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PAGE 8 THE SEATTLE STAR THURSDAY, MARCH 2 4 ® | The Seattle Star Coast Explorers Will Seek Lost Mexican “Treasure City” ier vee'ter |) — Soe a eecrea ) | Older Thar | rere = SHOWERS King Tut FA MS © (a BY A. H, FREDERICK \ N. KE. A. Bervice Writer) GAN ¥ CISCO, March 27 DA - PARTY | Published The Star Publishing Co. 1207 Seventh Ave, Phone MA in-0409, N iF Rnterprt tion and United Brees Service, By 9 per month, # mont @ months $2.00, year 138 Spring Showers thman, tyes, Gan Prahelaco A Traitor to the City GAIN Ed Hagen is sentenced to MeNeil Island peni tentiary for bootlegging A few years ago he was there on a similar charge and was paroled. He and hi companion in crime, Ed Pielow, are asking now for an appeal. At the time of his arrest, Pielow was a member of the police force, as was Hagen when sent up the first time. To a layman, it weuld seem that when a police officer | or - a ‘ is convicted of bootlegging, he should get the limit, with f ‘ ey Or chant No parole. Proving a traitor to one’s city is in the same ris them ts Gen Class as proving a traitor to one’s country. . =| joynton, engineer by profe ad ani apa soldier of fortune Seattle Should Have It “Ay é a SL wile® with whom and against MOVEMENT is on foot, backed by the University of ( / ny Fees atin gery Washington, looking to the establishment, on a large scale, of a botanical garden here. There. are but two great botanical gardens in the United States, one at Jamaica Plains, N. Y., and the Other at St. Louis. Neither of these places can offer the all-the-year climate of Seattle. In addition to being of benefit to the department of botany, forestry and landscape garden of the univer- [/ sity, these gardens would prove a great attraction to ts and visitors, A Job Well Done CTING CHIEF OF POLICE J. T. MASON has done well in ordering all of the slot machines and punch boards out of commission. There is nothing that does More to teach the youngsters to gamble than these two twin evils. Besides, they are outlaws, and have no claim for recognition. She, and Her Effects e = ‘ade Ree HHRU the conscientious service of our Paris corre- A Te spondents we are prepared to announce definitely, the dictum, as Paris tries to set it, as to spring and early | Summer female apparel, a most important matter. | ‘ fh euise There will be a tendency to wear skirts reaching within a : . » It will be a co 18 inches of the floor, sidewalk or ground. Skirts reach- pe ees ‘ “ee T ie ee “f tle stre fair, each member Be einige sidewalk or grote. Stewarts || 2 Hree Government Branches Now in Tangle |) «.< aaa rake tare #, |e eae ere permissible, but give them four or five inches and many y if the of them will take 18; so, there's no likelihood of com- (Thin ia the third of Charles ur <dNig UR, aR \EcRethny Whine pe : Ben ae geosrs Plaints over the length of skirts. a weehty: dige Y ‘ Sane cae cee a por “teh agli l Asided lent by the ; The stockings will be flesh-like and so thin as to be | » B ss tn Hecdendesns 9 tmer hipments from this cour ’ mem ‘lima tion ere ft ize [ A THOUGHT alled “onion skin.” Eighteen inches of “onion skin.” i a taletion iawartohe : ze i ER Lee Ne A eee et ee Picture for yourself the effect. : : Ki ARLES P. STEWART) (28,22, te ! lepartmer 1 at violations ¢ I rer , he reminisces. “We discoypred He that rebuketh a man, after The shoes will be of brightest color, apple leaf green . sO wane mre rood t t 1s bes, B the Sun,’ on the | ward shall find more favor than he Deing a shade particularly recommended, with cerise, er ‘ ‘ ravage tent oman mer ‘ 2 r that flattereth with the tongue— . b b “ . 