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oF wom ee = woe assem eve | den Maloney is again saying, | be hasn't cum thru yet. . . The Star goes into 11,727 more homes every day than homes every day than any other Seat other Seattle newspaper (these tle newspaper (these figures taken from October 1 taken from October 1, 1921, sworn | postal statements) statements) ~~ Tonight and Maximum, 44. VOLUME 23 __ northerly winds, ~ Temperature Last M Hours Today noon, 40. Friday, fair; Nont Minimum, 34. = iMusic FO _ MUTT LINE By Wanda Von Kettler We're beginning fast and furious to pick up the pieces for} that parade—that Community Chest parade of boys and girls, nd friendly apes. Best of alk we've got the band. And it’s a youngsters’ band| | —just as the whole blessed parade isa youngsters’ parade. | | Daddy “Draper's kiddies, known all | over the West for their musical abil purp dogs, goats Home Brew Howdy, Folks! Wish some- bedy would invent a self-starter for furnaces, see It won't be long now before War “Roy )Gardner is still on the Isiand.” eee We hope when they have that )Mutt Parade they don’t allow any ‘of the mutts near the city hall. They Pmight wander in, get under civil ice and then we'd never get ‘em INDOOR SPORTS Listening to a goof without to his name tell why -thing:-wbomte a part. jouse radiators is that they af- handy place to throw one's T knew a young woman named Maud | Who sure was a horrible fraud; To eat at the table Bhe never was abie, But out in the pantry—Oh, Gawd! see : How cuM? ‘They say he is a chesty guy, but : |The cider of the transgressor is em what © tanaied | web we knit first to bar the jit! 2" “The 5-cent loaf has finally come. ‘the only kick that a lot of us is that the 5 cetf¥s has finally eee m Seattle was a village it) overrun with weeds. Now it is| n with earwigs. eee dealt the cards out one by one, royal flush, I'm a spn-pf-a-gun, sweet papa, gin’t we got fun? » Twas solitaire. GREAT MYSTERIES OF SEATTLE How many raisins to a quart? one L. Sullivan, prominent Sinn Feiner, had « bouncing boy yeéterday, which he promises to name Home Brew.) “Nothing like having a little home | brew in the family,” he orates, o-* Altho it is a Stason, ALL-AMERICAN team will look like thiz: Murphy, Fuselli, Zybrowski, Mc Tavish, Duswoit, Cabero, O'Toole, Von Liederkraus, Resenblaum, Spinelli and Chief Sitting Bull. eee little early in the ma Gov. Hart's Thanksgiving procla- Mation says we should be thankful this year for our fine crops. We are, but not for our fine crop of poll ticians. eee University of Washington foot- bali players should take up golf. Their low scores would knock ‘em dead at the Jefferson Park links. one Under the heading of “For Sale— Instruments,” Sunday, the runs Woolen underwear. Well, why not? Woolen underwear is as musical as Phonograph needies—and has more serateh. see What has become of the father Spare the rod and spoil and the mother who tells her daughter not to cross her legs “because it isn't modest”? see They say that ducks, geese, pheas ants and rice birds are coming back thicker than ever this year. bout the rail birds? ae butchers don’t read papers, then they would know that prices are | coming down. ) ore Electric light bilis in Seattle are 7 we'll wager Walter Camp's) advertisement for | How | ¥ Foo bad Beattie grocers and t| | ity, will be |trombones and all, |Community Chest lead the procession. into box the The Seattle Star Entered as Second Clase Matter May 3, 1 snuggled, base druma, huge | on wheels, | {poke their heads over the top and) This procession, made up of the Hoy Scout troops, the Camp- fire Giris' “camp-scene” float, all the animals in town, headed by the G. A. M. (meaning Grand Army of Mutts), much boy and community girl, Mr. Woof's thest babies, and jing will be mentioned 4 janimal of thing to the i} low his name in pri Community Chest.) First Second pet anima! walking— Firat Becond ‘Third Boy with largent pet walking— Prise Girl with emaiiest pet walking Prine Most comically dressed First | | i ‘Third Fitth |] Most comicaily or most dressed littie girl ‘Third Fifth parrot, lending) Prine chia rine Child chia - rize pete. Prize. (the animal emblem). float, The the decoration of seene”’ float, Fourth Child with beat pet in © eat, chipmunk, ete.) Firat prize Hecond prize Best decorated animal walking (boy The Campfire Girls pressed their desire to produce a prize awards offered them they have asked to use in the later. Here Are Prizes in Pet Show Prizes to be awarded for Satur- day's parade of children, pets and purps in celebration of the Com- munity Chest movement. prizes offered by a friend of The Star, who modestly refuses to al He is al- ready a heavy subscriber to the est number marching— prise Pr prise prize prize a@mal, anima boy prize Recond prize prize. prize prin int Firat prize . Recond prise prize Fourth prize prize. leading) Prize Smallest pony— Prize.. Beat decorated cart (dos, goat—nothing barred) Firat prize Second prize Kid with most freckles | Prize Goat with longest whinkers Prine Child with hometiest mutt with best looking mutt Pp with shaggiest mutt Prise. .