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Congratulations, jYou Criminals! a The Star Likes Your Iniquity and Hopes | ‘ia HIS is an open letter Seattle fuel dealers, t wall & Sons; H. W, t Fuel & Ice Co.; W. You Continue Law-Breaking Career from The Star to seven o-wit., F. 0. Cornwall, of Schneider, of the Pacific R. Hocking, of the Sunny- Coal & Wood Co.; Henry Hickman; W. D. Scott, & Scott; Edward T. Verd, of the Bryant Fy Lumber Co., and J. F. Ive s, of the Stimson Mill Co. It is written to congratulate you gentlemen upon arrest and to announce, positively and finally, it The Star is with you and all other criminals like tomorrow and for all time to come. ‘ | You were arrested, it seems, by a very industrious official for the glaring offense of giving your strons more fuel than they paid for, | The Star is as law-abiding a paper as could be ex- from its accustomed fully uphold and condo Nay, more. The Star, b But in this one instance The Star must de- stand and vigorously and me your iniquity. here and now, contracts to and abet you in your sins and become an accessory , to and after the fact, by promising to give plenty of free advertising for every future breach fthis law for which you may be arrested from time ‘time (may they be many)! | Moreover, The Star earnestly desires that you all convicted—not that it wants to see any of you behind the bars, but because it wouid to have absolute proof » And, incidentally, The J fuel dealers who are of your guilt. Star also hopes that the pressing this case against goon join the ranks of the malefactors and get elves into court to answer similar charges. such criminals. ee his patrons more We every fue: dealer in town were to go to jail for than they paid for—well, would have nothing on Seattle. | | | ny dows that fella m 1 want to i Gasman, who is working as t nt of the street depart. pit being paid by Mayor Brown must be a dollar.o-year man, 4 eee Bould be just our luck to have a Md lip during Smile Week. ‘4 see , DIDATE FOR THE POISON IVY CLUB fink who always grabs when there is a piano eee has been prohibited on U. 8. board vessels, The next be to abolish ail schooners. 4 one Fame young Gal who turna on light before marriage #0 Bweetic won't slip and fall, the hall light after marri- Me if he will stumble on the it: ‘They call her the girl of | id kine. : How's that? i Mild, yet they satisfy. eee GEE GEE, T i] VAMP, SEZ { use you've been to a | ig no reason why you | home. | annie OFFICE FUEL DEALERS Seven Face Novel Charge of Giving Extra Measure With seven prominent Seattle fuel on the police court docket Saturday, Leslie J. Allen, chief tn- spector of the city weights and measures bureau was preparing to push the novel charge of selling too much wood. and larger dealers put too much fuel, thereby hurting the smaller fuel man. “It ts a long story. The city coun- cit passed an ordinance reguiath the loads, but it has been utterty dis- regarded by most of the dealers, practically all of them. We will bring this squabbling to an end by teating the validity of the ordinance “The coal and wood men complain they are losing money on every load at the present time in spite of the fact that the load has been cut down by the ordinance and prices are stil! at the high war days’ level. 1 fail to see how they can lose money.” ‘The fight does not affect cord wood, Alien declared. The mil! own ers claim the right to pile on as much wood as they care to, but the retailer finds that he cannot compete with such methods. Alien declared himself in favor ot a new ordinance Increasing the nize of the load and then holding all deal ers to this standard. By this method only, he says, @ lasting peace will be formed. ‘SHIP SIGHTED | AFIRE AT SEA No Trace of Crew; 15 Emp- ty Dories Seen HALIFAX, N. 8. Oct. 7-—-The |steamer Spedro is afire 300 miles | southeast of Cape Race, according to la radio meanage received here today by the marine fisheries agent Fifteen empty dories were sighted at sen by the steamer Radiance, which encountered the blazing vessel yesterday, but no trace of the crew | was found. PORTLAND PUT | OFF BIG FAIR | PORTLAND, Oct. 17—Portiand }has postponed its exposition from 1995 ti 1927. This decision was