The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 22, 1918, Page 1

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Full Leased Wire of the United Press Association, Complete Service of the Newspaper Enterprise Association, THE — ts VOLUME 21. CIRCULATION SEAT’ TL FE, WASH., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER OF ANY PAPER IN THE PACI at the Postoffive at Seattle, Wa sn, under the Act 22, 1918. FIC NORTHWE of Con, ome March 4, |/EX-KAISER REPORTED ILL WITH “FLU” AAA AAA AAR IRARAPADARAPtrtnntc PPR PPD PPP PPP PPP APPA PPP PPP PPP PPA The Seattle Sta GREATEST DAILY Entered as Bocdnd Class Matter May %, 18) NIGHT EDITION TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE Per Year, by Mall, $5.00 to $9.00 Weather F orecast: a ie brink an Saturday, easterly winds. STAMPEDE! DISPATCH FROM LOWELL MELLETT Friends Intimate He Wil (By United Press Leased Wire, Direct to The Star) Launch Attack on vow ~ —— sae i“ a ? | ABOARD THE U. 8.8. AR | tho many of the officers afd men Bolshevism KANSAS, Nov. Oy. mj |averred. they were sorry the finish German warships lie In| came fn such fashion | ee rca in the Firth of | “The teclings ot tne Americans ap MAKE MANY SPEECHES| | Forth. parently were chiefly confined to the ‘They are surrounded by more most intense curiosity, which in ‘fhan 200 allied battle craft, creased with a leap at & o'clock, | ( ° ‘ “which are prepared to guard (when the battle flags were hoisted } President Once , ‘ghem until peace is signed. atop the graceful “basket masta” of |} S E 5 ‘Geman officers command and the American ships, preparatory to |) aw ngland on { seamen man the vessels, reception of the surrendering fleet. |) Are minus ammunition and a an ee } Bicycle Journey } @herwise shorn of power i is Happened } WASHINGTON, Ma 2 } it #15. this. morning. German| This curiosity gradually subsided }{ When President Wilson wer faval officials, carrying out the dis jas the long line » eraft)( England this year and will be ac } fateful orders of the German peo- | *teamed monotonously 4 noth-|} corded great homage, he may re- } pl delivered thix powerful fleet to ing happened—secret hopes that |) t upon his last viait there, in ( $e alles, who are represented | S0mething might happen had been |) 1908, when he toured the coun- { iy by the British navy. Five | eMtertained by many d try on a bicycle, unne { dreadnought» and three} King George, reviewing the grand |} unacclaimed. 5 warships assisted in the cer Meet y visited the New/) At that time he pedaled over } York. He expressed to Admiral Rod. |) the country roads of Northern } TAs seen from the crow’s-nest of the "an the hope pee the working ar} nd and Jand, probably { ‘spectacle was not dra-|™Ngements ot ne «British and|) ver a thought of the da: ogg gheeng appeared off the American navies could be continued |} that will be hia when he en bow, fe direct line of the rays of |" #0me manner after the war, pos-|{ next mont ison fe British obseravtion bal-|Sbly thru some American ship be-|) The president also hax visited towed by the British cruiser Car. | ing attached to the British fleet, and|{ France and other European coun- @ff, which went yesterday to escort ee — a - |) tries, ns revealed today, in conne: } the Germaits to the rendezvous. Hcion with the armistice negotiations, | See ‘A few seconds later, thru the haze gun's path, appeared a low, marines thmn the whieh gradually took | fide hese wank, } a battle cruiser, p Seydlitz, Single File passed out of the path indistinct. tho) Another a Molttk#® Then came the | the Derfflinger and the a Der Tann, in single file ag at the e Germans found between B six miles apart. i long. ie was only slightly less. allied fleet was divided in’ ons, according Hee se RS ‘i them to the Firth of Forth. U. & Warships in Line the * "in counter marching, broug he Arkansas broadside to the Hii Geburg, ber particular charge, ix miles distant While the Arkansas was turnin, the Priederich der the tattlesbip squadron, came She was followed by the pa al and Koenig th Markgraf and %@ Destroyers Trail Was the Karlaruhe, ulsers. Somewhere, hidden 5 atroyers, es |(United Press wei ise British “ae saeairs “| WITH THE | Omsk government, for they believe Queen Elizabeth, Admiral] VANCING TOWARD THE | he in seeking to bring order in Rus. 7. flagship, was seen dashing | Nov. 21.