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BARE JAP SMUGGLING RING! EW we {ii w Tonight and Sunday; fair, fresh northeasterly Forecast ather inds, On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise Bntered as Second Clase Matter May 2, aaewallhe OLUME 23 — Cynthia Grey tof ques prise anawer | Here's the third and last Alone in the Cynthia Grey eontes: firat prine of $5 A two prises of or and two nawere to toda * im The Star ° . evening | eatant i# etigibie to one prise | erly | Prise winners and the best answers to the first hat wr Wednes: @ay; second | and today’s Winners, next Friday The judges are Balog editor Question No. 1 h Dear Miss Grey: After six years happy married life my husbar a) mts a divorcee. We have Diovely children. What can I do t . in his love? When I ask him Gwhy he does not love me any more he mys be does jate editor, y two} not } | Dear Miss Grey: Will you please $0 me thry your columns what the Pationality of a child would be that Ywas born on the high reas | INQUISITIVE. | Question No. 3 Dear Miss Grey: Is it considered for one to start eating as) As one is served-—before the! and others receive their) i A club woman friend does | the is known to be upto-the-| te in most matters of this kind, ft it seems rude to me, expecially | dining where there are no) nts. * ANEMONE. | Question No. 4 Dear Miss G: Will you pleare ly tell me rome way to make} four-monthold baby stop suck- bis ‘thumb, and oblige Siti A MOTHER, Question No. 5 | Dear Miss Grey: What relation de on my nice pink organdie and am afraid to touch it for of- making it fade. Is there way I can remove it without) the colbr, alo? MYRA. | Question No. 7 | Dear Miss Grey: 1 have noticed) so many printed articles of late! it they are ridiculing the idea of je newly married having their | taken together. As I think) fe quite all right, I am coming to! for your opinion, Is it comsid-| the proper thing in thiv faat- age? G. P. No. 8 Dear Miss Grey: I have been in an office for a long time have married the manager's) “gon. I am still working. Do you think I should call my father-in-law / “father”? It sounds so unbusiness: "Tike to me, altho I want to do What's right. D. 8. s. Question No. 9 | Dear Miss Grey: Do you think) ts all right for a girl to go with a whom shé knows to be engaged @ girl in another town? I have |B chum who goes with a bop quite Steady, and tho he told her of his ment, he doesn’t seem to me ) to be true to the other girl boys must have to haye com- Dany; but when he thinks {t Is all! ght to kiss her “good night” and| few other sentimental practices, 1) Yt think the love is quite true,| do you? My chum ts becoming Bather interested in the young man, fome one is going to come out! loser, Would you state your| panswer for-her benefit, a# I know| she reads your columns } A FRIEND, Question No, 10 Dear Miss Grey: I am keeping} | sili Taken Violently I After GIR THEORY POISONING Sampling Mysterious Food Package dainty, mysterious at Bvidence that kages of luncheon left daily the home of Mrs. Morris Grund and her five young children at 211 16th ave, were dropped there with mal jelous Intent was gathered today by detectives, MY | It was learned from May, the pretty #yearold daughter of Mra Grund, that a little neighbor girl named Ruth had eaten a part of one of the luncheons and became vio-| lently I as the result. | Potice are endeavoring to locate Ruth. She has moved from the} Grund neighborhood and none of the Grund family knows her present whareabouts, @ NO TRACE OF POISON FOUND IN PACKAGE Altho City Chemist Jacobson made & close analysia of the contents of & package that was left mynteriounly | in the Grund dooryard yesterday | morning, he sald today he found no trace of poison In the sandwiches, cookies and cand} that the package contained. Were on the point luncheona. “DREADFULLY SICK" AFTER EATING FOOD “The-lunch that Ruth at: May, “wasn’t left in our yard, where | it usually is dropped about 7 or & o'clock every morning, but Ruth found it about a block away, where she was picking hazel nuts a few weeks ago. | “after shé ate It, Ruth got dread-) fully sick and went home and had to go to bed. The rest of us children never Ate any of the packages. We were afraid of what was in them.” For the first time in two months | there was no package left in the| Grand yard this morning. Mrs. Grund said she believed the news paper publicity given COAL WORKERS QUIT COLORAD DENVER, Cob.. Oct. 30.