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ic red TWO att ¢ DAUGHTER OF TELEGRAPHER IS “WONDER” Washes Dishes to} Harmony of Her} Own.Songs; Gets} an Early Start BY NORRIS QUINN NEW YORK, Nov. 16.—This is the story of « little girl who sang her way from dishwater to fame. And it contains a lesson for everybody, young or old, tal ented or not, would rhe | from a mean poatien in life to | & lofty one, ‘The little girt Two weeks ago she @aughter of a Kansas ( ts Marion Talley, 15. | was just the ty railway } e phe: a ttle iss who liked Py * > aang a a j Marion Talley sing. | Today she ts acclaime¢ by New York as a child, a marvel : songbird, a oming second Tet (+] sini, and not far tn the future may be the world’s youngest sr opera star Already she has turned down one | NEW CONGRESS” ik Says. “Canvass of Body Proves Strength Nov. 1 Proffered ce ‘act to star in an 2 wi | because she knows her success be all the greater if she puts in sev- eral years of hard work and study. Marion herself told teday in an ex- lusive interview the story of her spectacular rise. “Mother says I began to sing at WASHINGTON ~The the age of two.” Marion said. “She'd | arye hold a two-thirds majority in ging little lullabies to mé and imme-!tne new congress. Weta’ hopes of @iately I'd repeat them, carrying the |» ending the Volstead act must be tune. | deferred until after next election, at “Of course, I don’t remember thre. ! i. .ct but I do know that ever since I can) “Wayne B. Wheeler, legislative gecolject, I've sung. jehiet of the Ant-Saloon league, told As I grew up I had to help mother with housewerk, Instead of trying to dodge dishwashing, sweeping and dusting, I did these things to the nccompani- ment of singing and I found that made it easy. the United Press toda reful can lwame of the new congressmen had |been made, and that as a result dry | inaders are confident they still con trot, Wheeler declared that: 1. Congressional drys now are is 5 called on to stn: at Pakeceeements ent other; | massing their forces to withstand the | ; in the | Wet uprising which is expected as a ae result of the wet sentiment in the - never forget the firnt time I) Tecent elections: took —— seat in the chotr, The di-| 2% An effort will be made to “take rector, listened to me intently and/| Probibition enforcement out of poll when I had sung my first hymn, hhe } tHe by passage of the bill placing | Said to be the first woman coal op- €alled me to sit in the front row. | ll federal agents under civil serv. jerator in the country, Mra. Joseph “That was my turning point. From | ice Pursglove has opened an office at that time on an ambition to be a 3. No new “teeth” measures are |Cleveland to market the output of singer grew in me.” planned for introduction in congres And now let Mra. Charles M. Tal- oo drys being supremely content with ‘Marion's mother, take up the) the present law. teary, Wheeler declared the wet era her. “Marion soot became church solo- alded by the election was largely a ist. She was pald as much ssa man./myth. Investigation had deter WOMAN ENTERS |Woman Operator Opens Of- fice in Cleveland WHEELING, W. Va. Nov. 17.-— She has taken a place in the busi- brothers. For more than 20 years, Mra. Purse giove’s husband and brothers have Her voice came to be in demand at) mined. he maid that many congress [been in the coal business in this all kinds of entertainments and she | men and senators who were claimed | county. During her association with ‘was well paid. Soon her talent caught | by the wets are not wets at all. them, the new woman coal operator 'WOULD LEASE TACOMA HOTEL TACOMA, Nov. 16—Proposais for larion | the leasing and operation of Tacoma's ee gos lagtit ip en! community hotel when completed Seetr Ba Opera House Marion | have been made by several operators, fang before Giulio tti-Cassazza, di-| Président Henry A. Rhodes of the} |board of trustees announced, follow. company, Otto} rector of the opera pan: 4 ling a meeting of the board. absorbed some of the lore and atmos. wealthy Kansas City men. phere of the industry, “At a special concert $10,000 was raised to pay for her musi- cal education. And the Metre. poliian Opera company of New York was asked to test her volee.” without learn said, all over clared. “W eration there on you start a mine in op is everything to see