The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 6, 1922, Page 1

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rain WEATHER Tonight and Saturday, prodadty ; moderate southeast. erty winds FORECAST Matter May %, 1899, at the Postoffics at & sami ME 2. NO, 192. Br Howdy, folks! ‘This ts fish day and it finds us fishing for para- graphs, as usual. ee | Max Stern is writing “To Alaska | ena Hell Ship.” We take it that the ship did not go outside the three-mile | oe 4 of Ku 4." Newspaper * Bet he was kanned. eee Seattle woman raises two potatoes that weigh two and a half pounds) each. Put ‘em on the top of the basket, Emil, Kluz Klan eee OR HAVE THE PIP North Pacific whaling season closes this week. Don't why. Perhaps the whales are moulting. 2 Tt now develops that Mayor Brown was once a grocery clerk. Wonder if there is where he learned to make promises and then never deliver the goods? se i Several Contribs have asked why Ol4 Joe Bungstarter isn't arrested again. Gosh, don't they know there | a city ordinance against arresting | Bieciseees more than once a year? ee | ‘This ts National Beauty week. Al! girls wearing tortoiseshell glasses ‘will be deport e | ee ‘A colyumist sai in his 2} room ‘And freely gave vent to his tre, For he hankered to sing Of posies and spring— But @ coat of ice covered his lyre eee TAKING NO CHANCES An advertisement on the menu of Lischetti’s restaurant says, “Make ©) your reservations. tor parties with the cashier.” . Say what you like about baseball, it is m great game for the peanut venders. ‘The reason they call tt the Polo Grounds ts because they don't play | polo there. eee Today's candidate for the Poison who breaks in just when the broad > casting station is sending out the \*Rews of a last-minute batting rally eee GETTING THE RETURNS ’ Bmashing the table chandelier With yells for Hetnie Groh, “Slide, dam’ you, slide,” we shouted —| the radio. Whether the Giants did win the game Well never, never know, For the Mra. broke the contraption— Grabbing the radio! eee Speaking of high light rates, give &@ thought to Judge Jake Kalina. czar of the police court. He fined three men $100 yesterday for being | Sluminated. As we understand the eauses of .the turmoil, England put up a “No| Parking” sign on the Dardanelles and Turkey got mad when she re-| eetved a traffic slip. ; eee THE COLLEGE OF HARD KNOCKS Matrimony is the oldest co-edu eational institution In the world. oe te no am ! How bitter, A To wim « gal And then not git her. Love in 20 wweet, h But you'd better Juat fet her go if you can't # oe her. Battling Stki has cauliflower ears Ah, the earmarks of « champion! Speaking of trouble in the Near East, ix Bellevue still fighting the terry issue? Home eas MAKE |day and « night and has ¢ jerty motor lifting a load of 10,300 Ivy club ts the commercial operator | | map ' Mayor Brown has bought a motor. Boat to run down booze smugglers. and Bob Hesketh says he hopes it; doesn't run on a bar. . | “THE BEAUTIFUL AND DUMB" George Beban calls movie act | fesses “unintelligent.” | Viola Dana counters with | “George Beban is a big hunk of Gong! George wins. Aga ga Better Homes week is coming. Make things easier for your wife and buy her a new coal shovel. . That girl who is going to lve in the window of the Standard Furnt-; ture company evidently believes in a| life in the open. Dry Agents Held on Graft Charge BAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 6—Three| Members of the dry squad were ar-| Mested here yesterday and accused @ extorting $100,000 from winerie @Pners in Sonoma county. Several @imilar arrests have been made re tently by federal officials who are Making a systematic effort to clean up graft among local prohibition agents. } | Mitia Wash, under the Act ef Congre SE ATTLE, Wé ASH,, FRI | Still in Air This Morning, Having Been Up 28 Hours} SAN DIFGO, Cal, Oct | Lieutenants MacKeady and Kel | ly were still aloft in their ree | ord-breaking flight at 10:30 a m, teday. They have been in the air 2% hours and 37 minutes, breaking all known records for sustained flight. They expect