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Penge RN RNR tte ERE REESE RE Sig oy & On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise The Seattle Sta Vay ( WEATHER Tonight and Sunday, fair; moderate northeasterly winds Temperature Last 24 Hours Maximum, 37, Minimam, 24. Today noon, 29, SiN A Ce ER AED ALLERIA LL ALLE AOA First in News—First in Circulation (by 11,727 copies a day)—Call Main 0600 to Order The Star at Your Home—50 Cents a Month—Why Pay More? (HERO SAVES LIVES OF 1,000° | TRANSPORT CAPTAIN KEEPS SEA PERIL SECRE ARRAN HOME| ] EDITION ) Tounaas Botered as Brcond Clase verano 5, 1499, at po a Ot Satta ‘Wash ender the Aet ef Convene Marek ® S918. Fer Tear, by Ball, 96 to $9 Bad mc tm <> SEATTLE, WASH., SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1922. | Tragedy Child Loses U.S. SPEED Citizenship; Back to Castle CAUSED Ra RRS HRD coe i sectteabe es j | Home Brew ‘Mary de Mumm Must Return to Ger- ° many and Title She Hates, Courts 5 i Howdy, folks! Doesn't this } E Geet re Have Now Decided orn a wo te Dinger Is . ran Q ell- er Is -at simoat time wee tne evry vows |OLAMAX IN SEVEN-YEAR DRAMA Thr »Ss to start chirping a - a ‘oule, ays : eaifahe . Kan., Jan. 14.—This is the story of a “poo: = a) Tg ba 7 ie a i L Bisclfpor fh endl onchibbed So little rich girl,” in real life—the resume of the seven-year Porter, Expecting would be a drug on the market. as we that has had to do with Mary de Mumm—and the Bi Smash : last “aet” that robs her of the friends and the country| £@ ng EGGING HER ON she loves. : - Lady MacDulf, Oregon's cham. | Mary was born in the de Mumm chateau, near Rheims, By Robert B. Bermann SekaPeuiry etn | France, just prior. to the outbreak of the world war—the ae wreak af te North: fast . “Lay on, MacDuft, and daughter of Baron Walter de Mumm, world famous cham- Limited, on the Northern Pacitic aamned be om who first cries oy Bers pe co heearg om Pasion soldier, and Frances railroad, near Vasco, Thursday ‘Mold! Enou; Seo 5 nsas beauty an ughter of a eca |, according to passengers ee banker. ¥ 8 former Sen | the train who were in Seattiq Many a beautiful bathing beauty | i. Saturday, recovering from shock Rico iE oeceeriony Pong wh ros Se ae before the first clash between French and and more serious injuries oecoming ambitious, wanting te soldiers, de Mumm and his wife and child escaped | “We got a hell-dinger drivin’ us wear clothes and act. from France. Mother and child went to live with the an’ he's goin’ to carry us straight to eee tbaron’s people in German hell tonight.” \y. | That, according to J. F. Avery, of ’ “Rip Van Winkle” is comma Fled Into Switzerland | Detroit, was the prophecy made by | to the Liberty next week. Elect | Lif the porter on the observation car a | him te fhe ety councii! e was unbearable and they moved to Switzerland. | few minutes before the last three —— _ When America entered the war the Baroness de ‘Mumm ronan, trenpanabinbrhdly cpelbon instigated separation ings inat her Germaits a sound like the snap- agains jus ‘ping of @ giant whip. jband, who was laurels in th ¢ kaiser’s aviation HOLD it, in the meantime, seized the Both Avery and M. A. Hanson, of wer hai oid SGralonTanc¥at Us tine ‘ofthe printed the list. of Seattle births | the close of the war’ Mme, de Mumm returned to ¢ [Wrecky declared that the train was yesterday, and they were all post, | ATER and brought her child to her parents in Seneca. - [running at wuch high speed that it We're darn glad Little Homer} en an act of congress t Wax Impossible to keep one's neat wart torn Sesterday—we doa't| American citizenship 7a 3 wal aaet cin and fant a wd Mary de Mumm, the “tragedy child” and, below, her) *ithout holding onto posts or sim! Asiati in our f lyt ~ . y 2 ¥ vil f y \ movabi b jee want any Asiatics in our family \French courts, for her shage of the sei ‘oad property belong. | parents, Frances Scoville and Baron Walter de Mumm. The highs pion, y teers Rass Dr. John A. Marquis, secretary of |ing to her husband. ; | engers, was nothifig unusual. Mem-| the Presbyterian Board of Home|, Before plans ; 18 t ‘ bers of the train crew told them that Missions, who is in Seal says her body ie ee carried out she died in Paris, and) |the engineer habitually “speeded. up that religion ie a cure for all iis, | y s returned to Seneca for burial. | } 9 jot u