Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
I ay , . | unsettled Tonight and Friday, partly cloudy ; moderate easter! Temperature Last 24 Hours Maximum, 57. Today noon, 46, weather, light te winds. Minimum, 40, Delaring that more than 15,000/ On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise Entered a» Second Class Matter May 3, || Big Show in Crystal Pool It's all been decided. The Mutt dog show is to Every youngster in town wi lef purp-dom. Only the The big party comes as a result; lof one Russet Dewey Hancock's let. | tor to The Star, which stated that | j “lot of us kids have got dogs and, we all want to do something for kids who are krippuled and haven't got) home owners in Seattic will be placed any homes. Maybe we could have a we wouldn't want any high-toned ones—juast full. blooded curs.” the “ugliest All a Kid Needs Is a Dog. || Many Eager to Donate Prizes. |] Mutt Owners Must Fill Out Blank. By Wanda von Kettler . blankets-—everything—for 1899, at the F fice at Sea! SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1921. Thursday. be held Thursday afternoon and evening, November 10, at Crystal Pool, ith a thorobred “mutt” is in- vited to enter the animal in the biggest tail-wagging show » nly one species will be denied entrance— pedigreed, high-toned dawg! THIS IS A MUTT SHOW! Piper & Taft makes a little sug- gestion about « collar with the win- ners name engraved on the name plate. The Hon Marche presents two cartoons of dog biscuits for “a good. looking family group"—meaning pups u'everything, There will be more collars, more biscuits, kennels, the big- gest mutt, the littest mutt, the uatient, the prettiest, the shaggiest— for most every type of mutt that parades Seattle's atrects. ALL A BOY NEEDS Boys, fill out the application blank and mail it to The Star, Bring on a million mutta, The show ts on. The Seattle Sta . Wash. under the Act of Congress March 3, 1879, Per Year, by Mall, $5 to 89 | Japan General * % * * * “Ladies of Leisure?” Well, Judge * TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE "Em * e They Have a Few Little Tasks on Hand oc Stan. ents who 18.560 more homes every doy than any, dthan Sil Hinspapor. |HOME OWNERS AT MERCY OF |CORPORATIONS, SAYS REEVES Dn~ @ HOME iii “Sink U. S. Navy at ‘Single Blow” Boasts of Power WOULD NOT - ‘SHUN WAR, 1 “HE BRAGS! “America Haughtily Insults — Our Empire and Endangers — Existence,” Says Sato ar RRR 7 Dog Show to be held at even Te oe kcas iow ia < oe dine ae ing, November 10, for benefit of Community Chest. r fie) ented sonits tgs ot pour amber | OPerate ax a direct permission for the | ‘ { ‘The School of Experience charges Most for its night courses. ove ‘Who'd make home brew if it wasn’t against the law? see 4 women hide it. . University of Washington has a / curse in the Chinese language. It “osaves troubi¢ at the laundry. 4 “ee | One move to enforce prohibition HR Would be to move British Columbia oe RING FOR THE BLUE-LAWERS | Seattle clouds generally stay at a low level, are frequently and are most de- It's » tough cli- mate, . All some people have for breakfast Is Brouch. eee ¥ THE MARCH OF PROGRESS 3 Ned—Deo you remember the old deke about the rural gent coming fe town and blowing out the gas When he went to bed tired? | Ted—Sure thing, and now he steps ) am the gas, and the blowouts are in the wheels that are tired. eee A sign posted up in a Wisconsin Saw mill reads: “The saws are run- Ring—no use to touch them to con- S ¥inee yourself.” j ° ee “Dad, what is a touching speech?” asked Johnny. “One that precedes a eollection, My son,” answered Dad see A feminine golf enthusiast is au thority for the statement that some Of her sister pinyers are catty enough to be called golf lynx cae ever The wonder of the age is how) lelty should not by its acquiescence Place itself in the position of having lwhich may be absolutely unsatie | tactory. The ordinance will also force th city to discontinue its dafly analy! jof the Seattle lighting company’s | gas, according Ro Reeves, Susted yearly by the city with smoothness and dispatch. That the jordinance in question will permit the utilities companies to ride rough- shod over Seattle citizens was the fear expressed by city officials | Thursday. | ‘The department of public utilities lacts as the agent for the citizens of the city before the state department of public works. Reeves characterized the council lordinance ax “a virtual surrender to ithe state of the home rule asptra- itions of the large proportion of our citizens” and declared that the sur- render may result in an effort to subject the ordinance to referendum. | BOY SLAYER TO "KNOW HIS FATE | der” Trial of 6-Year-Old / By Hal Armstrong | CHEHALIS, Noy. 3.