The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 19, 1921, Page 1

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Tonight snow; free erly ‘Temperature Maximum, 31. and Sunday, Today noon, rain A southeast- winds. Last M4 Hours or “VOLUME 23 DON’T let your windshields umbrellas. unless get clogged with snow. SNOWSTORM DON’TS-———— MOTORISTS—DON'T drive/up hills absolutely DON’T expect pedestrians to see you as readily as usual—especially if they carry DON’T forget your chains. DON’T drive fast. On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise at the Postoffice at Seattie, W under the Act of Congr NOVEMBE SEATTLE, WASH,, SATURDAY, 19, 1921. 9 March 3, 1 | The Seattle Star | Mntered as Second Class Matter May 3, 18! Per Year, by Mall, $5 to $9 -By Chief of Police W. H. Searing _ PEDESTRIANS—DON’T cross the street without making sure tl it’s clear. DON’T forget the danger from skidding automobiles. DO) walk directly behind an automobile climbing a hill. HOME OWNERS—DON’T let snow collect on your roofs—they weren't built for this kind of weather and may collapse. necessary. T No So bee! Si = | Fo) ae) = > CO = = | Greetings! Put on your smock | and your tam and come down to | the opening exhibit of the Seat- | te Art Club tonight. eee Henry Ford wants to use the bat | tleshipe to make flivvers. This is the | first time we ever heard that battle | ships were made out of tin. a tew of these boxing sg we SePENe | right. eee of SELF-D The utes for golfing should be cursed. ‘The game is going from bad to worse, ‘The guy who finds his golf ball firat, | Oughtia oe... . | manly art LIL’ GEE GEE, TH’ OFFICE VAMP, SEZ Winter is here. The girls left off their furs. u ———_——_—_—_———8 | eee | judge a man by the um | carries. It may be bor- Towed. “After standing at the corner of; Second and Pike for 15 minutes, / awaiting someone who had promised p be there 30 minutes before, we're | inclined to hope that most wom | €B are not as bad.as they're painted. | “It would seem, and is pertinent. that HE. Foster Bain, director of the mining | a. if competent to creditabty ocempy | Bi poston showld not gust as to any : yale, whien he has no moral right to do, © say that position ia vegetable or atanght but should gtate exactly what | ine pinton is tantamount @ rot,” sal B. Dennis yesterday. ‘rom The Spokesman-Review. eee They're picking on home brew 2 again, the big bullies. They know | that mout home brew is too weak to defend itself. | ———__—-—_—& | | | Henry Ford says he will hire a mil.) _) Yon workers if he gets Muscle shoals. | ~ Now the sovernment ts guing to sell; ” him the big power plant. Back up, Hen, back pl * Henry east write and he can’t 76 read, but Gosh how he can talk! eee POLLY V00? | Phere may be other pests, Wee Wee, But none we'd rather quench | | Than the guy who stings us like a : ber In a covpla words of French. { see SEATTLE ‘NOTES Mayor Caldwell was in Portland yeater attending to some tie Shrine | As a mayor, she is going to stop | home brewing any people in Hoat- tle re getting indigestion, Ray say#. Gil Dobie, former University of Wash- fngton coach, is doing right well im the wan given a now recipe today restaurateur, biffer, popular { cayenne pepper, gum arable, russic acid and iron filings. Tastes just like moonshine, Jack wafs, and has the same reeult John W. Stol Bland, has uw eplcriid stock of (Ase) Henry © plant rancher, Chants’ Hotel thia woek. ee of the City Hall Cigar andies. Snickletritz, a Poulsbo ems- is a guest of the Mer-| Seattle firemen are going to have their annual ball tonight. fy promised. ‘The number of banana peelings on Seattle sidewalks indicate a hard fall, according to Pilchuck Julia. Bair ‘fod, says Joe Marden, is that (Your wife can’t find any hairpins in the auto. oe i : Werne crime was mayhem, but They freed John Drayer, When he bit off the ear of 4 sasophone player, | ima, lot extreme cold Hugh is a 600d | A hot time | * Sone g60d thing about thie bobbed | Heavy snow, falling ‘here last night and continuing today, | impeded motor traffic, swelled city railway receipts, ham-| pered wire communication, caused numberless accidents—| |two of which will probably prove fatal—punctured the dig- | nity of hapless, pompous gentlemen, and put glee into the! heart of the small boy. At 7:30 a. m. there was 1.6 inches of white covering | Seattle's seven hills. The weather | bureau reported four inches at Yak- and the nounced 30 inches at Martin, on the Cascade divide and still enowing, with tracks clear