to stay up until thelr gas gives out. The plane has flown over the local army air station every 20 minutes. . SAN DIEGO, Cal., Oct. ¢ — San | Diego Mstened to the song of the Liberty motor all night long. It waa the never-failing drone of the wondreus air machine that has kept Lieuts. John MacReady a |Oakley Kelly aloft for more than a ven them a new world record for sustained Might tn a heavier-than-air machine. The mammoth Fokker transport monoplane, bullt in America for the army air service, cruised high under a brilliant full moon directly over the city all thru the hours of semt jdarkness, Its huge dragon-fly shape lwas imned sharply a. st the moon many times in the night, and the rear of its motor was always audible.’ MacReady and Kelly set one new! | [mark for aviationjwhen they sprang into the alr yesterday with the Lib- pounda. They made air histery shortly be fore 3% o'clock this morning when | they passed the world's sustained} flight record of 21 hours and 48 min utes, held by Walter Landman of | Berlin, | They hopped off at 5:53 yesterday | morning. In a note dropped at) Rockwell field the aviators declared | that they will stay aloft until their) gasoline supply is exhausted, barring | other untoward happenings. They} estimate their tanding time some-/| where between 4 and 7 o'clock this) evening. MacKeady now holds the world'’s| rd for altitude. Tt ts 40.800 feet. | \When they started thelr flight the aviators Intended to croms the con { tinent to New York city. A high/ jcloud bank over the first mountain | pass they encountered blocked thelr heavily-laden plane, which gained ol titude exceedingly slow. They jock jeyed to get over the clouds for an ‘hour and a half without success, Afr men and laymen alike praise them today for not taking the great risk of attempting to cross the — range thru the clouds. Aero Club of America i have authenticated the flight. The world record for sustained flight ts now in the hands of the two filers. It remains only to be seen how much they can better the old mark. A force of army aviators and as sistants remained on duty all night | At Rockwell field to give aid to the| airmen in case of a foreed landing. | |The motor of the plane, however, never missed a beat, apparently. MacReady Served at Seattle Plant) re | Lieut. John MacReady, who tw with Lieut. Oakley Kelly in the| record-breaking sustain flight above San Diege, was in ttle last sum- |mer testing airplanes for the go ernment at the Boeing plant. Mac Ready holde another record. He has been up on Initial fights in more types of air craft than any other ARREST COMING IN LOVE CASE New Jersey Suspect to Be Locked Up NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J., Oct An arrest {s imminent in the F murder mystery, Prosecutor Strickler of Middlesex county prom ised today, following an autopsy on Ithe body of the slain pastor. Charging important witnesses have | testified falsely, Assistant Prosecu tor Toolan plans to recall them. He declares a solution of the mystery | of the minister’s proposed flight with | 6 \his pretty choir leader and thwir vio. deaths while together at the y Phillips farm will come when “certain people” tell the truth \Worker Is Crushed Between Two Pipes lent ton. Crushed between two pipes while a work on Kast Marginal Fri day, Milton Custer, rly 06 234 ave, received several broken ribs. He was taken to Providence hospital, Buildings | Rocked in Alaska Quake) ANCHORAGE, Alaska, Oct, 6.~A’| repetition of the minor earthquakes that have been taking place here for | several weeks occurred last night when fhree distinct jolts rocked build. | ings, causing them to creak. No roa. terial damage has been reported, BABES IN NEVRECORDS BIG. RUSH FOR GOLD AAAS) John Berlin, who became a capitalist at the age of 4 Friday| morning. He is shown examining his Liberty Bell bank, while J. H. Miner, assistant cashier of the Seattle National bank, is opening a Shower of Gold savings account for him. » Sar Stall Photographers Bank Changes to Gurgling Nursery in Star’s Money Shower BY ROBERT B. BERMANN The architecture of the