us series of curves Will it cure insomnia in church, | Less than a year ago Baron de Mumm started legal w Wreck occurred in order to doctor? proceedings to recover his child. ent for an uperade eee 7 @ EASY MARKS | Grandfather Fights for Child aa et? atuacneers were even more Inr A burg stole 10,000 German : ; . s a | . * ignant, however, over what : - Pahang F Banker Scoville, the grandfather, then threw his money |Acting Mayor’s First Act Is Accusation Leads to Bitter! they described the wanton ‘Thursday night. Must be going {into a fight for the guardianship of the child. | to Condemn Measure } Struggle | neglect of the train crew when to paper his house. He went to Washington in that connection and—suffered | | Beg Bey Pha mane S. ae o 7 i we eJ an helpless, in e overtul Be thet as tt amy, A. Sinner op-|* rik breakdown, , f Characterizing the poll tax as | His skull crushed and suffer. | Pullman, eaates © garage,at Culbertson, Neb tely word came to his bedside that thy courts had| vicious, inefficient and hopeless ing from other injuries which | was 9:42 when the wreck oe cee jreturned little Mary to her father. ly antiquated as a means of vals. | )8Y yan; eee W. D. |curred.” Hanson declared Saturday. " THE TRUTH | Shortly afte Reovi c , ye, 2th ave. S. W., | “No assistance was given the in- " inde eight of wen. | beside his ‘ oH Mand deg died. And was buried} is revenue, Councilman Robert was in the eity hospital Satur- | jured by the railroad until between The right of wey— . his daughter, in Seneca. B. Hesketh, immediately upon day, while his neighbor, W. M. [3 and 4 the next morning, The Many @ led's hod Today little Mary—her mother gone; her granddaddy| ®**0ming office as acting mayor Kyals, 48, 4728 12th ave. 8. W., [two doctors in phe observation car Who ain't living today. |gone—is waiting for the messengers who will return her Saturday morning, issued a was being held in the city jail. | did splendid work, and the porter} 9 schaas Be |to her father in Germany ain CF statement declaring his intention Fd ares Cnltlgeonapa Gl berend ppihvelendthy. Avge caeallice Our police reporter says there = . ‘ pap R | ye Into unconsciousness, but no injured passengers. But the rest irae pate Week vy ene| Aad bow does the little “tragedy child” feel about it?, | {% pe Fi bn repeal of the | charge has been lodged against |of the train crew seemed to have mobiles in 1921 than in 1920, That] | on’t want to leave my grandma—I want to stay in| +The poil tax hits the mople least wee Gone cee eupnomne el the jn interest at all in dayene may be due to the fact that 1920|/ Seneca; I don’t want a title. I don’t want to liv 5 arts ared. "4 latter's Sapsriee. | INJURED LAY was & leap year | castle.” e in ala’ "y ee ant = a ag i Dye told the police in a moment iN COLD eee H “ widow with three children to support | of consciousness that he had gone) “ai the erie What's become of But Mary must go! ° has to pay, but the war profitteer| tg Ryais’ home Friday night and te the windows were smashed ee. ees | — neo ind robe of age is S%| accused him of stealing his lumber, | it got atelty cold Rarlag tan tie a jempt A more unjust form o! a a 4 household sn ond t. | ro! cold u e ve editartal every week | |. . vo i ” miemteen goods and CU | hours that the injured people had == 4 | Jation could not be imagined. ting his electric 7 } people had | | day at 2:30 p. moat the Hippodrome | ye paid, Ryaln seized a club and| COmPany didn't make the slightest “No Beer, No Work,” used to be} | to formulate plans to kill the poll) struck him over the head. knocking fe, to keep them warm or feed the slogan just before prohibition } jtax. Joseph BR. Manning, father ©f | hin t¢ thé ground, Ryals continued them went into effect. Well, both of ‘em| | ry the move , is in charge of OF | beating hia neighbs Bees ta |, Hanson was also irate over the eame true. P | - } asia iat rangemwents ata, t the | tne Sainte: Wein, atver the latter haa | fect, teat “ , ae yt paid - by j ‘ : “We want to get the ideas © \iapeed into wneonsclousness, and|{" Derths which they could not oo rome W. J. Connelt Manages to|Robbers Get Electrical Appli-|;ubiic.” Manning declared. “There | rey ont Capy were net ettered a. refend , | ; ceased only after he had been over A peanut sat on the railroad track, will be few speakers, We wish! powe, y ree He added that the company refused ses enterprise Swim to Safety ances but No Cash — | "il be few smrantr. | Mecting| Powered by neighbors. | [to pny for telegrame which, paasen The 3:45 came thundering past, lw . neste " —_— lof Seattle rexidents G. F. Bue! gers wished to send to allay the fears Toot-toot!