—“My mind is made up.” It was the calm, de liberate voles of John Peters, father jot five stalwart sons, who came to town out of the Big Bottom country east of here with his youngest tad’x dying words burning jin his memory: “Papa, you must do something about this or he will kill some other boys.’* “Lt have made up my mind,” said |Poeters. ‘What the judge aays will |be final. 1 whall bear no grudge in my heart against the boy that shot my little boy, and I have drilled my other boys to abide oy what the court decides and keep their heads.” Some time today Judge W. A. Reynolds will hand down his de cision. He will decide whether T-year-old Herbert Coleman is a de- linquent boy and what caused hiro to shoot and kill 9-yearold Lynn (Turn to Page 7, Columm 5) to put up with a type of service ‘Thousands of complaints are ad-| \Decision Today in “Mur-| telephone company to maintain an | to TACOMA, Nov. 3—There is no the fact that yester- 14 ; ‘The Seattle party of 27 business leaders, under the chairmanship of Robert 8. Boyns, came to town in a| special interurban car at noon and |was entertained at the members’ {council luncheon of the Tacoma Com- merclal club. When the meeting began, there | was a faintly distinguishable air of mistrust and suspicion hovering lin- geringly, like the forenoon fog out- side, over the proceedings, .'T, &. Lyle, president of the Taco: ma Commercial club, and Henry A. | Rhodes, merchant, were the Tacoma speakers, Both dwelt upon the need lof true co-operation between the) cities, Both expressed Tacoma’s de-| sire to co-operate, Both added—Mr.! Lyle by inference and Mr, Rhodes | lin frank, outspoken speech—that when the two cities did co-operate, Tacoma should expect Seattle to be fair in the diyision of the fruits of | {the enterpris®. In the past, Mr./ Rhodes declared bluntly, Seattle he not always been fair, i | FOG 's | ART | INSIDE AND OUT Mr. Boyns, Kenneth Kerr and Na than Eckstein were the Seattle| speakers, They pictured the whole | Puget sound district as being one business community in fact, and as | | werted that its people should work as one, They pointed out the great re-| sources available for joint develop. ment and many specific ways for ef- | fective work together. All asserted that Seattle standg ready to go the nd * Ht doesn't cost anything to enter your Mutt, payee epee ‘No “high-toned” dqg» allowed—just full: TACOMA’S DISTRUST OF SEATTLE WANES Mmit in working harmoniously with Tacoma. | Their talks were enthusiastically received, and the meeting broke up with three vociferous cheers on the; part of all present for “the Puget sound district.” The fog outside had | lifted, and so had the veiled suspicion | inside. Following the meeting, The Star's correspondent in Tacoma was assured by numerous Tacoma business lead: | ers that the Incipient anti-Seattle boycott that broke out carly last summer had entirety collapsed, and that Tacoma business men are virtu- ally all in a mood to carry out the spirit of the meeting MOUNTAIN NAME STILL RANKLES However, it was pointed out, this does NOT mean that all Tacomans) are like minded, A great deal of lin- gering suspicion stil] persists among! It pictured the Seattleltes as a “trade delegation,” grinningly trying to capture Tacoma busl- ness men by throwing salt on the Tacoma bird's tail, The implica- tion that the Seattle visit was not sincere was plain, The old mountain name issue is perhaps more responsible for this than anything else “Why doesn’t some representative, leading Seattle civic organization take up this matter and settle it?” one Tacoma leader asked The Stat correspondent at the conclusion of | the meeting. “It would do more than any other one thing to heal ALI the old sores (Turn to Page 7, Column 5) “Confessions of The first installment of this Page 5 of this editi | } { i ; a Movie Star” absorbing serial appears on ion. Don’t miss it. the rank and file of Tacomans. Ey In fact, one evening paper here, the News-Tribune, yester- occupy the featured position “Nothing to do till ‘tomorrow”— the fellow who wrote that song had | nothing on Jane and Katherine Lee, the two little movie stars appparing in person at the Moore this week. Outside of golf, plano, singing and school lessons, a matinee and two night shows every day of the week, Jane and Katherine are “ladies of leisure.” When a Star reporter called on the Lee kiddies behind the stage at the Moore Wednesday afternoon they had just arrived at the theatre—goif sticks and all. They were quaintly dressed in dark red knitted middy suits and black velvet artist tam hats, who ix 8, was born in Ham- burg, Germany, and Katherine, whe is older by two years, in Glasgow, Scotland, However, thelr home has been in New York for some time, Both prefer the movies to the stage “Vaudeville is all right,” says Katherine, “but when we are work- ing in pictures we can live at home, and we like