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TUESDAY, OCTOBER ARMED MANIAC SLUGS CLERK! ~ 0 HE’S GONE ve | SAXONY STARTS ~ GENERAL STRIKE | Federal fadman Runs Amuck on Protest Against Jackson St. With Wrench Military Rule Running amuck with a mon BY CARL D. GROAT Key wrench, a ma terrorized ff the district around 23rd ave. and BERI 1 Jackson st, after he had twice ary 4 t invaded Smith's pharmacy, 2300 e * 7 Jackson st, menacing a | thruo that People and slugging W. S. Hage t t ' ing~ man, a druggist, Monday night © fe ‘ c Hegeman w v i nev ' te ¢ oe eral ¢ » M ay ng c fi f n fea when the man 1 in the t ing @oorway, brand « ¥ ey 1 t aie ere wrench ry ' f va his Yoice. The « ers fled f de safety and, aft * th ‘ at 3 tor fo of his 1 : aped H mene: few 8 Al aquad of motorcycle wer tad ae t called ou fa to the weedy ( Suc f radmnar Bonar Law, e:t-|jowed this uy ; nee the : ss Tuesday morning tigating | 5 attacked 1 av. after ag battle against a : et one goa Maes 08 lingering illness, HERE'S MORE ABOUT igeMan was knocked unconscious p a" y v ts LLOYD GEORGE | BONAR LAM ered tits STARTS ON PAG had escaped. 1 t not of Iss SADDENE D|\— a did not open tt reg TELA , Loy Hegeman the as! with de " an Law's € being about s old feot tm i ef th | inn i H s he WALTON TRIAL “ at ‘ 7 . L left row tie ona S ained DUE TOMORROW ete oat afi ace OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla, Oct . : ur | Ansl h fight was at ft 0,—Evidence om. th of the peace we} Bonar Law was a nt mittee of the Okiahoma ure 1 in eemaetiog’ anid o “ur Which investigated conduct of pr cunts This wrets ay tee \ , ons; and Mate... NACUE ministers of. the er It was ¢ » under the administration of G« westaih Matera a| that brought him to powe nor J. C. Walton, to be used in the} aa. we aia no Say ae ead of the government. impeachment proceedings aga we did not communicate with he was out of office the the executive, was presented to cabin! Yah tatadohein ainwe between Ireland and Eng house today. saan ‘Gould wish for a Hees | way to peace negotia The ‘Feport. dealt with the larg®| sasacious and helpful partner ulting treaty. The number of paroles and pardons! times of « » the house of commons granted by the governor. peta derious ‘poltticat | {med agalt king hands with All, of the evidente gathe ra ” wy > me and d ever wile to Against the governor is expected to at severed co-operation | treak up the treat be made public Thursé n the esl cuge ean) CHANGED HIS MIND senate starts hear on the im | ON IRISH QUESTION Feachment charges “Tt fills me with sadness to think ] nat Law's first appearance in _—- I shall never meet im again.” Ir tleal life te retirement TACOMA, Oct. 20.—Visitors return | was us of commons dur Ing from trips to the national park my 7 ge the Lloyd Ge waged Sunday reported that Paradise valley DIED M ARTY R to drive the bill mbodying fs shrouted in three feet of snow, j the treat nar Law w many} R for October * wan * just ot he showed apa PARIS, Oct. 30 t it > fi ih ss a t of ¢t na Pictures of he belies inte tare Walia Geta hak finally inter the war entente| .9 loser than .angthing ince the Party ney e ae ated mers ues aby | cr : aa che Gains the s : other thing to bring about his break: | ¢,, ons of England, be never. Making pertinent sug- down theless realized in 1922 that the gestions forms part of our The mental strain of making a de-j only possible solution for Ireland cision that might change the fate of Europe and the British empire left Bonar Law a broken man. When Bonar Law left the confer. ence room where he virtually ended the wartime entente of France and Engtand, he was scarcely able. to walk, his face was drawn and hag: was an infinitely larger measurg of independence than bad opposed. Hie frankly told his friends an the HARA public so. Sdéme of hfs old frienda were burt, but his mind was made up on a clear view the necessity of the situation and idea of service. For ex- ample, flashlight pictures of the Hallowe'en party —you can make them, aay with your Kodak. Te just means a few min- utes of photographic fun. gard, and his lips and hands trem-| he lent his support to the treaty.