—Peanat Butter at oe 2219 lth ave. W.| Safe crackers entered the Seattle! “Thomas ¥, Horner, Seattle at i, seman a of friends and relative: ee \™ boone renege A shock | flectric Supply Co, 914 Pine at.,/torney and progressive, will be one) It of the passengers were rite, 1a y ale a hundrea [and exposure received when his auto|early Saturday, and, after prying! of the speakers at the meeting, but) furious over the treatment the; mobile crashed thru a barrier at Pier | | 7 f : es ee We! gnd dropped 30 feet into the bay | Hy yc pores Peep eid Nov, aba ed ap igh Mes Al MI TS CRIME pra ard pals oo, Previigad - f ‘ould get rich on the life . too Jeles of loot, but got no cash will come from the audience.” Wi jo express their wrati 1 © ® 24 | Pri night ag 9 Vpeigg | C. A. Underwood, the manager, dis- A concerted attack on the poll tax > ‘ wh rs came on the ‘the whole French navy. ‘Wist he'd Tae dbdine: Soyolling Beets.” Buindlé the shop. Ithey declare does not work, Is ex well well, 49, wealthy farfner,! road officials shooed the report- bs Gtfer to buy the. fleet of wooden |the steamer Keystone State. Blinded) Tho office was in wild contusion, | pected to be launched by 39 county confeased today to murdering Philip] ers off, and refused to give them ships in Lake Union ag Pp Pinan 5 oe ae — ridge |2P4 apparently had been thoroly ran-| assessors of the state when they Houston, whose charred body was} even so much as a list of in- oe reach th Pern va Ran oF f od Jopen their annual convention Mon-| found in a burning haystack near! jured.” Capt. Roald Amundsert fs going go | tnd 1s maine a mun sruck @ ra p.tooMtaken by the yess men|any morning at Olympia Portage i the North Pole to find out wh arey leaped: trom the auto agd| ouitee cs etaee nee Cher l «Renal W, Hun, Meempens, Teta oae tin age ie made to news| UKIAH. Cal-—Four members of kind of weather they have up there. | | y leaped from the auto ang {appliances valued ht $100 or more.| county, and president of the Btate|Papermen in te Suton ta family of Edward Zeni died from tri We could teli him beforeband, and qe tg Po gps cg “ey 4/ Valuable papers which were in the| cesnration of County Assessor, de-| Houston and Farwell ‘had many! chinosis, believed tp have resulted eave him 4 long trip. eastoy Miphogageie rt Boo sh reed ae safe were left behind. Stared Baturday that while other | difficulties, ctenaee’ was formers from eating home-cured pork. Other ee ‘ } ——- = we a employed by Farwell, and claimed trichinosis ted f raft, from whith he was rescu@ by matters will be taken up at the con-| of tr reported from a silareeat . —“B.} path nw | ventic 6 poll t 1 come in| the latter owed him several hundred | Caspar and Fort Brage *——COLD WEATHER HINT ee weg ehh ag ia aa Wl | THREE MEN ARE Se traiticatiy 400 ‘per’ cons ‘opposi.| dollars, Farwell also objected to a cy a shia AM Should you slip on the fey | | in ieee the-sunken car. | | tion. love affair between his sister and| pevement, always fall for_| |ST047 tree tne nunben cr DYING IN MINE("® rescivsion denouncing the poti| Houston i MAYOR ORGANIZES ward, pmember——better the SCRANTON, Pa., Jon. 14—Three|tax, and declaring it a flat failure, Fi | face than the flask. ,| TACOMA FOG | Seer eAt eptiined, “alter Baad ce] reckabey wil Ua gamle’ BURCH JURORS A FREE MARRIAGE . on eet alive, ane man killed and three in-| The convention is expected to hold | AND BABY BUREAU | - | | jured, today were the casuaitic forth until Thursday “ aransing tov costae to maicn| CAUSES DEATEH) sui, tesa wore tne commie ator DEADLOCKED ] x::4xsvotis. 90 14-tew the gown is the popular costume in ACOMA, Ja lense £08, | tyevil's Hyebrow of the Dunmore No F} A 108 ANGELES, Jan, 14.—One hank, mayor of the Hoosier Seattle ‘ence the prevalence of|which has hung over Tacoma sor aie ol y nction for me wel a hold : Frye polis, came to the front to- rg ae pr Tree days, claimed its first dean | 3,6? 