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Tonight fair; a Manin moderate erly winds, Temperature Last ' Hours sday noon, Wednesday: east- nd Mintnum, 35, _VOLU U ME 23 On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise eSeattleSta Entered as Kecond Clase Matter M ay 2 SEATTLE, W ASIL, TUE: 1899, at the Postoffice at Seattle, W: aah 1879. under he Act of Congress March 3, Per Year, by Mall, $5 to $9 EEK DOCTOR IN DOPE RING PARADA AAA A RAPALA eather tT EW LATE EDITION ba CENTS IN SEATTLE iaithaa | Grey HERE'S ONE CYNTHIA “COULDN'T ANSWER So She Turned It Over to Fred Boalt Adear Miss Grey: 1 am @€ your column and I seen a letter fe it the other day from a woman A reader Where she takes a slam at “chick ue.” She says she and her man even if she ain't along fine, « en,” and that it ain't for women to paint thelr face ike @ new barn to, hold the love of their husbands. Mebby this is the ease, but I got to my that wife ds some chicken and I'm glad of it. She cocks good and minds the house and looks after the children, | and then, when © work is done @he dolls up and looks like a millyon dollars. How can she do this, you ask, and I say it is because I stingy. If some husbands would give their wife a little more loose change to buy pretty clothes with, there Wwouldent be so many old there ix now. I don't get this preju ice aguinst chickens anyhow FOND HUSBAND, BY FRED L. BOALT Cynthia frankly adwits she doesn't Brow the answer to this letter, so she passed it on to me. Like “Fond Husband,” I do not un- derstand the growing: prejudite ‘Bocinst chickens. I am a partiowlar @dmirer of the White Leghorn, which én addition te being a good layer, ts @ neat bird. 4 A White Leghorn hes fine clothes White Leghorn's clothes fit. Maybe Fond Husband's" wife is a White WN CHIQKEN D PEATHERS about paanere ts @ certain kind of brown! “Mhich has feathers om tis legs. “Peminds me of 4 siatteryly woman schose stockings are coming down. ‘There are so many kinds of chick- ens. ¢ The trouble with some women, in minds of men, is that, whereas try to look like Whie Leghorns, only suceced in making them- etives look like geese. T have in mind old ladies who try to look like flappers, and silly young who cover waturally good com- Plerions with paint, and women too ‘fat or too thin who wear decolicte Gnd court the fiu to expose their physical imperfections, WHAT KIND OF CHICK DQ YOU IIKE? 7 suppos® most peopic, when they | sapeak of chickens have in mind | flighty young birds who are too busy preening their feathers—natural and acquired —to lay cogs. Rostand, when he wrote “Chanti- leer.” tried to make us believe that all life is reflected im the barnyard. That ix not trile. Professor Dryden, of Oregon Ag- gicultural college, has invented a hen which lays an cog 4 day. With guch fellows a Professor Dryden at scork, it's lucky for us that life t4 BOT reflected in the barnyard. FLL. B. (Very good, Mr. Boalt. iad you deen a2 woman I think you might Rave taken one of the prices in the gecent Cynthia Grey contest.) C. G. eee Perfectly Proper fe Tell Him Dear Miss Grey: 1 have been go- $a with a ‘young man for about a v ink @ great dealyof, but a few aif- erences have arisen recently, so ‘confide in you and ask you to give your advice thru your columns. © The young man to whom J refer has shown me every attention pos- Mble, and seems to be greatly Jove with me, He ts capable of com manding a very good salary and is recognized in the best of Seattle's pocial circles, and is apparently quite 4 but, in my opinion, he does r very strongly to “Dame “in the manner of his dress, At present we are engaged, and I believe that he would make a splen @id husband for me, for he surety | thinks a great deal of me, for hi every action seems to show it; but| 1 do feel that if he cares for me the way he says he does, b ald Clothes he wears, my company. Perraps I am unjust in thinking or wanting him to buy more ex- pensive clothing and try » dress more stylishly; however, think