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The Olympian from Olympia, Washington • 8

Publication:
The Olympiani
Location:
Olympia, Washington
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE SUNDAY OLYMPiAN OLYMPIA WASHINGTON PAGE EIGHT SUNDAY MORNING JULY 12 iwa NOW AT LIBERTY THEATRE out of Tenlno was also discussed and a committee was appointed to investigate 1 OLD AT CAPITOL STATE OFFICIALS APPROVE STATE WPa '(Continued amount of yet to be done" Ul Mayor Haskell WenatiL' Our city would proftably fully undertake a continued gram to the extent of at per cent of what was already Kitsap County Commissioner wV ter Rue Bremerton: most certainly doing needed bm useful work under the WPA" Mayor Wilder Blaine- -a should be used in the selecttcn 5 projects in order to get higher gree of efficiency through haM labor methods" PUN TO SAN FRANCISCO July Shopkeeper Hyman Oorwitc pleaded Innocent today to setting Mg steel-jawed traps to catch the hands cf little children who assertedly annoyed him Two housewives testified Gorwltz 56 concealed the dangerous instruments under thin layers of dirt in his back yard and baited them with shiny pieces of metal resembling dimes The traps were' epough to hold a wolf" said Assistant District Attorney Terrence Boyle Raise Bond $2000 Municipal Judge Daniel O'Brien called the traps most vicious ever brought into this court He raised Gorwltz bend from $500 to $2500 pending trial July 15 Gorwltz is charged with assault with force to produce great bodily harm The maximum penalty is ten years in prison a $5000 fine or both The storekeeper who operates a email place in a residential district complained of "vandalism" by chil- dren Abraham GlickBerg attorney for the accused man said Gorwltz had planned an out-of-town trip and because cf past trouble had set the traps to protect his property "Gangs of Gorwltz said had made repeated raids on his property and everything they could cany away" made complaints to the police DENIES years ago And just as Mrs Penlington rejoices at the smell of the mudflats Mrs Pinkerton Is Joyous over the fact the trees at Del Un Cablllito turn yellow In the fall-just like Washington's The Trevor Kincaid one son and five lives in Seattle Major and Mrs' Kenneth Kincaid and their son jire in San Francisco (Major 'Kincaid has retired from active service) and the Morden Kincaid family one son and two daughters are in Portland Mrs Pinkerton was the only one bom in Olympia Dr Kincaid was a northern surgeon in the Civil -War and after Appomattox Dr Kincaid went back to Canada to claim his bride Work Complete Two manuscripts Mrs Penlington has now completed and almost ready' for the publisher may prove to be her most brilliant work in connection with the Japanese stage They are concerned with the Japanese marionettes (nearly life size figures that require three persons to manipulate the strings) and the old idealistic stage of Japan the No Three -days under martial law in the imperial hotel when high Japanese officials were assaskiated in Japan's recent purge whole days spent in Japanese theatres: day after day and month after month of contact with the high and low of Japan intimate knowledge of the Japanese actors (there are no actresses) an earthquake stricken city all of these things are painted on the memory of Mrs Penlington And Olympians may look forward with certainty to the day when they may read the description of these days written by Mrs Penlington always Zoe Kincaid to her home city- But although a family of celebrities they still get homesick for the tall trees and salt water of the northwest Mayor A McGillivray Bruner ton: has more than matched dollar for dollar with fed eral expenditures on WPA" "Many of the letters" saw Improvements just put into effect by recent rulings cf Harry Hopkins the National WPA administrator MINISTER MARRIES Cl( bei ing dei pn rep Cle ten rep Clark Gable and Jeanette MacDonald teamed for the first time in "San Francisco" with Spencer Tracy soar to new heights in this flaming romance of the Barbary Coast directed by the man who gave the screen "Naughty Marietta" and "Rose Marie" Now at the Liberty with "The First Baby" -t HYDE PARK Ys July llUp) President Roosevelt beamed his ecDroval Mrs Ruth Bryan Owen United States minister to Denmark was married today to Capt George Rohde a gentleman in 1 waiting to Denmark's King Chris- tian We per ing a tbi Sco All of the romance the rich down-to-earth humor