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bx ¢ Weather I(UIb Tonight and Saturday: rain; fresh easterly gale, ‘Temperature Last 24 Hours Maximum, 51. Minimum, 44, Today noon, 45. Death of Babe. Soup fades’ Pose. Jim Hill. exploits of Paul Bunyan recited im ictters published by ¢ Star today, called forth by its fo perpetuate and preserve of thia epic lumberjack. recites the tragic death of in Kansas, about PUBLIC IS SOAKED, 1S RRembder of rival raconteurs, the cor~ 4 event in Bunyan, ‘Babe, = nt ul's retirement For, without the Paul was handi-) of the animal | aise 'Grossly OvercHlarged; Ap- peal From Rate Award to Go to Supreme Court 2 bad togned off the Mie | ing what became | “Great t Plains, he and | ine Co thousand acres | patrons, the city carried its fight for | ited to popeorn. In) a lower gas rate to the supreme ripened and Paul, | court Friday wat the corn into a) is grossly overcharging gas a hundreds of thou-| APPea! against the recent decision of the pubiie service commission lay directly in the! granting the Seattle corporation a ctr lta Kansas, where | 91.50 tarift was filed by First Assist as “* DOF lightning were quite fre-|*5t Corporation Counsel Thomas J went, A bolt of lightning bit the|L. Kennedy ) corn crib, the heat therefrom! Kennedy : the corn to pop, and it charged that the public vored the Seattle Lighting Co, sen: ing a private “investigator” to Call | fornia cities to bolster up the case ot He also claimed, that the Seattle company is the local corporation. product than Los Angeles, Portland or San Francisco, y The city’s appeal is expected to come up for hearing at the Janw | Ary seasion of the supreme courts The wagon would hold an found and used the dirt to FIGHT FOR BOY Range mountains. | of maneuvering to| ‘The Star: After Paul Bun et. North Dakota he came West Babe and his calf oto the mulligan for his crew Paul ro is ci aS a Pip teitie no large that it took aix| iro" the Custody On le nto be ie -aiiada tnd one caricad of |S@O0le, mother of the hoy, and it. ad this mulligan with |M"*- Mary Raven, its grandmother, on dmb according to indications ‘riday Soca tle Brench-Canadian| Fs Semple was in Judge French's Bae for him who was 14 fiddle. {Court Friday. apparent ay for Som between the eyes. Paul had to|‘"P fray, but on request of oppos-' up each morning at |!" torneys the court postponed! the hearing one week, leaving the Ib, pile: ha B00-%. Mledriver ham-| meanwhile, with hia «rand r to ages day to get the men t0| other but making him the court so that any person taking jhim out of jurisdiction would be guilty of kidnaping. According to Mrs, Semple’s affi davit in the case, the custody of the Ecce thing the stadium in ca was made by nature, but it ig not true. It is merely a excavation made by Paul Bun. | the year of the dark atmos the to park the Biue ox,|9°Y Was awarded to the father gamed a ry 6, 1920, in an uncontested the blue ox died they had/ pow Jramed tel drag him a few miles she came here erent cher dug a hole and Francisco and the be father a fim. ‘There waa 90 much dirt | ™ittad she should have had her i e e hority to take him ey made what. is now|*"4 gave her authority apd ez fin 0 | With the child she went t tried atch his coming and Ft bent a wireless menage | of the boy is now pending. he left France, and when he| the Btatue of LAberty, he} ms three links ahead of it HALL and KR. H. PARKS, Blaine, Wash, eee HOOFED A HOLE Farmer Killed by ‘Live’ Barbed Wire FOLSOM, Cal, Nov. 26.