—-A general @xofus of striking minéra in the northern Colorado coal ‘fields was in I su | progress today, according to reports | received here. Hundreds of the men are going to other fields, chiefly in Wyoming to seek- employment. Refusal by operators® of their de- mands after an all-day conference yesterday, and fear of prosecution by the state, were believed to be the reasons fo rthe desertion of the local district by the miners. AYS SHIMMY IS TOO NOISY! Devotees of Terpsichore shimmy ‘SEATTLE, WASH., SATU 1999, at the Postofficn at Beattia Wash, under the Act of Congress March 2, 1879 The Seattle Star Per Year, by Mail, $5 to 99 RDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1920. EATS MYSTERY FOOD; STRICKEN Vote for the Soldiers’ Bonus! The Star is for the soldiers’ bonus bill. The Star has always been in favor of adequate com- pensation for’ the ex-service men. Sentiment aside, veterans of the World War deserve everything that this state can give them—deserve it as a plain matter of justice. boys who gave two years of their youth to the cause of humanity have never been compen- , ated financially—and they never will be. The buck private who went thru hell for $33 a month didn’t think of money. Are the people of Wash- ington going to be niggardly now? x-service men—boys, most of them—lost two years of progress in civilian life. They are that much behind. They gave that muth for US. Are we going to fail them just because the war is over? It was easy enough to give during the heat of gray hordes y the war, when the is mgs wy eg my a broken and spirit- it it it necessary to Hmong 127 bce’ far oa" sit Vote for Referendum No. 2—the soldiers’ Rob Sorority of 55 Pies and Two Barrels of Cider PreHalloween pranks reportell to! police for investigation by Mrs. the matter! ine police today included the theft| George Hicks. sorority mother, who| | had frightened the miscreant away of two barrels of ckler and 55 piew from the Delta Delta Delta sorority house at 4714 17th ave. N, EB, Uni versity district The matter was referred to the KIDS! DON’T TRY advanced the opinion that the mis creants piled gheir ples and cider into a waiting automobile outside the houne. Tracks of an auto, were found | leading away, she said, Entrance to the house wag gained thru a window, Mrs. Hicks satd. ESCAPES BY. ROPE LINE! TO PAINT STREAKS | ON MOON TONIGHT! Trusties in the city jail today were cleaning up “spare room” cells for kids who underrate Chief Searing’s Halloween orders Such things as tying the peak of the 42-story L. C. Smith build ing to old Bossie’s neck, or Jc ing the neighbor's fenee up in hin parlor to keep it from running around, will not be condoned by Seattle's bluec Halloween is to be celebrated to- night in calm and peaceful fash jon. Ghosts and such may walk |] but ghosts that overturn build ings and destroy property are to ate Boys ewiped a clothesline from the \yard of Mra. G. F. Sehults, 4230) Stone way, she reported, and another | line from Mrs, B. A. Turner, 418 16th | ave. . Tpey asked, pro against further depredatic night Mrs, M. Severtson'’s gate wna re. | moved from 1 Seventh ave. W and placed on a street car track, sho informed the police, | A rock hurled thru the window of | Mre. J. W, Pepper's home at 5012 10th ave. N. E., she sald, nearly hit her widowed mother last night Police protection tonight was ask ed for by Mrs. J. Oronson, 1532 Third ave. W., who sald boys were in the habit of taking down her fence every sto Woman Said to Be De-| ranged Flees From Sister’s Home in Night Mins Salome Johnson, aged 45 ned her bedroom window in thagatiliy he Friday night window rope of bedclothes. The far