—(Night.—The Aevecienn |e to dodge Bolsheviam, to have MEGA hah veturnine army passed thru the city of Lux-| Russia do her own policing and thus Mewltanecus with the surrender | emburg, capital of the grand duchy | escape long aap wrt or increased | @ the German fleet, Admiral Beatty | of that name, this afternoon allied-American policing. If he can |” Great crowds of civilians, hailing | *ucceed in getting stability, Russian “The German flag must be hauted| the Americans as deliverers, escort: | *uthorities hold that nation will seek St 357 p. m. and must not be| ed the doughboys thru the streets, | seat at t tab again, without permission.” | Which were guily decked with allied| | Prince Lyoff is congulting with 4 . flags, the American embiem p President Wilson and Secretary Lan Thanks to God inating sing. ussia wants economic aid sent messages to the @ thanksgiving be held at 9 p. 1 @ every ship, offering homage the | from her two funnels. all looked altke to the lay:| distance, but the ensigns ‘y-nest promptly identified themselves two lines of war Fach line was The line of German to the ship's) “As the German corresponding 8 came alongside, the allied ips countermarched and escort: | @ther with a British dreadnought, Grosse, leading Kaiser, Albert. the Bayern, the Grosser | the leading After the ceremony of surrender, allied ° BELGIANS PASS | Meet, recommending that a service | STAND GUARD OVER LEAD /YANQUISHED FLEET, | the In the trumpets | ital, Queen Withelmina, our ships—nicknamed by the | awaiting whatever fate “Death or Glory Squad- ‘ht in in to | that Germany had lost 80 more sub | KING ALBERT IN BRUSSELS iF capital today. Jie queen and thelr | ¢, children were present, was enacted this soulstirring elimax to history's most stupendous drama, which reads like the scenario of a|'* ©xpected to be sounded In a speech Albert fs the hero and| % the people of thin country before it may be covered tn tiles to, steal hie kingdom anit be his message to congress, Outlining what he believes to be the funda- Today, the bands are playing and|@entals of this nation’s roadjust classic play the former kaiser come master of the world, | fagged Frussels. The king has reconquered his cap | the president's forthcoming trip, the diplomats of the world are working hiding behind the skirts of a woman | feverishly to compile their data for the peace conference and determine the allies|upon the main propositions which that le may be resumed and employ- while the villain is a fugitive, will deal out to him. And while Wilhelm's empire crum- | t to their bosom. YANKS IN CITY | OF LUXEMBURG BY WEBB MILLE ON TO BY ROBERT J. BENDER (United Press Correspondent) WASHINGTON, Nov, 22.— That President Wilson will par- ticipate actively in the campaign against Bolsheviem white in Eu- rope was the intimation of his friends here today. ertain Nov, 22—~King AL triumphant, entered fig} UM forttr the atmr of the amocia governments to uphald the cause peoples and support law and vrint autumn sunshine | rime ite no: (pies 4 The keynote of his proposed effor he sail. Or, the villain, who be. | Ment work. Meantime, blaring in joy-mad, behind ‘the glamour of Holtand— must be cleared away promptly, that men may suspicion to toil and profit Russia Asks Place ed at the peace conference as stable nation. Admiral Kolchak’s seizure ated policing Another phase of peace specul tion here among 4i the Rhinelands. FIGHT | 7 He is expected to make speeches not only in France, but certainly in Ttaty, and probably fn Engiand, set der, that the world may rupidly re. rt ot in-| bles, the Belgians are marching on| ment made available for the millions to | Germany. British cavalry is canter-} who have been under arms or at ing past Waterloo taward Cologne;| war work for years, |the Americans are approaching the| It is pointed out that danger g,| Rhine across Luxemburg, and the| comes with idleness, and for that French are hugging Alsace-Lorraine/ reason diplomats are anxious to have the principal questions of the peace conference disposed of rapidly turn from guns and Russia is striving to be represent al land is opposed to increased associ ylomats concerns lomats declare God for vietory Prussia ia willing to sacrifice this The pent-up feclings of the fleet |territory to avoid some of the in Were loosened when Beatty's flag |demnity Germany is destined to Daseed back thru the lines, men - . . N mm give. Am seen here, this sacrifice 2 21.