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INDIANS HOLD To Ask Cash Settlement conferen Petition to the gove Mement of tho land rights « Man 2,100 coast " Wreaty sigmed by Gove ‘bn 1855. boee@his treaty provided Whings that every India B80 allotment of $0 acres ar ‘5 Properly supervised Charles A. Witt vi of the Northwest Federatic the wr in " s, who presided . held Saturday morning, gounci! chambers, said S More than 2,100 Indians have ne | Received land allotments fs no more land thi ® given the Indians, : fo the government m @m amount equa! to the v Ba Sacro allotment upon these 2.100." Sore than 300 Indians, many the picturesque shawls costumes. a majority Were conservatively civilian attire, atte Saturday, Representatives f Lummi, the Skagit Snoh the Snoqualmie, the Swine Duwamish, the Suquamish Skokomish Indi sc Mbur represents the Swinon Other officers pre Wilbur s COUNCIL HERE of 2,100 Claims for Land a the atue ach | still and of died the meet rom | a os were mish t were ry Steve, of Marysv treas Of, representing the homish fine; Wilford Steve, son of Ii ittee was to report on @ solution of the problem. 2 Mystery of the disappears of Edward Hugh Webster, 27, d in Seattle last summer ited himself as a member i fide swath in Tacoma and circles, was solved Fri “ to Leavenworth pent from McNeil tsiand, Nover Nh was ctven 1§ months. §rand larceny warrant aga: Was issued in Seattle, int of a Seattle stenograp! Teported that when “Webs! d, after hiring a tax a taking her to Mount Rainie: than $100, and a diamond ER FINDS Graetz, Seattle Ki Crowned With Kisses fed Graetz, recently f of Seattle” in a Y. M. C. @ mother’s Mrs. Trita Graetz, propri @ millinery shop in San F ended a seven-year search him and talk with him. Graetz, who conducts Garcia,” feven years ago. | Fred and left, and the mot @ search which took he: Friday and said she is living with his hhas since remarried, at 121 hast. The reunion of mother a touching scene. tears welled in her eyes. @ bit shy, since seven y @ boy Fred’s age and have happened since he his mother. lolice on Watch robbery of a room occuple: for her chum in Miss Ol, 5 Dire eo property in amounts $1,000 and up Repayment Privileg 802 Hoge Mag. Elliott 0274 TODAY MS ny Night at “The Eternal U IND WEBSTER IN U. S. PEN Stone & Webster firm, and cut a Matt Starwich identified Of Edward Joseph Leneban, f 1822, as that of young Webster Eee be took her purse, containing | HER LOST BOY crowned Popularity contest, was crowned | kisses Saturday | father, .J. FISKEN CO. almadge ry; Charles Alexis, of the Du i second vice-president. Se Saturday afternoon an advisory pro- ance who and r of ttle day. a iten- nber | inst on her. ter D rin ring | | ng, | A jetor ran. for ‘son. The publicity given Fred | Bis ‘sutcess in the Y contest, | his photograph appeared fe Star, enabled his mother to| in} Marble Champs a Bit Flustered When Interviewe d CHA RTER VOTE WILL MEET 10 IS DOUBTFUL OUTLINE PLANS identities were proclaimed in yester ay’s paper, too, shor inter viewed. Doubtiess, the world was moring to ask, “How did y it? and would be soothed the answ afternoon I row finding th at first. Whi Jack De of foot-swinging d right sort perfectly was like all that n the PRESTON ELDRED INTERVIEWE! of Hiawatha playfic brown eyes and bre a big smile. He twisted his h told me this: “Oh, I'm not But then if I am, it's just p what's done it “T've been playing marbles « was 4 years old. Yeh. I start by snappin’ the marbies out between my thumb and fingers. But that way isn't right. Listen, if you want to play marbles good, you've got to kick out with the thumb, an’ you've got to practice the ki T tell you, ‘Practice makes perfect,’” and Pres: ton, who {a a first-half freshman at West Seattle high, concluded by look ing most awfully wise. Sam Loschbin, 11 began his talk peed i ~ laws passed by the ne coming wee two measures vo i « k time Friday a oC ® : ea be by ri E. ¢ ee 1 q ‘ork r nine months. | before the exe © aes opene hi v If the 4 copie | COMMUNICATION i te te for 16 freet rs to revise IS NOT READ ' ‘ coc goby with? . Sora A protest from R. Allen, secres | Seattle's playfield marble champions, reading left to right: Preston Eldred, Hiawatha playfield; Sam Lochbin, Collins playfield; Sherman Mackert,|m A are ps hl aps pales 90 nt Seeder 0 . Q = + hoo! similar to the Victors Tell the)xu vcr 6 MONTHS FOR ASKS LQWER INJUNCTION EXPECT MORE =: mee World How It |, aess "| CIGARET SALE STILL HOLDS ARRESTS SOON: 2 ose a a v ' n't} ; yates ! : bites : nd + ‘ " joned the board for a tie oak. team name. fo tT eig. | tlee CC, Dalton late Friday when he ‘ » clause, requested by| Confession of Camp Looting | ir’ iigh schoot to be located in ey = Ay lve Op rip Sraedlag i ag OS abs sil galerie Kennedy’s Brief Charges Cownsltinan ov eae tases Involves Others Georgetown falas geen Pha hope taeegs ae , A pssetoige pra Gross Inefficiency oie A a OTT to ex.