reached here last | night by the Por Jand elty counell, | gotlowing an opinion rendered by the world's fair committee More time in which to raise a mil \Won-dollar stock subscription and ef | the motive behind the postponement ‘The fair Is to be financed by a city of which is contingent upon the se | curing stock subseription of $1,00,000 | before October 1, 1923. fect the collection of a tax levy was| tax levy of $3.000,000, the collection | Are turning red, and Gee are blushing to think they were all summer. oe Men's brains were dyna- Couldn't biow off their | WEATHER Tonight and Sunday, probably rain; moderate to fresh southeasterly winds. FORECAST SOCIAL, ETIQUETTE Homer: 1 am going to = 0 Page 4, Column 2) GIANTS WIN AGAIN 43 Entered as Beoond Class Matter May 3, VOLUME 24, NO. 193. RUNS FOR HS LIFE AND WINS ‘Intrepid Hunter Is’ | Marvel Sprinter; He Still Flirts With Death By Seaburn Brown OLYMPIA, Wash. Oct, 7.—Some- where in the Coeur d'Alene moun taina, completely cut off from human ald by inaccessible ridges and track | lens for man, alone, is waging a |erim duel to the death with that most deadly of North American wild beaste—the ailvertip grizaly, | The man ix alone, 1 Hut one brief report from him has reached the state department | of agriculture. Already he has made one miraculous escape from death. Carrying « rifle of small caliber, he met the king of the mountain for- leat face to face, Realising that a | Wounded grizzly te terrible in ite} rage, and that a hurt will transform | | the reticent nature of the beast #0 | that he will become the hunter in- stead of the hunted, C. A. Stoner, {the government hunter, took @ |chance and fired. ‘The bullet struck the beer, but falled to stop him. How ] fe Fri EbsE27 i : reached: << The paper with a 15,000 daily circulation lead over its nearest competitor The Seattle Star the Postoffice at Seattle, Wash, under the Act of Congress March by Mall, $5 to 99 it “SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1922. Her Eyes Mirror Tragedy / HIS GRIZILY; eseue, Girt From Turks! WORKERC AND FORD TO RAD WALL STREET! Auto Builder ,and Brotherhood to! Unite to Run Co- operative Banks) CLEVELAND, Oct. 7-—Plans for a gigantic combine of the Interests of Henry Ford and the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engt- neers’ co-operative bank for a finish fight on Wall Street be came known here today. Joneph J. Hobert, jr, general financial agent of the bank, an- nounced today that he will go to | Detroit next week to see Ford, Mises Nazalia Nakagh, in whose eyes is mirrored the trag- edy of the Near East.~ ‘They were finally taken to Ras ulAin after suffering terribly all along the way, many dying from hunger and brutalities. ‘There a |stoup of American missionaries tried to help them but they The back shortly afterwards and the him an trre'Turks swept thru, her uncle and | girl was taken care of. Intelligence, offensive power strike from a distance, is with the| human duelist. Cunning In the ways of the wild, strength to tear his antagonist to shreds at close quar- tors, ie with the beast. i | The bear is a lone, picturesque | survivor of the great clan that has | lost ite domain to the encroachment | Of civilization. He has vented his | fare, shown his supreme hatred and | Contempt of the physically impotent human species by descending upon| the flocks and herds of Pend Ortelle| county and leaving a trail of blood | in his wake, | In despair, the citizens appealed to | |the department of agriculture and tn response Stoner, professional big game hunter, is playing with fate— | [im the form of the 800-pound silver tip grizsly——staking his life against | that of the beast, for the comfort and security af ctvilization’s outposts. ‘CREASY MUST |__ DIEIN CHAIR MINEOLA, N. Y., Oct. 7.—William Creamy, the “Kentucky sweetheart,” was sentenced by Judge Smith today to die in the electric chair at Sing |Sing prison during the week of No- vember 6 Creasy, Fort Thomas, Ky., was con- |victed of murdering Misn Edith La. |voy, Freeport school teacher, as sho! lay in hin arms in her apartment, Police Shoot Bandits | After Payroll Auto | BAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 7.