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si > of Rate who cite Tue Temperature Maximum, 51, Today noon, 47, | 335 alasiheadtial roo ahaa Nei it was Howdy, folks! Tomorrow's the day and Dan's the man! = ee The shades of night were falling fast, The foo! “stepped on it” and rushed past ‘A crash—he died without a sound; They opened up hia head and found | Exceisior ! “If Winter Comes” is here today | Shh | Sign in Union st. cardroom: A London cable says that the ex- Kaiser spends every evening in think- ing. Mebbe—but we bet he goes to Ded early. eee YEAR: “Give Us Back Honest Gas,” " ot = ae eee ald elect anew ely council, +4 truck horse ran to win a race, As fast as he woe able; A whistle biew, the truck horse! stopped | And beat it for the stable. j “ee ; | Advertisement for Columbia thea-| ter: “Foolish Wives” is the most} costly photodrama ever produced, and it i* necessary that we enlist | the cooperation of our patrons in| sharing at ast a portion of the un- e nses by paying a slight dmission prices,” s seems to indicate they are to charge more jack. | HIS MASTERS’ VOICES Mf Walter F. Meier comes thru the primaries, he is to get his further orders from the money- morons Wednesday. Gosh, and we thought Walter ran because | his wife told him tot _~ i C e umpire between plays. sone thing the Mayor eee — The Star has made a gain of 8,882 subscribers (more than 40,000 readers) on EVERY week day in the last year. It gives this newspaper a clear lead of MORE THAN 15,000 over the s second most wi idely circulated Seattle paper Tt Is ladon or Requests _ Choice Between | Two Extremes... =: " * : | tampe t Cynthia Grey is conducting @11 be nominated at the polls Tuesday or = |:#">".' ei ee else that Seattle will be confronted in | tom "Wy ie ls uid, now || the final election by a choice between = [Wir dcserivea a ear will do. «| th e extremists, Meier and Brown. | geo ul = Imaintaine’that Gern score by none would be dou-| herself outside the pale of the Genoa had somebody cuss | conference This is an unprecedented record. and 20,000 over ssue of Americanism On the I wday, fair; heavy Last Minimum, 39, Botered as Second Clase Matter May 8, 1899, at the Poatoffion at Beattie, Wash, SEATTLE, WASH, MONDAY, APRIL 17, 1922. under the Act of Congress March 4, 1879, Per Year, by Mall, $5 to 69 Sa Judges to Call Jury Against Board Must Be (EDITORIAL) Investigated In the last few days the city primary fight has narrowed down to a triangular issue. It lies now between: MEIER—Backed by the Washington Union League-Associated Industries- Pro-Jap-Dr. Matthews - Money Bags crowd, with the active aid and support of the city-county political rings. BROWN—Backed by the old radical group. LANDON—Running as a progressive | and independent candidate, backed by | no clique, with no campaign organiza- tion, no slush fund, and representing the whole public. : In other words, we have two candidates Sponsored each by a definite class group of Seattle citizens—class groups, it is true, of widely divergent aims but alike in wishing to advance selfish or auto- cratic ideas of their own. The Star does. not believe either of these candidates SHOULD be elected. The Star does not believe Meier CAN be elected if he has any other man than Brown to run against in the finals. The Star does not believe Brown CAN be | elected if he has any other man than Meier to run against in the finals. The Star believes that Landon is the Mh. reprewenting | best available man to represent the _iiusiians’ neadquarters at whole public. The Star believes he must (""""""", After charges brought board of county commissioners of the an investigation against by a delegation of Bellevue resi- dents, Prosecuting Attorney Mal | a crand jury be called, “In my opinion,” Douglas says In the letter, “the charges are sufficiently serious to warrant the calling of » grand jury, +o that the truth or falsity may be thoroly inquired into, | “Some of the accusations are ap- parently frivolous: others, if found to| be provable, would justify the start. | while, If foynd to] unsupportable, the persons ac doubtiess receive the vindieation at the hands isitorial body.” Ramee irman of the commixsioners, declared Mon. as not worried about « outcome of & grand jury pr “Let them invextigate.” Ramsay said. “Out records pear. T would welcome & grand jury probe.” (GERMANY AND RUSSIA ALLIES Pact Is Signed at Genoa Conference ing of prosecution be | } | BY HENRY Woop | GENOA, April 17.