Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1920. KELLOGG WILL PARENTS SEEK | MISSING GIRL MEET Ly olde Home in seatoniioll & No Clews Found THE SEATTLE STAR Suprem Cou rt’s Rise ta Power | GT Wig BY LOWELL MELLETT Local Woman Fosters Idea; Elected Head The Seattle Star Phone By 43.80. Published Dally by The Star Publishing Oo, 120T Beventh Main 000, Newspaper Roterprise Association and United Press tof city, 800 per mont he $1.80, @ monthe $3.00, ye fer, sity, 809 Ave Ban Prancivoe New York offiog | Progressives to Oppose His Appointment Editor's Noto—Lowell Mollett, of this paper's Washington staff, has made an extensive study of the movement to cu tall the power of the supreme court, Mellott has written a series of articles giving the out standing incidents in the court's history, This is the fifth article in the » The sup clare acts of congress unconatl- tutional was mado in 1808. It was likewise the last such asser tlon for 48 y Just at the clove of John A ams’ administration the retiring congress rushed thru an act cre- a large number of addi judictal offices, Adama upon," too gross to be insisted having set up bis premises ho pursued them to a logieal fin inh and for this they ndmired both his courage and his c ir 1 Tremont Didg, Respect to the Flag An ordinance to compel proper treatment and respect of the American flag will be introduced before the city council next Monday by Councilwoman Kathryn Miracle. The ordinance prescribes certain rules pertaining to the use of the flag and requires that everyone must sa- lute when the flag passes. Provision is made for fines and penalties for those who violate the measure. Mrs. Miracle says she seeks to compel respect for the flag thru her ordinance and we believe that she is sin- cere in the matter. But do we want respect for our flag that is brought about thru fears of fines and penalties? It certainly would not be sincere. Besides, this city does not want to be pointed out as a place where a law must be passed to compel the citizens to respect the flag. ; Proper respect for our national institutions and our national emblem in the past years has been based on tra- ditions of a country that has held its traditions sacred. We have respected our flag because we wanted to re- spect it. ‘ Such a law as is proposed would be the first step to- wards destroying our traditions and towards making the respect of our flag a legal duty instead of a privilege. {f « law be in opposition to tho constitution; if both the With no clues discovered by her polntment of former Henator Kel-| grieving parents wince her mynter~ | loge of Minnesota as American am-| tous disappearance September 14, baswador to Great Britain will be| the whereabouts of Hima Sherwood, the signal for a progressive 15, of 2420 39th |nlaught on the Coolld admints- ave, 8, is proving Petre Y ‘ “a puzle to the Progressive senators wero arous-|/ police of Beattie, ed by reports that Kellégg uld | J Elma, accord. bo given the London post, provid: |f ing to her moth. ed the British government found er, Mrs. George him acceptable. VV. Bherwo od, Contrary to the tradition of “once| dropped from 4 mnator, always a nenator,” which might after draw. a | greases for the nomin a few dollars | a | ations of ex-senators, the confirm-| | ation of Kellogg's appointment will} |be fought tooth and nail by the} Paper | progreasive group led by La Fol-| tory, lette of Wisconsin. | ave Senators Wheeler of Montana and| ing Frazier of North Dakota, today an- Bherwood ers nounced thelr intention of OpPOs-|\,¢ t> Yakima to Police jing Kellogg’ confirmation in the] inere could find no trace of the | senate, Wheeler was elected a5 2] itt1e girl, the mother udded. democrat and Frazier ax a repub-| wweve never heard # thing of her, Mra. Sherwood added, cept that a friend, a Mrs. Carlsor Mean, but both drew their strength \from the non-partisan league and | both ‘follow the La Follette banner.