Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
- THE NEWSPAPER WITH A 15,000 CIRCULATION LEAD OVER ITS NEAREST COMPETITOR <—a@ 00 FIRES IN STATE!) OODS AFLAME IN EVERY .COUNTY WEST OF rence WEATHER Tonight and Friday, fair; tinued warm; moderate northwest winds. Temperature Last 24 Hours ACRES 79. Minimum, 56. Alii ; VOLUME 24, NO, 113. TIME LOSES EJ James Finds There| Are Times and| Times, and This Is Not One Ovonove0- not allan Oot It's warm! eee | “Forest Fires Raging Around Se- aitle.” Gosh, and just a few weeks we were kept busy stoking the | furnace! Ain't nature wonder And you don’t want to hear it! played. You've already heard it played plenty. You merely desire to kins thirty-five cents adios, get the sheet wrapped up, and beat it. | | Johnny loved Mabel, But Mabe didn't care: _ Bo he found a wal sweetie WATCH HOW IT WORKS OUT All right; there's the plot. how ft works out. You've invaded a ballad bureau not over & hundred miles from Pike st. Wateh : . Teo some of An alert young woman approaches. be Saye | lh ee Snappy and brisk your chirp: be sae a “Just want a copy of ‘While Miami Dreams’ od candifate for the Polson ‘The young woman issues Ja the bimbo iw command. | a on ye “Play “While Miami Dreams,” | when he PR, 3 Before you have opportunity to yodel it need not be played another young woman seated at @ piano at | | tacks the instrument wickedly. Rest | |lessly you fidget and «quirm the | | while she bangs out “While sits } Dreams"—or something. Drawing a breath of relief when this fs over you look pointedly at} { | the saleswoman, but she makes no| | move to wrap up the song. Instead. | Today’s radio program of the station, broadcasting and operated by Home | Wave length, quarter me | | (| BV-D _fownea Brew. ter. |. Sentimental solo by Mayor E. J. Brown, entitled “Oh, Where | -s Fiv Carfare To | | *H¢ grabs at the rack in front of | | | her. aes ore a4 | “Have you ‘On the ‘Gin, ‘Gin, ‘Gin | ny Shore?’ she quizzes. | No,” you are forced to admit 3. Song by Capt. Charles oe Max'in My Preto Gallerceer” | |it OF any other shore 7 1) | “Give us ’Gin, Gin, "Ginny Shore,” 4 “Merely of the 575 Politica} | | 275 the young woman behind the| counter. You can hardly wait until the | plano ceases to shake your head firmly. The saleswoman is un | daunted, however. And you yearn to add you don’t want | Incurables,” played by Mayor Brown and orchestra. | ————-% i | 2. Zither harmony by 50) trained mosquitoes, | o- ‘They are looking for the 12 great i ' | j : o- i Pug oe as bystanders, He and the | Peso pad : soon z mad ml na \, t pick on “Angel Child” until i a reviewer for Nation. |i, a wonde ‘aggy wool vom METis, Clarice, we may assume that/i” % wonder the Juvenile remains) eee os funny se | WHAT HE SAYS | ofS xo | 1S ALL IN VAIN } iP scx Us SOMETHING WE cit a wwell foxtrot.” insinuates _ vot brenden —) { don't want any fox-trots,” you} } | Remember the first girl you [arise fo remark. It doesn't win you ii ever kissed back there in the |@ thing | ; Sunbonne: Sue days, when there ‘Oh, maybe you Uke waltzes bet i ter. swell waltz, Dearte | Wasn't such a thing as bobbed | hair or knickers?—Alice. ! Law, no, Alice! We can'teven | Obediently “dearie’ desists from) Temember the last one. hammering out some barbaric strain 4 i i for her canary bird friend that's on p) The radio will never be a great ald with voice and sailé into Fito civilization. You can't broadcast altz. She even rubs it in in by Poison gas with it @ verse and chorus both. | . No,” you say thru your o- Life is like a train schedule sey | teeth, po the time you have it figured out the (Turn to Page 7, Column 2) Vrain is gone. | “+e | “1 wouldn't eare for—" Do 'the faa of having all the teeth ‘Run Down by Auto, Fale out to cure all ilis in not new Vy | "he sate ieguiaure started tues, Boy of 4 May Die =: ago on its | Four-yearold Henry Carfson, son j > SG lof Mrs. nhild Sartson, 411 Har. SA ARISTOCRACY OF b C P We with the Retail Groce riso7 st., was in the city hospital ion wowld adopt reaolut Thursday suffering from injuries sining te following terme: which may prove fatal, as the re sult of being struck by an automo: | ! bile dr 1 by Chris. Hanson, 1816} | Sixth W., Wednesday, Playing Kes. in front of his home, the child ran =e 0 into the path of the machine. His One that we always avold is aj skull is believed to b frac: | dium fresh egg |tured, but the full extent of his in 3 Bees juries has not yet been determined. Radium has dropped to $12,125,000 |) | ce. ons ust ‘folks! | 7 er. ee |Seventy Injured * in Train Cras! 5 || PORTER, Ind. July 6.