+.+ with biggest rabbit— Chia having best appearing ‘twin the have dog brigade will take possession of Second and First aves. at 11 o'clock Saturday morning. Nothing will be barred from the parade but grownups. This is exclusively a parade for boys and girls, pet elephants, mutt dogs and dodo birds! One person who is working madly | }for the animal parade—endeavoring jto have the sidewalke moved further | jack and all that-—ts one BLL. | Swezea, chairman of the parade com. mittee. Others who will assist us in gumming the traffic Saturday morn- In the meantime, youngsters, read the list of cash prizes accompanying this story—and plan on bringing the the gold fist or some Community parade. Everybody reports for parade formation at Third ave. and Virginia Saturday at 10 o'clock. Cheat (Cash Most comically dressed child and ‘ both ‘ both cot (such as $10 5 Best decorated animal walking (girl $6 ' pony, $10 6 |] Chita with mont fienaiy monkey Each Boy Scout troop turning out with two-thirds of its number will receive a colored patrol totem ex. “camp On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise Anna Calls Solon Bunk As Suitor| BY PAUL R. MALLON NEW YORK, Nov. 17.—“He told me he was 100 per cent pure and 98 per cen) handsome,” Miss Anna Elizabeth Niebel, || former Follies beauty, poked her || head between the curtains of her room today and had that to say regarding Congressman Manuel Herrick, She said he had boasted of his beauty, asked her to marry him, and then failed to do it, She sald this was the reason she had filed preliminary papers in a $50,000 breach of -promine sit. “I don't know about all he said, but I'm sure he wasn't 98 cont handsome,” Miss Niebel “He didn’t hold my hand and whisper sweet nothings in my car. He didn't even get down on one 4 when he proposed. He just said: “Kid, I like you and you like |) me—we'll get married.’ “Lt didn’t think much of the idea, but he told me tie had piles || of money and lots of oll wells out || in Oklahoma, so I planned to mar- ry him, “I called in my mother and he said it over to her, He sald, “The |) follow in one of these all-night || "IN COLORADO! Coal Fields WALSENBU RG, Coto., the Colorado coal district, the bloody mine war of 1914. A walkout of union mings started at midnight. rangers patrolled the coal fields of Huerfano county to prevent disor ders. The strike began at midnight when several hundred miners of the Colorado Fue! & iron company quit) work following announcement of a) 25 per cent wage reduction. | Union leaders said 1,200 men would | be out by noon. Issuance of the martial Jaw procla mation by Governor Shoup preceded the walkout. Four union miners on strike were arrested here today by rangers for | attempting to picket two mines, The! men were later released with tho) warning not to try picketing tactics. | The editor of a local union news | Paper was ordered to cease publica. tion of inciting artictes. ie These were the only cases where rangers assumed authority. SIX KILLED IN FALLING AUTO JOHNSTOWN, Pa., Nov. 17.—-Six persons were instantly killed here | learly today when an automobile | | plunged over a 30-foot cliff, Five men and a woman were the | victims, and the skull of each was fractured, There were no other pas: | sengers in the car. \Marshal Foch to Be | Here in Few Days) | Field Marshal Ferdinand Foch | ) j will be in Seattle probably November or 20, 39 ram to this effect was re here today by Dr. F. 8.j} |Bourns, former messmate of Brig | Gen, W. D. Connor, American aide jin charge of Foch's pur in this coun, \try. The telegram said the exact date | would be decided later and would | {be dispatched. to the commander of | the American Legion here, together | |with all details for the marshal’s | | reception and entertainment. | Aged Man May Die as Result of Fall) L, Norman, 70, 6719 Dayton st., was taken to the city hospital Thurs- |day morning, suffering from a prob- | | able fracture of the skull, following a | fail on the street in front of the Cot tage Realty Co, 6408 Phinney ave. An X-ray will be taken to determine the extent of his injuries. His con- dition 1s said to be crtiical, EASTERN Gardner Will Be leach hanging over bis head. will take « | WILL [come to an abrupt stop, I am quite | island.” feel a lot easier” when Gardner MARTIAL LAW: | tree x * Kc however, Federal Dis trt | Getinitely today. Armed State Rat Rangers Patrol|s mex wii. GUAKD BANDIT Nov. 17.