about at ones, I have just ‘return ed from inspecting the mine and }have been planning for a new motor and arranging for the seven houses the board of director that must te built for the miners’ | eociies oan others whose names| W. I~ Stoddart, New York archt- | tamittes, | are known all over the world. jiect, who made ® report of the} «1m gotng to put pep into that And all pronounced Marion's ~olce| Various sites, conferred with the | mine of mine. When John Lewis, miraculous and said that = iver |tr istees on the subject of continued | president of the miners’ union, was Chances of becoming # star were »f|¢mployment as chief architect for the |in Cleveland a short time ago, 1 told the best. | Ps pig ey on the toart of|him he'd have to reckon with me So Marion and her mother are pasa settling down in New York where |truntees have been united under one) «1 am going East in a few days to Marion will study hard for three (head w work for the speedy com-| get the property rated, so that Lean years under the best teachers while | pletion of the hotel, it was said after get plenty of cars, You see, the mine her father goes back to bin telegraph |the meeting. Several resignations key in Kansas City. jof trustees were reconsidered and And the lesson? withdrawn, “No matter how obscure you may en be at the start, you can gain recog- nition if you really try.” says Ma- rion. “I cot ahead by being content- ed with my lot but at the same time reaching upward and doing my utmost to develop my talent. “That's why I wash dishes and | sing instead of letting the dishes | articles isn't very old, and the entries have just been completed and the rooms.” ae dee ee ‘The company operating the mine ts capitalized at $300,000 and Mrs. Pure |mlove has been elected president and |Many Patents Are Granted to Women | #2%! ==". LONDON, Vv. 16.—Official re ports record « large increase in pat.| ent applications by women, particu-| Mays will pitch for the New York larly in ‘connection with household | Yanks next , and I'll bet dough | that he wing NEW YORK, Nov. 5 co and dreaming of fame. orn asa once Huston, part owner of the Yanks, “That's why I was always willing . . said. Waivers we eked on Mays to sing anywhere and for anybody |Cussing Title Is as & disciplinary measure, Huston instead of considering myself above | oaid Handed to Women a LONDON, Nov, 16.—According to| WASHINGTON.—Albert D. Lask Judge Parry of the Lambeth county| er, chairman of U. 8. shipping board, court, women are the worst offend-| contributes $25,000 to American So- ers in the use elety for Control of Cancer Why and How Coke Should Be Used for Domestic Heating If you are having trouble getting coal; If you can’t get enough coal; If you would like to use coke, it , “And just as T have got ahead fn | singing, any girl—or boy or man or worman—can get ahead in any other line.” of bad language. RICH CHILDREN ARE UNDERFED NEW YORK. Nov, 16.—The New Jersey Anti-Tuberculosis league Joins in the findings of other Invest! gators that there 1s more mal-nutrt tion among the children of the rich but don’t know how; than among the children of the If you think coke can't be used successfully in ordinary domestic poor. The diet of a rich child is heating furnaces; frequently so unbalanced as to If you want to know why and how ft can be used— amount to partial starvation Then you will want the bulletin just prepared by The Star's The poor child often beging lfe Washington bureau, based on practical and easily understood gov: with a better start. The parents ernment tests and experiments carried out by Uncle Sam’s mines have sounder digestions, fewer ner bureau. It tells you all about coke and exactly how to use it in yous troubles, better teeth, stronger your furnace, Just fill out carefully the coupon below and mail It muscles and the habit of regular to our Washington bureau, not to The Star's Seattle office, sleep. The poor child ts certainly given a more wholesome diet t aoe a emarernssnsacnphiahimienscnaiiapitinindiinsieainy first months of its existence. No Washington Bureau, The Seattle Star, doctor can compound a coasts 1 New York Ave., Washington, D, C, modified cow's mil 4 I want a copy of the bulletin, “Coke for Domestic Heating,” from a health point of view the nat ural nourishment received by the Babies of the poor. dge Orders Man - ige Ord for Babies and inclose herewith two cents in stamps for postage. Name.......