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WEATHER The paper with a 15,000 daily circulation lead over its nearest competitor Second Clase Mat ia Tonight and Saturday, rain: mod g erate southerly wind. 4 Temperature Last 24M . , * Maximum, 57, Minimum, 52. Teday noon, 57, : . _ Bast ‘ae fii pe ‘ . yOLU ME 24. NO. 204, . Wash, under the Act of Congress March 3, =| The seattle Sta 167s, Per Year, by Mall, #5 to 99 Howdy, folks! Money talks,” but nowadays a dollar sorely ] needs an amplifier. . “gege “The Golden Haze of College Days fs no longer a popular song at An napolls. eee Now that Harold MeCormick has married Ganna Walska, he walsky i gonna ee CRUEL AND UNUSUAL PUN. | ISHMENT The fF. W. W. are causing a lot of trouble in Portland. Why not sentence them to California for life? In dayes of olde, whenne nights were colde, A girle, whenne wythe @ feller, If she hade sande, woulde holde hys Le hande, | And thynke she was a heller. : But nowe a dayes, whenne ice doth | glaze Ye lakes ande them— } Ye daymes get mad if every ledde | Don't wrappe themselves arrounde them, alle that bounds Itoyd George has resigned as prime minister of England. No long @r will the rest of Europe be able to Me back and “let George do it.” eee Weuld you sy thes = thy lieyd George adminia- tration expired by reasv® of en overdone of crises? Seattle man inherits a million dol. | lars. Now he can buy his winter / coal. eee A RATTLING GOOD HOLIDAY Tomorrow is “Ford Day.” Lo eal fivverites will celebrate with 8 big blowout, eee Suggested song for the occasion “It's always fair weather when good Mitvvers collide together. eee Es “Chief Severyns Spreads Police Dragnet.” —Headline. “Carter,” barked the city editor to The Star official photographer, “get mea photograph of that dragnet, | end don't come back without it.” eee UP IN SMOKE At the 0. A. C. game Satarday * * * JAP COLONISTS WINNING HERE Decrease in Shows Victory, Claim By Robert B. Bermann Japan has already fought and won the first great battle in her peaceful war of penetration on the Pacific coast of, the United States, This is the construction placed by Councilman Phil Tindall on figures announced Friday by United States Immigration Com- missioner Luther Weedin, show- ing that Japanese immigration has decreased 42 per cent in the ! Immigration | * * * Dr. Cook Now Is Texas Oil Trust Promoter m ¢ HOTEL LEASE | - AULSETTL Seattle Project to Be Realized in 1924 The Olymple, niunity hotel, will be in operation for the summer season of 1924, Seattle's com ® favorable lease having been concluded between the di the corporation and Frank A. Dudley, president of the Unted Hotels Co. of Amer | fea, one of the largest and best } financed hotel operating com. panies in the world, whereby that ompany will farnish ate the hotel, This announcement follows a meeting of the directors of the hotel Thursday morning, when | details of the lease, which tas been approved as to form by the legal committee and recommend: | ed by committee, were gone and Vrank Waterhouse, president of the Community Hot corporation and also of the Chamber of Com- meree, was authorized to accept | | the lease formally. | Of special Mmterest to Beattle folk announcement that Roy} now managing director | Astoria of New York. | himself with Dudley | | | | rectors of i's rruthers of the Waldorf has lin the lease. Carruthers, who began his hotel | career in Seattle, has always edi great fallh in this city, and the hotel corporation has been anxious to have FORT WORTH, Tex, Oct. 20. him amectated with (he optrating North Pole, Eakimes, gum 4rovl company, not” only ot his and Copenhbagen-—- jubfity, but of his ppal interest | Memories of thy > als nage a successful hotel pros here, Papo apparen' ny, Dro Pred tis expinined. erick A. Cook. The man whore an-| President Watefhouse’s formal nouncement that he had discovered statement Thursday was in part as the North Pote created an interna ,vonal