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at the Hippodrome January 2 oe ee Oe utiful voice of : Tetrazzini yy day you want to hear it, in your home or in record demonstrating rooms; here is a choice @f her records: -No. 88301—“A Little Voice I Hear” from “Barber of Seville.” 88306—“‘Aprile,” Vocal Waltz — (Tosti). ‘—No, 88291—“Carnival of Venice,” Part I —No. er” ee of Venice” Part No. 88298—“Shadow Song,” from “Dingrah.” No, $8207—“Bell Song” from “Lakme.” | Tike. 88908 “Silence “O'er All” from “Lucia di Lammermoor.” *88804—“You Would Be Hearing,” }— all these from “Masked Ball.” are $8807—Proch's Air and Variations 12-inch (with flute obligato). 88295—“Dearest Naroe,” from] Red Seal “Rigoletto.” “ 88802—Juliet’s Waltz Song, —Victer “Romeo et Juliette.” Records, —No. 88305—"Could 1 Believe,” from “Sonnambu formerly —No. 88318—“Recall Not One Earthly | listed at Sorrow,” from = yula, each, from “Trovatore. -88506—“Guiding Star of Lave,” eh _ “Linda di Chamou- es Mad Seene se $5208 “L Am Fair Thani,” fro $1.50 ia *TACOMA- Mf Your 7 EPOEEED O LEB Cred 22 MEN DROWN fe in the city howpital Woa- | with a fractured skull and | ghances for recovery. @ was struck by a Seattle & Mai lley street car on Rainier ave. | Gale st. at 7 p. m. Tues pepe Mercy of Giant Waves oe ST. JOHN, N. A leng yarn is sometimes s produced Press)—Twenty two the threads of a conversation. bodies of the shore of St. Mary's bay, acold a TIVE. BROMC a ig is BRB ope % nine.” ne vox ways out of reach of boats. ire om the four bodies have been recovered, Col IN SHIP WRECK Bodies Tossed in Storm at F., Dee, 31—(United the| wreck of the Dutch steamer Anton| Van Driel today were washing along firet swept on the crests of giant combera, then cartied out into the sea, but al Only Bringing the three survivors, Aho | MORE TROUBLE esane File Charges That | He Gave Arms to Rebels i: | BY RALPH HM, TURNER United Press Staff it, MENICO CITY, Dee, 31.— William ©, Jenkins, American consular agent at Puebla, whose arrest on charges of collusion with his bandit abductor led to strained § relations § with the United States, is now accused of supplying Mexican rebels with arms and ammunition, it was learned from official sources to- | day. “The governor of Tuchla (Alfonne Cabrera, brother of Luis Cabrera minister of the treasury) has ported to this department that investigations, carried out in the crimnial court of Puebla, prove Jenkins was in the towns of Manta! Marta, San Bernarde and Amiente in company with Cordova (the bandit leader) during the period of hia = presumed — abduetion,” —gaid Aguierre Derlanga, minister gobernacion. “Witnesses have sustained charges) that Jenkins waa not in company with the rebels as a prisoner, It ie proven, therefore, that asvertions| he made to the contrary are false Furthermore, witnesses declared that before his disappearance he fur ninhed the rebels with arms and am munition, The authorities are con. tinuing their Investigation.” Talk New Evidence ‘These charges were Also recited) waisted coat, decorated in the Com| roubles per pound in the open mar- shortly before Berlanga’s statement, by Julio Mitchell, prosecutor for the! distriet of Puebla He said the | "newest evidence” against Jenkin Previously binted at—included « |statement from the former man ager of Jenkins’ ranch that he has! often delivered arms and ammunt tion to rebels ag Jenkins’ agent. Jenkins, who #till is at liberty on the 500 pesos ball furnished by the American, J freatly discouraged over the new turn in bis case when he arrived here from Puebla. Commenting on Mitchell's statement~-before he [learned of that made by Berlanga Jenkins told the correspondent he Ifeared that he would be declared {eutity regards was conducted by the federal or the state court. Altho the supreme lcourt ruled that the federal court had Jurisdiction in his case, he said he feared he would not be allowed i present his own evidence prop- erly. “I am convinced the authorities are manipulating this case to suit | thet own purposes, an they have; done heretofore,” he said. “I under. stand they claim they have collected |new evidence to support their con tention that I