| 11.5 ynows Elma, tells me that the ler declared that 6's rning after she disappeared ion for the most Ima and a woman about d in the municipal em- They have no rec WABHINGTON, Oct. 27-—~Ap law and the constitution apply that decide Listen to how logloally John Marshall, appointed to t! 1 the tho to @ particular case, before he the court must eithe that caso conformably to the aw, disregarding the constitu or conformably to the con disregarding the law, must determine which these ‘conflicting rules gov strained by {ta own constitution, Thin is of tho ‘This ls a principle that springs | essence of judicial duty.” from the very nature of sol: | Mw the doctrine of Jud and the judicial authority lal supremacy stated as Wwoll, can have no right to question perhaps, as it has been the valldity of @ stated, Whatever his opponents much jurisdiction is may have thought of the tall, miven b; gaunt chief justice, with his not filled them by appointment. brilliant black eyes set in his the judicial Among tho number were four remarkably small head and his act, If the legtalature were Justices of the peace for the dis stubborn, tenaclous dently violate any of tho . 7 | thet of Col they never disputed his ability laws of God; but property ts the a wilt as a pleader, They might de creature of civil and clare that he sometimes based subject, In all to the his very thin Aispositon and control of civil ground, but agreed that once Inatitutions.”” supreme aide int ansertion by the U. 8, Won, stitution, the court of erns the cano. tive authorty of | mo court of a right to de ean only be re | | any ce are, ety Jaw unlenn expressly the conatitution. Tt to ing how | authority should | | the way ever ating eystone tional Box tac 215 Second and tell- employ was £0- necoswary ulre evi expression, to mbta, including one n Marbury. ‘The commis- ever, making these ap. rood d not yet issued When Thomas Jeffer took office as president. Ho instructed Jarr adison, his secretary of state, not to iasue the commissions. Tho precedin, provided tha: could issue to any person holding office un der the authority of the United States, William Marbury applied for damus to compel the delivery of his commission by Madison, supreme court did not hand down ita decision for two years, The opinion, written by John Marshall, waa that Mar bury's commiasion was not rev- | she work. Elma noclety, respects, decisions — 01 Has Brown Made Good as Mayor? 1E STAR Invites all Seattle citizens to join in a constructive discussion of this question of public interest: Has Dr, Brown “made good” ax mayor? Does ho deserve re- election? Woe want to publish letters bearing on all sides of this question. You are asked to restrict your letter to 150 words and to sign your name and address, Following are some specimen replies from various citizens: next m ° naw years coveted jee would) nm of the congress congress had yet in the diplomatic supreme cour y result in Coolidge administ Progressives of the Wheeler-Fra-| "ioe .. was happy when she left aier type deeply resent the welection | rome that day and had never of what they term “repudiated) 1 reatened to me she would leave | politician” for a high diplomatic The other children tell mo post, Kellogg was defeated for re- several times when discon- election to senate in 1922 by te over some little thing, ahe Henrik Shipstead, a farmer-laborite, | {idishly said that she would in @ three cornered race. a writs of mandamus | ployment office He who thinks he can find in blmself the means of doing without | ord of her there. others is much mistaken; but he who thinks that others cannot do with- out him is still more mistaken.—La Rochefoucauld, Bill Bryan comes to the front again to fight the theory of evolution und deny that man ever descended from fishes. He's right. Those who buy Fort Worth oil stock still are fishes, | home. Ada Berg Miller Photo by Van Dyck Studto | LUCILLE BUTLER _ profeasion—public HERE’S MORE ABOUT HOSPITAL STARTS ON PAGE1 | serie acetee imac castea iene tape Most drastic steps being taken now are the fall dance steps. Pink Wigs for Pale People Here’s something to get excited over; it is not in good taste to wear your own hair after dark. The Star quotes from a confidential talk made to local women a few days ago; a talk given by a beauty special- ist, who had just returned from the national convention of the hair-dressers of North America at Chicago. “Bobbed hair, your own hair, is in correct taste for street wear and al! athletic pastimes,” said the specialist. (Get that “street wear,”) Elma is 15 years old, five feet 2 inches tall and weighs about 115 | pounds. She was dressed, when last |seen, in a deep orange dress with | black beading on the front. She | wore a black velour coat and a lack hat with small pink flowers, black patent leather slippers and black hose. MAIL DATES ANNOUNCED Punt Bs okable, and that to