| bling, He came back Into office in, 1922 Andtellingyoa how is an He came {mnmiediately tothe room ot |{9 no gut of ambition but rather . ae the Eagies, in t 1 Crillon,|in an almost oppres: ¢ sense of important factor in our ser- where he slumped in a chair facing| duty. It was toward the close of vice. Tryitout. Askusabout \ hundred cager newspaper cor-|the adventure at Chanak, where; nts, and in a voice barely| British troops were massed to told them that the entente| make a stand if necessary against ng intensely from throat trouble | followers each commanded. that which he} of} s at last virtually ended. the rising Turks, who, under Mus- Bonar Law’s secretary told the|tapha Kemal and the yourig bloods |writer that Bonar Law's health—|of the race, were sweeping back ever very strong—was broken in| !nto Europe. }that fateful two hours at the confer-| Early in October, 1922, the Lloyd lence table in the Quai d’Ornay. ree party began to crumble. | From that time on the decline waa | Many of the small leaders In tho rapid and he was soon forced to re-| Party who played their part in sign ax premier altho he retained of.| *pporting the conservative hier-| | fice several months after he was suf-| archy, resigned, taking away the | Bonar Law came Into power at a! THE SEATTLE g She Mothers Convicts lf ee WEALTH Rt l STARTS ON PAGE 1 The wcor “ i] t ry v Mrs. Johnson S. Smith A and Ore., © rhe t nto contact phere were sudd . to aie . ends, 1 t trage It | White he HOF means ha I here Johnson whit th her gray hair capping a} ® e q means all | face lit by nile, she walks | started » make heavier nd much more among them h ther toms, we b time n men are shunted by soctety | gloomy corridors he hydr And then? ‘otise to meditate wpon seid no use worryin towards ME Y ey of La appen for a as the hers do toward tal Tt for him on that last day, and when *—and for t he finally left late ht, told at t from co tt s to phone her if Leo v by then In his autoblography, “From Im lo | migrant to Inve Just published hey will t Prof. Pupin says 4 thing to them i Do not the young stars, the ver helping hand and a tender word ot And Mra. Smith gives them that, [fo get ; «of ceealt And th tell of the |% supr ron AM not a © time a nm court. | desrad atoms i says, “but 1 e a | yard ano omic weight 1 among the w ‘ort men at m Ww 1 t pop a woman be the ¢ € the her | shops. T f ha is The prisoners will tell you that|? aeons M Seaphgtn 2 LAC) Pies me Just as much ich led | walk to the shops was dramatic, Men | Osha Sssture ianda of ray yup to it, I only undertake to do| stopped to watch. So wept un " ne J ae ® oe ‘ the lites ctical things that tend/ ashamed. That's what her implied s youre oe the better natures of those | confidence in them meant, tas HERE'S MORE ABOUT “SSHOSPITAL | ARTS ON PAGE 1 to aroun HERE'S MORE ABOUT STARTS ON PAGE 1 counsel for Forbes, automobile accident October 25 at} Morse became so agitated that| Ninth ave. §. and Massachusetts st the hearing was recessed’ for 19 | The Jury found George O huck, | driver of the car, responsib! r | minutes to sive him time to re-/ Kelty's death: | | cover. Douglas filed a charge of recklens Morse then told the committee driving against. Ostapchuck, The | that if it were fairly determined|™an admitted driving at a high rato| |of speed. He was blinded by the ap- | that the government had paid more | | es igh or’ | proach of another car, ho raid, and| j than waa proper for the property | drove off the highway. His automo: | | he would refund the surplas to the| bile overturned | government, | dy Hd | MORTIME® AND | | FORBES ENEMIES | Thruout tne testimony regarding ans’ bureau | Forbes wa the conduct of the during the period Col. ve PROVE TRAVESTY ause there was nobody else in| sight to sibility of | Memorable meeting at the Cariton| director, has run the violent under 99 leaders! npire, | club, when the old ministry failed in} tone of Forbes’ enmity with Ellas Aitho Bonar Law took the action | its bid for support. |P, Mortimer. It culminated with | | Six months later it was evident hat his {liness, complicated by n ma- his|Ugnant throat trouble, wam sapping at resulted in England “rance, he “rance because in splittin, in of popular | tactgul manner of handling the situa-| his strength. A long rest on the con-| | tion. tinent was followed by a conference | “He told Poincare bluntly that Eng-| of specialiate in Parix, where he was land could not follow France in her| informed he could not resume his Projected occupation of the Ruhr, but | duties. at the Gare du Nord as he left to re-| He came back to England, the jturn to London he miy shook | ruddy tan on his cheeks looking curl. | | Poincare’s hand and said, “Well, 1| ously out of place with the worried, wa | wish you good luck and I hope you| despairing look in his eyes. His} succeed.” This incident was widely | resignation then was hardly a sur- reported in the French press and! prise. sayed Bonar Law from the bitter! This was the brief story of his rise outburst of press vituperation to} to the highest civilian office in Great} | which Lloyd George or any other | Britain and his resignation. statesman would have been subjected. . - And altho he took the action that France had been fearing and’ dread INDIANS DECIDE TO . ing, Bonar Law was regarded as a| Se aceioh | sreat friend of France. || CLAIM WATERFRONT Mticlaldom and diplomatic circles |were unanimous in expressions of LANDS IN GRIGAGD |deep regret and personal affection | ASHINGTOD Oct. 30. |for the quiet, stern Scotchman who | delegation of Potaw: face could take the most tion in Europe jally belove George E. Ryan IIl unpopular ac and remain person s, living ne Mayetta, , today notified Secretary of Interior Work that the 2,700 have de- after several council meet to claim ownership of land the members of their tribe clded, ings, at Minor Hospital | on the Michigan ave. waterfront 3 in Chicago, valued at $36,000,000. George ‘. Ryan, president of * : The delegation composed King County Democratic club, was ‘ ibe gar cade ey of Nunemskeet, who gave his age LatenGiiaaitreeitie site ; onday |) as 113 years, and Skineway, who It oo pe a pk pec i re #4 |) claims he is 110 years old. The S K of: eect rouble. rf hile #uf |) two aged Indians told of thelr re- ring and fearful lest an operation || moyul from the lake front in 1883 ght prove necessary, Ryan Tues. and declared that the land wan ‘a able to talk to bi rienda | was able to talk to bis friends) | given the Indians by # troaty telephone and expressed the! | «igned with Gen. Anthony Wayne Nope that he might soon his |} jn 1787 desk again, f Announcing DR. CURRY the opening of a new downtown store for the dis- EYESIGHT SPECIALIST play and sale of Back in the Old Location Arcade Building Known for Good Optical Work at Reasonable Prices automobiles, in the corner of tho Stuart Building, Fourth Avenue at University Street No Charge for Examination November 1 Open Thursds Glassos fitted only when needed H.C. & M. Curry, Optometrists and Opticians , Friday and Saturday Byenings ELDRIDGE BUICK COMPANY Heattle since 1908 200% Arende Bldg. Third Moor MA in-7208 Coroner Says It’s Hard to| Fix Responsibility the relattion by James M, Willlams, | Philadephia milk dealer, of Mortimer planning | elderly the story of Mra, jibe omen the ansistance of | BY & B. GROFF | Forbes, sitting at the table not Almost dally, reckless drivers far from the witness, half rose,| Malm or Kill innocent people on his face distorted with anger and| City streets, yet in a majority of cases the efforts of the pros- |snaried, “That's a lie! and wan only | restrained by the insistence of his| Cullng attorney and coroner personal counsel, Col. James Easby.| fill to bring Justice to guilty Smith, | drivers. This was the |W. H. Corson, Tuesday Corson 4s inclined to blame. the coroner's juries for the failure of proper prosecution. In numerous cases, the verdicts returned by such Juries have been traverties, totally at variance with the facts in the matter, he said, In many cases, | however, lack of evidence his hind: ered the jurors in placing blame | where it belongs. | In one ‘case, Corson said, the| fury returned a verdict blaming the It was thig hatred, Mortimer in.