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PAGE a LABORER SHOT ‘LENIN AGAIN BY RAIL AGENT) BOSSES RUSSIA Shooting Takes Place in/Dictator, Health Regained, | Takes Up Reins RY JOHN GRAUDENZ MOSCOW, Oct. 2.—Nikolal Lenin has returned to active management of affairs of the soviet government of Russia. Rack ut the Kremlin, seat of the Moscow government—ensoonced fn Man’s Room PORTLAND, Oct, 2.—Hall a Mats. won, 27, laborer, was shat and killed here late yesterday by Vane H. Seely, special agent for the Oregon: ‘Washington Railway company, when | the latter went to his room to put him under arrest for carrying a pls tol without a license. & heavilyguarded and attractively: A raiiroad watchman named Brown | decorated pavilion on the reof—the reported to Special Agent Seely that | noishevik dictator will preside at a Mateson persisted upon traveling cabinet meeting tomorrow for the over the new pavement of the Greely | tig time since sestous NNER omise cutoff against orders of the railroad. | 1 his temporary ‘retirement, many Matsson flourished @ pistol, according | onthe ago. to Becly, and the latter went with| “4 vival of the head of the soviet Mateson to his room to obtain the) vonment wae oxceedingly quiet ewing to Lenin's dislike of cere monies. If an automobile, accom panied by Madam Lenin and his an sister, he passed practically wn- ees geome a eee cintad ac at {Roticed thru the streets to the Ses chine, Peart trenchery Seely | Kremlin. A few tntimates weloom- thia'he turned and firea twice, Five [#4 him and he inspected his sunny, bullet ‘holes wore found tn Matason’s | flaasenctosed quarters, which are hedy, altho Seely insisted he had| arranged so that he may walk con fired only two shota, Seely, » for. |stantly In the course of completely mer policeman, is being detained) recovering his health. MEXIGAN REBELS BORAH DEFENDS ARE SHOT DOWN Three Have Died, More to Pay Penalty Soon JUAREZ, Mexico, Oct. 2.—Bx04-| coming to show that the real master tions of many soldiers who selmed| unger the American fing and held the federal garrison bere | opinion for « time Saturday probably will) So declared Senator William FE. Ro. rah, Idaho, yesterday, when he ad 3 jean army ‘s+ otdhaegedboened Prog dgensed 4,700 Chicagoans at Auitito- Miclaly Goctares ¥ eine. ee rium theater, The meeting w Three Dave aiwedy Get. Pierced |Fanged by a committen which is | mn FB eae aan heading a drive to free war prison Juarez was quiet today and felt|*??. “Seventy-five obscure men have! et fears for « Migetine of Te SH) is neve years in prison for war | opinions because they lacked Influ- weapon. While there, aceorfing to Seely, Matsson, while the officer's attention was directed elsewhere, seized the Tells Chicago Meeting Pub- lic Is Boss " WAR PRISONERS, CHICAGO, Oct. 2.--Mlections are! ts public | HERE'S MORE ABOUT supreme in the Near East by using the Greeks as dummy holders of Constantinople and the resources of Western Asia Minor. Another strong influence at work |in France against Greece and the treaty of Sevres was that of Gen eral Lyautey, military governor of Moreceo, who went personally to Paria to Moroceo and to retain French sov- lereignty in the other North African colonies waa for the French govern ment to back Mustapha Kemal Pasha. For was not Mustapha Kemal Pasha, in the eyes of the Mohammedan world, defending the Khalif df the | Paithful (the Turkish sultan) against Greek aggression? Welght was added to this argu: ment by the publication of from the British viceroy, stating that backing the Greeks againat the Turks was making the problem of pacifying India virtually imposatdie, The 70 million Mohammedans of In dia stood solidly behind the Turkish Nation There is only one form of prestige that counte with the Mohammedans, the prestige of force. HM they get the idea into their heads that they can play one master against another, there is no telling what they will do while they are running amuck. This ts seen at the present mo. ment, Owing to French and Italian | !otriguee at Angora, Mustapha Kem. \al Pasha has the bit in his teeth, The entente powers can pull on the reins hey wan to, It ix too late, They are dealing with a runaway horee. He will, sooner or later come fo the end o: th and go to amash. But may he not