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WEATHER Temperate Maxiuw ‘ Mi Today noon, St a SAVINGS PLAN IS HELD UP! Directors Admit That New York Man Entered Schools and Ran Things With High Hand (EDITORIAL) It is apparent that the school board and school ad ministration have been sly hoc an East ern “slicker” in the campa scheme They have permitted the school system—principals, teachers and pupils—to be commercialized and to be used for private ends. They have permitted the dis tribution in the.schools of notices signed “Board of Education,” wh they admit they never saw and knew nothing about. They permitted the smooth Easterner to act as their agent in canvassing the banks of the city and accepted his misrepresentations as facts. waist year they made themselves an official party to another press agent scheme n Eastern outfit; in that case a “Week” was solemnly observed thruout the school system for the benefit of the company in ques tion. Oil stock sale ught to find our school board easy pickings. * * & % % folks! Charlie Chaplin 1 and Vola Negri got into 2 lovers’ |‘ f quarrel. Wonder if Charlie Sh erowned ber with a lemon pie? board's fir e Charlie referred t as a) a clreul tion” had been their teschers to ¢ home, Charlie said he wa to| entire matter is held up while the be married.” Whom did think he | Hoard cheeks up to find out what's Was marrying—Vassar college? happening: - wits’ When informed by The Star Sat ur If the movie actor# ay morning that cash prizes ho present pace, it won't be long beell offered for the best: showing in éople will call it the “silver the President Croson sald r rece t was s to him. ,Detafla of the had been left to Mr. St THE PERFECT ALIBI ce ywon sald whe ‘Your honor, 1 admit that ap- tioned, sald he some pearances are against me. But cash 4. it wasn’t my fault, I was wear- ing a tight collar and it pressed gainst my Adam's apple until the cider ran down into my tomach and m ¢ drunk.” being ‘ roar n the| aaministrat * state. legis but .un fortunately wa t leming adMitted there were some y, Legislators tarted cash prizes and he was under the nobody knew e mpression that t amounted to} ¢ cross. So they. simply used a ble-cross. Mr he det handled t Mr. Flem t you him at Mutual (Turn to Page 4, Column 6) plan “1 HEAR YOU CALLING ME" Tom Murphine rang a cowbell and Governor Hart thought he was being paged. (Turn to Page 4, € uid Washingto: CHOOL BOARD says it didn’t know any- thing about the circular being distributed by teachers in its name thruout the school sys- tem, and asked The Star to show it one. All right, School Board, here’s a copy of the “‘An- nouncement Extraordinary.” You're welcome. ANNOUNCEMENT EXTRAORDINARY SCHOOL SAVINGS TO PATRONS OF THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS: The Board of Education begs to announce the estab- lishment of a Savings System in the public schools. A plan has been adopted by which the school accepts deposits from the pupils and sends them at once to a local depository, where an account is opened in the pupil's name. A deposit may be any amount from one cent up _ A pass book will be issued to each depositor. One day each week, in the morning, a short period will be de- voted to receiving deposits. The pass book must be j brought to school each time a deposit is made. / The chil dren will receive interest on their money at the prevailing rate, Deposits can be made only on the regular savings day The money may be withdrawn whenever required. From you, the patrons of the public schools, we hope for hearty sympathy and interest in generally aiding the children in this important enterprise. An improvident child is sure to be a thriftless grown-up. The habit of saving is vitally important. For many it is the only road to good food and warm clothing; for | others, it leads to a college education or an automobile; to the more fortunate, saving means simply the safeguard- ing of what has already been stored by. To everyone, everywhere, it is the most essential element of comfort and self-respect. The date of the first savifigs day has been