The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 24, 1912, Page 8

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, but the plot Is sometimes apoiled by bad actore. And it the bad actors are not found on the HERE For you climate. if rervic Lilly Co, 1s (THI INC don ot of Phot Ind A 2149 SELLING OUT srock 3 iv nh To 4 Orr. a BROS. SF Radeon a ASTHMA SUFFERERS Send for Free Sample of ARNOLD'S ASTHMA CURE The Never-Failing Remedy ALBERT HANSEN Established 1883 PRECIOUS STONES, FINE JEWELRY, STERLING SILVER Corner First and Cherry SEATTLE START NOW Learn Millinery. Course Taught. Rusgh und Practica MODEL MILLINERY WaT People’s Bank Bldg. AMUSEMENTS MOORE THEATRE ht and All Week, Bargain Matinee Today, yet Seats, $1.00. Prices—Bvening, 50 to $1.50; Mat- inees, 25c to $1 SEATTLE THEATRE Both Phones 43. , TONIGHT—A’ WREK. ureday, 28¢. ree Math George Barr rent Novel. “GRAUSTARK” pee ss Romantic’ Pi McCuteheo PANTAGES THEATRE || Matinee Dalty. Twiee Nightly Dr. Edwin J. Brown, D.D.S. SEATTLES LEADING DENTIST 713 FIRST AVENUE Union Block. STATE DENTAL WAR A GOOD THING FOR THE PEOPLE Gestal work at prices opeente om_7 teeth; the com- on your ‘hot compe # with cheap dental but with tie high-priced 81 ine Devtiete for leas than halt HENRY MOUTONX Information Wanted} A-reward of one thousand dol- lave (91.000) will be paid in duly, born in Germany Noy Welghed when jeft. hair thin and of light brown color. gray, doep-set and sized eyes’ Wore mustache and chin whiskers. Scar in center of fore- head commencing where the hair starts, running downward to ihe Was his custom to comh Address COMBAD KISSLIZG, 1006 Larkin St., Gian Prancise® Cal.. either, THE SEATTLE STAR_ FUNNY SIGHTS IN FOREIGN SITES TALL TOURIST IN BURMA ATTRACT ATTENTION AND Ss QUIETS THE BABIES * ELEPHANT P ILING TEAK Rangoon, Burma, Dear Bill: Elephants working in Rangoon now are as rare as a white man working in the East. Ma chinery has supplanted them, and the beasts are only used in the jun- gle and in the smaller cities. In a Moulmein mill I saw two of them stacking up planks of toak At one corner of the yard was a shed where the animals were chained when not in use, and right alongside was a hut about six feet high where the driver lived with his wife and children. While at the Moulmein hostelry 1 cultivated the habit of shaking out my shoes and slippers before get- ting Into them. Scorpions are very careleas about the places where they put up for the nig! On the street I saw a most prim- itive baby carriage. It hed a cargo, and a small boy was pushing it and working a# though he would much rather be fishing or down at the docks watching the boate unload The thing had been built of rough boards and with thick, wobbly wheels, In fact, it looked much like the baby carriages we imagine the people of the stone age used, A tall tourist In a duck sult and toupee, with a camera ‘thrown over his shoulder, is a grotesque object anywhere, but in a place like Moul mein, where they are seldom seen, the people make a great fuss over one. : They would rush to thelr doors and peer out at me, and little groups would form on the streets and dis cuss me long aa I was in sight, All thie’ was very amusing, but when mothers would try to quiet their babie# by pointing at thought ft had gone far enough. The little begaars actually did stop bawling and look interested. bia A Final Clean-Up Sale of Ladies’ Mid- Winter Hats BOTH HAND-TAILORED At the Greatest Price ANDO FANCY TRIMMED Sacrifice of the Year. These special offerings comprise a dozen different shapes in every popular color, including solfa colors and two-toned effects, also a few very handsome large excellent qualities. Satin Beaver and Felt Hats in This is an excellent AVIATION this season's tions in feminine head You A re Invited © in our liberal credit system. pear. To partici and ings by paying a very opportunity to purchase at a splendid bargain: MIDWINTE! WEARABL' latest crea- At @ great re duction, tnclud- ing this sea son's Suita, Dre sand Furs, You ean buy clothing small sum down, and the remain- der at your conventence in weekly or monthly amounts, Ae. Outhitting se EASTERN = Co., Inc. ="*Seattle’s Reliable Credit House” SALE of FEATHER PILLOWS products. The