. Battle for Water Rights Dr. Bryant, are Drs, Willard G. Pal ‘Walt ‘thinks, altho a recount may| - mer, ley B. Palmer and J.B. how more | Los ANGELES, Cal, May 23—| Chapman, a pada 1 a chers| The building occupies half a lot oS | witty determined mountain ran e e f WE’VE NEVER HEARD - {47 remote Inyo county have defied | 120 by 120 feet, and was originally A MAN CONFESS \ the city of Los Angeles. built at a cost of approximately “7 in | That was the explanation offered | $50,000. For the past two years {t HE LIKES TO PUT today by officials here who have|has been operated « residential ON EVENING DRESS. ee The favorite literature of Seattle high school boys Is sald to be Cap'n silly’s Whizbang. We're astounded always thought it waa the Police Gazette YE Diary OMay l many people present, inelud- ton, ¥. Lemmon, J. P. Korlowski, ¢ the ibes, and ¥. did eat wieni nnd potato salad on the beach, and by und by did fall into the fire, bat seon reseued, and did sing “Sweet Adeline’ i “Carry Me Back to OW Virginny,” most sweetly, and se to home. A Kansas mer lost a $600 dia Mond in his barnyard. Puget Sound | farmers consider It good form to take their diamonds off at milking time oe | practically complete d investigation of }the dynamiting of the Lon Angeles | aqueduct in the Owens river valley high up in the Sierra Nevada moun. hotel known as The Castle Inn. purchase wan made thru the offices | of Ewing & Clark. TO SPEND $20,000 IN REMODE i | About $20,000 will be spent imme diately 1 remodeling the bullding and equipping it In the most modern | practically ready to ask an Inyo und complete manner It will be Jeounty grand jury to indict approxi.) ond, Convicte manner ae wil be mately 50 mouritalneers. They sald | seetrical cases, and for the treatment they had learned that the men, In'ac:| (0 11.4 sick according to the tenets 0 cordance with a pre-arranged plan, |i omeopathic met at night, rode horseback to the While aqueduct, dynamited it and seattered, traveling by little-known trails back to their homes. ‘This theory is that the dynamiting | tains, ‘The dymnamiting threatened great | damage to the efty'’s water supply. Inveatigutors declared they were the hospital ts | physicians of the city, Dr. Bryant explained, the same courtestes will | 1 skirmish in the long ecorded to other schools of medi. tant. of oa? Angeles against Abe as have been shown in the past [slaht. of 3% he 0 wns the water of | to the Homeopathic physicians of the aetomise Hiei |elty. Work on the conversion of the | Catrey aly ton Angeles owns St building will be commenced at once, But the ranchers have adopted an| and jt is expected to have the how | New Ships, Cars The |} school of medicine. | to be oper-| |ated primarily for the homeopathic | and Equipment Immigrant Flood of aliens over the Washington bor der but that numebr increased by leaps and bounds since otas of many of the Europ. nations have been filled. Facilities for checking this {1 legal entrance are inadequate, Wee: din declares. He tucks men and equipment to establish an ocfficier border patrol and to maintain s-rict port of entry watch At the present time there bill before congress which w propriate $1,200,000 additional for border patrol work. This was in jtrOduced to ‘cope with the situation which wan foreseen thru the passage of & more strict immigration meas ure MOST OF TROURL BEEN WITH CHI While this money will be ox pended along the entire Canadian amd Mexican borders, it is expected that part of it will come for sound protection. Woedin hopes that some will be used to provide the extra equipment and men he has asked for} th district. Most of the recent immigration the Northwest has beon (Turn to Page 7, Column 4) ina 4 ap ‘ouble in New $70,000 Hospital rtlve. The present hospital is argely the renylt of the unceasing | Interest*and activity of Dr. Bryant | thruout thia period FLYERS TO GET WEEK'S REST American World Planes Will Be Thoroly Overhauled BY FRANK HED( (United Preas Staff TOKYO, May 23.