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1 1 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? anne Tonight and Sa to stron Maximum, 49. Today gate. ‘Temperatare Last turday, rain; fresh @ southerly 24 Hours Minimum, 40. noon, 43. VOLUME 23 #ome Brew Howdy, folks! All the people who think they're paid what they're worth could hold a com | vention in an upper berth, | eee | The time is coming in Seattle when | they will arrest bootleggers. | eee Councilman Erickson wants to buy | 200 Light, speedy street cars. Fine! Then we can use the one-man cars for squirrel cages. | ° oe || LI'L GEE GER, TH OFFICE | | VAMP, SEZ: 1] | @our new dollar was designed | | by a foreigner. Foreigners ab | | | ways did have designs on our | dollars, w eee Tatil she pated | that old pon, Lil Gee Gee bad never i deen in trouble be- | fore. | eee : “In the spring a young man's fancy | lightly turns to thoughts of love,” postcards W. R. Allen of the Asso ciation of the Unemployed. And then} he goes on to ask if this explains why his dern tomcat has been ab-| sent three nights this week. . Well! Well! Well! If It Ain't My Old Friend Benet All Lit U “Tm waiting for myself, sittin: jate, aiting, for myself te come back te-| Af go ovt of moonlit gate and the right." I saw myse! ture to WOtiam L ~4 Remet tm The New Republic. eee | ‘ Dave Henderson, superintendent | the muny railway, says the large) street cars here may be sold to the| “Next week Dr. M. A. Matthews will speak to the Seattle realtors on “What Is the Matter With Seatte.’” Come carly, folks, and bring your ‘z outfits. . Woman may smoke, but the old fashigned way of seratching a match still remains @ strictly masculine a ee BY THE BREAD OF HIS BROW “His pleasures, indeed, are few { and as a general thing there is a great deal more sweat upon the brow of the average man than there is bread."—Seattle Argus, eee 1 cough, I snceze, 1 gnort, 1 whees, I'm in @ perfect frenzy; | My head is dough, My nose won't go. I've got the influency. i eee } ‘The Lady Next Door says there is} ene good thing about having the flu The neighbors don’t drop in to use; the phone at mea] times. ee | LIFES LITTLE DRAMAS (By Particeps) He gazed wildly around the disor-| fered room as if seeking some means of escape. There was none. The tiny phial sat on the dressing table fac- ing him, as implacable aa destiny He ran his fingers thru his hair.| His shoulders heaved convulsively,| as he was shaken by great dry sobs He gazed longingly at the smooth, | (Turn to Page 7, Column 2) Your Saturday Shopping List AN be entirely The hag which at some monstrous emotion? I asked Dr, Ameen Fareed, international authority on mental complexities, to ex: plain for readers of The Star this presumed factor in the slaying of William Taylor, noted movie director. “Jealousy is the most stealthy and venomous of our primal emotions,” said Dr. Fareed. On Increase in America “And it is on in America, for a number of social reasons—breaking out just now in a phenomenal ex cess of sex crimes, Jealousy ts the by-product of the sense of possession, hav ing in it both hate and fear. In its firet stage it is a nat ural animal passion arising from the instinct of self-pro tection. But the human being, in the throes of becoming civ- tized, ties to conceal it. This repression, like all smothered instincts, often begets abnor. mal and dangerous complica- tions. They tend then to break out with explosive force. “To one who has made a it the increase @eevcccccccccoce easily reo Tt has & definite biology, Its fret effects are tons of appetite and over.stim- wiation of the eeeretion giands. ‘The liver is powerfully affect ¢4. This bodily derangement then quickly reacts on the mind, establishing a vicious circle, bringing unbalance sim- lar to insanity, temporarily. “Tt is its furtive quality which makes it dangerous ‘This secrecy is submerved by two deep-rooted cautions Four Reasons for Spread *(1) The fear of advertising one’s weakness and inade- quacy—jealousy being the ad- mission of lack of power to dominate a situation. “() The dread, particularly in women, of affronting a so cial taboo by admitting pos sessive interest in a man greater than his own “Thus it often resorts to di- rect action “Among the big contributing causes for the striking im crease in jealousy crimes arp these “(1) The liberation of wom- en from old restraints and their wider experimentation in the realm of affection. “(2) The intimacies of the modern dance, with its streas a ex. “() ‘The insecurity of what were so lately regarded as sacred bonds, without full re- adjastment to newly forming conventions, Jealousy BY JACK JUNGMEYER OS ANGELES, Feb. 17.