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Keep the Hotel Project — LEANUP CARNIVAL 3 fomnny :xterns Hesssarsenssassenssenssasstscansensscasszasezscenseatestse exzesnsenssnasanseasssnspseaseaasansstnsetestssatssaesstessaesttstets (EDITORIAL) There is a good deal about the community hotel which the Seattle public that financed it is eager to know. For instance— Whet architects are to work out the plans—an imported firm or one of our own? What materials are to be used; held uppermost? What name is to be chosen? What are the business details? How about the operation after construction is finished? These are subjects that all the stockholders are interested in and ON WHICH THEY HAVE A RIGHT TO BE CONSULTED. A_ stockholders’ meeting should be held to discuss them. Seattle's Favorite Newsp aper by 15,000 Plurality The Seattle Star 1979. TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE DOZENS ARE PROSTRATED IN MID-WEST High Records Fall| But no Relief Is Promised by Officials. CHICAGO, Aug. 17.—Heat ree- ords of the year fell today as the Pacific Northwest products idea to be eon March &, Pntered as Second Class Matter May 9, 1999, at the Postoffice at Meattle, Wash, “NO. 14D ins SEATTL E, WASH, | under the Act of Con Per Your, by Mall, $6 to 99 RSDA » AU GUST 17, 1922. OLUME 24. OSE GAMES AT OBNOXIOUS Thought Each Other Dead; Meet Here! Brother, Sister Unite After 20 Vous * wa Seattle sometimes has made the silly mistake of sending outside for its areh- itects. The school board did it on the Roosqvelt high school—with no flat- tering success, Spokane, when it erected a community hotel, put the planning of it up toa home architect and a home hotel man. These two evolved the Davenport, one of the most distinctive, plea using hotels in the, country. The reason was that the men who designed it were familiar, from, long association, with the spirit and needs of their city, and they built to fulfill exactly those needs. Seattle has its own problems, its own requirements, its own climate, its own peculiarities, A great community hotel, if it is to be successful here, must ree- ognize all pe factors; the architecture must express all those civic charae- teristics. A Seattle architect, beyond doubt, can perform that task more sat- isfactorily than some casually imported expert from an Eastern city that has (EDITORIAL) “City officials ought not ool another hour with carnival that has squat- on and blocked the s in the Metropolitan sweltering multitudes suffered from the Dakotas east to the At- lantic coast, Three deaths were reported and downs of prostrations, will last at feast an prgri. f The idea must be remembered that this is a COMMUNITY enterprise. different set of conditions. . “The hor wave never would have been financed if it had not been one; it never will be an op- erating success unless that ideal is remembered. The whole city is interested, has a rig ht to be interested in the project. No Chamber of Commerce committee, no building company whose land it leases, no group of officers in its corporation should forget that fact. The Star does not say or wish to have its readers infer that we believe the di- rectors of the enterprise ARE forgetting. They can make it plain that they are REMEMBERING by calling occasion- al stockholders’ meetings, where these questions of general interest can be | 4s, iat ot the weather rs A WAY, STRIKE! ‘91ST MEN PLAN ON BIG PARADE “There iv no reilef tn sight then. | CONFERENCE ON Many Ceremonies Are on j but some disturbance may occ ur | | Brotherhood Men Meet With Saturday Program : IMITATION ICE USED TO KID POLAR BEARS INTO FEELING COOL 8T. LOUIS, Aug. 17.—~Thirty tons of glass, broken into great chunks, were deposited areund the polar bear cage at the Forest Pork 200 here today Keepers hoped that the bears would be “kidded” into believing that it wasn't as hot as the ther. mometer said it was. until the end of the week,” Prof. 1 HE’S OFF! within the next 48 hours that will) Road Executives bring cooler weather at the first of the week Lecal thunderstorms may cou temporary relief to scattered joculi ten. ‘Thousands of people haunted the| parks and lake resorts of the biggor | NEW YORK, Aug. 17.