—| addition to two other guards, it was Martial law today was proclaimed in|announced. The party will scene of here Saturday night. One hundred and fifty armed atate|an old Arizona territorial law pro- | Leavenworth | him to | woman any day, | sister-in-law SEATTLE, WASH., THURS’ PRISON FOR ROY Taken by 3 Men to Leavenworth; Not Discouraged PHOENIX, Ariz, Nov. 17.—"Roy Gardner will not go to trial for his latest attempt at rifling the mails,” United States Marshal Joseph Dilion informed the United Preas today, “He has two sentences of 26 years) They | re of him for the reat} of his life, in all probability. START FOR LEAVENWORTH “I reeelved telegraphic instruc | tions from Attorney General Daugh. erty today to remove Gardner to Leavenworth, Kans., immediately. “If we once get him to Leaven- worth his record of escapes will eure, Leavenworth is not MoNeil Dilton admitted that he “would delivered da Hie gates at Ledvea- worth The grand jury, which will con- vene here on November 28, will in all probability indict Gardner for his ttack upon Herman Inderlied, mail clerk, who captured him in a hand jto-band struggle on a weat-bound | Santa Fe train yesterday The indictment will not be prose- ct Attorney Thomas Flynn eaid| Marshal Dillon himself will accom. pany Gardner to Leavenworth, in leave | Federal authorities denied a news! report crediting them with seeking the death penalty for Gardner under viding capital punishment for at- tempted train robbery. Gardner was captured “while at tempting to rob a Santa Fe train near here. It was the first time he had been seen since he escaped un. |der fire of a score of guards from the federal penitentiary at MeNeil island several months ago. The de- cision of Flynn to send Gardner to instead of returning |/ MeNell island was taken at [the insistence of the department of | justice in Washington. eee Gardner Tells of Seeing Little Girl Gardner, “bandit of bandits,” who} met his Waterloo on a Santa Fe train here yesterday because he would not shoot an unarmed man, wrote his , y t ther and story In his own whimaleal way for | Army or to Mother |Ryther | and the United Press today. there's institutions included in this ie , 20 of ‘om, that I ney BY ROY GARDNER cnet of t I never even (Written for the United Press) Women are good scouts. They can |e trunted. My sisterintaw, Mra. | Martha Silda, has kept a secret for | six weeks. I'd share a secret with I rode into the ranch yard of my and her husband, at} Gordon Valley, about 12 miles from | * Napa, Cal,, six weeks ago. to see my little baby, Jean. It was|® about 8:30, Of course, they were sur- prised to see me. I gathered my sweet little girl into my arms and | $10 a day to count the money after | kissed and kissed her. it “Su 51 a ell, of course, | wie veitie GRAN body hax been doing a lot of | My wife had gone to dan Francis.| Wing spout the Community dT knew T would be taking too : ‘ much of a chance if I went there, so ent, but are these silly — tions, petty arguments? No, I was forced to go on my way with j out seeing her. T sure wanted to, but | _ I was too well known there, I had dinner, with my little girl on my} knee, ‘Ten o'clock came and I knew| that I must go. I had left the motorcycle that T stole up North out at the gate, My) sister-in-law asked me how I wax | traveling. I told her. She put up| a lunch for me and I went out into | the night, She held my little girl in| her arm as she stood in the doorway | of the ranch house, wishing me God- | (Turn to Rage 7, Column 6) Prince of ‘Wales Arrives in India BOMBAY, Nov, 17.—The Prince of ‘Wales arrived here today on, his first visit to India. 