The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 10, 1922, Page 1

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many young men of the wrong kind 0 to college. @nough to turn out for football. . . ( It seems that all they have to do \ttrike, ciniming the less they wear fhe more pay they should recetve. he higher figure. mary . Sa a Binder = aad ged you) : —s| ‘Ezra Doolittle, of Sagebrush, Ben- een Ee ae se ereattpee rene cern osemnmmtcemet me entet eememapmenten sey fen centena rt tert te eT ne comeeceateeammneectnetea ett: Mt et RAE fair; moder: erly Temperature Maximum, 63. oy seman VOLUME 24, NO. 195, Howdy, folks! The auto bas done lots for people and done for lots of people. see ‘The movie actress who Is living In the window of the Standard Furnt-| gure company this week is taking great panes to make a home, eee The city council is going to Investi- gate Mayor Brown's expenditure of the secret services fund Perhaps Doc used the fund to tn- Yestigate the city counell, wee YOU OUGHTA SEEN ‘ER! “She leaned forward, bugging herself with crossed re.) From Joseph Conrad's “"Twixt | Land and Sea.” 1 eee Gosh ding it! Cancer week ts com: fag and we can't scare up a single | privileged to —————_ LVL GEE GEE, TH OFFICE "| VAMP, SEZ: i} | Tacoma girl's voce reaches F in who can go higher than that they get mad. ¥f your mother.intaw gets attacked by a mountain lion, don't interfere. ‘What do you care about a mountain / Ben? go up with a roll and come back ih a bun. ee AS We understood it, the radio sta- tions broadcasted the world series games play ay Satay. too | Dartmouth professor says | Sure, a lot of them aren't heavy THE HIGHBROW AD WRITER | “Don Julian Cigars; Preferred by the Cognoscenti.”—Advertise- ment. ‘And the Owl, no doubt, Is the favorite of the intelligensia, ars Td Uke to be a race horse, It ts the life, they say; Is chase around all day. eee Paris chorus girls threaten to In other words, the more figure, Fewer young men have been ruined by bootleg whisky than by the dix | ery that they can part their hair the middie. eee Charles T. Donworth, assistant cor- Poration counsel, rules that the city fannot help patrolman buy the new coats prescribed by Chief Sev- ‘Why can't the bootleggers come to aid of their friends? eee fon county, says he has eaten #0 Many jack rabbits that every time hears a dog bark he runs under) porch. eee SLOGAN ‘e suppose Turkey Is fighting te make the world safe for bar | Bay what you itke sbout the Turks, they certainly Meve t Diace Constantinople 1s! long 2 word to fit into the head- ‘Maes é eee A Ment puy ts Cheerleader Crame; He's saving hia voice | | For the Thankagtving game. o-* tiwing may reduce euttiog your wind- Tedues the cost of living, (Free the advt, men.) . : . Gattieo— we mapped the aktes; much the world owes Ms middie-aged guys! WEATHER Tonight and Wednesday, probably Today noon, 89, <> ate northea: winds. Last 24 Hours Minimum, 49. The paper with a 15,000 daily circulation lead over its nearest competitor The Seattle Star TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE FOR CHANCE W. B. Davis Wishes Lesson Had Been Taught Earlier “I wish The Star had been around to start a thrift campaign when I was a young man. It would have brought the lesson home to me in such a way that I would have be; to save 80 years ago instead of Monday. But I'm on the right road now, even if it is rather late. I hope Seattle young folks will profit by the mistakes of many of us older ones and accept the opportunity The Star so generously affords.” W. B. Davis, 6509 10th ave. N. E., was the speaker. He is 92 years old Monday he opened his first savings accennt and carried home a prize of $10 because he was the oldest de. positor on Old Folks’ day. “I'm going to keep adding to this little start of mine as long as I am Rotered as Hecond Class Matter May #, 1899, at the Postoffice at Seattle, Wash, under the Act of Congress March #, 1879, Per Year, by Mall, $6 to 69 SEATTLE, WASH., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1922. i ei . ———— ‘an Seattle matte om si | DEPENDS ON one W. T. Beeks, 16, Is As Road At 92, oe Familiar W. B. Davis Note Is Awaited| witn Started From Angora to| Hongkong Savi : ° M «tar Decide Future in) 4* “ot Account N E t Seattle Monday, ear Las Folk Winning LONDON, Oct. 10—The Brit Are With bs ish cabinet was summoned to Prize meet at 6 weleck pr afternoon Second Ave. For Oldest > Mesagared the Near Eastern He Came Depositor ¥ wind Home : MUDANIA, Oct. 10.