bring }to grief with him those who are try ing now to pull him tn? If the events of the first fort night of September tn Asia M'nor jhad only to do with the discom |fiture of the Greeks we might look urge that the way to pacity | Herbert Adams Gibbons empire, end to loose from rance her North African posses mona. Northwestern India, the khanates of Central Asia, Afghanistan, Persia, Turkey, Mesopotamia, Syria, Pales. tne, Arabia, Egypt, the Sudan, | Tripoll, Tuniala, Algeria, Morocco, the tribes of the Sahara, and rapidly |inereasing converted areas in Cen [tral and Western Africa—these are | the countries, under British, French jand Italian rule or protection or mandate, which the victory of Mus tapha Kemal and the restoration of | Constantinople to the Turks will | electrify and galvanize into action. | If the entente powers were stil! THE SEATTLE STAR NEAR EAST STORY wpon them without batting « » United, if the United States were in id. Armies have been thrashed | the entente combination, if Japan before. The Turks have long been | Were not Interected on the other side massacring Christians, and yet the world bas wagged on. But I write from personal expert- ence, having just come from Asia profound reapect for public opinion.“ Two thousand people were turned ‘Chan /away from the meeting, unable to lian meetings is scheduled to be a government, in accordance the wishes of the Japanese peo- ple, deeply sympathize with the at- Young Women and Babies to Be Given Votes Any young woman, property en- tered tm the popularity contest CLEVELAND, Oct. 2—-Bituminous|peing conducted in connection with and miners assembied|the Shrine circus at the Arena, Prevent future strikes. | wit got 1,000 free votes if she President of the/ottains 100 before Wednéwday Workers, headed the! sight. ‘The same offer has been mapanrentetions. made for entrants in the baby con- + provided for In peace * ‘August 15 nettlement|%%t: Prizes consist of six valuable diamond rings. ” obs Saturday's count of votes at the opening of the big circus showed the coal industry genes |Mles Mary Eiteabeth Collins tn. the lead. Tied for second place were of a Joint committee to| Miss Bernice 8. Hansen, Mra. O. methods for negotiating a|P. Kellogg and Miss Irene Web- scale to be effective ween | ster. it agreement expires March the babies’ contest Eileen Brandt and Shirley Gene Young procedure for the|were tied for first place. Betty of inquiry so that its) Maxwell, Terrance J. McMillan and work will not conflict with the coal| Frank Harold Turpin were tied for commission to be appointed by Presi-| second place. Others in the race dent Harding for a probe of the coallare Marjorie Leigh, Gladys Cutler, RHODES RADIO and J. Richard Dillon. MONDAY NIGHT The circus will continue nightly until October 14. Monday evening's radio program to be broadcasted from K. D. Z. E., LINER TURNS Risen Mesut | BACK TO PORT VANCOUVER, B. ©. Oct. 2.—~ ‘composer, and his orchestra. Engine trouble has developed aboard the Canadian Pacific liner Empress HE-iniegHT lee iu . and she will return to Vancouver for repairs, according to a wireless from Cap- tain C. Robinson. The steamship 2 ag ae ae carries 700 passengers and 2,000 a hestra lions of freight. She is due here ‘I Wish I Knew".—ox trot (A Tuesday night. Sherman Clay Number) .Orchestra And other numbers to be selected, or Jan waltz (Carl B. Wing).Orchestra ‘That Wondertul summer Strain” ~—fiong (San Samue} Totten) . IN QUEST OF information fe. ‘The stores on the Majestic, the| garding obscure Ortental diseases ‘world’s largest liner, include 16,000|Dr. Joseph Beck, Chicago ear, nose ‘otps, 20,000 platen, 2,000 teapots andjand throat specialist, was on his 8,000 tumblers. way to China Monday aboard the Ad- a miral iner President Jefferson. He Ninety-eight per cent of American|nalied Saturday with his daughter, employ lees than 100 men| Miss Elsa Beck, after being feted by the Beattle medical profession. | iteelf cannot stand.” .jentente alliance stand? “| Hindenburg and Ludendort Miner and Constantinople, when I that the Angora Nationalists represent something far different from a group of patriots valiantly retrieving the misfortunes of their country Chung conference is @ matter of deep | gain seats, Fifty civic. religious and| Oh, the