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ac25 28 F PRESS GSeQ Oeste leas 839 Fes 5 ew me yur bie, and ef. few 2 ERRE ase nS Oo PRBBRFES G859S FEARS BRIEF GPS Rha lt oe MU RSET BEG eE : Ime j WiNot Been Arrested PHRENOLOGISTS | » plant of the Equity Printing ny, 3906 Seventh ave. seined | vember 13 b yfederal authori has been returned to ite pro ——- | tor, William Humphrey. British Capital Falls for Tho plant was seized by Deputy “ ” |U. & Marehal Albert Rooks, follow Solentific Study ting a warrant for the arrest of - ain | OC & . BY ZOK BECKLEY Walker C, Smith, editor of the Inter’ | ceenee of “Romances of w Summer Girt,” |national Weekly, z to Write on Toples of tn Kurope Varied Interest for The Star LONDON, Nov. %4.—Phrenology, | and “scientific atudy,” altho ridiculed by serious scientists, are the fad of n London, Professional stu cranial bumps are making Discharged soldiers spent their precious shillings to be advised as to what career to take up. Thera ts a tiny shop in Ludgate! cirous from the window of which the! pletured face of Woodrow looks calmly out over the crashing tramfie Of buses, lorries and cabs, At his left is a portrait of Clemenceau, at bis right one of Orlando, and below him the leonine head of Lioyd George ap- pears. Tut Wilson is the magnet which at present draws all eyes, Beneath each pleture is printed a character sketch based on a study of head measurements, Always a crowd is before this window intensely inter- ested. Often there ls a queue of men and women lined up along Fleet at. ‘& dozen yards waiting to enter this tiny studio which is presided over by the busiest woman in London, Mra. Stackpoole FE. O'Dell, phrenologist I opened the door of the litue stu- dio, banging the knees and elbows of the patient waiters, who were packed within like sardines. Irom behind a curtain trickled a conver- sation between Mra, Stackpole and @ sitter, “If you hit that description of the American president In your window from the bumps on his head, madam, 1 am thinking you can tell me what ft had best do for a living. I used to drive a truck and get 26 shillings a week for doing it. I'm fed up. “I was thinking a bit of going out to America. They say man has got & chance there and not many old [fashioned ideas to buck. The Amert- can president has got a head on him, you know—balance, securacy of judgment, knowledge of cause and effect, love of justice, conacies son, caution and hope—that’ your chart in the window says about him.” ‘There was silence a moment, the lady phrenologist evidently taking measurements of the head of the fed: up young man and making calcula tions upon them. Presently she an- swered: tion Ly ly was pub juity shop ot been apprehended, ed he has left Seattle. and it is b Q. A. Students Will | Give Three Plays The n next Wednesday Those who will participate include: Orillia Hurat, Lois Newman, Edithe Little, Clarive Brags, Dorothy Dames, | |Jane Thiering, Buster Burnett, Har ,jold Vander Las, Elizabeth Badgely, j}O«den Linton, Charles Parry, Arthur | |Haldon, Pansey Greve, Ruthella | Snook, Norma Dennis, Arthur Bailey and Liland Higby. | Over $1,000,000 is made every year || from apricot stones in California, from which the chemist extracts two olls, one known as bitter off of al- monds, the other a new substitute for olive ofl, Have That VICTROLA at the Thanksgiving Party Don't wait until Christmas, but get that Victrola now— get it in time for your Thanskgiving reunion—just think of the joy it will give on that occasion and for years to come. We have Victrolas for every purse—from $25 upward. Convenient Payment Terms Tells How to S Bod Cough” ° If you have a severe cough or chest cold accompanied with soreness. throat tickle, hy th croup you try thie reliable old remedy. Any dtug ou with 2% is into home-made coug! zist ean supply of x. Pour t 4 ee I the bottle with sugar syrup. Pe elarited molsseas, > YEP, instead of suga fonired. This recipe makes really remarkable cough remedy. It pom ag Ney i in foite of its low cost, ft can jepended upon to give yick and Imating, relief, You ean feel this take hold of « ronan fn ay that means business t js and raises the phlegm. ~] throat tickle and soothes and vals the irritated membranes that the throat and bronchial tubes with such Panne tainty that it tt inex ae Special 9 iahly — centrated compoun wine Nor: DETROIT. Nov. Rolla D.| way pin tract, and ie probebly Ruckman btained the address of} best known means Fay M. Baer, of Chicago, from a mat-| *yere Cay che oy e jrimonial agency 1% years ago. He o pats |then resided in Cumberland, Md.