The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 12, 1921, Page 12

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PAGE 12 EXPEC WORLD WIDE UNION NOW POSSIBILITY Washington Is Startled by Full Significance of the Pacific Treaty BY WM. PHILIP IS | WASHINGTON, Dec. 12.—| The impression prevails here! that the United States will goon become a member of an association of nations for the rvation of the peace of world, along lines similar to the 4-power agreement an-| - nounced Saturday by Senator Henry Cabot Lodge. ‘That the treaty between Amerfea, | Britain, France and Japan respect Wwe the Pacific may’ serve as Wedel for an understanding wit! | egard to China and Asia, and that © the nine powers represented at the Conference wil! sign it, is generally) Bdmitted, Secretary Hughes | ex Presses the hope that other power | Hot represented here, may see fit) to join in. From this to a world-wide | even those who opposed | the Wilson league of nations | is but o step. as Washington un- | @oubtedly was upon reading the of the treaty for keeping in the Pacific, the Article of the treaty, which| @warantees concerted action in case ‘the rights of any party to it are “threatened by the aggressive action Of any other power,” is regarded as oteg 2 it the armed strength ‘Of all the signatories, America not excepted. While the “Ditterenders™ in the| | @eate are expected to put up a ter Be Fific fight over this article, it is be _Meved it will pass with little diffi “eulty, albeit with gibes from the| democrats, who already claim there Ie ttle difference between this arti- | ‘le and article 10 of the covenant. The peace of the Pacific, not ef the world, henceforward is deemed to rest in the hands of the United States and Great Brit- ain, which two countries, under the new order of things, have % Japanese alliance, an Anglo-Amert an entente automatically springs into being, making moral allies of the two countries. Rration officials see no way to extri- @ate themsrives, even if they would, ‘ With the scrapping of the Angio | short of agreements which bind the Geography Dry? It can become entertain- ing to you and the chil dren with the aid of the Geographic Puzzles you will find in The Star. The first today's editorial page. Work it out with your boy or girl tonight, and see tomorrow if you're right. is on PARLEY NEARS UNDERSTANDING : All Questions Expected to Be Solved This Week THE SEATTL E STAR |than ever before HERE’ START: nenes wore asouT | /vone* — FLOOD DISASTER on 2 MORE DIE ABOUT PAGE 1 Gladys Cole, 22, 3234 61st ave. S. W., blinded by STARTS ON PAGE ONE storm, struck Ls auto, taken to city hospital, head cut. That there were not more casualties is due to the heroic nage bow Were Pager wa action of firemen, civilians and othe who went to the pceromig ee F houngs . rescue of people hurt by slides and marooned in flooded Efforts t er the three bodies homes Maat night tage 8 aan tenet Battalion Fire Chief TP. O'Connor and his chauffeur, Pe eoeeiae cram engine houses Nos.| WOrking all night with a rowboat, rescued half a dozen Land 26, hurried to West Seattle, families from the inundated Rainier valley in the vicinity | BOY WAS LAUGHING {of Rainier ave. and Letitia st. AT THE FIREMEN | deenest ‘Tyler, a reporter for ‘The {and civilians caught by the slid in the mud, washing it down the bill, [Probably saved the lives of several) yy ‘rireman W. A. McWaters, of when the second io al from | firemen, street department employes | Engine Co. 1 the top - Ernest Tyler, Star reporter sent t the sluicing, saw it coming Sets 058° TRISH OFFICIAL (SIN FEIN AND | werk 4, nd shoute “Here it comes In doing #0 Tyler ran ¢ the path of the avalanche. The work: | lors red and ran, Fireman Me | ‘This, the fifth week of the arme | contorence, ts sirtwaily certain to be | the mast notable of the partey. Settlement of the naval ratio quee- | tien and agreement on all the prinel- | pal points of the Hughes naval Himite- tion pragram, as well an the non-for Uification of the Pacific talanda, is fanminent, Signing of = convention hy the United States and Japan which w ead the Yap cagiroversy also is near, mm the Part ‘committee speeds its werk on Chinese problems. ‘The mediation of the Shanteng Question also appeared near a settle ment, Ratification of the four-power Pacific treaty appeared more cert with the administration planning make H mast difficult for aay seoe- tar to vote against it ® | BY A. L. BRADFORD | WASHINGTON, Dec, 12.