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iU.S.SENATORS OPPOSE JAPANESE STEAL! An American Paper That Fights for Americanism e Seattle Star Entered as Second Class Matter May 9, 1899, at the Postoffice at Beattie, Wash, under the Act of Congress March 8, 1879 Tides in Seattle LATE EDITION SATURDAY = | SUNDAY AUG. 25 | AUG, First Wigh Tide | | First Mish Tide tae am : 2:52 a om. 10.2 te First Low r \° $2 om ir TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE Per Year, by Mall, $5.00 to $9.00 tt Tide at Tide be te 22. NO. 154. SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, AUG T 23, 1919 ight and Sunday, fair; mod- CCASU+ erate northeasterly winds, winds. STAR BUYS LUDENDORFF BOOK Would Change Treaty for “Yom Nowsnap HeSlashed Newspapersto eturn of Land to China forgives! Pay $500,000 committee today voted, 9 to 8, to strike the word “Japan” from the provis- for War Story From Bed in Hospital She Goes to Husband Who f th th whe f y’ 's Loved Too Madly ions o: e peace treaty relating to e disposition of Germany’s rights in | SHE SOBS AS HE DIES| Shantung and insert the word “China.” The effect of the amendment is to | Meco chiatric NEW YORK, Aug. 23.—At the highest price provide for the return of the territory to China. Senator Lodge made the = gry is« cusp lover paid for Northwest publication privileges, The motion. Senator McCumber, republican, voted with the democrats against Seattle Star has purchased the rights to print seri- [J it. Otherwise the vote was on party lines. yh General Ludendorff’s book on the German side : of the war, in Seattle and vicinity. This is the first amendment to the treaty) The price paid to the McClure Newspaper Syn- LU} [} Weather Forecast: | | ped by the Ionian sea, the twin villages of Siderno and Gerace poke their broken roofs above erly agent of 9 to 8, Senator McCumber voting with the democrats, to strike out the word ‘Japan’ wherever it appears in) articles 156, 157 and 158, of the treaty at Versailles, and) insert therefor the word ‘China.’ The effect of this is that the committee on foreign relations favors the return of German concess*sns in Shantung to China, instead of to) SECOND YANK FORCE GOES ACROSS BORDER AUSTIN, Texas, Aug. 23.—The adjutant general's de- partment received a telegram today stating that a unit of the United States army and Ranger Captain Charles F. Stevens, with five rangers, crossed into Mexico from) Fabens early today. Fabens is about 20 miles east of | El Paso, | The telegram was from Ranger W. J. Robertson. It) igave no details as to what prompted the crossing of troops |into Mexico at that jase ee SPEEDING BANDIT HUNT MARFA, Tex., Aug. 23—The | Since Tuesday's cros#ing into bandit hunt in Northern Mex- | Mexico the American forces have jeo by American troops com killed four outlaws In one encounter tinued today without sign of a | and an aviator killed a sniper letap. Walking their horses and While return to the American side pack mules along steep trails, of the border has been expected, | the United States cavalrymen | reports from the expedition indicate | he reveals the en- fact that not much of fg eating their terbaccer even grandpap is smo! and probably you va an entire precinct to One good squirter. Pipe smoker is in the in many windows we fine pipes to be sold at the better grade of only thing smokable Rot advanced in price, le of cigars has fallen off leveled at the spruce produc Within 15 years the Japanese in Hawaii will have assumed political control of the islands, ac- cording to Dr. George L. Cady, secretary of the American Missionary society, who is in Seattle to visit relatives. from 107,000 to 120,000 Japanese in the Hawaiian Islands today. The Japanese attend American public schools, but also are compelled to attend Japanese schools, which are run in connection with Buddhist tem- ples, according to Dr. Cady. Japanese dominate Hawaii in population now. In a few years they will control it politically be- cause Jap children born there are American citi- zens. What has happened and is happening in Hawaii, now threatens Seattle, the Northwest, the coast. Shall we permit the West to be Japanized? DONOVAN COMES TO RESCUE OF DISQUE contrast with the criticiom he became a director of the spruce production corporation, but not until Never before in the history of journalism have newspapers paid such high prices for exclusive pub- lication rights. |\FIRST INSTALLMENT WILL Annie Ravelll with compassion. Re- membrances of her girlhood days, | when she romped the meadows by the saphire waters on the sea, bgp ae |from her mind the tragedy of law week, when Ravelli, after oho her of an unfaithful love for hia | Japan. | Dr. Cady says that the Japanese By cwgent of | dsrseaviia trem torte wont | APPEAR MONDAY, SEPT. 8 “Sena | the Hawaiian islands far outnumber the natives ‘© her husband's b, when tie ‘ores, | Present, Se ie Uainaiast toa poles were’ remeelols the! and whites. According to Dr. Cady, there are hang stole: wnat tha anrer Gok Among American newspapers that have com- iete. negative. Senator Lodge made the motion to strike out| 30,000 original Hawaiians, 25,000 whites, 17,000 peecoes ie pont pleted negotiations for the Ludendorff book, are: ‘vo |‘Japan’ and insert ‘China.’ ” Filipinos, 15,000 Koreans, 10,000, Chinese, and Played Together | Philadel hia Public Ledger, Chicago Daily ‘News, “Oh, I loved him so,” she mur- mured ever so wistfully in her ward | bed, her throat swathed in bandages | Boston Post, jand her volce the merest wisp of al | whisper, “and I'm glad we made up | | before he died. [St. Louis Post- -Dispatch, San Francisco Examiner, Louisville Courier-Journal, Atlanta Georgian, Baltimore News, Los Angeles Examiner ‘and the Cincinnati Enquirer. The first installment of Ludendorff’s personal |history of the war will appear in afternoon papers worked in the vineyards together, nee mange? eg ttle Ge we went to the same school, and we} ortly after the signing 0’ armistice, n- tee ti ga ant omether 2>4) oral Ludendorff went rey nde ah taking with him yor ORS aS la tremendous mass of records and a large staff of And 1 grieved. tor I acre ine 20: |assistants. From these records and his own knowl- love him. His brother wrote to my edge and experience, he, personally, has produced the document for which the whole world has waited, | “Fifteen years ago we used to play | together, He lived in a little village Just over the hill from where I lived. | “I was 11 and he was 17. We) sister, who was six years older than | | was, Then John began to write | me letters, and then I knew that | ———| surely 1 must go across the sea to LORD NORTHCLIFFE GETS him, When my sister left to marry John’s brother, I managed to talk | 4e RIGHTS FOR GREAT BRITAIN y father into letting me go, too.” tb Was deatece The largest cash advance ever made in the his- Tears filled Mrs, Ravelli's eyes an |tory of the publishing business was made for Luden- the told of the meoting of her lover dorff’s manuscript. Expert judges of book and Mind aha aka 3h eee followed |e WSpaper material were sent by the McClure News- years of happiness. jpaper Syndicate—Sir George Hutchinson, the great |English publisher, and Lord Northcliffe—to Stock- } as Jealous —oh, so jeal-| wid, “Men must always | ous,” in . * ‘ of romance that ended on a cold, made by the committee. After making it, ; | Mite cot im the Heattle ety bo | dicate of New York by The Star was $3,000. the committee proceeded to consider other, HA coats John Ravelll, Italian, died-at | = The New York World has paid $15,000 for‘ex- amendments in executive session. sound, ede during «fet |clusive New York privile . 4 Leaving the committee room, after the Jealous frenay.. And his wife Ce _ Eads en pe ive $500,000 f. roll call, Senator Brandegee made the fol- A J AP COLO the Sate of ber backene lar the atin Soncicate and ed " Weta ote Pe 1 vy . | sobbing in the next ward, ro ; “The committee has just voted on a roll call, by a vote | ae dad Weictitwagered hediend’ Pinca American and British rights respectively. Bany more, “MF OW | scoured the country for members | that the troops plan establishing a| thon division of the army dur. | 2/6" the tallroad contract Nad been) love Bay. host wear eoe be holm to read the manuscript. They unanimously re- rea " which held | base of operatioris farther south to| ing the war, J. J. Donovan, of |* ee ey a joubt. ‘The: * Sarat claret nas tne of the bandit gang Horm lenctete eta cee Al: me mssaakDeneren Lemiee jpoeporation | shouldn't drink, either. 1t was drink, |ported that it was the great story of the German eee Se | ser rane, ee ditional forage and supplies have| Mills, Bellingham, came to the Upholds Gen, Disque jealousy and a hasty, unreasonable side of the war,” and that “its appeal will be uni- abas o cot cee Tt has proved the longest incur-| gone forward from Marfa. Also a| support of Brig-Gen. Brice P. | In contradiction of the testimony | temPer which led to our trouble. He | 124) 99 , stench | con into Mexico since the Pershing |new type of bomb is being tried out| Disque and other heads of the of numerous loggers that Gen.| Wa # food husband. He provided | rag in an ancient ty enteemed by worker | for me and my two lite boys, but | expedition in 1915, ‘The continued |here preparatory to ite use by the| spruce division, when he ap- | Disque failed to consult experienced | (yr Me and, my two lite boys, but Lord Northcliffe obtained the serial rights for lounge | presence of the United States forces| airplanes scouting with the troops) peared before the congressional (loggers in building raflroads and) i Diittht wasptcion th lin Mesico wae taken here to mean| below the border: | Envestigating comeittee Satur |camps, Donovan emphatically tol} at erg I'm sorry he is gone, but | | England and the British Empire, and the McClure | i clgarets harem that \that the trail has not grown cold| Four flying machines have been| day morning. the committee that Disque “almost|@2,T help it? rave | Newspaper Syndicate obtaine the blanket rights for ; oF somet! land that th ffice: of the expe-| put out of commission since Tues} Aitho admitting that the Siems-|continually” sought the advice of) i “ | ‘ i Sang a dition have henes pe apping more | day by minor mishaps. More planes | carey.Kerbaugh arilroad, built for | loggers. aes ee m bay ** vite | the United States. The book will be brought out std iPmething more than their j bandits have been requested the handling of airplane spruce,| “Amos Benson of Portland and/,,ynd then Tim kolng back to my simultaneously in the United States, Great Britain, content. — was “very expensive” to the gov-|Mark Reed of Shelton advised Col.