—Seventy persons were slightly injured when | |Pere Marquette passenger train No. | 4 4 | 6, west-bound, ecoliided with a New Be ‘Phe York Centra! locomotive near here. Work, nays a Seattle lecturer, will| The train took a siding instead of fake the place of marriage.|the main line eve her. They're too m Moet of the injured were from Chi cago. | MSc TS (M | ped running. \Vatican Gendarmes | On the Issue of Americanism There Can Be No Compromise The Seattle Star Batered as Second Class Matter May 8, 1499, at the Postoffice at Seattle, Wash. under thy Act of Congress Mareh 3, 1879. Per Year, by Mail, $5 to $8 SE ATTL E, WASH, THU RSDAY, JULY 6, 1922, . TWO CENTS IN SEATTLE Mammon Laughing; Gold Beneath Red! By Robert Bastien Bermann Mammon, God of Greed, was laughing Thursday. His ponderous paunch shook with mirth as he counted over | the wages of his latest coup. Golden coins, gleaming and glittering, cascaded from one yellow talon to the other, : He licked his yellow lips as he played with the shining baubles. Some of the coins were flicked here and there with red. But what mattered that to Mammon? They were gold, beneath the red. ae alae The home of Peggy Larson was in mourning Thursday. — Peggy—Peg o’ My Heart, as her mother called her—lay in a tiny coffin. She had been duped by Mammon’s ruse of “patriotism” and | had added her mite to the golden store. The firecracker that Mammon gave her burned her to death—-and stained the coin with her innocent blood. But what mattered that to Mammon? It was gold, beneath the red. ° The home of Frank Levern was in mourning Thursday. Frankie lay in a tiny coffin. He had been duped by Mammon’s ruse of “patriotism” anid} had added his mite to the golden store. The firecracker that Mammon gave him led him to death| in the path of an automobile—and stained the coin with his innocent blood. But what mattered that to Mammon? It was gold, beneath the red. . The home of Anker Henry Hem was in mourning Thurs- Anker lay in a hospital bed, gasping out his dying breath. He had been duped by Mammon’s ruse of “patriotism” and someone had added a mite to the golden store. The bomb that Mammon gave him crushed in his skull-— and stained the coin with his innocent blood. But what mattered that to Mammon? It was gold, beneath the red. . Mammon, God of ieiks was laughing Thursday. His ponderous paunch shock with mirth as he counted | lover the wages of his latest coup. Golden coins, gleaming and glittering, cascaded from one} yellow talon to the other. He licked his yellow lips as he played with the shining baubles. Some of the coins were flicked here and there with red. But what mattered that to Mammon? They were gold, beneath the red. 100 TRAPPED IN'STEAMER ARCTIC ‘SUBWAY FLAMES RUNS AGROUND! women. Don’t leave out the one} ° . 4 a etek neat and| “Here's one—‘Angel Child’ A | j : A . nit toy to tell you bow to drive) smell foxtrot, Play ‘Angel Child’ | Several Injured in Under-| Strikes Derelict on Sound- ag eae As “dearle” does #0 some young ground Panic er’s Reef I’m fond of home and family, lcookle bobs into the songshop. Right But seduldn’t 1t be nice away you discover he's one of these | NEW YORK, duly 6 1s Gass wmaweieon, suly tute To float around the Arctic on John MeCormacks who are always) children were tranvpled, denser Aretia weet aground Gn A nice big cake of ice? ing into ‘ music | and women fought desperately Sounder’s reef last night, according in the darkness, and more than to marine advices here today. Leak 100 persons were overcome in a | ing badly the Arctic then proceeded panic 35 feet below the surface {to Arena cove. The Admiral Schley when « short circuit in the Lex- | stood by to render assistance if ington ave. subway was followed Jed. The Arctic atruck the dere by smoke and fire today | ict Whittier on Sounder’s reef. The At 12 » m. the police re | pint Arena life saving crew is also ported no one had been nding by with its power boat killed. % — Fire broke out fn a Jerome ave. | | cxpreas train which lett Grana cen.| Won’t Try to Pass tral station «hortly before noon to- * day. Short circult'of wires caused a Ship Subsidy Bill burst of flame as the train thundered| WASHINGTON, July 6.