5 75 per cent for collection and ad- ministration and 25 per cent to the real PHOENIX, Ariz, Nov, 17. —Roy | high aalaried executives thing to suit me. to the Red Cross or the Salvation | WRONG a| not supporting it. everybody a living; be any such thing as charity. I wanted | that is hiring 4,000 field canvassers | public DAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1921. WILSON AS HE IS TODAY at the Postoffice at Seattic, Wash, under the Act of Congress March 3, 1879, Per Year, by Mall, $5 to $9 | Ss JAPAN WAR FRAMED? =) Dangerous rous Myth of Hostile Am of Hostile America ica Ie eng Beimg Kept Alive Thruout Nippon! PRA RAR TWO CENTS IN ( SEATTLE SEATTLE _ ee Eins dtevsiemante. wilors leaving for ‘The next Dedlle cretion of the conference hae born teGiatively fixed for next Wed to give Premier Briand an opportunit, The heads of ali the delegations met today as = sub-committee te discuss — 4 ° Maa Big Fa home. | Japan? form or another, t! Tense with emotion—a temnences revealed dra- matically’ by his clenched fist ~ Woodrow Wilson pted HE Bppiuse of cheering thousands in Washington Armiatice Day. Mrs, Wilson, stand~ rapidly pushing: the two coun’ wants. SITUATION 18 NOW PUZZLING Frankly puzzled, officiais here are jot a little alarmed. They want to know: ing beside him, shared in the wonderful grecting. Now Come On, Folks Give ’Em Your Shirt! COMMUNITY CHEST $744,810.00 103,265.98 115,248.87 78,200.00 Given Monday . Given Tuesday .. Wednesday, 12:16 p. m. “LEND A nai »” By Hal ‘iiiiaens ny ig “This Communi-| ty Chest—who's really at the bot- tom of it, anyway, {1a like to know?”| “I'm — skeptical.| Too expensive an) 7 organization, My) money don't. go—| charity, No, too many} in* this} sir; “I'm off it I'll give my money neard of before. “SYSTEM'S Pe “The chiar a wrong and I'm} The world owes | there shouldn't “Not mucht" (Very heatedly, “Not | a cent do IT pay to an organization at $7.60 a day to strong-arm the! under the guise of charity,| and is giving a lot of office clerks Not one of them. Why Spokane Men Won’t Attend Hart Dope Meet SPOKANE, Nov. 17.—Spokane county officials prob- ably will not attend the conference on narcotics, called by Governor Hart to meet at Seattle November 26. The three invited are willing to go, but the county commis- sioners probably won't pay their way. “The conference is a farce,” sioner Whitcher. “The governor is trying to ingratiate himself with the public,” says Commissioner Hall. went to sleep during the tax conference,” ‘They are just a few of the things we, the public, are asking or hear somebody else say or ask, things we all have a perfect right to ask and muy, Our money, earned by hard toll of brain or brawn, is the money that is go! ing into the chest, er isn't going into , Just as we see nk to put it in or withhold it ‘ There isn’t one of us in this big- hearted town so mean that we would knowingly turn away a weak and hungry man, a woman who needs shelter, starving dog. EVERYBODY WANTS TO GIVE LAST DIME ‘There isn’t one who isn't dead xious to dig down and split the Jast dime if necessary with a needy neighbor. Why, it’s the very spirit of this great, big, open-fisted West to give our shirt to help a man who needs it, Everybody kno that and is proad of it, It's one of our traditions. But just the same, we don’t want any shenanigan. med, bitten and stung, and it isn’t going know it. questions. Some of us have asked our ques- tions of the wrong people, Some of us have been handed misinforma- tion gratis by busy-bodies who don't know what they're talking about, people who are just a little queer That's why we're asking or (there are some of these last) malicious. So, now, let's take the hinges off} this Community Chest, lift off the! lid, knock out the bottom, and’ have |a good, thoro look at it It isn't # trick chest, There's nobody at the bottom of it but just a lot of earnest, whole- (Turn to Page 7, Column 4) said Commissioner Reid. “Hart, | remember, says Commis- a homeless child, al We've been trim-} to happen again, not if we! ONE. Why is it that tho the Unit- ed States has consistently claimed less in China than any other great power, that country, in a world-wide propaganda, is described as the dnly jenemy of Japan? TWO. Why, after 20-0dd years of scrupulous observance of the open oor doctrine, which doctrine was in- dorsed by all civilized nations, should the United States be singled out as blocking Japan's way to expansion in Asia? THREE. Why should Japan—and lathers—make a casus belli, almost, jof the immigration question in Cali- fornia, when Australia and other parts of Great Britain openly pro- claim theirs “a white man’s country,” and also bar the Japanese immi- grant? FOUR. What did Frederick Moore, councillor to the Japanese embassy here, mean when he said, apropos of Japan's uneasiness