The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 4, 1924, Page 12

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DA. J. R. SINTON Free Examination BEST$2,50 GLAsses od BARTR We are one of the c—-ON FINST AVE. ination free by graduate op etrist. Glasses not preacribea absolutely sary BINYON OPTICAL CO. 16 PINST AYR No Matinee Today LAST TIMES TONIGHT Will King & Co. =i “HOT DOG” New Show T “LOVE and KISSES” HERMIE KIN MASTER MUSICIANS 30 — Ranway Beautios — 30 -cotaaaa CIRCUIT VAUDEVILLE DAILY—2:30-8:15 TMiawienise Be, SOc, THe, SI Metinees—I5e, 35, 50¢_ HENRY SANTREY And Hin Cameo Record Ore! — KR “ z MARRY AND ANNA SEYMOUR Breesy Bits ED AND BIRDIE CONRAD with CHARLOTTR In “L’Eplaode = of the Day JOE JACKSON TORTINO DAVE HARRIS | —_——___ — WALLACE AND MAY PANTAGESCOPE ORVILLE STAMM | Now PLAYING Peeneoment Bae ; Ladies Only, Mat. 1 Today A Massive Stage Production In 3 Parts and 12 Big Scenes —————— Positively the largest and most itly Production of this nature seen here in over fifteen yes ASK RICHARDS Anour, we Business Affairs, Love, §| Lost Articies, PR mente Lower Vieor, $1.10; Bal- 7, Se and Soe; Gallery 200 dren, 300; Adults Mem ZOnTSrPma Cash Prize * $500.00 40 Couples Competing Public’ Dance, 9 to 11 Contest 11 P. M. MASONIC TEMPLE OPPORTUNITY ‘$tar Want Ads |—When “Short: jtrying to develop a ELEPHANTS AND MILKERS HIT Quarantine Rule Compels | Strict Disinfection nd the poor ubjected to di LOS ANGELES HELD MOST WICKED CITY April 4 # are committe: Rr attorne nade tis declaration tn an address be les have an organ ‘crime trust, their own “benefit asso 4 i able to hire sharp free its members at technical! ‘Threo whom he knows of comes from lawyers: 00 on lawyers dertve fat in this souce, one of American ¢ bulwark of Amer! he urged its mem. bers to exert thelr influence to ward the establishmetn of taw and order. :) Alaskan Seeks to Breed New ‘Cussless”’ Cat ANCHORAGE, ALASKA April 4~ Wehnke began ex perimenting with crossing pin ten with cats the outlook w | bright for a new species of combined the sheen of and the spread of the cat. well until some of martenocats escaped and nimals | | had all th . of the mar- | ten for climbing and hopping about, | rustling food in barns and from | | kitchens, but also retained the dis-| reputable vocabulary of a tomeat. Whenever a martenocat mounts telephone or electric light pole, to have an argument with a member of | his species, the neighborhood be | |comes untenable. Now Wehnke Is “cusaless” cat, while carrying out his crossing of puss and mustela penns Ba SR | ORIENTALS HARD LOSERS | TOKYO, April 4—It ts very diff! cult for an Asiatic to grasp the idea of “losing with honor’ or being “defeated but not disgraced,"’ accord. ing to Prof. B. J, Wilden-Hart of th Imperial Japanese University. The Jold attitude of the fatalistic and fou-| |dalistic east, he says, was “win or die."” | ’ GADZOOKS! This gent with the hair vest might be most anything, but you'd never recognize him behind his disguise. He's Aleco Pasha, leader of the J) Macedonian revolution, for whom a reward of a million francs has been posted. Sh- sh-sh, that’s confi ential, tho. ® | SHOW Hit jearry mine-owners to wi “Bill's! Airplanes Carry Min ’ Hip Pocket’s Hea vy P What Become N Klondike May Soon! ers | | gold, | lesa than a day's trip from Seattle. chunks are | sacrilege to me. BY JIM MARSHALL < a day's ride from Seattle s expected to be gold camp will go on the the desertp. Yemong min- party of Seattle engineers tn-| some of the best known men I leave this spring for Alm le vale have been aken from the work miles north of Van distri ouve water From Gol how 4 amense fou world with n work: | values may be compared } fact that $6 a ton oro | jing and yields Much cre given to Dr fon geological covery ts if The urVeY red Taylor toward the fi | USE HYDROPLAN | TRAVEL TO CLAIM | ¥ Vancouver, droplanes fow field, alighting on Tho trip takes less | | j miles the |Taseko lake. than three h All camp supplies, however, to. with miners, leave from ouver over the Pacific Great | tern rallw to Trucks | them 30 miles more and then is a 40-mile pack beyond thag. government this year will build a road to the new camp, stores and hotels will go up and tho old boom} days of Western mining towns will be repeated. | The new country ts well staked | out and not available to small pros. pectors, Two claims changed hands | in Seattle this week for $150,000, | A, William Lohmann, of Dash} Point, Tacoma, is the only Amert- | can director of the Whitewater | Goldfields, Lt4. He, with a party of Tacoma engineers, will leave for the property short! Huge Cougar Falls Victim carry | there |The PORTLAND, Ore, April 4.