that personal ‘appearance should mean @ great deal to every one, and want to know ff you think it proper for me to tell the young man gust how I feel Hoping this will find its way to your columns, I remain, sincerely, I certainty hope, for the young ans wake, you will “tell him just » you fea.” The be presentable, wince he ta welcomed in- fo the best circles. However, if you are laboring under the theory that *the clothes make the man,” (Turn to Vage 11, Column 2) 0 man muat ¥} ain't} ene Hike | , about my own age, and whom 1 | in| pe more particular in the style of the | expecially when in| and | ‘ills Herself Because She’s CROOKDOM COMMANDED | } | Undesirables, Following Week-End Crime Orgy | ‘Thieves, burs! wor hold-up artists. and loafers must s undesirable got Potice Chief Searing Monday night | officially ordered them to move on ¥ a lige were told to effect a general | jolean-up at once. | This sweeping mandate was issued | had made one of the weekend raids on homes, stores and pedestrians jafter thieves | heaviest hotel rooms. in years, obtaining thousands of dot | lars in cash and valuables command te the police aring’s to clean up Seattle was incorporated | in the night bulletin. 1¢ sald “General Order No. 36 in again published as follows, and must show some resulta and that very soon, “Owing to the rainy season the uaual influx of undesirables which flock to the cities has begun to ar rive, and «pecial attention must be Gad knows how fo wear them. A} cien to keep the elty clean of that clement, puch as beggars, disorderly Persona, ‘soft drink and card room Joafers, gamblers, drug addicts, ete; alse the hotels, lodging houses, dane halls, cabarets must be kept clean of all undesirable women.” | BURGLARS TAKE VACATION MONDAY NIGHT Burglars took a vacation Monday night, after their strenuous week- end sesaion, according to police re- ports. Five army recruits rooming fn the Northern hotel, 113 Firet ave. Si) were robbed of $74, a sult, 20 shares in the Davis Car Co., watch and two knives during the night Olewang Co.'s office, 212 Ovet dental ave, waa efitered thru the skylight, but nothing taken, accord ing to the report made to police, A purse containing $60 and a check waa snatched from Mrs. Henry Hall, of the Witkes theatre, in Pike Place market Monday afternoon. STEAL ORIENTAL RUG FROM HALL Mrs, Anna, Stanton, 607 Eastlake ©, told ge: Ths that a’ blue velour | was stolen from the K | hail, Fourth ave. | Monday night. John B, Hart reported that a $208 Oriental rug was stolen from h hall. Mrs, Exler Tomb, 1837 25th ave., asked police Tuesday to find a wedding ring, stolen from her }house a week ago Friday Ole Trumball, St. George apart | ments, that a «rip TO ESOTE | will be decorated with the French Fouragere in Pioneer place | Armistice Day, according to an |houncement of the Marine eruiting wtation here. Those receive on an rps re ing the green cord E R Dillon, Arthur 1. Long, Ralph Newton, Raymond F. Carr, ¥ Jensen and Richard D. Cain JAP STEWARD IS HELD FOR DOPE . Mateu Mura, steward on the liner Arabia Maru, is held in the oma jail Tuesday on $2,000 bail ending a hearife before the United commissioner on was arrested internal revenue 37 ounces in the Mura Latham, or, who found tucked away Ralph In. spec cocaine clothing. BIG MEN COMING TO AID HEBREWS Heading a “flying squadron” of |bankers, merchants, business men, educators and philanthropist« who are touring the country in behalf of the nationwide campaign of the | Union of American-Hebrew Cong gations, Manny Strauss, financier and Dr. Nathan Kraas, noted orator, will be in Seattle next week to con fer with prominent Hebrews here, TO MOVE ON Police Told to Chase Out. ot P| and Virginia st, 14th and Yesler wily, reported | of ciothes was stolen| from his auto in front of the apart: | SEATTLE BOYS Six Seattle boys, who served with | the famous Fifth and Sixth Marines, | narcotic | by!) of! Jap's| Duchess of Marlborough Gets Divorce | Former Consuelo ‘enlt bilt