The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 8, 1919, Page 2

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THE SEATTLE Ou Will enjoy shopping in this great MAIN FLOOR Toy Store! —easy to reach--no elevators—large and prompt service! —a very extensive showing of toys, dolls roomy— nd children’s furniture, includjng the latest mechanical inventions in TOYDOM. out of town folks— —send for our TOY CATALOG —VISIT OUR DOLL, HOUSE—an exhiba of special interest to little folks and grown. of — dolls—moderately and 16¢ (out ft eet) wil! get one of hese little “Peer a" wagtns, body a cute little Santa Claus Christmas tree ornament, MAIN FLOOR, TOY DEPARTMENT. x11 inches, Im our Main Vloor Toy (No maa paint od Store. orders) an albseteel tthe fellows from four to years old, I¢inch front wheel, 10 inch back wheels, EXTRA SPE MAL VALUE $3.90, velocipede for the $1.49 instructive and amusing toy; works on the same principle as real ma- chine guns; it is perfectly harmniess, but will give plenty of excitement for the boy: special 81.49. 1.98, a very TT) a eu be that wit every little girl just Uke Jar 3 txt teak: menthiy paymento— buy « “Adtake” Suventio ii ndard mod $19.50 TO $64.50 © complete showing for boys and Kirte of ai) ages; beet mak eredes of Bleycies at fe mechanical hook and ladder— $1.75 —made of sheet teel, nicely painted n yellow and red; equipped with frie- motor; size 13 inches long; $1.73. Played by two « plays twelve games: sets of joker in a box 54x one. and s1— J —these blocks are Imches square, containing the entire alphabet. Packed te a box 8x13 inches— inches high, with shown) ts 23 inches finished golden; extra spectal, —a MERCHANDISE CERTIFICATE in the 1 giver” used, practical answer to “what sh sued until in any amount—¢ and 13¢ (owt It eut) o —— submarine chaser: special— 2le 4 tnetruct horse and 1 tent: spe cial for the set ate. $1.15 this train eon. engine nd ie track train 3 extra a) 81.15 metal wheels Length 20 inches; price 62.40, $10.50 winging horse € 1 y length over inches. helght inches; horas aiated gray, frame tn d bas bent tron race under horee; $1.65 —rubber-tired has strong spel apd rune in The gong rin ng as it awit doll cart— PAR--MONDAY, D long while, ke & steam shovel. deat doll for iit de ones—it can not be broken. 1 ‘nches long. 85. ~these ~pretty doll with a cute face, Neatly trimmed colored dress. Unbreak: able head and hands, 11 inches long, 95e. 7 STANDARD FURNITURE CO. | 101 to 111 South Eleventh St., Tacoma ve., at Pine St., Seattle —e hi Mren’s handy blac kboard reight set up 36 inches; of board 13x) extr special, 46e. inches; jointed body Kidette dolls — dolls have been made to take \place of the real kid bodies, ‘is doll and we are sure that the charming atures will cause you to go into raptures vhe head eyes and has good quality wig. removable slippers and stockings. 14 inches long 15 inches long b 17 inches long.. L. Schoenfeld & Sons $2.25 —a very dol cart. Height to haridie 33 inches. Frame 16 inches long, 7 Rubber tired 5% inches fiameter.\ Has top ixd inches Will hold a doll up to 14 Inches, $2.25. durable ins, w size auto wiz —this baby anxious to be some is 80 body's Head made tion, playmate and hands of compont good quality mohair wig. Wears this doll white dress and re hf]. nice white vith bonnet nateh movable shoes and stockings. Height 95e. unbreakable. long, S5e, 11 in. nehes “Litll> Sunshine” ‘Littl: Sunshine 90¢ aa -this dolly ‘% anxious to m the acquaintance of some nice little girl Won't you invite her to your home? Her dress is attractively trimmed. 11 inches long. Head and hands are made of composition, 90c, the We recommend in is made of bisque, with moving Jointed body, wears drewa to Compost n head and handa, 11 SCEMBER 8, 1919, TO CONTINUE COAL SAVING IS UNEXPLAINED: Passenger Train Schedules Are Cut Today CHICAGO, Deo, & tion was continued today dications that the strike the end neorva pite in- miners Coal c¢ de of was near The rangements railroads followed and cut passenger train schedules between Chicago and the Pacific coast by one-third. Htore out ar in Chicago adopted a new thm, opening at 12 Office » fo 3:0 working hour and el lings we } dule Fuel administr nounced intentions ment would neconalty for Even if the miners go bach it will be three pt on the ton of a officals an ntrile settle wen the ervation is nettlod and to work diately, weeks bef delivery of fresh coal can be started, and it will take probably all winter for the mines to catch up with the demand im FORD SISTERS CAPTIVATING Dance to Music of Their Own Jazz Band The dan ansixted by a jazz pand, have a real head-line effect in thelr act which the ord Sisters, ers, ably Moore saudi Orpheum per- quite captivated ence at the new formance Sunday There two young ladies, good to k upon, not