—Com: | plete agreement all the major/| problems confronting the arms con ference ix confidently expected be on | fore the end of this, the fifth week The star that jof-the pariey With the acceptance of the four power Pucific treaty by the confer ence, the outatanding question before the parley is complete and official | approval of the Hughes’ program for sewer ay |umitation of naval armament. Other major matters are: 1. Limitation ef Pacifis island fortifications. 2. Drafting of a treaty defining the new status of China as it lx being worked out in the Far Eastern committee. 3. Settlement of the Shantung question by China and Japan. 4. Settlement of the contro versy between the United States and Japan over the question of Yap and other mandated islands | in the Pacific. ‘The question of naval armamen fortifications in the Pacific and the Yap controversy are on the verge of complete agreement and dction on these matters of far-reaching im. portance protabty will be formally | | | announced at plenary seasions of the conference this week in much t same manner as the quadruple Pa- cific treaty was proclaimed to = world Saturday. YAP TREATY IS NOW OFFICIAL! | Adjusts U. s. Dispute With From this situation even adminis | Japan | United States at least morally to| WASHINGTON, Dec. 12.—The Something startlingly lke “entan-| Yap treaty was signed today Bling” participation in an interna-) ‘The treaty adjusts the Yap con tional league or pact to prevent war |troversy between the United States - ~--- land Japan and covers all mandated JAIL DELIVERY CALLED FRAME as “Inside Job” CHICAGO, Dec. 12. — “Lucky Tommy” O'Connor, Chicago's most Notorious killer and gunman, had Beat the noose today O'Connor, scheduled to hang Thurs @ay for the murder of a policeman, Blugged his way to freedom when he Broke from the “bull pen” of the Cook county jail Police Chief Fitzmorris branded the @scape of the criminal as a “frame and ordered his officers to shoot to kill. ‘The underworld haunts of the gun Man were combed today by posses Investigation of rumors that “O'Con Mor would never hang,” which emanated from the underworld, Conducted by Fitzmorris. was ; David Straus, guard, who was ie @verpowered by O'Connor, when he " broke jail yesterday and delivered By two companions to freedom, was un B der arrest today. “Darling Day O'Connor, prominent broker nd brother of the jail breaker, was also in custody. Lack of clews today showed that! O'Connor had, completely covered his escape. Rifle who rushed to the Fox lake region, where O'Connor had hidden on another o@ casion, came back empty handed Belief that a man and a girl, in whose automobile O'Connor was last geen, were involved in the plot, was expressed when police received no ‘word from them. squads were SEND YOUR FOLKS A SALMON A delicious fish fresh from the water of Puget anywhere packed in lee, in neat carton, Re-teed dail at isfactory arrival guaranteed. Send 82 and o COAST CO. 4122 Arende Hldg. Senitie, Wash, od jants have completed p 2iNg senate opposition |the United States to jislands in the Pacific | | American delegation that the treaty It waa stated by a member of the provides for cable and gives this country the islands in common. with | nations, rights for America privileges in other Killer’s Escape Denounced ‘Harding Ready | to Force Pact BY LAWRENCE MARTIN WASHINGTON, Dec. 12 Presi dent Harding and his chief leuten ns for crush the Pacific United States, and Japan. treaty between Great Britain, Fr They will offer the senate the al ternative of the four-power treaty which makes it to disarm continuance of AngloJas which it unsafe for sarm nee safe the make ora onene alliance Harding’s first me to checkmate opposition was his appoint ment of Senators Lodge and Under wood to the Americgn delegation in the arm: onfere The second foreign rela tions committee, to present the treaty to the conference and its guests. He opened the ratification fight before any of his senate colleagues could voice @ critiesm. Administration officials today said “they had the Jump” on the opposi jon and intended to keep it Hard » and Hughes all believe who fight the treaty sign their own political death warrants. For, as one official point ed out today, the treaty Is essential to the uccess of th arms confer