0%, ghe National mine of ‘ye | Anju Is Denied lone woman is holaing out against metropolis, caine to the front to as laat, night," AINE A. Schunidt, Been Aeee ce Mepeny, under Howat Is Denied} nin women and two men whe are ns ie Ntablished a. “marriage Li'l Gee Gee, th’ office vamp, says | who was found dead in bis car, is be Paposeceeys deer KANSAS CITY, Mo., Jan, 14—Clr Tae the lexcetan ef Joun Bilah weeks wu” in the city hall and will it makes her mad to discover that! lieved to have died from « weak heart) “ cuit Judge Samuel A. Dew today de-| 0) ne ee ote a . | nine a-soclety of widows, wid: her jdol not only has feet of clay, but | aggravated by the fog. ; |La Follette Aide | nied the petition mgr Howat, |r Ay teal we lustios peri vetore| owers, old maids and bachelors— also falien arches Tracks on the pavement showed . . limprisoned Kansas mine nd | Ae: pbject, matrimony OR as | police decla that he piloted the Ends His Life |) yes for a permanent injupetion | 11, a m. today gh anlar emer pt Ae ecided to take|car for more than two blocks after; PLYMOUTH, Wis., Jan, 14.—Henry |restraining Intterpatiqnal President The holdout, according to the re-} ioe of rettinis married Connie Mack has deci to tak |r is ‘ ti M Do|{ thinking of getting 1 again, j hiv team to Texas for their training. |his death, The machine finally |Krumory, president of the Wisconsin | John 1. Lewis gapd the executive; Port In circulation, is Mrs, Eva De)) ig when their billing and cooing When Connie's rookies get to throw. | crashed into a telephone pole | Cheese Federation and long identified | board of the United Mine Workers arg senerally beryl staunch-|1 i. done, T will do the act ing the ball, Texag is none too large leading supporter of from ousting Howat and his “outlaw | st surch adherent of any who sat!) Vinout charge,” Shank said. Q ¢ for them EVERETT.—Dr. Frederick tobert M. La Follette, was found | organization” from the Interna Jonal}in the lt 9 cee yy {|The mayor simultaneously an ton, University of Washington, to | dead hanging in his cottage at Crys. | union. penta hi wetland, who early!) nounced he would give a high EVERETT.—John Ke li, depart-| liver commencement address at the|tal Lake, near herd. | jtoday was credited as being aligne'|| ongir to each of the first 600 ment store employe of Seattle, in| Kverett high school graduation exer Recent slumps in the cheese mar-| PORTLAND, Ore—The Rev, Jehn| With Mra. De, Mott, later was said yes in Indianapolis named af. cisos: Wednes! night. Forty-three| ket had worried Krumery, according H. Boyd, former pastor First Presby |io care gy won over to the mu- him, side, Providence hoxpltal from injuries re | : ceived when struck by auto, receive diplomas, to friends, terian chureh here, dies in Ghicago, | jority Will H. Hays Resigns for Movie Office Quits Cabinet Post to Become Chief Director of Photoplay Industry | | | | | j | Will H. Hays \ BY RAYMOND CLAPPER WASHINGTON, Jan. M— Postmaster General Will Hays today announced his intention of resigning from President Hard- ing’s cabinet to become) the “movie king” of the United States. Official announcement of his intention was made by Hays, | follewing @ conference at the White House this morning in which President Harding re- luctantly acquiesced to the post master general leaving the cab- inet. uv United | Probably will succeed Hays as master general. Hays, the first member to drop out | of the official family, becomes head} | of the national association of the mo- tion pleture industry, representing | virtually all the largest film pro- | ducers in the country. | HAYS AND HARDING | ISSUE STATEMENTS ' | ‘The new office bears somewhat the | | anne relation to the motion picture | lindustry, now the fourth largest in-| | dustrial enterprise in the nation, that | | Judge K, M. Landis’ position does to | organized baseball. Following the conference at the both issued statements, but no men- |tion was made when the resignation | | would become effective. Hays’ statement said: “With the president's consent, 1 | producers and distributors. No con- jtract has been executed yet. T am |assuming, of course, that a satisfac: | which will make certain carrying out the high, purposes contemplated for this great industry.” President Harding expressed his regret at having Hays retire from lthe cabinet, “where he has already | made so fine a record.” | PRESIDENT SORRY TO LOSE HAYS ‘The president's statement follows: “The postmaster general and 1 