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BRITISH PREMIER FIGHTS AGAINST DEFEAT! * iil —=-.| The SeattleStar LLOYD GEORGE FACES FOES! VOLUME 24. NO. 32. Woman Wins Right to Whistle —and Howdy, folks! March came in like lamb and went out like hamburger steak. eee Bread prices are going up. Bakers are saying it with flours, see Fishing season now open. Outdoor enthusiasts on Queen Anne Hill are putting out bait for earwigs. eee THIS 1S AWFUL ‘This Is Flower Week. Plant a few @lectric light bulbs and raise cur. rents. eee “Seattle Kiwanis club has set aside this week to celebrats the century of friendship between the United States and Canada It doesn’t hardly seem that long ince prohibition went into effect. Misa Jenet Bunter Mntered as Second Class Matter May 8, 1f At the Postoftice at Seattle, Wash, under the Act of Congress March &, 1879. Per Year, by Mail, $6 to $9 The Star Leads All Other Seattle Newspapers by ??,000 Copies a Day\ The Official Government Circulation Figures for the Six Months’ Period Will Be Out in a Few Days; Watch The Star for What They Disclos ¢ é SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, APRIL 8, 1922. SUBSIDY HIT BY BOARD! Report Opposed to Aid to Merchant) Marine May Be a} | Boomerang BY J. F. RICHARDSON WASHINGTON, April 3.—| Crammed with arguments) against subsidies, the United States shipping board’s report} on government aid to ship-| ping is expected to prove a boomerang when the admin-) istration measure comes up| for hearing. | “Testimony introduced be-| fore various commissions would indicate, says the re- port, “that the increased cost $2,000 BUTLER MAY BE CLOSED Abatement Action May Follow Rum} Raid; Savage Is: Lodged in Jail | As ® result of a raid on the Butler hotel early Monday, in the course of which dobn KE. § 35, manager of the Butler cafe and cabaret, was arrested on liq- uor charges, abatement ings may be brought to close the establishment. ‘This wan the statement made by William M. Whitney, assistant fed eral prohibition director, who, with Capt. J. J. Haag, head of the police Gry squad, made the raid. | Savage, Whitney mid, would be; charged with maintaining a nuisance | under Section 71 of the Volstend act. | Tom Stamoutiew,r2%, one of the Tot and Countess at War; Two Million Their Stake Baby Angela, Central Figure in Chicage Wi Contest, BY ROY GMBONS 1 $8,000, And she treated other relte ’ tives similarly. Lloyd George Is Vigorous Fight His Downfall BY ED L. KEEN @ vote of confidence in his gov- — ernment. - In a stirring speech before crowded house the British prime ister put his leadership to the tes He defended the coalition gov ment’s foreign policy and asked tt approval of parliament of the G ic conference, PREM FACES ENEMIES ¢ = x:| City Forced to Pay Damages When Cop Arrest Girl for Musical Efforts; r alters, Who Wis arrested) CHICAGO, April 3—On one side a ih mance, will be charged simply |5-Year-old foundling baby— Outside of the bequest to Baby An- And on the other a Polish coun-| gela, she left the bulk of her estate to religious and educational instite of manning an American ves- sel has been greatly exagger-| with liquor ponsomion, according to | tenn Ise groups of political dream ated, amounting to not more vane HELD Those are the queerly assorted tions. ready with an amendment om ga than 10 per cent. WITHOUT BAIL [principals in a court fight for a| Now Countess Siedlawski, with | "esolution: a “Resolved, that this house s ° nd ch were | $2,000,000 estate now in progress here. | other dissatisfied relatives, is trying mn Roth Savage and Stamoulich ” [the resolutions passed by the st lodged in the city jail without bait} The baby is “Lucky” Baby Angela, | to break Mrs, Gormully’s will “Great Britain has never granted general navigation bounties nor con She Takes It Whistling a . r Raby els torney: |Preme council at Cannes as a struction bounties,” the document! when they were first arrested, but|taken from a New York home for! Baby Angela's attorneys and the ui ‘Whe spin their seuls eut by the yard— Woks BY GENE COHN jinto the house, recast big He | continues Practically the os og 1| Whitney said Savage's bai) would be | abandoned children by Mrs Angela | institutions that profited by the wilt | for ime Posgpend conference ? EUREKA, Cal, April 3.