The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 23, 1922, Page 1

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WEATHER Tonight and Sunday, rain; fresh southerly winds, ‘Temperature Last 34 Hours Maximum, 63, Today noon, 58, FouuME 24, NO. 181, fd Preparations for m four or five wives at home, soltier doesn’t worry killed. .& boy is making his way University of Washington | but the fiction is otion - to his father, not to @ publisher, eee ST PRODUCTS Hull has discovered & |. He his hat. and rolled as breakfast food. eee to land 49. Battle Against| Moslem. Forces! Are Continuing LONDON, Sept. 23.—A rumor that « British battleship had met disaster In the Dardanelles was o. BY LLOYD ALLEN LONDON, Sept. 23. — The Turks, fresh from the massacre | of Smyrna, will not be permit- ted to carry their war with the Greeks into Europe, Premicr Lioyd George declared today in & statement to the press. “rhe war in Asia Minor must not spread to Europe,” he sald. Pages fore, the British have strengthened their positions at the Dardanelles the Bosphorus, to prevent spread of the fire which devastated | | Asia Minor and which would ignite | Creek fiend says he wants itne tinder box of the Batkans.” 4 in Olympia. , many & politician has been or war, Britain’ With the issue before them peace cabinet ministers | [by his own petard down | met with Lioyd George at historic te & nies town, Dut well be banged if we'll . gerne orm oo Second-hand hath, if the telephone company the rates we can use post- they're quicker, anyway. eee FAMOUS WARS and Grecee. and Griffith. eee aviators who are fiying No. 10 Downing street, to decide whether the Turks shall be permit- Paris, in which the tentative terms Ml agreed to by Curson and Premier Poincare for a Near East settlement were outlined. These terms include restoration of Turkish supremacy im eastern Thrace and Constant). nople with internationslization of the Dardanelles, Turkish severeign- ty to be recognized there also. While the cabinet this issue, Britain continued to rush troops to the Dardanelles and Constantinople fronis where the Turks are concentrating. The Twelfth medium battery of the Royal garrison of artillery will be embarked at Gibraltar for Con stantinopie. The transport Semati | left Malta for the Near East packed | | with troops. The Cunard liner Tyria| land the Ellerman iMner Maronian have been requisitioned by the Brit-} ish governemnt for use as trans-| butions were pouring in from ali} ports. } It im understood here that, while in planes which have nojthe number of Kemalists on the have nothing on the folks he drive Forde, hear is dansilie! hit Jim so he killed himself.” oo ie enjoying —Aarore . I Hays is sincere in his de why he issue a decree forbidding | from occupying the end |no.nita early today. improve the movies, le took Mre. Hore: B see Hodolph of the Greasy A in “Biood and #and.” loves Rudy and we don’t, me | some bullfight before heme, anyway. = sick man's feet. see S10 "RM, KITTY Cat Lured by says headline, we calls it. Saxo- Good only way to cure the present Unrest is to give everybody of automobile they want, “ee A girt I ike, In Badie Blocks; Bhe inks the holes In her socks, eee iriean Vlag Saves Americans irks.” —Headline Turks probably thought School of Medicine. Kill doctor at the Women's Hospi- splendid opportunities | lision last night between two South: | ave. ‘and University st., | temperature nas far as it can go, he it (Tern es aan a ‘TWO TRAINMEN | DIE IN WRECK | VENTURA, Cal. § Two | trainmren are dead, two are in an [bruises today, the result of a col} ern Pacific passenger trains near Ox-| nard ‘The dead: Engineer RB. H. Bradwey, Angeles, killed instantly Fireman Patrick Feeley, Los died in aj | The injured : Fireman James Phillips, broken lar bone and three fractured ribs. pected to recover ||} “Mngineer Barto, condition not! | | serious, expected to leave hospital to- | 7. ee | | ____4| $50,000 in Hops Goes Up in Smoke} EUGENE, Ore, Sept. 24-—Two thirds of the largest hop crop in this section of the Willamette’ val-| ley is in ashes today as the re- sult of a fire starting at liast night, which completely de stroyed the J. H. Seavey hop stor-| age warehouwe near Springfield at) | total lows of nearly $50,000. More| than 400 deals of hops, weighing 200 pounds each, were consumed. | Real Estate News on Last Page