|{flver of one machine for an ac Jdent in which he purely the jtimated, that’ prompted “him: "to | victim of another driver's speed and }make public the many accusations | Lapaltist Horan c t bt | esness. The prosecuting at- } against Forbes concerning which h¢|iorney, disregarding the verdlet | | testified | ~ SUSPECT HELD | Tho revelation of the melodrama admisaton of. Coroner underlying the investigation begun | last Wednesday when Mortimer, his face hard and set, his yoice rasp: [ibe with repressed animus, brought most serious charges against Vorbex, Mortimer frankly |committee that for been wo friendly with For jhe, Mrs, Mortimer and Forbes had | veled together and there had oc- |ourred something that changed this| lintimacy to violent hatred, admitted to the months he had 4 that was HARD TO OBTAIN CONVICTING FACTS. “It {x almost impoesible fn some cages to get evidence which will in- flu © jury in the proper dire tion, correct in id Corson verdict superior “And when returned, a fury court will often reverse is Think Crash Victim May Be |" | | ‘The jurors on the other hand. as: | Taylor Murderer jwert that they return verdlots strictly in accordance with the evi Det, LOS ANGELES, 30.-A man |dence lald before them. | injured by a taxleab early today| In recent cases, a coroner's jury | and taken to the police station was|feturned a verdict strongly con. | placed under Investigation when the|(emning the driver of a machine | Inbol, “Hf, W. Sands” wag found] for the death ofa pedestrian, when sewed Inside his coat. Ho Iw about |'t seemed apparent the pedestrian the same height as Edward. 1) WA" at fault, Often the verdicts are a complete Surprise to the prosecuting attornoy and| coroner, blaming other Sands, missing valet of Willlam Dea mond Taylor, altho a little heavier, var ties and bears a close resemblance to par than those thought to be guilty. or him, according to pictures in pos onctalite hide at guilty, or sension pf the police. the, Wish of, the,ottlolals. t elton The man wos unconselous and clals (0 prone. cute, may have a fractured skull. While police hardly believe it pos sible that he fe the missing murder who {q thought to be in they took steps to summon eople in Hollywood well Three Are Injured as Scaffold Falls Three men were serlously injured Tuesday affernoon when a seaffold on the new Lakeview Apts, 911 Lake view bivd., collapsed, throwing them | fo the ground, The men, James Coyle, 3412 B, Howell sty G. W, Red. pect, Mexico, several quainted with Sands in order termine the identification Sands divappeared — immediately after the mysterious murder of Taylor, nearly two years ago DRIVERS _ ||: | man, But some day, the problem will be solved, Prof, Pupin believes. “And it will be solved the sooner ence becomes organized for tt, arch council has been de veloped as an outgrowth of the war Its work is not popularly understood yet, but soon I expect every person in the country to look upon it as the third arm of national defense—and jsome day It will be its first arm—a | | defense in peace as well as in war.” HERE'S MORE ABOUT DUSE STARTS ON PAGE 1 unbecoming manner, almost like a mid-victorian caricature, comes on the stage, We are asked to believe that she is Ellida—Ibsen’s ‘Mer. maid," and that her entrance (aa Ibsen wrote it) 1 almost like Aphrodite rising from the sea, Yet there is this elderly woman, without one subterfuge of stimu. Inting youth or even. sketchily visualizing the character she portrays. All around we hear murmurs and gasps—"‘Oh, what realism! If.only our American actresses could learn realism from her!’ Besides us De Pachemann, the pianist, is splitting our ear drums screaming “Divina, di- vinat" ONLY A FEW It WHAT DUS SAYS The entire sea of humanity js in a furore of enthusiasm. Yet we know that in all this mass of humanity only a few can hear a word that is spoken on the stage and of those few only a small percentage can understand the foreign tongue, Someone questions Morris’ showmanship in introducing Duse in this obscure Ibsen play. Yet we happen to know that Morris Gest chose, “Thy Will Be Done,” for the premiere and Duse—Duse who refuses to make up——rejected the Italian play hecause there is no entrance in jt for her. She would