folly of France! Oh! the egret to the Japanese government. | social organizations were represent: | folly of Italy! Oh! the folly of Eng Mt means mo change in our policy of/ eq among the 700 who sat on the/iand! And—yes, I must say it—oh! withdrawal of our troops from S1-| stage. ‘ the folly of America! berta.” “In recent years there has arisen] We are al! in the aame boat, and ‘This statement was tewued Monday /in America the doctrine that in war-|the waves are beginning to rock us ang ss ee oe The ma Germany and Senator Borah. fa victous In regard te “Withdrawal from Visdivostok an4/an4 treasonable. ‘The constitution| Japan, I put in s qualifying other mainiand potats,” Mr. Saito) was designed to protect all citizens| clause. The victory of the continued, “will be condluded by the! in troubled times, and in wartime the| Kemallete is of tremendous val- end of this month. As for Baghalien. | constitution ts undeniably binding on we to Japan, marking as ® Goes our retirement from the northern or | the president, the congress and the the defeat of » European and Russian half of the island will take/ courte. There ie no more depraved| Christian at the hands of Place, as repeatedly stated, 88 8008 theory than that congress, having| Ge” Asiatic “and sumCheletlon as the Nicolaivak affair has been et-| power to declare war, should also peaple, Ite repercussion tor tea. have power to suspend all rights thering propaganda of “Asia “The Japanese government hae 20 l guaranteed by the constitution. ar ae nt Cae toe territorial designs whatever “Congrees repealed the espionage or any other connection. It has bee/ace because {t trample’ upon the| | *Ponserine, ls incalculable, earnestly striving to adjust relations| constitution, yet 15 war-opinion pris. It ta of tremendous value, also, to | between the Japanese and Siberian) oners remain confined.” Germany, marking as {ft doea the Peoples as well as with other coun a utter confusion of the European tries and it certainly cannot be eald| | Armngements will be made here) onemies of Germany. that we have failed to show a liberal y abaaee oa ca not wup.| Germany took her greatest step ee Seay Seve 8 SON es demand f forward towards re-entry into world the view of other peoples and gov- ‘or Immediate gen- hen M. kit 9 lamenenta” eral amnesty. Heckling at repub.|*fafirs when M. Fran’ Bouttion signed on behalf of France a treaty with the Angora Turks, promising to ald them in getting the Greeks out of Asia Minor and Thrace. She actually did qualify for reentry Into ‘World affaires when Italy signed « ,|similar treaty with the Turks. ‘There in no truer motto tn the world than “A house divided against How can the ‘The kaiser is cackling at Doorn. threw their hate in the air when they heard of the recapture of Smyrna, and the murder of Englishmen by the Turks at Smyrna; and right be- side it the news that France had withdrawn her troops from the Asiatic side of the Bosphorus. For is not the Djthad (Holy War) at last coming to tall lke @ ton of bricks upon the enemies of Germany? All this does not preve that Japan and Germany are actually helping the Turks, materially or diploma: Intion to Moseow. Soviet Russia is squarely and openly backing Mustapha Kemal and rejotcing In the guilelessness of French and Malian statesmen, especially of the former. All that the Nattonalist Turks have been abie to accomplish during jhe past two weeks is of supreme and immediate importance to bol- shevist plans, Soviet Russia has placed herself on the side of Nationalist Turkey in demanding that the entente powers evacuate Constantinople, The return of the Turks to Constantinople ts not an eventuality that has any oth er significance to the new countries of the “little entente” than its true meaning. Mustapha Kemal tn the saddle at Constantinople would give the signal for the denunciation by Bulgaria of the treaty of Neullly and the launch- ing an offensive by the bolshe- vists against Rumania and Poland. Trouble is brewing once more in the Balkans. And when trouble comes in the Balkans, we know now from our bitter experience that Hurope— and America~get into trouble, too, Putting the entente powers out of Constantinople is only one part of |the program of Soviet Russia. It ts |no more than the soup, one