—(Nigh ne ities wily cheering A}.2°vem oo 2 ight)}—The| vould leave her gold free for de | Belgian army has passed Louvain, | : : Brench cruiser ing the Queen ae eteri deatroved | velopment purposen, and later the Bimbeth was also received with | he city which wa / militarists might revive the old war British an hers, while French, im sailors the “Marseitiaine.” Admiral Ro squadron, was aboard the 2 TWO-THIRDS OF | 'Reaucton of Arms / The other American a ights, in addition to the INDON, Premier Arkansas, were the Florida, the | | hee Georg: ig Chancellor Bonar Me aadlthe wyoming. Law have issued a manifesto on the » Wyoming to ° Famous Briti«h veane tinted in | coming elections, voring as th flett Were the battle cruisers| LONDON, Nov. 22.-Two-thirds of | |chief points of a lasting peace , Tiger and Princes val, all um has beén reoccupied by the| Reduction of armaments, promo- of the Jut attle. Their At no point are the| tion of a league of nations, land for | oye soldiers, colonial preference (in WES crows were pr: Participants in y the ha today’s ever ALL CLASSES That's why it haw ¢ Mrgest circulation of any Newspaper in th North West, Take a Want Ad for what alle you PHONE MAIN 600 You Can Have It Charged joined in singing nan, cormmanding th ae” ad was office p nt, | the by the Germans nnounced by tonight. allies now more than 100 miles from Rhine. President Sends | Congratulations to King Albert, arly in the war, it , »y making the martyr-like a the Belgian war |sPirit by making the 0 peal of “lost provinces.” ‘Lloyd George for | trade), reforms in the house of lords, | and renewed efforts question sex equality the Trish \Italy Parliament: to | Seems Pleased With His Job | Here’e.the newest snapshot of Ebert, who scems to be the “man of ae en: He ts evidently very well pleased with things in WORKER: RALLY SANUFRANCISCO, Nov. 22--0n. jon workers from widely scattered points are rallying to the supptirt of Thomas J. Mooney, according (6: of. ficials of, the International Workers’ Defense jeague, which annougeed today reoript of telegrams from’ New York afd Birmingham, Ala Strikes are promined if Moonty ds not allowed a new trial on @ mufer indictment The Waterproof ers’ Union of New York, represent ing 15,000 women workers, wired a | surance of “vigorous support forthe Garment Wark: Diplomats here see this angle in| sacred rights of liberty of the| ‘The Central Labor Council of Bir mingham, Southern center of the steel industry, declared, “We are strong for democracy and are With Alameda county on record for De- cember strike 100 per cent } PORTLAND, Noy. 2 Street Ratflwa, Moulders —The As Employes union have sociated and the GIRL KILLED IN AUTO ACCIDENT Killed when a big automobile over turned while rounding Death Curve, on the Tacoma-Seattle highway, near Orillia early Friday, the body young woman is awaiting identifica | tion today in the morgue at Kent sheriffs have set out Pedelty, Seward hotel, they believe, was driv ing the car, Pedelty, who was in declared at Kent that he did name of the dead girl Iron of a Deputy to Bert who, arrest Seattle, jured, not know the but believed her last name was Law | rence } Police here are trying to locate the other two passengers—a man pote Durston and a woman named | Marence-—who received emergen Jtreatment for cuts and bruises at Kent hospital, and promptly depart ed for Seattle. They refused to give information there that would lead to identification of the dead woman to Honor Wilson Big Bags of Gold (| WASHINGTON n ROME, Nov At the opening {| gratulations upon King Alt a rt| ee partagient today, it was ‘ds Sent to Holland } | turn to Brussels were sent by Presi-| eijed that practically the entire ) | dent Wilson toe as follows chamber would go to Paris to t for Hohenzollern { “At the mome yu reenter Brus:| president Wilson upon his arrival, | AMSTERDAM, Nov 22.—Two | gels at the head of your victorious an | hundred bags of gold and silver Ger (larmy, may I not express the gr PORTLAND, Ore., Nov. 22.