—-Republi past the 59th at. station Joan senate leaders have virtually 4 A panic ensued in the burning car. |cided to make no effort to pass the ‘The train crew checked the flames |administration subsidy bill at this with extinguishers. Thick black session amoke filled the train immediately They will conter with President afterward, All lights went out and trains stop c on the soldier bonus before it comes up in the senate, hoping to get an agreement with him not to Passengers in terror tried to ¢%-|veto the bill that is passed which they cape from the cars in The isions were made at al were locked, Windows were amashed | ainner giv last night by Senator | \ by terrified women and men, who | Lodge, party leader, to a number of | etimbed thru, some injuring them: | other jeading republicans selves severely ‘ Children were handed thru broken | FOR THE KU KLUX? OR AGAINST? TELL US ALL ABOUT IT! panes, Condemns Liquor Sale Aboard Ships WASHINGTON, July 6.—President What do you know about the Harding is the “man responsible for || Ku Klux Klan? the most open and flagrant violation The Star and the Literary Di of the 18th amendment, nator || gest want to get your opinions Caraway, Arkansas, democrat, || on the workings of the “Invisit charged in a bitter denunciation of || Empire” in this state the administration in the senate to-| The Ku Kiuxers are growing to be a political power in many parts of the U, 8. Have they gained a stronghold in Seattle? Send in your ideas to The Star Some of them will be printed in this paper, and ail of them will be dixpatched to the Digést, which is making a nation-wide survey ot the Klan situation and which has asked The Star to co-operate by, furnishing it with the point of view of the people of this tion. Caraway attacked the sale of liquor on shipping board vessels Foiled in Mutiny | ROME, July 6.—The vatican gen: | darmes mutinied today because of a dispute over wages and other dis satisfactions | ‘The Swiss guard took over the bar | racks and disarmed the gendarmes. FIRECRACKER BAN PLANNED; TOLL MOUNTS ‘Anker Henry Hem Fatally Injured as “Flower Pot” Explodes Councilman Robert B. Hesketh announced Thursday that he would take immediate steps to Prevent « recurrence of the tragedies that marred the Fourth of July celebration here this year. Hesketh wrote w Portland and | Royal Triangle in Europe | Princes Yolanda Is Prize San Francisco for copies of their “safe and sane” Independence day ordinances, indicating that he would amend presen Seattle laws to prohibit the sale of dangerous firecrackers and fireworks, “There are too many accidents in Seattle on the Fourth of July,” Hesketh said. “Something is wrong with our present city ordi- nances. Either they are too weak or they are not enforced, 1 am going to do my part to pre- vent any more casualties on the Fourth.” t His skull crushed as the resalt of » belated of July cele bration, Henry i 16 Keystone was be- ved be dying Thursday in Virginia Mason hospital, Should he succumb to his in- Juries, Seattle's toll of deaths di- rectly aseribable to fireworks amd firecrackers will mount to three. Frank Levern, 7, was killed Tuesday, when he wae f struck by an automobile as he ran into the street after un: exploded firecracker, and Olive ser" firecracker ignited her frock, Anker wag the victim of a “flower | pet” of defective make, which boy friends picked up at the stadium | Wednesday and took to his home. | Anker and hin 1-yearold brother Arthur Elm Hem, joined the other youngsterd when they arrived, and jthey gathered around the plece of | fireworks j There was just a single, feeble ex- | plostan when the “flower pot" first it, and Anker what waa the matter As he leaned over the bomb, there | was a second explosion, and the boy was knocked off his feet, his skull fractured by a stone which was hurled into the air. Dr. EB. FB. Grant, who has charge of the cane, says the boy has a fighting chance to recover—but that’s all John Hem, a Th carpenter. WOULD EXPOSE ' BIG RUM PLOT) y's father is \ the Relgian royal couple and heir to SAN FRANCISCO, July 6 booze plot.expose that will implicate prominent San Francisco and Seattle men in Hauor smuggling Is promised | today by counsel for Clem Sullivan, | om eight men recently arrested in | la Monterey raid | | But first Sullivan wants promise of | | immunity | The smugglers were reported to have operated a fleet of four power t nd many motor trucks. | ivan is reported intent on re-| venge because “higher ups” have not | bailed him out Booze Armada | | to Make Dash) si: | NEW YORK, July 6.