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BRA ee Entered as Second Class Matter May 2, 1 ™-——> THE NEWSPAPER WITH A 15,000 CIRCULATION LEAD OVER ITS NEAREST COMPETITOR <—@ © EW STORM SWEEPING EAST!) On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise =~ The Seattle St , at the Postoffice at Reattie, Wash, under the Act of Congress March %, 1879. Per Year, by Mall, $5 to $9 ae SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1922, RADIO ROMANCE, THE FIRST NOVEL ABOUT WIRELESS TELEPHONY, WRITTEN SPE- CIALLY FOR THE STAR AND ITS ASSOCIATED NEWSPAPERS, STARTS TODAY— YOU WILL FIND IT AS FULL OF THRILLS AND EX- ——-CITEMENT AS THE FAMOUS AU- THOR OF “CRAIG KENNEDY, THE SCIENTIFIC DETECTIVE,” KNOWS HOW TO MAKE IT! * * * * * & * * * of Howdy, folks! This ls Rock- Copyright, 1922, by N. B.A. Bervice bani at ae ga ae ag CHAPTER I J the munic over the wireless.” “Eddie Rickenbacke: > 10 NCE | “Yee . . . static . . Nature's rg athe lc al vin teria me amped j jane jazned the radio faze!’ Newspaper, " + ‘aio adie Mrs, Kenmore Walden drew Guy Sagas Sin ace eitaces Garrick toward, the quiet end of the| know, with the lightning flashing Nonowantuc Country Club. jand crashes of thunder. They were eererican eigen oo Garrick did not need to affect in-| debating whether to use the Victrola terest, fo: th Walden was far and} 8nd canned music or improvise an Rodolph Valentino has taken out a] Loree or Null Wituscating, problen| orchestra of their own. At. the permit to carry a revolver. NOW) oe tne Country Club set. Of late; height of the storm came a voice that he’s married he'll protect him-| oars Garrick had grown to be coun-| from the French windows: oe APH EPIT. Here lies what's left of poor old | or. was one of those stunning wom. | shut!” Beany— He carelessly put in one raisin (09 i noie gaughters masked, two men and a girl—a regu. many. | fertority complex wheu I say it—|the bag and a gun and took th schedule calls for 11 cars a minute.| uth worries me, but youth worries|the party... They seemed to ‘This is almost as fast as We C8 me that I don't understand young | know just what they wanted, what break ‘em. rie “~ }people-teday. I may have under. | to expect.” stood. young people in the days of “What did they gett HANG HIM . |the Florodora sextette—but I don't] why, those bandits went thro A Gayl hate ~~ j Uncloretamay theme, new-rand thgve the party. “Phey must have got away P: Is Sammy Chase; | What really worries me.” with a hundréd thousand dollars’ He lets his old | “No one would believe you could) worth of jewelry . . . oh, more Adout an hour you, Nita,” declared Before sunrise affected admiration. “But tell mejtwenty thousand easily.” And drives all slecp | what it was you couldn't may over, “A good haul. But what's this From out mine eyes the telephone when you got me at! gossin 1 hear that it wis an inside —K. R., Port Angeles. | last this morning.” | jon2 ee “I suppose you've heard ali about) Mrs Walden gianced about to Mayor Brown is to hold a confer- ence car problem with | ™ is A v.. pet oy Gradient ot the | Gerard place, at Oldfield Jon, Guy." She dropped her volce, “I Puget Sound Electric company. j Garrick nodded lthink McKay can tell you better, ‘The lamb lying down with the}. “Well, you know how young Glenn first hand, McKay is our chauffeur.” | woit? at Bellevue Lodge—you know, the/ shot. “That's what I want your help Big a ja wireless outfit—had Profemor | randa. “Jobo!” | Vario from the big Radio Central | So far Mayor {station at Rock Ledge help him in cted - Shite eacegh. stall it. At least that's what Glenn Li oe |said. The truth was, of course, that ” Vv ad HH the ork. Hugo Kelley, mayor's. secretary, | Prot. Vario had to do all the w Pn Heen just messes around with it: igys he is not a “democrat of the old) 1, cured the lingo—but I guess sehool.” } that’ it all.” Shucks! Now the Staftle demo |‘ht’s abcut a } crats won't have enough men to! | Up the steps of the club veranda. Gerard's?” Garrick smiled at the enaracteriza. | 'ne accurately first on one foot, then tion and Mrs. Walden hurried on.|9" the other, as he picked at his a|Visored cap, “after it was all over id there was a general alarm, sir, down to see for and he Then the young folks got up dance to celebrate the installation. | * f SHORT "YMN OF ‘ATE Lo and behold, they had scarcely |°!4 Mr. Gerard ca I cannot help |started when that awful thunder | What all the shooti But long to biff shower—you remember last night?