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The ‘Newspaper With the Biggest Circulation in Washington "WEATHER ght and T winds moderate Temperature Last Hours Maximum, 8% Minimum, 56 Today noon, 64, 4 Clase Mat te Bnlered an Se Was der the Act of Congress Mar Per Year, by Mail, 92.60 SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, JUNE 2, 1924 What Is So Rare—? Not as a June Day, but as a Movie Hero's Wife—Well, Here She Is, in Seattle burned yest folks! ay? Dideha get sun So'd we. got so burned Sur everybody gets out down th CHAIR! “She Is Choice of Associates to Be Mayor When Brown’s Away of the new city electing Mrs. Henry Landes president, will probably be effected Monday afternoon, city councilmen to safety | said. The new councilmen took of- Meanwhile O’Brien had seized a/fice at noon Monday. Their first H ome; hree RESIS Lighted matches, dropped by a sauater before they were rescued neighbors early Sunday morn. The three were asleep in an up-| irs chamber when they were/ Stolen Dodge Car| |acneit of smoke. | Arising, Mrs. Pearson discovered Pra columns of amoke rolling up door, and a guest, BE. 0, O'Brien, a ptolen|*¥akened at the woman's screams) Organtration amd rushed im thru the back door. | council burglar who was searching their ng | awakened by a slight noise down Is Used by T i uh the stairway, Chokingly, she rushed 2 I Spencer fought his way thru amoke]| | d | Head Council! " oes ra | home, ignited the structure and im sigs | the lives of Mrs. E. J. Pear 414 KE. 43nd st. and her two | stairs. Believing {t imaginary, sng |went back to sleep, only to | Sennen a short time later by Pr Thugs—Victim in| to a window and screamed for help. |'Tho burglar had disappeared | Hospital | C. D. Spencer, who lives next ; | yearold berry-grower, was shot and ang fiames and carried the two girls |poesibly fatally wounded noon | | Monday. | Held up by two men tn | Dodge automobile, Louls Bare, Home Brew again scores « clean scoop over its competitors! Twenty-four hours before its nearest rival, Home Brew prints the first authentic photo of the at eSeattleStar [4 * TO HOLD. Heaven Help the Fish Roy Olmstead’s New Is Going 38-Knot Freight Boat fter Them he * bucket and was fighting the flames | meeting will open at 2 p. m. Gibbons-Carpentier battle. The : | Tee crime took plage at May! ica) Phe fire Gepastinent re-|. The. pew .counell will. tusaetiaiss camera caught Gibbons as he \creek. four miles east of Renton. | -ronded to his call and extinguished | ly proceed to elect officers and com- was leading a vicious right at The Dodge car is registered in the \the blaze. |mittee chairmen, Carpentier, which the French- mame of Harry Landaker, 717 Olive} a was taken by the burglar, | While strenuous efforte were be- man cleverly blocked. (Phote by let, Beattie. Police believe it to} mene jing made to upset the slate tenta- Associated Cites Fen) [have been stolen, | uveyy agreed upon by & majority P Fresceh: waded Wire Veagtlation? | Shertte Matt Starwich sent depu- CARS IN CRASH «: the mettibera it 1s believed cer- + Raver: ‘The spladl Gime bw string tes to the scene and is making an tain that Mra, Landes will be select~ od. of small bones, with your head sit attempt to capture the robbers. A last-minute upeet ts not im- | possible. t Rent > ting on one end and you sitting on igs Wee ede oes athe ee (80... Injured ~ When Trolley | ‘The first rott cal! on chalrman- the other. is ae rel ts shot once in the at. | ship will result in @ tle between| see eo jdomen and once in _ chest. He Runs Wild, ‘Smashed | Mra Landes and Carroll, if council What a funny Nettle girl my typist) (ue ieee pothon? ag edged jmembers vote Monday afternoon as are, | ol hen) gan hey said they would Monda’ 4 . ome SAN FRANCI&CO, June 2,—/| they said they would Monday morn. , Vhat ain't got mo brains, almost) Berel resisted) the thugy’ efforts to) Oe Tee wee injured |'ne. Carroll will receive the vote: ardly; | ree Dim ncherding to:word here.) | sos cadky: win’ an Ingleside desen (Of: Counelinen William’ Ht Moore When her type, her don't think ;| Whethtr the thugs obtained any ear, on the municipal railway line,|E- L. Blaine and Mra, Landes Awd when her think, her don't] money was not reported ran wild out of the Twin Peaks tun.