and trains unde layed. Forty-eight traffic accidents, some serious, were reported to the police Saturday as a direct result of the snowstorm. COLD BELT FROM B. C, TO MINNESOTA ‘Weather conditions causing first snow steem of ¢he winter , this city and vieinity were a beit extending from British Columbia to Minnesota, an area of dense clouds hovering over this locality and chilled by a frees ing breeze from the northern cold belt. These conditions, it was forecast, ; will probably continue unchanged for 24 hours, perhaps longer. Thi would indicate the likelihood of foot or a foot and if of snow in a Seattle by Sunday nd youhgsters were While joyous turning out with sleds, building forts and statuary here, Southwest Washington and Western Oregon | were being drenched with rain, and it was 26 degrees below zero at Havre, Mont. Snow began Murrying In the Cas jeades early yesterday morning. By noon trees and bushes were droop- ing with the weight of their white mantle and overland railways dis- patehed orders to mountain divis- ions to bolt on the snow flanges. | Rotaries were being made ready for} instant call today | WATER CONTENT OF SNOW .14 INCH At the weather bureau here deli- cate instruments recorded the water content of the snow. At 5 a, m./ the water content was .14 of an inch, “This is not unusually heavy sat uration,” said the assistant weather } \dealer. “Nor is. snowfall at this [time of year unexpected or un-| | precedented.” . i2 Dying as Result of Snow Accidents As the result of the iirst snow- fall of the season in Seattle, a man and # woman, both Japa nese, were believed dying Satur. day, and several minor accidents were reported to the police. Mrs, Tazuo Tanabe, 606 Third ave., | was struck by an auto at Weller st. and Maynard ave. Y. Tamaki, 612 Seventh ave. | driver of the car, explained that his | windshield had become cove! snow. The woman was taken to| | Nippon hospital, suffering with 8., fractured #kull, | ¥. Kawabara 1 in the city hoapl: tal with a compound fracture of the Northern Pacific an-| Heavy Fall to Be More Than. a Foot Deep; Traffic Tied Up; Children Sport the } red with | rear of the el a| corner o | @ By Wanda von Kettler due to the elements. wake, photographers. SNOW PREVENTS ‘Oh, See the Beautiful Snow! BIG PET PARADE: Aileen Claire’s Version of How Olive Rob- erts Barton, Star Children’s Writer, Streets Too Wei - Mutts Would Report the Year's First and Youngsters | Snowfall in Seattle Beloved animals, Beloved small boy, “Oh, Goody!” cried the twins, as ” erfed Nancy joyfully, Beloved small girl: they popped out of bed Saturday) “and all the baby Polpolst” We weep together! morning and beheld the And indeed they were right, for At any other time in our life we)” s ‘oe by stood the big cage of the would have rejoiced in this wonder covered with a white, woolley blank: / white polar pears, who live in the et | “Let's go out to Woodland park,” | cried Nancy, “and see how Biff Buf. falo likes th: “Yeu, called } I wonder what Jno, Far ful opportunity to cleanse the faces North where there is always of our friends with a handful of snow, Today our heart is dead. Our Children’s day-Community | | Chest-Animal parade was called off, Hot Towel!" came a deep, gruff , and Papa Polpol rolled gato chewing an icicle. E “Oh, you shouldn't chew feicles,” this morning!” the twins said in unison, “it isn’t po: In a whisk, the twins had leaped |tite to pick your teeth with an icicle on their Kiddie Kar and were out to|jn public.” Woodland park, where Gus Knudson, |wpstg yy HOME,” vol “and Gnu is saying Our beautiful mutt dogs, with the beautiful blue ribbons about their necks, saw no downtown district to- with their tails day. Our ponies, ‘ braided for the party, have been |eeper of the animals, was seine saan THK BEAR 4 1 ¢ Boo-Boo, the bear, was kept at home, Our Charlie Chaplin | th A “But this is not in public,” replied cane and mustache, our, clown re. | comforts |the bear, laughing. “This is my |home.”” “Oh, then, it is ajl right,” sald the twins, who had often seen their daddy pick his teeth at the family table, And at that moment, out of the inner cage rolled four of the cutest lia, have been shoved again to the OLD GUS loset, \“80. RELIE’ Just a few of us gathered at the}: “You blessed ol f Third ave. and Virginia st./old Gus, “I am #o relieved! t 10 o'clock, wept on each other's |Oxtrich is almost crazy. She has shoulders, had our pictures taken never seen snow before, you know, and consumed the one bit of Joy to) And the. seals