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: % ts ee a eee FEAR LYNCHING BRING EVERETT YOUTHS HERE FOR SAFETY On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise Tides in Seattle SATURDAY NOV, 22 Piest High tab am. Piret Low Tide 10:48 am ‘Tide Le tf ao tt | SUNDAY NOV, 23 Firet Migh Tide Entere 4 a Second Class Matter May 2, 1899, w t the Postoffice at Seattle, Wash, under SEATTLE, WASH SATURDAY, the Act of © # March 2, 1879 _ NOVEMBER 22, 1919. The Seattle Star Weather Forecast. CENTS Late Ed Per Year. b $6.00 to $9.00 and Sund te southes right in; ro $400,000 “BOWL” TO BE BUILT AT UNI VERSITY Take Over TO ME DANA SLEETH T HIGH noon yest@rday I was panhandled for the first time in three years. Nosing into my feed bag at a Second ave. Ouse, a husky ebap stopped “What's the chance to get ing money, mister? I just got ® town,” he huskily insinuated. manner implied that it was public duty to feed him, so as he had condescended to im on our fair city. looked able-bodied: he was , and appeared intelligent and fed; and they are crying for at from $5 a day up. ED by a bright red fire truck, the two big, shiny Magnolia bluff auto busses, latest additions to the town's car sys- tem, paraded yesterday to the ‘Diare of a small but lusty band. far as I know, this is the | first serious effort of an Amert | ean car system to utilize the motor im connection with its rail pervice. To every one outside the trac Aion circle it for ten years has teen a mystery why the railroads did not, in both suburban and in- ban traffic, utilize the motor Private capital, operating chiefly @ shoestring, has for years nd the jitney, the truck and the profitable.’ The public has 0 found all these convenient, dy and efficient. At last a big city recognizes the bus and will give it a fair fas a feeder service to its rail And without municipal owner ip, probably even this tardy ex- ‘eriment would have been further layed, 4 HICH reminds us that Se- attle is also about the only city left in the West where the nickel still buys a ride, nd unless the council deliber- Joada excessive burdens on municipal system, the nickel continue to buy a ride in Se- while under private ownership, highly efficient management, y “a on pays, and has for , 6 cents, and probably will ex or 9 cents. Mand power and labor and mate- 1 cost no more in Portland than ) Beattle. But with a 6-cent fare, the Port ind corporation has still failed to y dividends. ‘And has kept out of bankruptcy ly because of the protit its light power business gave. reminds us, also, that @ buys considerable more Princess Daphne of Doll Land Has Returned From Exile and Will Be Enthroned at Arena in Few Weeks| Baby dolls, rag dolls, kewple dolls, high-born dolls, plain dolls! Dolls which can walk, doils which can talk, dolis which can Italian dolls, Trish dolls — everything but German dolls! Bride dolls in goingaway suite of peagreen checks—or whatever brides go away in; bride dolla in lace and chiffon groom dolls, being married by preacher dolls! Dolla of the caste of Vere de Vere; dolls dressed in creations from some miniature Paquin or some diminutive Worth; dolls which would think nothing of associating with the royal dolls of Europe! Ané just plain dolls, with saw- dust insides and homely rag faces, but with hearts of pure gold—the dolts! many of the prominent women of the city. ‘The dolls will be donated by the women of Seattle. Each doll will be somebody's con- tribution to the Mother Ryther Home. COAL PRICE TO BE INCREASED Local Fair Price Committee | Permits Raise ‘The price of coal is going up. A maximum increase of 43.2 cents per ton has been allowed to retail fuel dealers by the King county fair price committee, to take effect Mon- day. ‘The increase in allowed to the fuel dealers, to be added to their operat- ing cost. The retail fuel dealers asked for a special conference with the commit tee Wednesday, for the purpose of having the retail coal price raised, as they asserted that the old scale forced them to sell their product at a lous of bod cents per t ton. Billy Danzy Found .Murdered in Woods HAMMONTON, N. J., Nov. 22 ‘The search for Billy Danzy, 24-year. old “perfect baby.” who disappeared from his home here October 8, today was changed to a hunt for his sla The boy's body was found by near the home if his father. ——$$—$—$$ light and power in Seattle, under municipal management, than it does in Portland, under private ownership, and in Portland there is competition between two big corporations in the light and pow- er field. Of course, this, in justice, must be said; The people will suffer in- conveniences and exactions and experiments tn a municipal system that they