The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 7, 1921, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

\ \ EPTEMBER 7, 1921. OUCH CET Sa a Cel at TTT CuTIITT Ca Grunbaum Bros. Furniture Co. The People’s Popular Homefurnishers FOR 1,000 NEW ACCOUNTS 50 Purchase, $ 1.00 Down, $1.00 Per 75 Purchase, $ 3.00 Down, $1.25 Per 5.00 Down, $1.50 Per 7.50 Down, $2.00 Per 10.00 Down, $2.50 Per . $12.50 Down, $3.00 Per Week 00 Purchase, $15.00 Down, $4.00 Per Week NO EXTRA CHARGES—NO INTEREST Week Week Week Week Week ——= This Style Bed Now $8.75 Full or three-quarter size—all colors. 500 IRON BEDS TO BE SOLD THIS WEEK! $27.50 $25.00 $19.50 Value Value Value Now Now Now $15.00 | $14.00 | $10.50 LIBERAL CREDIT EXTENDED Geaes ac New Phone—Elliott 4910| | a 6 Millions to Be Raised by Taxes According to resolutions passed Tuesday by the city council, $6,647, 303.06 of the budget total of 1922 appropriations for city government expenditures, amounting to §1 ST4.57, will be rained by taxa! is estirnated that revenues and other Proceeds will be sufficient to pro vide the remaining $12,152,571.41. ‘After the show, we'll go to Boldt’s, it. CHICAGO.—Movies introduced in study of geography, history, pay. chology and other subjects. Just as well have “quality” in Boys’ Clothing when you can get it at rea- sonable prices. Seattle has long needed a Boys’ Store that put “quality” first. The new Cheasty Junior Shop opened just a few days ago, has been warmly welcomed by parents who know that it pays to buy something good in the first place. 915.00 for Cheasty Jr. Suits with 2 pairs of full- lined, full-sized knicker pants. $12.50 Large new shipments received in this Junior Shop Tuesday. —Cheast SECOND AVENUE AT SENECA STREET for guaranteed Corduroy Suits for boys of all ages. $ { A Smaller Animal Might Give Just BY Gouy! SOMETHING TELLS Me This WATCHDOG 1S GONNA COST Ne FIRST AIDFOR |INDIA REVOLT IS NOW AT CRISIS SMALL PROJECT Chamber Urges F Reclamation Apportionment Revolving federal reclamation | funds appropriated by. the pending | federal co-operative reclamation act, or similar legislation, should be ap- plied first to smaller and readily de- veloped projects, Thie in the opinon of trustecs of the Chamber of Commerce, as ex pressed in resolutions adopted Tues day afternoon, Interests of this sec ton would be best served by such a policy, in thetr belief. M. J. Carrigan, chairman of the chamber’s good roads committee, spoke in favor of the proposed Lolo Pas road, from Misoaula, Mont., to Lewiston, Idaho, “This would mean unchecked traffic across the Pasco- nnewick bridge over the Columbia river and into Seattle, he said. Cer. tain influences which have been try- ing to divert tourists from this city thus would be thwarted, he pointed out, Eastern Washington, Carrigan said, is bubbling over wtih gratitude to Seattle because of this city’s sub scription to the Pasco-Kennewick bridge fund. Now ts the time to ex tend commercial relationships there, he added, One hundred delegates were pointed to the Washintgon Sta‘ Good Roads association's annual cor vention at Tacoma, September 15-16. Resolutions deploring the death, Sun- day, of Judge Wallace W. Mount, of the state supreme court, were pased. Other speakers before the trustees were Judge George Donworth and J, J. Underwood, the chamber's repre- sentative in Washington. D. C, COLLINSVILLE, Okla—E. Scott, held for auto theft, and Roy Holling. worth, who tried to get him out on bail, taken from jail by 100 masked men and beaten with lashes, Both men said to have admitted stealing auto of Dr. W. EB. Smith. THE SKEATT BY G. B. LAL Authority on Indian Affairs SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 7.--The significance of the outbreak of open rebellion against the British, among the Moplas on the Malabar or south- West coast of India, is that the na tion-wide revolutionary movement Is ent ita militant phane, and that India ts fairly on the road to become another Ireland. & group of Indians who have never ac rule, Descendants of Arab immigrants to India some 1,100 years ago, they now number over a million. They are tn no sense foreigners tn India; they are genuine natives of the land, and their hoatility towards the British ts of old standing. They have resisted British troops several times in the past. And all attempts of the to enlist them in the Imperial army have proved failures. Twenty years ago the ant!