ence. o- | Britain Aneneue 4-Power Alliance’ BY . KEEN LONDON, T 12 Britain, | peaking thru its press, extended hearty welcome today to the new four-power entente, supplanting the Anglo.Japa alliance The London newspapers are unant mous in their approval. “The real thing at last,” said the Morning Post, which heretofore has been lukewarm toward the plan ‘There never was a document of greater promise to mankind,” sald the Time se. Japan Prepares to Reduce Navy Dec 10. ten rear admiral minor officers of the Japan the waiting list from active wax announced today ¢ Move Wag looked upon as pre TOKYO Transfer r r of and wn we y to ervice Tr | found | with | Burch is perfecyy Waters grabbed Tyler and pulled him behind a bulk titud. They stood there the slide picked up carried them and the bottom, burying Tyler REPORTER FIGHT IMSELF FRER When it reached the bottom, Tyler covered t rhelter Then ir and bulkhead to the m himself Lely mud and to lems } Fortunat@ly, he had landed in a} comp unable move his slough. The water loosened the mud. dnd he fought himself free, finally | jextrieating hin limbs. + Fred Carter, Star staff photog | rapher, was at the top of the hill when it caved out from under him He rode a log to the bottom, landing safely with his camera He rushed to a telephone to notify ‘Tyler was buried and probably dead, but found, to hin sur prise, that the reporter was there ahead of him, covered from head to foo, with mud two inches thick, tele phoning the story ESCAPE D Several of firemen narrowly the escaped with their lives. Howard Campbell, engine company No. 1, sayed himself by crawling top of the Andrews house and riding it to the bottom. The three inj@red street department employ were buried at the bottom and might have on perished @long with the two missing civillans had not the firemen extri cated themselves and gone to the rercue ‘The little boy who had been laugh ng when the slide started was nar rowly missed by the edge of the ava lanche and watched R to the end with evident amusement. BURCH PLANS | | INSANITY PLEA BY FRANK H. BARTHOLOMEW 148 ANGE 8, Dee, 12. Arthur C. Burch, on trial charged with the/ midnight murder of John Helton Kennedy, today prepared to bring forward hix inaanity defense. | The prosecution, headed by Dis trict Attorney Woolwine, has en-| deavored fo Ink Burch with the kill ing of Kennedy by many etrands of | clreumstantial evidence | * ‘The «tate, hearing that Frurch ts/ marshaling an army of alleniats to} he was insane when it is al he killed Kennedy at the in of beautiful Madalynne Obenchain, has issued a subpoena for Dr. Thomas J. Orbison, who ha already examined Burch, He says sane and that his irrationality is “unusual ¢ | prove lomed stigation only tiem.” TACQMA ZONE | | FLOOD-SWEPT | TACOMA, Dees Part of Tacoma’s industrial rection below the Puyallup river bridge was under several feet of water today. Port land ave. street cars were halted at Bay st Automobile traffic owas also xtopped The Peterman manufacturing plant on the flats was put out of commis sion early today when the boiler room was flooded. Other planta were reported similarly affected Travel on the Seattle-Tacoma and Tacoma-Puyaltup highways was sus: | pended. Basements in all parts of | this city were flooded | Portions of the city of Payaltup were, under water. In Hall's Ad dition school fidren were being ‘hauled to school in big trucks thru deep flooa water there STORM WARNING IS ORDERED CHANGED ASSASSINATED Trouble Is Again Browing in Ireland DUBLIN, Dee, 12.—A reign of terror by opponents the trish peace treaty is feared. Reports of shootings similar to those which occurred before the truce me into Dublin today, They caused much apprehension Former Mayor Meade of Cork was shot to death in his place of business by armed, masked Bsaanains. ‘ Another man was shot and wounded ax be was walking on | the street in Cork. ‘There was sporadic shooting in Belfast. One man was wounded, Police raided houses in Belfast, seeking wtores of rilfes, There were several outbursts of shooting A constable was wounded In ¢ with the Rasassina tion of Meade and other shootings. it is recalled thounands of interned political prisoners are being released kades in accordance with nection from | King George's proclamation of am. Neety It in betiewed some of them may be responsible. | The Irish Free State adheeenta are) atrong enough, it in