—Charles H. Haafe, rancher, in opening a gate, ox touched a barbed wire carrying 11 41M HILL'S RAILROAD 000 volts of electricity and died in. tor The Siar: May I not con-|stantly. Two milen away a Pacific exeeiient, history of | Gas and Mlectric Co. power line had 9. Column 1) ‘fallen across the fence, Charging that the Seattle Light-/ commisaio: ! ferro ceeennenre Set werent 9 | totlowing the Easter rebellion of 3916. | ‘) Arthur allowed a much higher rate for its) 4 ward of| On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise The Seattle Star Botered as Becond Clase Matter May 9, 1999, at Panoramic view of the great new Stadium which will be dedicated 2 SE | Ce ee es Oe SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, NOVEMBE R 26, 1920. aturday. Photo by Carter, of Cress-Dale. he Pestoffice at Beattie, Wash, under the Act of Congress March §, 1979. Per Year, by Mall, $5 to 69 CITY CARRIES UP FIGHT ON WHOLESALE TSN Hundreds of Men Seized,’ Including Leaders of Irish “Republic” DUBLIN, Nov Hundreds of | prisoners Were taken here today In & great roundup of Sinn Fein lead horn. In addition to Arthur orittitn, | | head of the Sinn Fein, and John Mc Neil, commander of the [rish volun teers, police and military’ took many loser officials to jail, Among these were Joseph Moliride and Staines, members of parliament | Great sheaves of documents were | metzed in the raids which began be- fore dawn. The “drive 6 wag similar to that Griffith was one of the was taken from his home at 2 a. m., after police and noldiers searc hia home, They dectared they found much Sinn Fein Uterature to be used ag evidenc Many were seized in their beds in the early morning, hustled into scan } ty clothing, and runhed to jail The jaila were filled to overflow {ne and spare rooms in Dublin castle and other bulldings were used ax | celle. | Guards paced before: m |ings never designed ax | Since the murfer of 14 British of. | first arrested y build ficers in Dublin Sunday there has | been great activity and hundreds of | suspects have been gathered in by soldiers and police The attacks jJast Sunday were spposed to hav n engineered to ¥ idence British officials had against Sinn Fein, leaders Many documents were destroyed in the raids and most of the officers | shot were connected with the tn- telligence department of the British army GRIFFITH'S ARREST [18 BIG SURPRISE yi CITY, Joins His Mate Michael | GAS On Anniversary -of Wedding He Grieving for His Pal of 44 Years, Aged Man Follows Her to “Wonder- land Beyond” BY HAL ARMSTRONG ARTED 13 days before by hand of death, Mr. and Mrs lGeorge F. Mayer, until recently of 11306 E. Union st., joined each other carly yesterday in the spirit world and, if what we mortals like to think in true, celebrated their 44th wedding fought to reawaken the desire to live Bome sald his heart yet much of the time, for days unconscious. strangely placid and he smjled. see the wae broken, while he ta SEV RSTERDAY would have been anniversary joyously together in their 44th wedding day,” said ae wonderland beyond.” Mrs, Rogers. “Had they been alive, Funeral services for Mr. Mayer|Mr. Mayer would have spent the were held at the Bonney-Watson|day at home alone with Mrs. Mayer Jostabliahment at 1 p,m, today. A]|He would have brought her flowers smile was on the dead man’s lips,/and some little gift, as he always all that remained to tell the rela |did on such occasions, and helped tives and many friends he left be |her with the dishes Just before 3 morning—as the anniversary dawn | ‘The body was cremated, just as bis|ed—it was known at the hospital | wife's had been 13 days ago. Their) that the end had come Mr. Mayer | ashes will rest, aide by side, In tiny | opened his t smiled peace. |urns, as both of them had wished. | fully, closed them again, was gone, ©. im, the smile transfixed air hind that bis passing waa a happy o'clock }one eyen UT those who witnesned the pass- . ing of the two cannot believe! There is no surgery to mend a other than that somewt in the] broken heart; no balm in medicine to misty after-world Mr. nd =Mrs.