—With emotions, the American mingled round-the. world flyers learned today that over- hauling of their planes may fores them to remain a week at K gaura naval base. ml- Aitho they fre eager to be on the |world flight, the mild climate of |Japan furnishes welcome respite |from the rigors of the North as Lieut, Lowell smith, of the flight, put It, “Ww |hell of a time, | Japan's warm welcome to the |Americans has been tempered onty | slightly by the il! feeling towards the | United States aroused by the immi | lon controversy. Ono newspa And, commander o had a r, for instanes, declares: “The Japanese are heartily wel coming the flyers, despite the ex clusion act of congre: | ACCOMPLISHMENT | UNPRECEDENTED The sift : “We do not hest- tate to welcome warmly this unprece |dented accomplishment, despite the immigration crisis, and are confident that the remainder of the flight will . fh ei pital in operation by July be a success," Hara J Polishing the insides hv acayy sae you get it.” The idou of establishing a homeop:| In view of the pousibility that the of apaghetti, j believed that a demand for |athi¢ hospital in Seattle was first) flyers may remain hore a week, the “ee ment in Inyo county—-which |broached by Dr. Bryant 16 year®/entertainment program is being re Under the shady mango tree. a small county on the crest and|ago. Since that time a number of| vised A Fi maiden peers; bgteay slopes of the Sierras, with only |efforts have been made to accom:| Prince Kunl, president of the Im Ble wedra an anklet on one Umb,) "OO tea of poople—-would be met|plish thi purpose, but proved (Lun to Page 6, Colunn 5) & ind: circles tn her cars with little more than @ laugh by the z Seomeen - = — eh gt rs oan iatyaipeunld | ) . ; : Brahe ee, | ice |.Bee’s Sting Kills Girl They leave the earrings off. |May End Strike : 4 WV/ALLA WALLA, M 3, —A, «ite | Ruhr Regién| ALLA y, ay 2¢ n insect sting, presum- Old Silas Grump, the sage of | in Ruhr eg) | ably that of a bee, was fatal to Mildred Weber, 14, Pumpkin Hollow, has just cut hin| BSSEN, May 23-Hope of belle The girl was rushed to a doctor's office, but died in 20 third set of teeth, but the prevailing; the mine strike and lockout of 600 Cont of steak makes them a hollow mockery ad. 8 ‘ minutes, }090 workers In the Kuhr was held her very ill. out today ay new negotiations start- ed here, Her father said bee stings had always made FRIDAY, Correspondent) | The Newspaper ‘With the Biggest Circulation in Washington under the Act of Co MAY: ete March &, 151%, Per Year, by Mail, & 3, 1924 Young Walter’ SHERIFF TO SELL OFFICES # $2,000,000 Worth of | Equipment Is. Taken for Sale in | Tax Suit Here BY JOHN VY SLSON | More than $2,000,000 of ersonal property _belongin the “Puget Sound Power Light Co. was seized by Sher- jiff Matt Starwich Friday. t Tt will be sold at a sheriff’ jsale June 10 from the front \door of the county-city build- \ing, commencing at 10 a, m., unless $655,956 in 1919 street railway taxes are paid before that date. |. Simultaneously with serving of A. W. Leonard, president, and other power company officials. with | |tha notices of the selzuré, sherift's depution posted notices, of sherift's nalo on the property distrained | This includes more than 60 auto obiles, 12 substations of the com | ny 4d in ttle, all of the locat entral office of the company, Seventh ave. and Olive st, hat ‘was| . How's this? that equipment would be so! id on the date| the summer months. | named County officials are disregarding | S¢mmer. He an application for a restraining or. | has cured him. der filed by the company Thursday HEN Walter Hassenpflug’s in federal district court. This applt- | mother ;dreases *hint tip’ to go cation comes up for argument June| down town, she merely changes his 11, when the county must show | swimimng sult use why Starwich and County! at 1 . easurer W. W, Shields should not | TD#t’s all Walter wears during th Ibe restrained from the male and seiz. (Summer. And he likes it. lave zi This is the third summer that the ‘ boy’s entire wardrobe has consisted | COMPANY CLAIMS ” y ‘AX IS FRAUDULENT of swimming suits, When he was {10 months old he was sick, and his The suit was filed by the Old Col-|{* Months Oe “fresh air” ony Trust company, of Boston, true on the tee for the holders of $15,000,000 in | ““'® bonds issued May 2 1921, by tho| Walter ts 2 years and 9 months old Puget Sound company. ‘Tho trus.