Is Freed From Marital Bonds LONDON, Nov. 9-—The duchess of Mariborough, formerly Miss Con- suelo Vanderbilt, today was granted | @ divorce decree nisi from the duke. } Neither of ‘the principals | Present in court. Counsel informed the court that the dye would re fuse to return to the duchies’ in com: Pliance with the .deeree of reatitu- tion of conjugal rights obtained “I her March 22 Attorneys for the duchess then of-| fered to show that since the duke was ordered to resume hin life with her, secret agents bad followed him to Paris, where he is alleged tq have | war | with a woman | they registering ax Monsieur and Madame Sper ‘This was denied. The court ordered the duke to pay the costs of the sult | The duchess, who was the daugh | ter of the late William K. Vander- bilt, was married to the duke New York in 1895. They have two children, the marquis of Hanford and Lord Ivor Charehill. The former, in | ried the Hon, Mary Cadegan on Feb- ruary M4. ‘The first rift in the marital life of the duke and duchess came in 1907. when they separated and lived apart for two years A reconeiliation was | effected thru the influences of the | late King Edward. They separated | again last spring, howe the duke announcing it wax impossible for ‘them to live together. “ee PARIS, Nov, 9%—Rumors hive been cireulated here that the duchess lof Mariborough, following her di | voree, would marry Jacques Balsan, famous French sporter PAWNBR 20KE R RUSHING NOW CHICAGO, Nov, 9—The silk shirt era in Minorican history is passing, and thowe who failed to save up their nickel# during the | prosperity » recent period of to feel the are beginning first pinch of “#lack times,” accord ing to pawnbrokerw here today | Pawnbrokers said that dinmondas and jewelry in increasing amounts are now being ued” for money enough to buy the odd meal by men who invested their high wages in multicolored sik shirts and liquor, THE SAD CASE OF OLIVER C. JOHNSON; HE CAN’T SIT DOWN Police are wondering what they |} will do with Oliver C, Johnson, |] confessed auto thief, arrested in Woodland park ly Monday, after being shot by Park Patrol man F. H, Stocks. | ause of Johnson's delicate |] condition, they are withholding I] charges against him, i The reason i# that if Johnson ts || charged, he will have to appear in || court, and when a person appears in court, he MUST sit down, Because of “Stocks 1 aim with a shotgun, Johnson CAN'T |] ait down So there the matter rests, but Jaynson doesn't, | epent a night in the Hotel Cirridge | who Is heir to his father’s title, mar-! ISACCUSED. OF SLAYING Is Arrested as Killer in Kansas City Case KANSAS CITY, Mo. Nov. 9 | Dennis Chester, police character, to | day was held by Great Falls, Mont officials, charged with the murder of Mins Florence Barton, local society fh death the night of Oc her girl tober 2 while riding with on & lonely road Private detectives | following 4 hunt actos many xtates Ja Bertilion photograph of Chester was identified by Howard Winter Miss Haurton’s flance, as the axsailant re announced other | pect is un reat in Bt. Joneph Mo. and a third arrest is expected There were three men in the party |which halted Miss Barton and ber escort, Tue clew an to Cheaters where | abouu ne from a letter found in | Chester's room here after his dinap- pearance, U.S, WARSHIP RUNS AGROUND WASHINGTON Nov * The} American cruiser Cleveland bas run) aground in the harbor of Cartagena Colombin, the navy department was advised today. The commander of the vessel reports she was uninjured arrested Chester one sun | and that he was lightering the ship. ! He bas requested a tug from the na val district of Ban Francixco, HE REGRETS HE | WAS CAPTURED “It was Just my luck to j euaht, judge. That's ali I id to say This was 1. ment to Federal the United States district | Tuesday. Stewart arrested by federal prohibition agents ‘Tues day morning as he stepped off the G, N. train from Vancouver with two grips containing 14 bottles of Can adian whinky | He pleaded guilty and was fined | $300. 