withhold his commission was violative of a vested right This disposed of the Marbury case, but Marshall, newly be come chief justice, did not stop there. He proceeded to declare that the act of congress under which Marbury had brought no- tion required the supreme court to do something which It had no authority under the constitution to do. This act of congress, he held, was therefore unconstitu- tional and yoid a now | stenogray Two Seattle | head the | Public Stenographers, Put women | ; Sar et ae Promises Have Not Been Kept | Editor ‘The Star: | In answer to your question, “Has Mayor Brown Made Good?” I would} say that he has and he has not. i= Ho promised to lower our taxes, and instead we have lost nearly all! th of the 14 mills reduction the Tax Reduction council worked so dto| But times have changed—and Ada It is admitted that he is not entirely to t , but} Berg Miller, Seattle promised and declared and mado his campaign on a promise of | Tapher, helped cha “Lower Taxes.” 1 Association of stenographers used to be dered as a cheap substitute for tion, and reorganize ft, but the coun- cil blocked me at every turn,” the mayor said. “Now they must stand sponsor for the acts committed there.” Supe real thing. nt two years ago. public steno After , | six years of untiting and loyal serv. intendent Barkhuff declared that ho will make public a full tement on the entire affair. © them What will be his rallying cry next y “But in the evening, for all formal occasions, at the opera, one must wear hair to correspond with the scheme of the gown, tho for most young people with fair com- plexions and high color, there is no wig like the white wig to set off the face.” In all seriousness, the amalgamated hair-dressers of the entire bloomin’ continent have dictated that the women shall wear wigs, colored wigs to match their gowns, and that the woman who does not wear a green wig with a green gown, or at least a white wig with pink cheeks, is a woman without class, and void as to form. : Mere man will wait with interest the reaction of his good wife to this edict. It was somewhat arduous these weekly visits of ma and the girls to the barber, at from 50 cents to $2 a throw, but if the dear creatures are going in for wigs, a wig for each gown and a new wig for each new hat, and wigs at from 50 bucks per capita up.to 500, ‘pa will have something to how! about besides taxes. ' New idea? Not at all. The favorite wig of Queen Blizabeth, so the wife tells us (no she wasn’t there at the time), was a green wig, and until recently there were men and women living who could remember the days when the powdered peruke was the formal head-dress of everyone in this country above the rural class. A California woman sues for divorce because her husband won't keep up with current events, read up-to-date books or attend the movies. “Drat such a husband. Henry Ford Is « persistent cuss in his present scrap with the secretary of war. He seems to be willing to continue his gunning for Weeks and Weeks and Weeks. Yet the Lord will command his loving kindness in the daytime, and in the night his song shall be with me—Ps, viii.3. Some Figures on Divorce “Morality experts’ are pointing with pride to the latest report on marriage and divorce in New York, showing that in the Empire state last year there was but one divorce to every 22 marriages. “Thus we see,” say the moralists, “how much better are the people of New York than those of Ohio, Kansas or Washington, for example.” What nonsense! New York has few divorces because her laws allow but one cause of divorce practically, viz., ” infidelity. Now, the rock on which the matrimonial bark goes shipwreck is the rock of finance. In most states of the Union, this fact is recognized, with the result that the wife can legally free herself from 2 ee nore ea ee an economic incubus, and if he has anything, or has any earning capacity, she can compel him to help support her and the family. That’s the way it should be every- where. And, of course, the facts are that New Yorkers who can afford to do so get as many divorces per capita as people here—only they go somewhere else to ask for them. Statisticians figure out that, since the war, Germany has sold over 30,000,000,000 paper marks to foreigners. Somebody seems to be stuck, besides Germany. Inglewood, Cal., held a public bonfire for rubbish. Better than selling it for breakfast food. One Darn-Fool