acted tn collusion friends, thus paying the whole ran- som himself. Governor Cabrera of Puebla has arrived in the capital, presumably for a conference with President Car ranza. ‘Seattle Is Set for a Sedate Seattle is all set to go. ‘This thing of extending the happy hand to Kid Nineteen Twenty and at the same time giving the boot to Old Man Nine- teen Nineteen is no new cere mony for Seattle, but a dry New Year celebration is not without possibilities, There being no puffing walters, bearing countless steins of amber brew, Police Chief Joel Frank War. ren fully expects vast clusters of Seattle's populace to gather in the streets and there make dreadfully merry aking of street roystering, the hief wants it dixtinetly understood that tickiers are fearfully tabu. Likewise the talcum powder fiend or the human armadillo who loves to |hurl red ink. For such the village bastile with swing wide its gates. And while Vancouver, B, C., and other oases across the International boundary line, may likker up to night, Seattle will be sober, No Aching Heads There will be no yodeling by bibulous ‘boobs, fringing laquor. laden tables; there will be no pound ing on the mahogany for just one | steamer Graham arrived here at mid. 2 ogee e ——, |night. The men sived are Secona|more: ther will be no raue “A | Mate Donald Plog, Fireman M.| Voiced brigades, telling the worle | Brodius and Trimmer Koerl Mih},|{bat thove who are knockin’ 'em this ean 1) oo, ‘Feguiar locensed physicians, aaa. the ighest geade mots ‘The eaving is made by having all pe ‘ } gome to me—I make no “house calls. -DR_WHITEAKER’S DISPENSARY I" the vense!, They had seen | wreck, smashed on the jag the brid | clinging. | | | isters of life a. ‘begin ta slide down, | taken from the fast breaking up An ton Van Driel after they had clung | for more than 40 hours to the bridge the boats with which the captain, first mate and 23 I: the crew attempted to escape the 4 rocks, and their comrades drowned, and had jwatehed tho of their fellows meet death when they were swept from , Where they Iikewise were | Most of the splinters In the ban- unnoticed until we there will be no gathering in groups of four to spill split-second harmony; there will be no popeyed lobsters, spilling solvent water on the rear tresses of ‘Teresa and all the other girls; there will be no| busted heads, mauve lamps and ach- ing heads Cost Is Too High ‘That is, not on the acale staged by Seattle when she was “wide open" and no limit except the blue dome of heaven—and certainly not at $20 a quart, f. 0, b, Seattle, Boot leggers’ Headquarters. For the boys and girls who get —___s— too gay on bootlegging boos, Police Dp A RED New Year’s Day Special— TCE SKATING { THREE SESSIONS | 10 to 12 A. M-—3 to 5 P. M——8:15 to 10:30 P. M. ee BAND AFTERNOON AND EVENING ace | The management wishes all its patrons a Happy and Prosperous New Year. Chief Warren is fully prepared, he announces, However, Seattle will be eminently sober in comparison to those bon vivants who fled to Vancouver, I C., last week tn time to tune up for the New Year celebration over there, Triple Alliance _ to Convene Feb. 17 ‘Tuesday, February 17, t# the tenta- tive dato set for the first state con- vention of the Triple Alliance, place has not been determined, but it will be elther Seattle or Tacoma, | The state federation of Inbor, the railwaymen's league and the farm. ers’ grange will all be proportionate. ly represented at the convention, The purpose of the convention Is to make permanent the organization The convention call will be iraued soon, Lm his! of | ms of whether his trial) NewYear’s Eve! year will be working for ‘em next{ ’ bch pletured) After drinking tea with Retnstein | tM pretty tate, I went home, bur | rowed into @& mountain of all sorts | of clothes, and slept @ tittle, In the morning I auccecded In get ting & room at the National hotel, I wasted @ lot of time getting my stuff across. Transport from one hotel to the other, tho the distance is not a hundred yards, cost 40 roubles, My room was perfectly clean, ‘The chambermaid who came in to tidy up, quite evidently took @ pride in dotng her work properly, and pro- tested against my throwing matches on the floor, She sald ahe had been in the hotel singe tt was opencd. 