announced to the boys and girls, Helpffhern remember it! f, BOARD OF EDUCATION Form 18 Educational Thritt Servier, tne» Woolworth Building, New Yoru | FURY ACQUITS | PERRY TRUAX Banker Found Not Guilty After 24 Hours 1 1 F ' 1 1 , 1| $17,474.01 from | ‘ a ¢ A A I by Wat Jur | | n_by Prosecuting Attorney Mak 1, who heard 1 the prosecutor to | nt pernona entered room courthouse, where pris of art | windows of this court of: the he ple to prose CORRUPTION BY | “LOBBY CHARGED Heighton Accuses Power Corporation OLYMPIA, Mareh tional charges agains: tions of certain lobbyists who are operating in Olympia, which he accused Stone & Web- ster interests of attempting to “buy him” and cha d the Stone & Webster lobbyists with operating a blind pig in Olympia for the benefit of the tors, were made on of the house Saturday by Rey Charles Heighton of 3.—Sensa- the ac broke nfter nu | tiff between Re entative |Ed Sims and Charles Roth on the |matter of, the olf leasing bill, passed | Thursday the house, Sins ¢ |élared that his integrity had been Jassafled by Roth when he stated that he could not stand for such corruptive legistation Heighton declared Roth reason to say there wa in legislation Forced to explain hin Heighton cut loom vad good corruption tatement, against the lobby: li ts, | “A short time atter T arrived here |the lobbyists long faithful in the| | © of th one & Webster Co,,'} Helghton said, “took me to one wi (Turn to Page 4, Column 4) That Automobile and Where to Get It + the Now 1s time to get that ones || Uned before the choice are all gone, Today's Want of being Ad Column: best wie ont the that uttle: some bargains are offered Se in If you find the car that looks good to you make it a point to wee it and have it demonstrated, e.10 for) yone | infor: | | in | |ning Monday [MUSIC THA attl es No Selfish Interest Has Ever Persuaded This Newspaper to Deviate From the Truth he Se SEATTLE, WASIL., SATURDAY, MARCH 8, 19: BEGINS ear, by Mail, 0 Seattle Movie Star Miss Nell Shipman, popular author-star-director-producer. Come: Home To Seattle folks she is still charming Helen Barham who has‘returned to the old home town for a brief period, un- sullied by her many triumphs. She'll advise movie-struck office next Thursday from 11 to 12. Seattle girls in Cynthia Grey's | Nell Shipman to Pai Meet Girls at, Star Office By Cynthia G lin, First Cure for Diabetes, Now Made Here Seattle Given Benefit of Miraculous New Helen’ Harham—that name te ever Discovery so famillar to Seattle residents, To} aa many it) brings recollections of a By Bob Bermann titled’ to hear this message of rosy-cleeked, bright-eyed, enthus — Thousands of Seattle men and ape. tice young miss, ho rowed acro: women, suffering — fro what | However, in deference to his feel- the Sound from Engle Harbor eath| they no lieve to be an abso. |ings, his name will not be men- morning in a flat-bottomed boat to incu disease, are | tioned #chool a chance for health and Insulin is an extract derived from result of the netivities of a Seattle phys! who has mast al the intric “How I loved that dear old boat!" uid Helen turday morn ut the tarham, « now known thru Nell Shipman, only wom-| of manufacturing what is herald , star director and produc: | ed thru ¢ ical world as the fer in the motion pleture industry, | first—and only—reliable remedy “My daddy made it wit bis own for diabe hands for brother and me, and it was| —q@Pye discovery of this extract—Iin. in that old skiff that I first developed | sitin is ita technical name—was an- a passionate Joye for outdoor Hf.” bounced thru the medical press sev she continued, ahe prepared to| 6rat months THU CHE Hew trent in “the old ment remained nothing more than @ |fable, as far as Seattl because of the difficulty is concerned, of obtaining LL, SEB AR OFFICE s aif |the extract Ebipman » wilt me diha Now, however, insulin is actu pearances at the Blue Mouse the boing manufactured in Seattle next week; but more—she has prom rom /attle men ‘and women—only a fe Ixed to come up to my office at The | fon the prosent-—care notually. being Star next Thursday, from 