only like mons, but wear clothes that are ntartling and original. The delight- ed au‘lence was loath to let them eave the stage | Our old friend, Stuart Barnes, he jor the married cla continues te * ad bh veerful marital propa ganda in which he advises al young unmarried men to take the joap if they expect ever to enjoy | real happiness. Mar, another Orpheum former ne Hor newly dance Grace de ite of effectively. woman the never marry, but who went uckoo when she ught the br t quot, and her™hard bolied flap per’ at the movies all won for | Mies De Mar the plandits d% the ‘audience Jane Barber and Jerome Jacks one tall anf the other short, kidded thelr way thru 20 minutes of non- senee. Jerome, who is about six [feet nix inches tall, @xplained just | why the government wouldn't take him into the army. | Edna Louine and Billy Frawley. jin a skit prepared for them by | Jack Lalit, present a sophisticated |cigar counter love scene, reeking |with breery repartee and. snappy | comebacks | Sterling and Marguerite, acrobats. Jaleo sing a little, while the How jards have a number of dogs, poneys and a monkey who perform Tiny Burnett's orchestra, an | jusual, plays @ well chosen program. | eee j | WILKES Alexia Luce takes the leading role |as George Tewkaberry Reynolds ITI lof New York, in “The Country Cousin,” which opened at the Wilkes | Sunday. Tho role in vastly different from those usun undertaken by the Wilkes leading man, and in scoring af thin week Luce demon rates his watility. Jane Morgan an the Country Cousin, matches her wits against a gang of polite society rafters and at last wins out The’ plot hinges on the adventures of a little girl from the Middle West whose mother has been divorced by her father in the distant past He has remarried and has apparently forgotten all about his former con tions until the giri*suddenty be comes an heires Accompanied by Reynolds, he comen West to take the girl out “to world.” Despite the plead. her mother, she goes, and in the hands of “the fast ably lead by her stepmother country follows and aried experiences succeeds in bringing the girl “back home." Marie |Thorne plays the part of Eleanor the little girl, to everyone's satiafs Howard Russel, as Sam, “the |boy with a future,” lends a touch of humor to the production. oe jaee the ing of jnoon ts | crowd | The after v cousin | tion | LEVY'S ORPHEUM Comedy predominates tn Up Babies,” the musical comedy at Levy's Orpheum this week. The fun ‘in hed by four comedians, rd, aa Ole, the Swede as Kabibble, the funny Rob Lorenzo, as a wop, and B andberg, as a tough Irishman, When these four get to | gether, which they do real often, the lw hole audience is kept in an uproar Lota of pretty mu al numbers are staged during the performance. lanche Trelease was particularly ar Sunday afternoon in her uty “Freckles Robert Loren: roved a popular soloist The chorus girls in a pretty array of new costumes take acti part in the musical offerings sung by Pauline Arthur, Frank Budd, Dorothy Raymond and Oscar Ger ard. “Grown Many Would Adopt Deserted Baby Girl SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 8.—A blue- eyed baby girl of 18 months, found ‘ling alone fn a downtown depart week, now has her cholee of a dozen or more homes. Applications for adoption of “Baby Blue Eyes” are coming to the juvenile detention home here at the rate of three and four a day, Efforts to find the parents so far have been futile, Until the juvenile court issues a dec laration of abandonment, the babe cannot be adopte Probation officers believe the in- fant may have been kidnaped in some eastern city and abandoned here by theabductors. to ment store last > | by DEATH MYSTERY Mother and Son Are Held in } California tatement m b Mr Maud died in her Maud's body wa YNBKA, Cal, Dec ed features of the trunk myster ner 1 toda Tabor her daughter fou M or he did nc had been embalmed. whe placed the arah which she declared arms t know did not explain how body in the trunk unassisted, altho she infimated she had done #0. Bhe ‘maid her Walter, Joseph Virgo and Florence Critchlow not present when Maud died | Maud was addic chloroform and died done, according to Mr two had agreed to preserve the body of the one dying first unt!! the bodien | of both could be buried together, ac-| cording to Mrs, Tabor's statement Mrs, Tabor did not explain how] pact could fulfilled had told r she 4 wan pointed out that if she her elf had died on her extended t ern trip before the trunk 4 ale would have bee without any reference Jeath pact.” Mra, Tabor being held for the higan officers to the fron une of an over bor. The have been wan din n buried the alleged and Walter of LAWTON, Mich. investigating the mysterious death Maud Tabor were en route to Cali fornia today to question the mothe jot the girl, whone bedy was found tt jthe berement of the Tabor home here, where it had been hidden for Dec. 8 Officials Sarah by was Tabor ¢ at Yreka, Cal, ted with her non, Prosecutor Horace Adams and erift Dw Harker expected to obtain details of the death of Maud from Mra. Tabor and her son, which would clear up the mystery. held where she Walter was What’s Become of John Mills? been eery voice the bright ! striane who have acquainted with the of John Mills, 13 faced newsie the corner of Second ave 4 Madison st, have missed the boy during the lat two or three days and won dered if he could be tl The police were no! day by J. W. Milla, #t., the lad’» father, that the youngster left his home on De cember 5 to sell his papers and id not come home, Nothing has || been heard of him since. at Didja Ever Hear of Trained Hail Storm? Read This ‘This Arctic ozone seema to have & peculiar effect on some of our pub- lie officl For instance: Ever hear of County Purchasing Agent Charles Barton Wood's | trained hall storm? Here ts the yard “One winter over Jcounty I hitched a pair of spiffy |horses to a sleigh,” Charles orated Monday, when Jim Dunlap, a bosom friend, unleashed a few remarks anent the polaric climate now sounding in our midst “Those horres,” continued Charles “were so wild that their sole ambi |tion was to Jump thru thelr collars. |Along came this trained hailstorm lof mine. It hurled pellets of ice into my expansive countenance until it bled. ‘That storm picked me jwhile those wild animals of mine tried their noblest to hop thru their collars. And I was 28 miles from dear old Port Townsend, my home, too, When I turned around to start back, that trained hailstorm switched on me and fought me all the way back But Dunlap did not stay to hear the finish Aged Man Is Held as “Dope Runner” Believed by the police dope runner,” H. M ing held in the city pending investigation ties in Chinatown. in Jefferson to be a aker, 60, is be- jail Monday of his activi been under time police | Miniaker has | He was surveillance arrested in an lay after the machine tn which b w jriding was stopped by a bullet fired Patrolman Fred Nicolar at Eighth ave. 8, and Weller st Officer Nicolar noticed Minaker, who was & passenger in the machine He called to the driver to stop, but instead the machine started streak ing down Weller st. The officer jeu el his gun and fired a bullet |thru one of the rear tires, The ma chine came to an immodiate stop. The driver was not held. No druge were found in Minaker’s it Is said, when he was for some Unknown Man Hit by Woman Driver| An effort is | police Monday being made by the| to locate the man who was injured Monday morning jat Rainier ave. and Charles st. by Jan automobile driven by Mrs, B, H Kemper The man was knocked down and| dragged several feet as he attempted to cross the street. Mrs, Kemper| reported to the police this morning | that the man was picked up by the| driver “of another machine and evidently started for a hospital | No automobile victims had been reported to the police by any of the hospitals at a late hour Monday morning. The man’s name is unknown, WATERHOUSE, REAMES TO GIVE ADDRESSES Frank W of Frank Waterhouse & Co.; Clarence L, Reames, former special U, 8, dis trict attorney, and B. B, Fish, Port land machinist, will address a meet ing Of Associated Industries of Seat tle in the Masonic Temple auditor- terhouse, president “The Hands That Make It Painless” “Its Something You'll Appreciate” e You Willing to Endanger Your Hea‘th Further Through Fear of Pain? We don’t think you are. Most people are willing to do most anything within reason to maintain their health as near perfect as they possibly can. If you are neglecting bad teeth you are endangering your health This is no idle statement. We mean just what we y. And in this opinion we are backed by the medical authoriti That abscessed and decayed teeth cause i peed diseases is, comparatively speaking, a recent iscovery. But every upto-date physician now KNOWS that this is the case. Some of the commonest and most painful diseases are often caused by abscessed teeth. We make your dental operations as painless as it is possible to make them, using the latest discoveries of the scientific world. WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER YOU First—Graduate regustered dentists of the highest standing in the dental profession are here for your service. Every one of our operators is a graduate registered dentist and every one of them has hiv certificate from the state dental board hanging right on the wall in front of his dental chair in plain sight of all Second—The use of the latest scientific discoveries for making dental operations painless. Third...The best of equipment. We have one of the finest and best equipped dental offices in the country. Every modern appli- ance