1 asked her how she itked the new re. |eime. She replied that there was not enough to eat, but that she felt freer, | I went downstairs to the kitehens of the hotel, where there is & permanent supply of hot water, | One enormous kite for the use of people living in the hotel, Hore I found @ crowd of peo- ple, all using different parte of the! huge stove. There waa an old gray. haired Cossack, with a scarlet tunic under hin black, wideskirted, narrow- | |mack fashion with ornamental cartridges, He was warming his soup side by wide with a little Jowess mak. ing potato cakes. A spectacied el j derty member of the executive com mitteo was busy doing something | With & little bit of meat, Two little |sirla were boiling potatoes in old tin cans. In another room set apart for washing @ sturdy little long-haired | revolutionary wae cleaning @ shirt. Balser Hansen, was) A woman with her hair done up in| & blue handkerchief was very care | fully ironing a blouse, Another waa busy stewing sheets, or something of that Kind, in a big cauldron. And all the time people from all parts of the hotel were coming with their piteh- ors and pans, from fine copper ket tes to disreputable empty meat tins, to feteh hot water for tea, At the other aide of the corridor was @ sort | of counter in front of a long window opening into yet another kitchen. Here there was @ row of people wait- ing with their own suucepans and Plates, getting their dinner allow-| ances of soup aryl meat in exchange for tickets. On paying for my room St the beginning of the week I was) leiven a card with the Gays of the! week printed along its edge Thin cagd gave me the right to buy one dinner dally, and when I bought it that day of the week was snipped | Plate of very good her soup, toget time between two and reven. Living hungrily thru the morning, at 2 O'clock I used to experience definite relief in the knowledge that now at GAMBLING WAR IN CHINATOWN Orientals Attack Deputy;| Assailant Shot Down Open warfare between Oriental gamblers and officers of the law has been declared in Chinihtown, sheriffs were on duty Wi with orders to shoot to kill If attacked. Muttered threats have been circulating against deputies for following intermittent raids on secret underworld day night when Deputy sige Irving Brown shet down Tong, 39, during a pir struggle with 35 men, in a raid at 719% King st, The Chinese made a rush for the door, but Brown blocked the way. | But only for a moment, Four ce lestiala seized him and pushed him aside roughly. Not content with This, they proceeded to choke and beat him. Marks of the long fingernalis of one Chinaman are still on the deputy’s neck. When he found that he was being overpowered. | Brown drew bis gun and fired, His assailants desisted from their attack, One, Ah Tong, dropped to the floor, ehotéthru the leg. He im mediately arose, however, and rushed from the room Deputies Conner, N. L. Loveatl and Earl Ramage heard the shot |rushed up to the room, As they a eared in the doorway, swarmed out of windows and secur ried past them in droves. Four were caught, Goes to Hospital | The wounded man could not be lo cated, but 15 minutes later he ap peared at the city hospital and asked to have his wound dressed. Four months ago, Sheriff Stringer formed an anti-gambling squad, with Deputy J, C. Conner as chief. Fre quent raids on gambling resorts in Chinatown resulted in loud walls of ‘They used every influence to stop \wgiaae from operators of gambling games, Several of the “higher-ups” among Chinatown'’s powers visited Stringer, |the raids, which were putting a crimp in their business, They even tried to buy off the deputies, In one case a Chinamen waa recused of try- ing to bribe Deputies R. 1B. Murphy and D. 8. Phillips. | Seek Damages Suits for damages against the wher. iff were inrtituted in superior court. The gambling princes claimed the sheriff wantonly destroyed property [in thelr quarters, But the raids continued. Tuesday's The | shooting brings the feud to a ell-| max, Chinatown warmly resents the ehooting of one of its mombers, The sheriff