--Pelt of what is believed to be the largest cougar ever killed in Oregon ts on exhibit in the Portland office of the United States biological survey. Story of the encounter with the 200-pound beast, in which tho animal was killed and Frank Rebeson, goy- ernment hunter, nearly met his death, was told in a message to head- quarters here. Skin of the cougar is 10 feet, 2 inches long, bearing out the claim of the beast’s unusual strength and fe- rocit "Trapped and enraged by pain In his leg, the animal pulled tho chain loose from a log and proceeded about half a mile thru the forests near Mol- lalla, Ho wan finally’ tracked by Robeson’s dog, The hunter followed and fired several times at the animal, His gun was almost empty and tho angry beast was only eight feet away when the hunter fired his last bullet and dropped the cougar to the | compensatt don't have to call the to Huntsman When friends of Lohmann him: “What’ you got on your hip?” he pulls out the three chunks of raw shown in the picture, They're worth $1,885, few days’ run at the Whitewater From and $780. a e re and rep- Goldfields mine, left to right the resent a worth: $757 . tographer LETTERS if, EDITOR name and R AIN VIER All THE NAME OF MT. Editor The Star With all an you letters to The Star m Ave let us call it We owe it t It is #0 unjust to o capt one to call it Tacoma. years ar t Joe Chrtstmas rt store in ‘ ture to fer no VAN os MINNIE CLEA “DRAFT” I to an to purchase a 5 THE oma give the be when we body en country your life or ye forget it." about J whi 1 and we will How draws, War his trip to Alaska, ¢ inthe next war * But how about that clause in constitution? It readsy ‘Py property shail not be taken for f He use, without first making a You can take young man’s life for public pay tn Jaw-bone In the dim an tant future, after the w maybe, afely leave the future of this land| with them, P. H. WILSON, 1330 Eighth Ave NOTICE HE STAR will print no anony- mous letters on this page. When writing to the editor, be sure that your name and address fs styned. Otherwise it cannot be published. British Ready to Give India Self Government Solf-gov jbo tru men’ NEW YORK, ernment for India, stmilar to Cana-| (ian autonomy, awaits only the end- | Pend ing of discord between the Mosiems| The Mc and Hin who compose mont of | accusing India's population. As ac acaitem| antagonistic religionista separate | fight. thetr modes of worship from lems have no intellectual tics, they will be able to show a/jand aro always quarrelsome. united fro the British labor| Before Gandhi was imprisoned government dominion home!two years ago for sedition, he had rulo will foll succeeded in winning the support Tho release of ( umbers of moslems. by the British personal character ts so A move toward fig har-| guilelens ho has |mony in India. The British labor.| ined the confidence of the mos. iten want to give India eyery pos.|!ems whero others have failed. |sthle measure of self-control con- |During Gandhi's imprisonment, sintent with keeplig British tmpert-| however, the old feelings of antag: al interests secure. Absolute Inde- pendence will not be granted by the} MacDonald ministry under any con-| sideration; April 4 1 govern. sas Inde- st the Hindus, fearsome and liling to as the talkers, and to and ndht from prison pun o and Jout afresy Gandhi, however, ts capable, haps, of effecting a new “NOTHING LIKE HOME!” but o soon as’ India can! “Barberry Hill Bootlegger,” owned by Bayard War: Prides Crossing, Masa., is back etiy) a ful trip to New York's gay white ren of home after a most suecess- way. He was adjudged the ground, | best dog in a recent show in Gotham. The Hindus declare the Mos | powers | onisin between the two races broke | per. | reconcilia. | WANT ACTION ON TAXES Merchants Urge Congress to Forget Politics QUAKERS PLAN BIG EDIFICE Philadelphia Wants a Hall That Will Seat 13,000 PHILADELPHIA, April 4~The of @ giant convention jon palace combined, capacity of approx persons and «@ floor > ow © feet for ex- urposes, is being advocat 2.000 100,00 is, the third city in the es, in point of population, f @ giant buildin is a in need ¢ be staged aused the Pt of Commerce t & program wh 4 conventior ace which w Other cities have made construction of 1 enable them to ge Conven- + the present time, | Chamber of « will be made over There aro man United States which have the kind bullding Philadelphia ts seeking. Cleveland is one of the models with a municipal auditorium with a seat- ing capacity of 12,600 persons and| with 70,000 aquare feet of flopr space for exhibition purposes. This audi- m cost Cleveland $6,000,000, Milwaukee is another ci rhich Philadelph valuable suggestions, This city’s au- ditorium contains six halls, the smal est seating 200 and the larg seating 10,000 persons. There also cities thruout ts contained special exhibition space, | dining halls and committee rooms The room for exhibitions totals 104 000 square feet. This building cos } $1,500,000, Buffalo bas a bhildin, jwith 10,000 Detroit, | seats; Kansas City 500 