believed, to put down any attempt to start a new civil war eee Situation Grave, Craig Declares BELFAST, De The between Great ¥ and fons not fulfitl the solemn promines} Premier Sir James | treaty Ireland in made to Ulster,” Craig told parliament today “The situation is grave, serious,” he warned ‘The signing of the Angiotrish| treaty, which does not include Ulater and which Ulster was not. Invited) to mign, has created a mont com plicated situation, Craig declared. “Steps we are forced to take must constitutional,” he said. “We must not depart from our pledge. “We must remain part aad parcel in the Britian empire. declared Ulater ta to support ita ideals 1 not swerve an inch,” very a premier, however. saiilical prudence until after the debate! om the treaty in the London par liament Hospital seltnenst “wane a for poor people, in being butit ig New York WITT REPORT IS DUE TODAY Peter Witt, $1,000.a-week traction expert, was to present his final re-| port on the municipal railway to _ jetty. tofine!! Monday afternoon. Witt arrived here October 17 and has been at work on his aurvey for | seven of the eight weeks of his con. tract. It in expected that he will de voto the Inst week to a dixcussion of his survey with the city officials. The Cleveland expert will- make! what i probably his last public ap pearance im Seattle when he ad Greases the Municipal league Tuesday night at the ¥. M.C. A. He ts ex pected to dixcuse his recommenda. Udna. KENT FLOODED, RIVER RISING At Kent all signs pointed to a flood even higher than occurred a week a0, when most of the town and the surrounding ntry were inundated Even before the Duwamish river | left ite banks, Su ay night, the sur face water rome over the sidewalks near the railroad, and Monday, with the r water rising rapidly and the rain continuing to pour down, residents wefe preparing for the worst The storm warning was ordered chan, at 8 a.m storm x moving slowly eastward er British Columbia, and will cause fresh fo strong south-shift ing-to-southwest gales today or- The warnings dered displayed at all ¥ and Oregon seaport station: ed southwer The tonight hington | FUNERA SERVIC for Glenn | Kingsbiry, 8, son of Guy and Mary} |W. Kingsbury, and grandson of ward and Mary ngsbury, of eattle, w held Sunday in La | Habla paratory reduction of the nav May Hold Rinenss | Meet at Capital LONDON, Dec, 12.Lloyd George ja plarining to attend an international , financial economic conference to be held at Washington, should Presiden Harding call such # gathering, it was learned authoritatively ay | ‘The premier, it is understood, will |not take the initiative to inatitu h conference, but he is mont interested in the whole question of economic rehabilitation which he will discuss with Premier Briand early next week, It was the pre mier'’s intention to take up the mat. | ter, of international economics, out side the arma erence proper, had he gone to Washington earlier, ! $100,000 Rum Cargo Seized With Ship NEW YORK, Dec. 12.—The motor driven freighter Alert, carrying a cargo of liquor and champagne val ued at $100,000, was seized by police today in the new basin canal here. WASHINGTON, Dec, 12.—The controversy between the United States and Japan over the island of Yap has been settied, Secretary of | State Hughes announced today. The settlement was effected at a meet! ing of the Far Kastern [ratification of the peace treaty | cay | fave | sition party | demand stertng up committee, C ULSTER MEET! | dermined }w T U. §. TO JOIN ASSOCIATION OF NATIONS ( HERE'S MORE ABOUT S MORE ABOUT FLOOD FLashes| STARTS ON PAGE ONE — nix feet in depth More than 150 business houses and dwellings are submerged in the flood which covers 20 city blocks Fire engines were used in this din trict to pump out water at 1ith ave N. E., saving about 20 hon Nainier valley in in worse condidion in history Je from Columbia The flood exte City to the bail park, a distance of more than a mile. | The sewers are no flooded that they are forcing off the tops of the man holes Mont on the east wide of Rainier ave On Nickerson from Sixth ave 1ith ave, W, the earth is nt to sliding. One house is about out and four other buildings to be washed re un There are three amall alides on Leaders Discuss Irish Free) westiake ave, and one alide on Dex State DUBLIN, Dec. 12.4 conference between representatives of Northern and Southern Ireland