have been discussing at considerable liength the proposal which has been made to him to become the head of a | national association of motion picture producers and distributors. “If the arrangement proves to be, when the defails are worked out, what it seems to be, T cannot well interpose any objection to Mr. Hays retiring from the cabinet to take up & work so important. It is too great service for him to refuse, “] shall be more than sorry to have he has already made so fine a record, broadest view situation from the point and seek the highest possible good. | In accepting the offer, which hg! | has had amder consideration for more than a month, Hays will absolutely divorce himself from politics—the work in which he has battled #0 virorously for the last four years. Hays’ formal resignation will oc- Jour when his movie contract is | signed. |Denver Fighting “Smut” Magazines VER, Jan, 14.—Whether the} the right to bar the sale of} 1 city ha so-called “smut” maguzines probably will be decided in the courts here. Members of the Women's Co-opera- ue recently prevailed upon y officials to stop the sale of al: risque publications, Publishers of one of the magazines | | have retained counsel here and have announced their intention to carry the case to the supreme court, if nec | . SIDNEY A. STRONG will! RE’ address the Millionair club, 98 W Main st, Saturday evening. There will be a program of entertainment. Doughboys and. German B rid L ETURN ‘oat and, Saved b Brave Skipper NEW YORK, Jan, 14 Captain Joseph J. Repha, manding his first vensel af 1 brought P Crooke safely home to port the army re: terrific storms, after the sprung a serious leak, was a teday when the Crooke & with 1,000 doughboys from th Rhine, 14 German brides who kept all knowledge of the ger from His pon the highest authority the) most of the Press learned today that} captain Walter Senator Harry New, Indiana, very | superintendent of the ost: | transport service. HEAVY STORMS BUFFET SHIP Captain Repha had never been ‘The in command of a ¥ Atlantic voyage had, started before the Crooke ‘ran beavy storms which | Violence as she plowed her slowly westward. Tuesday Captain Repha, who had been @ ing soundings every 15 minutes an additional precaution, twice a day as was noticed that there was 18 {1 water White House, Hays and Harding | At a this had increased ches. in No. 1 hold at 10 o Realizing that the transport’ in serious danger, Captain informed Chief Engineer Cl Burkguist and Chief Officer have decided to undertake the work | Holck of the situation and suggested by the motion picture|them not to let the troops oF passengers know of the Holek, with 50 men, went |to No. 1 hold, shifted over the tory contract will be possible and one | nd found a serious leak where: |rivets had sprung loose. The damage was repaired anyone outside the rescue ing aware of the trouble. |hours the men worked in in the depth of the hold. It until 2 p.m. Wednesday work was completed. ‘SOLDIER BONU: WITHOUT TAX WASHINGTON, Jan. 4. — United States will pay a soldier nus without one cent of taxation upon the people, under republican leaders in congress working on today. This plan bonus calls for paying with interest on the f debt or by the sale of bonds an opportunity for a helpful public |aeainst collection of the war principal. “The proposal that the foreign him retire from the cabinet, where |4e used to pay the bonus |ly will be adopted if it proves put we have agreed to look upon the /iie and I believe it with |sentative Fordney, chairman of tl |house “er ways and means said today, % “President Harding is In tayor he» plan and has personally mended it to the committee.” FATTY’S TF I3 SLOW WOR SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 14.—The- monotonous work of trying to fi juror who knows nothing of the coe (Fatty) Arbuckle |too muc resumed today in Arbuckle’s trial [charges of | Rappe's life. se and h about other things, having taken VI Me Kleven jurors temporarily were in the box when court 0} |Siow progress during the first made it certain the jury could nog be completed today. Of all the bored people in court, — Arbuckle seemed the imést bored by — it all, UNEMPLOYED VETERANS wit { Sunday, at 3 p, m. under the m auspices of the Unemployed Veter s’ club, at Veterans’ hall, 1616% — hird ave. p. m, will be fed, Hungry men coming