Pillows offered stripes. $3.00 Mixed Turkey Feather Pil- lows, size 21x27 $2.2’ inches, pair $4.50 Duck and Turkey Feather Pillows, 95.00 Duck and Goose Feather Pillows, size 20x26 inches, pair $5.50 Duck and Goose Feather Pillows, size 20x26 an $3.95 inches, pair ....... eimiiaiseshinbdepemmiiemecttiamatien’ We offer liberal reductions on all grades of Pillows, the famous Emmerich brand and the Sanitary Feather Co.’s are properly cured, well filled, and covered in fancy art ticks, linen ticks and herringbone $6.50 Goose and Down Feather Pillows, size 22x28 inches, pair $10.00 All Pure Down Foather Pillows, size 23x29 inches, pair ........... $12.00 Finest Goose Feather Pil- lows, size 25x29 : $9.00 inches, pair $3.50 BEACON COMFORT INCHES ose. GAT D Oak Breakfast Table A strong, substantial Table, made of solid oak in the golden fin- ish; size of top 38x50 inches, in the square or round; regular price $6.00, now— Seattle’s Largest Housefurnishing Store Buy Now Pay Later All the Credit You Want PIKE 81. AND FIFTH AV, YOU'LL FIND: IT HERE NEWS OF THE DAY CONDENSED FOR BUSY PEOPLE NEW YORK, Jan, 24.—Surety compantos ¢ burglar and h componies as they remove of dollars’ worth of #e curitios from the ruins of the Hquitable building, 4 AMHERST, Mass, Jan, 24.-Am- herst college faculty attended the diving exhibition of Miss Rose Pitonof, who wears only trunks and veot, but barred the students, who say the faculty is made up of “snobs.” NEW YORK, Jan, 24,—J, Arthur , ho Supreme Court Jus tice Davis has rained his allowance to $16,000, He is worth $2,000,000. ed * & *® Are you hunting quatis onw® Capitol nil? * If you are, the game warden ® ie after you. He says there *® a several people snaring ® quail in the city limits, rightov in the most fashionable dis-® tricts, too, He's gotng to try at to cateh the bird baggers and ® bring the full penalty of the ® Jaw upon them. * Reena eeeeeeeeeeee PASSIAC, N. J., Jan, 24-—When her husband, Rev, A. J. Vanden- heuvel, suspended by his church be- cause his name was mentioned in & divoree sult, was exonerated and reinstated, his wife died of joy, dow tors say. CHICAGO, Jan. 24.—Judge John fined Mra. Mary Czer wimeki $1 for stealing coal from the railroad because she pleaded guilty, Then he patd the fine when he found she had no money. | January 24, 1862, just 50 years jago today, Stonewall Jacksou re | turned to Win- | chester, Va., and Winchester was mightily tickled, for Stonewall brought trophies of the chase to the Po- tomac that cheer. od the hearts of ’ the Virginians. { He had destroy aa ed the federals’ Rema line of sunny, leaptured prisoners and stores, an Hoe onty four men killed and 28 | wounded, although the federal force considerably outnumbered bis own. Date the opening of the muse- ice Fifth av, near Union lpourd of directors of the Washing- iton State Art association Tuesday, |The opening date is to be on Feb- jroary 6, | Fifteenth anniversary of Rev HM. H. Gowen’s pastorate at the Prih- ity Parish charch and bis quarter century in the ministry ofthe [church was celebrated with a din ner and @ good program bythe {Men's club last night. Rev, Go! len was paid splendid tribute io speeches by fellow «lergymen. Mes. B. Samuels, 914 Fifthvavy struck by @ Fort Lawtomscar lat Interbay last night. She os leaped with a few minor brutses about the head and face Prof. Caspar R. Gregory-of the iUniversity of Leipsig will speak lpefore the Seattle branch of the | Archaeological institute of Amer. Hien at the University lub lrow night on “Mount Sin | Monasteries and Manuscript SOUTH ELGIN, IIl., Jan. 24.—The postmastersbip here is going bee: | ging. Nobody will take the job. Business men are considering offer. ing a bonus to prevent the town be- | coming a rural delivery route. An auto ran into wagon drawn by Sam lin which Sam Gabriel was riding jat 14th and Main st. last night Young Gabriel was thrown out by lthe impact and sustained minor |bruises, The auto proceeded on its way before its number could be taken. a delivery Henderson, REKERRERAEREH RES \* # WATER SHUT OFF NOTICE =Water will be shut off on * Twelfth ay,, from East Mad- |® ison st. to East Olive st. * Thursday, January 26, from 9 * | a. m, until 1 