15 MEN HURT IN C. Stewart's state Judge Neterer in | GAS EXPLOSION N, Texas, Nov men were injured iat seriously, when 80 gallons of gaso line, which had drained Into the bilg of the uthern Pacific hip company’s launch Ouida, blew up to: HE MADE MON MONEY; ‘BUT NOT FOR HER Altho Raym Watrous earn- lowing him to draw on it THEY THINK HE’s AN ALMANAC! | ‘There 100,000,000 in the U. 8 | lieve that | man One of | Hawkins, Grand Junction | wrote to Maye Caldwell T aday | asking for the market value here of weighing between 1,600 and 1,909 pounds and the quality of Jand that could be obtained in a trade for a carload of them, ‘Druggist Admits He 'Had Gin; Fined $200 | Charles E Kelly, Seattle druggist | plended guilty Tuesday morning possession of a pint of gin and was fined $200 by Wederal Judge Neterer, are persons is a human a mayor c. L Colo. the 99,999,999, | horses GIRL IN CAR Man in Great Falls, Mont.,. court | Jed from $200 te month by | carrying passenge hire in a Ford, he gave hia wife little or no | support and finally left her, accord. ing to Ida Mae Watrous’ divorce complaint filed ‘Tuesday, Mrs, Watrous claims that as a re | sult of bis business, Watrous has a | large wum of money in the Kirkland | | State bank and she asked for an order restraining the bank from al-| and 99,999,999 of them be: | GIRL BRIDE'S ACTNOTYET EXPLAINED Relatives Declare Sheva Le- vine Possessed No “‘Bol- shevist Beliefs” BY ZOK BECKLEY BO IN, Nov, 6 Why did Bhewa Levine kill herself? Here was a girl steeped, her rabbi bridegroom asverts, In the modern ideax of New Russia, She came to America to marry her okbtime sweet heart, Jowph Louwisch of Pough In fh ext} him, 1 to a®renunc af belief In God even aimont Yhe firet -breath of her he ays, she con. 1on of religion. Khe rejected fem the kealx of oM-fashioned, lovg, mar: | age, motherhood. She wanted free on expression, money and the imulus of “progressive thought.” HUSBAND HAS MARRIAGE ANNULLED Amazed and shocked, he says, at the in his gentle sweetheart of 10| the rabbi Louwiech de. tained from Justice | ap annulment of mar. | | | 1 and user | The ctvit rite only had been per. formed. Shewa yernelf, the rabbi) mys, had refused the orthodox Jew: | ish ceremony, at which in her new- ee atheint she laughed, And so, Shewa went to her aunt.) | Mrs. Benjamin Rabaisky of Boston. There she wrote a note to 1Rabalsky, tore Mra.) her bedsheet into a rope and hanged herself from a tran. | som. WHY DID SHE bo IT? | Why prefer death to the free ro: | before her, that she ia naid to have | mo coveted? Tecan knowing many languages, | She “did not believe in marriage.” Why, then, did not the adventure of self-eupport appeal to her? { WHY GRIEVE AT LOSS OF “OLD-FASHIONED ORTHODOX The “old-fashioned orthodoxy” her fiance had repelled her caused her to sneer and jeer, says Why should she grieve, then, at the lowe Of one whone type was antipa- thetic? Tt was useless to ask these ques tions ef Rabbi Louwisch, He did} not know, he said, 80 1 asked Shewa’s aunt, Mrs. | Fabalsky, whose lawyer-husband in sists that the case is by no means! ended but will be “completely | cleared up" and with thé rabbi's ver- sion somewhat altered, | ot and he in in AND NOT ATTRACTIVE = Mre. Rabalaky told me “Shewa Was far from pretty, She ri | was undersized and stout asd not ab shook her head. “Life in Russia,” she said, simply, “Why else should she have killed | herself?” WITH VOLSTEAD we | Elsie Bdwards, flirting with the Volstead act, $250. ‘This occurred in Federal Judge Neterer's court Tues-| at | day. | She was a highly educated young] ij | will tell you about her back, marvelous couldn't play in movies. Kitty. Gordon's back, as part of it is said to look, and her weekly pay-check. BY HAL ARMSTRONG N THE CORNER by the Moore theatre an old ‘man his Whiskers, Kitty Gordon’ S Ba an’t Be Seen tered and bent with age, and weeping | | dressing table, The back was cov- ck! ? NARCO = TRADE IN NORTH IS ALLEGED