furore a few years ago, will talk about them unreservedly if} you mention them at his office | here. | But epedk of an off company }that might be sold and Cook will do more talking. He has acquired about 100 companies so far, and | he's in the market for more. | The former explorer has changed Winner and loser of a couple of tunes, according to his own story, now heads a merger producing and stock- his vocation, He's a petroleum | technologist. “And it's ike exploration, too,’ [he says, cheerfully, “It has its jupe and downs.” j follows: | To the Bondholders and Stockholders | of the Community Hotel Corpora | thon of Seattle | 1am giad to be able to advise you | that your directors have closed a} lease of your new hotel on what they | believe to be very favorable terms, | which are as followr: Name of lessor—Community Hotet Corporation of Seatile, | Name of lessee—Olymple Hotel Co. | Name of hotel—Hotel Olympic. | The leasing company, which will furnish and operate the ho- | tel, bas a paid-up capital stock of | $750,000.00, | Its officers are as follows: President—Frank A. Dudley, president of the United Hotels juded Mra. spot Mrs. Clara Phillips, | Angeles on a charge | Meadows to death with a hammer. Trial; LOS ANGELES, Cal., Oct. —Clara Phillips cusers In the Los Angeles “prim: itive murder” case today. As she went to trial charged with luring a love rival to a se | and savagely beat- ing her to death with a hammer, the case looked more dreadful against her than ever. Phillips, was as unconcerned and calm as the day she was brought faced FR IDAY, or TOBE R 2, 1922. ho.went on trial Friday at Los 7 brutally “beating Miss Alberta ‘Accused Woman Is Unconcerned as the Sensational Case Comes Up for Chum to Be Called Phillips, who will tell of riding with her ac- @ lonely hillxide, bying she was intimate with him, eyewitneasing of the quarrel between Mrs. Phillips and Mrs. Meadows which resulted in the death of the latter. To forestall the defe the unwritten law, the state at the last moment divulged the discovery to Mrs, Phillips and Mrs. Meadows to! nse‘s claim sl LAW 0 HE MEN ARE KILLED IN MINE! [HOME] Til T EAD 12 WORKERS NEW CABINET TRAPPED BY FOR BRITAIN Invitation of King E ight Killed and Is Conditionally Accepted; Lloyd, George to Fight BY LLOYD ALLEN LONDON, Oct. 2.—Andrew Bonar Law started to choose bis ministers today as Lioyd George considered formation of a new center party which would com- bine all |\berals under his lead- ership. Lioyd George would announce his future plans at a speech at Leeds tomorrow, it was believed. Bonar Law, cond ly ree to form a ministry, leaders of the unionist from the coalition gov who accepted of consult the invitation od whoxe bolt lly King party, ernment yestereay caused tne down. 1 of Lioyd George, who was at| ead of the government for six rm DERBY AND CURZON WILLING TO AID It Lord Derby and Lord: Curzon | both intimated their willingness nerve in the ca t of Bonar Law This was not entirely unexpected be- known to have had cause they were | anti-Georgtan leanin The Canadian-born ;Who may become the head next government is to give nite acceptance to his majesty is chosen leader party. Altho this of is taken for some time. business man | the | a defi if he of the unionist | as al was authoritatively stated et have to| ‘Oregon Metropolis Hears of |foregone conclusion, it will not be} known definitely until the parlia-| } mentary unionists meet Saturday or Sunday. Lioyd George left London this af-| ternoon for Leeds. make a speech tomorroy The former premier plans to make |short speeches en route, where he is to! Pending formation of a new gov- ernment, mains in control. the coalition ministry re- In case Bonar Law ts successful in forming a government, it is almost jaswured that there will be a general | election. many were of the opinion that date, EARLY ELECTION | IS BEING URGED for the general election. |20 Are Injured in California Auto