The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 26, 1922, Page 1

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Tontont and Wednesday, rain; fresh to strong south.” erly winds, FORECAST I | VOLUME 24. NO, 183. Ee U.S. AGAINST ‘TURK, HUGHES ~ WORDS SHOW Se aaa. The paper with a 15,000 daily circulation lead over its nearest competitor SEATTLE, WASH., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1922. Tacoma and Everett Branches of I. W. W. Have Voted for Walk-out; Hanson Out, Brown In, It Is Noted The Defense News service, of Chicago, is broadcasting thru the mail the following “news story” under a Seattle » “Joint branches of the I. W. overwhelmingly in favor of initiating such a strike. These asa dateline: ray J Protection for the| alexi, foltat the poputarity | Minorities in the) ay tener hort tn'tke ren we | Balkan Region Is|are 75. “ the Contrary to poker expectations, Approved Poug did not leap out of his com -ohewenge im his pajamas and chin if on the edge of the trainshed. eee The American government posal of the three governments tilnorities,"" Hughes stated. sentiment. government also trusts that suitable arrangements may be agreed upon in the interests of peace to preserve the freedom of the pending the conference peyiicite Fin final tréaty ‘of peace between Turkey, Greece and allies.” Secretary Hughes declined to com- ment on the territorial questions testore Thrace and Constantinople to Turkey. Hughes’ statement is the first of- here | ficial pronouncement of American _ “There's one good thing about the over “Purk. He never comes ‘trying to borrow money. ic ad question. = this strike move. What a peaceful place Europe) tation from the allies to participate | nation. would be if it wasn't inhabited! in @ conference on the situation eee First he dubbed his tee shot; ; Hie mashie wos a shame, “# But stilt Re knew the rudiments And cussed @ beautiful game. eee TURKS START ON INVASION CONSTANTINOPLE, Sept. 26. —The British march from Chanak toward Erenkeul, where the Turks have taken up a po- sition in the neutral zone, has ag aa tea gt According to this report, the destination of the British troops is Kusukeul, which is seven miles south of Chanak, the Brit- ish stronghold, and about three miles north of Erenkeul, the Kemalists’ position. $ ‘The purpose of the British march, | [it was reported, Is to take up a po- sition at Kusukeul in order to block the Turks in case they start to ad- {vance toward Chanak. It was further reported that the Turks were rushing retnforcements of troops, machine guns and heavy artillery to Erenkeul, which would in- dicate that the Kemafsts do not in- tend to withdraw but are desirous of strengthening their position. ULTIMATUM IS SENT TO TURK LONDON, Sept. 26.-—The allied ad- Re that as it may, Marshall Mallow ‘Pres in Bethlehem, N. H. Fifteen “guesses as to what his friends call Hereafter all the new voters in York must pass the literacy t. This literacy stuff is spread- . Some day it will hit the movies. eee Street sweepers are heartily in favor of the new jong skirts. oe Fine! Fine! Henry Ford has de cided not to shut down Detroit! eee Attorney General Daugherty says that the action of the courts in up- holding his injunction means the end | of railway strikes. It also means the-end of Daugherty. : eee THE CHAMP Paris mirals at Smyrna today served an Pg tna ‘ond ay Bee uitimature ot Mustapbn emai that ed Garpentier, ix so strong that the Turkish forces mu be with whén he is drinking it takes a (Turn to Page 7, Column 5) dozen policemen to throw him ie att ” out of = saloon. Burglar Loots Home 1 In this country the coroner's © dssistants carry ‘em out. on Greenwood Ave. OP Ma Two rugs, two sults, several drese- | fOr att guys in Keattle - les, dozens of household articles and 1 wish Ev True would crown, pieces of clothing, were stolen from ‘Are pests who make leaning posts \the home of H. W. Witt, 7811 Of the autos parked downtown, Greenwood ave, Witt told police ee ‘Tuesday. The loot will total several Lioyd George is the most generous | hundred dollars. man in Europe. Now he is about to give a large slice of Greece to the} Turks. ! eee —_—_ Wanda is tuning up again for her mutt dog parade. A matt is a canine STAR WANT whose family tree is composed most & of bark. °° LI'L GEE GEE, TH’ OFFICE VAMP, SEZ ¥m erazy about th’ pure blonde type of giri—but not the chemi- cally pure blonde. eee News of the karer's marriage | sounds like all boche to Li'l Gee Gee. | oe | BEYOND THE ap gaa! Or AV. 7 “Henry Ford Finds $2,000,000 He Had "Forgotten About.”— Headline, ADS — A Trial Will Convince You That “STAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS” Gosh, we bet that fellow j doesn't even have to worry about his winter coal supply’ U ite “It would not be necessary to tle = be given was not indicated bY | up alt the industries of the country, + nd toys a iw felt that jit is argaed here. The tremendous weap statement May eNCOUrAg® strength of the producing class, and the social body, could be demonstrated if even @ single basic industry were cloned down. “Forecast of Industrial action to open the gates at Leavenworth was sounded first at Butte on September 11, when the striking copper miners placed at the head of the proviso that all politic ers be released, partial blame for their imprisonment being tnid on the shoulders of the Apaconda Copper Mining company. “Since September 11 that idea has been discussed in numerots camps