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Ew {WEATHER Feir tonight and Thursday; mod- erate southwesterly winds. Temperature Last M4 Hours Maximum, 61. Minimum, 46. Today noon, 52. Entered as Becond Class Matter May 8, 181 MAYOR DENIES 5,000 CITY WORKERS PAY! On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise The Seattle Star the Postoffice at Beattie, Wash, under the Act of Congress March 8, 1879. => SEATTL VOLUME 24. NO. 76. WASH., W. E DNESDAY, MAY 24, 1922. ‘Hugo, First’ Supplants Kaiser as Germany’s Uncrowned Ruler lw wi ju: a in ph K T. i | |Great War Was Fought for This Industrial: ies 3 King, Not for House of Hohenzollern | au le hy st The beautiful wh Howdy, folks! Newspaper prints picture of Poten-| zollern and, especially, of Emperor Wilhelm the Second of Germany. | your freedom? }was blond and erect. Hugo is black and stooping. Wilhelm was talkative as a of the Weat’died yesterday led when they got hold of a und that the stock control of the in th formula until now the Stinnes enter: | lots | me Engagement of Nile By Robert B. Bermann on the republican administration for mation and trrigation projects, and The poll tar is made a target for [special attack. The whole tentative ated for permanent chairman, thing about hay fever > that you William Hickman Moore, of Seattie rom 4 any for ¢ J mM a wolu cot tauncucacaon. BY MILTON BI BRONNER |mitien, Frank T Belt of pkeete eee | Eurepean Manager for Scripps’ Newspaper Service was to be chairman of the commit ew . ' ° ° . . : ee on rules and permane rent sen enally, we set hay fever from)" BERLIN, May 24.—There is still a foolish impression abroad in America){*e om rules and permanent organ coe that the great war was fought for the aggrandizement of the House of Hohen- | waits,’ en rman of the committee Jon credentials ‘CALL MEETING Ape hungry parrot. Hugo is silent as the traditional clam. Wilhelm sought the} state arnsae® Poovie who wear limelight. Hugo flees from it. Wilhelm loved to be photographed. Hugo straw dresses should keep away from qyoidg the snap shotters as if they had the black plague. citar ax PO fas | Wilhelm liked to doll up in glad rags. Hugo wears the same black suit and |‘ MOO! MOO! ake any claps an old “‘dice-box” on his head. Wilhelm made a bluff at appreciating all| Sabie gay to make Malthe arts. The only picture Hugo likes is the lithograph of a factory with the} I am mayor of smoke pouring from. all its chimney: porgpertag, Sed - * Their single resemblance is® ower ta lot of work ithat the Hohenzollern power old do Sabe | E was founded when the fam ay ogg lamas made themselves masters of <b ggesiueett Oe jthe Mark of Br: andenburg and HOTEL DRIVE: , Prominent hosiery man |the Stinnes power was found- | Cc State Convention at Olympia Puts Vigorous Plank, in Platform OLYMPIA, May 24.—With the addition of a vigorous anti-nar- cotic plank, a tentative platform was concluded this morning Just before the democratic state com vention went Into session here, The plank calls for state laws to coordinate with recently-en- acted tederal legistation designed to end the traffic in dope, and also advocates state aid for nar cotic addicts, Other planks of the platform hich are expected to be adopted thout opposition, include an attack ler” J approval of recia skiing with the national so! num, & Ke Drondaide againet the bleh taxer nposed by the Hart administration iatform is lees than 500 words long. ING COUNTY AKING LEAD King county, represented by a full uota of $0 delegutes, is taking the 1 In the convention and seems to everything its own way. Judge ephen J. Chadwick, of Seattle, was ¥ 3 4 € se BE. Ryan of King county t« Ee ee ee ee wane one| Come here to the immense capital df the country, or visit the Ruhr Valley and present organisation and’ Mrs with glasses and you will find many who will swear the conflict was fought for the enri i ti Dts es egass ne eg county pened | ment of the House of Stinnes and that Hugo the First, Only and Unique, is really| "Congressman €. €. Dill, who Ix FREE! mad de6 rWpgs lled ¥ bli Xs | viewed as a certainty for the Conviet—I am bere for having the uncrou neo ing of this 80-Ca. ec repuo we, Wilh 1 democratic nomination for U. 8. Oe ah sen. eller King Hugo the First is everything Wilhelm Hohenzollern was not. ithelm | senator, flung the Newberry. ts. sue into the convention by declar ing that he would give the state a chance to cast a ballot—possl. bly the deciding ballot—on the Michigan senator, just as ardent and persuasive as did America. of | the Admiral Liner K pi | quaint native wood fibre clothing of the islands. |is the daughter of Dr. Jose Albert, famous Manila surgeon, | who is professor of medicine and surgery at the University This announcement came in the) | of rm of a uble pledge “If elected,” Dill "T will vote | (Turn to Page 7, Column 5) ON LOW TAXES itizens Urged to Attend) this is why they are wear con ¢ Motheim | @ADOMA, ‘May S4~The. milltion Session Tonight | many stockings at half mast. | MILWAUKEE, May 24.