—Germany and Russia have signed a treaty here re. eatablisbing diplomatic and commer. | cial relations The Genoa conference wan com pletely overshadowed today by of-| | fetal announcement of thin event Tehiteherin, foreimn min soviet Kuawia, and Walter Germany, at the Kapatto, | | George inter of |Rathenau, representing favored” nation clause! VOTE. VOTE FOR DAN LANDON. The terms of the treaty further show that Germany and Russia have between themselves agreed upon neta many of the very points upon whieh |the main conference ix split | Respective war claims of the two} countries are canceled Russia | | Being a Re porter’: S$ aasere r claims for I thru soviet} alization of many's prop. Only things most amateur garden. | €rs raise is hopes “ee Wr { Star health series tells! how eczing. The advice is| directed “- The U.S. public debt ix $294,051, 206.24 The +4 cents is the sum they owe us for back pay at Fort Lawton in 1917. am declares that if or he will wage war t wrong idea. « ia shot in ALWAYS REMEMBER A guy in the city jail may be down, but he is never out. tist is able to duplicate ck beer signs, pol for Law Head ¢ known if she » much powder * LIL GEE GEE, TH’ OFFICE | VAM | One has only t 7. | ik to # Seat- | tle flapper to realize that bob- bing the hair takes a lot off the | mind a ~* McCormack Resting Easily, Is Report 17.—"Mr. Me mforta and v the statement le of the noted Irish 8 morning. Might put him to} | Using German citizens jerty or that of BY HAL ARMSTRONG [seized in Russia. A cla in the treaty provides HE only objection I have heard iduaa) th against Mrs. Henry Landes as a can-| didate for city council is that she is| a woman. | A man said it, but that makes it} less important. | rcellation is conditions ia's ref to compensate | any other countri Allied delegates declared the importance of the Russo-German agreement, plans for which were laid in Berlin when Tehiteherin passed thru on his way to Genoa, “hs . could not be over-emphasized, Chivalrous he was. Yes. But; q nial i Ss hueatomes from Per RUSS ENVOY somehow he felt differently about|tin at the time of ‘Tehitcherin’s visit | this. “Manish” women in’ polities terorted the probability of suey an| DEFIES SENATE) he didn’t like. Chivalry he had told to — EY, Biel a WASHINGTON, April 17.—Boris | ; t meant that Russia at Genoa!,, BBs Pgs te } get behind him. He was going tO) now has the open. backing of Ger. | Bakhmeteft, Russian amt lor, t cast his ballot for a man. In public) many in much for which she stands ay ret to comply with the sub: 4 office he liked men—men that were “nd that if the soviet delegation | poena of the kenate labor committee H all men leaves summarily it can still count) that he appear before it and testify ae 7 upon relations with Germany for ut Never, to be sure, had he seen Mrs. | 0°". regarding the alleged brutal acts of | xs , bs : - 7 + »+ | commerc with the outside wortd * jregury Semenoff. Cossack Landes. She might, of course, be| ne German and Russian repre ba ey kee different, but it was the principle | sentatives got together at Rapailo : , agg on a day when the conference state department, it was ‘of the thing—women in politics—to which he objected. pn 1 hen th nferer it wre Bees, ahhmnetett’s post was adjourned and conelude y after a brief session their Now I don't know whether that} Quite the oppor man is like @ lot of other men in| is one of | ner Husband, of the im:| % \Seattle or only like a few. No mat-| unaffected | ting treaties, such as that of ked by the com: I'm not going to try to con| en I have | Brest-Ltovek, when the-'bolshevike on the Cossack hee bim or them that women gen-| compliment I say she Is “as cany |" 4 on condition of no fur-| eres into the United Stat 4 erally ' make good politicians and| as an old shoe,” ha pon, by. Germany, « menoff was examined by th lought to be in public office. But I Above all, she is a very wom. |*UPerseded by the present agree-| iitie branch agent at Vancouver, A have asked the editor for a little| anly woman, who says clearly, |™°?! 