for the better performance of modern dentistry will be found in our equipment, Fourth-Wo use the best of materials. We have found out long Ago that the best is the cheapest in the long run. So we use the best material to be ha Fifth—our prices are very reasonable. In fact you will find that they are lower than usual, considering that we turn out the highest quality of work and use the best of materials, This ts made possible by the large volume of business which we do, which permits us to take a smaller profit on the individual patient than an office which does only one-half or one-third of the volume that we do can possibly afford to take. Sixth—We guarantee all our work, and our guarantee means just what it says—t if for any reason your work does not give you entire satisfac » come back to us and we will make it right. Our guarantee is absolutely binding. Seventh—We have a strictly sanitary office. We have spent a great deal of money on the latest and most improved apparatus for the perfect sterilization of our instruments. All operators and attendants are dressed in spotless white at all times. DON’T PUT IT OFF ANOTHER DAY Boston Dental Co. “The Hands That Make It Painless” 1420 Second Avenue (Opposite Bon Marche) Lady Attendant Always in Attendance |“Co-Ops” Will Give Release Russians ce Arrested in Raid Jubilee Blow-out Preparatory to the opening of Maidanuk and Romas Andrew | Russians, who were ar-| their own co-operative store, Green- jat the Neliovich, rested three ks ago during a police raid on a room at 521% King et. and held for federal investigation 19 alleged members of the Russian party, were ordered re morning we Communist eased Monday Insufficient evidence 4) inst the en given the cause for their release. Both men had several hundred Russian ruble notes and Bolsheviki subscription blanks in their possession when arrested. Maidanuk, at the time of his ar- rest, wass aid by the police to be ne of the leaders of the Russian reds in Seattle was as Devereux Players at Metropolitan the of Sheridan, Goldsmith, Rostand and Tehekoff he heard thts Metropolitan, when Dev 1 his company, including af as leading lady will night in a repertoire Classics works open Monday of ymedy ¢ ics nday ‘ Friday Sheridan's will be and and “The Saturday hool for Scandal” jay after- Conquer,” will to jant comedy, offered Two plays of unusual romantic interest, Rostand's “Romancers” “The Proposal” by Tehekoff, given Wednesday afternoon o'clock, that high may attend tudents SCHOOL MASTERS ELECT Thomas EB. Hulse, deputy intendent of county schools, elected president of the Sound School Masters’ club meeting Saturday in Tacoma, Frank Farrar, principal of Wash- ington Irving Seattle, was elected secretary was Puget school, To Fortity System Against Grip Take LAXATIVE PROMO QUININE lets which de y germs, act as ‘onic and Laxative, and thus pre~ lds, Grip and is’ only one jum, Harvard ave, and Pine st, at [8:30 p. m, Monday UININE.” 6. W. GROV: ture om the box. Ste week | wood co-operators will stage a ‘jubilee blowout" Tuesday night at Greenwood hall, 83rd and Greenwood ave, with W. B. Harris, “co-op, com- edian,” as the main attraction. The audience will be addressed by organ: izers of the Consumers Co-operative association, of which the store will become a branch, and entertained also by local talent. A dance will follow and the public is welcome. Bank Ruling Made by Supreme Court WASHINGTON, Dee.” 8.—Nation- al banks have the right to charge | interest in excess of the maximum amount allowed under state laws, the supreme court today decided, The case was brought b the and Scriven County bank the National Bank of Sa- vannah, Ga,, the claim being interest | was deducted in advance from the to- Thurs- | | LONDON, Dee, 8 schoo! | tal loan, making the interest, figured on the amount received instead of the face value of the loan, exceed 8 per nt, the maximum in Georgia Justices Pitney, Clarke and Bran- deis dissented. Plan to Dispose of Fiume Dispute ~(United Press.) —A definite plan for satisfactory set tlement of the Fiume situation will be submitted to the Rritish govern: ment by Viterio Scialoia, Italian for eign minister, during his present visit, it was understood today. The Italian official arrived in London from Pari last night. He will take up the entre dispute with the Brit ish officials, it was believed. Scialaia super- | was expected to confer with Premier Lloyd-George soon. at «/ Amphion Society, to Sing Tuesday Lovers of choral music will gather Tuesday night at the Masonic ‘Tem- ple when the Amphion society of Seattt under the direction of Claude Madden, gives its semi-ans nual concert. Marie Sidenius Zendt will be the assisting soloist, The Amphion society is now in its tenth season, iY

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