might jeay, In the meal Lenin proposes to force down the throats of those who jfeven passively), if soviet Russia | were out of the game, if the entente powers were not weary of colonial ware and heavy expenditures on tax | payers f ures tar afield, the | Mohammedan world could do noth jing and would do nothing as « re wult of the Turkish victory Ab! but those fatal “Ifw’\—they all hold. So may we not expect to see ® train of calamities following the collapse of the Greek lines tn Asia Minor, compared to which the burn ing of rich and beautiful @myrna ts a2 nothing? Why should the "Naslnst tera—interest oe new war—Isiam : ly eympa- Chizing with the ‘Turks, just think of this fact: To the oMhammedans all Chrie- tians look allke. There ts no die ttaction Detween Engliehman, Frenchman, Italian, American, Greek or German. We are ail held equally responsible for the wrongs, fancied or real, of Islam. And if there ie an opportunity—no matter what may be the combination Mustapha Kemal and hie associates can form—the vengeance will fall From Tokyo to Constantinople and Cairo our civilization w detest. ed, and our ideals questioned or mneered at. Let us beware of the Holy War. (Copyright, 192%, by the Unites Prees) HERE’S MORE ABOUT PEACE MEET STARTS ON PAGE ONE be held about October 15, worked out. 2. That the military operations of Kemal in the Chanak and lamid areas of the neutral zones be sus- Pended pending the Mudania confer ence. 3. That Turkey be allowed to oo- cupy Thrace as far as the Maritza river at once, This claim is made on the ground that it is necessary to prevent atrocities on the Turks by the Greeks. Franklin Bouillon was given the credit by the French foreign office for apparently averting a war be tween the Turke and Britain. The envoy who has been in conference with Kemal at Smyrna wan highly praised by the press. eee Turkish Assembly Approves Parley: LONDON, Oct. 2-—-The Turkish national assembly at Angora today unanimously approved the Mudania Peace conference, according to a Central News dispatch from Con- stantinople, The assembly action approves Mostapha Kemal's action in meet- ing. the allies and authorizes send. ing of delegates to Mudania for what wil] ultimately amount to a peace conference with Britain and other allied nations, the dispatch sald. A “CALL? “What have you got?” asked the minister of the chauffeur who rang his doorbell. “One pair,” replied the chauffeur, beckoning the eloping couple to come forward.—Boston Transcript. have been damning him, and whose folly in the Ni East has now jaiven him the opportunity to get even with them, Ever since the soviet regime camo into power in Russia, the menace of Islam has been @ precious weapon jto be used against the “capitalist countries.” Inheriting the machinery and the |opportuntties of Czarist Russia to |make trouble for Great Britain, | Lenin and his asnociates began near. ly five, years ago to use Mohammed- an fanaticism to destroy the British When You Visit the also a pleasure trip on the beautiful wa of Puget Sound Fast steamers to Tacoma connect with interurban to Puyallup or motor buses to fair grounds. ROUND I BEATILE-TACO! Make it Poorer UND WAVIGA co, Main Blankets Blankets $2.25 Cotton sheet blankets, a good, firm weave, in gray, tan, or white with pink or blue border, Gise 64x76. Blankets $2.75 Medium-weight cotton, In broken plaid designe in various color com- Dinations, Sine 64x76, Blankets $3.75 Medium-weight cotton, in threetnch bieck plaids or broken plaid designs, in blue, pink, gray and tan, with col. ored borders, Size 64x80, Blankets $6.50 ‘Wool and cotton mixed, tn plaids of pink, blue, gray, tan and lavender. Size 66xho, Blankets $8.50 Woolfilied Diankets, {n assorted broken plaids wi cotton pongee binding to match. Size 70x80. Blankets $8.95 Pure wool, in firm and close weave, fourinch biock patterns of pink, blue, gray or tan, ise 70x80, Blankets $9.45 | Pure wool, guaranteed Virgin Fleece, in block designs of pink and white, blue and white, gray and white, tan and white, or Invender and white, bound with 2inch mohair binding. Sine 66x80. Blankets $11.75 serviceable binding, Size TOxeo. 