—The | told her cate jer na andl given by Britain to ite marine is in| set later, at between $500 and §1,000.|C. Gormully, now dead, millionaire | are trying to make the will hold. pre stesactor ong ae gov “whistling war” of Eureka is over. she just wouldn't be arrested form of postal subventions. Whitney made it clear that any | Widow of a bicycle manufacturer. | untess Siedlawski and the other} ig to effect them.’ And Miss Janet Sunter has won| Putting up a fight, she soon! NARD SUBSIDIES | pro cedings resulting from the raid! The countess is Countess Casimir| relatives say undue influence wae; The prime minister stood resign if any amendment was. “The Genoa conference was to consider the economic Europe,” Lioyd George ed, | fF womankind the right to whistle | downed Fraser, who called for help. | REALLY A DRAWBACK lon the streets, if they wish, | Then she worsted his assistant. Fi-| str Meeker wtates that it ts evt-| Miss Sunter is a plain, unassuming | nally she was taken to Jail dent the rubsidies granted Mr young woman, a well-known church would be made against the Savage | Karaszo Siedlawski, of Warsaw, Po brought to bear on Mrs, Gormully management, and not against the|land, daughter of Mrs, Gormully. when she made the will. This ts de- owners of the hotel | When Mrs, Gormully died she left | nied by Baby Angela's attorneys, proceedings are| Baby Angela a $100,000 trust fund tu! If the Polish countess wins— let the great theaght= poss And feel the hook worm biting In! cu econstructi Joffre’s visit to Seattle was greatly | Immediately Miss Sunter brought | nard injured the development of Ene. | q worker—just a demure small-town " - - . hey secure Angela's education. | Baby Angela may have to go back |Clared, opening his speech late” suit for $10,000, lish steam shipping on the North At-| brought. Whitney explained, they wilt pe “a giri—but she likes to whistle when! 10, tne “whistling war” opened iantic by enabling Mr. Cunard toclub| have to be brought in the form of a| But to her countess daughter Mra to the poverty from which she was |@fternoon, “and to examine the | she goes about, Ion earnest. A woman's right to| thers out of business | eoperate action Gormully left only the incame from | rescued. method of 1 atria: Pi But there in a tendency to con:|W, SU/NO | Pued pro and con, with| "Mr. Meeker adds that during the| ‘The rald was expected to flr- oy na ah . le thereupon moved. servatiam among some of the offi. ure in the cafe's license, sched- {resolution, asking parliament's, citizens displaying considerable parti | time the Cunard line was enjoying »| ‘Nationalization of | claldom—eo, not long ago, Policeman | monopoly of government favor, ite| tled to come up Monday before fidence in the proposed 7 | Jona, Frazer reported her at head ag yl trial was asked and the|TI¥ils nevertheless distanced it in im-| the elty counell, wit juarters. . ovements and compe ent i y. H. Seart iN 4 r Later he appeared at her home, | Other day a verdict was rendered In | ProComent™ the mail payments ir Chiat ne ak sommmanial The prime minister went on presumably to warn her. Miss Sun. her favor. The sum allowed was|)’ ; = gd | elaborat ‘ it possible for the Cunard line to} that a license be refused the es rate on the principles ter was working in the garden—and | $2,000 jing the proposed conference, i tablishment even before he heard {| “I do not believe the Genoa | e and Coal Mines Is Urged ” What ne know about cling to out-of uneconomic ae dies aor as pong ne Kocneliman | Whistling. Frazer ordered her to go| Misa Sunter went home—whiatling!