5 % income tax ma ent, for ca! u c in “We got pottery and other ~ xxviil.:2: Violet and nose-bleed red popular. ry of Na y | prot r the mails. ! peg on whan we eal ta Dresses will, as to color and cut, depend much upon | started after 4 c tate, w stott n4 he ag r Shee are ite: hen@quartecs 000,’ ‘That. smectite sutammest at individual taste, up-and-down stripes for the fat figures 2 waht Rese 3 a - been asked te explain charges ot ir) there, working out into the.eur about 15 to 1 for ever} dollar [1 and barber-pole effects for the thin. nti] not a single member of the't ; . by ceria ney at ncn Nap an A | Soman comers Se had Invpatin Swift The range in style of headgear is large, the tendency inet nt dge started g asked! partmente haven't yet been asked to >for spring being a sort of inverted soup-kettle effect, | ‘ Ayer A Ty. i 2 ng various) account for anything | with large fruit, feathers and vegetable millinery coming i. at they've pret t the gov-| Several nen are under fire for Ia | h ts, b ment’s the past fow years, | of] and other stock market specula iter on. , t offices, they've t no how far ofl considera: | tions. Still more representatives are speak as famitarly of unheard of places as o or Philade made 4 HIGH UP IN THE MOUNTAINS there will be difficulties, WUE SMITH, ARE: | Yi Wi fy biti Servis thh' tis ie! tees YOUR FEET WeTT) tf Gen. Boynton and Miss Mayme Williamson, San Fran- cisco artist and former army nurse, who will be the only woman in the treasure-seekiny expedition. ime EUR inqui e ent. This hits MEMBER AMERICAN HOMES BUREAU : , lin on the White House, given con. ] eee ) bow shoes! Maybe you can also vision the Dad’s bank | 04 a otirring up, agitated the fod lTy Trem fect, as charged, that! balance effects. If you can’t, you'd better get busy at it. eral Judiciary and pitchforked the : fight films have been shipped from 7 ; | Veterans’ bureau into the criminal ellotship Of | | sts to tate wader nn arrangement : ° | courts. {whith permitted this to be done at a : The ? That’s in It | Siti veatte Ain tial Pra er minimum penalty, so'that there still i. ” : A ‘ “ papel pds, Mea was money in exhibiting the pictures E HENY explains that he retained McAdoo “because | Hiyened to Secretary Denby. Attor | ' iP ite peyesenk of uamenal fines; Geet ‘ i i i is i ney General Daughe i the . t ®. wes i a) ny : is n of his prestige resulting from his former connection | ney_Gen ugherty is on Dally Lenten Bible reading he federal ox ts are pooh eer a Bedroom and Dining Room Furniture never before shown in Seattle and exclusive With the government”—his political prestige. There is and meditation prepared for leg! rn patterns with us are offered at very attractiy 4 d ‘bi b h R bli I & St 1 Co. had th e Commission on Evangelism of the judicial branches of the govern e prices. little thir t ‘ jut t 4 i epu I wags M hac t ie it QUESTIONS Federal Council of tha Churches ment, all three, tangled tn the inves | The RTT same thing in mind in employing McAdoo to secure its AND 7 j ‘i ¢ Chi i tigation net! $2,000,000 tax refund. Whether McAdoo was morally rs jerome ’ . “right in either instance is not the big question, in the ANSWERS Entering the Kington Telling It YOU can get an answer to any premises. The people, somewhat informed by the above facts, || 4,,%2rtion of fact cr tnforme- |! eaq Mt. vil.t8-23, Text: viltl. to Congress aye a right to know to what extent political prestige Editor, Stare Washington Bu- | Not every one that saith unto me, || gocsots trom the Congressional pull has influenced the refunding of taxes to the i, Gs ceclesing tao’ conte ty Savans bier be Yent Gesth the Record) Dohenys and big corporations. Secretary Mellon opposes stamps for reply, | Medical. legal |) Vit o¢ my Father who is in heaven investigation that might produce the answer to this “Salvation means being saved HE ADMITS IT question. Cog on pectsigned Fe- || from a daily lite of growing selfish-| God did not endow all men with| s Seige : x : Epiron: ered — | wens to a daily life of growing un-|the beatiful locks and magnificent The big violator and the big tax-evader will escape, selfishness and Its inevitable enlarge: | presence that He did the gentleman | " while the hard-cider maker and the little taxpayer will a Pidors pel tal rear It fnvolves a deepening| from Texas (Mr. Connally), 1 con-| x jai i j s hate bres a bs ac ith God, to know|cede that he is the most beautiful he jailed or pay the fiddler, just so long as the people | states