—An interna tional rum smuggling, fleet, several | hundred men and 15 or more shiy strong, which was repulsed July lin a speed engagement with the fed ‘dry navy” and driven 15 miles | ea, returned today and is plan ning another dash to the New York New Jersey coast, according to in formation recetved by Ralph A. Day | prohibition director. H |Fighting to Save Town From Flames EUGENE, Ore., July 6—The Booth-Kelly sawmill, at Wendling, took fire at 9 o'clock this morning} and burned to the ground in a few minutes, Reports from the fire at 10 o'clock are that the sawmill is a total wreck and crew and townspeople were | desperately battling the flames in an jeffort to wave the planing m nd the lumber in docks, | ‘The whole town of Wendling Is threatened A special train was | made up at Springfield as soon as | the report of the fire reached there. |and fire fighters and apparatus were rushed to the scene in an attempt to nee! Save the town, big | was |about because Princess Yolanda, eld- ran up to ws bo daughter of the Italian reigning | picking is done. | selors of he \ant professor of | versity Figures. in royal ‘triangle. | (above), Duke Henry of Brabant (left) whom diplomats want Yolanda to wed, and the Prince of Wales who, it is said, | Yolanda wants to wed. ROME, July 6—A foyal tri- + angle! A triangle with one of | fond of the Prince of Wales than of Europe's most beautiful prine | Duke Henry, cesses at Its apex, and two heirs And it’s said here that the prin- to thrones at the other corners. While « Balkan king at any time may break openly into the regal scramble for «a heart and |to meet Wales. Wales is expected to | |marry shortly. Everything is arrang: | ed except that no bride has been change the triangle into @ | picked. quadrangle! | And Yolanaa, it’s said, wants a That situation has been brought) chance with her dark Italian beauty and langorous black eyes before the royal parents. And Duke Henry 7 aghast—in the past their) whether he'll have decisions in matrimonial matters have been accepted without question y decreed Yolanda should wed | Duke Henry of Brabant, eldest son of y're bride or not & watchful eye on the whole affair ‘This impoverished encouragement—from the diplomats. | Phin Se none from wey Yolanda! Kaolin Find Means the Belgian throne i Princess Yolanda of Italy! But Yolanda is sald to be far more} - HUGE LOSS SEEN $1,000,000 in Forest Property Already Destroyed, It Is raging in Washington. There are fires in every county in the attie Thursday by William Ent- {wets district fire warden for the Washington Forest Fire association, | who has just completed a/ tour of the fire area in King, Lewis and { | i | pair, hag a mind of her own. Revolutionary Yolanda, a girt in! bags for London | peril, her early twenties, says she's going And the royal counselors |to pick her busband without diplo- | arourfd in circles and declare girls of | association. j matic aid ‘# defying all the coun-/|the past were never like this— ; | | | New Industry Here The centers of the whiteware in mo raf By E. P. Chalcraft dustry in this country are located in Paving the way for the estab- | New Jersey and in East Liverpool, t of w thriving new Pa | 6. ‘Phere is no tac in the Pacific Northwest industry, the | Northwest or in all Canada. The tates bureau of mines ter more than a year’s investi- gation, has discovered and de nly whiteware plant west of Illinois | is @ new one in California Until the discovery and develop- veloped four deposits of high p- | | ae kaolin ‘suitable for the {ment of the new Washington and cesimtheniate Gk wulameee: | Idaho kaolin deposits, the nearest ap: Announcement of the bureau's} PPo@ch to the Cornwall kaolin was obtained by mixing that from the success was made Thursday by Clyde Gee . superintendent of the ment station of the| flelds, which are the principal other bureau of mines, located at the Uni-|@¢Posits in this country. ‘The North vaedity of: Wankel Carolina deposits are said to be limit ‘The four deposits of residual kaotin|¢4 in quantity The Washington are located at Mica and Freeman, |*"d Idaho deposits are