would revolt under if ™ private corporation inaugurated them. When the citizen feels that all the profit goes to the public purse, | he will endure a lot that he would rebel against were the profits go- ing to pay dividends on watered stock. Thirty-two new were cov: ered by the recent munitions activi- ties in the United States, This is Princess Daphne, ‘of Doll Land, who has been in Paris, performing each night in the World of Make-Relieve, that enchanted allied soldiers during the grim war years, Kemember when she teft Seattlo—petite Daphne Pollard? Now she is home again, and Seattle will soon see her in a new role for the benefit of Mother Ryther’s kiddies. Daphne is an interna- thonal musical comedy star, who, @ few years ago, was a cute, _aen hatred Metle Seattle girl. Both Men Were in | Seattle Gun Fight |, {William Chastain and Frank Mc Kean, both former reformatory prisoners, held up Deputy Sheriff G. H. Kearney on the Bothell road the night of October 11, and escaped aft er a gin fight with Kearney and Deputy C. H. Beebe. They were traced to Monroe, where they stole Superintendent D. B, Olson's auto. The machine was found next day in Seattle. Bloodhounds apnt to catch the men disappewred and did not return for | several days. jously made friends with the dogs at the reformatory. Chastain is 23 While ‘serving | he escaped, waa arrested in Portland and sentenced for robberies in Spo- kane, He was paroled in January. Jim Supposed of Course That He Would Get a Bed EUREKA, Cal., Nov. 22—Jim i-blooded redskin and "who is in the county jail, charged with criminal syndic: ism, was asked today how he hap- pened to join the 1. W, W. “They ask me if I got good bed,” Jim maid. “I say no, I not got good mattress, They say, ‘Jim, you join I. W. W,, and pretty soon get fine mattress.” I tell ‘em how much, an’ he say, ‘two dolar for join and four bits for dues.’ And I give ‘em two dollar half. That's all.” Chastain had previ: | The committee in charge ex- pects literally thousands of dolls to attend the Doll Show and afterwards each doll, be It countess or washerwoman, the daintiest bisque or merely cel- lulold, will go to some Nttle girl's home as a dearly-beloved adopted child December 10, the the best dressed Monday, contest for doll begins. Everybody, even the men, are eligible to enter a doll, But the dolls must be submitted be- fore 12 o'clock noon, December 10, for they will be judged that afternoon, and In the evening the winning doll will be crown- ed queen of the carnival and recelve the $25 fruit cake do- nated by Hazen J. Titus. The dolls will be judged on thelr personality, on the ma- teriais used in their dress, the the = originality “ty enter the be turned in to Mrs, Douglas, Waldorf hotel. On the opening night, Decem- ber 16, when the dolle take Seattic by storm, the Prince apd Princess of Doli Land will appear, back foem exile, to re- conquer their lowt estates. The family name pf the prince t# still unknown, but it is whispered about that the girl who enchanted the allied sol- diers in Paris during the war our own Daphne Pollard—will be the princess of the dolls Lucky dolls to be governed by such rulers, lucky princess to rule over auch a lovely kingdom, lucky prince (far, far luckier on that night to be prince of doll land than mayor or Seattie!), and lucky children who will be adopted by sugh dotis! . (CYCLIST HIT 7s "EVERETT STAGE | Knocked down and dragged sev: leral feet beneath an Everett-Seattle stage late Friday night, R. H Thomson, jr, 2454 Harvard ave. N.. |wax reported not seriously injured |Saturday morning in | pital | The stage was driven by D. EB. |Prothero, of the Wayne hotel, who reported to the police that Thom- leon, riding a motorcycle, appeared before him on Eastlake ave, at Roanoke st., before he could apply the brakes, He said that the stage letruck the motorcycle rider. Bystanders rescued Thomson from beneath his motorcycle, lin turn, was beneath the heavy atage City hospital physicians report that Thomson suffered a cut in the back of his head, a cut lip and general body bruises, none of which is serious, = | built, the city hos-| which | Would Seat 75,000, Is. _U.W. Plan | | Would Rival Yale sel } and Tacoma High School Stadium in Size TO BE BUILT IN UNITS) Construction of the largest con- jerete stadium in the United States, | lone with a neating capacity of 75,-) | 000, will be built on the University | lof Washington campus by the asso- | clated student body, if present plans | carry, | | The proposed stadium will joutrival the famed “Yale bow!" at| | Now Haven and will have twice the seating capacity of the Tagoma| high school stadium, Racked by the associated student | body, tentative