end dang ‘The near end she piece of furn Then peerin nhe nd a near the gro’ made fast In the room. into the darkness to assure herself that nobody watohing, lowered herself hand overhand and disappeared into the night This was at her sister's home, at 3235 W. STth at. Her disappearance waa not dixcov ered until Saturday, morning, when her elster went to call her and found) the room empty and the bedelothes | rope hanging thra the open window. | Miss Johnson, the sinter said, has) been suffering with a mental dis order The missing woman has no hat, ts clad in a dark dress and is wearing low shoes. Police were searching for her Saturday, . MISSING WOMAN IS HOME AGAIN Mysteriously missing for one day, | with Capitalize ' STUBBORN BEDCLOTHES ‘(isci» Here BOY BADLY Gossip Here Jeighbor Women to Lay for Each Other as They Hang Up Clothes Seattle wor are that in order to func ing doesn’t with ride im an automobile “Official Car” on the front of it and get he in the paper whenever she a trick The Red Cross annual dues are go ing ta be payable November 11 to 25 Seattle women will collect tem 000 of them—by what Mra, Wm. Utter, chairman of the member rollcall, designates as “back methods Towit: Mra. Mrs are hangin up baby clothes in t e back yards and Mam says to Mra, P. Perkins, with her mouth full of clothes pins: “Ptwayed y’ dues—dculp—Red Croas yet?” And when Mra. P. Perkins says no, she immediately produces a little red and white recelpt book from her apron pocket, with a pencil stub, writes her out a receipt for the whole family, and Mra. Perkina promises to send Willie over with the money As soon as he geta home from school at noon, Simple? But that’s the way ft will be done. And the very commencement of the thing will be the all-women mass Meeting on Monday at 10 a. m. atthe Fine Arts building, women from all communities in the city will report to register and be assigned “Every woman on her biock,” t out te prove tion effectively ave to be committee ribbons pleture turns ar 4 H ahip fe ir respect - BEATEN UP | Feri Ws |Attacked by Anger-Mad- dened Father With Strap Covered With Welts | ly covered with His little boy lite welts and bruises from the fri beating his father had given him, yearold Theodore Graun stood Judge King Dykeman ned his fate. fore Juv Friday He was beaten almost into Insen- | sibility last Sunday night because he evidence submitted to Judge Dyke- man, The beating is said to have lasted for an hour. ‘The boy’s screams were heard by paasersh two blocks away. They intervened and brought the maddened father to bis senses He thanked them for stopping him, according to the testimony, WORST CASE HE HAS EVER SEEN “This in the worst case of its kind | that has ever come to my attention,” said Judge Dykeman, Dr. | Merrill, probation officer, also said | it was the wort in his experience. ‘The boy was “sentenced” to spend the remainder of the school year at Seattle Pacific college, away from ‘hit parents. The father, G. Graun, | 34, who operater a garage at 65th }and Ravenna, was ordered to pay $35 & month for the boy's maintenance. Mrs, Anna Miller, of Ballard, W&8/tne catch-word, and there's a block At the end of the school year Theo- home agein today at 195 W. 89th at, reticent as to what happened to her Thursday evening after she disap \peared. She returned last night in hysterics, with a handkerchief cover. ing her face, Mra, Miller's absence waa first noted by her tusband, who, return- ing home for supper at § o'clock Thursday, foyna potatoes sizing on the stove; but his wife gone. After} her retarn, Dr. 1. J. Shuler was fealied to attend her. He said she) |eemed suffering from some tempor: | jary nervous trouble. ~ | D. | IN 80-YEAR WALK} | Henry I. Ferfier, who claims to ihave been walking for t® last 30 |years, hesitated Iéng enough Satur-| | day to pay his respecta to Mayor} | Caldwell. Ferrier was accompanied only by a dog. He sald he mtarted walking from Paris in 1890, and hat covered some 206,000 mil®. Carmen Orino Faces ESITATES HERE [i for every woman. COP ON LONE RAID GETS 7 V, Naville, a Filipino cannery worker, and six other countrymen | were-arrested early Saturday when Policeman J. Kinnéy single-handed raided an alleged gambling game at 618% Jackson st. Kinney took his n privoners to headquarters and made charges against them without aasixtance: STEAMER SUNK; 19 MEN MISSING: 30.