Seattle National bank is the most impressive of any business or financial institution In Seattle. Tho building is cold, imposing. The interior is beautiful—but also cold, | Imposing. Yet on Friday morning the Institution looked more like a day nursery than a bank. Babies, bables, bables! Everywhere, Some of them wee tots, In their mothers’ arms. Others of the perambulater age. And more still toddling along, a tiny hand grasping mama’‘s skirt, ‘They were there to reap some of the benefits of The Star's Shower of id. And, more important sfill, to learn a lesson that will prove of incal- culable benefit thruout their lives—the lesson of thrift. Incidentally, Frank Jacobs was on hand, grinding out yards and yards of film, to be exhibited next week at the Greater T corporation John, a tow-headed youngster with an appealing amile, was so vastly in trigued with the Liberty bell bank that Assistant Cashier J. H, Miner gave him that he collected not a few pennies in it before he left the bank, in addition to getting his dollar ac ters movie houses. timate the It was impossible to exact number of bables who were taken to the bank Friday, but It tx | Count for 60 centa certain that they carried the number The earliest depositor—in more ways than one—wag Botty Hill, | In the first place, she was only 36 minutes old when she became the owner of a bank account. In the second place, her de- of Shower of Gold savings accounts thousand-mark tly 876 accounts had 6 of business well past the Just been opened at the ¢ Thursday, as a result of the cam. | paign, and several hundred more| Poalt was accepted at 8:30 In the were ‘started before business had| morning—an hour and a halt be- fore the bank opened for busi- ness. Bo déterminet was her father, (urn to Page 7, Column 5) been under way an hour Friday. One of the first Babies’ day depos was John Rerlin, 4-year-old son f Mrs, A. Berlin, 6709 Thayer st The Seattle Star Thrift Coupon Worth 50 Cents; Cut It Out HE SEATTLE STAR has arranged with th Seattio National Bank, Second and Columbia #t., to help every Star reader start a bank account This coupon is worth 60 cents to you. out the coupon, Take It with 60 éents to the Seattle National Bank, October 4 to 14, inclusive, and you can open @ $1 savings account Besides being credited with a $1 each depositor will be given a bank. A picture of the bank app: Sign your name and address here SIGN YOUR NAME AND ADDRESS HERE: ave. Cut account, y Bell ra here, With Its Cold Marble Walls| 22 DAY, ocToBE R 6, 19 GIANTS TAKE THIRD GAME! Whitewash Applied by John Scott in 3 to 0 Victory Final score: | Yanks a) Pere sees oe 8 13 1 Hoyt, Jones and Scott and Smith. Yanks— a, rf Vive, tb K. Meusel, Bohang, ©. Ward, Heott, as. Me. MeCormiel ems, firet Kiem, second base, Hildebrand, third ee POLO GROUNDS, New York, | Det. 6.—"dock" Seott, bib North Caroling farmer, who was thrown off the Cincinnall Reds three months ago as excess freight, became registered bag- | gage here this afternoon when he pitehed the New York Giants to a %te0 victory over the New York Yanks tn the third game of the world series. got his passage from ati beeause the doctors arn was no good. eee BY HENRY L. FARRELL POLO ROUNDS, New York, Oct. 6—Caim and peaceful after the riot of yesterday, the | Grounds at 1245 today looked like la deserted battle ground at the | front | Faint rumbles of the raucous razz tpat fell upon Comminsioner Landis’ and the players when yes- terday’s game was stopped in the 10th inning rotted out of the bieach ors occasionally, Some vocal artit lery apparently was getting tuned jup for action, The bieachemand upper stands were practically filled at noon and }thru the entrances steady lines of jcustomers were streaming. it was obvious thét fandom wasn't leaning toward a boycott in reprisal for | yesterday's Incident The Giants, first on the field, | encaped a razzing As they fMled in from the center field gate they} were given a fairsized hand with| a few scattered whisties, As the players neared the dugout. the ba In the reserved section of t took it up and’gave a few ‘ag The sky was