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

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

WEATHER Tonight and Saturday, rain; erate sows Temperature Last 34 Hours Maximum, 50, Toda, mod- hweaterty winds, Minimam, 44. y noon, 48, es scanned NO the Home Coming celebra- ie fraternity houses will serv f eee ma grads wilh tel! what the Uni y has done for them, They a Dame it on the University. eee THE BARE FACTS Nightshirt wil be Coeds will not They hate to feel over mixer will be held at the! a te mir but there will be | ‘to mix. end Harvard oraduates will if\of sports in Seattle ts expected to ope thru the evening ey let 90, hg might kill eae’ The paper with a 15,000 daily circulation lead over its nearest competitor Bntered as Beoond Clase Matter May a0 the Postoffies at Beattie, W ash, under the Act of Congress Marnh 8, 187%, Per Year, by Mati, #6 to 69 The Seattle Star SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, eISTAGE SET 4] FOR GRID GREAT GAME Washington on Its|California Leader Toes; Set for Grifm Fight "| Sp Leng eietn ! Gports Editor of The Star) Come on, Washington! ‘The Huskies, facing the greatest test that a Washington football team ever went up against, will trot out on the Stadium field to- morrew afternoon to battle the pride of California—the Golden Bears. The greatest crowd tn the history Mj ait in on the football classic of the Northwest tomorrow, 4,000 additional of the 1. C. & wilt give |Dleacher seats having been built for if snappy college yell, which con-/the game to accommodate the de on a two-cent stamy wt P / mand for tickets. Thirty-three thou: sand tickets have been sold. Today, on the eve of the battle, the California team i resting up from the long train trip up from Berkeley, They were scheduled to go thra a light workout at the gridiron machines in the country“not hoger has 8 having lost a game since Washing- coming. has elected a Ku Klux nor, We suggest that he as / the title of Kloregon Kleagls. we think that be es campaign in Kloregon show treated with kloride of klime—| VAMP, SEZ: Love makes the world go at night in autos. main trouble with these short The Golden Bear The soph ton last walloped them. ‘The climax of the California suc: |cest, as far as Washington is con- lcerned, was staged at Berkeley last jyear when the Purple and Gold waa snowed under by a T2-to-3 count. Both elevens have come thru the season undefeated so far, Washing: it | ton Saving hung up victories over ithe U. 8. Idaho, Montana, Idaho, lo. A. % They have totaled 107 points to 16 | for the enemy. | | California's powerful combination | |i leading the entire country in scor- | |ing, with 265 pecinta totaled sine the start of the year, with only 14 | potnts tallied by their opponents. has humbled it fs that one doeen't have 4s/ Santa Clara, St. Mary's, the Ma time to loaf. @ lot of saving fotze, they're sty once— for rainy days hey save for dry ones. person who said that actions | louder than words never heard ij Landon make a speech. one the young man who adver. himself as a “doctor's or unde assistant” kindly 2? asks the Detroit News. eee DERN YE, WORK! Brown has signed the forbidding loafing in at the ety hall. sounds like a dirty dig st fe necking a new conatita- We're willing to contribute the amendmen the Newberry razzberry?” : eee ga? Scknowledgr Feceipt of 1.469 that Mr. Poindexter ca y fing, “You're a Million, Miles, Mowhere.” ee ‘caNDiparr: FOR POISON IVY CLUB The traffic cop who always the stop signal when you ready to cross the ahout half the members try-| | state) with gratitude! contributions | rines, Olympic club, U. & C. Tonight the biggest pep ever held on the University of Washington campus will get un- der way at 730 near the Armory. A_ nightshirt parade, an almost forgotten stunt here, r held. Acting Gov. Wee Coyle, former Washington football ace, and Bob Ingram, captain of this Year's aggregation, will be the principal speakers. The rally will be supervised by the fresh- man class. Yomorrow afternoon the gates will be thrown open at 1 p. m. an Armistice day program will start an hour later, Referee Varnell will 2:20. The Stadium crowd will tnelude visitors from all over the Northwest, wonier,” postcards P. Larkin, | several thousand out-of-town fans Poindexter will blame Burbank being in the city today for the game. | The