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| Chases Her Over Seattle Streets and Cliff; Blames Brother in Love Trianglal nent | +4 n . . . WAT is $0 ‘sad An American Paper That Fights for Americanism 222° LATE EDITION ter? Riches can se- cure few things as gratifying as having e att TWO CENTS IN the tired old foot ¥ eC SEATTLE smooth out its wrin- kled brow of care-- or words to that ef- fect. Even the pris- on walls of a city cannot coop up the garden fever. Anda flivver may pass up with a sniff that homely old yard in the valley, but the yard owner has his goat. Per Year, by Mail, $5.00 to $9.00 Entered as Second Clase Matter May 3, 1899, at the Postoffios at Beattie, Wash, under the Act of Congress March 8, 1879 “VOLUME 22, NO. 148. a. SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, AUGU. Y 16, 1919. - - . _ Weather Forecast: 72"'#ht,924 Sunday, probably showa eatner VECASE: ers: moderate wind, mostly southerly: OAST IN DANGER! EXTRA Senator Dillingham’s immigra-— H A T A BOU T | tion bill, introduced yesterday adopting the Gulick plan, | means the repeal of the Asiatie _ exclusion law, and letting down: the bars to Japanese invasion” —Measure, if passed, to go inte effect July 1, 1920 —Would GON ' open doors to Oriental natural suddenly whipping « 12at10n and citizenship. | rar from his pocket, aft-' _ Unless the Pacific Coast acts determinedly, the Asiatit e his wife > f, John M. Cavalli, exclusion act and the so-called “gentlemen's agreeme 37 Momive st, cut the with Japan may be repealed. These slight safeg and then severed his own against Japanese invasion are to be removed, if a bill in windpipe, in an attempt at troduced yesterday by Senator Dillingham, republicam, suicide, on the street near Ninth ave. N. and John st. Of Vermont, former chairman of the United States immi shortly before noon Satur- gration commission, is passed. Both are near death at| __ In place of these restrictions, the Gulick plan is proposed. This p the city hospital. vides that beginning July 1, 1920, the number of aliens who may Cavalli scribbled a farewell note on ues vaca ache ce Seeding the United States shall be limited to 5 per cent of the number of idewalk, in which he de laliens already in the U. S.—and also of near relatives of those livin jelared, according to the police, he | had attempted murder and suicide to| here, students, and other special classes. prevent his brother from running | sh mig om lag Naturalization Part of Gulick Plan 4. Brandia, who lives at the Elks club, was riding in an automo The Dillingham bill, furthermore, would open the doors to Japanese naturalization — lihen fall. inoenecious, blood stream “The proposed measure,” says the statement accompanying the bill, “will by no jing from a deep gash acrons her | Means open the door to increased immigration from Asia on account of the small number throat. Half a block away he saw of Asiatics now in the country. The number of immigrants admissible annually under Cavalll slash bie own throat, fall. /the percentage plan will not exceed the average annual immigration from that source E WAS a little, rotund gob of a man, with a head as round and as bare, and about as devoid of beauty, as a pool ball But he had a two-carat diamond in his tie, and a gold-headed cane. She was with him; she was a hatchet-faced woman of past mid die age. Her hair was sparse, she had the lean, toughened look of the mother who had yanked up her brood of children in the midst of a farm kitchen, where the work was never done. . But when it came to clothes, she yas well attired. A superb hat. that didn't belong at all. ~ A traveling gown of finest ma Perial. She, too, had her hickory nut diamond enthroned on her right hand; the other hand was gloved in @ driving gauntlet. And, to cap the climax, he had on those new blue silk stockings of What about rents? a highty inetantancour hue if you Houses that four years ago rented for $30 a month suede toe slippers to match. =» are now $90. Flat and apartment house owners gener- ‘Meet And every ence ina write. | ally have boosted rents shamelessly, and are still boost- ™a would stoop down and run a e . ° Go soothing finger around the inside if ing them without actempting to give an excuse. ’ Today it is almost impossible for even a transient<to se- cure accommodations in the entire city, and the average work- ing man, with a family, finds it impossible to secure a house, a flat, anything. This condition is serious. If allowed to continue it will injure Seattle irreparably. Seattle has grown right-up to its population and it has no room for more. Hotels, apartments, flats, houses are needed by the dozen and the hundred, aye, by the thousand, in the case of the last. Rents today are just about impossible in this city. Landlords are without mercy, are flatly and frankly grab- bing all they can grab. Unless Seattle begins to solve this place-to-live problem it will stand still when it should be making a wonderful growth. And merely cussing the landlords will accomplish nothing. There are more tenants than rooms; more families than houses. While that condition exists rents will be outrageous, be sure of that. Maybe it was wheat, or oll, or whatever