becoming so bary at at times it was almost as dark when the game was called yew ord. The far nec of the cen- ter field bleachers almost blurred Casey Stengel was unofficially an nounced from the Giant dugout as junfit for action today, and it was said that Bill Cunningham, of Seat tle, will be In centerfield. Stengel ts atl crippled with a “Charley Horse,” but he may be able to work tomorrow. Blume, the college the mound when the as the home team, started batting Ipractice. All the re«ulars and re |serves were taking their turns at Scott teher, went to Jlants, working bat. Hugh McQuillan was the only one of McGraw's pitchers on the field. | jthe Yankees to turn over the re lcelpts of yesterday's game exclusive ly for the relief of wounded soldiers were adopted at a Baseball Writers’ association before the game. inated Sid Mercer of New York, man Thompson of Washington, Bang of Cleveland and Ed Ballinger of Pittsburg to take a two weeks’ jhunting trip as guests of the Can adian Pacific ratlway this fall. Sale of tickets for the bleachers was stopped at 1:10 and a good-sized crowd standing in line was turned back. Very few seats remained in the upper stand end it wae apparent t another 8. R. O. day would be in Den eee FIRST INNING Yankees—Witt out, Scott to Kelly on a bunt, Dugan flied to Young Ruth out, Friech to Kelly, No runs, w hits, no errors ft out to Hoyt, un- nt. Groh singled to h singled thru the box itt holding Groh at seo- lined into a double play. Pipp. No runs, two hits, no errors SECOND INNING Yanks—Pipp singled to right. Be Mousel fouled to Kelly. Schang Iflied to ¢ am. Pipp ate . Bancroft , NO errors. to left, but lwas out a to Ward. |Kelly out, Scott Cunning: ham’ sinigled Smith | forced Cunningham at second, Ward to tt. No runs, two hits, no | THIRD INNING Hied to Young Kelly. Witt. Walked, off first, Smith to . no hits, no err rit singled past was safe at first went to third when J. 8 rd | mutfed Ww Bancroft’s _ roller. Grob hit to Hoyt and Scott was | run down between third and home. Hoyt to Schang to Dugan. Bancroft went to third and Groh to second. Frisch flied to Witt in deep center, Rancroft scoring and Groh ta third afte gr. M singled Young fo Beott. Tw | FOURTH INNING | -Yanks—Dugan out, Groh to Kelly |Ruth hit) by pitehed ball, Pipp| fanned, It. Mousel safe when Friach | muffed his roller. Ruth tried to reach third and was out, Bancroft (Turn to Page 7, Column 3) Polo} Resolutions asking the Glants and | meeting of the | ‘The association also nom: | Ed | Hoyt | TW 0 Cc ENTS IN One Cop | | Joke Was on Him So He’s Quit Couldn’t Explain They'd Just Laugh By Jack Hall There was a policeman and he was |® highly he did not jdrink, he did not smoke, he did not virtuous cop R. WM. ©, |mwear and he would stay up all night | to get a chance to put somebody in Jail He regarded the law as his private possession, and his enemies as foes f the public weal. pined one unregenerate lawyer 4 cross-examined this cop considerable acerbity. w it happened on his rounds| night this officer, with two others, came upon an ungodly quhr tet shaking dice at a dollar a throw nh & poolroom, The attorney was one of the sinners and the officer one the wagon and take ‘em in, ceman sniffed the lawyer's breath and in shocked tones exclaimed “You have been driking, too.” Now the attorney knew what he had on his hip and he did some quick thinking; he mys- teriously invited the officer into the private office; when they wore in there alone he closed the door, pulled out from his pocket his flask, extracted the cork and, handing it to the officer, said: “Here, be a good fellow, have a drink and forget it.” “The righteous servant of the Inw took the flask and exulted: ow I have got you!” “What do you mean?” asked the lawyer, “Got you with Uquor on you.” “It may have been my liquor once, but it's your now,” retorted the Hawyer and then he opened the door wide and backed out Into the pool room, erying “No, sir, that's one thing T refuse to do, drink with an officer when he’s on duty, or in uniform.” | The officer stood there stricken jdumb, the entire crowd saw him with the open bottle in his outstretched | hand, and one man’s word was as | good as another's about that time. For days this policeman kept on trying to explain that ft wasn't his |bottle, that he never took a drink. that he wouldn't be found dead with the stuff, ete, ete, and the more he argued the more he was laughed at. fo he quit the force in disgust and went to work } '6,000 HOMELESS IN FOREST FIRE Eight Towns ; Burned and 35 Dead in Ontario TORONTO, Oct. 6.