Commandment Commandment No. 4, of Commissioner Haynes’ com- mandments, published to encourage popular aid in en- forcement of dry laws, reads: “Express your opinions to the editor of your paper.” That man Haynes is no friend of ours. Down some- where in the basement of The Star building is a row of barrels containing opinions expressed to the editor on the topic of enforcement of dry laws. Eighteen more of such barrels can be secured by a 10-word liner in these columns, any time—opinions blessing dry laws, cussing them, flattering and blaspheming the editor for what he has said, “dry” or “wet,” or what he hasn’t said; opinions riding the editor, hamstringing him, or petting him as the only influence on God’s earth capable of mak- ing this courtry blister with dryness; opinions depict- ing the editor as an habitual soak, or as a Wayne Wheeler, or an in-between mongrel. There is no opinion on liquor the human mind ever conceived that the editor cannot draw from out those barrels, any time he likes, and if that man Haynes goes ahead with the idea that enforce- ment is suffering from lack of opinion at command of editors, his cause is in the throes of early decay. Commandment No. 4 should read: “Spare the editor! He has his troubles now!” Washington senator wants to tax those failing to vote. Senator, it is being done aiready. é ‘Two Mont! ilo, N, ¥., 16-year-olds eloped, which leaves them a long The John Marshall theory was expressed, in part, as follows: “The powern of the legislature are defined and limited: and that those powers may not be mis- taken or forgotten the constitu tion Is written. . , . The dintine- tion between a government with Nmited and untimited powers is abolished, if those limits do confine the they persons on are imposed, and if prohibited and acts tllowed of equal obligation It is a proposition too plain to be con. tested, that the constitution con- trols any legislative act repug- nant to It; or, that the legie the constitu ion by an ordinary act Be. tween these ternatives there ia no middie ground, The consti tution is either a superior par. amount law, unchangeable by ordinary means, or it is on level with ordinary leg acts, and like other acts, terable when the legia’ shall please to alter it... . Cer- tainly all those who have acta are ture In regard to the five cent car fare, he made good—but on the grounds | ice to her cause, she bears today the that if it were not successful, {t wouldn't stand. We all know the answer, and while he Is not to blame for the failure, why promiso what ts 0} of his power to fulfill? it seems to moe, is the worst charge that can be brought agalc him, unless wo include the promise that If his own app not} reduce the expenses of their departments, they should be removed and others placed there who would cut expenses E has given us as good an administration as any | , and as he probably knows what he can or| 4 ¢ may not be so foolish this time as to prom! what is not/* er to carry out w Very respectfully, yours, MRS, ETHAN E. STEWART, 20 Nob Hill ave. Like a Gallant Ship in a Storm eet Editor The Star: What is the matter with the present mayor? He was elected by a good majority of the people, but was alarmed by some as tho a cyclone had hit the town. He haa not made a hash of the street car problem; it was done before he was elected. Nor was he off pleayure hunting In distant lands and drawing his pay from tho struggling taxpayer, To be mayor of the city of Seattle, one must not listen to the dic- jtates of a trifling dilettante any more than he would to the wailing of | love-lorn tom cat. In view of these facts, I would liken a man of thin jsort to a gallant ship when attacked by adverse gales, and in spite of | wild winds aud boisterous seas, sho answers her heim like a thing of nen did in his pe and Ca | all action of being the president of| le 1 n fre the G 1 Associa ganization of the first n of ners in the world, me Publi ion was launched in hureday, with rep l over the United States | resen- and in the outgrowth of jand now has “How did i ra. M er. some kindred » anvoc lation of public headed by Mrs. Miller, st In this country inter organizations in cities and many of the Eastern ptaten. all appen smiled I, together with is, mix years ago “There is nothing further that I can do, other than to protect my men }from again being sent to that instl- tuon for assistance,” Barkhuff said. AID WILLIAMS IRED OTHER DOCTOR Dr. J. A. Wunderlick, an interne ho attended Will- ma had insisted having the physician for the in- Gustrial insurance department of the rtate administer to him, accord. i to Barkhuff. |iams had refused treatment, but Williams flatly denied this and sald that he had asked for any doctor,’ |Barkbuff said. ‘Dr. Wunderlick | maid he had applied an fodine dress- “Wunderlick told me that Will-/| |concetved the {dea of associating the |!9& but Williams said he tad only | public stenographers of thin city to-| Put 4 piece of gauze on the wound; | gether for the purpose of elevating | @24 Wrapped it in a towel."’ | | their professional standards and de| Dt Carl W, BSilverburg, another | | manding of those within their ranks |{nterne, who was Present | when jthe best of service, abiiity, morate, | Williams was taken to the city has- So wo got together, Thursday's | Pital, said William had insisted on action, I think, fustified our efforts” | >4¥ing his own physician. Other officers of the new interna-| “He said he was an industrial in- tional agsociation aro Miss Ann Mar-|*Urance case, and demanded his own quis, Crary building, Seattle: Mixs|{@lly physician,” Dr. Silverberg In accordance with plans to co» loperate with the public in prevent. | ing last-minute congestion of Christ- }mas mail, the following list of dates on which letters and packages should be mailed in order to reach the designated destination by Christs |mas, compiled by Geo, E. Will superintendent of mails, was | nounced by the Seattle postoffice partment Sa‘urday: Australia | New Zealand, November 21; Canada, December 20;/China, November 10; Denmark, December 6; Eastern | States, December 20; Finland, De- |cember 6; France, December 6; Gere | many, December 6; England and Ire- |tand, December 9; Holland, Decem- jber 6; Honolulu, December 11; In- dia, November 20; Italy, December 6; Japan, December 6; Korea, De- cember 4; New Foundland, Decem- ber 19; Norway, December 6; On- tario, December, 19; Philfppine Islands, November 32; Quebte, De- cember 19; South Africa, November 39, and the Yukon territory, includ- ing White Horse, Champagne and Carcross, December 13. framed written constitutions contemplate them as forming the fundamental and paramount law of the nation and, conse- quently, the theory of every such government must be that an act of the legislature, repug- nant to the constitution, is void. Has Brown made good as mayor? “This theory is essentlalry at- NO. Absolutely NO. The reasons: tached to a written constitution | 1, and is consequently to be con- sidered by this court as one of the fundamental principles of | yer. The council! to blame? our society. It is not therefore | Landes. to be lost sight of in the further 2. consideration of this subject. “If an act of the legimature, repugnant to the constitution, 4. How about the police departmen is void, does It, notwithstanding |American system?) The Lagute case its invalidity, bind the courts 5. and oblige them to give it ef- fect? Or, in other words, tho ft be not law, does it constitute a rule as operative as if it was a law? This would be to over- throw In fact what was estab- lished in theory, and would seem at first view, an absurd- I am sir, yours respectfully, | Editor The Star: asked for? Oh! What's the use? How about the street car system? cash fare with transfers; $1.00 pass system and 8 tokens for a quarter with transfers); the $15,000,000 contract repudiation, and Brown's a law- Ask Erickson, Tindall, Carroll, Miracle and How about tho civil service problem? How about the bootlegging, dope, gambling, vice and d Give the loggers a chance to spend thelr money. Speech Writer Brown has made good ax a moving not as mayor of Seattle. Tho 40,000 strong were double-crossed. (P. 8.2 Will be back for the spring drive.) life and leaves astern a bright and sparkling wake, FRANK GRIFFIN, $337 Hunter Blvd. Asa Speech-Maker—Y1I ES I should know, so herd goos. (The 3 in 1 solution; 5 cent Did ho not get what he How about the political tncurables (political rummies)? t? (The English system; why not and Nellie Hartford? ance halls? pleture actor, but Rincerely, FRED J. HANKEE, Zenith, Was, LETTER FROM VY RIDGE, MANN NAVY DAY Here's to the Navy, the glorious Navy, The pride of the seas of the world! @ carries the story of national glory Wherever the flag is unfurled. It speaks of the might of the grandest of