and kindliness that mark Will Rogers' performances have been captured in the picture which marks the climax of the great career Old Kentucky" now at the Capitol Theatre Adapted' and modernized from Charles for thirty years Old Kentucky" presents Rogers as a philosophical humourous horse trainer who breeds colts into champions and smooths the course of love for youngsters in the sunny south The plot of this colorful romance revolves about the rivalry between two feuding Kentucky families both anxious to produce champion hor3ss Rogers is the trainer for the wealthy- Shattucks first then for the Martingales And the Shattucks replace him with a young man brought from the East Russell Hardie who immediately falls in love with Nancy Martingale played by Dorothy Wilson Through plot and counterplot the the smashing rarprte cllma that JVM Rogers proves his aM11y Bill Robinson king of tap dancing sidekick in Old Ken supporting cast Sellon Louise Dinehart we are Showing starring Eleanor Dickie Moore OLYMPIAN RETURNS AFTER LONG STUDY TENINO July Directors of the TPnino Chamber of Commerce and representatives from Buccda and Tono met Wednesday evening to plan an effort to secure the completion of a road to the jetty quarry up Skookumchuck river gorge The CCC road at present within a mile and a half of the quarry and two bridges may be required Another meeting will be -held on Thursday July 16 at which time further Information will be available from an investigation A committee for this purpose includes Felix DeLlsle and Stokes of Bucoda Al Colvin PtUt M' Major ox Tenino The matter of a rural mail route ECONOMY WASH 9 a Flat work ironed wearing apparel dry DAMP WASH Lb CURTAINS Each Conserve your strength enjoy life to its fullest Send us your laundry worries and see how cheaply it can be done STAR LAUNDRY Phene 254 1 ing a piece of pertified wood six to 10 Inches in diameter weighing 80 he added the vandalism con- pounds The piece came from Ari-tinued I then set the traps but they zona He plans to make one large Aluminum is the most abundant at metal in the earth's crust but not 'i Spej until 1886 was it inexpensive enough car to be used for commercial purposes i noc egg i Lei Hot sty Lev ing div RAY WALKER 1 net 4 Pie A In wsJ i i An erl P01 i on the car en COOLING WINDS SEND RAIN TO DRY AREAS (Continued from pafee one) flllnLS'ZdP'SZ i 1 Forecaster poyd said the mass) of cooling air originated in the 1 057 Capitol Way Phone 1290 MAXWELL CUSTOM CANNERY hoi i PEAS For Canning at 2V2C per lb DIVISION and HARMS STS Thomas McConkey was added to the board of directors through an appointment by Andrew Wilson president of the chamber The Centralia ball team is scheduled to appear on the Tenino fair ground field Sunday at 2:30 to 'play the Eagles of Centralia The visitors will display a number of new players in the setup ROSALIE TO SEEK POLITICAL OFFICE (Continued from page one) Miss Jones is the holder of five cc lege degrees and a lawyer in her own right She Inherited a New estat fortune from her In divorce trial witnesses I testified that Mrs Dill called her husband a coward and a crook" after he helped swing the presidential nomination 1932 presidential nomination tc FTanklin Roosevelt and the vice presidential spot to John Garner She testified she was keenly disappointed when Dill failed to get the vice presidential nomination FREDDIE KNOCKSDOWN RISKO IN FIRST ROUND (Continued from page one) round decision over young Corpuz Seattle in the lightweight division Both weighed 131 pounds Al Hostak Seattle captured a four-round decision over Sidney Brent Seattle Both were middle-weights Brent was substituted for Dick Johnson Portland who failed to pass the physical examination before the bout The referee had not been announced at 7:45 Scores of newspapermen from all over the Pacific coast were at the ringside The latest odds were 10 to 7 in faver of the two-fisted Tacoma 7 in flugger Some odds were 10 to 6 If there was any advantage for either fighter in the postponement it was figured to be on side as it gave him a chance to add two or three pounds Steele's normal fighting weight! has always been: under 157 and he was not expected to gain much Both boxers were in scclurion all of the day Rlsko whiled away the day at his camp at Edmonds while Steele was quartered in a downtown hotel a $70000 said Promoter Nate Druxpian who predicted 30000 persons would pack the ball park before the preliminaries started A captain is empowered to conduct a marriage ceremony on his boat if the occasion arises MARGARET CALLAHAN Rhodes I HOBBYISTS SEEK BEAUTY IN STONE (Continued from page one) section and eight paper weights The men have just finished cutting a bunch of ladies coat buttons of from one to two Inches in diameter from petrified roots and limbs in a newly unearthed petrified forest in Eastern Washington -Bartran at present is cutting up some variegated and oolitic (egg shaped) jasper which is only found insofar as is known in a small sec tion of Grays Harbor county The men have a big supply of agate op- als of different kinds sard (dark brown agate) and all forms of jasper Locate New Beds They have located several beds of and cay wJch1 4iey are ring to the geological department of the University of Washington That the news of their findings and work is spreading is Indicated by letters on hand asking them to send sample blocks to England Bartran is assembling a complete array of all minerals and combina tions of ere of the state which hs later plans to display California has and makes much ado over her rose or Egyptian jas- per Bartran said but we have some here also with smaller and handsomer markings Which takes us back to the ori- gipal premise the outside of the rock is no Indication of its real beauty have learned to let lay the agate which appear cn the surface to be beautiful and take the ugly common stones for they have the real value" Bartran explained Both men have their laboratories at their respective dwellings Pope at 314 North Quince Bartran at 123 Rogers avenue' MARTIN ADDRESSES POLICE CHIEFS HERE (Continued rrom page one) parently the majority of the members found they did not want to support after they assembled in convention today Oxmcnd said association members consulted attorneys here and decided to change the name of the organization and elect new officers During the late afternoon the discussion concerning whether to support the magazine or reimburse the publisher for money already expended was more or less heated and by 5 the meeting broke up Other officers of the new association are: First vice president Carl Hansen Weiiaicnee second vice president Frank Osmond Vancouver secretary-treasurer John Walker Olympia EDITOR PASSES SEATTLE July 11 Funeral services will be held here Monday for Harry Steele 67 editor' and publisher of the Cordova (Alaska) Daily Times wlo died here today after a long Illness THE AMAZING StfORY 7 criminal lawyer who turned aw tha killers he hod defended! (Continued from page one) gle with the ups and downs of the publishing business in a land where Japanese are many and English comparatively few the Far East was rounding the comer when the disastrous earthquake of 1923 struck Earthquake Days All the work of 12 years crumbled with the crumbling buildings For a year Mr and Mrs Periling ton were in London working and studying trying to forget the horror of- the earthquake The same year Mrs Penlington published Tokyo Vignettes and' in 1925 the book that established her as the western authority on the Japanese stage That book is the Popular Stage of Three years ago while traveling with a party in Manchoukuo Mr Penlington was attacked by bandits Although he was able to return to Tokyo his death soon followed the result of the shock and exposure suffered at the hands of the Chinese bandits Mr Penlington's death ended the Japanese era in Zoe life Her work with the Japanese theatre and dance was nearly completed her mastery of the Japanese language was perfect and her interests again lay In the northwest Desperately homesick at times in the past 20 years she had nevertheless felt she still had much to learn from Japanese culture Now she is anxious to translate that knowledge into terms of this newer country She does not expect to return to Japan For the summer months- she Is lecturing at the- University of Washington where her brother Professor Trevor Kincaid is head of the zoological department She plans to come back to Olympia for few days rest after her lecture course and then will give the same ccurse at the Universities of Oregon California and Stanford In October she is slated to lecture before the Japan Society Jn San Francisco Fiction Written Several books of fiction' by Mrs Penlington are now awaiting publication She Is fairly bubbling over with plans and enthusiasm for her future work and she is so glad to be where she can smell the mudflats! Mrs Pinkerton youngest of the Kincaid family followed in her sister's footsteps at the Seattle P-I and then went on with newspaper work in Cleveland But she couldn't get back to the Pacific coast fast enough California was the next best thing to Washington so the Pinkertons started a at in entura It was a long hard struggle there depression years and years of working too many hours a day The Pinkertons liveon a hundred acre ranch 12 miles from on the edge of the Ojai valley Del Un the One Horse is the whimsical name of their place and Mrs Pinkerton states it was quite literally true when they moved thfere seven north Pacific ocean Its eosward movement he said constituted his basis for the statement: indications of a break up in the heat in the northwest are seen new moss of cool air from the and Virginia Weldler North Pacific is moving over the north Rocky mountain Idaho Montana and Wyoming causing showers and cooler weather in that A few hours' later the Chicago weather office said the cooling tern peratures had reached western Idaho and as far south as western Colorado Heat Continues In East But heat and drought continued their ravages over the remainder of the west north and south The prospective death for the torrid wave electrified domestic grain markets and they plunged downward In the-meantime the federal aid program for relief of -drought sufferers moved on The first week of its operation in -North Dakota' one of the most severely- hit states found 4000 cropless farmers enlisted in WPA projects In Birmingham Alabama Resettlement- Administrator Rexlford TugweU estimated 50000 farm families- of Georgia Alabama: and South Carolina were destitute from the drought He said his agency expected to make -direct emergency grants of approximately $15 monthly per family to half of the number Roosevelt dbes not intend to allow any drought stricken family to go in want" he declared Temperatures in Baltimore and Washington CM rose rapidly toward the 100 mark Across a sun blazed stretch from Dixie Canada also counted its heat fatalities at near 100 The mercury continued to climb though cooing showers fell on western prairie pro vinces Across the border Montana received a general rain but insufficient to wipe out more than $6000000 crop losses already chalked up against the drought The forecast was heartening however more rains The cooler temperatures in sections of Colorado were accompanied not only by showers but by snow A dust storm blew in the southeastern part of the state to complete a varied weather picture and heads a which includes Charles HOnry and Alan On the same bill Whitney Tom Keene were not open" PRESIDENT DEDICATES PUBLIC WORK PROJECT cials of city state and nation head- NEW YORK July ed by President Roosevelt joined today In dedication of the greatest i public works project yet completed I the $64000000 system of bridges and elevated highways connecting the Boroughs of Manhattan Queens and the Bronx Immediately after the ceremonies the great modern artery known sim- Fly as the Triborough bridge was opened for public use and contlnu ous streams of traffic started The 2000 Invited guests who sat in the sweltering heat at the dedication heard President Roosevelt refer to the project as A symbol oft nglng human needs which call for up-to-date government in place of antiquated government" Surrounded by many notables Including Gov Herbert Lehman changing human needs which call' Mayor LaGuardia James A Farley and Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes the president said: are a few among us who stlll consciously or unconsciously live in a state of constant protest against the daily processes of meeting modern needs Most of us are willing to recognize change and give it reasonable and constant help" STARTS TODAY Continuous Show 1 te 1 1 THE GREATEST STAR The screen ever knew ROGERS IN THE GREATEST 1 PICTURE OF HIS CAREERI TOM KEENE ELEANOR WHITNEY DICKIE MOORE VIRGINIA WEIDLER -The picture you hove been waiting for Don't miss it! i 1 I 6 II ll a a 1) ii tl 3 ci li na 01 VI tt Si ai ti is Pi la of rv 2C bl Ir ca Hove POPULAR STARS NOW AT LIBERTY -AND bile -her the -T9 nf from i inakejr tta rdork Gable oral Jeanette MacDonald head a brilliant cost ini the exciting: new picture "Son Francisco which opened yesterday ot the Liberty Theatre with 'The First Baby".

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About The Olympian Archive

Pages Available:
1,012,761
Years Available:
1923-2024