was under way here today, perhaps preliminary to Ulster joining the Irish Free State, Two important Uuter men, acting for Premier Sir James Craig, were clometed with Arthur Griffith and other Sinn Fein leaders who favor The re subjects under discussion ied as of the utmost importance. Seeing that the overwhelming x4 of public opinion in ® ratification, De Valera said to be planning to recede from his attitude of hostility toward the treaty, This change in his attitude may come during the sesion of the Irish parliament on Wednesday when it is considering ratification it may come immediately after the vote of approval. He then could an nounce that he would not oppose the majority will of Ireland and swing into line Meanwhile the Sinn Felners—both those who favor and those who op pose ratification—are rushing plans for the fight over the treaty in the dail Wednesday ‘The opgonition to the treaty will t in feared, form a permanent oppo pon am ratification ts ue fight complete measure of were tr or effective, It can then cont ing for a more Wherty medium of speeches and balloting if by any chance enta should win in the dail, tion of with Brifain would then go to the | country in @ pleblactte, Pound Reaches New | High Level of 4.18 « NEW YORK, Dec, 12-—-The spre tacular recovery in the foreign ex thru the * treaty oppen the ques change market continued today, with | Engineer at $4.18%, 4 Breater Mood new high, her quotations! Franca, Treland | copting or rejecting peace and one-half feet an hour ter ave Anotter slide occurred at Rainier ave_and Koxbury st. Slides are occurring thruout the clty wherever there are re-grades or cuts Acc rding to city engineers the con nh in due to the rains, which have ntiinued since a week before kagiving. ery available man in the street department has been called out and the crews have been at work continu ously since 11 o'clock Saturday night ‘The office is being flooded with re quests for belp from ail parts of the city At noon Monday water in the main streets of Kent was reported two feet than at ite peak during the 10 days ago, and still rising. means from four to six feet ai higher food This deep. Btreet car service to Fort Lawton is partly interrupted. The advance to the bridge at 34th ave. in washed out and cars unable to cross. Passengers are being transferred however, to cars on the other side of the street car bridge. A slide on the Lake Burien line threatens to engulf the tracks, but so far service has not been stopped. Two houses on the bluff south of Lesehi park have tumbled over the hilt The basement department shops flooded to a depth Hight feet of tumbling over the spliltway the new masonry dam at Cedar river and the rixing at the rate of one Thin ix amount of water ever are ter are of the city wi at Fremont of four feet water in at water is the greatest ee in the river. Pipe lines of the municipal sys- low from Swan lake to the intake lat tag dam are being patrolled Mon our ate halt feet of snow fn #till | feported in the Cascades. County At Lake Forest Park a slide blocks 0803; lire, ‘ols: marks, .006@; Dan. | the Bothell highway. { ash kronen, ht (College Gin Found ered on Road HOLLAND, he The body of Mise oie: jenewald, 1 ) yearole Hope College student, found jon @ road near here, wan believed i by police today from af automobile ai had been murdered. the er girl 7 Families Are Saved in Washou Battalion Fire Chief and| Chauffeur in Rowboat Are Heroes sf day, Sunday and Monday, 65 auto} Wotking with a rowboat aM last accidents were reported to police. night and until § a. m, today, Battal-|Mra. W. R. Ferris suffered bad cuts ion Fire Chief T oh P. O'Connor and his ur, Frank Sagmaster, rescued seven famiiles from the flood In Rai nier valley Mr, and Mrs, William Boles, 3600) Chariestq@n st, were the first taken) out les, bedridden with pneumo- nia, was wrapped in a mattress, | placed in the rowboat and taken shore t Ist ave The res cuers the went back and got Mrs, Boles, Mrs. A, Hagen and her two small chidiren, at 3634 33d ave. 8, ware taken from their home to safety and placed in the care of neighbor Seven feet of water flooded the Home of Mr, and Mrs. Pat Basterly, 3400 33d ave. 8, When O'Connor and Sagmaster reached them and their two children Mrs, Nick, Stein, 2646 334 ave, S, was rowed to mffety. Then the boat- men rowed back to get her husband He was found in the