— | @#ked me lot of qu The bird who yammers | swept around, as they often do, from | the signal—and. “Meet the wiff.” the Connecticut shore t stopped| “Just how did you happen to be see - there, MoKay?" asked Garrick, “I didn’t know Miss Ruth would let i j i i } i ; j form a ball team. | ie - j Reading the amateur baseball | | th news, we notice that “Pure Milk” is} anybody drive her car Jeading in the Milkmen’s league. | | MeKay smiled. He had a touch of | We always were fond of that Cana-| SAN FRANCISCO, June 12—The | and I beat tt dian Club | American schooner Edward R. West, | car with Lotta a mile a minute. You see len route from the Columbia river | know that tower on the corner of the ee Yes, but Sour Milk should ea humor, even tho his keen Irish wit “Oh, had been out joy-riding, sir ‘ = I'm sorry to have to aay it, 6 j ‘ ma‘am—" he bowed toward Mrw. Mi: tae iTug Races to Assistance of |" “West Seattle Bridge Work to sas gin Soon.”—Headline | ‘That's one advantage of having a| 1 keep saying things like that when I want to help little Bobbie with his new copper | better batter. } naw the serious and suspicious side . one of the incident } Mommer, mommer, why does that man | } ; | sible —"with Lotta, one of the Schooner Texas \™ masians It was evident that McKay wa - striving to show that he had nothing tea life-saving tug|to conceal—and a lot to tell: More. dentist as mayor. The United # omish was racing today to the} over, on the score that there affair was d anxious to y AN INDIAN bemetrenece Spelman istance of the halibut fis An Indian maid up the valley, schooner Texas, which, disabled, was|inside job, he seem Who picks the luscious olalla, drifting in the open ocean with six/| clear Lotta, too. poard. ‘So when Mr. Gerard asks me, 1 From Stuck or Pilchuc! wag expressed for the| says ‘It’s darn funny. It must have When he called her his sweet little , a8 @ fresh southwesterly | happened right after that light sig gal-e. | wind was blowing, and the propeller | naled down toward Urane's neck.’ —G. H. H., Houghton, Wash. | shaft of the boat was broken, see ing! been a signal and the Lost her heart to a buck | Seattle men “ee i” Be that as it may, the wave ath, “Well, T saw it," returned McKay ot an onion is about three feet. IU. Ss. SCHOONER a trifle contentiously. “A lotof us eee saw it. That's what made the sus We wish Vancouver belonged | WEST WRECKED picion that it was an inside job You| the Pacific see, I saw the storm coming up fast nck to Bellevue in the Mathilde MeCormick’s actions lead| with iumber to South Africa, is|Gerard houve? I thought you'd Us to believe that she is a chip off| ashore on the island of Tahiti, ac-| know it. ‘Most everybody does and several old blocks. cording to a cablegram received here|has seen the searchlight in it. Well nm the storm broke—I suppose «| ‘The ship and cargo were reported a| that was some time after their wire total loss. less went on the blink... The was great. It always is was assumed the captain and crew|out there—lights up the shc for you can #ee y down on LI'L GEE GEE, TH OFFICE } VAMP, SEZ: {| From the nature of the cable, it) lightnin / Let's invent ‘» barbed wire | hair net and stop petting for- | | ever! i arivé sate at Papeete \miles and the sea an a tae the waves breaking the rocks PORTLAND, June 12.—The wind | “yy jammer Edward FR. West, owned b Orleans, cleared | re., on the Colum with 951,154 feet | and the be: tween flashes Ughtning 1 saw the searchlight moving up and down the shore and I says to myself, ‘s a queer etunt—maybe a lit 4 see | tle dangerous on a night like this up splash his sweetheart and she lof lumber valued at $26,097, for Port |s, tnat there tower,’ But the search | | é ould top!” jot aa ae per | | Gd not say, eome ae Mee | Mlizabeth, South Afri The lumber light waa just lke artificial light |pany of St. Helens. Ten men com-| oe the whore you wanted and the Saptain C. B, Foster | eh. | | | TODAY IN HISTORY 12, 1902, hing at Alki young man Point did not lfrom St. He |bia river, April 12 Sb Rishedicn aes The man who tuys a gan balloon May find it iwn’t cheap; % BoveAond America movies with it Idies here. (Turn to Page 9, Column 1) ARTHUR B. REEVE’S GREAT| “It was a spectacular storm, you! Ott aginst fappers. selor and confidant in all the ills to| “‘Hands up! . . . And be quick} | which North Shore society was heir.