| fill an empty one. But does death Mayer have rejoined and, hand in| always part us? rand, are going on. ‘There were inci dents, It ia sald, that point that way LADY’S LOWER LEFT Both went to the Minor hospital) Jabout the same time some weeks MOLARS RECOVERED Jago, Mr. Mayer wax 76; his wife a bjt younger, During their 44 years BY CAR CONDUCTOR together their home life had been Alice Hurley's lower left mo. singularly without the slightest fric-|]| lare are found! tion That is-to say, an Xray photo: Vor 21 years they had lived In Ses|] graph of the molars has been re. lattle. Mr, Mayer was connected with || covered by a street car conduc various railway, mercantile, real! tor and now reposes in the ar here at He was. Drummond | of the lost and found de nt of the muny ruilway Rocutgen snap shot was estate and promotion firms different times as auditor finally, auditor for the Griffith is chief of the Dall Eire. | Lighterage company. He was a Ma by Dr. Bourns, It is an ann, the Irish parliament, and acting | #00 and a member of the Arctic club. portrait of a dental fa | president of the “republic,” in the | phe Pe absence of Bammon de Valera HRUOUT there married life, Mrs The Irish volunteers, organized by Mayer was his helpmeet, advi« 1, have assumed some strength |or, counsellor and sweetheart, it Is Nab Jap—He Shot te the difficulty of arming and| said, They were very close : training. Drills are conducted clan-| It became apparent when Mrs Ducks in the Dark destinely in isolated spots. Mayer first the hospl-| While he loudly protested against The arrests of Griffith and McNeil | ta) that she had to live. Mr being interrupted in obtaining a ax a gurprise, Both had been |Mayer broke down immediately and | Thanksgiving repast, Shocki Nako, a erate in their pub statements | was taken to the hospital, too, Until] Japanese, was arrested at Renton and bad | allowed every freedom, | «he died, they were constantly tn-| Junction Thursday by A, C. Marco, It way believed documents captur-| quiring after the welfare of one an-| deputy game warden, who charged ed recently in the wholesale |BRITISH FLAG ION N. Y. CLUB NEW YORK, Nov, 26,-The exclu sive Union club on Fifth ave, was guarded by police today to prevent a repetition of the attacks of Sinn Feiners which occurred there yester: day afternoon, Four men arrested in the rioting around the club yesterday were to be (Turn to Page 10, Column 3) ‘other, with more than ordinary inter | him with shooting ducks befere sun. pence was declared 11| San Francisco and was visited by] py trish office officials and the mili. | estsand concern rive. was very anxious to get|Mre. Rauen, mother of the boy’#| tary implicated them with the plots} On November 12 Mra. Mayer) Nako is minus $10 he deposited ¢ and the transport service be. | father; who asked permis@on to get|o¢ extremists or that the govern-| breathed her last. Mr, Mayér was! for appearance for trial Dec mber 2, too slow for him, he got into his |'he child's hair cut, but took him! ment had decided to make @ clean|too ill, It was decided, to inform | in addition to the voyeted ducks. bark canoe—the one he used |!nstead “on board @ steamer for Se-| sweep of all Sinn Fein leaders, mod-|him of the fact, but he seemed to (the Big Onion the year he ran | “ttle [erate or otherwise. sense that she was gone, He didn't up stream. His path was wena Pega nany Sv 0324 o Po te ask for her again, i condition h with broken backs, and her motion to modify the steadily grew worse, But it was not dead fis divorce decree to give her custody IRISH ATTACK until after her funeral on the Sun day following that his physician en tirely gave up hope “After her funeral,” Fr. Rogers, of Spokane, his step daughter, who was at the bedside, “he gave completely up. He seemed to, have no further interest in get ting well, He wanted to die.” A especial nurse, Miss Mabel Holmes, was called in a final effort to revive his, and stubbornly his ldoctor and others at the hospital raid Mrs. A, his face was! yesterday | RATES OIL KING IS WIFE FEARS | DEAD FROM, COAT CL GUN WOUND) TO SUICIDE Police Hunting Woman; He | Says Garment Left on Boat Was Mentioned for G.0.P.