11 to 1 nd relieved with It to. advixa “movie-struck"’ misae «Inno Kendo a patent med This, I feel, is a real opportunity f eo wore taken by its dis girls interested in thig profession to it absolutely obtain some constructive advice from cover to make im: pownible for drug companies to ex: one who has grown up with the mo. | bowsinte for drug companies to ex tidn pletures. iP sey Nor will the out-of-town girl be|DOCTOR FEARS slighted, It will be Impossible for | BREACH OL ICS many girls to come to The And, as far as its maufactare In ar of fice at that hour, 9b Miss Shipman | Seattle ts concerned, this very arti has written riew of four articles} ole is being printed over his em: to the “wéreematruck girl,’ which | phatle protest—because will be published in ‘The Star, begin: |that wome might const “advertisement | being the | remedy His wishes are being disregarded an PUPIL OF Miay Shipman was a musical pro: |heeause, in spite of medical eth toge of Mr, Lou M. Heck and) The Star eves that the thow |wtudied dramatic art at the IWgan | sands of diabetics in Seattlo—doomed | Dramatic school; she made her first} until now to a brief period of min. (furn to Page 4, Column 2) ery and then inevitable death—aro SHOTENIRCHTIDIIIN PAE VLC OH | . | ternal the pancreas of cattle—the pan jcreas being a gland, sometimes de- |scribed by the butcher as the to and on the left of the stomach jand exercising an important diges- tive function, in all animals | Diabetes, you see, is the result of the fafture fhis gland to fune |tion properly—which, to put it tech |nically, makes a complete metabol- jism of the sugar in the human body impossible, By making an extract |from the samo glands, extracted |from healthy cattle, the missing in secretion is restored —and |the dlabette ition {x relieved, IMPORTANT DISCOVERY Is MAD¥ The theory of this remedy has heen known to tho medical profes: |sion for ya and countless experi ments have been made, But all the rly experiments proved futile be- use of the presence of certain en- zymes in the pancreatic gland, which destroys the curative sub: stance. Finally Dr, Of, Wik of physiology ‘Toronto, G. Banting, a pupl! MacLeod, professor in the Univ y of made the vital discovery If he tied. up the pancreatic ducts, the cells. which ote the destructive enzymes degenerated In a short while, On the other hand, the Isles fo contain the antidiabetic fluid (or xeople substances which are known to contain the antidiabetic fluid (or (Turn to Pago 4, Column 4) ) 4 tar ren Il IN VALLEY SOME RIDE FOR 5 CTS. Leaders in Rainier V alley Revolt Insist Upon Transportation; Conductors Make Up the Difference BY JOHN W. NELSON Skirmi in the Rainier Valley street car fare war jopened Saturday when several score citizens of-the district refused to pay the token fare and tendered nickels to the }conductors. After brief arguments the patrons were per= |mitted to ride to town, the conductors paying the balance re out of their own pockets. phe ” GREW ESCAPES i BLAZING VESSEL ape - and Admiral Line Vessel Lost in mov 1 the and sald 1 t Flames at Sea Hare. ‘Of cours oats true . March 3,—The continued the practi account his monthly salary would |" inda of the. Admimt be rather small.” jline, en route from Los Angeles Free gas at bus stations to be |to San burned at sea Francisco, opened at points in the valley will be given auto owners who carry passengers to and from nta Cruz, Indidations . early today. this morning town free, Kelley said. Regular |that ship and cargo were a total Stations for the short hauls, the loss, according to the Admiral line most profitable for the railway offices here. lines, will be opened by the as- gathering data upon which to base a. m. today and ap- sweetbread,” situated next | SHERIFF WILL NOT COLLECT Sheriff's deputies will not be used as fare collectors on Rainier valley car nes, Sheriff Starwich said Sat- urday, “In the event of riots, fight- ing, property destruction and law violation my men will keep the peace at all hazards,” Starwich said. “But |it is not my duty to collect fares for j the Rainer valley