lands; It carries the peace of the world in ita handa, The Navy, God dless it! We proudly profess it The pride of the seas of tha world! Here's to our sailors, our glorious sailors, The pride of the ships of the seat They live thru the ages, on History's pages, The boast of the Land of the Free. With handa that are steady and hearts that are true, Whatever the duty, they carry it thru. Our sailors, God bless them! We proudly profess them The pride of the ships of the seat Here's to our nation, our glorious nation, The pride of the hearts of us all! With loyal devotion, on land or on ocean, We thrill to Columbia's call. A haven of refuge to people oppressed, A garden that Nature wnatintedly blessed; Our country, God guide it, whatever betide it— The pride of the heafts of ua alll recommends "SALAD A” EA. ORANGE PEHKOE BLEND to the most discriminating ten drinker. R. & H. ©. COOK, WE st-4073, EL iot-0350, Distributors 1388 MASK BALL at De Honey new acadens: at 1st Ave, 7” > Pike Wednesday ove. chi cht (Halloween), ‘aah prises, fat hall, scope Dancin evi Wednenday, © suture day and unday eve, Finest hall, beat . Towent ‘prices all the Good a Why ® Real Monday NERS" CLASS, All Dances. Now id Tanko stope taught In ‘12 ‘Thuraday Fox Trot $8 leexony vanced, embarra Beginners’ $4. Plenty ola . of practice, “No Take advantage o n rate this wee he er RCHOO! of this ela Cary me Sennen all hours, Phone Thoroughness Characterizen our methods tn every transaction, and our cuss tomers are accorded every cour. tesy consistent with sound busl. Judgment. 4% Fald on Savings Accounts Accounts Bubject to Cheek Are Cordially Invited Peoples Savings Bank SECOND - VE. AND PIKE ST, Lottie Bowron, Victoria, B.C, and Mra. Betty Seymour, San Diego, Cal. Mra. Miller operates public steno- graphic offices tn the Alaska, Arcade and the new Terminal Sales build. ings, Seattle California Captain Sick; Out of Game PORTLAND, Oct. 27.— California was to take the field today against Washington State without tho serv- foes of Don Nichols, captain and crack halfback of the Golden Bears. Nichols is out with an attack of ton- silitis, Perry, star guard, is ajso out of the game with an injured knee. Dixon will probably start in Nichols‘ place, with Perry's successor un- named before game time. Washington State went {nto the dig game with their first string out- fit intact and all in good condition. Ideal weather was prevailing as the teams lined up for the kickoff and a sell-out at Multnomah field was aasured, eee Bagshaw’s Huskies Tackle Puget Sound TACOMA, Oct. 27.—All football attendance recorda in this city were expected to be broken this afternoon |when Enoch Bagshaw's University of Washington eleven tackles the small College of Puget Sound grid team. Washington enters the contest a heavy favorite, but the Huskies were promised a stiff battle by R. W, MacNeal, conch of the Tacoma col- legians,_ Nation Celebrates for Douglas Is 35 Prosecuting Attorney Malcolm Douglas was busy all Saturday morn- ing opening birthday presents from his friends and relatives. It was the prosecutor's 35th birthday and it is being celebrated thruout the nation, “It's funny that President Roose- velt selected the same day for a birthday,” Douglas said. “I suppose some people will think that the na- tional observance of this day as the birthday of a great American is be- ing made because Roosevelt hap- pened to have been born on the 27th of October, too.” ’ Douglas said that when he con- templates what many people have accomplished at his age he is abashed at his own failure, “Just think, Gladstone had written his “Commentaries” before he was 80 and the younger Pitt was prime minister of England at 23," Douglas sald, FIGHT BLAZE | AT TERMINAL A stubborn fire, which broke out on the dock of the Jordan terminal, F. Marginal way and Dawson st. Jearly Saturday, caused several com. |panies of firemen much trouble before it was oxtinguished. The | blaze started in the piling and raged for over an hour, It caused no dam. Age, however, according to the offl- cers of the Jordan terminal, said, “We gave him an antiseptic dressing and a hypodermic Injection to kill the pain. Then we called up the Seattle General hospital and sent him there for treatment.” CHIEF CLERK TELLS DIFFERENT STORY N. 8. Meengs, chief clerk for Barkhuff, said that he had called up ft least half a dozen physicians, and finally took Williams to