—Nine | Wide behind them, ‘The wounds were teen members of the crew of the | *till fresh and raw in court Friday. NEWPORT R. 1. Oct. tion | Jconerete steamer Cape Fear, sunk | in @ collision with the steamer City | of Atlanta in Narragansett bay last |was charged with second ree | Might, were missing today. | | burglary, in an information filed Sat-|_ It was believed most of the men | urday morning by Deputy Prose-| ad drowned. | Jouting Attorney John D, Carmody.; A great hole was torn in the| Tt ia claimed that Orino entered the Charge of Burglary Carmen Orino, alias James Dale, bow of the City of Atlanta but her | room of one Dick Switzer in the St.|DUIKheads prevented her sinking. | 169 Main st., Oct, 28,| The Cape Fear, a United States intent to commit a|*hipping board boat, was struck | jamidships. The big concrete freight: | jer quivered and almost immediately | jbegan to settle at the bow Three minutes later sRe rested at the bot tom of the bay in 130 fathoms of Louis hotel, 1920, “with crime.” ‘STRUCK BY CAR; dore is again to appear in court, | when the judge will decide what is to be done with hast |. Thbodore’s mother and father sepa- rated when he was a baby, |two. years ago he lived with his | mother and grandmother in Minne- apolix. After he came here to live |with his father things didn't go well. He wis mischievous and not quite scrupulous as to honesty, juvenile of: | ficials way. temper. Also the boy is stubborn Wherefore, he has received many | beatings. | JERKS HIS EARS UNTILL SKIN CRACKS y Theodore is alleged to hay quarter from his stepmother of it, he stubbérnly de. | nied it, In a,furious rage, his father took down an inch-wide strap and began belaboring the terrified child with all his might, He even jerked the boy by the ‘3 until the skin cracked The boy screamed with the pain and what he felt was the injustice of it—but he would not confess, For an hour the battle between brute strength and childish will pow- er raged, and there was pandemo- nium in the Graun household At 11 p. m, & man named Hock, living some distance beyond the Grauns, was passing two blocks away with @ friend. He heard the cries of torture and hurried to the Graun door. ring, he interfered, and Graun, shamed, said he was glad Hock had epme and added that he didn’t realize he had been making so. mueh noi TH LATE ‘TWO C Lilburn | Until | Also his father has a| ITION ) x ¢ il PLOT IS “SEEN IN “ARRESTS OF IAPS | Systematic Ring Working to | - Smuggle Nipponese In | From, Orient The workings of an organized ring’ |for smuggling Japs into the United States thru Pacific ports, a ring whose members include agents in Japan and Seattle, and members of the crews of Japanese liners on Ore” ental runs, was bared Saturday by immigration officials, folowing two | weeks’ investigation. A® a result of the probe of Peter Perkins meets | would not confess to stealing 26 cents | stowaways who were apprehet Mamie Mickelwitse while they|from his stepmother, according to |" the Alabama Maru on October, |4 complaint was filed Saturday | United States District At | Saunders against 13 Japanese, jare hbtd in arrest as members of the jsmugegling ring. Two other Jil |are held as witnesges, | The nten are chargeg with |aey to attempt the Minding in United States of aliens who are J entitled to admission, The men under arrest are T. ita, a rancher of South Park; 8I | Yamane, the proprietor of @ taurant at 603% Main T. Saito, T. Mazusawa, T. Fujtwara, carpenter on the | Maru; T, Mazekawa, N. Main | Y. Matsushita, K. Minaido, Y. | gata, K. Nakamura and T. Witnesses held are K. B e Saal The system, as outlined by gration officials, based on the feasions of the men arrested, is complete in its workings. Eight of the nine stowaways | were found on the Alabama come from the province of. Wakizama. They relate that @ named Hirata, who is the in Japan, arranged to t1 them to America for 200 yen dow and 400 yen more a head to be pal on their safe arrival. Hirata said they met first | | Kobe and then in Yokahama, tl |the guidance of T. Yoshita, jSouth Park farmer, who went Japan for the purpose of i to import some Japs. Having their deposit of 200 yen each, eight men were stowed away the liner with the aid of Y« | who returned to the United as a first-class passenger, and Saito, who was responsible to rata for the men’s care. while route. A contract drawn up Hirata, binding \all parties, duly signed before the ship left, SHIP CARPENTER’S | AID ENLISTED In order that the stowa’ might be fed and kept under the aid of Fujiwara, the ship's car penter, was enlisted, as well as that of several crew. Yoshita, the first-class ey, here. When the Alabama Maru docked in Seattle, Shotaro Yamana, restaurant proprietor, appeared, told Yoshita that the ninth mem |ber of the crew of stowaways was was to attend to getting the off the boat once they other members of the ~ #0 joudly in the dance hall at £3rd || be housed in the booby-hatch over || Hallo quest wa stud Greenwood ave., nightly, that || 2¢ housed in th hatch over || Halloween. A similar request was the whole neighborhood kept} | Bisht, sald the chief, phoned to headquarters by E. € lawake according to a report made} Klyce, commission merchant, living to the poli¢e tod: by Mra. w. ati 35th ave. | Cummings, 145 N, 83rd at A new garbage can, just pur- the | Mra, Cummings asks that cha: by C. W. Phillips, 1498 Third dances? And if I do, what is A man who stopped her on the | police take propery steps to quell the ave. W., was reported missing from} ' Whe best way for me to pass the ASKS $1 0,000 |atreet near her he Friday made | notsy dance. his yard this morning. He said later} / ime away? All the dances are in-| |vulear proposals to Mra, H. W the can turned up in a neighbor's basement. EATHE q M. crn F 17 Beacon ave, she in- | She said she believed him to be | Damages of $10,312.2 the same man who haa be h What Do You |..P nc: the same man who has | bers in suit filed Saturd: t About Seattle? @ompany with « young girl who to dance, also I do, but ing to an accident T am unable Wo dance, having had one foot hed, so when I dance six or geven dances I can sclircely walk Vfor a week. I know it ian't right | @f me to expect the girl to stop Vgoing to dances, because I can't Vance. What is the proper thing me to do; continue to take her [his uncle, and that all had better |stay aboard until the boat went to Tacoma, as it would be much easier to land them there. But in the meantime immigration and officials had discovered the Japs, sealed In under the steering gear | housing of the boat, and had |them inthe immigration det station, : |PAID WELL FOR UGGLING HIS UNCLE Shotaro Yamana, whose sti mana, says that he paid a ia named Handa, another man in th business In Japan, 200 yen to send his uncle over, and was to 1,800 yen more upon the safe @®& rival of the stowaway, ‘ This transaction was made thea — the services of one Wataneba, A | written agreement was drawn and signed in this case also, Othera limplicated were Katsumi, donkey man on the Alabama Maru, and the | au urtermaster, Kondo, who was palg to turn his back to what was going on Wataneba and Katsumt were ab 30 [lowed to return to Japan, under sun veillance of the officers of ‘the boat upon the condition that they will am sist in rounding up the rest of the |gang, especially the agents Hirate Jand Handa, : Bad News Turkey Berries Up. Cranberries, per box, wi water, { . Report 50 on Board | Steamer Are Adrift) NEW YORK, Oct. 30.