{20W, and one would never imagine tee alleged the seizure should be | tht he had ever seen a sick day. enjoined on the grounds that. the |The sun's rays have tanned His shoul- city and county have combined in | 2m arms and face and has brought |a ruddy, healthy color to his cheeks. “fraudulently” collecting taxes from two-year-old Walter Hassenpflug asked posted with the sale notices, stating ‘rank Jacobs, Star camera man, Thursday, when. the latter all of the desks and office | posed him for a picture showing his mode of attire during Walter wears a swimming suit all He was once a sick baby, but Puget Sound sun —Photo by Frank Jacobs, Star Staff Photographer His New Spring Suit s Mother Puget Sound Sun Have a ( hance _| selieves in Letting | | | | foto er recut OSES AN TCR MG ST AE TS ST | |summer time, he wears his swim- ming suit He fs a familiar figure in his neigh- borhood, trudging about dressed as | if he were on his way for a swim.| In the city the little fellow attracts no.end of attention as he walks hap- pily along thie streets: Waiter likes his mode of dress. Yep," he said, when asked'if he preferred the swimming attire, { Walter's mother, Mrs. C. H. Has-! senpflug, 1511 E. Columbia st. says her boy will keep on wearing swim. ming suits for « few more years at least “More mothers should try the fresh air cure with their children,” she says, ‘They don't know how Yo matter w 0 sood Puget sound sun is for them’? | |the property of the bondholders In.| N° Matter where he goes in the | good Pug Istead of from the street railway 1 | system: | | Prosecuting Attorney | Douglas, and his chief juty, Howard A. Hanson, pose the injunction petition Corporation Counsel T. J. 1. nedy on Friday was in with Ha m concerning Kennedy refused to state whether | or not he would join forces with | {Douglas in opposing, but decla that, for his own information, he | wished to know all details of the | conference, VOLCANO BLAST Malcolm | civil dep. | will op. Ken. | conference | the suit, Churches’ John M. ian clergyman, charged the officers of the Washington Council of Re- Rev Lyle, a Presbyter- ligious Education with un-American iS NEAR M tactics Friday as tho result of a telegram sent to President Calvin | Coolidge denouncing the Religious | Educational Workers’ Union for Temblor Presages Another | upnoiaing the Japanese exclusion bill. Severe Upheaval, Belief | Lyle is secretary of the Union, an ‘organization that for the past year HILO, T. H,, May 23.—The vol-| and a half has been fostering pro- cano of Kilauea, which resumed! gressive religious and educational activities yesterday after 26 hours! measures In Seattle, of quiet, gave indications today of| ‘The another mojor eruption approach-| council was signed by the Rey, ing. J, H. Matthews and Rey. H, I. The ground was shaken by earth-| Chatterton. It advised Prosident quake and there were rumblings! Coolidge to disregard the telegram jfrom within the voleano which! of the Union, saying that the Union twlegram of the Washington caused observers to declare the situ-} was an unofficial and unorganized ation “exceedingly serious.” holy and did not represent any of Yesterday's explosions hurted|the ministers of Seattle, boulders 1,000 feet into the air, The Educational Union's telegram Religious Union Hits Pro-Jap Plea |Telegram to Coolidge, Asking Veto of! Exclusion Bill, Protested | last week urged the sign the exclusion act, “The Religious Educational Work- ers’ Union has been organized for a