saya the raids will continue, i nevertheless, and gambling must |stop in Chinatown, according to his edict, fre a: Gialiediablaehcin Nearly every proposition looks a sure winner—on paper. n is wet apart the Chinese | ‘THE SEATTLE STAR—WEDNESDAY, DEC. 81, 1919. enkins FACING | RUSSIA al 1 COeymeNTEO, 1910, OY OS RVERIR TOR'S NOTE—This is the fourth of Arthur Ransome’s articles, Ra- | Honing of food and the terrible want and misery Moscow are vividly any moment I could have my meal, Feeling in this way less hungry, I used then to postpone it hour by hour, and actually dined about 6 or 6 o'clock. ‘Thinking that I might tn- deed have been specially favored, I made investigations, and found that the dinners supplied at the public feeding houses were of precisely the |eame sige and character, any differ ence between the meals depending not on the food but on the cook, A kind of rough and-ready cooper- | ative aystem also obtained. One day | there was a notice on the stairs that | thone who wanted could get one pot | of Jam aplece by applying to the pro- visioning committee of the hotel, I got & pot of jam tn this way, and on @ later occasion a amall quantity of "| Ukranian enusage main | Resides the food obtainable on cards it was possible to buy, at ruin: ous prices, food from lators, 4n iden of the difference in price may be obtained from the following | examples: Liread in 1 rouble 20 ko pecks per pound by card and 15 to } 20 roubles per pound from the apecu- | lators. Sugar is 12 roubles per pound | by card, and never less than 60 | ket. It ie obvious that abolition of the card system would mean that the rich would have enough and the poor nothing. Various methods have been tried in the effortto get rid of mpecu- lators, whose high profits naturally decrease the wiltingness of the vil lagen to sell bread at less abnormal rates, But as & communist maid to me: “There is only one way to get rid of speculation, and that is to sup- ply enough on the card system. When people can buy all they want At 1 rouble 20 they are net going to pay an extra 14 roubles for the en- couragement of speculators.” “And when will you be able to do thatt’ 1 anked. “As soon as the war ends, and we can use our transport for peaceful purpose There can be no question about the starvation of Moscow. On the | Shira day after my arrival in Mos. cow I saw a man driving a sledge laden with, I think, horsefiesh, most- ly bones, probably dead sledge horven As he drove @ black crowd of crows | Stlowes the sledge and perched on it, tonring greedily at the meat. Hoe beat at them continually with his | whip, but they were #6 faminhed that they took no notice whatever, . The wtarving crows used n to force GOOD TEETH Are Now Within the Reach of All THE NATIONAL DENTISTS (Under New Management) Are Making a Special Offer for a Short Time Only Best Gold Crowns | thelr way thru the amall ventilators | Nor can there be any question | about the cold. I resented my own found 5 an sheepakin coat and felt boots, rising | pow and then to beat vitality into | hia freezing hands ike a London ‘eabman of old times. EERE 5 6 AS IT SEEMS || 10 ME || DANA SLEETH x | T Goatinnad F rom 1 Page One j=—— * more ping {n our couch of pain If, inwtead of throttling every jetvine impuisg that our tawdry pile of gold might rive up to im | prison us, we would epend a few hours a week cultivating the sim ple, easy, but eternal little traits that bring joy to others and con- tentment to ourselves, we would, anyway, have a better time of it while we are here, And if it be true that this earth apprenticeship determines the eter. nal rounds of our future caree how utterly asinine it ts to wast our soul's energy, to devote our powers of mind, and our native abilities to grabbing a lot of junk that ean be of no possible use tovue Over There, and that, In ite use. less, heapedup mass merely means trouble and discontent here! ven if you are a long dead; even if eternity will not [know you, still, what possible hope | of joy is there in living like a hog Living in a wallow of selfish ness, of «reed, of envy, of hate; roiled up by all the peevish sprites that we beg come and plague us “How Jittie we can take which will benefit us, How ashamed we time fecl, How racked with remorse at our ruin. It is Inexpreasible, such woe.” Shakespeare is not happy Over There, And most of us are not going to be very happy Over There, either. | And if there tmn’t any Over |'There, and this is our first and last chance, why not spend less time being a hog and more in be- ing a man? There in just one place where mortal, or immortal, will ever find happiness; that’s within, | WAGING BRITISH | DRY CAMPAIGN LONDON, Deo. 31.