weal college stunts, with some new trimmings, are promised by Yell King ssh al ‘Olympia a Port Wins by Five-to-One Vote OLYMPIA, Nov. 10-—The port of | Olympia went over by a vote of 5 to 1, complete returns from Thurs. ton county show. Even the outlying districts, where the greatest opposi- tion was expected, in most instances voted for the port. ny Locust Newberry from his seat Genate, it might be advisab gentleman from Michigan to 8 the floor oe #098 kinsing is not unhealthy al, it nometimen ‘ you're Kiming. . KILL EM: Ki LEM and = California Wilt tell of the coust game in The Star's Program tonight. Tomorrow they will say it with depends eo © Lynch, as the result of bet, pushed Hob ave, in a wheelbarror lucky the bet wasn't te Cone n o whe down 2 . @t the game tomorrow, Read, city health commission. | on Hodge LABOR SAYS DILL’S ELECTION GREATEST VICTORY IN DECADE fenator-elect C. C. Dill and rep. resentatives of Washington labor exchanged congratulations Fri- day by wire over Dili's victory. Replying to Dill’s wire express. ing appreciation for the support of \abor, President William Short of the State Federation of Labor declared labor regards Dilla elec tion ax the greatest victory it haw achieved in a decade, Dill’s wire to Short follows: “{ desire to express my appre. ciation of your great sesistance to me in winning this vy. \ ry for progressive principles and thru you to thank organized labor for the united support labor gave me. Cc, C. DILL." le a) we el and Washington State. and! Washington State so far this ‘year. | blow his whistle for the kickoff at} Says He’ll Match U. of W. Pep By Seaburn Brown Ready to do battle to “the death” on a foreign gridiron— unafraid but not overcontident— bs the attitude of the University of California football team, as ex pressed by Charley Erb, Bruin quarterback, and rated one of the brainiest fleld generals in in- tercollegiate football, ‘ewspapers have misrepresented arb said Fridey morning. “We been painted as & cocky bunch us, hha “puffed up over our string of 1920) - aah Charley Erb, U. of C. Captain and 1921 victories. Got this straight: We believe that we are meeting a hard foe in Bagshaw’s clan and ex- pect to give everything we have ‘om the ball” to win. since the Golden Bears left for Seat- tie, thae California will not play a post-season game with any Eastern team in case the Berkeley university wins the Pacific Coast title, meot with Erb’s approval, “California has played two success. fve years with invaders from the East,” he said, “jt is time for some other Western school to have that | honor--and the work that goes with i” Altho California has been the ob- fective of Washington's football men since the opening of the season, Erb gives the Stanford team, which | meets Washington a week from Sat | urday, a boost that makes the Cat- dinal-Purple and Gold clash loom as another crucial game. “Stanford has a heavy, powerful club, If they win over U. 8. C. to- morrow, I think they will go thru the season undefeated, with the sin- gle exception of thelr game with our club,” Erb said. The stocky Bear signalcalier de- clined flatly to predict the score of the game that will pack the Stadium with the greatest crowd an athletic contest has ever drawn In Seattle, Saturday. “Tl just say that we believe we'll win,” he retorted. “And a win by » field goal of three points goes down on the same side of the record book with a victory by half a dozen touch- downs, “Just tell the fans of Seattle, for Andy Smith and his squad, that we'll be out there fighting from the opening gun. And may the best team win!” A word about this man Charley | Erb, one of the most talked of ath- jletes American football has ever de- | veloped, may not go amiss, Erb is the smallest fellow on the Berkeley team. Physically, he does not look lke a football player. He | has, perhaps, the poorest pair of eyes lin the Pacific Coast conference. It | wae feared at the first of the season that his failing eyesight would end his career in the moleskins. But, | Erb is the brains of Coach Andy Smith's gang. | Despite the fact that Erb’s physical handicaps throw the burden of carry- ling the ball, on offensive plays, upon |the other backfield men, Smith rates him as the most valuable cog in his | great machine, | At Pasadena, last New Year's day, |when the Washington and Jefferson | team startied the football world by | |holding the Californta “wonder team” to a scoreless tie, Erb's direct. ing genius alone saved the Bear ‘from disgrace, When his demoralized team went to pieces around him, Erb dispensed with the vaunted offensive power of (Turn to Page 19, Colunn 2) NOVEMBE R 10, 1922, "TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE Mr. Dill, Consider the Tragedy of Poindexter To C. C. Dill: The Star’s congratulations! You are elected United States senator, the youngest in that body. A wonderful career, a long career of public service stretches as you. a possibility before You have outlined a program on which the people of this state have set their seal of approval. You have promised a progressive, in- dependent vote on public questions. You have said that you will ‘stand with the farm bloc on the major points of its present platform. Good! Be with the farm bloc but not too much OF it. Be with the democratic party when- ever its ideas are sound, but not too much OF it. And never fear to be with the republican party when it is right. holden to no special interest, to no clique. dependent, people’s choice. THE UPPER CHAMBER “Mr, President, the effort ts made here constantly to get hold of a new man when he comes into this bedy and give him soothing syrup and «l- leneo powders and rock him and jull lim to sleep and take all the fight out of him; con- vert him from an aggressive, able, gallant fighter, if he is such, into one of these namby- pamby, arm-folding, whisper. ing kind."—Senator Heflin, Alabama, in Congressional Record. Remember always the tragedy of Miles Poindexter. Twelve years ago he went into the United States senate under auspices as bright as those now attending your election. He went in be- He went in as an in- His career has been brilliant, but bitterly disappointing. He became one of the leaders who controlled the national machine of his party and, of late, the American government itself. Be ty analy 3B aks dav disdacied ty ke t bower ‘wile be dit up, he i to- sta' use he for- got the people's interests and the people’s wishes. In the poisoned atmosphere of Washington, D. C., lobbies and clubs, he listened to thé ‘flattery of selfish men, to the voices of money and ambition. He was thus changed in 12 years from a fighting progressive to a reactionary, from a people’s leader to an intriguing member of the Old Guard’s in- ner circle. If you, Mr. Dill, senator-elect, are ever tempted to go wrong after you assume this high office, surely the memory of Miles of Washington believe in you. long “ you abide by the fundamentals. tions EXPLAINS LOSS |U.S.-China OF REPUBLICANS) Must Agree Minister Sze Says “Work Together” “China's and America’s eco nomic futures are so bound to- gether that we must work in co- if either country is to realize its fullest prosperity. We M’Adoo Says Democratic | Victory Inevitable LOS ANGELES, Cal., Nov. 10. —Democratic success at the polls last Tuesday was inevitable because republican leaders have failed to interpret correctly the sentiment and opinion of the country, William G. McAdoo, democratic presidential possibil- ity, charged in @ statement is- sued here today “The administration hes been re actionary, narrow, provincial and) uninepiring from the outset,” he) declared, “It has made no appeal to the great moral and spiritual forces without which no nation can yendure. “It has given us a wholly ma- terialistic and soulless America, It hag been devold of political morality as evidenced by its wholehearted support of the seating of Newberry. It has made no appeal to the con- science and spiritual forces of the nation. “This is serious enough, but tts economic policies have been equally mistaken, “The Fordney-McCumber tar. iff bill is indefensible; the new income tax law was a discrimi- nation against the great body of taxpayers for the benefit of the favored few. “The administration's callous dis- regard of the interests of the farm. er, the laboring man and the great mass of consumers was in glaring jcontrast to its favoritism to tho trusts and powerful interests which | have dominated its policies and con. sintently controlled its action. Its] | | hopeless and uninspiring theory of| American isolation has caused grave | danger to our material interests and international influence, Widespread business