over the calling of the Pacific conference; “Many Japanese thought that an equitable consideration of their position was |perhaps unobtainable, KNOWING THAT IT WAS TO THE INTER- ESTS OF CERTAIN NATIONS TO KEEP ALIVE THE HOSTILITY BETWEEN THE UNITED STATES AND JAPAN.” WHAT NATIONS ARE INTERESTED? Administration officials point out that President Harding's foreign policy, like that of his predecessors, is really @ policy of the Golden Rlue; that this country demandy absolute. ly nothing more than an equal show with the rest and to live, and let live, in peace, Why, therefore, they ask, should Japan—and propagandist# outside Japan—keep prodding the Japanese | public with the goading idea that the imperalistic Yankees alone stand in their way? Is Frederick Moore right? What nations are interested in “keeping ‘alive the hostility between the Unit {ed States and Japan”? Are America and Japan, both, be- ing “framed”? A strong feeling is growing up |here that the American delegates to jthe arms conference must find the janswer to this very tic! ‘Klish situation, WON'T MCDIFY NAVAL HOLIDAY BY HERBERT W. WALKER WASHINGTON, Nov. 17. —The United States in future sessidhs, of ‘the arms limitation conference will oppose any modification of its pro- posal for a 10 has been suggested by Great Britain. marines as proposed by Great Britain will be approved by the American delegation. Reduction of total submarine ton- nage, placed in the Hughes program {at 90,000 tons for this country and ‘the British empire, will not strongly opposed, altho the American naval advisers believe a 50 per cent {cut in this respect is too drastic. The views of the American dele- (Turn to Page 7, Column 3) By Wm. Philip Simms : WASHINGTON, Nov. 18.—Is the Unites |States being “framed” i In the capitals of the Orient and of Europe, in on this question has been mooted. the privacy of diplomatic circles and among com: | petent observers for months. In Japan, the highly dangerous, but now popular, m: of a hostile America standing empire, is being kept alive thr while elsewhere in the world sinister influences ar holiday, such as} | Outlawing of the big cruiser sub: | be! | future aggressions, for a war wi lone in Nippon’s road some mysterious = al tries into a war which neil |ARMS MEET TO LAST 2 M0 American Delegate Says Is Progressing Fast BY LAWRENCE MARTIN - WASHINGTON, Nov. 17. arms limitation conference will jish its work within two ene of America’s “big four” gates predicted today. The parley, he said, Is better progress on both of armament ana Far questions than was expected. * The United States, the Am delegate indicated, will present comprehensive *plan for of armies, discussion” to be 8 }on Premier Briand’s speech on 1 question before the conference week. RIG NINE GOES INTO SECRET SESSION ‘The “big nine” of the arms ference went into secret session day to go over China's program making the Far East less of an ternational trouble breeder, Japan's position held the inte of those who, from the ou watched the gathering of ‘the he of all the delegations now here. Narrowing of Far East con’ to the nine heads of delegations taken to indicate an intention to os rapidly as possible to-the decision point on the questions involved, “big nine" are the men whose se proval or disapproval will in the last analysis spell the fate of the various plans put forward, ‘The purpose of today's session to expedite working out of the wi Far East question for aa a to the Far East committee as whole. That committee is made of the entire membership of the ference. COMMITTEE OF ADMIRALS WILL MEET TODAY | ‘The committee of admirals, b by Assistant Secretary ofthe Navy” Roosevelt, meets at 4 p, m. and it is understood will consider thé British suggestion that | sub.” marine tonnage be limited to half” ; the amount suggested by Secretary |Wughes, Hughes suggested 90,000 \tons for the United States and the |same for Great Britain, The French, it was learned, favor’ the American view. 3 President Harding expressed his 5 the progress of the” thru a member of the ion today. ‘ an HOW" GERLY AWAITED The cheer leaders who enlivened the firet two plenary sessions with noisy Yells from the galleries are im = patiently waiting for the next “show,” which is tentatively set | next Wednesday, and is expressly the purpose of allowing M, the French premier, to tell the ican people why France must elt maintain a huge army or haye antees from other nations that will be safeguarded against satisfaction at conference bat :