railways, and It makes no difference to me whether the car riders pay nickel fares or 81-3 cent fares, as long as they Keep within the peace laws.” Walter Brown, manager of the Se- attle and Rainier lines, was confi- dent that threats of trouble have been grossly exaggerated and is rely: ing upon his customers to continue paying the token fare. “The state department of public works is making a survey of the sys- tem to form a basis’ for the rate hearing, which will be held the mid dle of this month,” Brown said. “I do not think the department is going to force us to lower our rates when (Turn to Page 4, Column 2) a hearing on carfare rates, Hugo spread rapidly. Calls for Kelley, generalissimo of the embat- re immediately sent out and tled car patrons, was preparing to the Celilo, which move his y into active service. was in the v “We don't give a damn for Mr.| Captain crew fought the Kuykendall or anyone else,” Kelley | flames stea until shortly before sald. ‘"Ve are going to have a 5-|4 . m., when the fire had made cent fare now and fight about its|such, progress that the men were merits later.” iven from the decks, which had ecome hot | feet | At 4:30 they put off in small boats and were picked up soon thereafter by the Celilo without loss of life enough to burn their were” a Captain Maland and his crew of sociation fighting the 5-cent fare battle. Every district will be {24 abandoned the vessel and wer 1% organized and the car owners | picked up by the steamer Cellloy pledged to carry workers in un- | at 4:30 a. m. til the Scent fare battle has The Celiio 4s standing by the been won. burned hulk of the Babinda, radio While E. V. Kuykendall of the | reports said state department of public works {s was discovered at ap- jor injury to any, The Celilo left for |Port later with the crew, | The Babinda wasa vessel of 3,000 jtons and carried a general cargo in the coastwise trade. A portion of her cargo was for | Portland, Ore., to which port she was |to have proceeded from San Fran- cisco, ORTLAND, Ore., March 3.—The und brothers, both captains of motorship freighters in the Admiral }line fleet, e been running in hard | luck latels | It was learned here today that Capt. H. M. Maland of the motor. ship Coolcha, wrecked on Albert Head, southwest | Vic B. C, harbor during the February storms, is a brother of | Capt. W. H. Maland of the motor | Ship Babinda, which burned at sea joff Santa Cruz., Cal. early today, e. Pr BY E. PHILLI Copyright, 1922 Arrgt, N MICHAEL SAYERS, arch accomplice, Scotland Yard, went back to alias of Stanfield. It had taken months to collect all the necessary information and make the preliminary arrangements, but the moment had arrived at last, At 20 minutes to 12 on a Friday morn. ing, I descended from a rather shab- by Ford car exactly opposite Bailey's grocery store at the eorner of Men. wood Road, in one of the northern suburbs of Leeds, It Is a neighbor hood of aix-roomed houses and long. cobbled streets, a neighborhood teem: ing with men and women when tho a. A. Serv! The Leeds Bank Robbery PS OPPENHEIM BE. Phillips Oppenheim », Inc. criminal of many aliases and disguises, was about to be arrested by the one police officer who could recognize him, when his maid-servant, JANET SOALE, shot and killed the officer and thus saved him. Thereafter Janet, a girl of strange beauty, became Sayers’ é The forces of the law also received important reinforcement when SIR NORMAN GREYES, formenly of his old calling and sought to pick up the trail of Sayers, whom he had known under the How he accomplished this is told in this story, related at first in Sayers’ own words: great factories close at hand are empty; but at this partieular hour of the day, when the children are at school, and the men, and many of the women, aro still in the mills, it shows signs of something approach: ing desertion. ‘There was a hand some gray touring landaulette eon: taining two passengers, a man and w woman, drawn up on the other side of the way, apparently to take ads vantage of the shade of some tall (Turn to Page 11, Column 4) of the mouth of”