~The great- est labor gathering on the rail strike since breakdown of the negoti iations | at Chicago got under way this after. noon at the offices of T. De Witt Cuy- ler, head of the rall executives, who cities Living again in memory the stir met with brotherhood leaders at 2:15 | ting days of 1917 and 1918, and re |newing friendships contracted in the |mud fijled trenches of the Argonne, the members of the 9ist (Wild West) division will gather here Saturday to , — participate in the huge Americaniaa. tion parade, which will be one of the closing features of the encamp- ment of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Coming here from all parts of the country for the first general re union of the division’s members, the Evergreen veterans will form one of the largest detachments in the pa rade, several thousand of them be ing expected here. Delegates to the convention of the {division are reporting daily to the headquarters in the Savoy hotel, By Friday night more than 3,000 men will be on hand, officers in charge of the arrangements declare. Sunday the division will move to Many slept at Chicago beaches last night. A score of prostrations and one death were reported here, The beat claimed two victims in St Paui. eee p.m. eh od ore Whe enue of peice or continued war in the shoperafts dispute was STRAW HATS in the balance as executives and }enee room. oth were allent on their plans doors closed behind them. siden an the Oh, goody! Btruw bennies are giv en another chance! The latest manifesto issued by) CRISIS CLEARS jcaught sight of him Wednes-| ain insist on using cow-fodder bon SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 17. —Resumption of traffic over jday night on a downtown) “Fair and warmer,” Salisbury as | \ street. He was attending the|nerts, wili mark the next few days! | the Western Pacific and the Union Pacific on one hand and | veterans’ convention as a dele-|in the city renewed violence on the other, it would not be wise to In an There's 5 | marked today in the Pacific | hopped eff from Rockaway nayal air| _ toast failway strike situation, | station on its §,500-mile flight to Rio |Camp Lewis,-where they- will take San Bernardi Cal, where the, De Janeiro, at 7:20 today | cuerme of the post apd the Cot haa nta Fe's mai »ps in Southern | wly rising from its hangar, the |!P& days will be duplicated. Instruc- oe was the| plane winged off to sqm, starting for| ton trenches, where the men first scene of disturba: Charleston, 8. C., on the first 600- pe gpg the ny oe pees =a af " |mile leg of the flight. Walter Hin.|'"@ and bayonet attack, wil P Two nto Pa = hae ae ton, pilot and commander, expects to | ited and in the afternoon the division (Turn to Page 7, Colm reach Charleston in less than seven | Will be drawn up in review formas la | hours. bre nd As the bands blare the division will |2gain sweep forth and, under: the command of Lieut. Gov. “Wee* |Coyle, pass the reviewing stand with jits colors flying as it did on the day Wonder If Anna when the division paraded before en- ‘Paid the Check}: for the embarkation point For the Cawf ee? > Ss’ Eighteen bands have been secured for the parade In Seattle Saturday M. le Duc de Talleyrand, foremost /and men from the army, navy and | ok ure in Burope, declared on his|mayine corps, as well as the varioug jarrival here that he would not j veterans’ bodies of the city will be | in Seattle “unless the food suits me Svidently the famous "jin Mne. (that's a fella who likes his vittles) . Mrs. Jewel Nyquist, Seat tle woman, who, after believ- ing her brother, Jack Reding- \ton (below) dead for 20 years, By S. B. Groff A thrilling race up Second ave. between an auto and a street car, a flying leap to the street car's platform, a few burried words and a war veteran wearing Uncle Sam's army uniform tried to climb over the gate before the car was brought to an abrupt halt—and brother and sister were reunited after having believed each other dead for 20 years. y night fn thousands that itown section and in’t realize what oe However off too > hot wave and environs. LAeut. Walter: Hinton NEW YORK, Aug. 17—The Sam-} |paio Correia, mammoth sea plane, jgate from Portland. jautomobile Mrs. Nyquist \chased a street car which she} | sate her brother board and,| |with the help of her eacort,| |the reunion was effected. Photos by Prtc Star Batt Ph |much clothing in sight—yet.” 'HOT WAVE DUE | IN PORTLAND | PORTLAND, Aug. 17. — Another siege of hot weather was being pre-| pared today for Por a and west-| ern Oregon by the ts, sald the | ther forecax With the! ON IN STRIKE! the weather CHICAGO, Aug, 17.—Another wave of violence swept over the rail-crippled country today, Troops at Joliet, HL, were fired on by snipers during the night. The shots came from the direction of strikers’ homes. A squad of soldiers was sent out to seareh houses in tho ity for arms. Martial law may be established in Clinton, HL, as # result of clashes ¢ A group of strike sympathizers assaulted four em- ployes of the Hlinois Central. One man was dangerously wounded. Nonunion men were beaten at Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and Janes- ville, Wis, Trouble also Evansville, Ind, ‘HARDING TO DELAY PLEA Sa 8 , folkst Our offer to a straw hat for a raincoat hereby withdrawn. Happy tebre owed for several mo | ments as they exchanged mutual con- fidencen It then developed that Keding- | 4 ton had been living in Portland, Ore., for 15 years with his fam ily and bad been a frequent vie itor to