|tyney of steamers, ‘The White Star| of the raid, r | a ted Coma ASAD } boats beat teh Cunard in speed, com: | ‘This action, he said, was based CHARLESTON, W. Va., April “If the owners will not set their ference should consider reviston Drake. | ee 3.—The first disturbance in the West Virginia field since the na- on “the notorious character of the place and the several arrests fort and convenience “In |house in order the public must step €Xisting treaties,” he declared, | 1902 the British board of ad. | in and enforce order, because in a/cating his accord with the You can find a lot of low company in high society, says Li] Whee Whee, e e miralty declared that the payments| recently made there.” tion.wide mine strike began was [democracy such as this no set of | Viewpoint that the Versailles t the Office Wheeze. 25 jto steamship com s by that! Tha raid was made entirely with:| reported to state police here to | men, whether in the ranks of labor|Must not be abandoned in favor ij eee } in as r1zes board were worse than wasted, out the chief's knowledge day. or of capital, can be allowed perma-|2€W agreements. “My good man, you had better take | “All writers seem to agree that “CAN*T BLAME M Ten miners, on their way to nently to maintain a public nuis It was on this point, the streetcar home.” wie —_— the growth of the h merchant | SAYS SEARING work near Royal, in Raleigh | ance.” George's new-found acco “Sh’ no ushe 7 wife woulda | P : Pye m4 : jmarine was in no due to the le stled it rpriee when he county, were shot at from am- With respect to settlement imme- | France, that the independent me—hie—keep it tn,"tn” howe HE STAR is going to give $25 in cash prizes for [I rer unmty. paid Pad. sage tage “plotter Mon-| bush, W. Le Lewis, secretary of |diately of the existing strike emer-|Wwere prepared to attack ¢ummanin ies sae, aman tet 'to} the best 100-word letters from its readers on the |]! FAIA RE ALSO IN |inorning and. saw Savage's name| the New River Coal Operators’ |gency, Lewis again held out the |@er’s resolution. ee blame if he thinks more of his|{| Most satisfactory transaction resulting in service, sav- KANCE AND ITALY there association, reported this after. [olive branch to the operators. He| “Europe's trouble is not due tome stenographer than he does of his ings or profits to them as a result of reading Star “Byen subsidies which have been| — “\Well,"" he grinned to news noon. jSaid the miners are ready to meet a demanded reparations,” Liga ife; he can dictate to his stenogra- advertisements given (in France) sinoe 1881 have not) paper men, “they can't blame me eee the operators at any time to nego | George declared, “but because + bs | ‘ boats beat the Cunard in speed, com-| for this.” WASHINGTON, April 3.— | tate a new wage and working agree- |is something to repair,” i The period to be covered This typical Lloyd George eee | in this offer is two weeks, of 1893 pro: even more| Only a few bottles of liquor were| Nationalization of the country’s (Turn to Page 7, Column 5) ian twist, A FOWL PROCEEDING |]] to and including April 15. Letters will be received atory than thetict: 1881. — lesteel in the raid. coal mines was “seriously sug- Sa payee 6 | delivered in his best style, brought @ An old maid, residing in Needham, up to the 20th sailing navigation bounties| we know they had a big cache| gested to congress today by John jeeees of appreciative applause from 4 "e ae Hd were s0 high that sailing ships could jewhere,” Whitney said, “but it) LL, Lewh ssident of the United the house. hens, but neglected to feed ‘em; Pa ¢ 4 | somewhere itney wa ». Lewis, president o | ‘ Taney decltes cate | Any bargain offer that you take advantage of suc- | set y eo a the world in bal. | (Turn to Page 7, Column 5) Mine Workers, appearing | u ux an ibe yeas st a treaties . | . | lant—and they did : ee, vould not w need Went off on @ hike, ||] cessfully during that period, any unusually good