-British feeling of the Moplas did not mean much to the British. The Afghans in the Northwest, the Mopias im the South, and other such scattered and warlike anti British groups were negligible as enemies to the state, so long as the vast bulk of the three hundred millions and odd of the In dian people were loyal and obedient. But since 1905, India has been in an increasing state of revolution, PERSONAL ELEMENT IN REVOLUTIONARY MOVE There is something personal about this revolutionary movement, in the sense that it began and continues to be an effort against the policy par ticularly of one English stateaman, Lord Curzon. retired from his six years of viceroy alty in India. But he did not cease to be of account in Indian affairs, At Present, as the foreign‘minister of Great Britain, it is believed hip Influ- ence is paramount in British policy towards India, The writer saw Lord Curzon riding on an elephant thru the main streets of the city of Delht, the present SUAAATANAUAAATARAGUAUUGAUUA UA —— A SPECIA L SALE OF ALUMINUM Four splendid values at a great saving in price. Kettles inum, special...... aluminum, special...... many three, sil, special... andre separately 1 Preserving 2 Steamer 3 Roaster Preserving 8-quart, of heavy gauge alum- .. $1.69 10-quart of heavy gauge $1.97. 3-Piece Sauce Pan Sets They're always useful for so Aluminum Colander A well-made and durable uten- , eeeerees $ 1 e fea Beata Combination Cookers Seven utensils in one. Can be used ho Ce TTT Is cooking purposes. Set of fui or as a combination. Kettle 4 Milk Pan 5 Colander 6 Doyble Boiler 1 Popcorn Popper UDEHUAUOAVUAULOOAEOOEGTOAOUAEGOTOUGOUGUOGEOERGEOUOCS AAAS * Soa shige Sips Sademamelom Moan ae LE STAR as Much Satisfaction capital of India, at the time of the Curzonian Durbar, towards the end of 1902 This young, romantio British ruler of India seemed trying to outshine tn monarchic splendor the Moghal em perore of the Middle Ages in India| The sight of it filled Engijshmen with tremendous imperial self-conscious nena, CURZON'S SPLENDOR ANTAGONIZES LEADERS But many thoughtful Indians were filled with fear and anger. Were the foreign rulera going to show off themselves like that? And were the Indians never going to have a share} in the government of their own coun try? Why shouldn't India have the same rights as Canada and Aus- tralia? ‘The leaders of educated India put these uncomfortable questions to Lerd Curzon, who lost patience and dubbed them dangerous agitators and seditionmongers. His lieutenants, provincial governors like Sir Bam- fyid Fuller of East Bengal, went many steps further than Lord Cur. son himeelf in the direction of re- pression Depending upon the loyalty, partly real and partly professed, of the In- dian rajas, the government started to treat most sternly the educated In- dians who began to demand home rule or swaraj, as they called it. Two results followed from this: (1) all the more thoughtful and mod. | erate leaders were jailed, deported and otherwise silenced and paralyzed; (2) a young militant revolutionary party aprang up and became exceedingly popular among the manses, and even among certain princes. Bombs and pistols were used by revolutionaries to terrorize the ‘British officials and | paralyze the police, beginning tn 1908. The retaliation was further repres- sion. At the same time, however, cer- tajn concessions, civil and political, were given to the Indians, for in- stance a few high offices were for the educated Indians. REVOLUTION NOURISHED IN FOREIGN LANDS By 1911, it seemed at last that the government had altogether supprese- ed revolutionism, The country was still, dead still, But what had hap- pened was that the revolution had been temporarily driven out of India to foreign countries. Beginning with 1908, Indian revo- lutionary exiles began to emigrate to all ¢orners of the earth. They went to every country of Europe—France, Belgium, Italy, Germany, Austria. They came to the United States. They lodged themselves in Japan and China, ‘The present Indian revolution was thus nourished tn foreign lands. And it 1s no secret that during the world war, Indian revolutionists made ev. ery possible use of the difficulties of the British. 