—Two| lbandita who attempted to rob the Dairy Delivery company's payroll car, carrying $20,000, at Seventh and Folsom streets, today, were nhot and leaptured by the police. Two others jescaped without loot. Marie Lloyd, Famed | Comedienne, Is Dead | LONDON, Oct. 7.—Marie Lioyd, | for many years famous as @ come dienne and singer in London music | halls, died here today, She is well| \known in the United States, where | ahe toured the country on vaudeville | circuits. pi a mnligcislleey cate oom | YOU CAN DO BETTERIN || THE STAR'S | GREATER CLASSIFIED put to death, A couple of days included in the party. On her arrival at Aleppo she re- later two other brothers were ar-| ceived news that her brother, who rested, thrown into prison and sub-| is a photographer here, was on his sequently tortured and killed. way from Canada to take her home A number of women and children | with him, After 11 years of separ. were taken away for Turkish slave | ation brother and sister were reunit- markets and harems. Nasilia and) ed at Heyrut, her mother were marched out cession, among those in a miserable pro- Her dark eyen til! hold the mir- rors of the horrors thru which she has paased. REECE ORDERED OUT OF THRACE! France and Britain Agree on Plan for Near ots wit fa East; Turks Can Enter Disputed Zone After Allies PARIS, Oct. 7—France and Great Britain have decided to call the Near East peace con ference at Seutarl or Princess island on November 1. Russia will be included in the invita tion, it was officially announced. eee LONDON, Oct, 7—The British cabinet today approved the agreement entered into by For- eign Minister Curzon and Pre- micr Poincare regarding the Near Eastern crisin. eee BY WEBB MILLER PARIS, Oct. 7. — France backed Great Britain against the Turks today. It was officially sgreed by Lord Curzon and Premier Poin- care that the Kemalists shall not be permitted to enter Thrace until peace is concluded. The Greeks, it has been de- cided here, must start immed!- ately the evacuation of Thrace. ‘The allies will enter on the heels of the departing Greeks. One month after the latter are completely out the Turks may come in and set up « civil ad- ministration, Thelr armies may not enter Thrace nor cross the straits, This “wae the answer tapha Kemal's ultimatum. The Curzon-Poineare be sent Muda man chief, : The Turks demanded Thrace im-| mediately, Lord Curzon hurried to Paris. The French cabinet met immedi. ately after tentative agreement had been reached by Curzon’ and Poincare and gave its sanction to their plan. |. Curzon, who held three of the six telephone lines between Paris and London open all night, then got in touch with Downing st. Curzon, it waa stated, in the con- ference with Poincare, won the to Mus- agreement | | Was approved at a meeting of the French premier over to the stand! that the Turks should not be per- |mitted to cross the straits until peace had been declared. It was pointed out by Curzon that if the Turks got Thrace immediately |the allies would be deprived of any |effective means to bring pressure to bear upon the Kemalists to make them accept the conditions regard- |ing Constantinople and the straits, as laid down in the allied note to} |the Turks which waa dispatched two | weeks ago. |. It iw anticipated here that Mus tapha Kemal will back down and ac: cept the latest proposal, in face of the olid front of the allies. After the ultimatum ordering the | Turks not to cross the straits is pre \wented, it in expected that the Greeks | will be notified to start to evacuate jas soon as possibli . WANTS U.S, TO BACK MOSLEMS Frenchman Makes Plea for Mustapha Kemal BY EDWARD J. BING CONSTANTINOPLE, Oct, 7.—Ap peal to American public opinion to | French cabinet and instructions will|believe in Mustapha Kemal, in an | la, where the allied |terms will be handed to the Otto- hour when “the chances of war or peace are 60-60," exclusive statement to the United Presa by a French negotiator, who was hurrying to Mudania for re- sumption of the armistice confer: ence. The allies went to the meeting place today to, answer Kemal's ult!