11 board of inquiry held that ex space in the paper, and he bes given| “I want to-carry the ideals of immigration laws did not jus it, no say something nice about Mra nhood into that city coun. | ———————————————— y refusing the Cossack an “in Lunde CHEN ae, bie acta er DAN LANDON VOTED transit” vise, good for 60 days in this | You see, Mra, Landes is not 4 ma in ie idea over tha country, Such a vise was granted |nish woman. She doesn't cut her woman whom men AGAINST POLL TAX] “’Minutes of the examination ut halp and wear mannish clothes and | honor 1 love? And that Scores of people telephoned to. || Vancouver showed Col, Wharton, of| carry a cane. She doesn't speak in| woman eapect and go to | day to inquire how Dan Landon, || the British service, had testified for deep basso profundo tones and with their trouble And that candidate for mayor voted on the general {"1 will do thus and thus when I is an ament to vanhood it iba well tak in thes diate sents No American testimony was taken} | ed Seattle's first councilwom 1 hope I am, for #he is all of tha He voted againat.-it by the boatd of inquiry, Husband ad None of that (Turn to Page 10, Column 3) eltted, df 1 Mrs. Kuth dncroco —Photo by Price & Carter, Star Staff Photographers he Seattle Star $$$ SY DOUGLAS ASKS FERRY PROBE! LPIA ARAARAR RR There Can Be No Compromise the third. SHOT DOWN IN _ FAMILY FIGHT One Dying: After Row ] hav the era the AS | the j that ithe jot be tho all | ot ‘| By Wanda von Kettler Out on South Beacon Hill to- —ithe result of a shooting caused by petty jealousy and grapo. A wife wrings her hands with two great fears at her heart— | her husband's beaten and bul- let shattered condition, and his guilt in the shooting of Pete ; Two little girls, eight- half and six, raise their Italian eyes to their mother and ask her why she grieves. But she does not tell them, brown | Men and women, speaking hyster. |teally in bigh-pitehed Italian and broken English, stand in groups be | fore | Place, while police officials and dry squad members from one house to the other. Blood is on the porch and steps of the corner house, sourry the two cottages on Brandon | a; ealousy and Grapo | List Three Victims | the jsaid now to be This orio Fosio, morning at 8 o'clock, Greg 34, shot two bullets into left lung of Pete Dicicec dying in the ¢ hospital, and injured the ‘wife of | Diciceo with a bullet wound in the of her leg. Foaio, in turn, re- bullet in the center of the and a beating over the| ad with the blunt end of the The shooting resulted, it is ed, from a combination of pet- usy and a plentiful supply | of intoxicating liquor Dicicco, who, it happens, was operating two hugé stills in the basement of his home at 1 Brandon pl., and had in his pos- session 1,000 gallons of mash, is said to have been envious of one small auto purchased a short | time ago by Fozlo, Foslo, be- | Heved to be in partnership with I in the moonshine manu- fact lived in the adjacent hous¢, 1731 Brandon pl. It is said (Turn to Page 10, Column 2) Gregorio Forno, 32. place, is under guard at the city pital, where he is being treated [three severe ecalp wounds | were inflicted by Dicteco in an | to disarm him. badly mangled. The Dicicco baby was also fh chair in the melee, failing against: Detectives Tom Charles Waechter seized 20 barrels of ing. |MRS. FOZI0 BOOKED Mrs. Fozio was taken to headquarters and booked asa ness. She told the police the ing was the result of trouble | ment. | Other witnesses gave a dil | version. | been in the habit of beating his | Fozio is said to have warned certain result that their grapo would They are said to have been | partnership in the grapo business, Disregarding Fozio'a advice. it ip said, Dicicco chased Mrs. Dicicco out 1731 His fingers were ing been knocked out of her kitchen stove. Hayden and po and two copper stills when y went to the scene of the shoots A WITNESS lquor found in Dicicco’s Dicicco, it was said, t, if this sort of thing contin i police sooner or later would hear it and would investigate with the — found. the stills and their product were found on Dicicco's property. the house and down the street. (Turn to Page 10, Column 4) Get Your Letters In Before Thursday The Star $25 in cash ~ advertising letter contest will close Thursday, the 20th. First prize, $15; sec- ond prize, $5; next 6, $1 each. Letters to be written about a satisfactory transaction thru a Star advertisement between April 1st and 15th. Con- fine your letters to 100 words and address them to Ad-Reading-Pays Edi- tor, care The Star,