| about it! . . . Line up along that! Mrs. Walden «miled abstractedly.| Wall! . . . And keep your mouths | } en of today whom one confuses with| “There seemed to be three of them, | “She says that I betray my in-| lar devilmay-care hussy. She held} } The Newest Henry Ford's June production that what I really mean is not that| Jewels while the two men covered | Ford engine rece | have a daughter old enough to worry | than that. The Walden pearls that | rick in UM | they took from Ruth were worth | ~ | the first Radio Dance last night over | make sure that they were out of oar. | Buckley got the Gerards to put in| She leaned over the rail of the ve-| McKay, down the driveway with| the car, touched his cap and sidied | | “John, will you tell Mr. Garrick | at you saw last night over at} . balane-| Lir**? Signal? Tell me anton) | | | i | | | { i | posed the crew, aves asmashing over the rocks. t Bu i'n not the coi 4 ta, | PO ‘Radin bd beg 1A nde wp satin count | commanding. The schooner ha lany time you liked and as long aa} ee eee paulty’ of 762 net tons. | you liked. From where 1 was I seen 1 tas, |that there was fellow and a girl Our next song is entitled “Tuck Me | Midian atten Goes E 8 bs | BAN FRANCISCO—Col. H. D.|up in the tower—a fellow. thut inte ory Pr N50 Loveland, 69, dean in point of sery-| looked, maybe, like Glenn Buckley Li'l,Gee Gee saya the world does lice of public utilities commissioners,| “The Nght traveled along the Come, J gett in June we imprisonment wa upon Nakaok: student who asi mier Hara se’ today will be n lelgn policies of the Uchida served as foreign min the previous cabinet under " tan ce Takahashi, ment ister YOUTH STEALS JUDGE’ TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE WIFE! DIRECTS MARRIAGE CONTEST Here’s Member Of The Star's Editorial Staff. Her Name Is June d'Amour, Which Is A Pretty Good Name For A Young Lady Conducting A Wedding Contest, Don't. - You Think? Photo by Pride & arter, Star Statt Photographers * % & By June d’Amour dJune—it'’s a wonderful month, isn't it? Wonderfal for tennis and golf mixed singles and twoxomen, of course, I mean; wonderful for canocing on placid waters, be neath a silvery moon; wonder: ful for hammocks and honey- suckle, Bat, primarily, it's wonderful for weddings. Of course, almost any month is a g00d month to marry—if you to lwok at it that way; but June June is more wonderful than all its 11 sister months put together So, having established the fact that June is the lovingest month in the calendar, let's get down to busine The Star believ in June wed dings, Not simply in an abstract sense, But actively. It bolleves in ‘em enough to want everybody in Se tle to have one—everybody that's igible, that is; we aren't promoting bigamy or child marrt of course Herb Schoenfeld, the Standard Fur niture Co.'s famous elephant collec tor, fe me way about it. He’s | strong for any kind of wedding | “You furnish the girl, we'll furnish the house” is his motto, you know but he’s particularly strong for Jul weddings So Herb and The r dings, Here's the scheme The Star has agreed to furnish a couple and Herb has agreed to furnish the wedding, The couple will be selected by means of a contest. The engaged pair who send in the best essay Slayer of Hara Is Given Life in Jail TOKYO, June 12.—Sentence of life | the appea ynounced today the young Japanese s#inated former Pre al months ago. good of the country and because he | thought it was bis patriotic duty, Jap Foreign Policy ‘Will Be Unchanged TOKYO, June 12.—Viscount Ueht- | da, minister of foreign affairs in the cabinet of Premier Kato, which was formed yesterday, tayued a staternest | re te in the for formally declaring that th change me une Bride Get Married Free, Also Win a Prize! of 300 words or less, on “Why We Want to Get Married” will be the winners. couple themselves, will en The date for the wedding is Friday, June 30, not yet heen decided definitely, thing's ready essays and the happy couples, Get your heads together, matrimo- | your es- ar have got to. J they're planning a corner | | d'Amour, The Star, 8 Arthur Schramm, Jr \for Olympia argue befor the supreme court use of State vs, O'Con action was brought by th state in February to escheat land he jin trust for j