be on the stage at the rise of the curtain, The frail, white-haired woman with the glowing eyes, the beau: tifully modulated voice, the plas- tic pose, the expressive hands, is called before the curtain so many times: after the perform RK ance that it seems as if her strength would give out CALL HER BACK AGAIN AND AGAIN People stand, waving their arms, Others beat their, hands together until they call her back again and again, Many times tries to escape to her the gld_ actress dressing room, but the roar of America giving an unprecedented wel: come tothe ageless spirit of Mleanor Duse cannot bs ignored. Thru a gap in the curtain, members of her company ean be seen, arguing, gestioulating, per: suading her notto go Just yet xo sho returned to the footlights repeatedly, bowing and bowing, Just an old, whitehaired woman without make-up. New Hudson hotel, O'Brien, 508 Bastlake ave, plastering the building, Coyle ed a skull fracture, Redman has sev eral broken ribs, and O'Brien has a) broken foot, Redman and O'Brien were taken to the Columbus Sank | tarium and Coyle Wag treated at his home, * he} ‘ow in this country the Na-| | and G,/ PAGF 9 FREDERICK & NELS ON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET DOWISTARS STORE A Special Offering, Wednesday: 33-inch Silk Pongee 89¢ vor N opportunity to provide a generous supply of this fine silk Pongee for gift lingerie, handkerchiefs and other article Also useful for draperies and lamp shades. Width 33 inches. A special offering, Wednes- lay, 89¢ yard. TORE a Now Is the Time to Replenish Linen Supplies for the Winter Season Mercerized Cotton Damask 75c Yard In rose, pansy, cherry and dot patternings. 64 inches. At 75¢ yard. Width Mercerized Cotton Damask At 95c¢ Yard na Linen-finished Damask At ‘ 85c } Yard laund de Lis leat patternings, Width At 865¢ yard. n, rose, chrysan- patternings. At 95¢ t ba atte nd dot inches Fieu ily inches oak th yard. 64 NCH WIDTH tn combi- nation stripe, rose, lily, poppy, tulip and dot patternings. At 95¢ yard. | Fancy Mercerized Damask Linen-and-Cotton Damask , At $1.75 You Heavy quality linen-and- cotton mixed. In poppy, pansy and rose patternings. Width 70 Inches. At $1.75 yard. 70-inch Linen Damask At $2.25 Yard In poppy, lily of the val- ley and rose patternings. Width 70 inch At $2.25 yard. TABLE NAPKINS in pat- terns to match, $6.35 dozen. —DOWNSTAIRS STORE | At $1 00 Yard In - colored and white, Also colored border effects in lavender, green and _ pink. Width 64 Inches, At $1.00 yard. 70-inch Linen Damask | At $1.50 and $1.90 Yara Light weight linen Damask in assortment of attractive patterns, Width 70 inches. At $1.50 and $1.90 yard. Ex-Warden Lectures|Coast Theatrical BE. man, Pacific Coast, jhis home, Culver City, |short illness, it PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 30.—John- | 0. Child, son Smith, recently ousted by Gov. Pierce as warden at the state died October 25 peni- is now on a@ lecture tour, of a | Tuesday. he had | Sennett tentiary, speaking on tne tople, “Trials Prison Warden.” as field representative Bridegroom of Ten | Days Meets Dea TACOMA, Oct. 30.—Everett Ander-! First ave. son, a bridegroom of 10 days, was | Saturda: killed and his wife seriously injured | Mrs, Nellie M. |near Gig Harbor Inte last night/dren, Mrs. | when their machine ran off the rond| gene Clare, all of whom reside | into a deep ravine. | Seattle. LAST a Hole Range With Porcelain. Trinv in Blue, Winte or Gray $68.00 HE Capital Range, as #F inch oven, and duplex grate for wood or coal. A well-built, attractively designed Range at a very moderate price: $68.00. DOWNSTATRS STORE FREDERICK & NELSON Best Quality Water Coil, $2.00 on Prison Troubles) and Hotel Man Dies satrical afd hotel widely known all along the Cal., after a was learned here For the past three years been employed by Mack | the Sennett motion picture releases, KITES were hetd Monday th | for W. G. Clare, Seattle resident | since 1910, who died at his home, 619 W,, after a short illness . He is survived by his wife, Clare, and two chil: Jeanette Myer and Bu- pictured, has pole ished six-hole top, oven= door thermometer, 18- at of in .