her Standard Oil filling sta- ° / Temained for Attorney General Hty to file the first dissent-| on the American consti-| Seattle school board the pay of plumbers, Hers and — painters, reducing the pay of thus proving again ibie value of edu- in Today’s Star ) Keep Posted in || | Seattle || Real Estate Sales / ; [probation was de The paper with a 15,000 daily circulation lead aver its nearest competitor Batered as Geoved Clase Matter May SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER &, 1909, at the Postoffice at Seattia 28, 1922. JRKISH Nationalist under the leadership Mustapha Kemal Pasha, defeated the British at Gallipoli in the worki war, have ad vanced from their base at An gers, Asia Minor (1) and have taken the important seaport and commercial center at Smyrna @) which fire of uncertain origio troops of who destroyed as was captured. The Turks the Greeks from the whole coast of Asia Minor; the latter ure Seeing to Ls From his positions in Smyrna and Bruna, Kemal ts advancing nearer Constanti- nople (3), now under interallied control. Britian warships in the ten of Marmora and before it have driven Smyrna are preparing to hold the Turkish leader in cheek, Britain ie rushing more troops to occupy the neutral zone about Constantinople, indicatec by the dotted line, Kemal in a draft of peace torma has demanded Con stantinople and Adrianople, seen went of Constantinople. This, to gether with the suspicion that Per Year, by Mall $6 to Rulgaria may support Turkey, has caved Jugoslavia to mass troops on its borders (5). Mean- while Soviet Nussia ts said to be concentrating troops in the Caucasus (6) to come to the ald of Kemal, The bulk of Kemal's troops are quartered on the mainland of Asia Minor (4). T DRIVE IS STARTED TODAY 5,000 Workers in Field to Raise $798,843 Seattle's big community drive opened Saturday morning with more than 5,000 active workers in the field. A quota of $798,843 will be raised in the second annual cam- paign of the Community Fund. Seattlo’s big neart | quickly to the plea for its help, and ithe workers reported that contri sources. ‘The Community Chest will 51 charitable agencies during coming year. Solicitors are combing the busi rss and residential districts of the city. Thirty-seven zones have been portioned off, and each district piaced under the leadership of a campaign manager The drive is scheduled October 3, giving the workers help | the to clone 10 left yesterday for Oxnard hospital and about « dozen | days in which to raise the fund. je commence bie fourth year at | passengers are nursing scratches and) A huge mass meeting will be held Monday noon in Kellér’s rink, ‘Third totals of the various districts will be given out Contributors will be given a but ton and « window card showing they lare subscribers to the Community Fund. “We want everyone in Seattle to wear tho little button bearing t words ‘Another Good Neighbor, Campaign Chairman Otto F. Kegel announced. “The button and win dow ecard will show that he wishes to do his share in helping Seattle's poor and unfortunate.” ELECT RICITY KILLS WORKER PORTLAND, Sept. 23. of 11,000 volts which shot thru the 10.30 | body of Roy R. Renick, 20, a fore. | man for the P. Ro L, & P. Co., at ~ jWillamette moorage, late Friday, sulted in bis death an hour later, Renick was at work with his crew, stringing a telephone line beneath a power line which leads to Sellwood | station, w the aceldent occurred He was standing on the ground, hold |ing one ond of tho telephone wire, | when it accidentally swung againat |the power line, the entire current | | paseing thru his body DRIVER GETS PRISON TERM SAN JOSE, Cal, Sept. 23.—Phil lip C. Valentine, whore father was |the late J. C. Valentine, millionaire ‘head of the Wells-Fargo Express, was under sentence of one to five years in the state penitentiary to- day an a result of pleading guilty lto a charge of driving an automo. intoxicated. fed Valentine’s car is alleged to have struck one in which George Boyer and Miss Miriam Donald, school teacher, were riding, Mis» Donald suffered « broken leg. bile while His plea for responded | where the} A current | Old Game Played With New Rules ER play “T Spy” you were just a kid? ‘The Star ix going to revive the game. The rules have been somewhat = changed. Here's the plan Just observe the curtow unusual and often ludicrous incidents of everyday life. | Sharpen your eyesight and |} when you've seen something “different,” write about it briefly, telling where it took place and mail it to the “I |] Spy Editor.” We want true stories of Seattic and the Pacific North- west. Yor the three best submit. ted in the week cash prises of 4 dollar each will be paid. i Start sending in your con- tributions at once, when |! }man came | | ‘(CONROW SEEN | TACOMA, Sept. 23.