| From Which Unidentified Presidency Nomination ‘Man Leaped, Is His ARDMORE, Okla. Nov. 26 —Jacod] ‘The overcoat believed to have been Hamon, millionaire oll magnate 1 left. on the deck of the steamer and republican national committee | Washington by the’man who leaped man, died at Hardy sanitarium here |or fell overboard Thanksgiving after: shortly after 8 o'clock thie morning. | 200m, while the boat.was bound from |Acute dilation of the heart caused here to Tacoma, was identified Fri day by Mrs. Robert Boyle, of 307 |death, it was announces. Hamon W. 87th st. ag that of her husband. jhad been nursing a gunshot wound! Boyle, 33 years old, and a cook, left since last Sunday. be a note at his wife’s house Thanks- He walked to the sanitarium here giving day, saying that he was going | to leave her. e has not been seen Jon Sunday and maid he accidentally | 44, aap |ahot himself while cleaning a gun, since that time Mrs. Boyle told Capt. KE. C. Collier Preparing for a hunting trip, His! anq Detective Sergeant W. E, Justus |story wax accepted without question |Kriaay ‘noon that she felt sure her juntil Monday, when a warrant WS | niusband was the man who drowned. issued for the arrest of a woman who | she could give no.reason for the act had acted as his bookkeeper and sec:|""Aitng police may. that. indications hae gfe lag yg almost positive that Boyle is the She was charged with shooting) man who leaped to death from the Hamon, and the pational committee: | {hits geek, they are not yet certain, {man and the woman were also @- | \iny Hoyle was grief-stricken when | cused on information filed in court of jane tid the story to. the police, S matutory petenee |There Is only a slight chance that amon, ot been loc fhe obtaiiied ‘the name ef Hamon|_ D°7'e waa arenes & & dark blue |thru marriage to a distant relative of | suit, army shirt, tan shoes, light cap, | was fair complexiorted and had blue {the oft wing ( according to reporta even, tile wits Clik MA KO Mae tween avon : hie Poorer a never! i. Bisbee, 3035 Alki ave.; J. P. Jack yn edlcir agen ih ne aroma json, 3211 34th ave. &, and J. EB. Hamon and the woman had occu @, & Vicksbure. | Butehard, of the U. pied adjoining rooms at a hotel here| Wig saw. the man. leap overbourd, for several weeks. Mrs. cob rs va in Chicago with her two|"*Y be Was dressed im fark clothes are Sgt fl After his supposed death leap, the may man never came to the surface. S CONFIDENCE Boats lowered from the steam: IN HER HUSBAND Jer, and altho th searched, the e Point for half an nd not a trace of him. The Washington, commanded by Captain Samuel Bartow, had left here at 11 a, m,, bound for ‘Tacoma. RAPS FOES OF VACCINATION | | waters off B hour, they fo Shortly before her husband died, Mrs. Jacob Hamon expressed “fullest confidence” in her husband. “T feel deeply grieved that any other construction should be placed jupon the incident, she said She rushed to Ardmore with her two children as soon as she heard of her husband's injury The rise of Jake Hamon from a penniless promoter to one of the rich independent of] men in the world der in ‘the republican party, [and a le jreads like a fable. Dr. MH. M. Read,-city health com fortune at his ¢ ‘h | missioner, requested Corporation ervatively at $30,-|Counsel Walter F, Meier Friday for | 000,000. an opinion whether persons circu- | GOT BACKING lating. anti-vacoination literatore’can a punished. the circulation of these |OF RINGLING be restrair | “L believe The foundation of his fortune lay | In the scheme wheh he devised and|Citeulars should be restrained be lcasried ‘thry—the lopment of {fore this excessive agitation against townsites and a railroad in Okla.