the Seattle General hospital in a street depart- ment automobile. “When I arrived at the ctiy hos- pital, Williams had been there more than 30 minutes and was frantic,” Meengs said. “He tola me he want- ed any doctor. He said he had nev. er been to one himself and did not know anyone to call. When I was unable to get a doctor right away, I took him to the Seattle General hospital.” P. E. FISHER’S FUNERAL SET Funeral services for Philip E. Fisher, Seattle manufacturer and capitalist, who died Friday morning, will be held Sunday afternoon at 2:30 at his home, 614 Boylston ave, N., the Rev, John C, McLauchian of St. Mark's parish, offictating. Mr. Fisher, who was 57 years olf when he died, succumbed to an itiness of but five days, following his reported collapse at the steer ing wheel of his auto while driv. ing with Mrs. Fisher last Sunday, Community Play _ Project Planned Initiating a series of meetings and demonstrations to further recreation: al work in the various Seattle co munities thru a play leaders’ in tute, Alice M. Warne, recreation director of the Seattle Com: service Saturday announced a series of eight meetings from November 6 to December 11 for women of the city interested in the community entere prise. The sessions will be held at the ¥. W. C. A. gymnasium, Fifth and Seneca, on days specified, between 3:30 and 5 p.m. In addition to the educational addresses and demonstra: tions of actual work, mimeographed material will be given the represen- tatives, that they may carry on the work In thelr own communities, FORD MEN IN STORMY MEET DETROIT, Mich., Oct. 27.—During a stormy two-hour session behind locked doors last night, members of the executive committee of the Dears born Ford-for-President club ate tempted to repudiate the national call off the Ford presidential boom, it was learned today. Members opposing the meeting are Sued that Ford, in his statement on prohibition and President Coolidge, in. He Is survived by his widow, Mrs, Elizabeth Stoops Fisher, and two sisters, Mrs, Jullan Haywood of Rochester, N. Y., and Mra. J. C. Hammond of Seattle. The late capitalist came to So, attlo 21 years ago and established the Pacific Coast Pipe Co., at. Bal. lard, and the Portland Wood Pipe Co,, at Portland. both of which he later sold. He was head of the Pacific Coast Pipe Co., of Vancou- yer, B. C., when he died. PREMIER LAW IS SUFFERER LONDON, Oct. 27.—The condition of former Prime Minister Andrew Bonar Law, suffering from a dis. ease of the throat, was described as little improved today, Newspapers said the former prime minister might die within two weeks. Governor Walton Will Go on Trial OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla, Oct, 27, —J, C, Walton, suspended governor of Oklahoma, will stand trin! Novem. ber 1 before the senate, sitting as an impeachment court, upon the charges voted by the house. Square your shoulders to the world! It's easy to give in— Lift your chin a little higher! You were made to win, Grit your teeth, but smile, frown, We all must bear our bit, It's not the load that weighs us down, It’s the way wo carry it! —Tit-Bits, don't dicated he would not run. “Henry told his brother he didn’t approve the calling of such a con- vention,” someone shouted. ‘ The committee finally adjourny without approving the conference December 12. Senator to Attack Geologist’s Report WASHINGTON, Oct. 27.—The re ports of the expert geologists tending to uphold former Secretary of the Interior Fall's contention that leas+ ing of Teapot Dome naval oil reserve was necessary to save the reserve from damage will be attacked in tes timony to be submitted to the senate investigating committee Monday, Senator Walsh, Montana, announced today. Tho investigating committee ad jJourned at noon today, after hearing Assistant Secretary of the Navy Roosevelt and Assistant Secretary of the Interior Finney, Harry F, Sins clair, lessee of tho reserve, who came to Washington to testify today, was not called. ' Studio Is Closed on Laske’s Ord LOS: ANGELES, Cal, Oct. 37. The Famous Players-Lasky studi here and on Long Island closed thelr doors today In accordance with Jesse TL, Lasky's decree of 10 weeks of inactivity, The Robertson-Cole studios are still closed, following a change in managers, and are not likely to re- open for some time. The B, P, Schulberg studios are also closed for an indefinite period, =a conference set for December 12 and ¥