-—Spencer Con row, former Tacoma banker who ts| wanted here on a charge’ of embex-| wement, has made good his escape from Washington and is making hie | way eastward. This i» the theory on which the; department of justive operatives are working in their effort to appre hend the Tacoma bank defaulter, According to advices received iny Tacoma, Conrow was seen at a point in Idaha by a man whose} name has not been divulged. The| person, who formerly knew Conrow in Tacoma, talked with the fugitive about conditions in this elty, not | knowing at the time that he wan) 4 fugitive from justice, Later the man discovered that Conrow was wanted by federal au- thorities and notified offive Conrew apparently was well sup- jPiled with money. the Tacoma | " KENDRICK IN COURT AGAIN| OAKLAND, Sept. 23, — Rodney | Kendrick, artist, who figured as the \"installment plan husband” in the Kendrick: Wakefield “triangle” which stirred San Franciaco society recent: | lly, found himself in more trouble to- \day. | Ho wan cited to appear before | Superior Judge Kinsell here and} show cause why he should not be} adjudged guilty of contempt of court | jfor alleged failure to pay his wife | |$75 monthly alimony, The alimony was ordered paid |temporarily, pending outcome of the jwult which “Mrs, Kendrick filed for | divoree. ‘ Balloon Resumes Endurance Flight ' NOGALES, Ariz, Sept. 2%—The dirigible C2, stalled here overnight repairing damaged pontoons, resum- ed its transcontinental journey at sunrise today. The dirigible is expected to reach Arcadia, Cal, this evening. WOMAN ROUTS. MAN IN-HOME |Citizens Seek sk Terrorist hear! Olympia OLYMPIA, Sept. 23.—Seores of | citizens led by deputy Moriffs today | took up the search for the man who haa been terroriang women in the vieinity of Olympia for the past two weeks Belief that the man who yesterday afternoon tried to force his way into) the home. of Mrs, Peter Jorgenson, | eight miles north of Olympia, is one tive tw escaped inmates from the) Western Washington ate howpita! for the insane, at Steilacoom, was expressed, Mrs. Jorgenson fought off her as sailant when he entered the kitchen at her home, yesterday afternoon, | beating him with her fist and hurt ing a kettle of water at bis head. The to the door about 12:6, according to Mra, Jorgenson. He or- dered her to go to the bedroom. When he seized her she struck him { in the stomach. The fiend grabbed her clothes and tore part of them | from her back before Mrs. Jorgen son grabbed the hot water kettle and hurled it at him. over his head, Ho house across a field and woods, The alarm was carried to Olympia ran from the into. the a few minutes afterwards by a mail| carrier. Description of the assall ant of Mra. Jorgenson tallies exact ly with the one of the man who Wednesday afternoon attacked Mrs MO. Weidner at her home in Olym pla and poured fodine down her throat . Two Escape During Week From Asylum | TACOMA, Sept. 23-—-Two men have excaped from the Western Washington State hospital at Stell acoom this week, Carl Johnson, 46, & native of Sweden, who wax com mitted from Ellensburg last Octobe ran Away on Sunday, and F Bito, an Italian sent to the asylum from Yakima, escaped Thursday BANDITS KIDNAP AMERICAN TRIO M ICO CITY, Sept. 23.-Three Americana employed by the Interna- tonal Petroleum Co, were kidnaped by Mexican bandits near Tuxpan and are being held for 1,000 pesos ran som, according to a report received by the minister of the interior The men's names were given as Sullivan, Elleworth and Staney. It is believed they are held by an out- law band under command of Pedro Meza Federal troops” have been ordered to go in purault of the bandits, Will Give Lecture Here on Hindu Art Prof, 8, L. Joshi, of Bor cha professor from Bor America universities, lecture on he Boul of Hindu Art” Wednesday evening In the Masonic club, Arcade building, ay y The kettle went) will deliver a} Griffiths Will Let Grand Jary Probe