lation of the anti-alien land not a citizen, ruling of Superior | Judge Mitchell Gilliam sustaining a r filed by the defendant. is expected to decide the itutionality of several provisions | of the staté anti-alien land ly -_ 2D x will be given a “model in the model bunga- the fifth floor Standard Furniture Co, The min- , the floral decorations, the the be fur- n, the newlyweds will get a substantial gift from the furniture company. Herb hasn't announced thin gift will be. that ft will by of the what he promises | of real vat in ful entrants will get the except that they won't get ent from Herb, same time, and the documents, letters, jewels, clothing, will be borne by the furnl: | taise The hour has except for the mo—June The early not the worm this time, but the wedding, Land Law Case . deputy prose: mornin will in di vio Nakaoka, when brought before a nd Plerce Loner magistrate, continued his declarations | gan, both American citizens, are said that he killed the premier for the » unlawfully holding land fo ‘The ap: | WOODEN WEDDING NDED BY TREE NEW YORK, June 12. apanese govern: | lace celebrated his wooden wedding. A storm struck town and sent a tree spinning into his parlor as the guests were making their presentations, John Wal Jurist Bares Treachery | of Man He Lifted From i100 inured Depths of the Gutter! PORTLAND, Ore., June 12,.—“A pudgy little fellow,” Arthur Cotzhausen, an attorney and graduate of the Uni- versity of Wisconsin, entered the office of Judge Langguth, then president of the Multnomah County Bar association, several years ago. He was looking for a job and much the worse for drink. “IT can see him now, as he sat there,” said Judge Lang- guth Friday, “his face bloated from drink, his eyes blood- I was sorry for him, and gave him $2 on the spot: I dared not give him more, for I knew he would spend the money, if he had it, to prolong his shot, his hands trembling. ree. “I looked him up and found he was the man he repre- sented himself to be, son of an able jurist in Milwaukee, and himself a keen lawyer and a facile talker. lodgings for him, guaranteed the rental, and gave him money for food. Then I wrote his father. WROTE ASKING AID FOR MAN “The son had been. ada, somewhere, and Then he had drifted. an office of his own, elsewhere, and I sent werk to him, “Cotzhauven bad heen in Portland a number of months when, about atx years ago, I said to Mrs. Langguth: “"If Lhad # son in the plight that| ‘Let's take the car and go on a vaca- yours in in, I wrote the father, ‘even/ tion, to Mexico, anywhere, and just tho I had broken with him, I would| forget work.’ thank someone for writing me so I| fore starting could save him from the street.’ “The father replied, thanking me and forwarding $100. this money out to the son, a little at a time, to get him on his feet. He did quit drinking, I'll give him credit for that. work in my office, advancing my own money to him, my record. Finally, he opened And we did. hausen, a stranger, alone, living in dreary lodgings and fighting the devil So we looked him up, and I said: ‘Cotzhausen, there's that big house of ours in Irvington without a Move your stuff over and make yourself at home there while we're away,’ “We were gone six weeks or some (Turn to Page 7, Column 4) COURT TOHEAR (BANDITS WRECK - MAHONEY CASE Lawyers Prepare to Argue | Robbers Blow Up Cars and Appeal June 19 TRAIN, KILL 11! Slay Guards Attorneys in the case of James E. | Mahoney, found guilty on October 1, of murdering Mooers Mahoney, and later sentenced spent Monday jean bandits dynamited a train on! outhern railway near | killing five mem and | wounding several others and looted the wreck of 60,000 pesos in Mexican | according to reports reaching the Mexican 117 exhibits presented in the murder oung couple |trial last fall. peaanenen skies ndiliibie aoa le The storm assumed the fury and site direction was held up at | the wreck and’ plund bers of the guard being killed. A large force of mounted bandits, They were choosing exhibits to be taken to Olymp! Monday, June 19, when the murder trial is scheduled y one for appeal at the supreme court. can get trunk in .which The bandit band, load. SEATTLE DIES IN AUTO ‘art, Seattle girl, was in- Warrenton, near | this morning w automobile in which she was ing from Flavel with five other per- L turtle at a dangerous | turn in the highway. the