The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 17, 1922, Page 15

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#[ suction TWO] The Seattle Star Maunted Police. MONTREAL, Nov. 17.—Ouangwak, | the Evkimo, bas gone back to his | Aretic home very dubious about civt- | Quangwak killed two other Eski-| _ Mos, was captured after a 2,000-mile | } chase, was well fed and treated kind- | ly during the two years he was held | prisoner, was tried by a white man’s) to the scene of the crime, 160) north of Chesterfield Inlet, at | northern tip of Hudson Bay, al-| most Inside the Arctic Circle. “That is not the taw,” said Ser- 7 geant Douglas. ‘7 Ouankwak trembled when at last! ; im Montreal he faced the strange, he said, pointing to the judge. } ‘The Eskimo, who frankly admitted! > of one of them, couldn't understand. Nor can the other Eskimos in the Canadian Northland. The white/ man’s laws puzzle them. They dim-| ly understand that Ouangwak’s chase and trial cost a great deal of the ite man’s money—and ft was all for nothing. ‘The cost of capturing him, bring- ing hirn back, and trying him was probably $8,000. | ‘Was {t all for nothing? Men of Ouangwak and Sergt. W. O. Douglas of the Canadian! under.) | stand.” said Inspector Wood. “When | i they kill they expect to be killed. -\7 before Douglas, deserted by fright- ~ligioos of the Paddlemuit tribe, north PAGES 15 TO 28 SEATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1922. the Royal Canadian Mounted Police think so. For suddenly there have been more murders by Eskimos. One of them, Alikomisk, has confessed to the killing of Corporal Dak, of the mounted, and Otto Binder, of the; Hudson's Bay company. No more will be wrought all the) way to Montreal. Inspector Wood | of the mounted ts giving them pre. | liminary heartngs at Herschell| island, and a special court will be established in the tar north next) spring to try them. “The mind cannot | We take them away and their friends give them up for dead. Yet they come back—free. We've tried to! teach them the leanon of justice— | but it has missed fire.” | The chase after Ouangwak, first | E’kimo to be tried for murder, be-| gan Dec. 19, 1919, and tt was Feb. ened Exkimo guldes, reaching the of Baker lake. Eating frozen rein-| deer meat with the chief of the tribe | and bestowing gifts of tobacco, he} finally learned the killer's where-| abouts. ‘The return trip to Fort Nelson, | Manitoba, on the south shore of Hud- son Bay, lasted until April 28./ Thence the party went to Winniper and later to Montreal. In August a trip covering months was made back | to the scene of the murder on the, Hudson Bay steamer “Nascoplc,” and | on the second trip to Montreal last summer Ouangwak was tried. He has | fuist returned to the Baker lake re-| sion | BY ROBERT TALLEY WASHINGTON, Nov. 17.—Rich. | romance is Uncle Sam's world-wide | search for new plant-life to make this country more and more into another Uncle Sam Dreams of New Garden of Eden department of agriculture imported | from Brazil in 1870. One of the two| descendants sent to California in 187% still stands at Riverside. About the time Columbus discov- | Garden of Eden. ered America, about the only thing | ‘And richest in romance of all these| that the North American Indians had plants are four little seedings — baby|were corn, tobacco, wild berries, | trees--in the government green-| pumpkins and a few others. honses here that are being nursed bed | The first colonists brought seed) tenderly as any mother’s child. They | wheat. One sack of Madagascar rice, | are chaulmoogra trees from whose | delivered by @ ship at Charleston, 8 nuts is obtained an ofl that Is now/C., in 1700, was the beginning ot | an accepted—and the only—cure for | America’s great rice growing indus- the dread disease of leprosy. | try Cantaloupes came from Asia} ‘With « retinue of 20 half-naked |and Persia; watermelons from the native porters, Joseph F. Rock, plant | Mediterranean; sugar cane from the explorer for the department of agri-| Ortent—and so on. culture, penetrated the dense tiger-{ “Singularly enough,” says Dr infested jungies of Siam and Burma| Taylor, “the staple items on our to get the precious seeds. |Thanksgiving dinner menu are all For one entire day the party was | indigenous to this country. The In- stalked by a tiger who made off with |dians had turkeys, cranberries, corn two of the natives that night, Rock's | and pumpkins before the white man matter-of-fact report — dally: of | came.” roving bears, howling monkeys, wild VOR UGG RNR Fat slephants and other dangers of the * * are ue that We auotier ater, | Indian Girl Enters : The net result was the four baby | Oregon University trees. y, | UNIVERSITY OF OREGON, Eu- Says Dr. Taylor: “We intend to) pane, Ore, Nov. 17.—Eleanor Houk, send these trees to the Panama! the Blackfoot tribe, is the first Canal zone and produce the nuts on) rian girl to attend the University a commercial scale.” Nearly 10,000,000 boxes of navel or-| anges were shipped from California to eastern markets last season. All| were descended from trees that the! Move to Bring the | Stage to Church} BOSTON, Nov. 17.—fteps that! may bring the church and the stage closer together are being taken by the community service here in the opening of a, dramatic institute for the training of religious workers In producing church dramatics. Oliver Larkin, director of dra matics at Harvard university, will) head « corps of instructors. | The institute is the outgrowth of a belief that many religious truths can be better understood when pre- sented in pageant or play | Following the completion of the! course, which will last about six weeks, the students will present a| pageant of Oregon, Her home is Browning, Mont,, a small town situated a few | miles from Glacier National park. ne received her high school educa- tion at Carlisle, Pa., the largest In- dian school in the United States, | which was abolished during the war by the government. Coming to Oregon in 1918, she en- tered Salem high school and gradu- ated in 1920 with high honors, The following year she taught in the lower grades at Chemawa, This fall | she enrolled at the Gniversity as a freshman, with the intention of com- pleting four full years in the de- partment of physical education. Captured Pigeons | Return to Berlin} BERLIN, Nov. 17.—Two of the German war pigeons of station 708, which was captured by the Britixh in 191%, have returned to Berlin. They escaped from the London wovlogical gardens, ESKIMOS START DEATH CRIME ORGY IN FAR NORTH Sinhrenetibictimes ¢ | Natives Are Emboldened by Release of Murderer AGreat Personal Service Planned and Developed to Save Money for You The goal of the Fahey-Brockman business is to save money for the customer. All our planning and thinking—all our efforts in buying and selling are directed towards this one end. Before we started this business we firmly believed that it was possible to build up “A Great Personal Clothing Service”—to retail better clothes for less money. The mere existence of this big, progressive concern is ample evidence that our belief was founded on fact. Yesterday Ten years ago the retailing of qual- ity clothes for men and young men was a lordly business. Merchants, who might have rendered a great economic service, strutted behind their marble and mahogany attend- ing to their few customers with becoming dignity. That gave Fahey-Brockman their - chance. We couldn't have bought a single fancy fixture but we knew how to sell good clothes for less money. And that was pre- cisely what thousands of men wanted. Conditions demanded the ruthless application of new ideas back in 1911. Never was the clothing business more leisurely. Conservative methods were stran- gling it. Volume per store was small. Turn- over was slow. Competition spelt additional overhead—for the business in general. It kept street-level rentals on the jump. Of course the retailing of men and young men’s clothes was expensive to say the least. Fahey-Brockman slashed through the costly traditions of the clothing business right off the bat. We pioneered the Upstairs Idea, and how we were ridiculed for doing it. We filled our little space with quality clothes, hung them on simple racks with in- expensive hangers. Instead of marking up the garments, according to Hoyle, we figured out how little we could sell them for. Talk about fast selling! The way we turned our stock—the rapidity with which we kept on turning it was amazing. / en oe m i F-B CLOTHES Greater Values Than Average $85 Values § F-B Prices are always safe prices. They’re never varied — never averaged—never juggled. And they’re always money- Greater Vgigey Tons Average savers for our customers, buy when theymay. Get the suit or : overcoat you want, here and now, and bank that extra ten. I BRockMAN ) and save 510°" Today Upstairs Shop to the great Fahey-Brockman Upstairs Stores of today. A few friends believed in our methods then. Fifty thou- sand intelligent men are preaching the gospel of F-B Values now. And, what is more important, their cooperation has made this business a great economic merchandis- ing machine. Go visit the nearest Fahey-Brock- man store and know the money-saving pos- sibilities of this business for yourself! Study the merchandise with care—observe the A 1 quality of the fabrics, the class of the work- manship, the distinction of the styles—make a mental note of our prices and the courtesy of our service! Then see all other firie dis- plays of men and young men’s clothing in town and the chances are ninety-nine to one that you'll become an ardent Fahey-Brock- man booster and a steady customer too. Reason out the fairness of this for yourself! We do not say “Buy Fahey- Brockman Clothes.” We urge you to shop around—to investigate—to compare values. We want you to buy intelligently—to save a ten dollar bill where and when you can save it. There’s no manner of doubt about F-B Values. They are supreme in the clothing field. But—we want you to make sure of this fact for yourself. cesar F-B CLOTHES Fahey-Brockman Building, Third and Pike

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