e Quarrel Many False A, Affidavits of Prejudice Being Filed, He Says | | Investigation by a county grand Jury into the flood of affidavits of prejudice filed against him during the last few days by Prosecuting At- alcolm Douglas will be or- dered, Py ding Superior Judge Aus jttn E. Griffiths announced in open Jcourt Saturday | Judge Griffiths’ statement came after Deputy Prosecuting Attorney |John D. Carmody had filed an afti- davit of prejudice and a motion for transfer of action in the habeas cor pus proceeding brought by Robert Watker. Carmody’s motion was denied and Judge Griffiths then spoke te the Imembere of the bar who were pres: lent in the court room “I feel that I should call atten tion,” the judge said, “to the increas ing number of affidavits of preju dice that are being filed against Judges of the superior court. “The filing of these affidavits, most of which are false and are laid without regard to the proof, is rap idly spreading thruout the state, “This practice ix becoming so no: torious that I have determined to lay the matter before the next coun ty grand jury.” In private conversation, }eourt had adjourned, Judge Grif: fiths was aaked if he intended to call a special grand jury and when it would convene. |torney after “I do not wish to commit myself) this* time,” the the is. on that question at he said, “but 1 will say this, | matter shall be presented to |next grand jury, whenever it called.” | Inviting Prosecutor Malcolm Douglas to a debate in which he is to defend the recently indicted county commissioners and bank officials whose cases he “stepped out from under” in court, while she will defend the grand jury which brought in indlet- ments, Lady Willie Forbus, can- didate for prosecuting attorney on the democratic: ticket, sent Douglas the following letter Sat- urday; | Malcolm Douglas, Prosecuting Attorney, |Seattle, Wash, Dear Sir: In order that the zens of Seattle and vicinity may have the opportunity to hear the candidates for prosecuting attorney so they may Judge as to our respect ive qualifications, I challenge you personally to meet me in public de bate on the following question: “Resolved, that it was NOT to the best interests of the public for the prosecuting attorney to ask for the diamiasal of grand jury indictments against the county commissioners (Turn to Page 4, Column 5) | itt | WANTS DOUGLAS O EXPLAIN SELF The 2: Seattle: Star “TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE \rick, 56, was instantly killed. \deputies to the scene to inv HURLED TO HER DEATH! \Victim of Tragedy Upon Railroad Tracks Near Richmond Beach Is Thrown 20 Feet Struck by a Seattle-bound Great Great Northern train two }miles south of Richmond Beach Saturday, Mrs. S. F. Her- | Mrs. Herrick, wife of a track walker employed by the Great Northern Railway. Co., was crossing the track at that point, after a freight train passed and she did not see the passenger train approaching on another track. Caught jdirectly in the path of the speeding locomotive, she was jstruck and hurled a score of feet by the impact. Sheriff Matt Starwich and roner W. H. Corson sent ite the tragedy. The train, No. 3, was bound from Spokane to Seattle. * * * Injunction Rule Up held * & *% DAUGHERTY IS RAIL SHOPMEN RAPPED AGAIN) ARE UNDER BAN NewYork World Upholds Temporary ‘Injunction: ‘Rules Memphis is Editor ‘ MEMPHIS, Tenn., Sept, 23— Trial of G. ¥. Sanders, editor of the Memphis Press, on a charge of contempt of court, was post- today by Federal Judge J. W. Ross until October 16. Plea for a continuance was made Sanders’ attorneys, who they would require more time to prepare @ proper defense, eee NEW YORK, Sept. 25.—The New York World today leads its front page with the story of the arrest on @ contempt of court charge of 3. V. Sanders, editor of the Mem- phis Press, formerly editor of the Tacoma Times, then picks up the gauntlet and «ails in on his behatf. “G. V. Sanders, editor of the Memphis Press,” says the Work in jits first page introduction to the jstory “must answer a contempt charge in the United States dis- trict court at Memphis because he ‘declared the anttstrike Injunction jissued by Judge Wilkerson in Chi- cago and Judge J. W. Ross in Mem- |phis violated the constitution, | “The article for which Judge Ross [believes Mr. Sanders in contempt of court was entitled ‘The King Forbids,” 1t was