—Be|man coins, each weighing 100 S|joy that it gives to me 1 the| cause of a difference over the df-| pounds, have arrived in Holland for {| American people to hail your return | vision of the receipts, the Mare In-| the former kaiser, it was reported }|to your capital, marking your final| land Marine-Multnomah athletic club today. The bags were brought \ | triumph im thi war, which has cout] football game, scheduled for Satur- | across the frontier in sealed wagons | your nation so much suffering, but|day here, has been canc The |They are believed to have been de tT which it will arise in new} marines will play a team from the| posited in a small bank in southern ~~ 1g strength to a higher destiny, Vancouver barracks, ‘ Holland. OF COUNTRY ‘OR MOONEY voted in favor of striking in an of fort to gain a new tal for Thomas J, Mooney. Members of the Central | Labor council are con@idering taking similar action, They will decide the issue at their meeting next Thurs day Four More Unions Back Mooney Strike | | The action of the Central Labor Council in appealing to the local un lions to unite in a general strike | the purpose of saving Tom Mooney's | |life, is meeting with tnMorsement of all Seattle organizations. Without a single dissenting vote, each union that held:its meeting Thureday evening, ineluding the Teamsters, Milk Wagon Drivers, and Laundry Workers’ or. ganizations, resolved to ‘call a strike December 9, if Gov, Stephens, of does not grant Mooney a & pardon by that da Lathers, on California, new trial or 'ADAMS GUILTY, JURY DECIDES Without @ twitch of a muscle or 4 flicker of emotfon, Alvin Adams, the 19-year-old soldier boy, charged with murder in the first degree in killing of M. R taxi-driver, near Red- connection with the | I | aymer, a mond, on Jur received the jury's verdict of “Guilty,” in Judge Mitchell liam's court, Friday morning. The vordict may mean a life sen- tence in the Walla Walla peniten tary, The sentence will be pro nounced early next week | Attorney H. 1. Butler, for the de fense, while freely admitting that Raymer was murdered by the ac cused, made a hard fight to save him from the full penalty of his crime by endeavoring to show that Adams was temporarily insane when the act was committed The jury did not sustain this the ory, and Judge Gilliam, in announc the verdict, said, “I do not see |how the Jury could have arrived at other decision.” he went to the jury at 3 p. m, Thursday Start Campaign to Oust Red Flag NEW YORK, Nov. 22.—~Approving the action of Mayor Hylan in pro. hibiting the display of the red flag in public meetings, the American ety announced Defeonve todey that it is taking steps to bring about eimilar action thruout the country. FINN TOWN “TS STRUCK BY SHELLS Warships Flying Red Flag of Revolutionists Make Attack BATTLE THREE HOURS | | “United Press Leased Wire | Direct to The Star } hae 8 COPENHAGEN, Nov. 22 —Three Russian » | By warships jearrying the Red flag of the {Kronstadt revolutionists, vio- lently bombarded Vitikalla, |Finland, for three hours on Wednesday. MEAT RATIONS DUE GERMANS AMSTERDAM, Nov. 22.—The Ber lin Tageblatt says next week will be the last meatless week, and that the bread ration will be raised to five pounds a week The above dispatch indicates that | the Germans will have to exercise un- usual ingenuity to starve themnelves to death. PUT TRAINING UP TOWILSO WASHINGTON, Noy. 22.—That} the war department will keep hands off in the matter of universal mili tary training unless asked specif jeally for ite views, was the opinion exprensed here today | Indications are that the president directly or thru Secretary Baker must sponsor the idea, else congress will have to ask the war department for its suggestions. It was said that indications; now are that the mili- tary men themselves would not at-| tempt to urge such training untens | asked to do 0 by the president, the | secretary of war or congress. PORTLAND LABOR ‘AFTER BURLESON PORTLAND, Nov. 22.—The Cen- | tral Labor council is on record today | against Postmaster General Burle- json, having passed a resolution ask ing the president to remove Burle json because of alleged unfair treat ment of telephone employes at St. Paul and Minneapolis LA FOLLETTE TO WASHINGTON, Nov. 22.