—Thirty-five dead, 6,000 homeless, eight towns in complete ruln and damage amounting to probably $10,000,- 000 Is the incomplete toll today of a terrific multiple forest fire which swept the district of Tem- iskaming. Fifteen bod Halleybury, Chariton, Halleybury, county seat, was razed ‘by withering flames which were ‘tanned by strong southwest winds and the fire cut a swath thru the lcentral section of the stricken dis. trict. Refugees are pouring {nto North Bay with stories of the disaster that | were recovered at at Pelsip and three at |has known since the Matheson con. flagration of 1916. Automobiles, wagons and convey: ances of every description still crowded roads leading from the dis. | trict today, as a checkup showed the full extent of the disaster. In some sections, the fires fought | by volunteers, still burned Rain, which fell last n'ght, check ed the main conflagration, however, and saved the districtin-the path of |the flames, Robert Bond, his wife, their eight children and Bond's wife's brother, John Marshall, were found suffocated in a house where they had taken refuge from the flames, While {t will be days before any. thing like an accurate estimate of the death toll can be arrived at, it is |believed that at least 60 lives were lost Families were separated on the (Turn to Page 7, Column 5) DO YOU LIKE THIS ONE? Perhaps you been and have looking |] over haven't found the one you Bet ter look this one over and see where you can find it. many homes want | $2,500 HOME FOR $1.95 This sound big; but we would like to prove it, 4 rooms; com- plete bath; large sleeping porch; garage; splendid bulk- head;’ graded ‘streets; cement walk, ete, © ete The classified columns you more about tt, will tell Of all his enemies, he most heart: | jannounced that he was going to call| In the ensuing argument the po-| exceeded in horror anything Canada | | MEET | |\Diplomacy Breaks Armistice; Briti | BY EDWARD J. BING CONSTANTINOPLE, Oct. 6.— The Grenadier Guard, the crack British regiment, tramped into Constantinople today, following the breakdown of the Mudania | peace conference and the ap- proach of Kemalist cavalry to- wards this former Turkish cap- ital, The British force, brought here |by the Empress of India, swung thru the streets, band playing, col-| jors unfurled and Constantinople’s| n population went wild with| Christians see in the troops bulwark against an . Ottoman to take Constantinople by thru lies do not territory a threat force and march if the a code this Kemal Meanwhile, the secret confer- ence at Mudania had ended in temporary failure. The exact causes are not known because of the ban against newspaper men, It is reported that Turk- ish greed, once the allies showed signs of giving way regarding Thrace, caused an abrupt end- ing of the pariey. Another report is that the Greek representative, Gen. Mazarakis, re- fused to acquiesce in the slightest degree to Greece withdrawing from | | Thrace. | The Turks are understood to have demanded that the handin, Thrace and Constanté | piace immediately, while it was the’ | idea of the allies that this ebould not | be done until after the next peace conference. As a result of this Impasse, Mustapha Kemal has come per- sonally to take part In the dis- pute and will meet with General Harington, British representa- tive at Broussa tomorrow, ‘The Mudania conference, it was said today, might be resumed this evening, but this was unlikely in view of the fact that Harington and | Kemal! plan to meet. Broussa is just outside the neutral zone. The Turks continue to withdraw from the Chi immediately to Mustapha threat