| ister, 1 want to forget the unhap: |France, Scandinavia, Spain, Italy and Germany. it World just has to have to get dineipared on. piness of the last few days. to live for my children," want] REVELATIONS TO STARTLE ernment? Donovan excused the cost-| Disque constantly in railroad mat NO I RA( E OF AIRMEN ly outlay on the ground that the|ters. I had nothing to do with the work was pushed thru to success| advisability, of the Slems-Carey-Ker- And in the morgue the body of th ‘ SAN DIEGO, Aug. 23—~| but very few habitations. The search |in one-third of the time it should | [batt railroad as the contract waa! aeag mucband la, balhe peaseted’ fer WORLD, IS PREDICTION "4 Anxiety over t te of Lieuten-|by airplanes continued today have taken and necessarily was) before I became a member ot | the crave. } ts, Rhymsters ants Frederick V joune and Cecil) |more costly than hed the -work| hoard of directors of the spruce pee Ludendorff, the genius of military Germany, 9 Yonnolly, fro : |been done leisurely on corporatio: | * : i 1 ENTION! 71] Coma "isan as me te roe mg 9 [PMne quailty af the’ work ab Advise ‘Timber Buy eden na — a aa about ie. Hun na anaes te creased t comp! do © Sie ‘4 Ker ony ce 0 e .| |wor ny other iving man e conceived an : ! reased tods e y WVlex. Us complished on the Sleme-Carey-Ker-| “The excessive cost of the Siems: nder Fine o 00 | wor an any : lew contest a, night of fr ra Bek | MEXICO CITY, Aug. 23,—Troops |PAush gp iopeg fet aot seetut the | OMe Kerbaugh railroad necessarily Ohta; Ader as, {directed execution of the enemy’s collosal campai ns. i ; d innounced || All day yente (her alrplan ent to the Ajusco region t AG bahaanas) be ; id | (CONT'D ON PAGE TWENTY) her, manager of be h t ified page. Here jg || manned by brother officers, flew be |sent to the Ajuxco region to search | pest I ever saw," Donovan teatified. = ee suite cor | His book will be an intimate, authentic, close-up his- Vd OHE Poet oes || tine necking, tease of the De Havi-|t0 be held for ransom by ba Rushed Job Thru Report Four Mex | *, was under sen-|tory of the whole German plan. He discloses the | jae er prted today they had been unable| “The conditions jer which the . A - |t fine and costs here 1 diti of Germany just fore th t- land plane with which the young fly. | reported fads ; Oil Bandits Die : real condition x y j ore the war, ou | . & 1 detach ts lab 1 their inex fight against high j lve me Main 600, please. Yale roe, a ee soldiers wer. bent 7 Spin a i Pertiabe i {ficiency and other] LAREDO, Texas, Aug. 23.—Four| prices Fletcher was found suity/lines in detail what went on behind the curtain of f ff : ’ search several da a D1 did make for economic|of seven bandits who robbed head-|of violation of the cold storage act. | ive: edi p S yimember this number || Reports trom Calexico ete vatey | bandits were oni to have Gama Lobel Had the railroad been|quartere of the Pennsylvania Ol! - — silence, and gives credit and places blame where he my ee oe ne even he border |@d $15,000 ransom |puilt under ordinary conditions with|company, near ‘Tuxpam, Mexico, of Sugar Price Down believes it belongs. He tells when and where the Rg SM? The land head south about 340 on Wed- ——— _"|estnpetent "ior ana plenty of te, |88,000 penn Augurt 18, bave bean in Dallas, T. German plans miscarried, and the military crisis and head south about mete the Si ES oe al could have been built| captured and executed by Carranza in allas, exas, ] Bebe 1 Wet what T want, so there Fan, Anetpes: SOOT ae te * Liberty Bonds (€ Q ote di dor veethird to one-half of the sum soldiers, according to a military tel:| DALLAS, Tex. Aug. 23.—(Unitea | thru which the central powers passed, all unknown "abd oh ing roast ligearaiv 4 pe Bi AE nth eee pee lit actually cost the United States. /egram received by officials in Neuvo| Press.)—Reports that the govern-/tg the allied world. slaying oe ero hould | been built,| Laredo today. nt had resumed ‘control of suga y Se Deaean ee cee wh ‘and | abe rig rrr yy Ser 4 THe ordinary circumstances, in| Employes of the fission ence sharp decline in wholesale General Ludendorff’s book is expected to p \ Winding ct the coastipa? | $94.18 ,,, W280; tient 44's | three times the number of months|company were tied and gagged! prices here today. Extra fine granu-'voke a storm of controversy, and result in startling ‘The country around Jacumba, 6olf P. hue Seana’ third 44 '% |i took,” while the bandits looted the office, lated sugar was quoted at $20.18 per lati Miles trom hore, is rugged and with $1000; Yiemmy 24s $00.04" "7 *** Donovan told the committe that |the telegram sald, hundred pounds, revelations.