plans for the varsity bow! are rapidly taking shape. An ideal site, overlooking Lake Wash: | ington, is available, according to) Darwin. uate manager ee ke eae and one bare Movierty well wutted to the construc: tien of the bow! as planned. ‘Tentative Pisns Drawn Already tentative aketehes of the! propowed varsity bow) have been) drawn up from data supplied by the | associated student body, An archi-| tect will be comminsioned soon to) draft preliminary plans and specifi i cations so that grading work may | | proceed. | Would Be Self Supporting | According to present plans, the| stadium would be financed without loutside help and will be built in lunits, the first to be under way be | fore the 1920 athletic season is under | way. | To finance the first unit the profits | of the present football season, amounting to $15,000, will be added | }to the $40,000 already in the #tu-| }dent body treasury | It is expected that the complete bow! will cost in the neighborhood of | | $400,000 | It is believed that the bowl, once will be self-supporting. Civic! pageants and outdoor fetes will be held in the bowl, affording seating capacity for thousands upon thou- sands of spectators. Harvard | 10, Yale 3, in Great Classic CAMBRIDGE, Mass, Nov. 22.— At the end of the first half of a} |loose, but spectacular game today. | Harvard had established a lead of | 10 to 0 over Yale in their annual big | game. A beautiful field goal, executed by |Ralph Horween in the first period. |gave Harvard first blood. Horween went the ball more than 40 yards Jagainst a stiff wind for one of the |neatest drop kicks ever made in a | big game. | The first touchdown of the game came near the end of the second period, when Casey, for Harvard |took a long forward pass from Felton and raced across the line for a touchdown, Horween kicked goal. There were no scores in the third quarter. In the fourth Yale kicked & field goal. Solemn Coseamnuy | Marks Demise of Fateful Bourbon | Superior Judge Everett Smith per sonally poured into the sewer the 10 quarts of liquor over which Judge hunter late yesterday in @ swamp | Chas term in an Oklahoma prison,|Clay Allen was arrested, tried and | acquitted of a charge that he had it unlawfully in his possession June 4. Six quarts of Boone's Knoll bour- bon and four quarts of Scotch gur- gled down the sink in. the private of. \fice of Superior Court Clerk Percy | Thomas, at 11:30 a, m “It's gone-—for good,” Judge Smith, as the |dripped from the last Scotch. At the conclusion of the ceremony, | Judge Smith, Prosecutor T. H. Pat terson, Clerk Thomas, Assistant Clerk George’ Grant and Israel Nel- son, one of the trustees of the Swed. |ish hospital, bent solemnly over the \sink, inhaled deeply, turned and filed silently out of the room. “It was the real stuff, all right,” Grant in a weak commnted last drop bottle By French law no physician may inherit property left to him by a deceased patient. of | Good! WhyNot Try | It in Seattle, Too? | = ——$—$ <_< $$ —_—_—_—_—_—_—_ es Price marks on the soles of shoes. ‘That's how Britain is stopping profiteering in footwear, Prices range from $2.95 to $12. Thirty millions such boots have been ordered by British manufac: tarers and will be placed on the market. From 10 to 60 times as much oplum is used in the United States as is used in Austria, Ttaly, Ger- many, Portugal, France or Holland. the HY not take over the mines? There seems to be only one way out of our coal strike di fficulties. That is for the government to take over the mines and run them, pending complete investigation and miners’ demands; fair settlement of pending also com- plete investigation of alleged unscrupu- lous profiteering by operators and appropriate action on that head. Government by injunction has failed. Miners have not gone back to work. A coal famine still faces the country. Government by injunction has done worse than fail. feeling. It has created bitter It has widened the breach. Even if eventually some miners are forced back into the mines because of starvation, this situation will remain to make trouble for n ext winter. Government by injunction was bound to do this. Itis autocratic. In the pres- ent instance it looks too much like taking sides with the operators. Coal mines have already been seized in Kansas and their seizure is advo- cated in Iowa by But these are only Governor Harding. state actions. Why doesn’t the administration seize the mines and run them, as during the war it seized the vented a complete r: railroads and pre- ailroad breakdown? Horrors! Donald 8. Phillips, handsome motorcycle deputy sheriff, is a young man of excellent modesty. Tho a daredevil in business, he frequently blushes exquisitely in the of ladies. Buckling on his sixshooter, he stepped fearlessly into a gambling joint at 410 Bighth ave. yesterday afternoon, lined patrons and conduc tors up against the wall and con- fiseated their paraphernalia, which he carried out to a waiting motor- -yele, R. E. Murphy, another deputy, was on the driver's seat Phillips crawled onto the seat be- hind with the paraphernalia in his arms, The machine sped up the street, headed for the sheriff's office. At Fifth ave. and Washington st. unlooked-for happenings began to oc- cur. A policeman, noting the para- phernalia, shouted at the speeding MH | cyclists: “Halt!” But the motorcycle only chugged the faster. The policeman’s gun flashed from its holster. A shot rang out. Murphy and Phillips ducked their heads and Murphy added an-| other pound of power to his machine. Just as the policeman was draw- ing a fine bead on the back of Phil- lips, as the motoreycle was rounding the corner of Ff ington the rear wheel of the chug-bike skidded suddenly, slewing #0 sharply around that Phillips was unseated. That is to say, he was unseated from the rear seat of the motorcycle and seated in a much less comfort- able position on the hard and asphalt pavement. Tho his progress was somewhat impeded, he slid some sev- eral yards over the surface of the street before he came to a full stop. Gambling paraphernalia was dis- seminated over the entire block. Playing cards were still fluttering in the air when Murphy picked him- self up and looked around for the fearless tho modest Phillips. Murphy did not locate his com- panion at once, ered Phillips standing with his back close up against a cold brick build- ing. “Well, let's pick up the stuff and 60,” suggested Murphy. ‘ourth ave. and Wash-| ~ Finally he discov-| Bashful Deputy Loses Seat of Trousers “IT can't," said Phillips, his face @ furious crimson, “Why not?” asked Murphy. “The whole seat is burned out of my trousers,” confessed Phillips. “Here's my coat,” offered Murphy. “Wrap it around you. We can't wait here till it gets dark." | Just as the policeman arrived on the scene, the two deputies seated | themselves gingerly on the motor- cycle and shot thru the crowd. Phil- lips acquired new trousers at the county® jail eae . . British Prince Will A Leave U. S. Tonight BY W. R. HARGRAVES (United Press Staff Correspondent) NEW YORK, Nov. 22.—Ninety American and British air veterans were decorated by the Prince of Wales today on his ship, H. M. 8. Renown, on which he will sail later in the day for Halifax, This was the final event on the program for the prince’s visit in this country. Earlier in the day he came ashore and re- viewed a parade of Boy Scouts on Riverside Drive. Cocoanut oll is used extensively in India as a mange cure for dogs. Who Is Looking for a Bargain? Some of the best buys in the city and country are listed today in the Classified Sec- tion, READ—THEN You can't ALSO— the prize winners in the RHYME CONTEST are an- nounced today. Is Your Name There? Try your luck next week with this line: “Christmas time is drawing ACT make a mistake. |KEPT | Snohomish “County S Secretly Removes Prison- ers Arrested for Murder INCOMMUNICADO. had arrested three they were confident one of them land locality, occurred when Bi Perringer and a companion, E. Pe Marshall, of Pendleton, were in a private room at the tavern, — .? where they had stopped on their re@ turn to Portland from an automobile ” ride, Rob 25 Guests ‘The three masked bandits entered _ the tavern at 11:30 o'clock, compelled 25 guests to assemble in the hall room, lined them up and robbed them of their money and jewelry. They subsequently robbed the safe of the roadhouse. While one of the highwaymen guarded the victims, the other two made a search of the private dining rooma, finding Burgess, Perringer and Marshall in one of them. It presumed the robbers mistook the actions of the three Pendleton men ag a show of resistance and opened fire. Burgess was shot in the head and aM fell to the floor dead. A bullet © pierced the heart of Perringer, who, — after staggering a few steps, dropped dead. Marshall escaped, but was thrown into such a state of nervous excitement he has since been unable to coherently describe the fray that — cost the lives of his companions, 3 Thought Is Was Joke The police announced today = had received information that Bure gess and Perringer thought it was @- joke when bandits approached them at the Claremont tavern last night, “stick up your hands, or well shoot,” Burgess was ordered, “Go ahead and shoot, then,” plied Burgess. The words had no sooner left mouth than the bandits fired, en the lives of both Burgess end ringer iB. i