Physician Supplied Addicts in Alaska by Wholesale, Say U. S. Officials Upon telegraphic instructions from | United States District Attorney | Saunders, agents of the dey of justice are seeking in Chicago ‘Tuesday Dr. Howard Blake, said to — [be the head of a dope peddlin, lextending from Seattle to re Bay, Alaska. A complaint for violation of the | Harrison narcotic law has been ie) 0) jsued in the United States 4 |court here, and Dr, Blake will |brought before the federal grand Jury that convenes Nov, 16, Dr. Blake is the company’ physi cian for Libby, McNeil & Libby, ai |for several years past has heen © ducting the hospital at Bristol where the company maintains jlarge salmon cannery, It ts in con- | ection with bis trips to the north, where he is alleged to have fur nished narcotics to addicts in sale numbers, that Dr, Blake wanted in Seattle. It was upon information suj by Albert Geddings, a cannery worke | nee wae rae? oe morphine were found in his | | sion. , |them at the canneries and that he NY ~| When stood, tat-| entered, She sat there, facing a mirror at her Sometimes before T had geen him— | ered with a Nile green mantle. Calcutta once, again in Milan, in aft.” “I will give it.” said Wilson, “to Bob Hartung, the treasurer out front the box office, He will Know more pout banking than 1." active. She realized this. eg, + he erst pn Hartung accepted it and undertook | ut sho did not complain even} 6 mienion | when she returned to me from aap - Poughkeepsie alone and penniless.| witty Gordon's back! “ry She kept her suffer. It Was the city editor speaking. self, Only—when it got too ‘Go over to the Moore,” he said, | bad, she quietly ended it—in that ter-| “ang see her, Interview h And gee pg j write a story about her back. It's | nd she had no ‘Bolshevist be-| the most marvelous back on earth.” lef: *- Shewa's aunt smiled sadly and sswed the old man crying on the and entered with the matinee “ crowd, I stumbled thru a long pas has been hard in the laxt years. She! sageway that led past the Rees tol probably suffered much—and learned} the stage. Back stage I stumbled in much—perhaps had more liberal ‘leon, ifeals than in other times. But as itty Gordon's back!" said 1 r being a ‘dangerous radical’ or al yhore ja it?” |bad gitl—I would never, never be} “whist!” said Wilson, “Come with lieve it. She was just a poor little | m | thing who disappointed her good-| Upstairs we went, into a dressing + | looking sweetheart—that ts all. And! room, she couldn't bear the thought of the| “Sit down,” he said. “Miss Gor. |lonely, forsuken life she felt was be-|don's getting ready for the show. I fore her It is white she! ‘The Nilation It is so Why, indeea? ruined the films, It is so wonderful ool that princes have asked her to marry LSIE FLIRTED them—just to get her to turn her back on them, Come—you shall He Jed me down the stairs, “Miss Gordon!" he called, knocking a door “Come, in!” shegummoned, and we | | ar show time, | And out of sight. abaisky declares with feeling | hama a that The matinee crowd was ushering “Louwlsch blames the annulment|in—amiling, chattering girls, jof their marriage upon the giri's|S0Mme chaperones, and men, It was) | ‘Bolshevist ideas’—it is the common | yesterday afternoon, Pr ctice to blame everything on Bol-| adn ay sheviem.” “Here,” said Kitty Gordon, extend. | Shewa’s aunts are equally positive! ing a large, fat envelope, “is $2, 7 | that the on for the girl's pathetic! ‘This happened the night be | from Steila “Miss Gordon,” I stammered, “IT Publin later, and long ago in Yoko-| have heard «o much about your~ that is, I should like to see—if you don't mind— Miss Gordon, I have hand-| positive orders to see your back.” The back turned slowly around, Miss Gordon faced me. I fumbled in my hands a copy of The Star, She kaw it, “Bandits Rob Theatre Man of 000!" read a red headline: cried Miss Gordon, jump- ending gf her life was disappoint-| the close of the Orpheum show ; Back! Givi cl ment and humiliation, Jack Wilson, being her manager, 7 ee te “I can not live any longe) she | valet, or husband, or something, took 1 , , . 