—Five men |Coal pit at Mulheim. z . 2 : : ys A tack in Napoleonic times Matthias |dollars in subscriptions for a great} . . st their lives here today when over-| Back 4 t im r | Home owners and property own GIVE "EM H— Stinnes th ge of 18 started t new community hotel will be com-| IVE 'E come in a gas pocket of a sewer tun-|é ers generally are urged by the Se. Harmony or Hades,” says Dr. ‘ rescue two work. |@mily fortunes. The Stinnes before |pieted and the success of the project | attic’ Real Datate wenociation to at 4 3 el while trying to reseur o ork: | inn ad worked on the Rubr and the s . r r z : E. J. Brown, speaking hg ae % aus from: the.ene m had “s J : Ruhr and announced at a Commercial Club din-|tend a massmeeting at 8 p. m.| plans for running the city gov a necig ane dion pall ai Ee x ep Sie ahaa t, it was confidently fore-| Wednesday at the Press club audi f Deere alt Hight, Dee, we never | ried to wafet are in @ critical Jagwn the rive y leaders of the drive this zore- | (OTN, Tilt Fae no ciate deci f J n a demand on the state legista were musical. ne ‘er A were firemen, eres and railways. iin: gunasiiiaas tS ulation |ture for passage of a law limiting} sy ee’ | _ ‘Three of | h ‘ al w i. fir men, wouLD COMBINE iF " ° ery ing ‘ bens tabulation | ta sation property to 40 mills | iuiaary ote eo aquind called re nis morning showed a total o! 6 0 e pres. | when the gas pocket was discovered REE BUSINESSE! 700 raised, with only $128,300 to be | 0" veruaten.. ‘SB0 Dr The Krafchek, Paul Wul ‘o Matthias came a vision. Coal tisay up today. It was predicted, in| ¢ot rate in Seattle ts 63.3 mill arg sanké’ preanistinad upplanting a fuel! Hs | oe tet “a cathe egal Homes and other tangit prop: | The other two killed were unidenti-| would combir business cription might be accomplished. The |-°?ty are being taxed to the point of | ‘ De sue ipping, co x and co dahon i pt any additional |Comfiseation, while much 0 the | ; fied laboret ups n "| committee will accept any additional | ey Neate omeapen tuxatie o- | * ing. His own ships would carry his | \ mounts offered and increase the size der orig aed waere Wooay, | The only kind of harmony that! 4o4045 natives work in pairs pull | OWN coal to h hewn nes ie wa {| and splendor of the building accord | o aont of the Real Estate nme . 4 ain formula, but he worked it out! jn) ‘ " a (Turn to Page 7, Column 1) fing r¢ oa Wetaea tie neenbeie dH rs a : ation and chairman of the large jlong befor i ‘j le ] A notable fact in Tacoma’s achieve | committee w 5s hag Galled the mane Everything his famous grandson | ment ia that the great mass of sub. meeting. has done has been to expand thig|seriptions has ¢ in $100 to $500) rhe committee will ask the mass | eting for approval of the organi CUT IN FREIGHT WASHINGTON, May 24—A | August 25, 1920, averaging 33% per, revenue liquor stamps, C. Te peshaagred "s - tion - pal aad cent, were cut to 20 per cent. Beckenhaus, owner of the Home es thruout the country w: he ; ; dered today by’ the interstate The announcement of the rate cut| Beverage and Supply Company commerce commission, tive July 1. the present rates about cent, the decision of the commis- sion states, shippers of th mately $200,000,000 a year, it cuts today, wh affect all inter-| tion of a carefully-planned trap. : officially estimated, Other rate [state freight would not de- Tuesday afternoon Nocken delige ' nths will push the total above | below the 5% per cent level agreed] nurchaser at the KE, Pike st, store, $300,000,000, upon by the commission. it is charged. As soon as the trans- a The commission was unanimously The commission called on the car- | the greatly | commissi senger rate prises, instead of being confined to| corporation will rest entirely igattel 00 & lokam al.aeesevie oame' (Turn to Page 5, Column 3) it is, balleved: that “Glaiael the Ruhr region, are spread all over /hands of the citizenship generally | ery to demand ot the next legieia-| commission also declared that | te Se to be