- matum that he, must have Thrace at once, They had instructions from their government to refuse this do- mand, but to avert a clash, The French delegate, declaring it was “a toss-up whether tt is peace or war,” vigorously upheld the Otto- (Turn to Page 4, Column 3) vas made in an| | Hobert plans to ask Ford to join |with W. 8, Stone, grand chief of the | Engineers, and president of the jbank, In carrying the co-operative banking movement into New York. It in expected that Hobert will ank | Yord to pr depoait of from $50,- 000,000 t 000,000 In the bank. It is uflderstood that Stone feels that $17,000,000, the bank's present | youngsters made their swarming ap- funds, are not large enough with which to go into New York In «@ statement to the United Press | mately 800 more would be today, Hobert said: “We have thought over Mr. Ford's day's youthful thrift enthusiasts, position in the financial world and | mention must be made of Friday's They Just Come and Take Gold Youngsters ‘Do It Their Way in Star Shower and Win Out By Wanda von Kettler Saturday hadn't been set aside as any “particular’ day in ‘The Star-Seattle National Bank Shower of Gold campaign. Fri- day was “Baby Duy;” Monday is to be “Old Folks’ Day.” But Saturday, well— Yet nothing matters now. Sat- urday has no reason to be peeved due to the lack of a name. It automatically became “Young: ster Day” when the bank doors opened at 10 a, m. Young: escaping on this sixth ay of the week from school, flocked into the bank, some with mothers and dads, some by themselves. All clutched coupons and round silver half dollars, According to J. H.! Miner of the bank the youngsters | made the biggest showing of v! to the bank since the started four days ago. And on no day has the number been small. It was estimated that more than 1,500) accounts had been opened before the | pearance. It was further estimated that by Saturday night approxi- opened. Before speaking in detail of Satur- believe that his entrance into the co- | luckiest thrift baby. | operative plan would be of great ben- lefit to the workers of the nation, as they would share in all the profits of our bank.” Under the co-operative system, 4 per cent Interest te paid on deposits. Then, after expenses, including re- turn on capital stock, are paid, the profits are divided among the itorn in the form of dividends. If Ford goes into t cial observers ‘ake it ever ed. REGISTRATION TOTALS 92,900 Figures Show No Great Election Interest Registration of Seattle voters for the November election has reached & total of 92,900, according to EB. B. Coffin, chief registration clerk. This is a normal figure. Last year, registration reached |for both 1920 and 1921, it is easily possible for the present twoyear period, which opened January 1, 1922, to equal or eclipse that mark. “A ight primary vote does not al- | ways indicate that the election bal- lots will fall below normal,” Coffin “Voters do not have \to register before the primary in tion.” While the registration total is cer tain to increase between now and the insues at 9 junusually heavy Throws Match in Pail of Gasoline John H. Wilder, 412 Columbia st., was severely burned about the head, jface and arms Friday night when vot jhe attempted to throw a bucket of flaming gasoline out of a window at his home. Mra, Wilder accidentally wet fire to the pail when she threw @ match into it after lighting a gas Jet. Wilder is in the city hospital. Forgery Charge Is Filed Against Two Charges of first degree forgery were filed in superior court Saturday against Irving Sangster, 19, and A. id Gettings, 26, They are accused of | passing a $30 forged check on J. | Brandel!, tailor, at 1025 Third ave. | account. | Besides being credited with a $1 account, each depositor will be given a Liberty Bell bank, [order to be eligible for the final elec- October 17, it is not expected that) ke will bring out an 131,000; but ais that included records ‘helt, young {rier peegee iw, | | The Seattle Star Thrift Coupon Worth 50 Cents; Cut It Out HE SEATTLE STAR has arranged with the Seattle National Bank, Second ave. | and Columbia St., to help every Star reader H a bank account. This coupon is worth 50 cents to you. Cut out the coupon, the Seattle’ National Bank, October 4 to 14, ' inclusive, and you can open a $1 savings Betty eisets! Old Folks Com pete in HOME EDITION RALLY FAILS IN