—Pence In Star's wer'te hb tei ass Sadek Monday Gold Shower. up to the Angora government to- Night are day, while Great Britain quiet- #1 Wish, ly shifted more troops into Saying: o strategic positions in prepara- “ye, He Says, tlon for any eventuality, T'm Glad “The Star amet Pasha, Kemalist representa- To Be tive at the conference here, Had Been ponied by ‘on. Bartagton with allled Here!” proposals for evacuation of Thrace Running on condition the Turks did not fur. ther violate the neutral sones. The 80 Years Ottoman delegate forwarded theae to Angora. promising « reply from Ago Mustapha Kemal's government by lve,” he continued. “Even if that shouldn't be very long I know I'll be surprised to know how much {tll amount to tf I keep lat It persistently, The Star ts dotng | Ph |& great work; all Seattle has a chance to profit in a way that should make thousands of homes happy.” Mr. Davis baa 14 grandchildren, 13 great grandchiMiren, and bas the dis- tinction of having ridden on the first trolley car operated in Seattle in 1889 on the Lake Union line, and in an airplane here when he was just 91 years old. He attributes his ac. tivity and his health to right think- i treble clef. We know «@ lot of | ing. He has been teaching an Amert- te u Hl - ral : I i : " i j h Fire ef rae ; i 4 ! bank today. BILLIONS OF SURPLUS CASH NEW YORK, Oct. 10.—Biliions of dollars of surplus investment money in the United States, pre- saging an unprecedented business revival, were disclosed today as the result of the government's call for a M-year loan of a half billion dollars at 4% per cent. Oversubscription of the loan, asked for refunding of part of the national debt, by $1,000,000 to §2,- 000,000,000, was sanured today as applications for hundreds of militons rolied into the New York financial district banks from coffers of “American business.” ‘The quota was oversubscribed in a few hours, Two Men Murdered; Youth Under Arrest CRESCENT CITY, Cal., Oct. 10. Fritz ©. Gerrold, age about 20. wi held in the county Jail here today fol lowing a coroner's jury report plac- ing upon him the responsibility for the murder of Joseph L. McIntyre, aged 24, and Jack Brenton, aged 26. Gerrold led officers last night to a spot on the ocean beach two miles south of here, where they found lying in the sand the bodies of McIntyre and Brenton, both of whom had been shot to death, * A BANANA SELLS * RUM; JAILED DENVER. —A sentence of from one to three years was meted out to A. Banana, convicted for the second time of bootiegging. Banana is a Greek fruit merehant. how | Protogrep! H. Brew Gazes on Girl Living in Glass House Most of you was down there yes terday, and I guess you noticed me. I was the little guy at the left, with his nose stuck agninst the window: pane. I would « been closer, but was afraid I would be cut by broken eians. The movie actress's name ta Edna Sampeon, and I guess she knows me, too, because I kept winking at her Uuke'l wag a old friend. Eéna—t hope doen't mind me calling her Edna—ts living, eating, seeping and breathing in the store window. She even plays the plano, ed out of the thing was lacking. the little things that make married life #0 enjoyable, things like a hus- band or a cute little yelling kiddi. And there wasn't any of that ocn- versation that {iluminates the early morning hours with the sacred glow of domesticity, for instance: | "Get up an’ close | honey.” "Get up yourself, you big stiff.” “Hey, who left the cover off the toothpaste? “Where's Where did you hide ‘em? the It's as hard as rock.” my collar ‘t that just like a Start a quarrel. The