source ae ee ee And nothing, in all nature, is so sad as a fried oyster. FRATTHEN & fellow really gets the gardening fever, nothing will cure him. He will have a garden if he has to have it ina | three-inch pot in his bedroom. | x One Seattie man has a garden | 4 at the bottom of a canyon formed by the high walls of hotel and of-\ fice buildings. His garden doesn't . get much light, let alone sun, and ‘his chief exhibit is a squash vine = that probably never will be any . thing but vine, but he gave this | ts Mittle patch his best. Every morning he rushes out. in struggle to his feet, and slash at *— the ten minutes between a gulped a ap under the various exclusion laws, treaties and agreements now in force. ik 4 geal bacon > WHAT IS SEATTLE GOING TO DO ABOUT THIS? Police and ambulance were sum: | “While it is believed that the per cent limit plan would improve relations with Ori- moned, and as « crowd assembled /ental countries, and especially with Japan, by removing any possible cause of friction Cava Fg S-sang Rae sg Not jover immigration discrimination, the primary purpose of the bill is to fix a definite limit — to the future of laborers, particularly from Southern and Eastern Europe.” ‘ Usually his garden bears trophies FE \% of the night. cast there from hotel windows, Cigar stubs, torn pa The Star invites public note and comment on this subject. Maybe if everybody gets busy thinking something will be pers, old magazines, sometimes an ing to interpreters, it said: | The statement does not take into account the “near relatives,” picture brides and 1 eT stow thet Gascanted afver the done. “Goodbye, dear friends, Go arrest| students who will be admitted. Picture brides become laborers, do a man’s work in Tony Cavalll, 747 Monroe st. my field and shop, and incidentally bear children at a far greater rate than the whites, brother, who is trying to run away with my wife. | have « brother in| And the students who come here generally drift into the fields of labor. briea-brac of the departing guest, xe elt Send in your opinion. |. He uncovers his treasure trove + aaa your experience. : Blaine, $16,000 insurance and four According to V. S. McClatchy, of the Sacramento Bee, who has made an exhaustive — . a, ais teks obit oiouaind, Thanks. lots; have paid $600 on them. I leave | study of the Gulick plan, it would increase the Japanese population at a greater rate thar rE tes oben te comes them teeny Seeee gulleren at the present time. : Cavalli appears to be about 30 home and clears off his plot again, years of age. His wife is about the | * Gh: treeke up’ the cinders and. | | sxe |Allotment Small Part of Immigration , Glods, and pulls the weeds, and |@o@ | = ie | With approximately 150,000 J: the Coast, the Gulick pl admit, is in the delight of maki | h approximately 150, apanese on the Coast, the Gulick plan w : things grow. aera ace ENT Reach Agreement 7,500 more next year. P , a j "i mE nr face on noacnnn s s on Ships’ Wages, “But the allotment is only a small measure of the immigration which must be admit- grain, gets lose fun out of them A satisfactory wage agreement)ted under the Gulick plan,” says McClatchy. “Every immigrant who comes in ani an does this town mechanic | has been reached between officials | every one here is entitled to bring, or send for, a wife (and pictures brides are wi ith his cigar-crowned squash b rll atop tars hens 7 are tee | under Japan’s procedure) and certain relatives; and ‘students’ who may turn at once to’ vine. | laa Woks Vobuthe. Who! have bes labor, and those who claim to be the object of religious persecution must be admitted’ OWN on the bare flats | “Vennclens An ef.| Without limit estricti along Rainier valley | conference in San Francisco. An ef: | or restriction. \ =, . rm there is a front yard | fore will be rrange a simi-| _ “So that the allotment may be only one-half, or one-quarter, or even a smaller pro. that is worth attention CHICAGO, Aug. 16.—(Cnited members of the Homekeepers' League |ing will be formulated at a later date,|!F_ Nehedu private hip | portion of the actual immigration for theyear.” | As an ornament, it is | Press)—John F. Campbell and [of Seattle, Inc. and sympathizers | she salt i,m Baek rape te ‘lll ] leas than nothing; no city-planning | dohn K. Bunker, officials of the h in a monster With “no dairy products and noj J. ©. Brin 3 |Mi ° : 4 artist would do anything but sniff John F. Campbell company here bre. Weetern ave ad nel ney represented Local 12, Masters, | On Japanese m Generation ; " at this yard, but, just the same, were arrested toda charges | o) district u i Thus, in the year ending July, 1921, the immigration of Japanese would be more f it is potent with suggestion (Rigacesne Lg eel rol act. | during t *, Mich, aug. 16.