—Jealousy— The force which many official in lieve provides the key to the Taylor mystery, most baffling murder in years— On the Issue of American SEATTLE, Cause of Many Recent Crimes estigators be- time rides every lover to misery and many to tragedy— The greatest motivator of crime in America today— Just what is it, how does it develop and act—this DR, AMEEN FAREED Moted London Paycho-analyst i a i i 2 Pensati “BUT JEALOUSY I8 CUR ABLE. ITS MISERIES CAN 1 MITIGATED and ITS STORMY CRISES PREVENT. EEPING IT FROM DDED IN THE Mtr LB IT DEVELOPS ITS BTROUS FORMS “This is accomplished by the now pretty well kpown pay choanalytical . method estab- linhed by Freud and Jung—by stripping nside the secrecy and shame and hauling it out into the open for frank inapection.” Practical Hints to the Jealous If you are jealous of eweet- wife or husband, neither create stormy scenes nor keep it suppressed Bring it out of yur mentdl | caverns and talk it over un ashamed. If this is impossible | with the object of your love, | confess it to some calm, delib- erative, trustworthy friend Jealousy, prompted by fact or imagination, feeds and tes ters on secrecy. Say to your- self, “I'm jealous.” and try to dissect your emotions with ref. erence to the provocative cause Deliberately faced and dis- nected, jealousy usually is dix | sipated. Taylor’s Murder Is an Unsolved Crime LOS ANGELES, Feb. 17.—In- vestigators working on the Wil liam Desmond Taylor murder case were today inclined to credit the prediction made shortly after the crime by Maj. Maurice Camp- bell, investigator for the motion picture interests, that the Taylor killing would go down in police unsolved, as the “perfect made up from the ads in today’s Star without a doubt. Food, clothing, shoes, children’s apparel, ete., in fact, what- ever you are likely to want to buy tomor- row you will find ad- vertised in today’s Star and at prices that mean substantial savings. Make up your shopping list as you ‘read your Star. |} Business motiv nett said Before leaving Los Angeles he ated the trip, just as I know Sen- sued his first statement of his knowl edge of the Taylor murder. It fol| Church, who has refused food for lows }a month and has been growing very “My association with Mr. Taylor | ™ ak, took a turn for the worse to. wes of the slightest. I knew him|#Y-, A fever developed hundreds of other TROOPS GUARD BORDER American Forces. Watch Line as: Mexican Rebels| Prepare Attack | j . | EL PASO, Tex, Feb. 17—Five thousand American troops in this border territory were on the alert today to guard American terri- tory against violation, following Persistent reports of the revolu- thonists preparing for action in Mexico, | Brig. Gen. BR. 1. Howse de | elared American forces had been | forced {d take heed of revolu- tionary reports, frequent of late, | | Kebelx gathering near Chihuahua! City have the intention of marching on Juares, reports bere maid, Gen. J. J. Mendex, commanding | troops at Juares, send word to the! revolutioniats declining to join them | and prepared his garrison to oppone | any attack that might be made. | | | | | | | | CHINUAHUA CENTER iP REBEL ACTIVITY Esteban Canta, former governor of Lower California under Carransa, was sald to be one of the leadere—if | Not the principal leader of the rebel! activities Altho the reports that the |several rebel bands in Chihuahua— rebel nest in Mexico for a decade— were attempting to concentrate and attack Juarez, there was rome doubt expremmed on both sidea of the river that this city would be the firet ob-| jective of the plotters Word went out today to all American authorities along the border to tighten their lines | against smuggling of arms into | Mexico, They were alse in. structed to stop any attempted | plotting by Mexicans on this side of the line. | Dispatcher or other word received | from interior Mektoo, quoted Mexi can officials, | juding Gen, Callies, Obregon minister of state, as deciar. | ing American interests were behind the trouble. Last reports of Cantu’s movements | the United States were that he wan in New York aftempting to raine financial backing for a Mexican revo- lution, Reports of unrest in Mexico have been increasing for several weeks and observers have predicted | that President Obregon is facing a real teat of power | VILLA DECLINES | TO JOIN REVOLT Disturbances by roving rebel bands of Northern Mexico, where most all revolutions of the past have | been started, have been more ag. gravated by serious industrial and | political trouble in Puebla. | The attitude of Francisco Villa, | former bandit. was causing plotters (Turn to Page 7, Column 3) Noose May Be | Cheated Thra Hunger Strike CHICAGO, Feb. 17.