Plunges Over January or February were various-|being arrested for where they quar-|ly mentioned as the months in which | scores of admitted members of reled over Phillips, Mra. Meadows de-|the general election may be held, but| organization, told the police it! day night Mrs, Caffee will repeat her alleged | would be called at a much sooner] picket who could find a freight .j coming Three factors will be taken into| trial Worker, a Seattle consideration in selecting the time | sald to be devoted to the interests These are: two leaders in the movement. | jingford |brakes refused to hold and his auto jhigh. University students are going to last year thru the port of Seattle. | 5 cates formed during woe | Co, of America, which is the larg- | back from. Tucson, Ariz, a city | mat moment divulged the discovery | 1—The sooner the election is held, burn $40,000 worth of Stadium “Japanese propagandists will doubt. | “boom days. 4 | ¢s and one of the most success. | seething with indignation at the ap Phillige’ codduch with dither ‘tea the less opportunity Lloyd George a bonds. less claim that this is due to the fact If fortune smiles on him again, ful hotel operating companies in alling crime She b never ad 1S magaag hag taste neti agli | will have to form a strong center io. Some bondfiret that the Japanese government ix now |Cook may head northward some of/ the world jmitted ha. billed Alberta, Meadows | 11 1 not heed irreproachabie. "| Dartye sien sveuid Inciade nat only 5 eee living up to the ‘gentlemen's agree |these days. ] Vice president—C, D. Stimson, | #d bas refused to discuss any par in. | acuthoeiadion f the insanity | 28 own ‘followers in the liberal trnow “ 0, It i} rplane, ‘ }ticulars of the slaying. te: eee bs . ‘ D4 , 0 various ¥ Mis.—My luck leaves me at cards. | ment,’ and that it ts doing Its utmost : te nt wi t be cif hve 9d bd Seattle ; by send ia tecateon fied to over-| Plea, reports of alienists who have Le , but those ot yariou shades of Mr.--It isn't your luck, dear, it's Jiscourage immigration to the| tho,” he adds six machines, a Second vice president and i ; fen barrier held back |ObServed Mrs. Phillips since her ar-| 904s. OPinton whe are now, idanti- Your common sense. | ited State vt dail Gectnyed ts ot the same tye and working in| (Turn to Page 4, Column 1) Lnowiae: 6 prooden barrier held back sce will-be introduced es with other parties. SES ng the repor at this is! pairn—that’s the system. owd of 5 5 2 case the election is deferred, « ” twaddl ; tr Judge Frederick Houser took the T D, " ‘Alleged Rum Runners Held."—/|mere twaddle. Anyone familiar with| Give him a moment to dream as Judge Fr | (Turn to Page 4, Column 4) the Star. Didya ever drink any|the fiagrant way in which the ‘gen-|ho gasea out of his skyscraper of | MORK GLAND | petit “puitips br wipe | Three Men Die ii in | ; cai it A ? tlemen’s agreement’ has been vio-| fice, and he'll tell you of the frozen rs. Phillips, brought In by an- ee Te nase linted tor the last 10 years and more | Noru's value to tne word, Het! THIEVES BUSY [ott cstzance, sat, slim and quiet, Wreck on Wabash If your menetic should leav'e you | will realize the utter absurdity of the twit you the 5 ties: toed: a w | us toning closely to the opening pro-| WILLIAMSPORT, Ind., Oct. 20. Don't you wear no black ; |Jap government undergoing so com me day come from Arctic w CHICAGO, Oct. 20.