OTH McGraw’s Men Get Strong Hold on tmyder, «| MeQuilias, ». u Gold Chase|zi: An@ now for Old Fotks’ day! kiddies had their's Friday. Confident there are many elderly persons in Seattle and the North-| west who would like to open savings | accounts elther for themselves or for | young friends, children or) The & prize of $10 to encourage a pants ESSAYS MUST BE IN MONDAY NIGHT Don't forget that: Every Seattle baby born during the Thrift campaign—it closes || Saturday night ,Oct. 14—will be given a savings account of $1 and || a Liberty savings bank. No de- |! posit is required. Merely take a |) doctor's certificate showing age || of baby, to the Seattle National | bank, School essay writers competing for the $25 prize on “What The |! Star's Thrift Campaign Means to |) Seattle,” must have their easaya || in The Star office by Monday night. First prize, $25: second, |) $15; ten $1 prizes. No essay muet |! contain more than 300 words. |} That's all. Get busy, Send your essay to Thrift Editor, The Star. “Never too old to begin to save!" ‘That's the slogan for Monday. The oldest person opening a savings ac- count that day at the Seattle Na- tional bank will be given a cash prize of $10, in addition to 50 cents which every savings depositor is given free, Old persons will be made welcome and given careful and courteous con- | sideration by the bank clerks. They are asked to clip The Star's coupon, (Turn to Page 4, Column 2) Take it with 50 cents to | Meusel then too! | Kelly out, Mays to Pipp, on a ta) The players filed into the club- houses. Heinie Groh and Babe the battlers of yesterday's game, arrived at about the same time. Heinie,"—" ‘Lo, Babe,” in to get Into their uniforms. Big drops of rain started to spill down again at 12:45 and the bleach ers became a sea of umbrellas. The Yanks, In the white uniforms lof the home club, were first on the field. They received a bis hand as they sauntered In ‘from the cen- |ter field gate. Lew Liewellyn, a tall, lanky col- lege rookie, went to the mound when the Yanks started batting practice. The rain was spitting down steadily and the players look- ed doubtfully up at the skies, Seeming to be the favorites of the day, the Giants caused a big outburst from the stands when they entered the field. Rain continued to fall intermit- tently. It was very light, however, and seemed to be working no dam- age to the infield and only little annoyance to the spectators. FIRST INNING Giants—Bancroft beat out a hit over Mays’ head. It was a single, as Ward faited to reach 1¢ tm time. Groh out, jaye ANncyp' second. Frisch tied to Weusel. ie Meuse! out, Scott to Pipp. No runs, one hit, no errors. Yanks—Witt singled to center, Cunningham fielding the ball nicely. Dugan singled to left. Witt stopping at second. Ruth flied to Cunning- ham, who made the catch with his back against the center field fence. He heavily and was hurt, time being called, Witt reached "third easily after the catch. Dugan held first on the play. Cunningham re- sumed play, Pip hit to right for @ single, scoring Witt and sending Du- an to third. Pipp waa out trying for second, Cunningham to Kelly to Frisch. R. Meusel singled to right, Du Meusel reached see- yder'a throw to ot through Frisch. third when the ball to center field. — Scha Two runs, four hits, one SECOND INNING Glants—Young flied to R. Meusel, ia front of the plate, Cunnings walked, Snyder out, Dugan to Pipp. No runs, no hits, no errors. Yanks-—Ward flied to Young, who made the catch against the right field wall. Scott out, Bancroft to Kelly. Maya out. Frisch to Kelly, on play. No runs, no hits, ne err: The Yanks were trying to get a pmo in before rain stopped them, ‘hey were playing fast. THIRD INNING him stealing rolled fanned, error. Sign your name and address here: A picture of the bank appears here, || Giants-——McQuillan out, Schang to Pipp, on a bunt in front of the plate. Rancroft walked. Groh flied to R- |Meusel, Frisch flied to Ruth. Nv |runs, no hits, no errors, i |. Yanka—Witt flied to Cunningham, Dugan out, Groh to Kelly. Ruth |walked, Pipp flied to Young. No runs, no hits, no errors. FOURTH INNING Giante—E. Meusel gut, Dugan, to Pipp, on a bounder. Young singled (Turn to Page 4, Column @ i F on