acats; St. Paul, 10,000 12,000 se: 1 tion. gone a the road to home rule. has always failed as a with the British government, Lord Reading, the viceroy of India, who Uberal ideas, has tried repeat ly to persuade Gandhi to declare Jin detail what kind of self-govern- ment for India would bo acceptable | jfor him. If he does this, he will have r toward clearing But € wht negotiator hi But Gandhi has always refused to do this, Ho has insisted that |the British get out of India alto- gether, and then, he says, thero will jtho best thing to do, | No such fantastic plan could be accepted by the British govern: ment, Clvil war undoubtedly would break out among the Indians if the | British army and British officials were to be withdrawn. Then Rus- sia or Japan or some other nation would threaten to step in, and Great Britain would have to return to save India from forelgn molesta- |‘on. | Gandhi's term in prison may have given him time to ponder this controlling factor in tho case. It so, Gandhi ts now in a position to bo the savious of his country. If he 1s willing to indorse a plan for self-government within the British empire, and if onco more he can reconcile the Moslems and Hindoos, India will find a successful solu. tion of her administrative difficul- ties, Should. Gandht stil! remain ob- durate, he will have to give way to another leader. Anyone, then, who can smooth over India’s do mestio religious difficulties and who will not dodge details of self-gov- ernment will become tho national leader, Bring Body From Islands to City The body of Dr. Ivan A, Parry, well-known Seattle phystelan, who died March 18, whilo on a trip to the antipodes, wil arrive at Van. couver Friday, aboard the liner Nie ogara. M. A. Arnold, president of the First National bank and a rela. tive of th deceased, will bring the body to Seattle, whore funeral sorv- {ces will be held Monday afternoon, at 2 o'clock, in the Bonney-Watson chapel, be a divine revelation showing India | 10,000 | riche, who want to go to French and| Waists ats, and Toronto with | | Another large shipmer pretty shoes for spr’ ing wear rived this week, including aan els in Airedale Beige and Jack tabbit Gray, that you will surely like.. The price: $4.75 to $8.75 One of the pleasing new mod- i is “The Green- wich,” pictured above. It is only one out of many we have to, show you, including some charming “‘step-in” style Baxter & Baxter 1326 Second Ave. now Open | $50, 000, goes entirely to his widow, according to his will, which has con admitted to probate. | af you value your watch, iet a | watchmaker repair It. Next Liberty | theater.—Advertisement. WOMEN! DYE > ANY GARMENT OR DRAPERY Draperies Ginghams Stockings Diamond Dyes | Bach 15-cent package of “Diamond Dyes” contains directions so simple any woman can dye or tint any old, |worn, faded thing new, even if she |has never dyed before. Drug stores sell all colors.—Advertisement. April 20th Z quarters—at 401 and 403 East Pike St. ¥rom tit the me you can buy your accessories at a big saving, as we aoare want to move any more than necessary. | Our New Store Will Feature Accessories for Less—and TIRES °N CREDIT H# A Fall Line of Camping Eq ment WIll Be Carried in Stock aw) 2008 WESTLAKE PP. y urday Until 9 P.M. MA fn-7251 | German Travelers Curbed by Passport Rules BY CARL D. D. GROAT (United Prest Staff Correspondent) BERLIN, April 4. —Germany has taken drastic measures to curb lay-/| ish expenditures by her cary Fe abroad. Hereafter passports and ex- tensions of the same will cost $125 id other difficulties will be thrown the way of German nouveau in Kimonos Dresses Sweaters Italian resorts to spend thelr money. | Skirts Issuance of all visas was suspend. | ed yesterday for two days, prelimi- | Coats |nary to establishment of the new passport regulations. Commercial! travelers and journalists are hoon ed from the heavy passport fee. | Inland hotels and resorts are glee-| | ful, believing the new regulations | will turn a flood of profiteers and “sehiebers,"" who “hitherto have splurged on the French and Italian baie ivieras, to home Limecain’ | Burnside Estate Totals $50,000 The estate of Charles B. Burnside, late vice president of tho Dexter Horton National bank, valued at LAST FLIGHT! }) | PERFECTED MOVIE PHOTOS NOW OPEN Have You Seen It? Folks say its worth a trip from any part of town. Visit ors are welcome. It you have’ children you will bo especially interested in the MOVIEGRAPIL method. (Opposite Pantages Theatre), Brooke Hyde Pearson, 31,| U. S. air mail pilot, saw! service with the British forces in Egypt, Mesopo-| tamia and on the French} front and escaped without a} scratch. But. while flying) into Cleveland with the mails from New York, his plane crashed to the ground near Bellefonte, Pa. His body was found beside its charred ruins, | |

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