-— New opera elegans g She wore a trim velvet} Three men lost their lives in rag It takes a loving mommer | plete a change of heart lthat in ( land's mountains |tlons of the band of robbers seeking | hat and a gray traveling suit, the/ wreck of fst passenger train No. | | To bring a daddy back. | “It's all camoufiage—a smoke | which aren't always tcy—roams ant-| life-giving glands of virile young men | *@™me she wore:when she was ar-/2 on the Wabash here at-midnight } dans | sereen. The Japs realize that the | ral life sufficient to care for much | were reported to police today ed at Tucson, Ariz., following ber | Five injured were taken to Lafay-| a Perhaps the reason Lady Duff-| seed has been sown—that enough [or the world's needs. Anthony Tonst, 19, reported to au-| fight from the city. salted the | 7tt®, for treatment. , No» passengers —_— . = Gordon, the famous modiste, went of their nation have already ‘a ak |thorities that he was attacked b; The ye of -the set ey veplicm were among the casualties, bankrupt ix because she bought @| gained a foothold in the Pacific . es two young men wearing the white| ames of the 22 members of the jury 4 é 0 ne | * " verful DE LINE S TO | suits of hosp! nes, The attack | Panel and 12 were seated in the jury A Bonfire Fi ht a on ee | Xijauece calony tor thute pron: -| CLINES [Occurred in Ch vr iat aitisak |box., Of these, five were women. | Woman Candidate g 4 bio Anim | ny 25 or. 30 years tence, and, | OUST SAWYE R jon, the West, A tor’ sate: (Mira dora: Weaver | Issues Challenge) 10s ANGELES, Oct. 20—cot f : Prosecuting Attorney Malcolm | therefore, there is no longer any | : “They sa needed a Leman PFN" ry hry ro re ane 4 eave) or PAUL, Minn., Oct, 20.—Annie| lege rivalry turned into a riot on [MEP = Douglas has secured a writ of | necessity for further immigra- | WASHINGTON, Oct. 20—Presl-| ana tried to force m DEY eee eoeming of the tclal, and che| Dickie Olson, first woman nominee} the campus of the University of § mandate from the supreme court | tion, dent Harding will not grant the de-/|them,” said Tonsl, “but after a hard|to the opening of the trial, and she ck ie matt by ; oman a“ Pa |. California, southern branch, exrty ; against Judge Austin &. Grif. | | saith intele: Atanatiteale nd of the American Legion for the | struggle T encaped.” repeatedly embraced the man for|for the United States senate, today |” tOusv and more than eO students 3 fhe | ‘So, with typieal wile, they he moval of his personal physician, | whom she Is alleged to have killed challenged Senator Frank B. Kellogg! Were injured, fatally. 5 . he legal {S¢ized upon the opportunity to show C.'B. Sawyer, ax head of| Alberta Meadows. \to @ series of debates on the tariff] je injured, one pertiage fatally. As we understand eal | ow moral and. high-minded they are an * FEARING Crowds gathered early for the| bill, the Newberry case and the ad.|_ Jt was the traditional bonfire fight terminology, Judge Griffiths is ‘the Americans don’t ral hospitalization board, it v & 1 - And ad: | when University of Southern Califor: 4 enjoined from making faces at iz Malcolm. eee | cia th test regard for the|_ The president is known to feel that we have ine eee: bia 4 & e amy asst criteized by the When the Standara Of} cut thelr Honorable United States. But the| Sawyer was unjustly crit a i ; he Tecent melon the fortune of John D. | Y eace ie proud, We don't go|l2sion and that while the hospita % Rocketeller, Jr., was increased $64,-| 13m not wanted. And so,/construction program had been de %@900.000. |where my Pang ae liayed, the doctor's handling of the behold! No more Japanese are go ete ode Bright lad, that Johnny Rocke Joa.’ | matter will be Justified in the end feller. fetan pogo Ih in very nice—Iit you| ‘Sawyer today declined to make any bd . ys comment on the Legion's demand © A-Wisconsin man has paid $160 for |49n't consider the thousands of Japa! ce mT ST state no was surprised | sconsin man has paid $15 s | other th ate he was surprisec a half interest in a honey bee. | (Turn to Page 4, Column 1) jat the action. He sald he might tasue ‘Wouldn't it be a joke if he got the oo \a statement later. hind hait? . THEY LICK | CLEAN | Jack Spratt likes jazz an’ that— | is wife wants classic song; } . THE ETHER Why don't the psycho-analysts tn. | divoret He was ¢ Pedy Vextigate the things a man scratches 0,06 eck i ae te | on a-pad while waiting for a tele |1r® book which listed Pe eneticn?. |from one to five wives each In Chi +, cago, Hogan ttle Creek, St. Jo: Wd wonder who won the first prize |Chillicothe, Steubenville and Colum . for blooded tracte bus, Ohio; Baltimore, Bloomington 3 see iL; Memphis and Paris, Tenn. Fd x | Pittsburg, and Monessen, Pa.; Mason “| [L'L GEE GEE, TH’ OFFICE | | City, lowa, and St. Loul : SEZ Jones claimed he lived with hin theee’s a | | first wife 16 years in Oxford, Pa on # party | jand then his “marryin’ spree” began | | He said he had been married 14 times - ” j this year oes | Police declared Jonen had served | Well, well, well! Here we are|22 months In a Pennsylvania pon again! The end of a perfect day! {tertiary for bigamy. »,’ they nay, us for some e much pained by this, bec COLORED MAN HAS 40 WIVES Ort, 20—Rev. Bill ° DAYTON, Me head to bly 6 coupla bets | Jone m, negro Dr her, admitted hay ing 40 wives today. _ And now th y wet along. | Kev, Bill said he had never been | ted when arned here today from source » to the executive | | ‘The Indiang of the Prazilian wilds | eat rate, alligators and par ots, snakes, opening of | IS POSTPONED, | CHICAGO, Oct Federal Judge James H. Wilkerson today postponed | hearing of the motion of the railroad | ehopmen for disolution of the Daugh erty injunction until November 6 action followed a motion by 20. Mrs | the lips, would The the the court doors were open a doubt jline stood on the eighth floor of thie trial and hall of records. At one time it was intimated that Phillips might have recourse to “unwritten law” Jand that her husband, the stand and te: Ar take as her defense | ministration’s attitude on the soldier bonus. |. The challenge came as a climax to one of the most energetic cam paulgns for a senatorial seat on record. long befo’ |Steamer Sinks and ‘mour Phil- Assistant District Attorney Edwin L, | tify regarding his alleged ilicit rela- Wolsl, that the case be postponed in| tions with the dead girl. es Three Lose Lives lorder to give the government suffi-| Herrington, defense counsel, dented | B., Oct. 20—Three} leient time to prepare an answer to! this, but would make no statement | Pé ved to have lost the arguments of the shopmen. jin regard to the plea he would pre-| their lives todey when the passenger Donald R. Richberg, attorney for | sent steamer “Dream” sank tn the St | the shopmen, resisted the motion, but The state will call Peggy Caffee,| John river, according to reports re: | was overruled. rmer chorus girl chum of Mrs, ceived here | SSitisstrsstisstictitiesiiiT Sansa Capt. Lloyd George Resigns again, things were rapidly going to pot, he intervened to save the situation, He has always had powerful ene- (EDITORIAL) LOYD GEORGE British premier puts a L resignation as war. Time and the ill Europe when him to remains » anxious seat. Much depends 7 4 6 va aggre va oF a or, mies, both in England and on the upon he choice oO 1s successor. A %e 3 % : continent, who consigned 20 is i bit too ‘ ‘ a. ”* ay apg Bay in "dias hades. daily, but the fact 1 lin a eb that he not only saved |# acter of the new prime min depend the question of peace or war. | Lloyd George has been one of the ope after few sane leaders left in Eur ister ma 54 ¥ bacon for force of character, but has annihilation more than or Britain's her repeatedly by sheer dragged Europe back from the brink of self- ice even seeasesaatesesstesaeestesatestessessaesses: | against Europe’s own violent pro- testations, To cite only the most recent illus- tration, there can be little doubt that but for Lloyd George Europe would now be in turmoil as the result of Turkey's demands for readmission into the European concert. His lone stand in this crisis temporarily saved the day for the allied nations. What attitude will his successor take in this and in other grave crises just ahead Not only all Europe, but the world, very much including America, is tremendously interested in the answer, {stopped the fr jcating i ltt a ‘gasoline bombs” to destroy the ma rally preceding the