thruout the West among the miners, dirt movers, lumberjacks, sailors and Jongehdremen, workers. indispensability to harvesters and “Seattle knows pretty well of the large part which the I. W. W. played in the general strike of 1919 and the Northwest will not forget the unprecedented solidarity which that organiza tion achieved during the lumber workers’ strike of 1917; The Se attle general strike, while osten- aibly under A. F. of L. nuspices, was dominated to an important degree by the radical influence in the Central Labor council.” “Various other things would doubt. { tiea Speeches the meeting where the strike vote was taken revealed @ great disgust, a great reeentmen| ‘the breaking of premises by the the json and Harding regimes. CLAIMS BIG PA IN STRIKE OF 19: “Among the workers there exists a involved in the ailied proposal to/ conviction that the chief executive's hands are tied by unseen forces, and that the only way to untie his hands ia to Ue up production, to withhold tor one week or for many weeks the policy toward the present Near-East | services of a great multitude of pro- What reception an invi-|ducers whose work is vital to the ir demands prison participate in the parade. | youngster need do, as was explained jin yesterday's paper, oil In all these trades the In dustrial Workers of the World are able to display tangible power, when there is occasion to une It. efimi: and guarantees for the f aprech. to consider the same program, CLAIM PROSECUTIONS STILL, CONTINUE “AIL Pacific coast (Turn to Page 7, Column 4) WELCOME, YE ~ MUTT OWNERS Glad to See You All Again This Year By Wanda von Kettler Nothing slow sbout “SEATTLE, Wash.—-All labor unions in the West which lare component parts of the I. W. W. have been asked to take a vote among their members on the question of calling a general strike designed to compel the granting of amnesty to all remaining war-opinion prisoners, of which there W. in Seattle have voted |branches comprise the local membership of the Marine Transport Workers’ union, the Lumber Workers’ union and the General Construction Workers’ union. the strike on Tuesday, September 19. joint branches at Tacoma and Everett had concurred in the vote. “Conditions for a general strike in Seattle have changed somewhat since 1919. Ole Hanson, the Chautauqua-going mayor, who boasted on many platforms that he ‘stopped the revolution’ here, has been ousted by a disillusioned com- ts|munity, and DR. E. J. BROWN, SOCIALIST, NOW HOLDS gratified to observe that the pro-|HIS PLACE. “Action by these branches Is their seeks to insure effectively “the UD lanswer to President Harding's fail erty of the Dardanelles, the sea of jure to review the casea of the polith Marmota and the Boaphorus as well jcain within the 60 days stipulated by a8 protection of religious and racial|him on July 19. “Farreaching possibilities are tn Ite progenitors feel that this ts precisely the paycho- logical time to back up repeated ap Peals to the administration for jun- tiee with economic power. made at They voted for Within 24 hours the| ff cansorahip of malis In camps, ation of employment agents, armental rights of free assemblage and free local unions comprised in the Marine Transport Fund Seattle Star-Mutt Dog-Pet Ani mal-Youngster parade, set for Satur. day next! Already small boys and small giris are beginning to straggie into Community Fund headquar. ters with the words, “Please, where do I leave the penny and get the button? I wish to be in the parade with my animal. Yes, mam, I've got = dog.” Or may- be, “Yea, mam, I've got a red rabbit.” It may be even “a goat.” It may be anything. HIST! The Stage Is All Set for Another General Strike! those who in to be in the Annual Community kK waa presented, declined to comment on the situation until he had con: FIEND SUSPECT Defense News Service Says Seattle DEDOCTTORG IN DEFUNCT BANK’ URGING PROBE File Request With Court to Recall Investigators to New Session Demanding « more thoro In- vestigation into the failure of the Scandinavian American bank of Seattle, the Depositors’ Pro fective association, thru ite at- torney, H. W. Powell, asked the superior court judges, Tuesday, to recall the county grand jury to convene a new ene for this purpose. Presiding Superior Judge Austin) Griffiths, to whom the petition red with the other judges. More than 3,000 depositors of the Beattic Scandinavian American bank are represented by On Sunday the Lumber | brotactive unnociation. Workers’ Industrial union will meet ~ the Depoaitors’ “The petitioners are of the con- wclentious opinion and belief,” the petition reads, came about thru the culpable nes- leet of the state banking depart- ment and Violation of both banking practice by some “that this failure the persistent reckless tate law and good trustees of fi if i E i f ry A 2 eed perized and untold suffering oc- casioned many thousands. All this has had the effect of bring- (Turn to Last Page, Column 4) IS QUESTIONED Man Arrested Near Tenino Or it may be nothing. For all mals or not, is vieit Community Fund youngsters, whether owning pet ant- have been invited to All any the headquarters ut 333 Henry building, deposit 1 cent and receive a Community Fund “con: tributor’s button.” ‘That button wil) admit him to the ranks of those who at 11 o'clock Saturday morning will| ance tally closely with the descrip- pass thru the etreets of the down- town district in spectacular forma tion! Since discussing the parade in yes. terday'’s