buy ]]\ "rye results ota mubeldy in ttaly! peal sucdbpgaecthy- sgt gntigtaven reparations, the prengier decile And now it's seven days since she 1} that you make as a result of information gleaned [J|have not been any more successful FORMER EMPRESS OF sae , | rarns ut to would merely transfer the burden ef e008 ‘om. “ } from advertisements in The Star or any profitable than in France. Matienaliaatiin, Lewis tel the com | payment from Germany's should ii digg sonper ene heart their | transaction of any sort that you are able to accom- }]/ woreny saeke thee ee ae AUSTRIA EXPECTING mittee, is the inevitable remedy for | Hear Matthews Kenan . rhage | Pe : P hy merchant shipping of the world. The ot Sy tea eral abtieation; whieh: -ayment for damage done pei yeeros |} plish by this means may be the topic of your letter. []/aman shipping subsidies which Nor EIGHTH CHILD SOON j\;° is on" Prose ce 1nd ge be mate by, somects. he many i is — a killed by a dig Confine your letter to 100 words. Write clearly on wey ane Ce “— —_ had a VIENNA, April 3.—The For- |!to remedy * yg Lowy vat ph. ite Geer ee pay, then France motor truck, } ; : material effect on this growth, 0 neread Site dow of EB: » hooded a owne: and Britain must.” ‘ee |]] one side of the paper. State all the essential facts onclusion. A atudy of the ad-|| mer sO nee me ee enin NOTHIN most approved manner, attended | reg : | regardin ‘our purchase. | Emperor Karl, who died in exile || 13 ACCOMPLISHED a . are t th “STORATION OF We heard a Seattie married man | gi zy pu * |thorities on subsidies, taking into ac-|] saturday at Funchal, Madeira, is || o>! n Sunday night's service at the |FORKIGN EXCHANGE say yesterday that a wife makes a| The prizes—-$15 for the best, $5 for the second best }f|count the policies adopted in various || cenecting her eighth child soon aryl rie geet tony Dia 8 Tabor rigs per hag we One of the first things that would man forget a lot of troubles a bache-|M and $1 each for five other letters—will be awarded countries, would seem to indicate!| ne tact is revealed in a letter ® been waiting with ever-grow:| | ‘They sat in a body in the Ine ‘undertaken at Genoa, lor never has. } " that with the e ption of Ja nm the tte t a Vienna newsp , ing impatience for many years, hop-| church in seats which, according George enid, was restoration ome ; ag se |]]_ not on the basis of the amounts saved or made but [| poiicy as not been important in the |] Written t hee a reg 5 to be able to detect some signs| to L, M. McFarlin, an admitted [ign “exchange, In order that, thin t A @idmekin, Pa, man seeityl on the conclusiveness of the demonstration of the building up of a merchant marine.” ak one wad that the Tape. ||t2at the operators were awakening ember of the Klan, were re might be done, it was most RECemmAEae choked to death when he swallowed {| value of advertising to consumers which the letter |}| || burg family in suffering the || 00 rete ot men accomplished. | "We Meatd that Dr. Matthews {that exch nation balance its budletas the hospital and was saved. People “The empress is expecting an- || ..’rny that there now seems to be| Wave Producers’ MeFarlin ex. (Lloyd George said, was a most im: who wear false teeth ought to have IS DISMISSED || th", contivement in May,” the loo bane eabept thet Viatwerstention.] eras portant one, } May, Jno h cept thi oniulizatio! plained Monday, “so we got up “Ge A ot cf amar ll a an le % Lae os ae | letter reads. “I have to look |) No remedy has been offered by t this committee to show we were bron watt aes er = ea i | Soldier Arrested |Fatal Auto Crash LOS ANGELFE April A|] after the seven children with the || operators and in default of any other] with him, Several hundred other a ae ae ; ew ae re USUALLY | " wholésale jury dismissal was or-|| help of a nurse and a nursery: || remedy the mine workers seriously) members of the Kian were scat- | sored. the Brme i Sa ceitenes poen. t00 ter Wh on Assault Charge} Probed by Police | era today by Superior Judge Sid-|] maid, “Formerly we had seven || suggest that the government take] tered thru the church, but they |° Arie thiuat ental vabinaleina . a man, she comes back alone. | port TOWNSEND, April 3.