depression has resulted and our agricultural industry, always} the basis of genergl prosperity, has been reduced to a tragic state, “There can be no return of (Pura to Page 19, Column 2) S. K. Alfred Sze ~Photo by Price & Carter Star Stuff Photographers must work for a better under. standing on both sides,” The speaker was 8. K, Alfred Sze, Chinese minister to the Unitee (Turn to Page 19, Column 5) Poindexter’s fall ought to keep you straight. The Star believes in you and your sincerity. The people You have a great future as Again, congratula- DILL OUTLINES SENATE PLANS Will Seek to 0 Put Newberry Out of Seat His election to the United States senate assured by a plu- rality of at least 5,000, and prob- ably more, former Congressman Cc. C. Dill was at wark. Friday framing the program which he plans to follow when he takes his seat next year, His first step, as announced fn campaign speeches, will be to work for the reopening of the Newberry cane, with a view to unseating the Michigan solon. As the result of republican. reverses thruout country, it is believed there will be enough votes in the next senate to accomplish this, its general program, altho he will | Probably make certain exceptions on some of its tariff schedules, He also has announced his tnten- tion of getting behind the Smith- MeNary reclamation bill and the Co- lumbia Basin irrigation project. Altho elected on the democrat- fe ticket, Dill has made it known that he will insist on a progres- sive program, and will be inde- pendent of party lines if the democrats départ from that course, Dill will come to Seattle next ‘Thursday to receive the congratula- | tions of Western Washington friends. | Ho will be the guest of honor at a dinner in the Masonio club rooms, Arcade building, that night, Robert P. Oldham, vice-chairman of the democratic state central committee, has announced that the dinner will be open to the public, regardless of party affiliations. Dill will be the youngest man in the senate when he takes his seat next March. He celebrated hia 28th birthday last month, He is unmar- ried. With unofficial returns in from all but 47 svattered precincts, out of (Turn to Page 19, Column 3) the | Dill plans to join the farm bloc tn} UT In the complaint Peterson is al- jleged to have sold C, E 419% Eighth ave, 13 ur platinum refining compan In an affidavit Caristen Peterson showed him some purported platinum ore which he claimed ran five dollars to the pound in the value of the metal Hammer personally obtained sam- ples of the ore Peterson was display- ing and submitted {t to the assaying firm of Glover, Wells & Elmen- dorf, in the Prefontaine building. Their report on two showed absolutgly no trace of plati- num, but a little silver and other Caristen says also that Peterson told him he had $52,000,000 worth of WARRANT FOR ACCUSED ‘Seattle Platinum Swindle of $20,000 Charged as Officers Seek President of Company Based upon allegations that he has swindled Seattle and King county investors out of $20,000 or more by means of @ huge platinum ore fraud, a warrarit charging grand larceny ‘was issued Friday for E. R. Peterson, president of the Pacific Milling, Smelting & Refining Co., The complaint was sworn to by Deputy Prosecuting At- torney Ralph Hammer, who for several months had con- ducted an investigation into Peterson's activities, with the as- sistance of the Better Business bureau. 519 Northlake ave. J. 8. Swenson, U. 8. postoffice in- .|spector, also has been checking” on *elerson to determine whether he -jhas been sending false advertising thru the mails, Peterson has established his refin ing machinery tn the Northlake ave, plant and claims to be ready to turn out platinum, In answer to the local assayer’s report Peterson says that no one byt his own chemist, whom he claims has a secret process, can extract the platinum from this particular kind samples | of ore. LONDON RUMORS platinum ore on the dump at the mine, Carlsten ts an oldtime Alas- kan miner, but his confidence in Pet- erson was gained thru the fact“that he had known Peterson's brother i i ii iF j t Nar Het! F BONUS PASSAGE IS NOW ASSURED Veto of President Can Be Overriden BY LAURENCE M. BENEDICT ht, 1922, by United Press) ‘WASHINGTON, ‘Nov. i0-— vealed today by a comprehen ive tabulation by the United Press of adjusted compensation strength in the senate