by rate? whom {s oterns " | mun in the house, and that {is gen-| persist in being blinded by partisanism. Government is | A. About $200,000,000. | MEDITATION: ‘Doing the will|erally conceded in the house, Inj litics, and the people determine their own politics, each , lef the Father’—there js nothing/| fact, It needs no testimony, because | for himself or herself. Q. Has @ meteor ever bdeen|higher in heaven or in earth than to|he will admit {t himself—Rep. | known to kill a human being? be sharere of the divine will. When /|Tincher (R.) Kansas * | A. There is @ Chinese record of| one is Lipurgsicen he gaping aie WEAt Wa Maren 616 B. C which tells of a meteor|the great enterprise of making God's 4 f | Down to Brass Tacks ; nity kitica AO aoaels | will supreme, he has united his life| ‘The United States as a nation knows | HE SATURDAY EVENING POST, after not a little see [with the ongoing iife of God, which nothing about actual prohibition, for : . = ae ene TES | De union will continue thru the Jong|it has never tried it. What it has ‘ effort, has said something with a spine in it. Listen: | Q. What te°meant dy an A. It) eo oe the life to come. tetd fe eeenbthicig ten’ called “Vor! “Jt is the dirty rich who are responsible for the legis- | 4. M. thread on a bolt? PERSONAL QUESTION: Have 1|steadism,” and I dispute no man'‘s| lative woes that afflict the clean rich and the decent Ameri- A. The standard thread of the the courage of high profession know-| right to «ive it that name. But it/ : business men. To them we owe the multiplication of | Association of Licensed Automobile|ing that it means making good or|is not prohibition—Rep, Kvale (In- ao issions, bureaus, snoopings, red tape, interference Manufacturers. # | acknowledging hypocrisy? | dependent) Minn. With legitimate activities, corrupt officials, and dirty poli- | 6 wnat ts the site of the Mo-\do same service for Thee tolay. Let| - SOMETHING 18 WRONG | tics. They have no party but their pocket, no politics but — | peat gun in th 8. army? our daily work bring blessings to| Mr, President, whenevr crooks can “privilege. Unless they are destroyed they will destroy A. The 16-inch. This has alothers, May we be at one with Thee| lay their hands on tho instrumental- hie nation.” nge of 50,000 yards, and fires a|in the deepest places of our lives, |ities of justice in this country, and Poa ap A sjectilo weighing 2340 pounds.|that Thy purposes may be our|with tho fruits of their crime buy | Brass tacks? We'll say so. And no more fitting time © cost of a service shell 1s rough-| ideals. May we begin this day with |immunity from prosecution, some. Bench to match, $6.95 than now could have been selected for the utterance. Day {yy estimated at $1,000 \a close feeling of the infinite andcon-| thing 1s radically wrong and it is Walnut Dining Room Suite by day, we have blazoned before our astonished eyes eee tinue with an abiding sense of the/high time to cry out against such Lie 0 detailed accounts of the more or less successful efforts of Q. Is correct to say a “act-\eternal, in Christ's name, Amen. {a dangerous and deadly condition— | pecs eH > “the dirty rich” to corrupt officials, pervert the law and _ | tino” hen? (Copyright, 1924—F. L. Fagiey) | Sen. Heflin (D.) Ala steal from the people. | A. Tho purists would say that !t should bo a “sitting” hen, for the FABLES ON HEALTH en actually sits, but popular usage iia toc aa Give Skin a Chance ing, “Cleanliness is nezt to Godit- | A New York man broke his hand over his wife's head because she had ” s given sanction to “setting. ETE ER Jy | nea?” |]\fR. MANN, of Anytown, took his} But, th ‘ I ei rasnaeh . MANN, : 5 ut, on the more sctentific side - ms. | aa, Ler Sen. Jette W Omer A baths by the calendar and not her hair bobbed, thus learning for the first time he had married one of | ' ae ie quand on “Theeen.” Skin becomes enveloped in a varying | those hard-headed women with ideas of her own. * A a6 by necessity. To him Satur night | layer of perspiration, dust, dirt and Lb TL WIN Fae eRe Htocum| 98 significant because