—-With 60 passengers aboard and no water, the hit by northbound street car No, 303 steamship Rambler was reported at First ave, 8. and Horton st } adrift southwest of Santiago, Cuba, Johnson had just left a southbound | in a wireless message received here car and is reported by witnesses to/| last night RNECKS have stepped directly into the path of| The message said a Cuban gun other. He was taken (o Seattle} poat returned from a search with| t si AT U. OF W. ft neral hospital. He was uncon-|the report that no trace of the ves- scious 60 minutes. Bel could found, - The Rambler plies between Ke | West and Havar Next morning Hock’s wife reported | to the police, and the boy was taken in charge by juvenile authorities Theodore is a mass of bruises, the heavy strap seemingly having fallen on every part of his body too; . Frank Johnson, an employe of the jus Steel company, living at 4417 lawn ave., got a smashed shoul 1 broken hip Saturday, when ie Woe der a 5,000-FOOT LEAP THIS AFTERNOON A 5,000 Monday all men enrolled in the engineering depectinent of the | university will adopt the leather-| ‘Girls Uncover Their Ears Now CHICAGO, Oct. 30. today are able to see ninity they haven't gazed upon for a long time--a woman's ear } They're showing ‘em here now—all | but a little bit ofthe top, which is | still covered by ha Mme, Louise, renowned beautifier, sald today that women were unveiling a bit of their It would be too immodest | shocking to show the who! | sald, upper portion main a mystery for a while,” On the lobe of the shell pink ear the girls are adding a little dash of rouge to make it pinker, madame said “It adds charm and subtle sugges. tion of. viyacity,” the madame ex plained. | leap from a speeding airplane ciliott bay was scheduled to be made late this after- noon by I. DeVilliers, the “Flying Cowboy,” to boost the soldier bonus bill, DeVilliers planned to descend in a parachute the Reginning feet ove n bother t nelghbor- re claimed M. Finkel as a re nt on Pa ghway y liver Lake erett 23, 1920, Goebel Will Build: $200,000 Wireless Station ALTO, » Oct The Radio Telegraph company announced today it will at one work on constpuction ¢ radio tower Cal, near San Jose, all over the world will b this tower, which will b la t in the world t PALO Federal 20. to the waters of Sound The drop was to be made Burrill Johnson's plane. Prior to dropping from the plane phnson planned to drop small pa chutes containing merchandise pri slips, over Second and Pike at 3; P. commence 00,000 cific I and wants $ 5 for his automobile, $2 for his physician, and $10,000 for | himself because of alleged dislocation QUESTIONS What is Beattie? 2. Who ts the acknowledged his- ftorian of the city? of his spinal column 3. When was Ballard annexed? APPLES RAIN 1. R, Auzias de Turenne, vice} ‘president of the Bank for Savings i has written several volumes pn the Klondike and the United States, one Set which wi French Acade oes. A. ¥. He %5 years of % Soap munufacturing was be in Beattie in 1470 by J. J. Mons, soon found that the town was| ‘pot ready ,for bis industry. Chicago men from the highést point in @ bit of femi ages from ’. ‘ received at | J Don’t Be a Strap-Hanger! Sor ane 625 feet in —buy a used car! In today’s Star you'll find many reliable dealers offering cars for sale at attractive prices. If you want to get a car you'll find the best used car bargains advertised in the Want Ad columns of The Star. Turn to the “USED CARS” classification right now and note the variety of makes offered at moderate prices The Seattle Star “The Paper with the Results” ey Old King Apple had his say in Se-| attle today | Shortly after noon, loaded with big, juicy, delicious ap- | ‘. rowned by the| pies from Wenatchee and Yakima, m, and & goodly complement of fair § , city councilman, is | attle maidens, got under way at the city hall park and showered the length of Second ave. with a fruit barr | An appleeating contest was sched. He} wled for elty hall park in the after noun, The quickest, snappiest, most reliable election returns in the city! The Star has made every preparation to make good on this promise. Re- turns will be flashed as soon as it gets dark enough. Eastern returns will be available before 6 p.m. Avoid the auto and street car traffic and gather in front of The Star building, Seventh ave. between Union and University. 50 huge trucks, will re