elected Tuesday. A careful poll of the senate as it yc be constituted after next March based on votes of the old sena- Sie in the present congress and on | pledges made by the new members| during the campaign, show that 67/ senators are in favor of adJusted| compensation, 27 are against it, and the position of two Is unknown. A total of 67 votes for the bonus is three more than two-thirds of) the senate—the number required to override a veto. In the house, whtch overrode {President Harding’s veto of the measure last September shortly -be- fore the senate blocked the measure by sustaining the executive's objec- tion, sentiment is overwhelmingly in favor of the bill, ‘The democrats gained nearly 75) seata in the lower branch and the |majority of these are known to be for the bonus. The tldier bonus {s certain to be re-introduced shortly after the con-) jvening of the new congress, which |probably will be called in a special session shotriy after March 4, 1923. The measure also will be intro. | duced again in the present congress, but it is extremely doubtful if it can be enacted during the few remaining months of the current session. The American Legion, greatly en-| couraged by the increased majorities | for the measure in both houses and} the favorable votes for the state bonus in Mlinots, lowa, Kansas, Mon- tana and probably Oklahoma, ts pre- paring to launch a new drive for the [federal bill. Harding Urges Help for the Red Cross WASHINGTON, Nov, 10.—Presi- \dent Harding today issued a procia- mation calling upon the American people to support the annual Red Cross membership rol} call, begin- ning tomorrow and continuing ubtil Thanksgiving day. He proclaimed November 12 as Red Cross Sunday, inviting the peo- ple “to, unite with their spiritual! leaders in such observance of it as may promote a renewed consecration to the gospel of service based upon divine injunction and sanctioned by all good conacience.” MOSLEM HORROR Capital Is Cut Off 3 Contant on deny them. The cabinet was called to gether at 10 o'clock to consider the situation, What the Turks are driving at in their arrogant assumption of author. ity over the allies at the straits has at last been made clear. The Angora government demands nullification of all “capitula' arising from defeat of Turkish arms in the great war, It considers that victory over Greece has wiped out all losses sustained by the sultan’s government. “We are an autonomous nation,” Ferrid Bey, nationalist representa: tive at Paris, declared in a bellicose statement. “We do not recognize any penal- ties incurred by the sultan’s govern- ment.” When the British cabinet met ft was stated that an official dispatch from Gen, Harington had come thru, despite the cutting of the cables by the Turks. The British commander in the Near East advised the cabinet the situation {s most serious, British air experts were called tn to answer questions about a possible military move against the Turks, Airplanes are expected to play a big part if war breaks out. Bonar Law, who presided, declared the Turks sought nullification of the treaties of Mudros and of Sevres. They have agreed to abide by the armistice treaty of Mudania, at the same time exceeding its conditions, and seeking to‘ drive the allies from the vicinity of the straits, Ferid Bey was quoted as saying: “We shall ignore capitulations en- tirely. For us they do not exist, We are free. This is our country (re | ferring to Turkey in Europe) and we shall administer it as we like,” ‘START PACIFIC MAIL SERVICE Robert B, Whittig, mall clerk in the state of Washington for more than 16 years, will be the first matt clerk to do duty on a trans-Pacifie steamer. Saturday, ‘when the President Jackson leaves Seattle for the Orient, the trans-Pacific postal service will be inaugurated. Whittig will be on oard. According to the new plans five trans-Pacific steamers will eventu: ally carry mail clerks, who will sort mail on board, thereby saving con- siderable time for the mailing depart ments, Two Bandits Take Smelter Payroll TRINIDAD, Golo, Nov. 10,.—Two bandits held up the paymaster of te American Smelting & Refining Co. at Cokedale, near here, today and escaped with a $14,000 payroll, ae cording to reports reaching here, : Details of the robbery were lacking, * Unrate enone YS anon rem er oer

Other pages from this issue: