The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 10, 1925, Page 7

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TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1 THE SEATTLE STAR CHARGE DIVORCE IS INVALID Plaintiff In London Suit} May Still Be Wife LONDON that the a The Taileur oem $59-59 to $69.50 oo March © whith 10,—Chari Mra. Ds The taileur is character- . t her tormer husband, ized by its slenderizing mh se annleee Rahe Dennistoun, who already * Q lines. Some of the coats has admitted engaging in intimate are even longer than the Cane: DibE Rabe eo inietoe model illustrated. These sigh emmal la ged wrth one: reat tae lard, today was tc ce 16 hotel at-| who will seek to identify her as the woman who stayed thelr hotels as the wife of several men. LEAGUE SOLVING TAX PROBLEM Appoint Commission Study Double Taxation styles reach almost to’ the t bottom of the skirt. Braid, tucks and flat buttons are used effectively as trim- | mings. at | | to} GENEVA, March 10—-As a means | wreckago that ever came to Boa. | TheTailored Suit Sin the cl tthe ham. |rtern conty thi ing of United] South American, German and thi British for . th For the Stylishly Stout Matron cota The stylishly stout matron will find the lines} P=! of the strictly tailored suit most flattering. : Sizes 46 to 54. erta, to atud question n Chamberial ann of today's » had signed the le arbit under commercial ing to ng | counell decided to Invite Mex-| 1 Beuador to sign the drug con- Blouses le For the Taileur DISCUSS TRADE Complete the taileur with a dainty blouse. | There are smartly tailored blouses, dain- ty lace trimmed mod- els and French beaded blouses to choose from. CREDIT GLADLY 1332-34 Second 209 Union Chamber of Commerce De- | partment Gives Luncheon | des dep @ under utive comm soon In t n open Mm ch the con topl take | on: 4 Plan Funeral for Noted Local Actor 20 years, We Guar- antee a Boy’s Body Kept in years, the body of served in a jug of alcohol that also} contained several century-old Ameri-| } coins, was unearthed today by workmen excavating for a new build ing opposite the Glencove bank D body and said it must hav alcohol at least a century. dates on the coins were not legi | they were of a type that were with-| wa j drawn from circulation prior to 1860. | 12 Arrests Are Too | | _ Much for Brocolli | Two arrests at the same time are |too many for 8am Brocolli or Sam | | Brock been In While 1) Values that defy competition! C. Lyle’s dry agents In a raid. At| Values that will compel the |}|the immigration station Deputy U.| ladies of Seattle to recognize §. Marshal Eugene Laird recognized |him as Sam Brogk, wanted for con- | spiracy to violate the prohibition | law. Sam is now secking additional ball to enablo him to “get out.’” that in the purchase of Finely Tailored Sport and Dress Coats, | it is not possible to duplicate | Herling’s prices. To introduce these magnificent | values to Seattle we have re- duced our margin of profit to practically nothing for these opening days. We are selling > Drys Smash Bars and Arrest Four Julia Mayfair, barmaid, and George Nakamura were in tho {m- migration station and thelr “soft drink bar” was in kindling wood em will be held for) baby boy, pre-| we Fred Hernstein examined the |. Last week he waa arrested by Roy |§ [ T iny Bit of Wreckage Beside developing the ter- ritory, running a railroad, regulating seal hunting, and\| doing a score of big jobs in Alaska, Uncle Sam finds time; to look after tiny Alberta Rose Adamson, waif of Sit-|' ka. A childish wreck, she was brought to Seattle, has been repaired under direction of the bureau of education and is to be trained in a gov- ernment school near Anchor- age. | —Ph rer & Bradley, | Photographers LBERTA ROSH ADAMBON, one} ; of the smallest bits of hum nal ing in this elty with Mra. 105th st. and st th beth arms and t Alberta was found n tho beach at Sitka, L She fa naid to been handled in @ quarrel be her white father Officials of have t and native the Alaskan school system took care of her and nent her to Seattle Her broken bones had set crookedly, due to lack of attention. At the Orthopedic hospital here the bones were rebroken and reset T hited Stateso bureau of edu a Dr. J. T. Wagner asked the Washington Children under Department Wars Against Alien | Smuggling BY WILLIAM J. McEVOY United Press Staff Correspondent Press) March 10.—Stop. | oo in the Can aries of the admittedly Hons, in the department of ainen J. Davis, onter erm, will shortly call | rt immigration and | erence congrons af. | . with a view to wal to congrens | © as a basis or a per-| Saving of Absolute From $10 Money-Back in the profees to $15 on Guarantee ae Seared (ie, hens ton: : ie in the Ea. ‘ A wat a Garment! saves m.06 yhianindbaodde a ear a ems of immigration reg noe WESTLAKE AYE company to play In the sot awe ted also | artment now operates, mpered by a large n of whi ttment, that Davin believes codification 1s the} mosty Important step to be taken now, “The laws podge,"’ Davis sa semble a bunch of small packages tied up in a big package, We want ull of them unwrapped, consolidated and bundled in one container.” | Davin plans to increase his force | of immigration agents to cope with | the smuggling problem. Ono feature | of the program !s to placé his most skillful agents at the most likely points of illegal entry, “Gratitying progr hodge- | oda. “They ' according IS THE ONE FUEL home to care for her, Eklutna, 28 miles north of Davis’ Job Will Be to Stop Leaks on James J. Davis partments’ work tn concilia are going on. During the last fineal year, ened strike 475 were settled t tho commisstons. 1 tho federal Stato nelew nests arch 10. go report for February increase the pr month. tonnage on Febru ‘The census bureau estimates that $5,000 on thy average must vostes ntr ‘The home accepted and placed her with Mra o 8. Boxer, to the bureau's plant at Anchor He hopes to con i co of th uu the efforts of | and local om{im: 7,448 tons over that of] . 1 O SEL TONNAGE REPORT / PS ~—United vide work for ono man HERE is the same reason for pasteur- izing cheese that there is for pasteurizing milk —tomakeit pure, whole- \ some and safe for hu- y 3 man consumption. For cheese. is but another : way of preserving milk. Kraft American Cheese | is a pasteurized cheese girl t —the finest of Western i madecheese,selectedby , : one standard only— quality. You willnever ["/ be disappointed in the cones @ cheese you buy if it > \ bears the Kraft Labél. be in- Varieties i Bizen 14 to 44 and Domestic Fabrics. ond K gita and Mra, ie Oke i THIS CAPTIVATING COAT, EXACTLY Falls on Pitchfork $15. BETWEE 2nd Floor, Home Savings Bldg.—1520 Westlake Ave. PINE AND PIKE ON WESTLAKE AVE. practically at cost; and the cost was exceedingly low, due to the tremendous purchasing power | of the great Herling organiza- tion. Latest styles in Imported as pictured, in an exceedingly splendid fabric, only § Every woman in Seattle owes it to herself to inspect Herling’s Ladies’ Coats. INC. vst hblintettltaradpedatabomte rte net att a eg Tuesday, following a Monday night visit at 122 Washington st. by Will- jam Whitney and a squad of federal dry agent ax-wielders, The agents also chopped into the New Bruns- | in Dad’s Barn, Dies | BUC Ore., March 10.—Lloyd Johnson, son of Mr, and Mra, Ivan Johnson, died hero o# a re- j}sult of injuries suffered yesterday in his father’s barn when he fell on a pitehfork. One of tho tines penetrated tho! lad's braing, Manuals to Be Used in Training Camps | Tho war department in publishing new training manuals, entitled “studies in Citizenship,” for use in the oltizens' military training oe! and rosorvo officers’ training The primary object of this instritc tion is to awslat the students to per form their duties, both civil and mili- | tury, with Intelligence and an appre: ciation in full measure of the obliga. tion Impowed by citizenship, for cooking almost instantly. which produces any desired temperature The Up-to-date GAS RANGE is without a competitor where speed and accuracy of temperature are important fac- tors in cooking. Lorain Automatic Heat Controlled Gas Ranges ® do superior cooking with Speed, plus Accu- racy. 1308 Fourth Ave. Seattle Lighting Company MA in-6767 ‘ Swiss Brick Pimento American Old English (Sharp American) 1 Ib. and’8 Ib. loaves »* Also 5 Varieties in Ting q 4 4 Wy Pasteurized for Purity aw Live to Be 1 But Not HiCAGO, March 10,—Tho average length of Hfo will rench 100 r 2,000, Dr, Gilbert on and member of clared at the Amorican Modicu sociation here today noy ts toadily tne » tho following y of fe in 1775 yours; 1926 100 years aT your years; 1975, 80; 2 ‘Tho big increase in life expectancy during the past 60 years can be traced to the “germ theory” of dis- wa Sages Fanny ‘Hurst’s Father Is Dead 8ST. LOUIS, March 10.—Samuel Hurst, father of Fanny Hurst, died 00 Years— lg y outhoress had been called here be- een ea fore her father's death. ease, Dr, Mitzpatrick sald, THY germ ys | theory mado {t possible to-trace| ‘The Mississippi! supreme court has } and isolate diseaso germs and find|held that honey bees are domesti- | cure for atiments though incurable, |cated animals and that therefore | he sald, their owner {8 Mable for any dam- or vontrol of dict, less crowd: {#80 Which they caune, Tho court TF mereta OF alot, loss crowd: | iwarded man $260 for two mules , 6 18 reuchod, {Stung to death by bees of a neigh. trick declared “Suge | means must be found to alr pu balanced dicts, crowding an lodical examin: is by physi sential, he Some expert has figured ont that pro are 626,019,539,600 different hands in a pack of playing ere must be to Overseathing,® | ma Dr, Fitapatriok sald, They will have} fresh vitaminos have not boon killed a plonty of fresh foods in which the| by poor methods of preservation.” « Yala

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