body was found ccording to Prosecut Malcolm Douglas, will d to Olympia, y all other exhibits, vill be taken before the court. it is believed, at Olympia, will remain in his cell at Why We Want to|the King county jail, Attorn \Johnston and Louis Schwellen! vill argue in his defense, while the state will be represented by jcutor Male s and Deputy | \Li Yuan Hung Will | Be Heard by Court} Complete His Term China, June 12- Li Yuan Hung arrived in| ed to resume temporarily, jout his unexpired term if nece: } In the meantime parliament is to arrange for an election at which his | successor will be chosen, |Report Diaz Lands to Launch Revolt 12. — Pri. | ived here today telegrams rec declared that G soldiers has p on the gulf coast and will shortly of Mexico | |would go far towards bringing about raise the standard | The advices stated that arms and \munitions for several thousand more jmen had been brought by the expe ernmental difficulties. Legate Death Probe Is About to Begin), Investigation Charles O, Legate, police officer, by | the grand jury was expected to be- late Monday ing to a statement \Malcolm Douglas Monday morning. The jury, after one month's prob: | situation, was be- | Mayflowe readiness with discredited the re- | |Harding Yacht Is Safe After Storm) WASHINGTON, and | Mrs. Harding and a few guests, ar-| rived here early today after weather: | rain storm in Chesapeake bay late yesterday, lieved to be nearing The Legate case gsc ae for the next hearing. WATERS. ENGULE VICTIMS First Tornado in New York Brings Reports were received this afternoon of a new »storm sweeping upper Ni | York state, ' The area of the new extended eastward from vicinity of Schenectady . the New England ti interrupted by the storm. NEW YORK, June 12.—A tor- nado which carried death and destruction to New York, and ex- — tended to New England, es vania and Ohio, in the East, swept pede dences of its destruction along with its victims. | : New York police have a death list — of 43, and reports from up-state | the total to 60, while, it is | many other casualties were PLEASURE BOATS ARE WRECKED "i A Ferris wheel, shattered and top: pled over by the biast, carried &f persons to their deaths. 2 In the Sound and Pelham bay, pleasure yachts which dotted waters by the hundred were lowed up by the twisting cyclone, many to vanish from sight forever, Pitiful scenes were enacted at City island, as the bath houses to which many victims never returned, were broken open and clothing, ui taken to police headquarters for pos: | sible identification. Relatives of victims crowded head-_ quarters and went to the island in boats to identify property of lost ones, Many capsized boats, hired by pleasure seekers, drifted in with the tide. 5 | Eleven bodies were picked up by jthe police boat today, TWISTING WIND BRINGS DEATH | Most or the victims were caught | bathing or boating, haracteristics of a tornado as if swept up the sound. A twisting cloud {that touched the water ripped along jat nearly 90 miles an hour, leveling everything in its path. Pleasure yachts were swept over like toy boats. A glass-cabined yacht, struck by the full fury of the blast, went down in a cavern of water and never reappeared. Little boats, dot. jting the sound, were wiped from sight like ehessmen dashed from @ board by an unseen hand, Nothing like the storm was known in the memory of the oldest iphabi- tant, for the sound and bays about |New York have been free from the jperil of cyclones, Yesterday's brief blast, however, had all the character: (Turn to Page 7, Column 5) TOKYO IS MOVED TO ~ SEATTLE; CERTAINLY IT LOOKED THAT WAY Tokyo! That's where the few Ameri cans thought they were Saturday night when they wandered into the carnival that’s operating on Jackson st Tokyo, because nine-tenths of the crowd was Japanese, It's a sizable carnival, stretch. ing er the greater part of two ol nd it was jammed Satur- night. The Ferris wheel, the sideshows, the gambling booths, the merry-go-round and the rest of the amusement concessions did a big business—virtually all Japa- nese. There was an.eccasional China. man to be seen; sometimes a few colored residents of the district, and once in a great while a white man, But the bulk of the crowd was tiny brown motiters towing | citizens from a year up to aie years in age and accompanied ty unsmiling little brown husbands,