are frozen in’ their Ka ren,” cried gruff Mother the whole proceeding—a plentiful /tank and afraid that they won't get |little white bears that ever bit off pony bel A sid slipping on the | te of Hazen J. Titus’ fruitcake. |their breakfast. Oh, dear, oh dear,|a walrus’ tail. [snow and falling down a fligit tg | Maybe if the hurt ian't too deep, we'll /T never haw® been so worrled befo “Ain't we got fun?” they sang ak ane se Duplo was | allow our pictures to appear in Mon-| with Christmas coming 'n’ all, too.” |gaily, rollicking in the nice new ps early Saturday by George| | day's paper, a ‘The twins, after comforting Gus as |snow; “tonight we can all sleep in Bird At present life is empty. We’ oe ag they Vetoes looked about/the ee. gee nisl : ta par big z00 « pualy. ut the twins suddenly remem- sie pics peayy sre Aha ME f. And what on earth Is th “Oh, oh, ob!” cried Nancy, grab:|bered that their feet were wet, and Vastlake uve, and Broadway Friday of a parade permit if one can't pa-|ping Nick's arm, “What is that/like the dutiful little ebitdren that night by F. Ht, Elder, 1526 N, Prow-| Fede? awful noive?” they were, they sald goodbye to all | eee By: 36 2 ‘The Community Chest peopix| «piumph!” sald Nick, giving |the animals, leaped on their Kiddie | pect wt An unidentified man was knocked down at Terry ave. and Pine st, by V. EB, Lindell, 1918 EB, 65th st, Kar and whiezed home to change their stockings “before they wot their death of cold.” however, think we're terribly funny | Naney's hand a comforting pat, “I ty get so cold and blue over ‘be believe that is our old friend Pol- (Turn to Page 4, Column 4) pol, the polar bear, and Mrs, Polpol.” Ten Killed as NITE as Train Wrecks Funeral Auto CHICAGO, Nov, 19.—Ten per sons were killed at Summit, Il., a Chicago suburb, teday when an automobile in a funeral proces: sion was struck by No. 4, the California’ limited, on the Santa Fe. Thirteen persons were in the automobile, which was » large funeral car. The other three were seriously injured. The train was going approxi- mately 55 miles an hour when it crashed into the atitomobile, ‘The Mier plowed thru the large automobile, scattering wreckage and bits of bodies down the track for 250 yards, A heavy snowfall and storm ob- secured the track to the chauffeur. The hearse, carrying the body of 2-year-old Emily Zienanin had Jast cleared the track and the automobile carrying a party of mourners was squarely across the rails when the train struck. brother of » Chicago alderman, and Stanley Chybicki. The train was Chicago bound. Besides the storm, the road curved sharply just before reach- ing the railroad tracks, obscur- ing a clear view of the track to the driver. ‘The dead included six men, two women and two children, Automobiles in the funeral pro- cession were going at high speed | | SHORT OF QUOTA ve to Be Extended Thru Tuesday BY RORVERT BASTIEN BERMANN Has Seattle been weighed inj the balance of charity and found wanting? With May only a little more than halt ithe re quired — $744,810 subscribed up to Friday night, it has | become apparent that, unless a mir: | jacie happens, the Community Chest will not be filled Saturday, sched: |uled as the closing day of the cam- { paign. | Community Chest. officials, how- ever, refuse to believe that the city will permit the undertaking to fail |And they announced Saturday that, unless they went “over the top” by night, they will continue the cam- paign next week—probably until Tuesday, by which time, they think, {t certainly should be possible to raise the deficit, The snowstorm, which ruined the whole day for a lot of Seattle folks who've passed the age of “belly-flop: ping” and snowmen, had an exactly opposite on the chest workers, Maybe, they thought, the snow will turn out to be the miracle that they | are pulling for | The gloomy gray skies, the biting } cold, the slush underfoot and the pelting flakes from above-—no argu: ment that they can present could so forcibly bring to mind the urgent (Turn to Page 4, Column » | aay, robbed ON ARMS PL America Serves Notice She Will Conference to One Big Issue BY LAWRE NCE MARTIN iTON, Nov. 19.—The United States has | IN POSTAL RAID |Policeman Wounded, Shoots | Down His Assailant Nov. 19- MONTPELIER, Ind., An unidentified bandit was killed to- psy day when four men attempted to] AMERICAN PLAN rob the postoffice here, Jerry Engle, 45, policeman, was wounded by a “lookout” when he and sintoe eave way" frustrated the attempt at robbery. /ments is to call an imi Engle shot and killed the man who | naval competition. wounded him, The other three ban- dits escaped Scene on Fifth ave. (upper) Saturday morning in Seattle's blinding snowstorm, the first of the season, which brought both tragedy and it: Other pictures show sportive Seattleites plunging into the fun made possible by the heavy fall.