p.m, * lchalielahielisiglahalalelabehaliaid “The Potlatch Bug” had been copyrighted by the Seattle Carnival association. Its use will be Mmited and certain restrictions will cover jits use, One hundred members of the Se. jattle Federation of Ministers’ asso- |clation attended the banquet given by the association in the newly- completed Plymouth church last night. Seattie Yacht club will be enter- tained by the Press club tonight. Loss fesulting from the fire at |the Lois theatre has been adjusted, Losses to the building amounted to $4,650, and to Wm. Bloch’s cafe, $2,100, County commissioners rejectéd the offer by Sullivan & Considine of $300 a month for the Coliseum theatre, on a six months’ lease, An entertainment will be given jat the Moore theatre on February 2 to aid in the fight against tuber culosis, The funds will provide room for ten more white plague victims at the Richmond sant- tarium, ‘There will be a Mothers’ meeting at the home of Mra. 8. Wood,'1521 Me ay., tomorrow afternoon at 2:30, | $400,000 for a five-year land of Missouri put across two superlatives in a recent bill he in- troduced in 4he house, It pro. vides for the longest Amert- can road, Wash- ington, Olympia, and it ieto have the longest high- way name “Daughters of the American Revolution mw tional ocean to ocean old trails road.” Congress is to provide half the “cost, the statenthrough which the road goes the other half. eee GEORGE P. BOWLER spent college education at Harvard, according to a money lender who is suing Bim for $30,000, Roulette, in # place on Broadway, New York, cost $76,000; ftuition fees, books and board DIDN'T take the rest. me oT W. P. Borland, Roger Marchetti was elected president of a new club to be formed by local Italian voters of Beattlo as a permanent political organization. A collision between fire truck No. 3 and a light auto truck of the Van Dyke Motor Truck Co, took place at 28th av, and Cherry st. yester day. Lieut. Jas, Maloney was re- jmoved to the Providence hospital. where it was found that, besides other slight injuries, his thumb | was cut off, CHICAGO, Jan, were the cause of 6,000 pupil | Chicago schools failing to pass ex- }aminatiogs last year, according to | Dr. G. W. Dittmar, in an address to local physicians and dentists. | CHAMPAIGN, Iti. Jan, 24-—“The the day ‘when young people are, taught the ectence and art of mat ing.” sald Dr. B. O. Ayleswort Colorado educator, in an address | here, |e aRaRananwatene * AT THE THEATR' *% Moore—"The Deep Purple |® Metropolitan—Anna Held in |* _ “Miss Innocen : | Seattio—"Graustark.” t Orpheum—Vaudeville. ® Pantagee—Vaudevilie. Emprese—Vaudevilie ® Grand—Vaudeville | tion pictures. * * REREKRHHKREAHRHHH and = Mo- seeeeeeeeeee CHICAGO, Jen. 24.—In patching up the shattered domestic tranquil- ity of Ralph Sundbiat, Judge Goode- now advised him: “Never go to bed at night without having settled all your difficulties with your wife.” PITTSBURG, Jan. 24.—A move ment is under way to have the con- | gress of women's #ubs convening here next week, authorize. the boy-/| cotting of butter for 30 days because of high prices PITTSBURG, Jan. 24.—Four cow ples, combined ages total 496 years, took Heenses to mar The oldest is and the 50 The Brute By Berton Brarty. Low-browed and brutish-lipped and} dull, With thickened thews and hardened skull, And eyes that shift and squint and | peer, Devoid of mirth or warnith or cheer, He shambles on his weary way Back to his slum at close of day A Brute? a Beast? unkempt and low? But if a Beast, who made him so? For centuries we tender folk Have fashioned for bis neck the yoke, To keep our fingers slim and white His own have grown to clumsy might; That we might climb to light and sun In darkness has his toll been done; An Ox--unthinking, heavy, slow? But if an Ox—who made him so? * His brow is low—WBE beat it down That we might win to wealth, re- nown; His eye is dull—WE took from him His light, for fear our own would im ; Through all his woe and sweat and pain, We built our palace: And now we call h know If he 18 Beast, who made him so! Judge Forces a Fortune on Map (By United Press Leased Wire) SAN FRANCISCO, Jan, 24.