1 believe firmly that the British had pretty well realized their pert! in India in 1917 when the present sec- retary of state, an able and liberal] man, Mr, Montague, put forth his scheme of reform of the Indian gov- ernment along democratic lines. Eng- lish tories were, of course, sorely displeased with even this tardy pro- gression, But they would not have dared to act against the reform policy, had it not been for the illusion created among English tories that Woodrow Wilson was backing them in anything they might do in India or Egypt. WILSON POLICIES AFFECTED INDIAN TRENDS On the one hand Wilsonian slogan of “self determination” incited the In: dian nationalists to further efforts. And on the other, Mr. Wilson's stern disapproval of Indian nationalism led the Anglo-Indian officials to believe that America would approve British rule in India, no matter in what form. That, I believe, accounts for the manner in which Gen, Dyer and his} chief, Sir O'Dwyer, ruler of the Pun- Jab, put down the nationalist agita- | tion in the Amritsar massacre of 1919. That was the turning point, For a moment India was paralyzed, Then’ a man arose who defied the govern- ment--Gandhi. Gandhi had been trained as a non- violent revolutionist in South Africa, in the struggle to maintain the hu- | man rights of Indian laborers there, against Boer and British working: men. Gandhi's movement of paral ing the British government by b cotting all British trade, and all Bi ish Institutions has spread all ov the land, even in the most backwa: villages. Gandhi is strenuously posed to violence, altho he exhorts = Pictorial Review, McCall’s and Designer Patterns _ You will be well pleased with the splendid assortment of patterns and sugges- tions for new frocks to be found in our Pattern Department. Co, See Seattle’s Fall Fashion Fete — September 12, 13 and 14 Women’s and Misses’ Silk and Wool Dresses Featured at $43.65 Fall Styles Attractively Designed in Dresses of Canton Crepes, Satins, “Roshanara Crepes and Tricotines Second Floor In this group of dresses, the Fall fashions are exten- sively manifested in garments of durability and style, and most pleasing to look at, Materials, workmanship and styles put into these dresses are gratifying in every way. They’re embroidered and trimmed with silk braids, beads and leather. Pre- dominating colors are navy blue, black and brown, The dress sketched is of tan Roshanara Crepe, faced and piped with Harding blue and embroidery in Oriental fuse att one of the many attractive styles selling at Ment’s Linen Handkerchiefs Each 25¢ Main Floor A good quality Linen Handkerchief, full size, and with @ quarterinch hem. Anexceptionally good man's handkerchief that we are now selling for, each, 25¢. Men’s Ties Special 85c Main Floor A large assortmentoft Men's Fourtn-hand Silk Ties in an excellent variety of patterns and color combinations. These ties formerly sold at $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00 each. Special for Thursday, each, 85¢, or three for $2.50. Silk Striped Madras Shirts Choice at $2.50 Main Floor We have just received a shipment of Men’s Shirts with sik stripes in a splendid as sortment of patterns. They are in sizes 14 to 17 and moderately priced at $2.50. ~ Husband Kills Wife A and Shoots Himself LOS ANGELES, Cal, Bept. 7.— Following @ quarrel which nated more than four hours, Charlies E. Erhardt, age 62. yesterday afternoon is alleged to have shot and probably fatally wounded his wife, Margaret Erhardt, 29, then fired a bullet into his own head, dying Instantly. Community singing originated as a Gee, but Boidt's Bread | result of the war, me ‘s ee Advertisement, 1 Safe Milk for INFANTS & INVALIDS hin followers to go to jail. But the Moplas, and numerous other fighting bloods in India, do not yet quite grasp the doctrine of non- WSeOngiaat violent revolution. STORE HOURS: 8:30 A. M. TO 6 P. ML. c SEATTLE’S CANNING HEADQUARTERS Ball-Mason Fruit Jars— Quart Size $1.25 Dozen. Everlasting Fruit Jars— Quart Size $1.65 Dozen Everlasting jars have the wide mouth, with glass lids. Gear-Glass © Large Size Jelly Glasses (no lids), dozen. - 60c Parowax, 1-pound Size, Special, package .........19¢ Arap Jar Rubbers, Special, 3 dozen for.......... ,25¢ Mason, Economy and Schram Covers, dozen... . .35¢ eres, Attractive Clocks Special at $1.69 Each A lucky pyychase enables us to offer these attractive Clocks—mounted in mahogany-finished wooden cases. They are good timekeépers and are made in a very neat design. Worth $3.00. ~ 30c Can Sani-Flush—Special 19c Can Sani-Flush cleans toi- let bowls and keeps them sanitary. It is a powdered chemical compound that will clean toilet bowls without scour- ing and keeps them sanitary and odorless. Special at ......19¢ See Demonstration of the Wonderful Dry-Hand Mop Makes mopping a pleasure. A new invention to make house- keeping easy. Use hot suds— any kind of chemicals—it never wets the hands. No more back- aches— No more sore hands. No more stooping. Price during Demonstration $2.00 good

Other pages from this issue: