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=——> THE NEWSPAPER WITH A 15,000 CIRCULATION LEAD OVER ITS NEAREST COMPETITOR <-—@& enn nnnnnn ncn eee MASKED MOB FLOGS WORKERS REVENGE BATTLE IS FEARED IN MINE DISTRICT! On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise VOLUME 24, WEATHER Tonight and moder Maximum, 81 e westerly winds Temperature Last 4 Hours Wednesday, fair NO. 123. SE ATT E, WASIL, TU Howdy, folks! room in the new hot “eer Gilfred ‘nt women, How do you Gil? Chapelle, like City council Hicenses to cabarets iw in thi refuses Reserved your el yet? who married county jail your freedom, to grant Oh, well, the bootlegging joints are still running! . TERRIBLE ACCIDENT yewitnesses the plane etavisrdlesrdle ¢ duenpletkbfisrd exalksjbentds seemed to collapse. Homer Brew's ¥ haps somebody will for pedestrians o- Los Ang jet industry is and the of hot . Down their ¢ Yep. in air LYS 18 L French daneer no fea val declared was looping when it sdbenfqlesqul- etaoirimbnoy rilpzrdl climate that suddenly "—The Star, of Hope ent a bumper cles is composed EGS ow in Amer- » her legs at $1,000,000. Think of the gold mine at See- ond and Pike! . ery time the wind blows it un-| the govers a fortune. o- Judging from the have flied for county lot of men must wont active work The reason most flurn to Page number that| fobs, an awful to retire from | office-holders ‘olumn 7) Per | they say their climate. | Friendship that began when the geles “Follies” show led Mra. Clara Phillips to invite unsuspecting Mra. Pegov Caffee to accompany her on hammer murder drive which lended in the frightful death of Mra Alberta Meadows, charged to Mrs. | Phillips, Mrs. Caffee (at right) here jshown with Mra, Phillips in chorus virl pose, withheld for one day the j|uruesome knowledge of the slaying |which she declares she wwitnegaed, and then informed the police, A, L. I Phillips, for whose love his wife be- two were chorus girls in a Loa An-~| [eROWD CLEARED JOUT OF COURT! Mrs. Phillips Calm Befor Spectators | LOS ANGELES, Ca July 18 Ar |raignment of Mrs. Clara Phillips for |the murder of Mrs, Alberta M | was postponed for a second tir | day by Judge Houser | While crowds in j strained over closely packed ain! As District Atte Woolwine read the lindietment, th red the case | held over until on request lof defense att Bo great ¥ e the court of ‘Thursday e concourse that ficers had to clear the court of spe tators who were loath to leave after the ruling. Mrs. Phillips made no sign of gratification or disappoint | ment at the action of the court Mrs. Phillips, ecompanied Sheriff Traeger, 4 matron and hi attorneys, appeared early in the court and took-her seat without show of emotion. She conversed easily with her attorneys and greeted sev eral persons she knew by ROCKPORT. Willard J. Gal braith, 19, son of Rev. B. N. Gal- | braith, pastor of Methodist Episcopal jehurch at Oak Harbor, drowns in glacial stream of Sauk river. \ieved Mra, Meadows a rival, accord ing to Mra. Caffce, had previousty re lated to the authorities a purported confession by Mra. Phillips that i had “killed the one he loved best.” Bra, Meadows ia shown below, | wed | courtroom | TOWN WOULD FIRE COUNTY I =|| The Seattle Star sacsunad athe echoed wananadload sodas at the Postoffice et Seattle, Wash, under the Act of Congress March 6, 16 Per Tear, by Mall, 96 to 69 DAY, JULY 38 1922. i TWO. CENTS IN SEATTLE [FIREBUG ENDS DISPUTE OVER COMMISSION, SANITARIUM Bellevue _ Farmer Institution Set in Asks Advice on! Method Used in Removals Marking the first step in a campaign looking toward the im- mediate removal from office of the three county commissioners now under indictment, Thomas Daugherty, Bellevue farmer, made a written demand Tuesday upon County Auditor D. EB. Fer: guson for information regarding the legal procedure in conneetfon with exercising the recall. Daugherty in the man whore In | Commissioners Clade C. Lou Smith and Thomas Dobson, under the chairmanship of Wiliam Faine, is initiating the movement to recall the commissioners. The terms of Commissioners Ramsey and Smith expire this fall, Commissioner Dobson will retain office for two years longer unleas recalied. INDICTED | MEN ~ ‘The citizens’ comm! ttee of Bellevue, Tac ine, and | day | PLEAD TODAY All 10 men under indictment by the county grand jury were scheduled to |be arraigned Tuesday afternoon be Hore Syperior Judge King Dykeman. At this time it was expected that , arguments would be heard i on | murrers filed by J. F. Lane, former cashier of the defunct Scandinavian American bank, and W! A. Wilkins Lane is charged with loaning mon ley toJ iiiberg, former president of the Scandinavian American bank, without authorization from the dir Chitberg was indicted for cepting an unauthorized Wilkins and the other indicted men ny torn. ac loar are charged with grand la The defend are County Clande C Ramsay, Lou Thomas Dobwon; Capt los f the count Adoipty Anderson ing Agent Charles Wo Tompkins. STRANDED SHIP ‘STILL AGROUND The stranded Isthmian liner Mo: bile City was still aground on Point Protection, at Pr id, Tuesday, after efforts made by three tugs to salvage her had failed dur ing the nig The steamer grounded in a heavy |fow and pall of Sunday night she attempt | float free at high tide, Tuesday night | atter additional cargo has been Jight jered from her A hundred tons have already been removed nd 200 tons of oil transferred from bow to stern. |Cargoes Damaged remaining Commissioners and An his brother. Pr and Smith John L. ferry Count “on EF otection smoke to ire SAN FRANCISCO, July 18 for the steamer Empress Asia consigned to Vancouver, B and for the steamer President Grant for Seattle, was dam » on the wharves and in sheds « kohama Japan, today, a cable to agents here | reported of C Gunman Slain, Pals NEW YORK, July 18.—An alle | gunman was mortally two members of a Harlem gang were | shot heré today in a desperate to-hand fight with policemen on the running board of a taxicab, and Mission Watsons: Slain in Battle July 18 A bat and socialist mp at La P: , Aris., Catholic workers staged in a ¢ in the Matheuala mineral district of Mexico, in which 35 were killed and nearly 100 wounded was reported in advices received here today, Cargo | hand: | | losin sanatorium in the district, } [fired on th | Field Wounded in Battle | 0» 0 treiana.” | the time, Rogers waid Flames After Bitter Row With! Neighbors Apparently incendiary, fire early Tuetday destroyed the Sound View hospital, 1531 Sunset ave., in West Seattle, bringing to # close a long and bitter contro- versy that has raged between neighbors of that district and Mra. Nellie Waughop, proprie- treas, A passing policeman sighted fames Veatigation led to the calling of A! in the building at 2:30 & m. but, sup special grand jury which returned! powing the glare cate from the fire- indietment for grand ee Pe rare ie wrapped , and ® de- chment of fire fighters, under Bat- tation Chief Robert B. Rogers, rushed to the acne, They found the upper part of the hospital a seething Infer- on the ground floor the flames were raging with equal inten- sity, and beyond control. No patients were in the building at It is beliewed that Mrs. Waughop had moved Mon Rogets naid intense pressure had been brought to bear on Mrs. Waurhop to move by neishbare, who ented the prosenes of the tubercu: Fee! ing had been very high, he said, Rogers’ statement was corrob- orated by leading medical men and nurses in various Sedttle hos- Pltals, who said “it was common talk” that threats had been made against the institution. “The fire could easily have been of incendiary origin,” said Rogers, of course “no one could say positively, as the fire fied taken such headway when we arrived that all possible evi- dence was destroyed. It evident ly started a short distance away from the fireplace.” A veterans’ organization was to have occupied the structure in time, and is pre sumed presence was also re | sented. 2 ASSASSINS ARE SUICIDES! BERLIN, July 18.— Fischer and! Kern, th sarsins of Dr. Walter Rathenau ign minister tea today about t Thuringt The two were traced to Bad Koes en, where they had barricaded them selves in a tower on top of | tain / Volley after volley of shots were } murderers by the police. ¢ being closed in upon heard them shout, “You cow This followed by two hin the stronghold | Kern and Fischer were dead when the voliee found them. They had shot themselves thru the temples \ colored their | t suicide were | Koesen. police rrest them at ¥ @ moun As they police x ards!” shots w was in Yokohama Fire |Wilson’s Slayers | Sentenced to Die} LONDON, July 18 Reginald Dunn nd Joseph O'Sullivan Marshal Sir Henry were sentenced to death today ‘The jury which found the two! guilty was out only seven minutes, | Roth men, during their brief trial, ad. | mitted th killed Wilson, but re fused to make a plea of guilty “What I did done for the; ‘Sullivan said be. Dunn, whe fifst, sh aasins of Wilson, | fore he was sentenced had been condemned O'Sullivan's hand RECALL MOVE ON! \Nation Faces Greatest Industrial Crisis as Warlike Atmosphere Depresses Trouble _Regions FORT WORTH, Texas, . July 1! 18.—Four men employed as strikebreakers in the ’Frisco shops here, were flogged and \ordered to leave the city. A mob of 100 masked men kid- |naped the strikebreakers at a dance hall, took them six miles \into the country and lashed them with straps after removing | their clothing.. The men fled and several shots were fired at \them but none took effect. foal and the movement of trains, it was learned officially The White House announced the president would issue the governors before night. Back of this appeal Ter beinnge potion. Sih governors will ing that if the states cannot cope with the atleal situation, government, in the public interest, will be forced to intervene United States army. This course of action was deckied upon by the {dent and his cabinet at their meeting today. (Tern to Page i, Column ) to} a warn-| federal | use the! be the sega, LEADER RESIGNS; | U IS SURPRISED | commit: | jand asked, according to Meisnest, for Ed Leader, rowing coach at the University of Washington, | has accepted an offer to coach the crew at Yale university in | 1923. He has not yet signed the con- tract, but his resignation has been accepted and graduate man- | ager of athletios Darwin Meis- | nest has line out for a new man to take his. place Leader's r nation came as the biggest kind of a surprise, according to Méisnest. The athletic manager | says that Leader dropped in at thej| A. 8. U. W. office Saturday to report | the Poughkeepsie trip, where his] boys finished second to the Leader told Meianest for the first} time then that he was considering an offer from Yale. | Meianest says that he never enter ed into a discussion with Leader over | salary, which is said to be the main | for Leader's going East. | received $2,700 from Wash- for his services this season | ; son Leak ington $4,000 before going Hast Metsnes: says that Leader wired his « pt. ance Yale Sunday, before dis. cussing itewith him again on Mon. | Iday, and Meisnest also claims that | } Leader's transportation West from | chkeepsie was paid by the New| Haven university. j Leader, a Washington has been highly successful at Wash ington, and, accore to his sta ment given out last night, he hated to break away from Washington, but the offer was too attractive to re- sint Leslie Ayer, university athletic out the following “Washington cannot hope at present | with Rastern hools, as from Yale is much | an hope to give him As a matter ¢ we cannot pay | as coaches are paid in the board of control of the of Washington is abso nek being paid | m outside sources, such as the Al: | association or the Chamber of | chairman of the committee, stater to compete Leader's offer more than we policy « as much Fast, The University lutely opposed to cc tr umni Comn | system, | watering place, according to a dis- {correspondent of the Svenska Dag- graduate, | iL Meisnest says that the Yale coach- ing position is one of the most | sought-after berths in the rowing | game, because of their wonderful fa- | CMities. Leader will have access to three shells, two coaching launches and two assistants. “Washington will have another | good crew next year,” says Meisnest, ‘and we will try to get a man on the job who knows the Leader-Conibear | No one man is bigger than the institution, and while we hate to see Leader teave, nevertheless row- ing will continue to be a success at Washington.” REPORT LENIN COPENHAGEN, July 18.--Nicolai Lenin, Russian premier, was mur- dered while en route to a Caucasian | patch received today from the Riga piadets. The report, which lacked confirma. tion, said that poison was administer. | ed to Lenin on the train by Moscow radicals and that his body was hurled into the river Don while the train | was crossing @ bridge near Rostov. | It was reported from Riga that one | f the accomplices in Lenin's murder | as an executive in the third inter nationale, who is now impersonating enin at the Caucasian bathing re-| sort. President Receives Dover Resignation’ WASHINGTON, July 18.—Prest-| dent Harding has received the resig: | nation of Elmer Dover, assistant see: | retary of the treasury, but he has| not considered it of “transcending | importance” and has not taken any | action on it, it was said at the Wht House today, The tender of the} esignation, it was said, was made | by Dover on “the theory that he ts | not in harmony with the policies of | the administration,” the White House | Stated. | | | ¥, Belle. of ’60’s Likes Flap pper By Wanda von Kettler So much has been said about the older person's opinion of the flapper—about the way grand. mother is covering her eyes in ror at the ankle dixplay, the loose-fitting clothes and the | bobbed hair. But, suppor ing that right here in Seattle was a dear little lady, 77 years old, who heartily ap proved of ali these things—the ankle freedom, the loose-fitting clothes and the bobbed hair? Mrs, Emma T. Moulton, 17, of 623 ‘d ave, was a belle in her youthful day She says she wasn't, but her friends say. che was. At le ahe knew something about dressing | for the ball and combing her Ai in fashion's latest in the days of | the Civil War, She knew something | about the quadrifle and the cea: | bidnal waltz.” And SHE says the flapper of today is wise, very wise, In her style of dress, “My goodness! declared Mr, Moulton yesterday, as she sat in the (Turn to Page 7, Column 3) to Be Passed Nightfall; Cit Being Canv tee in Koller’s rink Monday nig! was $1,727,100, Of this amount, | $1,615,200 was obtained by the execu- tive committee. The ‘citizens’ com mittee reported subscriptions totaling $111,900. aa Frank Waterhouse, general chair. man of the campaign, read a teler gram from Roy Carruthers, manag: — ing director of the Waldorf-Astoria hotel, New York city, in which the latter announced that he is mailing Y his subscription for $5,000. 5s “I am writing fully my ideas about Jan operating company for a modern’ | ace Carruthers _telegra; ‘Kindest regards to Seattle.” “No one need have any doubt about the profitable operation of the ho \tel,” said Waterhouse. Division “EK,” headed by Otte F. Kegel, led all divisions in ag- gregate subscriptions Monday night, reperting a total of $27,- 200. Team Ni 24, of ber. Archie Taft is high team among the 40 that make up the citizens’ committee. His team subscribed $7,700, Team 24 is in Division “E.” — Division “A,” headed by Pliny L. Allen, was second with total sub- scriptions of $19,500, The leading team captains in the respective divisions were H. L. Coe, — M. Caldwell, W. G. McArthur, Archie Taft, woe E. vibbs, George Dowling and Vie- tor Rabel, Clark P. Bissett, professor of law at the University of Washington, made {a stirring address, He declared that jevery taxable piece of property im Seattle would benefit by the con- struction of the hotel. The hotel rep. resented the life and growth of the” city, and the team. workers were, “ambassadors of the Seattle Spirit") Romanoff Crowns Are Up for Sale. LONDON, July 18.—The soviet government is selling the former ims perial crowns of the Romanoffs, valued at $350,000,000, according to a report from Warsaw. You May Have Your Choice The tourists from all parts of the country are traveling thru our elty, and are observing Seat- tle's Homes and Hospitality, Many will be deeply impressed and will return again, There are others who are here now-- and will stay. ‘These people are looking for HOMES in which to live and be happy. Let us help them with @ few suggestions. FURNISHED BUNGALOW, $2,700 OR UNFURNISHED, $2,500 All on one floor! fireplace; ga~ ROSES? dust ota of One block to Meridian car, 3 blocks from McDonald school; fine neighborhood, Will sell furnished for $2,700, unfur- nished $2,560; $300 oF $500 cash, | Sap Turn to the Classified and tind the home you are looking for, them.