—Harvey W.| Chureh, whose hanging, scheduled | for toduy, Was postponed until March 2 to allow an insanity hearing, may cheat the gallow by starving death, physiciang believed today. | “Church is slipping and may never te to} s ty now ful, “Weil |my question We may be met at Shanghai by @ band and a great group of people WASH., FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1922. 1 hope not," he replied to| “L hope there won't be | any grand celebration when our par. | @tonally. arrives in China, But we can’t be certain about |We are satisfed with the arrange m There Can Be No Compromise he Seattle Star wn Matter May 8, 1899, at the Postoffice at Reattle, Wash. under the Act of Congress March @, 1879. Per Year, by Mall, 05 to $9 TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE Parley F ailure for Cc hinese o People Think, Says Wang Dr. C. H. Wang Photo by Price & ¢ By Wanda von Kettler Dr. C. MH. Wang, former chiet justice of China and head of the party of delegates from China to the arms conference, leaned back in his chair and looked though? 17 days from)! rter, Star Staff Photographers “And jikt what." I asked him, “DO. you think of the arma confer. ence?” “This,” replied Dr. Wang, “Taken as a whole, it was successful, But China did not get what she expected I nan what the people of China expected. They believed Shangtung would be returmed to us uncon- “But the delegates knew better. ments as they stand. What Japan {now retains in Shantung i= of little with brightly colored banners bear. | significance, and even that hold will ing inscriptions a banquet iw ILL &, AIL, ON and speeches.” PINE TREE STATE t Tt D. da }last until the 4 set for the hang am: Hotel Washington. finger to make a speech public speaking. Dr. of tarles, nurad coat and delegates, ha dark arrived in Wang, of medium height anc slight build, away dressed in a black cut-| trousers, wearing spectacles, was seated at a | table in his apartment at the He, with the par- advisers and sex Seattle | night from Washington, | ‘And there may be/be eliminated in five years by the |terms of the agreement. It is for us jto explain to our people that the Shantung arrangement is for the best and that it is going to prove a} successful.” cut|. Dr. Wang, a graduate of Yale, of Berlin and Paris universities, was chief justice of China in 1920. Previous to that, following his re- jturn in 1911 to China, after studying abroad, he served his government in numerous official positions. “When asked what he would do C., and would remain here until Saturday planned State for Chir “Why ughing. have them exactly arms conference.” to sail And I don’t care to priv morning, on what I when the Pine Tree they 4 him, referring to | Shanghai his statement, “don't you want that | Pleasant smile on celebration “Just because,” Dr. Wang replied, | as he leaned forward and |tapped the table decisively with his | 80 since my “Just because I'd be expected And I object to | Shanghal. I believe a pubiic speaker feels himwelf at times called | There in Peking,” Dr upon to say thingy he doesn’t mean, | ued, jo that, I want |a decision to make. heart-to-heart talks | fered the position of minister of jus- with the leaders of China, and tell |tice of China, but think of tho} EXPECT ABRESTS IN POISON CASE Clues Being ‘Narrowed in| Score Perish in Nicaragua | | “Epsom Salts” Tragedy had | UPON returning to China after this visit to America, Dr, Wang replied, \“1 am going, first of all, to stop in and get my boy.” The Dr. Wang’s face moment he said jwas gone for just 1 “Little Tahhun 4 years old. “Is now His mother died in 1919, absence | in three months" stayed with relatives But T am now me to Wang contin. his smiling self again, “I have I have been of- he has take him on with 1 have not as yet accepted. I shall not finally decide juntii I am home.” 1U, S. MARINES DIE IN BATTLE Clash With Police people in motion picture work, but -: a o our | : + ” 1S St d j cs c SHE D i. SAD a ), Feb, 17.