ald on bottle: ana were Announce ayor Germany, and extend into Finland, | rather than in the hands of any small/ tire that taxation on real property | Pailroad rates in the future would be whlekyy Which ix Cola. noo Sweden, tria and Switzerland group of rich men be lowered to a point which will not |ased on a return of 6% per cont of fulnity’ gavorel te sate i met | Te CoHital with Which Matthias! No site has been selected for tie | Be lowers Prisiyell the aggresite value of the lines, as | aay Repent p inal pfs » . nnes started career wan exact | hotel, but this question is to be left fescay FF Menasha. bakiss veal pared with 6 per cent under the . -abangrk Gamma of Upper Pekin college, | Stinr ted Hil x | George eacham, Seattle re sip Rosi aaa ee While no direct evidence sania By Homer Brew and arrived aboard the Keystone | ly 1.240 depreciated Rhenish German |to the decision of the stockholders. | tor and member of the state legis. | © yo ay rf be ao Bethea Beon has been given out, he is held (Camel Editor of The Star) State Tuesday afternoon. He is |thalers, But he was enterprising Thr ations are most ag 9 lature will be the first speaker on. ht na bi ‘“ peat Se al aver in the belief that he has guilty ; r m1 {9 was the first to introduce the |ly discussed, Ono is the present site/ihe necessity of a 40-mill limit. of | Dire 6 commission was t oepdpaes bagi ag, <a ae a amahip into the Rhine hauling |Of thé Tacoma theater, Broadway and taxation “Pacey “Liveany president | the right to fix a new rate of return ogg ent vivemedebthusmsne ac | well announce the engagement geome yd ogy business, At his death in 1846 he{Ninth st; another the 11th at. andlor the Northwest Real iatate neve, | 1” making the reductions the com-| WASHINGTON, May 2%4—No re meer f | of Nile, lovely dromedary of Nile | Segall joe Oy possessed four coal mines, a ship.|Pacific ave, location where stands | elation, who ix coming from Belling. {Mission cut nearly in half the freight | word has been recelved by the war Says Detectives é Temple, » Reginald Marmaduke io und Mr. Potentate |yard, a fleet of coal carrying ships |the unfinished Scandinavian-Ameri-|ham at the head of a delegation of {rate increases authorized August | Gaietats aspera: srocactareariae Shad S t 4 ; Nile and 3 : ‘ , ‘ vapeher genie ated breed neral Leonar nod, governor Potentate, of Shanghai, are known in Shriner circ and barges and 29 cos! yards where | ¢#n ne building; the third & ri property owners will be among Abert NE aR Rabe tai Be Ag, pal eae 20 bi gov rae adow enators j he wedding date has been set for here and their nuptials are awaited (Turn to Page 7, Column 2) | reser ae oa Leet ema oe r gen. | cent Increase of August 25, 1920, wag! and daughter, who were reported to| WASHINGTON, May 34,—-Attors Mf toth c nth and 10th street }to short talks to give time for gen nt tner e" ’ = i ¥ | June 1, when Mr. Potentate will bejwith the greatest interest. Both lenat aiebemaie j cut to 26 per cent aboard the yacht Apo in the re-{ney General Daugherty has ordered 7 | Eeledsed from government quaran-jhave:meny friends in the sky. Ti. |Mrs: De Valera Is ALFRED NORWOOD, 23, 2 wood) “Home owners are especially | In the Western district the previous| gion of a typhoon raging off the| secret service men to shadow sene | tine were childhood sweethearts in thi ™ ‘y | hauler, was held in the county jail on| urged to attend the mass meeting |35 per cent increase was cut to 21% | coast of the Philippines, ators assailing him, Senator Cara. | Mien Nile ix well known in Seattle. |Upper Manchurian camel set before | Mother of Twins grand larcetiy chatees Wodneeday. lab we seed thelr “eupedrt. to (hu (per omit All attempts to get in touch with| Way, Arkansas, charged today in re- ; ‘ having accompanied Mayor Caldwell | their arrival in Seattle 4 in| LONDON, May 24.