—Photos on Price & Carter, set. “staff CHEST DRIVE IS DUBLIN'S THIRD BATTLE IN WEEK 15 Gunmen Fight in Dark- ened Streets of City BELFAST, Nov. 19.-—-Fifteen gun- men fought a thrilling battle in the darkened streets of Belfast early to- It was the third shooting af- fray of the week, An armored car swooped down | the atea where the fight was in prog: |60 per cent as proposed by Secrets: |ress and seattered the contending par- | Ueg after one man had t been wounded. $100,000 TAKEN $275 IN GEM ROBBERY ST. PAUL, Nov, 19.—Three mei Police too! PREP FOOTBALL TITLE GAME IS HALTED BY SNOW Snow halted the Franklin. Queen Anne high school football game, scheduled for Denny field this afternoon. The city cham. pionship, which is at stake when these teams clash, will not be decided until next Friday,, ac- cording to Athletic Director A. C. Pelton. the Gittleson Jewelry Co.) store of from $76,000 to $100,000} worth of gems today, Harry Weisman, manager of thi store, into custod notice that it will hold the arms conference to the one gi jissue involved—limitation of armaments. :called a halt on efforts to broaden or amend that ligaes: was demanded that Japan and Great Britain squarely m the question either by agreeing to stop naval competitic right now or by stating frankly that they are no ead to go to that extent in putting a check on the princi | cause of war, BANDIT KILLED It has sh This is the m frank and nificant meal aoe mete to newspaper thorized spol an for this government. If the statement of the oneon is not sufficient, |Hughes, taking advantage of | dominant position his opening: | to the conference has given poiainty tell the delegates: —That the United States te |roine to dicker, bargain or its proposals for limiting naval SPEEDIEST WAY 2—That the American plan fe! upon the principle that 3—That {ihe Aimer represent fied experts op the the constant ment of the American g and are regarded by this as not only fair but exceedingly erous. 4—That the United States 1 fore cannot consider suggestions that of Japan for an increased of nava) tonnage or any other cation which goes to the and essentials involved, ALLER POWERS SM. RALLYING TO U. S. The smaller powers were strongly to the support of the States on the submarine issue by Great Britain's suggestion of a duction of American tonnage f! The technical sub-committee of mirals continued discussion of submarine «problem. The United Btares navy launching at Newport News the © tleship West Virginia, while the J anese navy was launching the another modern dreadnaught. Premier Briand of France preparing to bring before the plenary session of the r Monday France's a 3 armaments, JAPAN DEMAND MORE WARS Insists on Increase in tal Tonnage BY A. L. BRADFORD (Copyright, 1921, by the Unit WASHINGTON, Nov. 19.—Ji will’ firmly insist on increases capital ship tonnage over that 4 lowed her in the Hughés’ pi *jaccording to authorative Jal | seauere today. The Japanese believe their di naught tonnage, after the A\ program for limitation of naval ment is put into effect, should b per cent ag great as that of the Unite States and Great Britain, ¢f in | Hughes. This significant information obtained by the United Press \ing the vigorous statement by @ American spokesman of this govern tonnage, in which the distinct 4 pression was given that the States would oppose moves from | pan or any ether power for im ed capital ship tonnage. ae ‘The Unitea States and Japan tl seem to be in a position of direct opposition on the qu: limitation of naval armament, and the first fight of the conference ta threatened, 4 ‘These salient points stood out to day in the Japanese, situation ing the naval question in» the . ference on limitation of armamet: — 1—The Japanese’ government and” delegation here hag fixed a set ratia ~ of 7, per cent for the Japanese | i in comparison with the American British navies—which Nippon fs |derstood to be prepared to ag the “absolute minimum”. for tin capital ships, ‘2—This fs a considered ‘opini the Japanese government, believe to have been settlgd on in be for the Japanese delegates left yashington, and is not a (ura to Page 4 K

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