70 BABIES AT PUYALLUP FAIR Big Show Will Be Open to Visitors Tuesday Six hundred and seventy babies. the finest grown In the Pacific Northwest, or anywhere in the world, according to each one's fond parents, will be presented for scor- ing, starting Tuesday mogning, at the Western Washington fair, Puy- allup. For three days the infants will paas tn review before statis of physicians and nurses and each lit- tle individual will be weighed, meas. ured, sounded and tested in every department of his or her anatomy. So great is the number of entries at the baby show this year that four distinct staffs of physicians and nurses will be necessary to keep the four lines of infants going thru the clinic at the same time, Tho baby show is declared by W. H. Paulhamus, president of the fair, to be one of the most intoresting departments of the show, which will be open to visitors all this week, Tuenday will be the first day the fair is open to visitors and on that day children will be admitted free, BPlaborate children’s drills, folk dances, pageants with decorated floats and fing raising exercines wili take place during the forenoon, In the afternoon will be horse races, bear hunt, exhibition horse jumping, cattle Judging in front of the grand. stand, auto polo, pursuit races, Roman chariot and hippodrome races, FOUR DRAW 5 MILLION WASHINGTON, Oct. 2—Four per. sone in the United States hed in. comes of over $5,000,000 in 1920, re. port of the internal revenue bureau on income taxes revealed today, Thirty-three had incomes of $1,000,. 000 or more and 128 of between half a million and a million, Of 7,159,044 who filed returna for 1920, a total of 6,578,382 paid on in. comes of $5,000 or less, The mont numerous clase of taxpayers report. between $1,000 and ed tnoomes $2,000, WHITMAN COLLEGYE.—rour hundred and twenty-eight students enrolied at end of first week of reg. latration at colge. MecDougall-/outhwick MONDAY. Second Avenue at Pike “Main o720———=—==—=—_«SShopyping Houre 9:00 to bap Ass is se Rit AL Blankets Comforts Exceptional Savings Comforters . Cotton-Filled $3.95 | Filled with a good grade of cotton and cov. e4 with slikoline in different colors. Size | x75 finished, | Cotton-Filled $4.50 | Covered with silkoline tn light grounds with rose Gesigns, and finished with 7-inch eatin border to match, in pink, blue, rose or yel- jow. Gine G8x78 finished, ! Wool-Filled Comforters $8.50 Others $12.50 and $13.50 Piatn or figured coverings; full bed siz | Good wool filling—warm an@ comfortable. Bed Spreads Crochet Spreads $2.75 A good weight, hemmed Spread in several Cesignea, Size Tixts, Crochet Spreads $2.95 | Closely woven, with medallion center, hem- med and ready for use. Size 82x91. | Satin Spreads $3.95 Firm weave, of medium weight, in several medallion center designs, Size 18x88. Satin Spreads $5.45 Goda heavy weight, stripes with floral és signs, size 80x90. Sheets and Pillow Cases Extra! Sheets $1.00 Seamless, in a good, firm weave, free and dressing, size 61x90, Hemmed, of fine quality casing with corded Pure wool in block designs of pink, blue, tan or gray, bound with 2inch 6x80 or Blankets $5.50 Complete With Cords and Frogs Bedding Sale—Basement DAFT WOMEN IN WOODS, SINGING Two With Two Tots, Minus Clothes, Found Suffering from cold and exposure, two women and two small children, found wandering in the woods of West Seattle, early Monday, bereft of clouuing, were pursued and captured after a lively chase by Police Sergt. BE. W. Pielow and Patrolman A. C. Swanson, The women were violently insane. They were taken to the city jail and heid in padded cells. The children were clothed and cared for by nurses at the city hospital, According to police, the women be- jeame demented Sunday and broke up the furniture of their respective homes, tore their clothing to shreds under the influence of religious ma- nia, and, dragging the two babes, set off for the dense woods near Faunt- leroy, singing hymna. Poople living near by, upon hear. ing the singing, called police, and an all-night hunt followed, ending at 4:30 @ m, Monday, when the quartet Was located in the shrubbery. When they were finally captured, neigh- bors supplied the women and chil- dren with blankets and clothing, and they were taken to the hospital, Auto Accidents Are Many During Week Several persons were injured in traffio accidents over the week-end. Miss Helen McMahon, 123 N. 63rd *.; Davia Carlson, 8939 Stone way, and Herbert Larson were injured when their auto was struck by two Cowen park street care going in op: Donite directions, Sunday. E. W. Donaldson and A, R. Don- aldson were cut and bruised when an auto in which they were riding was overturned at Ninth ave. and Jackson st. in a collision with & street car, Frank Bell, 7000 Wilson ave., flor: int, was severely bruised and cut when an auto in which he was riding with Fred Bronson, 4800 Willow at., crashed inte another car at Rainier HARVEST BEETS DENVER, Oct. 2.