1 fled, Wilsoi 4 wrote in her last note, “after this ex.| the envelope and tucked it into bis | paged me rors ae Frain ae perience. Tell my people at home} pocket | corridor apd dashed into the box of- I died naturally.” Have it," she added, “converted | gicg, wonky, oi at hie heele. SHEWA WAS STOUT into a bank draft, and return me the ’ “Where's that $2,001 ed of Bob Hartung. “Who held you up? Why didn’t you tell me?” “Oh, here's your draft,” said Har- tung. pbody held me up. That Was another man,” Wilson turned to me, “You can't see Miss Gordon now.” he said. “She's temperamental. It Would spoll the show.” . he demand. The old man was still standing on the corner, weeping, as I went out. Fapproached him “Poor chap!" I said, He turned, “I've been all over the world,” he said. ‘ve seen the pyramids and the tomb of old Confuctus, I've bum- med the streets of Paris, France, and is in Kentucky, I've knocked around in South America some, dug gold in Alaska, lost it in Sydney, and mooched my way back thru China, Japan and the Philippines.” His volce broke, “I am about to die,” ho groaned, “and I've never set eyes on Kitty Gordon's back, Friend, I ain’t seen | nothing ye ROVING IT PAYS “What is it?” TO ADVERTISE} Louis N, Cobb, who telephoned The Star Monday and said be had escaped room insane asylum, in @ private sanitarium Tuesday, He was arrested by police Monday. “This | will make a good story,” Cobb told} ‘The Star, “you should vrint it.” The Star did, * feondition from the use of ,{OUNces of the stuff. Six o1 Geddings, who was in #& | nevertheless told a complete story ¢ the alleged system by which it |said that known dope fiends |transported to work in the | nertes. Geddings incriminated. two: men from the North, Jack Yeo a Harry Knefb, who corroborated i story in the main. They testifi that Dr. Blake furnished narcotics to all who had the price to pay for - he boasted on the way back that he had cleaned up more than $5,000 this sear son on hjsx dope business. hey arrived in Seattle \fall, Kneib and Yeo say that | Blake offered to supply them | morphine x $40 an ounce, if they would peddle it. This. he la sald have claimed, was cost price to hit. They agreed to this proposition, put’ up $400 for him to purch be morphine were delivered, and sh for the remaining four was given Kneib. ‘The records at Stewart & Fotmes_ Drug Co. show that Dr. Blake pre | sented to them an order for ba ounces of morphine, but that only other four were back ordered. morphine cost Dr. Blake $12.75 ounce, SUSPICIOUS CLERK STARTS PROBE Some time later the two Presented the back order to the four ounces, but the Sere had become suspicious, and refused fill it. Internal revenue agents wero notified, and an investigation begun. Dr. Blake is supposed to be at: tending the Cook County Clinic in Chicago. According to District At: torney Saunders’ instructions, he will” be held on $5,000 ball and brought: to Seattle for the action of the grand Jury. Geddings claims that he was “off the dope” and went to Alaska, thinking to be away from t tion, But he became it with Ia grippe, he says, and while sick, Dr, Blake gave him several shots of mor phine, which brought the old 1 back, and, as dope was offered where, he again became addicted to” its use. WASHINGTON, — Company 328th tank battalion, ordered from Camp Meade to Camp Lewis for duty with Fourth division, A Good Time to Get Into Business for Yourself Several of Seattle's Brokers have listed the most desirable opportunities in Se- attle that can be bought for reasonable prices and have dé cided to offer ‘them for sale in the Classified section of The Star. Each day ‘from this ‘time on ‘J you'll find many good “Business: Opportunities” advertised for sale in The Star, If interested, turn:to Want. Ad J page, read these ads carefully” and perhaps the very thing want will be: listed there. Business,