Seuttle! of 88 or KR came to Seattle by auto! ed Friday and w 54 was expe int f ann, candidate for rney, says she English, French and German. re glad to hear she speaks heigl dhout English—tew candidates do. ei , | And Thursday, Mrs. Jewel Ny- wae quist, of the Virginian apart- ments, and her brother, Jack Redington, delegate to the Veter- ans of Foreign Wars’ conven- tion here, were smiling happily | tends th as they recounted their adven- | 23rd hg sister saw him. Red m the north, 90 degrees might A temperature of 1 today, The wes where | office reported that the weather map | is cam while he at.) showed a regulation summer condi Veterans of Foreign Wars’ |tion for the Northwest ! ampm: when hi sn sanica x vance HIGH RECORDS seins! IN NEBRASKA 46, at Baxoilles-sur . Neb. Aug. 17 nly living | red thruout last nigh’ renta and other of their family died years | a haan Sees 48° G8 | These were th lington is employed at the Ninety degre: » Portland Jed for midday. Rell each other since 1902 when our st cs neg Hoe when ot NORTHCLIFFE, _ |! smro™ by oe tion ear about and yell at him, but sto ord Northelitte FROM W H when we had finally crossed to Men cdma ase where he had been standing, | Westminster abbey today : dock had boarded the car. Ewas | Testing publishere trom all over I, DE NVER, Aug desperate. atid seerenenenttiet oe oe emperature of bo Wilson said I was mistaken, | "'s *n¢. representatives of th and cooler weather promised] wAcuInGTON. A 17-—Prest- } s/and other nobles attended the ee eatiee prortigna| WASHINGTON, Aug. 17 that I'd see r or later | i. w. there was/dent Harding has decided to post but Tom him chase the . “a oy one | pone his message to congress on the} John L. Lewis, president of the ® car Gieregarded the} various parts of] rai! strike situation, pending the out-|tnited Mine Workers, and his as | speed laws and dashed up the length | of peace negotiations between | sistants, meet with S. D. Warriner | the railway executives and leaders of |and representatives hard coal | jof the entire avenue in pursuit until siderably we reached the New Washington ho the non-striking railroad labor organ- | mine owners at 2 o'clock. tea tions, which opened in New York | . | tel, where Mr. Wilson leaped out and | a few Gaye be | poarded the car.” IOWA TO GET |‘rrte message, however, win be a-|Mid-West Utilities SOME. RELIEF 3%." ti MWA Be Given Goa Mrs. Giberson,| “I thought ‘Wilgon was a bandit,” the ven strike bo setth DES MOINES, Aug WASHINGTON, Aug. 17.—Public| | es, stated she need.| Redington said, “when hoe poked an | | Carr told authorities, state d she need aactetdat tinmne Wk tna hod eonanneel | | |New York ptm extreine tion of lows | | utilities in the Mid-West will be kept | was promised a little leas warmth on a 10:to 20-day supply of: coal it} j ed to give to Richmond fise sin trouble ” Carr said he| ‘Are you Regington? I admitted that | besoin Be I was and he tried to haul mo out tonight by the weather bureau here jon Aerte Serger snot eet |today. Little change in temperature |eeste satebeosse ateo, Sista | refused | the loan. | r I was forecast for the rest of the state. | dential commission has adopted this LOS ANGELES, Aug, 17 of the car, but I wouldn't go. new fruits | didn't know what to think Defense Poly following urgent — requests from practically all of the utilities | CHINESE HELD of 35 alleged klansmen, charged. immediate replenishment of | MURD ER with deliberately planning an flegal id which ended in violence and SAN BERNARDINO, Cal ingt way to the auto tour id park Miss Hohmann was trained at the | Sorbonne, Paris. This ought to get her the American tourist vote. eee FISH STORY Eastern scientists find a fish that is 400,000,000 years old. iB Wonder what kind of bait they | NC SON. is used? fa a re nt . . Great are the wonders of democ P M. le Duc de Talleyrand was Wem eating a doughnut yesterday! see Mayor Brown got Carl Reeves’) St, and now a Contrib reports that | CEti has lost his goat-ee { eee | | | | | his fan | | | | Bs a | quiet, employe of the Market ugton # ones st., by the the v merest ch all veteran urhy waiting for n nd Yesler was an occupant of iven by H.C. Wit w it was my brother,” she said, “altho we hadn't seen . Wednesday, the French nobleman | | was spotted wolfing a bevy of dough- | nuts at the Athenian Bakery and | Delicatessen store in the Pike Place |market. Furthermore he Was wash-| ling ‘em down with a cuppa cawfee. | | And he carried his.own tray! street ca md ave a on ago. ¥ readings at Arlington club i ha was expect was forecast th |His Need for Money Brought | Into Murder Case Union Men Seek Vengeance on Great Northern” 8ST. PAUL, Aug, 17—Word reached “Big Four” brotherhood officials here today that a brake- man on the Great Northern, named Stambaugh, had been killed at Havre, Mont. by a strike guard. Reports here were that Havre union officials had wired national headquarters of the Big Four brotherhoods requesting that a strike be called on the entire Great Northern system, A Home Near Woodland Park If you like to be located near the park, one of Seattle's real a splendid occurred at 17 William | ST, N , son of Mrs LAKEHU Joe Richmon iberson, ardent reformer, following the murder of her husband, | was sought for questioning today } Police theory } ithat the son, fre | hard money his mother furnished when famous held here | ” held in MEETING ON PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 17.