that better than so much traveling.” “Yes,” piped up Jane, who is just fis roughish off the stage as she in on, “and in pictures you get paid whether you work or not." Mrs. Lee accompanies the children. She is a charming womag, and it isn't hard to see why the kiddies are not “stagey” and Sppiled. She Is also anxious to have the children back in pictures, for then they can go to school, At present they receive their schooling by correspondence. A feature of the act presented by the’ Lee kiddies at the Moore thie week is the final scene in which the youngsters do a bit of real emotional lacting, They are called upon to shed tears, This they do without the aid of the glycerine bottle. They supply REAL—not REEL tears, Saturday, after the matinee,Jane and Katherine lare going to hold a reception on the stage for the children jbusiness over Jane and Katherine Lee. A pair of real little actresses, who though not yet in their teens, on the Orpheum vaudeville bill now showing at the Moore. HERE’S CHALLENGE . TO CITY LEADERS! Seattle bankers and basiness men will give this ‘The Star hopes that Not so much because the going concern with great what ie far more thon. fer ‘THE SA! By BARY OTHER SOUND BUSEN! city ts threatened with the lens of one geod ot » but becamse— DIFFICUL' 18 BEING FACED ENTEKRPRI! By E. P. Chalcraft The Polk-Hueber Co., Inc., is ready to leave Seattle today. This concern, composed of Seattle men, manufacturing a} Seattle product, has waged a game fight for its faith in this! town during the last 14 months. Today, proposals of other cities, in California and elsewhere, are being considered, and Seattle probably will lose an industry whose potential pay- roll and advertising value are vir- tually unlimited, Why? Because, according to Thomas B. Polk, president: “It is impossible for a new industry to get finahcial assistance in Seattle, You can get moral support and hearty encouragement from the men with money, yes, but when it comes to finances needed to carry & new the hump—nothing doing! " "The Polk-Hueber company, located at Spokane st. and Pacific highway, manufactures an automatic wind- shiet@ swipe invented by Henry Huevder, a Seattle man. This swipe, which is operated by suction from the engine of the auto. mobile, is the only one manufactured in this country that wipes the en- tire width of the windshield, thus giving a full range of vision to the driver and other occupants of the|ago,” said Polk, the president. “All front seat, i | The swipe works on anything with a windshield and a gas engine or a compressed air tank, Ten of them have been tried on Seattle street cars for the last four months with marked success, They may also be used on boats and other vehicles, FIELD FOR ‘SALE 1S UNLIMITED The practicability of the Polk- Hueber automatic windshield swipe has been proved time and again. Motorists purchase it on sight. The field for sale is limited only by the number of autos, street cars and trains in the country. ‘The swipe has been improved from a device of 24 to only two working parts. It is “fool proof,” easily in- stalled, and cleans the windshield and keeps it clean in any weather. So much for the swipe itself. It appeals to the average person as a splendid thing, The company is in- dorsed by leading bankers and others. Why are the Polk-Hueber people going to leave Seattle? “We started in here 14 months (Turn to Page 9, Column 2) much of a base. i Japan's intentions ing to cumulative authority as weil’ . To go as far as she can at the Washington conference without scrapping any fundamental portion of her fixed Asiatic policy—whiclt includes her claims to “special inte: ests” in Manchuria and other parts of China—then . . « Y 2, Sit tight, at home, behind “a navy of quite respectable strength,” as one Japanese official put it, and proceed to carry out that policy. VICTORY WOULD BE EASY ONE? Sato and other. militarists have clearly indicated Japan will follow such a procedure—do as she likes and remain on the “defensive.” The islands of the Empire, they assert, mined and guarded by the ‘hter fighting-craft, are impreg- nable, and a fleet, coming from a great distance, would be no match for a much smaller fleet, close to its base, manned by fresh crews and with full bunkers, The fleet with the rising sun gilded on its bows would lie in wait for the coming of a tired enemy and, according to the militarist the ory, “sink it with a single blow." eee ANGLO-JAPAN | PACT RAPPED Lord Northcliffe Says Alli- ance Out of Date BY CLARENCE DUBOSE TOKYO, Nov, 3.—Lord Northextfe. famous British publisher, advocated full publicity to the sessions of the Washington conference on limitation. of armaments here today, addressing a dinner given him by newspaper” publishers, Later, in an exclusive jew (Turn to Page 7, Columa | | eS ee