++. Street and No............0000008 EDMONTON England, Nov. 16 GE ehgo Fed co cegeccvvcosevcsoesve ahr MELO; mmnECOT OG, |B eee Re eae ee a wewmn ete eresegeret was sued for rent, Judge C awford Tid him to stay home and mind the WO i ced dibesriden) o¢eads a rnbavesevares toes ik as bien while his wife got wor D lemese, there being great de- mand tor such help. MINING FIELD mine she owns in Belmont county. | [ness beside her husband and three | Ing much of its technical points, she | “It's Mke netting up housekeeping ain,” Mra. Pursglove de- | ready for 16.—"Cart | games for us,” Col. | __The seattle Star SEATTL E, W ASH., THURS ~ HUMAN FAMILY LIKE MONKEYS, |Sea Captain's Wife Finds | New South Sea Tribe an, north of Borneo, she said. “They are peaceful and childitke,” Mra, Helbig declared, “but very ugly | to look at “The married women black their teeth to distinguish them from the rrted They have little Intellectual devel opment and speak no language com mon to other on of the Pacific islands.” : PLAN TO RAISE $5,000 FOR BASIN] TACOMA, Nov ‘Tacoma’s au £ $5,000 for ane promotion of |the Columbia basin irrigation project tw to be rained by a © men headed by J. 8 announced today, fi mittee of ten it wan wing meet 1 Columbia basin com Heiney, mittee. The money will be obtained trom | Tacoma manufacturers, wh The quota west Washington has $15,000 Women With Extra Husbands Sought LONDON, Nov, 16.—The St. Pan eras § officials who recently dis charged a woman who married now Jannounce they will receive applica-| |tiens for women “with dependent} | husbands © jobbers and for South been set at lena lors. Ba { | | Sale Starts at 9 o’Clock Tomorrow ! i] ALL COATS Formerly sold at $15 and $17.50, Including Double-Texture Moleskins, Mohairs, Silk-Back Tweeds—every Coat guaranteed waterproof, on sale at— SAN FRANCISC Nov. 16 Stories of @ tribe of humans with | like monkeys, who live in tree tops and are afraid of dogs, were jbrought here today by Mra, Wanda Helbig, wife of Capt. John Helbig of the South sea trading schooner Eclipse. They live on the island of Palow Thousands of Raincoats on hand and a long dry spell have completed the job for the present management. Don’t Fail to Attend This Big Which will start tomorrow morning—be one of the first to get the 5 ne bargains. Look at these prices—see these Wonderful Values in Coats 904 Second Avenue PAGES DAY, N VEMBE R 16, 1922 \Foreign Forage Crops - | Now Grown in America BY ROBERT TALLEY {HELD CAPTIVE | tle in tong dry seasons. All this has WASHINGTON, Nov. 16.—If “we | descended from a little ket of are what we eat,” as the saying goes, | Soudan grass aeed—not more than a the department of agriculture here, |tablespoonful—that the department of agriculture received trom Africa about 1910, Biome day, when the history of the live stock industry Is rewritten, this nful of Boudan grass is Ko ark the turning of the tide | within another generation, will have |turned Americans inte an African Asiatic - Kuropean - Austrajasian me: | lange. Which is another way of saying | department scientists are rapidiy bringing into this country foodstuffs | tere ot the give, acciimating and) LORD MAYOR quirements of the inbabiants of tote! ~TNAUGURATED C Not only fruit and food plants are being imported set forth in a@ previous article in these columns but miraculous forage crops also are brought In by researchers out scour |ing the four corners for what they | can find | LONDON, Nov, 16.--With turtes-old elvic ritual and pomp, Bd ward Cecil Moore was inaugurated lord mayor London. The pie turenque and ancient pageant known an the “lord mayor's show” attract ed hundreds of thousands of citl con zens The history of the South Ie being) starting from the Guildhall short-| | rewritten by the spread of grain #0r-/1¥ hefore noon, the lord mayor's ghums and grasses discovered 10 Af-| ow traversed’ the principal city jrica, These are supporting vast! ciety cncluding a tour thru the |herds of dairy cattle and releaning |New tond mayar's own ward of the cotton farmer from the slavery | Hinopente), arriving at. the hinh of the one-crop system. court’s of justice about 1:30 p. m. Already kafir and milo—dry tand ‘The procession included ol forage crops that need little