— Superior Judge Thos. F. Gra- ham had to force a dishwasher, Eddie Weeks, at Callente, Cal., to take $2,800 due him from his mother’ tate here. An attor- ney was sent down to the rt town to inform the young of the fortune awaiting n Spain, n Beast—yet m him, Weeks refused to Int himeelf in the money, ai dhe = wouldn't Ci to come and get it. has been there 15 years without leaving. Judge Graham ordered the estate turned over to him, whether he wants It or not. BOGUE PLANS TONIGHT ‘The Bogue plans will be digcuss at the University Community o! ty | summit of thenew education will be | tonight by several speakers. The Ubrery on 10th ay, and 60th st, meeting will be held in the branch | FURNITURE | ORY GOODS Page sconery ts ike that of every-day life. oteasionaily to get better results. FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc. Store Clowes Daily at 6190, BASEMENT SALESROOM Offerings of Special Inte e To Tharsday’s Visitors Spring Models in Crepe de Chine Taffeta Satin A pleasing array of new styles for afternoon or p choose from—in many cases but one garment of a maker’s sample line (purchased at a saving) is emb offering. The Dresses are designed with high or low neck, % or elbow-length, and straight-cut skirts. Some are fective touch by a side frill of dotted net, others have buttons of self material, other are trimmed with b fastenings. Colors: Sizes: The Dresses show careful tailoring and design in every detail, and the values closest interest at $16.75. Silk Waists ~ Special $2.35 ROKEN lines of Silk Waists in soft taf- feta and messaline, in a color-assort- ment that includes black, brown and green, also a few styles in plaid. Sizes 34 to 42. Thursday's special, $2.35. Toweling Ends Clearance At | 10c | Each —a clean-up of short ends in a variety of good-grade Kitchen Towelings — pieces ranging in length from 1 to 2 yards, Spe- cial, tomorrow, the piece, 10¢. Table Damask Remnants Clearance — These are Remnants of Bleached Cotton ‘Table Damask in mercerized finish, 64 inches wide—a good serviceable quality for kitchen or every-day use. Priced to close out as fol- lows -— 11-yard length, special 65¢. 134-vard length, special 75¢. 2-yard length, special 85¢. ~-Basement Salearoom. Underwear Specials Children’s Cotton Vests and Pants Special 15¢ Garment + Medium weight Vests with high neck and long or short sleeves; Pants to match with tight or umbrella knee. Special 15¢ gar- ment, Broken Lines of Children’s Underwear Special 25c Garment Broken lines, including Wool and Silk- and-Wool Pants, also Cotton Union Suits in ankle length, with high neck and long sleeves. Special 25¢ garment. Women’s Cotton Union Suits Special 25c Garment Cotton Union Suits of medium weight, with high neck yen, short ‘sleeves, also low- neck, sleeveless style, in knee length. Spe- cial 25¢ garment. —Basement Salesroom. Black, navy-blue, brown, tan, light reseda, gray, royal-biue, champagne, 16, 18 and 20 years; 34 to 42 bust sm urement, B= Sheets of good quality’ muslin, with patent ters. Size, before hemming, An attractive Thursday sp each, PILLOW CASES, SP. EACH—In good grade bl size before hemming, 42x36 —made with tending around toning in back, with bias folds. in black, li and white cheeks, with white dots 9 also light groun with dark dots. Thursday, 18¢, Hubbard A ruffle at bol value at 23¢. RAPERY Remnants lengths are quoted at ext prices for clearance. Included Cretonnes Swisses Novelty Nets Burlaps F Silkolines Tapestries Oil Cloths in short lengths are for quick selling. Children’s Patent Button turned soles; sizes 1 to 5, without 4 to 8, with wedge heels. Special _ “Eagle” Combination Dressing ish for black shoes. Special for 10¢ box. “American” Waffle lrons Special 65c Each MERICAN Waffle Irons have thick iron pans which hold the heat, and wood handles set in air-cooled sockets. ‘The patent ball socket joints enable one to turn waffles without lifting pan, and base has extended groove to catch any overflow of grease or batter. Special, for Thursday, 65¢. —Hourefurnishings Section Special WO excellent designs offered at this special ff G5c | Set of Six WS g > price—one an engraved vintage pattern, the ! other the popular cut sunburst effect, as illustrated. Unusual value, for the set of 6, at Glassware Section

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