Southern’s foot |ball game with Occidental college. landed at the foot of the declivity™ nia students attempted by the use of ja tangled piece of wreckage. son was rescued by a passing motor — jestic woodpile the night before the jist and taken to his home, severely — {i Jen nose and cuts and bruises, The invaders arrived in automo- biles and, hurling “gasoline soaked | rts,” succeeded in setting the fire, but student guards engaged the at. tackers in combat, which brought clubs, sticks and stones into play. Police and firemen, attracted by /hit a new low here today when they called out reserves and |were sold at the rate of 17,300 to the after a stu: pound sterling. This ts approximates the blaze, s only dent had been seriously injured The most seriously hurt Roger Vargas, 18, possible spinal fracture; Ralph Hermann, 20, severe cuts on face; L, R, Cummings, cuts on head; Herbert Stalbert, cuts on head WILHELM IS _ NOT MARRIED LONDON, Oct. 20.—Reports indi. that the kaiser was married, which flew thick and fast in n capitals, were set at rest when word was received from Doorn that Wilhelm had merely insoribed at the registrar's office that he would be married November 5. The first cable received here from Doorn newspaper correspondent ated, “Today kaiser bridegroom,” subsequent o inseribed at the today, A officially office at Doorn that marr registrar's ge would 4 | | | | chan fail 1s clogged with ‘Then we will test the fairness of the courts,” |Marks Down Again ————— anti WO CENTS IN SEATON EXPLOSION! Four Injured in Tragedy in Co-— Operative Mine M'CURTAIN, Okla., Oct. 20-5 Eight miners four se plosion in the Progres company’s mine, near here, to- day. The explosion entombed the workers. Rescue squads reached them shorte ~ after the blast, but eight ae were already dead, is Reports from attending phystelane. 1 the four inared had but slight e to rec A thot fired by ope of the miners” loowen the coal was believed to) have caused the explosion. The 12 miners were pioneers this field. They were operating workings on a co-operative basis, LWW Moun INTO PORTLAN to Invasion Ordered out of Portland the progress of the ciland dating te 250 Industrial Workers of ‘the © World were making Seattle tl headquarters Friday, Second ave. eee PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. Confirmation of reports that rs: W. W. were moving from West ern and Northwestern points to ward Portland was local police here today. William Ford, head of the local W. W. organization, who was leased yesterday on $500 bail vagrancy that every “foot-lo passenger train to carry him, “on to Portland.” q Verne Smith, editor of the Indus>” newspap the I W. W., declared that peaceful means would be emplo in picketing the waterfront strike here. “Violence ts prohibited, but I W. W. will “keep coming until our member Smith said. information tended to the statements of these Police roborate There was no rioting. Kven Wednesday night, when nearly” 400 = alleged = vagrants «were hauled in by the police dragnet, there were no disturbances, Those arrested appeared to be mindful of the warnings of their (Turn to Page 4, Column Column 3) Bank; Driver Hurt — Charles E. Peterson, 4310 Burke . tried to avoid hitting another |] automobile Thursday night at Walk” ave. and Ewing st. His plunged over an embankment 60 feet The auto turned a somersault and Peter injured. He is suffering from a brok« Dollar Buys 3 LONDON, Oct, 20.—German marks y 8,800 to the American dollar. A HOME READY FOR YOU Everything modern and ready to move in. Seattle's Real Estate dealers are offering many good homes, NISHED BUNGALOW New and nifty; new furniture; has 5 nice rooms, with a built-in conventences; finished in eld ivory; overlooks Lake Washington at Sew: two blocks to munieip ing beach and poulNvet, is a real snap. Price 50 cash, balance as rent, rigage. No Turn to the classified columns and let this dealer show you this comfy little home,