-—William “Pu syfoot" Johnson, recovered from in. sustained Juries when he was! “ragged” by London medical stu- dents, was today ready to combat tho Intest enemy that bas arisen in | te fight to make Wngland “dary.” Numerous deaths in the United | States attributed to “wood alcohol” poisoning was characterized by John son a8 an argument for prohibition, The wood aleohol may have killed pores, he said, “but booge has killed thousands.” Johnson plans to enlist the services of every governor and attorney gen: eral in the United States to aid in his British campaign, he said. Needless to say, this office turns out the very best of work and uses the best of materials. We're determined to make this one of Seattle’s leading dental offices. THESE PRICES WILL DO IT THE NATIONAL DENTISTS Northeast Corner Third and Pike FERRY RESUMES RUN LORD FRENGH'S | fy tesumes run jresumed her run between Mercer island and the mainland Tuesday after being In drydock since Sunday, | when her propelior blade was broken j by hitting a “wheel inapectar.” DENTISTS THIRD & PIKE 12 SUSPECTS IN POLICE NET) HOME FORTIFIED Twelve suspicious characters! DUBLIN, Deo. 31—Dublin castle were rounded ep by the police} and the vice regal lodge, occupled by | Tuesday night In a city-wide rald| Viscount French, lord leutenant of | instituted by Chief of Police Joe | Ireland, were prepared for all attacks Metropolitan i ae | today. . ‘ | ppiisni-g egal a ,| Engineers have completed thelr 5 DAYS J William = Edmunds, = 27, 894) work of surrounding the two gov- Charles MoNaull, 24, who were ar-| ernment heads with barbed wire en: rested at Westlake ave, and Vir-|tanglements. Phoenix park, which |j “etinece a ” e y surrounds the vice regal lodge, will ———$————— ginja st. by Patrolmen W. A irround be Dat o1 id . di oS Woods and Ie V. Roaster, are said | Pe closed from sundown to daybreak, HERE IN PERSON it was announced, to have admitted to Captain EB. 1. | ‘phose defense measures followed | OLIVER MOROSCO Hedges that they were out “after| Sunday's supposed attempted attack Presents votw,, | in which Lieutenant Boast of the men earried a loaded revolver is euned and’. Sanines when arrested, a civilian, were killed. } L. P. Lynch, 28, and AN Crane, 27, fell foul of the at Boren ‘ave, and Union st, PANTAGES : a. m, Wednesday moming. The Mate, 3:30—Nights, # and & — men are said to have admitted BEVERLY robbing a telephone pay box in a Yip Yt La Fra and Kennedy; Norraine; Love and Wilbur; Peerless Trio; Pantagescope, Admission, 25c and 35, Union st, apartment house. A small amount of change and tools for opening the boxes were found in their possession, REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS In order to tntroduce our new (whalebone) plate, which 1s the lightest | and strongest plate known, covers very little of the roof of the mouth; | you can bite corn off the cob; guaran. | teed 15 years. | EXAMINATION FREE | . ORE tes 5 BAYNE Themselves IN THE FASCINATING MYSTERY PLAY Master Thiel 8. reine By Edward B, Rose $4.00 From Richard Washburn $1.00, Childs’ “Paymaster” Stories With a Typical Morosco Cast ing Have impression taken im the | Examination and advice free, te and Urtdge Work. We Stand the Test patronage is Stcteaten led b: early patients, whose work is iving good sath Ask o pationts who have tested our work. When coming to our attics, be sure | you are in the right place. Bring this ad with you, PRICES Nights—250 to $2 Matinee Wednesday—25e to $1 Matinee Saturday—25e to $1.50 Open Sundays From © to 12 for Werking People OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS Q07 UNIVERSITY BT, Oppeaite Mraser-latesson Ob | |