rainfall ments of London's territorial sol-/ aro spreading rapidly over great |diery, naval volunteers, boy scouts,! areas girl guides, firemen, men of the The South, too, fs now growing the forestry department, representatives|@ For three days Ruth Sellers soya bean, brought over from China, of the ancient city ulldn” and on an increasing commercial ecale, |“livery companies,” emblematicas| Becker lay bound and gagged | |and experts foresee a day when it care and a dozen bands, in the San Francisco home of | will perhaps take rank with cotton| The new lord mayor drove tn the! ri ‘! as the major famous gilt state conch, attended by | 7 suitor, Corp. C tharles Ro So far, Americans are using the his chaplain, mace-bearer and pucse- bare of the U. S. Medical soya bean only as a cattle feed and bearer, and preceded by a mag-! 7 hy, its of! ax ® dilutant for linseed oll, nificently uniformed figure on Corps. Police learned of her | but for ages it hag been the butter horseback known as the city! plight and broke in the door. and cheese of the Ortent. Americans, , marshal | They found Robare dead from se lf - poisoning. jit ip said, wilt food, Then there ts the cow pea from India, an excellent cattle feed, and, when plowed under, an effective fer tilizer. noon be using it as a Tonight the lord mayor gtves the customary inaugural banquet at che mansion house, at which there will be some 300 notable guents. trative duties, the lord mayor ts the Lord Mayor Moore is 61 years of | city’s official host to royalty and all age, and is a leading chartered ao-| distinguished visitors Thousands of acres of Soudan | countant—t first chartered ac-| term of office. While lord mayor, grses Are Now spreading rapidly thru. countant to occupy the mayoral’ he ranks with earls and is ex-officio out the Bouth, providing feed for cat-! chair, In addition to his adminis a privy councillor, during his} 11 TO 20 E) NEW WITNESSES IN POISON CASE | Women Become Ill After Eating Food Nov. 16.—A half dozem Mrs. Tillie Mre. Netile Sturmer of having gtven her bus band arsenic polsoning, werd brought forward by investigators te day Mrs CHICAGO, witnesses against used new Klimek, ac with Stella Gruntkowsk!, sister of, a former sweetheart of Mrs. Kile mek, declared she had become viow ently ill after eating candy given her by the a used woman. “Before my brother died, he told me Mrs, Klimek had informed him that she had poisoned two him bands,” Mrs. Gruntkowski declared, according to police. The brother died under mysterious circum | stances Mrs. Anna lis, Mra. Rose |Split and Nicholas Mickey, all of |whom live in the same neighbor> hood where Mrs. Klimek and Mra. Sturmer resided, told of becoming | ating food cooked by the Kage women Wheelbarrowing Is | Dangerous Sport MANCHESTER, England, Nov. 16 ey wheelbarrow piloted by Henry Gearing was torn from his hands when struck by a motorcar, Tt struck a woman 20 feet away, kill ing her tnstantly. Who Won the War? The Censor, Buddy PARIS, Nov, 16—The war ts over; there is no censor.” Such is the official version. Nevertheless correspondents find that certain dia? pitches are mysteriously “lost” oF ‘delayed in transmission. ne Forced to Quit Business 3,500 Men’s, Women’s and Children’s Goodyear Coats Must GO Regardless of Cost ENTIRE STOCK TAKEN OVER BY W. W. GRAF, EASTERN CREDIT REPRESEN- TATIVE, WHO HAS INSTRUCTIONS TO “GET THE MONEY” LARGEST STOCK OF RAINCOATS ON THE COAST TO BE SOLD FOR WHAT THEY WILL BRING! I have so arranged the stock that man, woman and child can now have a rain- — coat and never miss the money.—W. W. Graf. © They simply could not get the money for the prices they were forced to charge. Sacrifice Raincoat ALL COATS Formerly sold at $20 and $22.50, ALL COATS Formerly sold at $25 and $30.00, ALL COATS Formerly sold at $32.50 and $35, Including Including Cashmeres, Including Imported Woven-Back All-Wool Gabar- Priestley Tweeds, dines, Craven- Cloth, Tweeds, Ladies’ Silk Coats and Dou- ble-Service Rain or Shine Coats— to go at— Gabardines and Heavy Scotch Cravenetted Tweeds and ette, Tweed and All-Wool Overcoats OODYEA RAINCOAT CO. Gt R 904 Sale Starts at 9 o’Clock Tomorrow Sale ALL COATS Formerly priced $37.50 and $40, Including Blanket Plaid- Back OVERCOATS, Genuine English WHIPCORDS, hand-tailored, and the finest money can buy— nd Avenue