—El-| ‘The police and coroner's office|ney Reeve in the second trial of Ar.|| servants for the children, but |! over and operate the mines. didn't’ wear robes, because we (rare to Page 7 ‘Onl on nh die | mer Bogt, 50, a former soldier, lies | were investigating Monday the kill |thur ©, Bureh for the murder of || mow we have to manage as it is. “We do not do this thru any mis. didn’t want to alarm the con- peolealoarrs hia dS : Overheard at the ball game: lin St. John’s hospital today nearjing of William Coupland, 25, 912| John Belton Kennedy. “There is no ¢ wood—it || chievous or wanton spirit. We have| gregation.” ° 4 “Oh, Paul; ien't our pitcher grand?| death from knife wounds, while) Ninth ave., whose motorcycle col-| sensational action followed || is terrible, We have been sent ||no desire to advocate irredeemable Rev. M, A. Matthews, who ts Boxer Dies After i He hits their bats no matter where|gergt. Clarence Wilson, Fifth C. A.|lided with an auto driven by R. C.| ct y tampering made by || here and God alone is left to look || steps in any direction, But we s pastor of the chureh, took issue A ° ~ they hold them,” ©, i» held in the county jail as his |Cole, $11 Columbia st., at Minor ave. | th . nat District Attorney || after u |that it is inevitable that sooner or| with McFarlin on one point. He Middleweight Bout ‘ ee | sonatas land Columbia st., Saturday night Woolwine's offic | It we understood, prior to || later the government must take the said he hadn't heard anything EUGENE, Ore., April 3.—George | A fellow who worked in Fall River | The two men are said to have been| Both machines were totally| Investigation of these charges will|} Karl's death, that the allies were || step of nationalization, because we] about the visit in advance and | Tetzi, boxer who succumbed Satu |] Was bothered to death with his liver ;| alone in Wilson's cabin when the| wrecked. Cole received injuries that| begin Wednesday and will proceed || willing to allow Karl and bis jhave finally given up all hope of re- that no seats had been reserved day night to hemorrhages of iy | Said the doc., what you need |gtabbing occurred, Both are alleged |confine him in the Swedish hospital, | independently of the murder trial. |] family $100,000 a year, but wished | ler from the operators, and, con for the Klansmen. brain, following a bout here 4 Is 4 shake-up at apeed, to have been drinking. Wilson ts said | w a companion, F. Wander-| Dismissal of the panel neceesitates || the central and southern Buro- || vinced as we are that It is a step in “They behaved all right, tho,” |Carl Miller, Jocal middleweight, er. Go and purchase a second-hand fliv-|to have used « inch butcher knife. | lick, 4042 11th ave. N. E., suffered | sus yension of the Burch trial for ®|] pean countries to pay it. the ht direction, we urge its con. Dr. Matthews explained, “They [be buried at Brownsville, Ore. nis ver. stabbing Bogt deeply in the back. week, It will resume next Monday.’ sid on upon congress all worshiped very reverentially home, tomorrow, : |broken arm , neni eg * OPENING CHAPTERS OF THE NEW BEST SELLER, “IF WINTER COMES,” YOURS FOR THE ASKING i There was such a rush for back copies of The Star last week that every issue is complete-|one for the asking at The Star office, by mail on request, or from your newsboy ‘in the | ly out of print. If you failed to get started on “If Winter Comes,” however, there is still a}downtown district. Get it, catch up with the procession and turn to today’s installment dance. We have published a circular containing the early chapters, and you may have!on page 6. It’s the greatest novel of a decade, and you can’t afford to miss it, * A