It was bath| grimo; becomes clogged and eries for | i and what was its extent? |sht alr and an opening of the pores; {s LAN disaster, and what was its cztent? eee ining turn ee You can already vision the coming female effects, | visited elght. Two they've mi ns h ntered aceuned of lending aid to liquor law New B Bowl, bobbed hair, speckled dress, onion legs and rain- | >t to make up for It they've looked tation: | violators. : ning 00m Furniture Specially Priced Some exceptional values are offered in these special items for this week. New A wonderful three-piece Bed Room Suits in elther French gray, fvory or walnut, very beautifully finished and a distinctly new pattern. Bow Bed, Vanity Dresser and Chifforette, special for the three pieces $124.50 Dresser, specially priced at $89.75 March 27; 1924, A. The excursion boat, Gen, Slo-| swathed in tight clothes and com. Talia 9 cum, took fire while going thru | Hell Gate, East river, New York city, Juns 15, 1904. One thousand llives were lost. . 3 Q. What are the best forms of format grecting? Dear Folks: ‘There'll be a demonstration at the Stadium, they say, with alt she aviation stunts that men can do today. With aviators com- ing here to show us how they fly, they'll set our spirits hum- ming, as we bid the boys good-bye. Of course they can’t compel us all to go and see the show. They merely come and tell us where the proceeds are to go, And every single penny goes to army men’s relief—in death and want and many kinds of sudden need and grief. Some folks—I've heard them saying, “I can see thom in the air. #0 why should I be paying dough to go and wee them there?’ There's really no denying what they say 1s largely true: werall can see them flying—but'is that enough for you? The program's not completed in the air by half, at best; and only people. seated have a chance to seo the rest. But more than that, we've got to help them make a pile of dough—it isn't decent hot to, when they bring us such a show! So go and buy a ticket! If you view the show from far, to show your spirit, stick it on the windshield of your car. And it you can't afford if, but you want to #00 the flight, then put this sign aboard it—“I'm too poor’—or “I'm too tight!” Grits Yonn, of mind, he would have learned that for conturfes, the bath wa ous pastime among the Egy Romans and Greeks ‘ | In fact, great works of art were created about the baths, and such a state of Iuxtiriance did it achieve that a Seneca, tho Roman philosopher, once A. It is enough to say, “How do) wrote, “To such a pitch of luxury |you do?” or, “How are you?” OF! have we como that we aro dissatis |simply, “Good morning," of “Good jtieq uniess we tread on gems in our evening. eile | baths." | | | | Mr. Mann might go more frequent | @ Is the typewriter ever used!) ty the tub and with greater kee | for social correspondence? | pons aid he know that ho was indulg. A. Tho typewriter is never used) ing in a sport of kings, for strictly social correspondence, | altho it is often used by friends in writing to each other for the sake| of conventence. | q “widow woman” ever used? Efe: One might say “widowed | | woman" if desired | | $6 | » earthquake? Q. When was the Charleston, e A. August 31, 1886, i! : Mi pressed. By bathing we may awaken |the skin to activity, Baths have varying effects upon |individuals, depending chiefly on j duration of time in the tub and heat jot water. They may be either tonic | ‘or suffocating, A bath of about 102 to 105 degrees! can be continued for two or three | | minutes, filling surface blood vessols, | stimulating functions of the brain, heart and nervous system. A short | bath may be taken daily, particularly -|at night before retiring, Bathe oftener and give yout skin a chance, _A new showing of Dining Room Furniture in very pretty combination walnut, Queen Anne style i with 54-inch buffet, oblong table and four chairs with leather seats. This is a wenderful sulte for Spociad this week Tee Cea 1. A lot of new Lamp Shades just received which are attractively priced Convenient 206-210 PINE STREET \7