—The senate privileges and election com mittee today voted to recommend | that no further action be taken on jthe resolution for investigation of the eh made by Senator Robert ptte, of Wisconsin, in St. Paul last wepeenh r. \Plane F light to Washington Held Back by Weather SANTA BARBARA, Cal, Novy, 22. Reports of unfavo le weather conditions over the Mississippi val today continu to hold up the ns of Allan and Malcolm Long ad, of Santa Barbara, for the Santa Barbaru-to-Washington flight of thelr big airplane. The flight, the builders declared, will start just as soon as their re: ports show conditions favorable. The schedule calls for the first stop at} Deming, N. M., and but » more | stop is planned between re and Washington th | Senate Committee Adopts Tax Report WASHINGTON Nov The senate fina committee today | idopted the plan submitted by Sen Simmons, for reduction of the bill to $6,000,000,000 ator | revenue | 1919, | The committee however, on. that | mons’ plan relating |Governor to Speak | at Democrat Club | | Governor Ernest Lister will ad- for | took no Ag portion of © taxes for 1920 |dreas the noon meeting of the King | County Dem ‘atic club in the Good | Rats cafeteria, 818 Second urday noon. Allen A, Bartow, U brarian of the Pross club, will recite | 1 newly-composed poem, “Wilson, | the Man of the Hour Silence of © Teutons Is Suspicious BY J. W. T. MASON | (United Press War Expert) | NEW YORK, Nov, 22.--The failure RUSH IS ST of the German revolutionists to en Hy Fy ase in exuberant calebrations ot | Feuton Soldiers Killed on their newly won popular rights con Train Tops in Race Unues its suspicious manifestations of sullen resentfulness against the Thru Tunnels democratic nations of the world. —— The Germans are not preparing to “TQ SEE REVOLUTION” enter the peace conference as the representatives of a nation that has been redeemed the blight of the Hohenzollern rule. On the contrary, Germany is fol lowing a course of domestic inaction that will inevitably lead to her future on among free nations, unless ang rtakes the present atti tude of the German people Gruesome Silence ionic By United Press Leased Wire Direct to The Btar THE HAGUE, Nov. 22.—Ger- man troops are stampeding from the battle fronts toward Berlin in order to “see the revolution,” ac- cording to German newspapers received here today. from medieval ov Germany is a defeated nation, but if the democrat leaven had worked The soldiers are seizing rail- its way thru the mass, the people way trains. which had been in | would not show, even in defeat, this! tended to convey troops to differ- kruesome silence In the presence of ent parts of the empire, and are jhuman Uberties that never before forcing the engineers to take have been theirs. them to the German capital. The Germans exhibit evidence of The roofs, platforms and brake already beginning to plot for revenge, rods are loaded with returning sol- Their retirement from France and | diers, many of whom are suffocated and brushed from the roofs when the trains pass thru tunnels. Troops have been stationed outside Rerlin for the purpose of disarming that #ome tle, stronger than the nat-| the soldiers and diverting them from ural antipathy shown democracy and! the capital to their home cities and reaction, is holding together in these | towns. revolutionary days German ultra| radicals and extreme conservatives. |Panic on Berlin Desire for Revenge | ‘This tie ts the desire of all Ger-| Stock Exchange mans for revenge. That ix the domi) COPENHAG: Noy. 22.—Usur- Nant trait in the German character.| pation of power by extremists in Te Nemaie sey ten Bia. Yanagi 0 several German coast towns has taken possession of | caused the greatest panic on the aivencay ‘What the future German | Rerlin bourse im-three years. A Ber- | democracy will be like the world has |lin dispatch gays that representa- lyet to know. tives of German free states have It is certain {¢ will be different in| been invited to @ conference with many respects from American democ- | Chancellor Ebert on Monday to ar- racy. It probably will gravitate to- range co-operation of federal and lo- ward a natural intimacy with the /cal administration. more Ortentally tinged democracy of Russia Count Wilhelm Ill With the “F lu”? Before America entered the war, it was a favorite threat by Germans in Berlin ¢ if the United States AMSTERDAM, Nov. 22—Count brought about Germany's defeat, the | wittam Honensollern is understood German people would turn