| Pie don't T yea ‘ jegraph Co. pro: | : OPEN ACCOUNTS ¢ ract ty of | Otule b s ed reaaed phone toll, Cor-| Asia ' j sangell ed A report on the rowess t And Sam ji teh ol T. J. I. Ke biting th 4 Ke t or of the scho natural to me. f playin ne the what to do next in r t like « 4, ch w tk i t Re art » it's a cane of knuckles t luck You ca cometinves they help it |ARTHUR PICKED | OUT GOOD AGATE Back to brown eyes. Arthu; Adamson, 11 in the |sixth grade at Concord | “I think I won b ¥ abil. jity & a de. Hr joo ¢ box, took out the he when interviewed, | |Mayor Brown May Block |School Board Will Hold Secret Session | Two Ordinances Prepared | the | | ®hop under the name of “Miss | was divorced from Graetz | ther r to was Mother and wanted to talk |tion, him. She does not intend tojtry was ruled from Dublin castle. legal action, she declared. | Even the independence claimed for 0 and ears Wide space to bridge in the life many |of executive, judicis ast for Girl Burglar| A girl burglar was sought by the s Saturday in connection with a by A, Olson, 721 Ninth ave. Fri-| ly, The girl, posing as a friend of | Olson's, obtained permission to son's z She disappeared later and/| theft of several articles of jow-| FY Was subsequently laid to her. 2% * 6% MONEY ‘or mortgage loans on resi- of 17.—The follow ling article on the situation in Ire-| land, written by President Cosgrave Columbia and into Mexico, | bd pie * * of the Irish Free State, has been au- which 66st a small fortune. & Graet2 appeared at the police |tnru N. E. A. Service, Inc.: thorized for publication in The Star Ireland has come thru revolu- For some centuries this coun- jratan's parliament’ (1783-1801) was illusory, | COUNTRY, MAKES The wom- | sareRIAL PROGRESS gmely gowned and stakingly MATERIAL PROGRESS ful, clasped the boy to her heart | ey» Probably no country in the world r made in: such a brief space so much material progress as Ireland |made during those few years of legislative freedom. But the control and military ie jpower remained all the time with |Dublin castle, and Dublin castle did jnot walt, but contrived the opportu |nity to destroy Ireland's legislative |freedom and concomitant prosperity. From the time when the discovery ff America gaye Ireland a place of rdinal importance in the midst ot the world until about a year ago, Ire. land was dominated by Dublin cas tle, and this domination developed in time to such a degree that, in the words of a recent English chief secretary, the whol people of Ire land lived under the Dublin castle microscope. Dublin castle was an organized bu. reaucracy, responsible only to the absentee British governmient, con temptuous of the Irish people and jtheir representatives, over whom it appointed its own judges and m trates, its own taxgatherers and po- lice, its own secret service agents, It was supported by the British army and navy and had its own arm of power and intelligence, the royal Irish constabulary, organized on a military footing and equipped with |military arms, the most centralized and efficient police that the world |has known. Its power can compare with that of any despotism in his. tory. is. it was able without challe: terminate half of the poy Ireland and to stifle most of the peo- ple's industries, draining from them in the meantime a tribute that mounted up, in Lord MacDonnell's words, to “an empire's ransom.” DUBLIN CASTLE NOW NO MORE Irish revolution thur Griffith and has ended that, Wd by Ar Michael Collins, Dublin castle ts no more. Ita entire organization haw disappenred, ‘The survivors of ite great police organization ave retired pensioners, do ite wvead ruley a government Within kes than three generations | jal its authority, PRESIDENT COSGRAVE Jelected by the people of Ireland, un der a constitution of which the fundamental principle {a that “all powers of government and all thority, legialative, executive and ju- dicial, in Inland are derived from the peoplo of Ireland.” | | So great a revolution w |be achieved without heavy cos' all the wrongs and evils on Ireland by Dublin the least was this, that were forced, generation to resist the only law and government that extated, until resistance and negation