Seattle Star Thrift Coupon Worth 50 Cents; Cut It Out Inclusive, aecount bank. Y haar SEATTLE STAR has arranged with the Seattle National Bank, Becond 4 Cojumbia St., to help every Star reader start a bank account. This coupon is worth 60 cents to you. Cut out the coupon the Seattle National Bank, October 4 to 14, and you can open a $1 ave. Take it with 60 cents to savings Bosides being credited with a $1 account, each depositor will be given a Liberty Bell A picture of the bank appears here, Sign your name and address here; but that doesn’t make any differ- ence, because Second ave. is nolsy, And this morning when she crawl hay, I noticed some- I guess it was window, buttons? man’? ‘They're right where you left them If you'd put your things away at |night you'd be able to find them in the morning.” “That's right. can't even ask a simple question bu I ut } Search for Miner’s Body | «1 store, Well, fotka, I gotta dash along and explain to my wife that for the last two days I been out on an important ansignment witt, Matt Starwich and his bloodhounds, chasing a murderer in the Cascade foothills, Make mar. ringe safe for the married man, is my motto, Yre. Gnely., HOMER BREW. GIRL GIVEN DAIRY PRIZE ST. PAUL, Minn. Oct. 10—Mive Elizabeth Willerton, of Ohio, ie the champion junior judge of datry cat- i | tle In America. ‘The young Indy was awarded the prize at the national dairy show here, She was the only girl to com- pete for the honor with 28 boys, and the boys admitted there waa no chivalry in the decision, “I was reared on a datry farm,” Miss Willerton said, “and I know my | cattle just as a city girl knows the | street of her home town.” ch Abandoned JACKSON, Cal., Oct. 10.—Search for the body of William Fessel, who died with 46 other men im the Argo- naut mine, has been temporarily abandoned because of gaa and water in the lower h js of the Argonaut. When fire again flamed up in the Argonaut, bulkheads had to be re- placed in the shaft. This has caused a new accumulation of gases, Water has now risen to the 4,500 foot level in the mine and is being pumped off thru the opening made into the Ken- nedy mine by rescue crews. |Deciding on Site for Tacoma Hotel TACOMA, Oct. 10.—Whether Ta- coma’s new $1,000,000 community hotel will be built on the site of the present Tacoma hotel or on the Rhodes, Scott & Howe property at Ninth and Broadway, will be de- cided late today, Stockholders are taking @ final ballot on the sites after eliminating a score of other sites In t revious elections, Officials Go to Grand Jury Meet Thorgas P, Revelle, United States district’ attorney, and Judson F, Faulkner, assistaht United States district attorney, left the city Mon- day night for Tacoma, where the |grand jury was to conaider further evidence in the Cronkhite case Tues day. It was expected that’ Otto Shultze, shoulder arms expert, would testify. |Stores to Remain Open Columbus Day All Seattle stores will remain open Columbus day, October 12, according to an announcement ‘Tuesday by the Seattle Chamber of Commerce. thia afternoon. Limitations of @ permanent neu- tral zone around the straits and the number of Turkish gendarme: which Is to be permitted In Thrace were also mentioned in the allied note Meanwhile, the Biritish went threatening to lead a bolt from the parley if Ismet Pasha 414 not secure an immediate answer. LLOYD GEORGE FACES ATTACK ‘BY LLOYD ALLEN * * * By E. P. Chalcraft hold no terror for the Pa age is with Olympia and Tacoma. Trulock, who Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. William T. Beeks, 109 W. 56th He thought he wanted to enter the naval academy at Annapolis, but wasn't sure about it. “Bo I thought,” he explained, “that I'd try @ taste of real sea life and see if 1 liked it.” First taking the lifeboat drill test, Trulock made « round trip from Beattie to Ban Pedro as deckhand LONDON, Oot. 10—-Lioyd George's |Aboard the H. FF, Alexander. Thus critics are giving him no peace in the ertain, Labor today had joined a wide spread demand among opposition parties that the