—Dele. | gates of hard coal miners and opera jtors arrived today for a conference | which is expected to send 155,000 an. thracite workers back to the mines. With a mean for the last 24] CANDIDATE FOR POISON IVY CLUB The gink who can't eat water- Melon without spouting seeds & corn-popper working on t 18 years old, for are hours |for today no suffering from the ver. Showers in he state cooled the atmosphere con was him soor my pressed de Several hundred journalists trom | Fleet st. marched to the abbey Canon Carnegie, sub-dean of West it minster, officiated. The muffled peal of bells concluded the rites: The cortege, followed by hundreds |of carriages and automobiles pro eded to Saint Mary Le Bone cemo. ry for interment { | quently a) | whieh lever possible Wilmer Carr, according to investi gators, was approached by Mra. Gib-| 500 Joan a few days be oe | come Thomas Jefferson Bing for congress on ‘atform of wines and beer some folks | Sfe 80 cantankerous they won't take | Wight beer—they'il want dark oe A new geyser is spouting In Yel lowstone park. We should worry We've ga Dee Brown Casey i run erson for a $5 fore Giberson death in bis home. was Iowa, west negotiations. CHICAGO.—The brain of a fons! fish, & macropetalichthys, said have died 400,000,000 yeara ago, been found r ‘ BANTA pron Nie, world next| Wilson finally induced Redington | tion at the ¢ jare to be a Ar Burbank, according-|to get off the car and they rushed |surprisingly intact and to offer| ear by Lu vi Fruits include a|back to the auto, where Mrs. Nyquist |ample opportunity for the atudy of Cadlcralngegg grass plum, 6 sears | into the arms of her brother,/the internal structure of the “De ee crue © ’ whom she had long felt to be dead! vonian” ago fish | . « ~ to has ntly in an investiga “0 Museum to be 1 she stohs with half-closed eyes, p The while her hand you press, Don't Nr she fell, you never can [KLAN TRIAL NEARS END) has you, estate dealers home to show oe may. Be Vitlousness. . . Bill Short wants to debate Poin-| exter. eaeen, Sreement may be clowe; GENUINE BUY Less than 500 feet to Woodland park and Phinney car. Beautl- 1 lot, 80x200, rge rooms on one floor, and . stocks. death, was gathering tts strength to day to throw off the weight of evi University Student Aug. We'll take the short end of the betting, o 2 FALL OUT! Mout. Harry O'Brien has been hppointea police inspector. Be: ing ey orersene veteran, he will to deal with the boys When they are talf- over, (Lorn to Pace 7, Columngy YOU are the most important citizen in the United States! It is only by your good judg- ment, your hard common sense, your devotion to the ideals of good government, that this great country can progress tating nn iin fy tomrem nn rf You are the VOTER! Another election Is near. You must exercise your right of fran- chise. If you haven't registered this year, you must have your name placed on the books. Only five more days are left for this mo- mentous duty, The registration office in the county-city building is open all day, Registration will only take a few minutes of your time, Don't be a civic slacker! 17.—Quong Wong, ® Chinese, with whom she is known to h had a disagreement during the was arrested early this morning as a #us pect in the murder of Mrs, Mabel H Hangen, 34, who was found shot to death here last night. Wong protest ed his innocence when question this morning, but is being held. Another arrest is momentarily expected, dence expected which the persistent cros ing of the defense which threatens to crush the| ret order. The state today or tomorrow was to close its testimony, s-question \c has falled to shake. more than 30 witnesses called to refute the that be announced would arraignment, Defense counsel | Brty Killed in Cave-In GRASS VALLEY, Cal, Aug. 17.—8S. son, aged 23, a University of California student, was instantly killed here early today when a cave- in covered him on the 2,500-foot level of the Pennsylvania gold mine, where he was working. All others on the} level escaped without injury. unusual attic. Also 2 moth- proof closets or storerooms; Rardwood floors in living room and dining room: — butlt-in buffet; cabinet Ieitchen; 2 bed- rooms and den, ete. ete, to the Want Ad Section earn more about this home i where you can find it, T