| [1008 Of (hie matte ee ee | They corresponded fatthfully and last! Pinex” with full directions and don't (spring Mr. Ruckman called on Miss| accept anything else. Guaranteed te | Baer. They became engaged and re-| give absolute satisfaction or money |oently Mise Baer came to Detroit tol promptly refunded. ‘The Pinex Co. become M: eyne, Ind. “You won't need to drive a truck. ‘Why don't you try electrical work? You have mechanical ability. I will give you a delinention and you can study it at leiwure. You can rely upon it. Do you know that the American electrical inventor never| knew he had the inventive faeuity | until a phrenologist told him? As for! Lioyd George, 18 yoars ago when he) had just come down from Wales was studying to be a lawyer, my husband told him to go into politics instead and learn public speaking at once. He thanked him for his advice geo at Boldt's—uptown, AY 913 2d Ave. 34 Ave.; many times afterward and sent all his children to us for readings.” How the Egyptians managed to haul the gigantic stones used in ballding the pyramids has been 4 subject for speculation. Now it’s be- eved the stones are artificial WOMEN OF MIDDLE AGE How Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Re- before the war : spells month C a package ae during the war ij diferent § reme- | i dies without ben- From the tone of the articles ap- Pearing in the English newspapers went by Hritish officials and mer- | India [It ts bad enough when a competitor THE SEATTLE STAR—-MONDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1919. BRITAIN FEARS HANDS OF JAP Nippon Threatens Control of India ARD SPILLANE rican Eeonomiet, Who tegularly for The Star, Foremo: Writ chants in India, Britain has a J pears that Great none question in big that our one o Pacific coast is small in cor When John Bull is touched in his] pocket nerve, which means hia trade | control, he is touched in a vital spot gots the advantage in a neutral field, but when a friend and ally throws the harpoon into the British lion right in British territory, that ts awful, The London Times has been awak- ening the empire to the seriousness of the situation in Britain's chief de pendency. You cannot understand the importance of India to England unless you know that India iw Great Britain's chief customer, and that tn some linea, cotton manufactures, foe example, India took 50 or more per cent of the whole British exports, While the European nations were at war the Japanese had clear sailing in regard to commerce, not only in India, but in all of Asia and a goodly part of Africa, The London Timew explains this, 1 also that Imports of Japanese-made goods into India, which in 19 917 were $44,000,000, were $111,666,665 in °1918-19, or one- fifth of India's total, JAP COLONIES DELUGE INDIA It is bad enough to get that much » but the influx of Japan- ty, bankers, wal and settlers is most threa’ . Large colonie Japancse have been established in Calcutta and Bombay, and more and more Japs are coming monthly, In 1911 there were only 32 Japs in all of India. Today there are 200,000. The Japancse banks have been established, and are grow- ing in importance, Not only that, -|but the Times points out that where- as formerly such Japanese products an Were used in India were carried in Britian «hips, financed by British banks and distributed by Pritiah or Indian traders, today 90 per cent of Japanese goods sold in India come in Japanese steamships, are consigned to Japanese firma, and distributed by Japanese. 4JAP8 GIN AND BALE COTTON The Cotton Spinners’ Association of India, the Simia correspondent of the Times declares, is dominated by the Japanese, and Japanese buyers of cotton have become dominant in the cotton growing part of India, They go thruout the cotton belt and, in many instances, buy the crop, elther in the field or immediately after it has been picked, doing the ginning and baling themselves, The Japancse must find lodgment somewhere. They are breeding faster than the people of any other great nation, Their food problem is get- ting worse year after year. They must get more territory or they will have famine and disaster ever threat- ening. To keep their vast and ever- growing industrial structure em- ployed fully, they must find new markets, open new territory. There has been more unrest in India in the last few years than usual Many sacrifices by the native Princes to support the Britiah gov- ernment did not bring to India the concessions the people expected from the London government. The arrest of Annie Besant and the deportation of Mr. Herniman. together with harsh treatment of Englishmen and Englishwomen in England for cham- pioning the cause of India has had a very bad effect, sentimentally, in India, and has made natives welcome the Japanese more heartily than otherwise would have been the case. Indian has been a prize over whieb | the East and West have fought these 40 centuries, It in a land of pacifiste, and yet a breeding placé and hot house of na- tional and International trouble. It has been so since the beginning of recorded time, and it never has changed, for tt cannot change. In the seed planted in India the world war may be the start of the) growth of the clash of East and Went, a clash that is as inevitable as ; efit. Lydia E. ides Pinkham's Vege- table Compound was recommended to me and I fook it, and I believe I would never have been weil if it had not been for the Vegetable Compound and Lydia E. Pinkham’s Sanative Wash, I am recommending your med- feine to all women ailing as I w for I think it will carry them safely through the Change of Life, and re lieve the ailments that come at that riod."