premier resign. Rea- otutiong calling for immediate resig- nation of the government and elec tion of a new parliament were adopt- ed by a joint counctl representing trades congresses and the labor party. ‘The situation tn the Near East fur nishes a useful lever for evicting Lioyd George, his enemies believe. independent’ Ifberals and unionist “die hards” started the attack. ‘The prime minister is not eaying anything. It wes announced he will insue a statement on the Near Fast after hearing directly from Gen. Har- ington. Lioyd George, in defense of his poll. clen regarding the Turkish trouble be made in a public mpeech, |GUGGENHEIM PASSES AWAY BOUTHAMPTON, Oct, 10—Inaac Guagenheim, American copper mag- nate and one of the wealthiest capt. talists in the United States, died suddenly at a local hospital today, eee Guggenheim was 68 years of age, having been born in Philadelphia, July 7, 1854, He had made his home in New York clty for years, Tho magnate was a director in the following corporations: Mexican Union Rallway. American Smelting and Refining. American Smeliters Securities Co. Yukon Gold Co, He was a member of the firm of Guegenhelm Bros, 120 Broadway, New York, Do You Want a Home in Mt. Baker? Today's offer from a Seattle Realtor tells of a home in the Mt, Baker district. MT. BAKER HOME $300 Cash, $30 Month Good b-room home. on « dandy Jot 40x120 to alley; lot alone worth more than half the pur- chase price. Within two blocks ie and high school. This r chance to get your fam~ & home 1n_a good district, co $2,060, No mortgage, fly Pri ‘The classified columns will tell you who can show you this little home. qualified, he applied for and secured an assignment on the President Mc- TOO MUCH FUEL BILL IS ARGUED Bitter Scrap Is Staged in the Mayor’s Office ‘The sentiment at the meeting was divided and there were many aoc- erimonious arguments between deal- ers and attorneys representing’ the two sides of the case. Jonse Ives, of the Stimson Lumber company, made the direct charge that the existing ordinance, which Mmita the size of a load of wood, was * zx & & Qualifies as Youngest Seaman Out of Seattl Kinley as ordinary seaman, sailing from Seattle August 19. work any seaman gets these days,” ® three | trulock said. “Painting, scrubbing, holystoning the deck—I had my share. But, honest, it isn’t bad at ell, Nothing Whe it used to be in ten home during the voyage he said: “Life on the ocean ts fine, but home, sweet home, for mine.” Pahaska Tepee Is Menaced by Flames DENVER, Colo., Oct. 10-—Volun- teer firemqp battied a forest fire on Lookout «méuntain, near here, for several hours last night to prevent the flames destroying Pahaska Tepes, “I guess I had about alb the hard HOLDUP PLOT FRUSTRATED NEAR TENINO Conductor Bluffs Two Bandits on Tacoma Train; Suspects Seen TACOMA, Oct, 10—An unsue- cessful attempt to rob Tacoma- Portland passenger train No. 401 on the Northern Pacific railway near Tenino early this morning was made by two unmasked men who poked automatic pistols in the face of Conductor Ward at 4a, m, today. ‘Ward is said to have refused to hold up his hands at their command. The men, becoming frightened, jumped from the train. Tacoma police were informed the men boarded a Tacoma-bound freight. An hour later the night watchman acters from the yard. In their flight Detective Captain Strickland said the goods were taken either at Vane couver, Wash., or in Portland. flashed weapons on Conductor make their escape when it arrived jat Chehalis. couple on September 14. 2. Repeatedly threatened to shoot his own wife. mystery heightened public against the further imp: young Hayes, who ts erv! as a result of Schneider says Hayes minister and choir singer by mix take. “Say,” fall, “if I killed them, do you think Tf” would have stuck around New Bruns wick all this time? Prosecutors Beekman and Strick- ler re! to Aivulge the contents of the 300- statement that Schnel- der is alleged to have signed after he at the G. N. railway freight sheds here chased two suspicious char — they dropped a roll of blankets com taining stolen jewelry. ; Police here believe the pair whe — planned to hold up the train and — in which are kept hundreds of relics was grilled for 24 hours. Peart of William F. Cody (Buffalo Bil), A shift in the wind at a late hour turn- ed the fire from the museum. Pahaska Tepee is familiar to thou- sands of tourists who annually visit the summit of the mountain, on which is Cody's grave. American Freighter Is Afire Off Canal SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 10 The Hawalian-American line freighter Cardiganshire, bougd for Ban Fran- part of a conspiracy on the part of; cisco from Atlantic porta, is making coal interests to strangle the wood /for Colon, Canal fone, today with a industry. fire in her cargo, according to pri- “It ts impossible to sel! a load Of| vate cablegrams recelved here via 84 cubte feet for any less money than a load of 100 cubic feet,” Ives de clared. transportation. Therefore, the only way to protect the public is to set a minimum standard. J. E. Peterson, appearing as at- torney for the Stimson Co., told how a bill similar to the present ordinanceghad been presented to the last legislature and how the legis: lature had refused to pass it. reason,” Peterson said, “1s that this measure has anoth- er motive than that of protect- ing the public, Its true motive is to stifle ‘a The session was marked by sev- eral bitter attacks upon L. J. Allen, chief inspector of weights and measures, who caused the arrest of the seven dealers, “Allen bas laid down on his job. No effort haa been made to enforce the ordinance,” J, F. Vining charged. A plea was made for a minimum Joad of wood instead of the lMmited load of wood by H. W. Sanders, at- torney for the Bryant Lumber Co, “It's no crime,” he said, “to give someone more than he pays for, But It te an offense to short change him, The min- imum load would make it im- possible for the customer to get too’ little, but, the present ordi- nance simply makes it impos- sible for hin to get too much.” “This ie due to the cost of}tne cargo but the extent cannot be | Lendon. The fire has done some damage to determined until the ship reaches Colon, probably some time today, the cable sald. Train Derailed; Passengers Hurt COSCOB, Conn., Oct. 10.—-Mem- bers of two train crews and about & score of passengers were slightly injured when a New York, New Haven & Hartford train side-swiped a freight in the yards here today. ‘The passenger train, a local from Stamford to New Haven, and the motor of the freight were derailed. There were no serious injuries, Columbia Frosh, 12, Would Make Team NEW YORK, Oct. 10.—Daniel Berman, 12-year-old Columbia fresh- man and latest prodigy of the in- stitution, longed today to put on enough weight so he may play foot ball. Columbia's youngest, who fs 4 feet 2 inches tall and weighs 98 pounds, is taking a heavy course in mathematios, languages and history, He came here from Galveston, Texas, “Clif? didn't do it,” she said. It was Pearl and Schneider who reported to the police that the bodies of the millionaire pastor of the church of St. John the gelist and his choir under the tree on the farm. “On the morning of Saturday, September 16,” the girl said, and I met to take a walk. him I wanted to go tn the direction De Russy lane. He said he didn't want to go that way, I finally coaxed him to do it. don't want to go over there,’ he said, but finally consented. Me te va Mils, I now the minister had his watch with him then, “He only went to a farm house to phone the police after I bad coaxed him,” Rhododendron Buds Again! Editor Phe Star: On a trip to a Kitsap coun- ty resort, Sunday, I saw rhodo- dendrons with well-developed buds, almost ready to blossom. Also dogwood trees with foll- ‘age turned red and with large seeds, yet at the same time heavily budded, as if for an Oo tober q I would like to ask local nat uralists ff this is not an ex tremely unusual phenomenon, due to the uncommon duration of our warm weather, AAR.

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