--Beet sugar fac: tories are running 24 hours a day. A total of 1,600,000 tons of sugar beets are expected to be hervested, for which farmers will receive ap- proximately $8,000,000, ! | Beacon Bath Robe | borders, Size 45x36. | Pillow Cases Pillow Cases Coroner Probes Death of Woman Coroner W. H. Corson will hold an Inquest Tuesday, at 10 a. m., to determine the circumstances of the death of Mre. Sidney Bartlett, 45, of 4319 Rainier ave, who was killed Saturday evening when her hus- band's auto was struck by @ street car at Fauntleroy ave. and W. Othello st, Corson ts the charge made by J. F. Turner, 4106 W. Thistle st. a passenger on the street ear, that Dr. Bartlett's car was speeding in an effort to beat the ear to the crossing when the crash occurred. Bartlett was recovering Monday under the auto. Mrs, Bartlett died soon after being taken to @ hospital. Conductor Throws Lunch at Motorist an F. L. Hobson, Broadway street car conductor, 644 27th ave, huried a milk bottle containing part of his lunch, at the offending motorist, Hobson told the police. The auto had narrowly missed running down @ little girl and her mother, who | Were stepping from the car. The milk bottle failed to register 4 connection with the driver's skull but crashed thru the windshield. The driver then stopped and offered fight, Hobson sald. Carleton @ her home Monday from severe in- Juries which she received when struck by a street car at Willow st. and Carleton ave. Saturday aft- ernoon. yy H. BURNQUIST, 22, was in the city jail Monday while police wi investigating his alleged possession of a flashlight, which is said to have been stolen recently, Burn. quist was arrested Sunday night. KING GEORGE ON PRE-WAR PAY The king has effected an annual saving in his household of some £10,- 000, Administration of the various royal residences has been over hauled, H. M.'s racing stud cut down, the 80-year-old Britannia laid up, and other economies contrived. Meantime, the yearly grant for crown maintenance stands at the 1914 fl@ure, £470,000; thus the king has rvygeted drawn considerably upon his private fortune. Passing Hemmed, a soft finish, well wearing, sine OLYMPICS, FE HOQUIAM, Oct. 2- than a month _ jungle of the Otymptca, two Lat Angeles” men, and Mayo, are feared to fact from minor fnjuries received when | Until the local [both he and his wife were pinned |Was informed today that Mt. keross to Grays Harbor tember 1. No word has been them since. Forest rangers have to look When a wild auto driver fatled | they have met to stop his car after running past). far, and {t ts feared unloading street car Sunday, | quest will be hopeless, DUNCAN UR¢ HIS CANDID Speaking at People’s ‘seattle, on Sunday, James can, for United States senat cussing constitutional “Today, Stripes, men are we jail who have committed n0 | MRS. ANNA BOGLIN, 65, of 6701) put only hold opinions and ' recovering ati contrary to those who put there. “The constitution of the States gave these men the F their opinions and that be respected by every oft every agency of our otherwise the safety which Jamendment sought to been He declared a democratic istration had thrown these fl and a republican . : keeping them there and that citizens, accordingly, farmerlabor ticket. Vashon Floater The body of a man found Tae day floating off Vashon believed to be that of, probably of Tacoma, Coren Corson said Monday, 7 London |found sewed tn the thew, bore the tag of a Ta 45c 6 for $1.35 Hemmed, of medium weight, made from H s 42x36, muslin, size 42x: jcwe “Loute At the Trackless Jungl e mere in the trackies named ce that the pair Fitzhenry, planning © for the missing +s with no. farmermiabor party PP ERIS 2 NN IES Sima under the Bt utterly destroyed.” M. Baisle, Tact