—Mrs. ALEXIE NaNoLe, Jatin, Tl. Women who suffer from nervous- “heat flashes,” backache, head- aches, and “the blue: hould try thie famous root and herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham’: Vegetable Com- pound, and if co lications exist write the Lydia £. Pinkham Medicine », Lynn, Mase. The result of their st mae in such cases is at your serv and C a package NOW || aaa THE FLAVOR LASTS SO DOES THE PRICE! sician and «Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets’’ Be sure you get the Genuine | Look for this signature CHS ror on the box. 30¢ POLICE WOMEN ARE EFFICIENT, SAYS MELBOURNE DISPATCH. | | MELBOURN v. 20.—(By Mail | |The efficiency of the modern | | policewomen in handling their own sex te rated by an incident wh in Melbourne lately. | | of drink and disor: | jderliness was gathering a crowd. | \'The appearance of a policeman on the scene would have swelled the | audience and aggravated the inebri ate to epmbativeness, The Indy bobby in white costume and helmet went quietly up to “noisy Jane,” ltook her by the arm in a kindly way, and the disturbance terminated. Off © while the crowd jean woman taking eveled female into her care seemed to command the respect of |the captive and the sympathy of the Jonlooker, People turned away as if they had nothing more to jeer at, whereas a man arresting a stagger- ing “noisy Jane” 18 always followed by a rowdy and delighted gathering. Cider With a Kick Is Banned by Law Cider with “a kick in it” will be: come a contraband beverage after January 16, when the national pro hibition amendment becomes effec ve. This announcement was made by |J-hn W. Rogers, deputy collector of {internal revenue, in charge in this district Cider containing more than one half of one per cent of alcohol will be forbidden, and adding raisins, sugar or yeast to the extract of the apples with a view to increase its alcoholic content, will become a criminal offense under the new lagvs. anipeiaabgnnciannnsanicaineninemstieintinensttane Let's go buy Boldt's French pas- try, Uptown, 1414 34 ave; down- town, 913 2d ave, <1 PAGE ® SECOND AVENUE AND UNIVERSITY STREET A Special Sale. of Goblets and Sherbets Cut in Star and Grape Patterns Special at $1.79 for Set of Six —A special Thanksgiving Sale of water goblets and tall sherbets in two pretty and popular patterns of cut glass—the Star and the Grape designs. Choice of these patterns in both water goblets and tall sher- bets to match, at $1.79 for six. —Chinaware, Fifth Floor. The Price of a Turkey Delivers a HOOVER Something to Be Thankful For q ——How thankful she would be to attain home cleanliness with ease. The Hoover Cleanser offers that bP efi —It beats out embedded dirt, straightens crushed nap, freshens colorings and pro- longs the life of carpetings. ~—An order for a Hoover will make her Thanksgiving a continuous affair. —The price of a turkey delivers a Hoover—ihe rest payable in small amounts monthly, The Hoover ee Electric Suction Sweepe Powe teenie ota —It beats—as it sweeps—as it cleans. —Demo: nd Floor, ELprepce Two Spoor —Do you know that the most up-to-date sewing machine manufactured has no bob- bin, but sews directly from two ordinary spools of thread? The lower spool fits into a spool case just the same as a bobbin fits into a shuttle. The upper spool fits on a spool pin, and the machine is threaded very simply, is easy to operate and easy to understand. —tThe prices are as low as $60.00 for this high grade Eldredge Two-Spool ma- chine, and upon an initial payment of $5.00 it is delivered to you; then you make payments of $5.00 a month, without interest, until the sum is paid. Pay as you sew. Your old machine will be taken in part payment if so desired. —These machines are absolutely guaranteed for ten Farm here with ordinary use and care they will last a e, . Sewing Machines, Second Floor. Adjustable Dress Forms —Personal le can be easily attained in home dressmaking, by the use of a dress form, adjustable to the.exact proportions of the figure. By saving the cost of tailoring, a woman can have ma- terials in her garments and a larger wardrobe for less money. —This National Adjustable Dress Form solves the problem of the “high cost of dressing.” —Dress Forms, Second Floor. th Special Price Basement An Important Thanksgiving Sale of Women’s Warm, Serviceable COATS AT: $22.50 —The materials are silver- tones, wool velours and plushes. : —Some have wide fur collars; some are lined throughout. —In all of the fashionable shades of the winter season. _ —The sizes are as varied as the styles, in complete range from 16 to 44. —Not a coat in the lot that will not be a‘pleasure and a comfort to the purchaser the entire winter. Petticoats At a Specially Low Price $2.50 | —Petticoats of fine mercerized sateen, in rich seasonable shades of marguerite, hunter’s green, slate blue, rose and navy. In all the regular sizes. .Also one model of black sateen in large and extra large sizes. —All have elastic waistband, and are in open side-front style. Finished with deep novel flounces.