hasement, pin ned immovably, to his armpits with rising water up His legs were loos to have been thrown | nicnway A Slide is reported between Duwa- mish and Riverton, on the main high why At Lasaquah a vert is washed out, side between Auburn and Bean on the Tacoma-Seattle in- terurban, was expected to be cleared | today Completely blocking near Taylor's mill foo concrete cul the Renton south of Seattic, a huge lagdslide was report-| ed as having shut off all traffic be tween Renton and Seattle Monday A flood of water three feet deep is |said to be flowing over the highway } and | | | ened by diving and he was carried out Mra. Cole, 3312 46th ave. S.. and; her 2 arold daughter were taken| out in the firemen’s boat ag the final rescue, | The water had backed up ina drain and was seven feet in depth along Rainier ave., from Letitia to harleston st THE BEST DENTISTRY IS NOT EXPENSIVE IN THIS OFFICE Best Gold Crowns. .. Flesh-Colored Plates (No Better Made) Porcelain Fillings Silver Fillings Cleaning Years in Practice o Painless Extractions All Work . 810.00 . $2.50 +. $1.00 $1.00 uarantecd DR. E. C. PARR D Corner Third and P N ihe 1sTS Open Sundays and enings Main 3256 pouring on the Rainier Valley railway tracks, and is believed to} bave washed away the road. The Columbia City public Ubrary was reported in danger from floods washing away a sanitary fill in the jrear of the building, which had cut |a channel thru a newly graded street The Columbia City Undertaking Co reported seven feet of water in their basement and four feet of water cov ering their garden. Aw the result of the storm Satur. about the head when she was thrown thru the windshield of her husband's auto at Fifth ave, N. BE. and BE, 45th} st., Sunday night in a collision with an auto driven by F, N, Cooley, 2347 The accident was rain and slippery Harvard ave. N ldue to the heavy | streets. Peter Witt Talks on No Peter Witt, traction ot Cleveland, way the principal speaker at the Greater Seattle committee luncheon of the Chamber of merce Monday, at the Aretic His subject was “The Lure Northwest to the Tourist.” Editorial Just a suggestion to employers — state, coun- ty, city, railroad and others. You are going to need a lot of emergency labor to clean up slides and other damage done by the storm. Use thought in the hir- ing. Try to distribute this work among the jobless men that most need it. Parcel the work out intelligently and it will do a lot to relieve a bad situation. And do the work promptly. The damage must be remedied and in the remedying you can give a Christmas present of at least a temporary job to many men who desperately need it, expert club. of the the damage is being done | Beeman predicts a still, west Lure) Com { MONDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1921, ROY GARDNER TO me Oe ace NEW UR Greetings and Salutations! Bo far in the hunting season on cet Sound, six persons have ‘ . ‘ hoon killed and six wounded, in | Fist Trial Ends in Deadlo We note that at last we have ®! pyoenyx, Ariz, Dee 12 charges of having robbed the n at Maricopa, Ariz, Novernber 3. Federal Judge William A. Bay yesterday dismissed the jury Gardner's original trial a charge when it failed to reach agreement after 17 hours’ del has agreed to give up her 1 to Patagonia and Great Britain han relinquished rights in the |manufacture of Ford motor cars, but what has become of Yap? eee &. will retain sovereignty why, we don't know Japan The | over California . They are thinking of giving the National Advertising agency the mandate over Low Angelen. eee ro not dincunm thin case nor clone the number of hallow taki Judge Sawtelle warned the charged jurors. “Such informati might materially affect mubseq trinls of the defendant on this other charges,” Gardner admitted the Ma robbery during the course of but pleaded mental abnor * AT LAST Under the new treaty, Phinney Kidge becomes a part of the jus i a —* trial, ity Shipbuilder Faces Profiteer Char, | NEW YORK, Dec. 12—Charles Morse, financier and shipbuilder, ‘The rumor that The Star will be printed in Japanese is wholly Br founded, | see George Mathieu, asnistant district attorney, bas resumed the private | here from France on the Practice of the law after nearly ®) pir, today and will go imm year spent in prosecuting bootler|1, Washington to face charge D gers, Wonder if they'll trust bim| i ididing frauds TO now? panes | Morse, who returned from Fran 16 | when the government cabled him Two corn crops that never fall—| reruen voluntarily or be arrested, pic whisky and those on your feet. nites canetiteg “aa ee on 3 | nounced | that h id tak 225 t “Germans Seize Potash Market of | Waurngton | uM” the Se ee All America.” Wish they would take| He isued « statement dec! over the putand-take top industry. yinar before he left America he m Pedi hat an {Tired of government officials Senator Tom Watson says that 40 | Was informed no charge was army officer sitting near him in the |sanointed against him. He senate gave him a nasty ~ me openly, he said, and has retu Old Mother Nature gave bim voluntarily, ready to fight any first. jsution against him. SIAN care, m1 EI n eee Emma Goldman, anarchist, ey | ae ing to come back to Americ cause xhe doesnt’ like Russians, Her red seems to be changing to yellow. | j “ee Masonic Templ Harvard at Pise Ds | | About 20 residents in the neigh . MATINEE borhood of the Cornish School of Friday fvEnine Dec. 1 Music failed in their efforts to get! Cer an injunction, Fine! What harm ix is tre in a little music? A lot of us have to live next to slaughter lhouses, glue factories, sawmilis and people who own phonographa, } now cum? “Last year our export business was from 100 per bent below wormal Weil say K had just about reached bottom. KATHARINE RICE Presents | Beneath this stone lies Ira Zinn, j | A perfect fiend for “cutting in” | Just once too often he transgressed, That's why he now lies here at rest. eee se) invented an | | | | Eddie Hogs has | explosive coin that will blow up | the telephone-box after the fifth | | wrong number. Fates San iS | Sis83 is | Wen, tf they close down all the cabarets we can still join the Seattle | | Chess and Checker club. | ode { “The bride wore a single sprig of oe Moines (lowa) Ree | s ‘e We're glad we were not there. We jeare hay fever, SEAT SALE TODA — Sherm: Clay & Co, MAIN 441 AMUSEMEN TS | WERE PATRIOTIC Charles Bh Ferren of Colorado Springs died the other day and left $5,000 worth | ef bonded hooch to the Y. M. C A., the Y. W. ©. A. and the Salvation Army, and | none of them will accept it. The court | ie puseled what to do with it, We are | == | | anxious to belp the court. Send it to! MBIT Tw Hom B Bi . € ne Beate) Wisner’ 2 irew, care of The Beadle | MMR Moor THEATRE sum Circa VAUDEVILLE : SAM MANN | ED JANIS&( } “We members of The Star don't even pose as being all-knowing. From an editorial in this paper. You |bet we don’t Most of us are mar. | ried. | . “Knickers” are the thing” for col lege men to wear, according to a} [resolution passed recently by the interfraternity council of the Univer- sity of Chicago. Whaddyu mean—knickers? eee Believe it or not, there's a fella in town by the name of dehnny Walker. war 5 mee BRSSON'S GLIMA ¢ MOSS & FRYE (RUPTURE EXPERT HERE » FAMOUS IN THI SPECIALTY, CALLED* TO SEATTLE SOPHIE ASSIA JOSPPHEND dent LYONS & YOSCO | SEEL ley, of Chi 0 and Phila. | , the noted truss expert, will onally be at the Washington ho- | and will remain in Seattle Wed: | ay, Thursday, Friday and Satur. December 14, 15, 16, 17. Mr./ says: “The Spermatic Shield will not only retain any case of rup: ‘At The Cornish Roy St. at Harvard THE CORNISH F ture perfectly, but contracts th lopening in 10 days on the average case, Being a vast advancement | PRICES Tiekets on Sale at Office and at SI over all former methods—exemplify Cornish ing instantancous effects immediate: ly appreciable and withstanding any strain or position. Tiis instrument received the only award in England and in Spain, producing results with. out surgery, injections, medical treat ments or prescriptions, Mr. Seeley has documents from the United States Governments, Washington, D. C. for inspection, He will be |] admisstonr Be; Nights 400 glad to demonstrate without charge or fit them if desired. Business do mands prevent stopping at any other © in this Reetion METROPOLITA ONIGHT ’ ery statement in this notice has been v ied before th John EF. Kellerd and Company Federal and State Courts.—F. bf in the Seeley. “MERCHANT OF VENICE 117 North Dearborn St., Chicago Advertisement Prices: 50c, 75e, $1, Home Office, 50, Pare % LACE Dr Donnelly Cooke HIF] s “DON’T TELL EVERY- THING” “NOBODY'S wipow” 250 to 81; Mate. 25e to 500 ‘tus War ‘Tax, .

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