The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 30, 1922, Page 1

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: OE AAA nd Friday, rain terly winds mod. Temperature Last 04 Hours Maximar ul Minimum, Today Neon, 38. 33. King George Held Prisoner; Tried to Stop Deaths of Six Leaders PARIS, Nov. 30.—King George of Greece ts held prisoner in his palace by the revolutionary au Greetings, folks! There's many ‘a aip twixt the lip and the drum <a ° As Waa exclusively predicted in he colyum = several weeks age, Jraakagivids falls on a holiday | eee | qhankexiving was not originated | AD iy turkey growers or punch board | ower lt thorities who executed former peop! thankful today Premier Gounaris and other or, ona. choles statesmen Tuesday, according to oe 8 Belgrade dispatch to the Matin today. made every effort to prevent the exe- eution of five former ministers and the general who commanded the Greek army when it was defeated by Mustapha Kemal, His activities in thetr behalf roused the ire of the rev- | olutionaries, Their anger was tn- j creased when, immediately after the } death sentences were carried out, he 4 are wild turkeys. You'd be | requested that he be permitted to Ss" H{ they hit you In | leave Greece. In reply to this the rev. , ‘of the neck with an ax. | olutionary committee put a guard eee over him. tor. * Tee Wildest thing absut Jes bowever, Is the price s eee George King Constan. Une, became ruler of Greece when git ereat turks remind ws. his father fed, after the great Turk- can make their lives subline, | iady victories, Prince Andrew, broth ing, leave behind them — | or of Constantine, is held in Athens, 10 last a mighty long time. | and:te expected to be placed on trial » Pitts shortly by the revolutionaries. Plenty of Homes for Two Boys By Seaburn Brown Maybe the speed and the pleasure- seoking trend of modern life 1. de- stroying the love for children-—but it thing about the Thanks | doesn't look that way to the father (game is that it gives the spec: |who asked The Star to ald him in a whopping appetite for | finding homes for his two boys (his werk. ; Early Wednesday he . requested The Star to withhold his address from future applicants, I'm swamped with offers of won- derful homes made by wonderful people,” he phoned, and his voice \carried the impression that in spite of the sadness attendant upon giving up his children he is « thankful man this Turkey day, because his little ones are to be given the care he leould not provide. “I haven't made & decision yet because I am lost in |& maze of attractive offers,” he added. |, At the present rate, the list of boy-seekers will run into the hun- |dreds before the joyous father sends o you remember the old-time ving days back Fast when out thru the crisp, spark- to Aun’t Mury’s to dinner? @o boy BELIEVE IT: . that Mayor Brown can poy for is that there SF) his iads, aged 2 and 7, to “a home oa. where they will be | molded into men of character,” as [he puts it, Couples, usually -with latreaks of gray in their hair and a half-mysteriousx, hungry look in their c eee leyes, have literally stormed The Star The Pligrim Fathers gave thanks | Office since the story of the father’s Mm they landed here in 1621.4 plight was printed Tuesday. thanks because they didn't| The note of tragedy that tempers bere any later ithe success of the father’s appeal is w eee ‘the look of disappointment with TO BE THANKFUL FOR, which childless home-builders have Raisins | received the news that further appli Yeast. cations cannot be considered. | After all, it seems to be a pretty Basements. | good old world. with plenty of good, ce ie | old-fashioned childlovers in it, that Gee Gee. th’ office vamp, says | we have to be thankful for today! ving ought to be cele- - on a Chewsday vee lat part of the turkey do you 5 Mrs. Simpkins?” Ment, thank you Parte’ DROP TEARS HERE tion turkeys were bacilli, some of , White House PB eowldn't buy x drumstick | fair z | hentia President and Mrs. Harding had so poor that/@n unpretentious little dinner for two served in Mrs. Harding’s own room, luxuriant with flowers sent by numerous friends ‘The simple dinner today contrast ed strikingly with the elaborate spreada of other years, when rela e eee tives and friends of the family have ag Homer, Jr., isn’t musical,| gathered about the huge banquet ta TE We Diays a wicked jazz on a| ble in the state dining room on the - | lower floor of the mansion, $ ws 6 A ~ —* citizens can be thankful } Brown ta not twins. WHITE HOUSE | DINNER QUIET of Thankegiving day at the was @ quiet family af. fome of us are & quart in the house. oe. © "Eat alt you want.” i “take said. © Wow Little Homer Bt, Atmost dead \ i We are ready to believe that| Rect pronunciation is cramp-| Are You Ready to Return to the Soil? Just the sort of land or the place you want can be found by watching THE STAR WANT ADS dally SER OUR SUBURBAN TRACTS People, we here offer you 1, 2 and S-acre tracts, located ‘on fhe North Trunk blvd., close to taba an y transportation, where you have lights and phone, and Cashier in |] $35 ie 'good tat" us show you dale. |] soll te Betts before you. buy. at t; Get $2,500 fine front North Trunk blvd., EMA, Col, Nov. 20.—Two| others with fine view. And our dC. A. Kockafellow lie tnes itlhdaion ta ns 5 Anegda i sue and excaped with % rom the bank at San | BPGr here, yesterday. Rocka Teleaved from the vault later, | The classified columns will tell will show you these yous who properties, } This dispatch states that the king | WASHINGTON, Nov. 30.—Celebra. | ‘ae The paper with a 15,000 daily circulation lead over its nearest competitor attle Star on Mar The Se Entered as Second Class Matter May 1208, ui’ the Peek par a ae | | | } | | } | j 1 BY LEO H. LASSEN (Sports Editor of The Star) Wellington had his Waterloo, | Nelson had his Trafalgar, Foch had | his Meuse-Argonne, and today Bob! | Ingram has his Oregon. | Bach great leader must have his last battle and today's gridiron tus! sle at the stadium marks the last [battle for Ingram, captain of the best Washington football team in | years, | Big Bob hay been a mighty annet to the University of Washington For three years he has played var. ‘educated and ty football and rowed on the var-| sity crew. A big, husky, with a fighting fart and a world of purage, he typifies everything that Washington stands for in the way o good sportamanship | Ingram has rowed hi« last crew race and today i# his last football game. With his passing Washing ton losses not only a great athlete, | but a regular fellow Ingram, whose home is in Ho quiam, is a giant in size, standing six feet in height and weighing 195 pounds. He has played tackle for three years and served his one season on the frosh team, eee MAIN FACTS ABOUT BIG FOOTBALL GAME AT STADIUM TODAY Teams University of Wash ington and University of Oregon Time: Gates open at 12:30; kick off at 2 o'clock Place: University of We ton # jum. Coaches Washington Bagshaw; Oregon, Shy ton Captains gram, right tackle; ¢ Shields, left guard. Officials: George FH. B. Perkins Donaldson, head Unes Northwest hing Enoch Hunting. Washington, Bob In on, Archie Varn umpire; zn. champion ret. Alex Stake ship Weather forecast: Fair and cold, U. OF W. AND OREGON ALL SET Teams to Face Fray That Will Decide Title With both teams keyed up to the top of their form, the Uni- versity of Washington and Unk versity of Oregon football ma- chines were to clash in the grid- iron finale of the season at the Stadiam this afternoon, Northwest title bangs in (urn to Page 7, Column 72) , WASH, THURSDAY, NOV ABER 30, 1 ATTL The Last Battle of a Great Warrior Bob Ingram, Husky Chief Of Husky Warriors, Who Is Facing His Final Conflict Today In As Spectacular Fashion As The Historical Captains Of War Have Climaxed Their Careers. Whether He Emerges As Wellington Or Napoleon, He Is Sure To Come Photographers. As They Will Line Up Oregon Washington j] Petrie (6), 193 seeee LER «T. Johnson (16), 175 irimm (2), 194 oo LTR +Vonder Ahe (22), 180 Bellman (6), 186 ove LOM. Shields (21), 179 168 185 186 a9 158 . Callison (19), held (83) (C), Campbell (15), . Spears (85), Chapman (12), Haynes (13), 160. . Kubo ((14), 197 Ingram (1) (C), 190 Hall (16), 162. Abet (21), HIM (28) 160 W. Johnson (82), 170 Ziel (30). 176... ..4 «..King (2), 175 Bryan (12), 190,, «Latham (20), 176 Average weight 178. 17Th4 Possible substitutes and their numbers Washington—Lillia, 3; MeCreary, 4; Walters, 7; } A. Wilson, §; Dubois, } Tinting, 11; Perry, 16: Metnre Westrom, 18; Daey, 20; Hanley, J, Wilson, 26; Beck, 26; Hakper, 27; Sherman 29; Christie, 33. Oregon—Jordan, 18 am, 1 eed, 11; Byler, 31; McKeown, 36; Brown, 10; Burton, 14; Kirtley, reenon, 4. Triumphs oF ¢ MJonquelle \¥, | by MELVILLE Davigson Post © 1992 NEA Service, inc THE THING ON THE HEARTH | “The first confirmatory evidence of lthe thing, Excellency, was the print |of a woman's bare foot.” He was an immense creature, He spoke English with a certain care in the selection of the words, but with ease, He It is necessary to try to under- wat in an upright chair that seemed | stand this, because it explains the |to have been provided especially for} conception everybody got of the ‘him. The great bulk of him flowed | creature, when they saw him in charge of Rodman, I am using pre- cisely the descriptive words; he was exclusively in.charge of Rodman, as }a jinn In an Arabian tale might bave been In charge of a king's son. The creature was servile—with almost a groveling servility, But one jfelt that this servility resulted from j4omething potent and secret. One | looked to see Rodman take Solomon's | ring out of his waistcoat pocket I suppose there is no longer any {doubt about the fact that Rodman |was one of those gigantic human intelligences who sometimes appear in the world; and by their immense conception dwarf all human knowl- (Turn to Page 11, Column 1) Hunts Nickel Under ' Bed and Burns $600 JERSHY CITY, Nov, 80.—Thanks- giving day for some folks but | plain Thursday for Mrs, Mary Cyoyk, out and filled the chair, It did not |seem to be fat that enveloped him, It seomed rather to be some soft, tough fiber, ke the pudgy mass making up the body of a deep-sea thing. One got an impression of | strength. | ‘The country was before the open |window; the clusters of cultivated shrub on the sweep of velvet lawn extending to the great wall that in- cloned the place, then the bend of the river, and beyond, the distant mountains, blue and mysterious, blending indiscernibly into the sky. A soft sun, clouded with the haze of autumn, shone over it “You know how the faint moisture in the bare foot wili make an im- pression,” He paused as tho there was sone compelling force in the reflection. It was impossible to say, with accuracy, to what race the man belonged, He came from some queer blend of East- ern peoples, Hix body and the cast of his features were Mongolian, But one got always, before him, a feeling of the hot Bast lying low down against | | the Suez, One felt that he had risen wily into our world of hard air and ean out of the vast sweltering ooze ot it, just lit a mateh to find it and set fire to the mattrénn, bills banked in the feathers went up in smoke. But whe found the nickel, She dropped a nickel under her bed, | | | | | | | Six hundred dollars in | cour | 1 Your, by Mall, #6 to $9 OFFICER 1S OT DOWN ONEY ADMITS MURDE Y BANDITS Patrolman Stevens Near Death After Attacks by Two Motor Robbers Wantonly shot down by a masked motor bandit who held up his automobile at 17th ave. v early Thursday, n F. Stevens is in vidence hospital with « bullet hole thru his right lung. He is sinking rapidly and physicians fear he will not live thru the day. After shooting and robbing Stevens, the bandit and a com- panion drove thru the downtown section, firing at every police man they encountered until they finally abandoned their machine, a stolen Cadillac limousine, near the Milwaukee station on Lane st., between Jackson and Dear- born, Shortly afterward, the dexperadoes are believed to have stolen another automobile and driven to N. 70th st. and Greenwood ave., where they held up K. EB. Johnsen, 6741 Seventh ave. N. W., and robbed him of $63. Then they disappeared, driving north on Greenwood ave, at a high rate of) 14.6 24 of us on the schooner Exact, speed Altho every policeman and de- tective in the city was on the look- out for them at the time of the second hold-up, no trace bas been . Stevens lapsed inte unconscious hospital and has been able to give in the however, search, His wife, marks. Steveng was on his way to the/ ang siahs of wood, for we wanted | } | {ness shortly after he arrived at the! | few details of the robbery to assist giving: jwas able to plece together @ story iauehe Mrs. Frye. jof the attacle from fragmentary re| toms for our 1 hospital, where his wife ix employed) as a nurse, when the attack oc- curred, at about 510 a. m, ‘The bandits had been following his car, & Plerce-Arrow, for some blocks up Pike st. At 17th ave, one of the banditw yelled for Stevens to stop, and the policeman obeyed. The driver of the stolen automo- bile approached, but it was not until he was directly behind the officer that Stevens saw that the man was masked, Stevens made no attempt at resistance until the drew a gun—a 38-caliber Colt's automatic pistol. Then the po- Heeman tried to draw his own Weapon, but it was too late. The bandit fired, the bullet passing thru the front seat and penetrat- ing Stevens’ body from the rear, The bullet passed entirely thru the policentan's chest, dropping to the floor of the machine. Meanwhile, the bandit's companion, who was also masked, had rushed up to the other side of the car, and he jumped in as the policeman fell. He went thru Stevens’ pockets, taking (Turn to Page 7, Column 2) STUDENT IS NOT OUT OF DANGER Boy Shot by Officer Still Battles for Life Grimly fighting but not yet out of dan Richard Holbrook, Univer: sity of Washington student who was wounded by Patrolman J. H. Karl- berg in the University business dis- trict early Tuesday morning, follow. ing a student prank, was declared ‘Thursday morning to have passed a fairly good night. Little change, so far, has been observed in his condi- { tion, and it likely will be two days at least before attending physicians are able to detertmine what the outcome will be, Holbrook’s temperature was sald to be normal, and no signs of a hemorrhage have been manifested so for. No probe for the bullet can be made till the boy's condition has improved Meantime, affair is being rigidly pros investigation into the pushed by the department, the university and members of the university alumni. Karlberg ts still under suspension from police service and is manifest- ing much alarm oer Holbrook’s con~ dition, Wednesday afternoon he sent flowers to Holbrook at the Seattle General hospital, Samoa, where the natives are en ed to retain thelr natural mode of life, is the only spot in the Pao islands where the native population is not dying out outing attorney's office, the po- | FINAL! Mill EDITION MADE: ON EVE OF HANGING! Mahoney Declares Woman Saw Turkey Day Herein1851 But. Mrs. Louisa C. Frye Had No Turkey, She Can Now Recall By Wanda von Kettler today Seattle is busy bustling ini watson mnicier and © He Killed Aged a Bride; Hammer But supposing It ceases to bus tle just a moment to hear the | story of one who can say ow, Used in Crime Ire ber away back when—,” WALLA WALLA, Novy. 30—~ and thus recall Seattle's first On the eve of his execution, Thanksgiving James E. Mahoney has con- fessed to the murder of his aged and wealthy bride, Mrs. Kate | Mrs. Louisa C. Frye, @ little lady | of something like $0 years, who| Mahoney. now resides at News of the confession was 1906 Madison st./ given out today by Warden was a member of} Thomas Pace, who said that t first “Denny! Mahoney had made a written party” that land- statement yesterday to his at- ed at Alki point’ torney, Lee Johnston, admitting November 1%) that he slew his wife with a 1861. Mra. Frye! hammer. was just a little} — the confession bere out fa irl then, scarcel reece yee every detail the case against still in her mem-| Mahoney as built up by the ose agp 5 prosecution during his trial in woh happenings | Seattle last year. of those early! It is understood to have been Mre. L. ©. Pree Photo by Curtis days. j “We landed,” says Mrs. Frye, “in/ made by Mahoney in an at- tempt to forestall a reported ef- fort by his sister, Mrs. Dolly Johnson, to win a reprieve for him by confessing the murder herself. Mahoney, if anything, seemed re- inch to get the confession off his mind. the schooner Exact, coming up from Portiand, the place we had reached after six months’ travel In wagons acroas the plains from Titinois. There And we landed at Alki November 13 —just two weeks before Thanksgiv- ing day.” “Well, I've got a good dinner to Well do Seattle and the be thankful for, anyway,” he re- Northwest know the story of marked pocosely when wardens that early landing, when Ar |Prought him his Thankegtving din- ther A. Denny. Mrv. Frye’s |"¢r im the death house of the state father, led the memorable little | Denitentiary here band of people up from the ‘The dinner was a regular feast— OE cg RP My onde Mesy_ aubeERy moe, maxbedl ye. cabin was gravy, plum pudding and ie ‘ment thane 34 people, | overrthing “else” In the. way of led in their big undertaking | Thanksgiving dainties. ‘The con- by the men folk of their group, |@emned man ate ft with apparent A. A. and David T. Denny, ;Telish. William M, Bell, John W. Lowe, | As & matter of fact, Mahoney has C. D. Boren, and Lee and (actually been in better spirits since he was informed yesterday that his last chance had disappeared with {the refusal by the United States su- preme court to grgnt his petition for “Preparations for a celebration?’ |* ¥Fit of error. “The prepara-| “I'm glad it's all over—tomorrow Thanksgiving | can't come any too soon for me,” jogs |##ems to be Mahoney's attitude. He went to bed shortly after receiving the news of his final legal reverse, and spent the first Charlies C, Terry, will live al- | ways in the spirit of the West. But back to the first Thanks- first celebration dealt mostly with a roof over our heads, 1 remem-! ber,” she says, “that our cabin had} \no roof for several days. We slept! ps peyton ru of apparently under sort of tent awnings. I gor sad hagas that he has believe, tho, that our ‘home’ was from! tho-tiab ote tener 9 here complete by Thankeriving day. “About the feast? ‘There He arose early this morning and announced at once that he wanted to see Father Stephen Buckley, prison chaplain, whona he has repeatedly repulsed be fore. Gone was the of morose stoicism which he wore a few days ago when he told the chaplain, tersely, “If I want you I'll send for you.” While no definite announcement has been made, it is expected that he will receive the last rites from |Father Buckley before he goes to the scaffold in the morning. Mahoney received the news of the supreme court's action with the same lack of emotion that has char- acterized his conduct ever since he j went on trial, more than a year | ago, for the murder of his wealthy | bride. * “I thought so,” was the only re- mark that he made to his attorney, Lee Johnston, when the latter in- (Turn to Page 7, Column 5) BOATS SMASH OUT AT SEA SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 30.—The Pacific Mail liner Newport, carrying 100 passengers for Central America was put into San Pedro for exami- nation today following a collision at (Turn to Page 7, Column 1) Why We Are Thankful Being Some Thanksgiving Prayers Suggested for the Use of Folks We Know. _MAYOR E, J. BROWN—I'm thankful because there're only nine members of the city coun- cil. THE SMALL BOY — I'm thankful because a turkey has only one neck REV. H. lL. CHATTERTON— I'm thankful because I was so successful in stamping out the practice of turkey raffles and punchbaords. THE CITY COUNCIL—We're thankful because we're having such a lot of fun razzing the mayor. THE AVERAG HOUSE- HOLDER—I'm thankful because I'm alive—and bévause I was ks Sedbucdnn able to stall off the landlord long |Bveas eay With the schooner enough to buy a turkey, Ttaeeciiaen ©. C.. DILL, SENATOR. |p hor lies off Port Bam, ELECT—I'm thankful because I don’t take my seat in the senate just yet—and thus have a few Neither vessel was seriously dam- aged, reports indicated. Each pro- ceeded under her own steam after more weeks of peace and quiet. | the accide THE PEOPLE OF SEATTLE |'"° Scien —We're thankful for the nice T . . Sent fare that Mayor Brown | 1 WO River Pilots gaye us, Killed by Train ACTING GOY, W, J. COYLE— I’m thankful that Gov, Hart is PORTLAND, Nov. 30.—Investiga- letting me play governor for | tion into the deaths of Capt, J. W. him—and he ought to be thank Shaver and his brother, Lincoin ful, too. Shaver, widely known Columbia CHIEF OF POLICE W. B. |Tiver pilots, will not be held until GEVERYNS—I'm thankful be. | Friday, it was learned at the offices cause the city council decided to |f the Southern Pacific here today. pick on Carl Gassman, instead The Shaver brothers were killed or tie when their automobile was struck NATOR MILES POEN. [#24 demolished, and the men them- selves mangled almost beyond recog nition, by a Southern Pacific elec tric train at the Nebraska st. crossa- ing in South Portland, Wednesday. DEXTER AND THE TURKEY (Chtorus)—We're thankful — be- (Turn to Page 7, Column 3) CLEVELAND, Noy. 30. —~ Frank r ; Wave Hits Liner; | Willis, allas Ed Lewis, fourth mem Passengers Hurt | per of the danait gang that kiilea NEW YORK, Nov, 30. Several | Patroiman D. P. Koehler and wound. passengers and crew of the liner|ed Corporal Roscoe Friddle in a in Columbus Tuesday President Wilson were injured today | street battle |when a huge wave struck the ship! morning, was captured here today during @ 120-mile hurricane in mid-| Willis was arrested at his home Atluntic, aéeording to Capt. Robert | here. He w exhaustion from than 48 eluding police posses more S. Tuperitch, who brought the vessel [hours in southwestern Obie, safely into port here today. BESS PAC ICeNeE Re

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