| Mra Landes will receive the vote a "n brother, V. Burel, drove 7 * »D ts Pe Barel’s) brother.) V. E nel, raced down the Market street of W. M. Campbell, Bxlph D.! ta it miont hurt she'e nite Beet | up. to the berry farm just os the! ii and struck a Park fide munici. Nichols and Mra Kathryn Miracle What er ain't got, ai 4 Fos v. pice bea ae eae ll He pal car at Market and Dolores ats |SAYS SHE WILL ‘ 3 Ee ¥ oop od mienzathe He went |. Three of the Injured may die, it| BE GLAD TO SERVE e | 4 thinking something amies. 6 went was said at the receiving hospital. Standing as a representative of “These old pants are on thelr last 3 on and found his brother, shot, ly The runaway car wrecked three/the city’s publicly owned utilities | 43.” said the suicide as he hopped! y ing on the ground near the house./automobiles and strewed wreckage and for moral uplift, Mrs, Landes _The farm ts on the Imaquah road.lover the street for two blocks. ney. vedere will be elected chairman on the sec- WHY MEN LEAVE 10ME heaped The restaurants of this «lly are enjor- Councilman Phil Tindall has im patronage as house tieaning’ time-—Jehastown (0) inde-| Many's the ste nographer's heart that will Oe shattered », Japanese Charge | reaty ‘rede = Sptsion the tit tale pendent. eae | thie: picture, which Miss Daisy Henry, The Star's movie Both Hesketh and Carroll are out Well, another week has rotled by, editor, and Frank Jacobs, Star photographer, conspired to| of the city, but Hesketh may re- so that our veterans will only have| get Monday. to wait 20 years, cight months and/ two days before collecting that-new | bonus.—Lynden Tribune. see turn in time to attend the council meeting as he was reported in Van- jcouver Sunday night. Mra, Landes said Monday that she had not sought the office of | chairman and had not lifted a finger to obtain it, but that she would be| | glad to serve if elected. Violated by Americans Mrs. Frances Meighan, and they're devoted to cach other. The two arrived here to make scenea for a new film. St hate 10. 8. Reply: to Protest Will State Salk Seta eae ah Gentlemen’s Agreement Is Ended HE wrath of a press agent will be upon me when he glances} The young lady with Thomas Meighan | | Up to the monrent of dozing to} press, Mayor Brown had not declared a Weekless Week | ove | “I would consider {t an honor| THE SUN STILL SHINES: } [at the above picture. I've left word) WASHINGTON, June 2. ~The | Still more objectionable is racial|to myself, as well as to the women | WE'RE GLAD OF THAT. | |With the phone operator that I am) American government in the nar discrimination, strongly condemned} |of the city who supported me,” Mrs. WE PAID 3 BUCKS | out. Also she hasn't my home at-/ruture will dispatch a courteous re-|in the past by the United States, | Landes raid FOR A STRAW HAT. Grease. Not that TI fear this press|oty to the protest of Japanese) Japanese are not incapable of as- —_— wy gar Ege chs a a | jagent, but—well, I have just decid. | against the new law excluding Jap:|similation in the United States, but | and navigation of 1911 between od United States and Japan NTLEMAN'S AGREEMENT |Amerioans Complete Another BROUGHT TO END | Step in Long Journey Movement on foot at Olympia to | Bank Suspect ct Explains Why feineeeas gin ee ant ansidy by anese immigration from the United|are victims of circumstances that | otect the wild birds of the state. a P 6 7 States. One of the principal points|have prevented thelr assimilation. ‘They wouldn't need so much pro-| of Motorboat Trip |Compaty moves on te alaska es" lof the American response, it is] The exclusion law “ls in. entire| { tection If they'd stay at home nights. = —_——— Rapes ye eke Haha to tg (Understood, will be formally to| disregard of the spirit and circum Ste ae 5 hree times have r ge bring to an end the gentlemen's| stances” of the treaty of commerce! z— oe ong |BOAT $ LO G TO Al D tare of Mrs. Thomas Mélghan, agreement of 1908, by which Japan if ‘ UL GEE GEE, TH OFFIC! VAMP, SEZ: A. chicken is our most usefal | | bird. We eat it before it is born | and after It is dead. | and three times, because of a pr agent, T-have fafled. Mrs. Meighan |im one of the most interesting per- |sonages {n the theatrical game. On the stage, a few years ago, as Fran voluntarily restricted her grants here to a minimum Japan in in her note of protest declared the new law made it im- |possible for her to continue the! immi- | Attorney Claims Witnesses | to Support Alibi Secretary Hughes, in reply to the! z- rapars * ces Ring, she was every bit as pop-| | Tokyo note, will state that in view | cee | D. W. Nadeau, secretary of the | uinr as Tommy {a right now. But eats ta of the gentlemen's! of ine enactment of the immigra-| TOKYO, Japan, June 2—The Photographs are now being trans-| Tacoma Lions’ club, and one of the/ she ts one of the fow actreases who |"STeement which the protest de-| tion measure, tho United States rel aunbteast round the world flyers mitted by telephone. You can send|four Tacomans held as suspects in| hejeve that marringe comes before |Scribed as having been “abruptly! iieves Japan from all further obli- jcompleted another step in their your picture to your Sweetie in New|the $18,000 Anacortes bank robbery. | career, and shortly after she took \oVerthrown by legislation on the! gation under the agreement | journey today York. That ts, if you are not afraid | explained for the first time Monday/tne name of Meighan she gave up |part of the United States.” | Whether the Japanese claim that) ney flew from Kushimoto, that the operator will get the num-|why they had no trophies of their/the stage to become a devoted wife,| CHIEF POINTS IN the exclusion law violates the spirit] where they arrived yesterday trom bers mixed up and send her Bull| big game hunt to show when they] Ask anyone in Hollywood to te}! (JAPANESE NOTE jof the commercial treaty of 1911 Kasimaguara, to Kagoshima, on Montana’s. | returned. ‘The other chief points in the pro: ee who the happiest married cou:| will be refuted in Hughes’ reply !4/the Island of Kiushu, the last stop The men insist they were en route! pie among the movie playe ang |test of Japan are as follows see the sta not finally decided, but they will make in Japan, She—How would you ike to take to Juneau, Alaska, when they put you'll quickly ‘find out It's the | Any sort of international discrim-| department is in a Position to show The three flyers, Lieut. Lowell part fn another wat? |into Anacortes a day or two before! Meighans. Tommy seldom goes on |{nation ta utterly opposed to the| this government made ample reser-|gmith, Leigh Wade and Borie wel He—This is so sudden! the robbery, and that they were on /q location trip without Frances, and |Policy of the “open door,” so ardent-j vations at the time of the nego-|son, left Kushimoto at 1 p. m, and see their way south again when they/at the dances, parties and other af.|!y championed by tho United States, were seen in the neighborhood short |fairs they are always seen together, ly after the Citizens’ bank had been|No scandal has ever crossed their (Turn to Page 7, Column 1) arrived at Kagoshima at 7 p. m. If those talking machines succeed, C ao of our stars are doomed. They é This fast new boat is building on Lake Union and accord- ing to reports it's building for Roy Olmstead. Unkind peo- | ple call Roy the “king of the bootleggers.” | triple-screwed, 38-knot, with three engines and four freight The vessel is holds into which, it is surmised, Olmstead will place the fish he catches. Inset: eee H, SEE the pretty boat! Looks like a destroyer, doesn't it? Who {s building the pretty boat? Roy Olmstead, so-called “king of the bootleggers,” and some friends, ac- | cording to reports in the city, Also | according to the foreman of the Lake Union plant, near the county dock, where the $40,000 speed beauty is getting her finishing touches. Mr. Olmstead himself does not deny the soft impeachment. Well, for what purpose does Mr. Olmsted—or King Roy, if you insist —want the $40,000 boat? Aw, g’wan; quit your kidding! Mr. Olmstead wants it to go fishing with, Gill net fishing, or trolling, perhaps. The boat will make between 80 and 38 knots, running light, and no fish can get away from that speed, A speed of about 25 knots will be made when the boat {s loaded. Loaded with what? Loaded with fish, of course. The new boat will cost nearly $40,- 000. It will be powered with three 00-horsepower motors and, driven by triple screws, will be the © fastest thing on Sound waters. The ship, as yet unnamed, {s 100 feet long and has four cargo hatches, to carry the fish, Two of tho hatches aft; two amidships—so that the bow will be left free for the fishermen. Olmstead used to be a police lieu- tenant. Since then there have been lots of unkind things said about him, in connection with bootlegging, of all things, Can you feature that? However, officers of the Scout, a lo. cal revenue cutter, were greatly in- terested in King Roy's new boat Monday, ‘The Scout makes all of seven knots, And Millard Hartson, lector, couldn't get up. much enthu- siasm over the fact that he may get a couple of 18-knot speedboats late this summer. customs col- Alpha Man Is Killed CH ALIS, June 2,.—-Cornelius Dingus, 27) died Saturday night from boing struck on the hoad by a choker hook which fractured his skull, The reekewottwes—— lle ‘ould never learn English. fobbed: | patch. | ‘ M4 ? Pr | om arty vn an hPa AcE BAL an Iwo Live as Cheaply as One ag = ae only weer bathing | was a new boat, made it necessary |AT THE “MI PHOTO ) suit cen 7 pie write d D anemia for us to abandon the trip when We) ‘To get back to. that press agent, | em ao dad Se a a ene gn {Why ts it that these eratwhile pub. BY G, LUCILE BUTLER, monotonous “everyday” that counts YEDIARY Pemeocouyer Islan’, | Nee * |Iielty fellows never want you to] with the month of June--magic| RECKON THE COST in the final score, tierWe ath Gane 2 ae higes Bau py BADLY feuget ane wees wife? en month of brides and roses—many a} And this, indeed, be true, Whether OLD, OLD QUESTION a ay lone 9 in Me Jacobs, The Star's camera man, 1) paif of fond and eager lovers will set a BE ANSW 8 tor the Chozeuadth (Tait, "reat pleasure, |” nie boat acted badly from the|braved the mob which greetod ‘Tom. sail in thelr trait flower-garlanded | ‘he Salls of the love barque be of har ca nea pk de Inue' morning boat, where did welcome Mt. \start. Wo were obliged to put into|my at the dock this morning, when| parques of matrimony-—high of heart | liken weave—or canvas; the cost prospec une bride Inughing- Md play, cla eetia ne anon Bob and T| Anacortes for repairs—60 miles off|the HH. F. Alexander arrived. —shining of vision—glimpsing the| must be reckened with, Not for “bon|!y¥ @%ked me, the other day, it two toart very hot, and he very wild, bat 1, | OUF cOurse—and it wasn't long after] “Now, Jake,” I sald, “let's got a|ahining shores of prosperity and pro.| voyage” can the hours be spent ite [people could live as cheaply us one. tiaa, stil! wilder, “And preity soon pafte|we left before the boat got to be picture of Mra. Thomas Meighan.” | tected happiness ing a love song to the tinkle of a]o¢ course, on first thought, I sald | having badly again. Wo stopped at| “All right,” said Jake—and he did.| God be with them. And with a|soft guitar; nor can the stress of No!" But that miserable little | Nanaimo and hid more repair work| However, it wasn't an easy task.|clear-eyed lookout “on watch” and al storm not the strain of tide be Ie: |"No!" It Kept popping up in my | jdone. Farther north wo again ran} we tried to avoid the press agent,| steady hand on the tiller, they can|nored. All must be kept ship-shapo| mind, accompanied by @ great big into trouble but that couldn't be done. be reasonably sure of reaching their/ aboard the love ship, lest advetse|question mark—and I» discovered | “We kept on, with only oneengine| “Here's Molghan's cat right over| coveted haven winds drift the craft upon the rooks,|that "No" does not answer the | working, thinking we could get to| here," said he most obligingly when| Day-dreams interwoven with dell:| or a reckless pilot flounder the ud.lquostion with « i h any more accuracy Ketchikan and have the boat re-| he spied Jake's camera, cate sprays of orange blossom,| vonturers in the smothering break |than "Yes" doos, \ paired there. But by this time we} “We want Mrs. Meighan,” replied| daydreams and heartbeats, pulsing | ers of a lee shore, So what {s the answor? 1t tsn't \ jwere all so disheartened with the) Jake, thru a simple cotton gown, And s0,) Once the honeymoon is over, our|"Yeg.” It isn’t "No," With the \ Jee and groaning und am fullure of the boat to work properly) “Can't have her, Mrs, Molghan}adown the years’ tremulous pag-| newlyweds must face the everyday |aid of aome of Seattle's leading citt, Vatimes ‘and parsn'p wine, whick vow 1 | that we decided {t would be best to] objects to having hor picture taken.”| eante of brides camo tronplng. Brides | facts of existence-—and It ts not the}zens, Tam going to tell you, trom shall not keep, but Ik lot my com | postpone the hunting trip, So we| This from the P. A, pale and spirituellobrides romping | Nigh Ughts of extreme joy or the|day to day, Just what T discovered organ Rl Sad ets «of Jamb\l i iened back and came home. Hight here Jake and I blessed the| and rony—but each sweet maid with | droge of bitter sorrow that determine in my quest for (he answer to the Tn cenee and Al the toothoeme, diet “The circumstantial evidence crowd: Before we knew it we wore! an cagor quest In her cyes of browa| the success of ti marriage, Instead |uge-old queation, "Can two tee cy ; A368 | (urn to Page % Column 1) (Turn to Page 7, Column 4) or blue—or grey, it i9 the plain, dull level of thelcheaply ay onet™ ; « + A i - iy, funeral will be held ‘Tuesday at Alpha where Dingus resides, Olmstead, in the uniform of a police | lieutenant, which he used to be. —Photo by Frank Jacobs, Star Staff Photographer 15 MILLION 10. AID SLAYERS Unlimited Wealth Seeks to Free Chicago Boys DARROW IS RETAINED Student’s Murderers Fight Hard for Liberty CHICAGO, June 2.—Millions were pitted against millions today as the fight to save Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb, confessed slayers of i4-year-old Robert Franks, from the gallows, was opened in crim- inal court before Chief Justice John R. Caverty. Clarence Darrow, noted criminal lawyer and orator, retained by the millionaire parents of the two young intellectuals, opened the case for the defense by filing a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, releasing the boys from the custody of police, Darrow indicated the move was prompted to forestall examination of the youths by the state's alien ists, a move expected to be made’ by the state in order to prove the boys sane. Resources of $15,000,000, are said to be backing the defense. Tho first skirmish ended tn a slight victory for the defense, Judge Caverty ordered Leopold and Loeb released from the custody of Chicago police, to be held without ball by the sheriff of Cook county, He ruled that Darrow and his aides could consult, with and. advise the two boys at their own will ‘ Darrow said he was pleased with the decision, and would advise Leo- pold and Loeb at once to refuse to testify at the coroner's inquest, ‘Nathan Leopold, Sr, and Jacob Loeb, uncle of the other boy, ap- peared in court. ‘They took their places In the huge crowd that edged ity way near the rail in the’ court (Lurn to Page 7% Columu 2) Pa ’