paper numerous things have We have taken place and developed. even called upon the mayor. Bo. And altho the firat part of tho interview got us somewhat fuss. 4, expected. Seemed to mo the mayor should be the outcome of the whole pro: cedure was happier even than was less be fought for in the event of alinvited to participate in our party widespread walkout, altho the matter | Yes, the mayor—and the chief of I went down to their respec ings are being held this week by the |ive offices to request that they lead Industrial |our parade, ot om aboll- of amnesty would top the list, Workers’ action to eff Construction union to consid tablishment Meet. police. t “We're going to have a mutt pa (Turn to Page 7, Column 3) (EDITORIAL) Hiding behind the shadow of the 18th hole of the presidential golf course may be found these bright autumn days a stunned citizen who talks to himself, and this Is the text of his dis- course: “Whatever have I done to make thent hate me so?” Harging has performed strict- ly to specifications; he has come ag near delivering the goods per platform promise as human ability may. Yet President Harding, from being the most popular candidate, and then president, in years, has sudden- ly come upon a great silence; 4 silence punctured here and yon by a» fast-fleeting brick. As he was he is now, and ever will be, world without end, amen and abmen; but, drat it, the people have changed their ideas, and they haven't even coughed before switching their minds, Wasn't the public tired of in- dustrial strife and eager to get down to productivity? Well, then, whatcha yellin’ about injunc- tions for? Didn't you want a splendid isolation and no entangling al- Mances? Why, then, this sudden ohift? Wasn't it » high tariff and protection to the working man you wanted? Even so. Why, then, the cussing? Didn't you want the govern- ment quit being durn paternal and to get out of bus- iness? Once more, why the con- fusion of tongues, and the to so th O'Hara home. Held at Olympia OLYMPIA, Sept. 26.—A rough- ly garbed, nervous man, who says he ix Sir Edward G. Lamb- den, of London, England, is in the county jail here teday, while officers are investigating to de- termine If hie is the maniac who assaulted the O'Hara family, at Schneider's Prairie, the night of September 7. Lambden's clothing and appear. ion of the fiend who attacked the He has soft, white hands, and a peculiar quality in his voice. him as to his whereabouts during the Jast three weeks, but he docs not The officers have questioned give natisfactory answers. T SHECK INGER PRINTS Finger prints will be taken of the suspect this morning and checked against the prints left by the Schnet- der’s Prairie fiend in blood on the lamp chimney in the O'Hara home Be him over. Members of the O'Hara family also ill be brought to Olympia to look Mrs, Peter Jorgenson, of joxton Harbor, who beat a maniac off when he attempted to attack her, It’s a Mystifying Job—Being President (Turn to Last age, Column 4) silence among the hand clasp- ers? The nation by a rising vote recently announced that it was forever and forever thru with high talking, essay writing, idealistic government; it wanted & practical, political, business- conserving government, attend- ed to by » practical politician who was a regular party man and who was no solitary voice crying in the wilderness. ‘The nation got what it stood up for; it was tickled to death for almost six months, and now it has flopped once more and is running in fiery circles seeking idealism, justice to the down- trodden, and the brotherhood of man, No wonder there is lack of concentration on the ball af the 18th hole, of the of. a (MARY WITH HER CURLS, DOUG WITH HIS LAUGH * * * # & * * & SCREEN STARS ON HONEYMOON VISIT SEATTLE | The Seattle Sta Matered a0 Gesend Cinss Matter May 6, 3490, at the Postoffice at Geattin Wash. wader the Act of Congress Mareh 6, 1678, Por Yong, by Mall 05 to $0 Mary. Aileen of The Star Helps to Wel- come Notables By Aileen Claire Mary and Doug were tho guests of Seattle for two hours and a half Tuesday morning. That is, they were in the city two hours and a half. But the city saw them only two hours, It wasn't their fault, however, that they weren't prepared to step down the platform immediately upon their arrival at 6:80 a.m. The porter he Shasta Limited, Doug on on board (Turn to Page 7, Column 2) HOME | |EDITION TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE “Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford (above) leading their own Limited shortly after their arrival here at 6:30 Tuesday morning. —Photo by forty from the Shasta elow is the inimitable Price & Carter, Star Staff Photographers Please, Doug and Mary, Have Mercy on Homer!) By Homer Brew Douglas Fairbanks, Mary Pickford. Dear Sir and Madam:— I take my pen in hand because T have heard that you are In the movies and thought perhaps you could help me in my great am- bition to become a screen star and make $1,500 a week and at- tend pajama parties, My only drawback to a successful | career in pictures is that I.am op- posed to divorce--but I am perfectly willing to get into any other kind of scandal, Now for my qualifications; Tam suceesstut both in comedy, and, tragedy. If you would like to hear me J could recite “The Shoot. ing of Dan MeGrew” like a file be ing drawn across your teeth, And. when it comes to comedy, I (Turn to Page 7, Column 3

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