—But | likely to approach 15,000 to 20,000 than the allotment of 7,500. A milch goat grazes in the yard, ¢ warrant alleges the two ex The pur worth $442,762, alleged < is ‘ ce bg A ree mie and a tiny kid butts itself about | acted an undue profit in the | said by officers gue, would|them to adopt the Mi h nd at April 1,| pags scart take Into account me birth rate within the United States. Dusty chickens that once were sale of $40,000 worth of sugar be to show the co sion men the} Many letters expressing confidence ras ant te gat |i n less than 20 years, it is estimated, there would be a Japanese population of a mile white sing the song of the fresh | prenanes irom Arbuckle Bree, number of seatt ymen who have|in the success of the movement and|today at the Detroit R sting |ion—and a large proportion of them would be voters! ese. of New York at $8.82 per hun: od boycott on dairy| sympathy with the league's ideals | company. Two concerns, well known | Congressman Albert Johnson, chairman of the house immigrati ittee, Ducks, dusty, too, but fat, wad. dred po and sold to retailers have been received, and Mrs. Red-|in the central west--the Fox River|to fight the Dillingham bill to the last ditch gration committee, gl die about the narrow confines of at $13 per hundredweight ington stated Saturday that she felt| Butter company 1 the H. L on tetas ae ‘the place, and one lone goose is sure that the work of the league! Brown company, ¢ »—were said —" acquiring gobs of yellow fat for With government investigat 1 somebody's Christmas dinner. ‘ing the city and sur- would soon show signs of success. to be owners of the . + PEPPER eemenrenmerenmm a That household hay solved the pounding vicinity for ' UNC] Z {| the federal building Saturday Weds White Girl {| Seattle will shortly have its own E, a d eggs appear on ite threst } r " Mig the ty manic. and the public market, where citizens can|® vduce association, in order to| number of figures. Le ™ oid as tho by magic, and the chil that a umber of seizures would ’ | 1) TACOMA, Aug. 16—H. M pro producy rhe vere +n’ dren of the family are, we venture be made before nightfall, Here’s a Chance HOARD iS TAKEN Vein eed Pk i hotel Keeper. }| PUY RRS. butter and produce at bed fen, 4 at at eae Mbt Pre sae, Siruren anew, that foodstuffs! a 7 al off : eg yg tS a ock prices, providing the city coun. | i— . es vanced In cost 83 per cent fat and healthy senile to Help Wounded § of Seattle, and Pearl Stackhouse, ( rock pri h providing. ty ity boa bs cetuneubdusthodabadunon, | ee: eee Novena 1 SA 7 A goat in not ne lo’ hotel, (| cil next Monday accepts the recom: | ee 3. Gill, credit manager of the Se- | ies, has furnished the city with a so orna ‘ . N DIEGO, Cal. Aug. 16 22, employed in | {| 1918, while shoes have advan 3 ec toeen emt Sci teed? be Aver ign detsy Soldier Get Job || uniter ‘states’ Marchal Wiltium|) were married here today by Jus j/mendation made by the councit|) Prettiest Legs in {| per ‘cent during te aia his proposition it is # And | ber of str in the vicinity ™ % Carse today seized a large quantity |) tee of the Peace Frank A. }/ finance committee ) P A Cc . }| Women's underwear has advan vd goat's milk’ i* richer and more | of Seattle which, under the juris Twenty-seven wounded soldier Magill, ‘The Stack e girl told The committee approved the ordi-|) aris Are Coming }} 130 per cont and ginghams 216 pee healthful than cow's milk and is | diction of the Jocal federal official are listed with the veterans’ wel e}) Jus Magill he is in (ne providing for the city's entry |; NEW YORK, Aug. 16.—-United {| c*®t Gill said that If the city pli produced from the odds and ends Arrests may not follow the s#eiz-| fare commission, and have not ob Montana and declared — Salo ‘/int we business. The ordi: |) Press).—T! ith the pret. {| 80 into socialized business or s! P of -vacant lot and wayside bush, | ures, it was stated ern-| tained jobs yet ) "such a eute little brown fellow | ries an appropriation of |) test in is"—take the }|@ Soviet government, it should # uite: the cow. desires rich fodder ent oan, Ta oh docks) pe and so nice that I couldn't re: ¢ r starting the market { Pari word for it—ts due in {|® dry goods store and handle ot! expensive mill feeds, and lotw of | will be seized an mar-| te there b eral authorities, ¢9 sist him,” {| Most of the couneiimen have sixni-|} New York tomorrow on the liner {| S°™Modities that them. ket, but tlo action te age t the any of th r } They obtained the marriage (/ fied a favorable attitude toward the |) La France. She is Mile Mistin: {| PME NeW . jot of folks “keep broke sup owners if it can’ be n that the claims in with the fatant United State Attorney |} license here jJordinance, and it is believed there |) guett, a dancer. ‘The American COSTS EITHER WAY ing a fitvvet that would do | supplies were not held with criminal, but the red tape ts slow unwind Green said that all the |) - | will be no opposition to passing It}) verdict must await her decision }} nae ara krrceis Ala. Aug. he © if they ifvested in a goat intent ing, and in the meantime they ge houses in Low Ange lea}? Salo's’ address does not appear (| Monday } on theatrical offers, it was said ederal authorities are investigate. | here today. ing complaints of profiteering by undertakers, es 7 or. ar nnd San claeo are bulging « directory here. H Produce merchants are protesting tg ent of feathered Unless pices of butter, eggs, milk| will be up against it unlews jobs | and Franch r in the city 4 ae. a00F" Jand: meat: some. down immediately,|. are foes ham. ‘with hoarded products of all kinds, |) ‘against the proposed market. Capt. |) \ ‘