—Se Scores of clues have been rundown leven the little contact I-had bred a|'"8-" Said Dr. Francis M nae, | eee ~ ee oe ee SE DINGO, Fe , brad and are still being run down, but not |sincere admiration for the man jail physician jtracing the strychnine "| United States marines and » "4 ‘The slayer of the two automobile |find where it came from we expec Nb hi eciable step has been made| “Taylor was a man of education! | score of Nicaraguans have been 7b ylation Pag ae iis oniees ana t nor oat ation | salesmen was reported unconscious. |to arrest the person or persons who] Yo Te i Nay, jtoward apprehending the murderer, }and culture and I not only respected | 49 Keeps his eyes closed all the |put the poison in the Epsom salts ighting in > it waa admitted. jae but liked So far as 1 can|iimne and never gives any signs that| ‘This statement, made Friday by| Tagua, according to word brought “We are po further along on pace Ay Fang he hap ling etl he knows what is going on |Prosecuting Attorney Herman Allen! here by the naval transport Ni- bagi yd ankly amerted|everyone else who knew Taylor. To| i nap ; e when we began,” frank! Oe hos tes ulitthe to . Other jail attac expressed the lof Chehalis, sums up the latest angle) tro, ‘The last clashes occurred District Attorney Thomas Lee Wool “ 6 Mebviag |belief that Church was dying from |in his investigation of the mysterious ‘i wine [because I cannot imagine such a man} ions death of the five Rhodes children, | last month and were duc to ill | Police headquarters had no sate teen wees vicious enough to re “He in no afraid of hanging that he|who succumbed from the effect of |, feeling between the natives and ment to make. It was obvious, how. |#Ft to murgler, is dying,” said a guard, “He was|medicine administered by their) United States troops, it is said. ever, that they did not regard the| “Having such a feeling personally | pretty strong and it would take a|mother last Saturday Siaiehah whin ‘Santis ‘north, dak situation as hopeful |for Mr, Taylor, 1 was very glad that! hunger strike of more than a month | “It looks Wke a case of lay back |he was also a friend of Miss Mabel| in wear him down to the weak condi until Edward ¥. Sandy is finally|Normand. Miss Normand has been |tion in which he now is in.” picked up eomewhere, as he will be, one police detective said The sheriff's office sald its oper atives were too busy with field work ve time for a discouraging per to h lspective of the case as a whole Mack Sennett, comedy producer, |who, with Mabel Normand, his feat ured star, tion with the Taylor case, left th "Imy friend for My |were, and are, pure and simple “Miss Normand is a charming girl and T interested in her cruel] dits attacked two messengers of the| Queensbor: | ans well as a very fine actres have been greatly sucess. have Only put professional coincidence could her was questioned in connec: such an unfortunate position as fol forlowed Tavior's murdes. feeling: of friendship, Bandits Get $5,000 in Daylight Theft NEW YORK, Web, 17 Pacific bank beneath the ough bridge here today and escaped with a vayrol! of more than $5,000, While awaiting the complete re-| port on the analysis being made by | the Nitro declared that the Nica- jt tate chemist at the University} faguan police aro continually lof Washington, Prosecutor Allen is! elashing with tho marines, and |narrowing down his bunt for the re an { jot one Vive ban. | completed ponsible Anal other signment parties packs to the 5 seller in sis of the stomach contenta| of the chidiren is now being the same con: | of the medi-) have shown no trace of poison, according to Allen, the first serious clash occurred on December 8, Continued fight ing extended thru January, and late last month the most serious clash occurred, when the Nica raguan government finally took drastic measures to prevent fu ther trouble. | | CZAR OF POLICE HEDGES dal in Force | By Jack Hall | Chief of Police W. H. Searing pulled a Néwberry Friday. KMecause he “doesn’t know” anything about the case, he said, he has taken no action on Jus tice of the Peace Dalton’s implied | Fecommendation that Ralph Bow- | en and 0, K. Boltin, dry squad | patrolmen, be dismissed from the | police force. Altho he dismissed charges of ex- |tortion against the dry officers, | Judge Dalton eaid: “It would appear that the defend- lant officers were at least guilty of a |course of conduct that should not be |tolerated in officers intrusted with | the particular duties which these of- | Gicers are expected to perform.” Yet Chief Searing announced Fri- day: Nothing has been done yet.” GIVES LONG TION mn asked if he contemplated any action, he replied at first mere- ly that he “couldn't state,” but al- mort immediately plunged into a mueh involved explanation. “In bis decision Judge Dalton said Lieut. Haag and | had heard all the testimony,” Searing declared. “That isn’t true, Neither has he sent me the transcript of the testimony—so |{ don’t know nearly as much about {the case as he says.” | He had no-comment to make on the fact that Judge Dalton had not promised to send him the transcript —but had merely said “the sten- jographic testimony so taken is at the disposal of these officials.” IRECTOR LYLE EVEN MORE RETICENT Prohibition Director ‘Roy C. Lyle wae even more reticent on the case of H. J. Stetson, federal prohibition agent, who had been jointly accused with Bowen and Boltin, and whose conduct was also criticised by Judge Dajton. ‘o, nothing has been done yet— Stetson is still on the force,” he ad- mitted Friday. “The government handles these cases differently from other departments so nothing more can be said about it.” Bowen, Boltin and Stetson were | accused of extorting $260 from Tarao Tanaka, a Japanese, for immunity from prosecution on a liquor charge. Baby Heiress to Wed Swiss Groom, Report NEW YORK, Feb. 17--A rumor that Mathilda McCormick, 17-year. old daughter of Harold I, McCor- mick and his divorced wife, Mrs. Edith Rockefeller McCormick, was to ty Max Oser, a Swiss riding master, was in circulation here to- day Harold McCormick and his daugh: ter, Muriel, at a New York hotel, de- | clined to comment on the rumor, eee CHICAGO, Feb, 17.—-Council of the clan McCormick, ranked with the world’s wealthiest families, was called here today to discuss the re- ported engagement of the baby heir- ess, Mathilda, to a Swiss groom more than twice her age. Harold F. McCormick was speed. ing to Chicago on the fastest train from New York, accompanied by his other daughter, Muriel, Mathilda arrived from New York |jast night, She was reported to have jalready obtained the consent of her father, president of the International Harvester Co., and now sought the John D. Rockefeller, world’s richest Mathilda lived in Zurich with her mother eight years and there met Max Oser, riding master, 48 years of with whom she is reported in She returned to this country |iast fall, She is now 17. | Her mother and father were re cently and altho she has not yet officially decided whether she will cast her lot with her father or mother, she stayed at her father's house here last night, When she re turned from urope, she did not divorced, OR ene CHIEF SEARING PULLS A NEWBERRY ON COPS Ey WEATHER HOM EDITION approval of her mother, daughter of} Northwest Products Slogans | Judges Appointed Swalwell of Seattle. Burnett of Tacoma. || Hindley of Spokane. SS] | | { | | EET ee eed RANEY the Northwest Products slogan com ~ test. They are: 7a J. A. Swalwel! of Seattle, Louis H. Burnett of Tacoma. W. J. Hindley of Spokane. Mr. Swalwell is president of the, Union National bank and chairman + of the Pacific Northwest Products committee, which is co-operating with © The Star in conducting the slogan contest. Mr. Burnett is a leading jeweler of ! Tacoma and active in buy-at-home and many other civie activities. Mr. Hindley, educational director } of the Washington State Retail Mer: | chants’ association, has been lectur- ing in Geattle this week, and is known thruout the state. He is a former mayor of Spokane. t ‘These men have a job marked ont for themselves, as more than 6,000 slogans already have been entered in / the contest and the lists are open | for the remainder of February. They have expressed great satis- Yaction with the high quality of many jof those already in and with the | | wide range of territory from which they have come. ‘The judges’ personal attention will | be given every entry, so there {3 just } as much chance to win the $25 first prize, the $5 second prize or one of the $1 prizes as there was when | the contest began. If you have not | entered any slogans yet, or if you’ have some new inspiration, send in your 12.word gems. Just address them Slogan Editor, The Star, Se attle. Here are some of today’s: Particular purchasers prefer Pa _ cific Northwest Products. — M | O'Neill, County-City Building. Wise men buy Northwest Prod | ucts—-Mrs. Mina B. Orth, 6644 / | Fauntleroy, A sound doctrine for Sound people, buy Pacific Northwest Products.— Alex Cowan, 1528 John st. } Tho crest of the best, Pacttic | Northwest Products.—Jane Neikerk, | 2402 Ninth ave, W. | Keep the wheels of the Northwest | industry ‘moving, buy Northwest | Products only.—Mrs. N. A. Dubl, | 5415 35th ave. S. W Northwest Products are the best; | |buy at home, build up your West-— Mrs. Aura Stratton, 3912 Barke ave. | Live in the Northwest, boost the | | (Tarn to Page 7, Column 3) | ncomeenionee |travel with her mother, but came on { |}the ship with her father, ‘As soon ag other members of the | family arrive, according to close friends of the MeCormicks, a confer- ence will be held and an official state- * ment on the rumors will be made. Mrs, McCormick, at her Lake For: home, said She could not comment jon the affair. Miss Mathilda was still in bed at noon, according to servants at the Gold Coast palace, where sho is stays ¢ ing, and could not be disturbed.