of consider. Washington, 1 Spokane, and at] *ble extent ‘Troy and Moscow, Idaho | “Phere are wo general types “ 4 vert ) Professor Wilson ex- Field and laboratory work was per-| formed by Hewitt Wilson, ceramist . “Residual kaolin is that for the buredu of mines, and assist: err is left as the granite rock softened, Transported kaolin is that which was sorted and car- ried away by nature, and deposit- ed elsewhere, Transported kao- ln is of finer grain, but is more susceptible to cracking, “The Washington deposits are dual kaolin, and our prelim- tests have shown most en- couraging results.” In making up whiteware, from 35 to 50 per cent of kaolin is used, from 15 to 80 per cent feldspar, and the rest is flint. Both feldspar and flint are found in this section, the latter nics at the uni “This kaolin is of a quality very similar to that from the de- posits at England, which is regard stand. ard of the world,” Williams said. “We not only have found the kaolin deposits, but have worked out methods and have made small samples of whiteware. Now we are going to work on a larg- er scale, and when we are thru will have complete working data for the use of anyone who is in- terested in establishing fac near Spokane and at Merritt station, tories.” on the Great Northern railway, and Whiteware includes all pottery r near Troy, Idaho, and in with a white body, Tableware, porce- | British Columbia. Thus the manu- lain insulators, sanitary ware, chemi-|facturer has at hand all the needed raw materials, a situation that does not exist elsewhere. In making his tests, Prof. W (Turn to Page 7, Column 2) cal porcelain ware—all these come under the category of whiteware, and the list of articles of common use might be extended indefinitely, North Caroling and Florida! Thurston counties. leks aT | tions, And there is always ger of the fires getting out of hand should there be strong winds, The logging companies, according to Entwistle, are suffering the most severe losses, They have lost hundreds of thou- sands of dollars in destroyed equip- ment, trestles and cut logs, and they f cess plans to go to London incognito | aigo ‘bear the brunt of the wage jcosts. One concern alone—the St. Paul & Tacoma Lumber Co.—has 1530 men fighting the flames south of Orting, and other com- panies have nearly as many com- batting the fires. So far the storm zone in the Olym- | Meanwhile as Yolanda packs her | Fag peninsula has escaped the fire | due to the extraordinary pre- run cautions taken by the Forest Fire Should a fire gain headway in that section, there would is wondering | be no way in the world of stopping it, so extra heavy patrols are being King Boris of Bulgaria is keeping | maintained there. The result is that all the fires on Balkan king /the peninsula have so far been con- sued for Yolanda’s hand and got some! fined to the east side, where they jean be held in check under favorable conditions. oo DRIEST SEASON IN 32 YEARS, REPORTS WEATHER RECORDER ‘The driest season in 32 years, That's what the weather bureau says, During June rain, very light rain, fell on only two days. It registered in all dredth of an inch. Back in 1917 the heaviest rain- fall for June in the past 32 years was recorded at the weather bu reau, In that year 3.70 inches of rain fell. No records extend beyond the 82-year line, since it was in 1890 that the weather bu- reau first began operation in Se- attle, July, it seems, is tending toward upholding the record already be- gan. No rain has fallen so far this month, and the weather re- port states that “it will continue to be warm.” It was believed that the temperature would rise to 83 or a little less late Thursday afternoon, A light northwest wind has been noticeable during the day Records of June rainfall in Se attle during the last five years are as follows: 1921, 1.29 inches; 1 1.93 inches; 1919. .35 inch; 1918, 60 inch, and 1917, the rec- one-three-hun- ord rainfall year, 3.70. Salt Water Ruins Mexico Oil Field NEW YORK, July 6.— Complete abandonment of the Toleco-Corona Azul of] field is imminent, it was announced here today when confirm: atory telegrams were received that salt water had invaded the district. More than 80 per cent of all oil ex- ported from Mexico during the past few months has come from this field, Ofl men estimate that the Mextean ntoutput will be reduced 300,000 barrels daily,