to the jto be {i with influenza. East and make themselves the lead: |” pocin newspa estate take: ers of @ future alliance with Russia! wwing to the revolutionary agitation ag hs ee r t pe |i Holland, he may return to Pots- See TOC See dam. At Amerongen, however, it is well looked to at the peace confer- | saiq the former kaiser will remain jonce. It can be blocked only by | di Tese| |intimate relations being permanently |'" “elland for the present. hed the WV demnoc- . . a |Ex-Kaiser Keeps in Censorship on mer kaiser is believed constantly in « |communication with Germany. It News to America |is reported that a wireless station PARIS, Nov. 22.—-French censor | has been erected on top of Count ship of all matter intended for Amer. | Von Bentinck’s castle and that Ger- jea is henceforth abolished, the | man airplanes frequently fly over United Press was told by the French | the estate, dropping messages. authorities today. final on Belgium has been marked by cruelties, furtively perpetrated the inhabitants It is Imporsible to overlook the fact oe cats nr en earee DUTCH WORRY ed in American newspaper circles Te, garding the passage of peace con- { ference dispatches, owing to the fact / that the French and British censor- | ship remained in force after the | American censorship was abolished. Cat and Dog Save Two Local. Homes Two burglars were scared away| ‘The Telegraaf and some other from their “jobs” Thursday night—| journals would expel him. Others one by a dog and the other by 4! take a more moderate view, at the cat. same time admitting that it might ‘The first tried to enter the home bring Holland into difficulty. of B. C. Abney, 3910 Garfield st. E..| The Nieuws Can Den Tag, a very by means of a ladder, but was| moderate paper, publishes an article chased away by Garfield's dog. jon the subject which shows the un- The other burglar was climbing | easiness prevailing in various Dutch thru a lower window at the home | sections about the presence of the OVER WILHELM LONDON, Nov. 22.—(British Ad- miralty Wireless.}—Some of the Dutch newspapers have been dealing }of late with the presence of the |former kaiser and crown prince in the Netherlands, of M. F. Moe, 1941 Fifth ave. . | Hohenzollerns, when the family cat, aroused LS the stealthy movements of the burst, dashed suddeniy, in alarm French Demanding from her sleeping place beneath the) K aiser Expulsion kitehen sink and in doing so upset) From Netherlands a small table with a crash. In the | aaerpmecmees the busgier. escaped. PARIS, Nov. 2 Allied action | toward inflicting punishment on the Anti-Booze Writer |kaiser is daily becoming more probable. Ousted by Japan | “te ‘Temps says: “France par Lawren Mott, correspon of ticularly has the most cordial senti- the New York Sun in Japan, arrived | ments toward Holland. Therefore, jin Seattle Friday, following deporta- | it, in sincere friendship, advises the tion by N so as a “trouble | quickest elimination of the kaiser maker,” b he published a ma, as an irritating problem. ne ‘called “The Searchlight,”| “A Hague jurist has rendered an which campaign inst liquor in-|opinion that the Dutch law does terests and pr of German |not permit extradition. We do not teachers thruout the Japanese em- hazard a contrary opinion, but we pire. Suggest a much simpler solution, Mott is the son of J. L, Mott, | namely expulsion as an undesir- wealthy iron man of New York. able. He arrived on the Katori Maru! “If put aboard a ship or conduct- and was refused permission to land | ed to the Belgian frontier, the allies at Victoria by immigration authori. | will see that disposition is made of | tles, | his case = pe ’ “If conducted to Germany the Ryan Resigns as | Berlin government would be in a | position to show the measure of its Airplane Chief renvbiieanism by its ardor in pun- WASHINGTON, Nov. 22—John|#hing the author of the war." D. Ryan has resigned as head ot | aircraft production, it was reported| FREDERICK HARPER BETTER | today Frederick C, Harper, former chair- | man of the republican state central The high price ‘ot linen is due in| committee, who Is ill at the Seattle large measure to the demand for cov: | General hospital from influensa and ering aeroplane wings, typhoid, is reported better Friday.

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