—Mrs. Kamonn| Norwood is alleged to have aided In| augurate a movement which will en-| In the Southern and mountain Pa-| the vessel by wireless proved futile. newing his attack on Daugherty, in 4 ie, Som the Orient on hie recent Mheine| They willbe at home to trlends| ne today presented the for-| the eonosalment nad to have abetted | atin we to ge to the lésislature wit (citic district the previous rate. inl ‘Wood, his wife and Gaughta, pallea|ponmsction Sith the aun Dilarien newcomer tothe |after June 1 at thelr Woodlind pwor{mer president of the Iriah republic|the theft of an automobile which waa|a demand for justice backed by the | Crease of 26 per cent was cut to 12% | Saturday’ for Mindora, where the|Charles W. Mamws from, Avani ey, st 00 :IR8T SORE A Ee FN er eee eee digas | with twin ‘be ccording to # .dis-] the property, of W. I> Morrow, of! saatiment af the inajority of the pec. |Def-eant general planned a brief tour of ge tae and the prosecution of the Woodland park 200 for the season from the Gus Kau¢ n twin boys, w “ wll Portal? whe ota Soe Ed Somes dg } late,” sald Wood, inter-terrilorial rate increases of | spection, war fraud casear Mr. Potentate is a Phi Delta jyen- [patch to the Evening Star, lbes Moines, ple of tho state, ve Sara Gummene! Por Year, by Mail, $5 to $9 TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE i EMPLOYES 10 Prospect of 30 Days of Waiting — for Wages With Mayor Caldwell and the elty council deadlocked Wednes day on the question of munich pal railway appropriations, more than 5,000 city employes are in danger of not getting paid 4 7 ing committee and the city coum cil were held Wednesday, but um less the mayor recedes from his Position it is not believed that the small army of city hall work- ers will draw their semi-monthly y checks. oy Crucial developments are expected among the railway trainmen and | — other workers if their pay is with held. Mayor Caldwefl, In a letter to the city council, declared int he would — veto the May 25 appropriation, cov ex- ena fnieet 19 ewe ee tay dt ogee it hd Vee als 3 tae Bee wpe ering the pay of all city office and departmental heads, unless ‘penses incurred by several city de- ¥ partments om account of the street — car system were segregated and paid — from the railway fund, instead of from the general fund as heretofore. “The issue is clear-cut," Caldwell said. “We might as well have @ showdown. The supreme court in the 14 taxpayers’ suit held that no part — of the railway expense could be borne by the general fund. At the Present time several of the city de partments, such as the law depart: ment, are doing a large amount of work for the railway. These depart ments are supported by the general taxes.” If the mayor adheres to his resolu tion to veto the appropriation ordi- | nances, it will be from 30 to 50 days | before the city's employes draw thelr | salaries, as it will be necessary to The Philippines have their workers for woman suffrage| pass a 30-day ordinance over the Not the least | mayor's veto. these is piquant Miss Natividad Albert, who arrived Of | cecdecinred that the peenean a ‘one State Tuesday with the Phi P-| partment expenses for the opera- ne independence mission. She is here shown wearing the | tion of the railway was not prohibit- Miss Albert | &.>y any order of the supreme court. Incidentally, Mayor Caldwell's own salary and that of the city council- men will be held up with the other See Page 2 for story of mission's arrival. | employes of the cit r- 3 HELD IN FAKE RUM LABEL PLOT; Charged with the possession and sale of counterfeit internal So the Philippines, RATES ORDERED! store at 705 KE. Pike st.; Thomas Been, a clerk at the store. and Gus Nocken were arrested late Tuesday by secret service offi- cials and are lodged at the city jail. The three men have been under surv ince by the fed eral sleuths for several weeks, and the arrest was the culmina today came as a surprise, It had been been supposed that the adminis- tration would continue its efforts to reach a voluntary agreement with the railroad executives by which great rate reductions could be put into ef. fect at once. The commission declared that the The reductions are to be effec The reductions ordered will cut 10 per The re s ordered during the last 18 e the earnings of the railroads ered 1,000 sets of fake stamps to @ action was completed, the buye® flashed a star and made the arrests, When grilled by officers, Nocken admitted that he bad other stamps at his home, 1619 Minor ave, ‘The place was searched, and two etched Plates for printing liquor stamps, together with 800 finished labels, were seized. of the order, altho some | riers to notify it by May 31 whether believed the cuts should be | the rate reductions prescribed will be and expressed the belief that | carried into effect without a formal cuts will stimulate business | order by the commission, and not jeopardize the finan-| The commission said it was im- ability of the railroads, possible to make findings respect pinions of some members of the| ing electric roads as a whole and jon displayed a belief that, therefore held that its ruling should also should be cut. favor