year und @ half, and has been ad- dressed by some of the leading men | of our state,” Mr. Lyle sald, “Min- isters, federal judges and business men have addressed us, We meot every Week. It is peculiarly un- American for another organization | | such the * Counell ot Religious | Education to diseredit us merely de-| cause they held different views than we do. . | “Our organization makes no effort | to force them to aceept our opinions and we resent this unwarranted at-/ tuck upon us, made to the highest! officer of our nation by the church counell Mr, Lyle sald that the action of | the council will come before the next meeting of the Union for dis- cussion and action to controvert ity oftect. president to A * ieee hii sorcerers teenager testi [HOME J { TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE, _ Witnesses Declare ‘ave. and Nickerson st., in | was giving him a ride. | POLICEMA) TRIPLE WRECK PROBED Officer Drinking Before Smash-up Thursday Night Chief of Police W. B, Sey- eryns and Inspector Joe T. Mason Friday launched a sweeping investigation into the triple smashup at Dexter which an automobile driven by Patrolman John Wuchterl | was involved, Thursday night. Charges have been made by participants in the crash that Wuchterl and a enger in jhis machine, M. E. Wood, |8007 Aurora ave., had been | drinking. Wuchterl was |Friday afternoon, to be suspended Chief Severyns jannounced at noony,. ‘The order wage prepared signed: Wuchterl declared that he was driving south on Dexter ave. about 1145 p.m. He had picked up Wood ® stranger to him, downtown, and The street. is very Narrow and two cars were coming in the opposite direction, SAYS BRAKES SMASHED The foremost auto, driven by Mrs. W. A. Harris, 4719 Thackeray place, struck his machine, and another car, just behind, Mrs. Harris’, driven by Robert Painter of Black Diamond, smashed into the two of them, The policeman’s car kept on going and stopped quite a distance away. Wuchterl said his brakes wert broken in the smash. Painter and Mrs. Harris and an- other man, J. G ‘on, 6311 Phin- ney ave., who saw the smash, de- but had not yet been clared that one of the men in the | | police auto came back and showed 1 badge and posed as an officer. Wood) denied that he was the man when’ questioned by Lieut, Ralph Olm-) stead, and Wuchterl also denied that’ he had flashed a badge. BOTH OFFICERS DENY DRINKING Both men denied they had been drinking. Wuehterl Friday declared that Wood had taken Wuchter!’s badge which he carried in his coat pocket, and had used it to impersonate a policeman. Wuchter! did not remem. ber just exactly what had trans. pired. Lila Haynes, 7038 14th ave. N. W., who was a passenger in Painter's ma- ine, declared in a statement made ter the accident that she had smelled the liquor on the breath of both Wood and Wughterl, Chief Severyns and Inspector Ma- son said the case was a difficult one to solve, as so many conflicting stories were told by the various. parties. No action has been taken as yet against Wuchterl, who is a pas trolman on duty at Densmore pre- cinet. WALSH SUBMITS CASH BONUS WASHINGTON, May 23.—A joption bonus bill was introduced in: jthe senate today by Senator David! | Walsh, Massachusetts, democrat, Walsh declared he would press for: its adoption to replace the ae insurance plan law. The bill has the same provisions! as the 20-year endowment insurance: bill already adopted and, in additiong the cash option. OWN YOUR OWN HOME Now is the time to buy Real Estate in Seattle. Bargains are advertised daily. Here are two | comfy homes. $3,850. On paved modern 5+ room bungalow; lot $0x100 combination living and din: ing room across entire front of house; fireplace; cabinet kitchen; ‘breakfast ‘nook. bedrooms, bath conerete laundry trays; garage; terms, “b-room cottage, street, W, 86th, popular distric Tard Wiagh 3 The Want Ads about these homes, on paved 2 bedrooms; near Bal-

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