written after Judge Ross found Jacob Cohen, edi- jtor of the Tabor Review, guilty of jcontempt, sentenced him to six months in jail and fined him $1,000," Editorially the World then says, | under the caption, “Daughertyism in Full Flower": “No better example of applied Daughertyism has come to light | than the cases against G. V. Sanders, editor of the Memphis Press, who is held under $1,000 bail to be tried on contempt by Federal Judge J. W, Ross, following the publication of an article which criticised the judge for imposing a heavy fine and jail sen- tence on another editor who had ex- pressed an opinion concerning the railroad strike, “This opinion, set forth by Editor Jacob Cohen, of the Labor Review, was that strikebreakers were ‘dirty scabs’ and ‘industrial scavengers.’ “Judge Ross found it ts violation of his version of the Chicago injunc tion, and sent Cohen to jall for six months, fining him $1,000, upon Mr, Sanders printed an edito al, entitled ‘The Xing Forbids,” (Tura to Page 4, Column 5» Tacoma Joins City in Fight on Rates Tacoma will throw its infiuence with that of Seattle in the fight to prevent an increase of 31 per cent in telephone rates asked by the Pacific Telephane & Telegraph Co,, accord ing to a letter from J, Chas. Dennis, Tacoma city attorney, ‘a written request for co-operation in the contest from the Seattle corpo- ration counsel's office, Wenatcheo is the only additional municipality hy from Saturday morning. As Wenatchee has a local line, it is not affected by the pro posed raise in rates, COLVILLE. — Mrs. Grace Wenll, 26, wife of L. A, Wenli and daugh- ter of Mr, and Mrs. J. N. Stevens of Bellingham, dies as result of burns sustained when gasoline stove ex: plodes. editorially | There. j in response to | } | | | } | } After » bitter battle of more than one month, the federal court issued a temporary in- Attorneys for the unions de Sor Oe ee eee ‘Granting of the Injunction up holds the rostiating oder tart has heen in effect more than one month, Railroad shopmen, under the in- junction, are practically forbidden from carrying out the strike which has been in effect since July 15, The government must now call witnesses to substantiate the charges of inter- fering with interstate commerce and the transportation of the mails to make the injunction permanent. Under the injunction, the shopmen are enjoined from participating in action which would further the cause of the strike, Judge Wilkerson said: “The defendants will not be Permitted, upon the record here, to deny responsibility for these unlawful acts; will not he permitted to continue acts which, even tho they may be and lawful in themselves, it has been demonstrated are only part of a program of unlawful con- duct and are done for the accom- plishment of an unlawful pur- pose, “It hardly need be said that thia conclusion is upon the record as it now stands and leaves the defend- ants free to present their contention again if and when a different case is made of the pleadings and proof. Judge Wilkerson said that the in Junction might have been issued uns der the Sherman anti-trust law, but that it was issued under the Cla: ton act forbidding interference with constitutional rights of the public. Another hearing will be necessary to make the injunction permanent. The injunction as granted was prac- tically the same as the original re- straining order. Only two corrections were made. One allows the unions to use their funds for sick benefits (Turn to Page 4, Column 5) BABE RUTH IS PROUD FATHER OF BABY GIRL NEW YORK, Sept. 23.—‘Sure, Babe's a father, and a mighty proud one, Her name's Dorothy, and she’s 16 months old, She's the finest baby you ever saw,” Mrs, Ruth, the attractive little wife of the great swat king, said this morning. She expressed some surprise that the news was just leaking out, “I thought all the newspa- per boys knew about it. We cer- tainly did scoop you all, didn't we" she said with great amuse. ment, The baby was such & wee little thing when it came into the world that it had to be placed in an in- cubator and handled like a tiny little plant until it developed suf- ficiently. “Babe, you know, his had a lot of worry that you boys didn’t know anything about, and the concern over little Dorothy was far from the lightest of them,” Mrs, Ruth said,

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