be came thelr chief political tradition. ‘Then came the war, with its disturbing effects on the public mind thruout the world, Close upon not to Among | inflicted Castle, the people after generation, not great ity traces came the final and ter ribly intense stages of the Irish |revolutionary struggle, which be. came definitely knit when the rep- resentatives of the people, at the beginning of 1919, established government of their own and openly rejected the Castle bureaucracy and The strain, the sacrifices, the en thuslasm and exaltation of that struggle set up an abominal atate of mind among tain proportion expecially younger folk, the whose experionce of Ife meant little of to them before the war era of 1914 began GRAVE DE TIN IKISH SITUATION There ix alao a graver defect in the new Irish situation than any manifestation, however distressing appear, of political para nol, ‘The British polley of the past hay al bits the| The looting of the unoccupled|' from the Seattle Bank Now ae to|barracks at Camp Lewis of thou cont aa . accunes the phone ¢ © pay inter ands of dollar orth of plumbl: the enrollment opened acc on & Holds Fifth Rank pany of concealing its profits thru on payments. | {tures and other articles was un-| the first da mm | The Seattle postal savings bank | “interioc tdcatha* the ath sivaret SHELA Grtaat, of Cartiocl AN eae ae aa \ nks fifth in the country I) American & Telegraph tho by City Detectives A. A. Bro’ 1% . it was announced) co and the Western Electric upon r L. C. Harris Friday Coast Guards Look pany, and de t net aside | sion was obtained by ‘ : ab WHematkad fader for Rum Runners : Carrier bad been SAN FRANCISCO, March 17 * HAD WHISKY jae nd to be aph 4 A . sitwo mysterious sh leved to be Sppere aye rd aC nea ai rl and after several trips (o|rum runners, had been sighted off ne th gen, oe ae - Be ing ne IS ARREST ED his movements were ob-|the Go! ate, They were report- ely Gross inefficie ar ieee eae ae Pe rier naid soldiers army camp| ‘The revenue service, coast guard bi travagance are charged by Kenne ‘an stopped were hin aids in the plot, according |and prohibition office immediately s fellows t . who claims that the company makes | Canadian border at A s net a lookout on the beach to watch~ j on the no efforts to establinh the reason-|ay she was attempt for any unusual activity ftom The b ‘ae wd nm large te a , craft h might be en viv WILL apr ipgehs conte otties of liquor bid in a hang. West Point Grads unning Kiquor ashore from the sup SILVER MEDAL telephone’ avatetn tat to Customs officials * Fs posed smugglers ce today’s paper! doubtful and which will be more ex ® to the reports, M A banquet and reunion of west | Three Are Arrested | ayers’ who will petal Mitchell drove acroxs the bor qin Risien Chew Bee ; pensive to operate, acrons the | rand) Point graduates, now living in | champio ship) as — nothing waa fou car as she | attle Is to be held in the Rainier club by Federal Agents » of them »will| |drew up to the customs station, She| Saturday night. The meeting will be| Three men were arrested F in the Nort’ atl f |ia said to have later returned by alin the form of a gathering to cele-|afternoon by federal prohibition do hin beat to insure circuitous route to the border and|brate the 12int anniversary of the|agents who staged a concerted tour and one parent a trip ere |Upon again passing the station she| founding of West Point and will cor-|of the city in an effort to round up to City, N. J, where the wan stopped. ‘The liquor was found| respond with other meetings of a like | questionable soft drink dealers. ‘Those | | nati games will be played in ina bag in the car, She paid a fine|nature about the country, Fifty | arrested were A. J. Ford, 91 Columbia ; |Jun Chehalle Masona choose site for) of $25 and surrendered the liquor to| graduates of the academy are expect-| st, Thomas Harris and Albert Swift, | © of the above The new $30,000 temple. customs officials to gain her release.’ ed to attend. 1218 Westlake ave. silver medals. Some! ee —— “ capeneamel — m will later receive Dr. James Rhodes, poet, dies in " England ds eee tate Etk convention In 1923 to be held in Everett on August 13, 14) and 16 eee Several bootleggers in Yakima file | income tax returns. Thomas C. Power, former United States senator from Montans at Helena Edgar Jowell gets clock as share of $20,000 estate, so starts contest of sister's will, see te Funeral services for Mrs, Mary | -Tolt Thomas, Seattle pioneer, will be held Sunday at Bonney-Watson chap- at 2 o'cloc J establishes eparate government | el, k jin Belfast, subordinate to the Brit ish government and parliament, and| Martin Flannery ruling over an arbitrarily defined }tive from Canada, held by & area of six counties, lee, fugi eattle po: suspe Effective Monday morning, March 19, the prices on our Cee at “ ageing eo eee | Widow aanks $20,000 for death of well-known brands of bread— ment stand for =continuous "a 0 : i Hit d ook |John Maryott, killed when Great CN tion and instability, and they lot | Northern engine was derailed, last : ‘ Butter-Nut, Holsum, National, and cordial agreement, Ireland will| November, = Cream Crust, ete—will be advanced ‘ Oa eee an’ sconomie unity,| wm. Pearl E. Livingstone mues le a pound, to the same prices that Pacific Steamship Co, for $36,000, | porter on Admiral while she was} Retail Prices of the | @llesing negro dchiey attacked her sick In stateroom. . Notwithstanding the febrile fects of the two fanaticisms, Irish revolution is an accomplished have prevailed in Spokane, Portland and other cities for the past year. fact. The new co tution in op | wise | erative and the changes that follow) |. Shere a Atoiteste : rey eiretoral jaw, in accord-|DUt are captured two houm later We have persistently kept the prices 10c ano with the constitution, will se) pace RteTer ET: down longer than in many other cities. cure future elections will be : - i held under. the conjoint. principles | Jomeph Rice, acctised of | news But steady advances in flour, sugar, 1%4-Pound of universal adult suffrage and the | Stand rodvery, bs : | We de x oaves proportional representation of minor-|Ust!l April 6. | | milk, lard, ete, for the past three ies judicial aystem i undergoing | Tfo2P. 48 Boy Scouta, will hold months, have brought about a condition 15c a complete reform, readjusting it to |banedit | dance Sunday tyenit: that makes this change imperative— the requirements of the Irish people. | oui” | A new and purely elvil police or: | : ade ganization has replaced the Royal Irish constabulary A new revenue department will collect the taxes of the Free State. Ask bids for new postoffice build: | ing at Green Lake, —In Order to Maintain Our Well Urges Continuance A new army organization will be e ine soar of Oe nations! wi!” OF Russian Relief nown Standard of Quality expressed thru. the sted repre: j sentativ of the nation, for the de. The 2,000,000 Russian children be fense of the nation and its inatitu-| ing fed by the etitete Faliet ry tions. elation will be in danger of starving sa i i . sas M ‘ SHO LMT Unie TE ARE Crore, AcdRie AMD RIRRIBR S16 Bread made under the sanitary conditions of our plants, TIONAL MIND sd stRinar gh 2 eke ta and produced from the very highest grade ingredients, is he far-reaching power of educs de by Bi + Inte , ton the, molding. Bf the fanioea [HONAY commaiteeman of the YA. | YOUR MOST ECONOMICAL FOOD. mind, Is now completely In the peo- | “Colton in traveling with Dr. John Ota Greased 4 R. Mott, chairman of the ¥. M. C. A. Tn Great Britain there still re- | international committee, who com mains an element, difficult (om pleted a two-day program in Seattle | jure, finding voice in certain sec-| friday, Ho pointed out that the re: Hons of ‘the press, hostile to the | jie¢ should continue, inasmuch as freedom which Ireland won, and] 15,000 students in addition to the ger to undo it But the main fact of the situation in that the clected representatives of the nation in both houses of the Olreachtas, the Irish pariiament, |are practically as one In their deter j mination to maintain that freedom and develop it for every advantage of Ireland, political, economic and | cultural, We have no mind to boast or to prophe It iv enough to say that children are being cared for by the ansociation. ‘ i Oil Promoter Gives Bond for Release Leroy C. Bigelow, president of the | Sixty Mix Oll Syndicate, was prepar- ing to leave Saturday for Portland, following bia arrest day after. } noon by federal on © chore of using the malla to defraud, Tle Pa HEM i rvioba vi confidence | way arregted at hin office in the in tne firm purpone of carrying for | Joshun Green building on a tele-| nsummation the pol loy bequeathed to tw by the wisdom, graphic warrant from Portland, He! gave bonds of $2,500 to secure his Butternut Cer ait battlotian of Arthur | yetease and atated that he would pro: | | Grierith and Afichael Cottins }eeed to Portland and give himselt nee W. T. COSGRAVEE up to the officials there. President, the trish Hlute, The Sixty:Six syndicate . caters especially to policemen and firemen ’