|the constituted law goes so far as |homa. He had no money with which |to be @ direct inoltement to riot,” to carry out the project, but decided | Dr. Read declared. a wealthy circus man would prob-| TWO men have been arrested for ably be more apt to finance the pro- distributing anti-vaccination cireu- ject than any other persbn, lars on the streets without a license. He made the acquaintance of one y are Wayne R, Wilson, 21, @ of the Ringling brothers. It was] Student living at 1531 Belmont a . said he deliberately turned over a/@nd Emil J. Adameck, 3f, a German cocktail glass in a New York cafe | Student, 1603 20th ave e at a table where Ringling was seated | Both cases were dismissed in po: lice court last Wednesd Anti-Bolshevik _ Congress Asked RIGA, Nov. 26.—Reports circu: In order to meet the cireus owne Hamon made the most of the incl dent and soon got Ringling'’s back- ing The town of Jacehamoh and an other named Ringling was started. The railroad project got under way and then oil was discovered on the| tated here today said President Milly property. From that time Hamon/|erand of France plans the calling of was a made man. a world-wide anti-Bolshevik confer- After making his fortune, Hamon} ence to consider a campaign against (Turn to Page 10, Column 2) the soviet government, ‘ LATE EDITION | oe CENTS IN SEATTLE _ B LARGEST CROWD IN SEATTLE HISTORY! Gates Open at Noon; Dedi- : cation Ceremonies 1:45; Football Game 2:25 The largest crowd ever gathered within @ single structure in Seattle’ or the state of Washington will be on hand when Referee George Var- nell blows the whistle that will send | University of Washington gridiron warriors charging down the field to meet the eleven from Dartmouth college in the new Washington stadium Saturday afternoon. This game, the first inter-sectional contest ever held in Seattle, will be the feature of the dedication of the stadium, the immense structure that was built by the Associated Students of the University of Washington, ADVANCE SALE PRESAGES CAPACITY CROWD The advance ticket sale for the dedication and game show that the | temporary. capacity of the stadium 20,000 seats—will be filled with expected. Impressive ceremonies will feature the dedication of the stadium before the Dartmouth game. State officials, representatives trom other states and federal officers will take part in the ceremonial proces: sion that will precede the big con- test. The dedication will begin with the presentation of the stadium by W. H. Lewis, for the builders, and the acceptance by Darwin Meisnest, for the Associated Students. Governor Hart will represent the state and Dr. Suzzalio, the university. Among the guests who will take part in the opening ceremonies are: Major General Charles H. Muir, commanding officer of Camp Lewis; Rear Admiral Harry A. Field, com- }manding the 13th naval district; Col. O, J. Charles, William J. Coyte, Meutenant governorelect; Mayor. Caldwell of Seattle, presidents of other colleges and universities of the Pacific Coast conference and the regents of the university. GAME TO START AT 2:15 Dartmouth will take the field at 2 o'clock, followed by the Washing, ton men five minutes later. The kick-off will be at 2:15, Darwin Neisnest, manager of the A. 8, U. W., announces that final plans for handling the crowd have been completed. The best way to reach the stadium after 12 noon Saturday is by way of the 28rd ave, car line to the end and over the temporary pontoon bridge over the Lake Washington canal to the stadium entrance, This: is by far the shortest route for the street car patrons The University cars, to 14th and 40th st. N. E., come within six-tenths of a mile of the stadium, Automobile parking will be In charge of Lieut, Carr of the police department. NO PRIVATE C. ALLOWED ON Cé Absolutely no private cars will be RS allowed to pass thru the university campus to the stadium. The cars must go over Laurelshade rd, bordering the south end of the campus. Sufficient parking spaces have vicinity cars. A jitney line will run from 14th and 40th thru the campus to the ; Stadium. The fare will be 10 cénts, Two hundred and forty university men will act as ushers, ‘This will (Turn to Page 10, Column @ of the Stadium for private ease, and a large overflow crowd is — been provided for in the immediate |