against Constantinople. They are at Ismid, on the edge of the neutral zone. FUEL DEALERS SELL T00 MUCH Warrants Out for 7 Whose Wagons Are Oversize! ° Charged with selling more wood than {s legal measure in a cord, seven Seattle fuel dealers were to be served with warrants fesued by Acting Police Judge Jacob Kalina to J. P. Worden, of the city weights and measures department, Friday. |Worden disclaims responsibility for the campaign to force fuel dealers to cut down the size of their loads jby saying rival fuel magnates had brought the charges. ‘The dealers named are F. 0. Corn wall, Cornwall & Sons; H. W. Schnel- der, Pacific Coast Fuel & Ice Co.; |W. R. Hocking, Sunnyside Coal & | Wood Co.; Henry Hickman; D. W | Spot. Arms & Scott; Edward T. Verd, Bryant Lumber company, and J, F, Ives, Stimson Mill compan The warrants were signed by L. J Allen, chief inspector of thé weights and measures bureau. Allen likewise side-stepped responsibility for hail-| ing the seven men into court The specific charge made is that |the wagons used to transport the cordwood are not of standard size, prescribed by law, weights and meas- Jures officials claiming the Interest of the public can be served best by re- | quiring all dealers to comply strictly | with the provisions of the ordinance. | Boy ‘Avaies to Find Robber in His Room} Charles Riggs, 19, awoke early | Friday morning in his room at the Reynolds hotel, sensing that some- jone was in his room, Riggs was correct, He found Alex Cziseweskt (39, miner, examining his clothes jand held him until Patrolmen J. B.} Clark and C. J. Guettel arrived, | Cziseweski was found to have a} gold wrist watch hidden in a shay. aad stick can, police allege i\Man Yells, Burglar Runs With Trousers A whoop in the dark and a fright. lened burglar took the alr at double Iwpeed Friday, according to William |Mitchell, 1118 24th ave. Mitchell ‘was the author of the whoop. But the thief was too scared to let go of | | | PEACE IS FAILURE! Paris to See Premier to ‘Thrace| | ernoon laged to extricate Shields from | debris and helped him to. the FOR | Military Meet for sh Envoy Off to BY LLOYD ALLEN LONDON, Oct. 6. and Britain have been brought once more to loggerheads by developments at Mudania dur ing the allied-Turkish prelimi nary peace patley. Lord Curzon, foreign secre tary, went hurriedly to Paris today to talk directly with Premier Poincare Franklin Bouilion’s intervention in the Near East and Franee’s support of the Turks at the com ference. Meanwhile, the whole progress of | negotiations with Mustapha as viewed from this end, are at tandstill. Gen. Harington ts at — Constantinople awaiting instructions: from London. The cabinet here ‘9 unable to send him those in structions until Curzon finds i exactly what the French have jto Kemal. Diplomatic considerations been injected by the — wih, Bouillon, into what been purely a military, regarding an eee here. Bec: things | thid out its own” are invariably at v: cially, Franklin ,Boutllon 5 ken of as nt, have | gv ery jto "his government atrocities in Thrace, where 50 lages have been burned. Candidate. Must Alibi W. W. Shields Willlam W. Shields, republican nominee for county treasurer and at present chief deputy treasurer, | was scheduled to face Acting Po lice Judge Jacob Kalina Friday aft in police court. Shields is charged with having driven his large touring car into the Great Northern docks while under the influence of something stronger than ginger ale, on the night of September 20, wrecking the machine and partially wreaetne himself. A nearby patrolman, as the story runs, hearing the crash, rushed te the scene of the accident and hospital, where a few stitches were taken in Shields’ lacerated physiog- nomy. If Shields should by chance be convicted, he will spend 30 daya in jail in addition to paying a fine of $100 and having his driver's license canceled, Is Seattle a One-Lunger? Seattle has only one lung of its Community Chest _filled—Lynden Tribune. Mitche! trousers and yest, Re- sult, Mitchell visite clothing store,

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