The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 8, 1920, Page 7

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THURSDAY, JOLY §, 1920. BROWN-WHITE’S Basement Store SECON® AT UNIVERSITY July Bargains WOMEN’S WHITE REIGNSKIN BOOTS pictured, welted sole and 100 pairs as enameled heels— $1.80 & WOMEN’S OXFORDS Fine Kidskin in Black or Brown—welt sole—all sizes, 2} to 8, Ato D........... $5.80) BAREFOOT SANDALS Tan Only- Sizes 5 to 8 $1.15 | $1.35 | $1.65 Child’ Boys’ | Women’ ild’s | Boys omen’s White or on Barefoot White Reignskin Tennis Oxfords AM see, fo 2 Sizes up to 6 Oxfords, Cuban heel 99c | $1.29 | $4.65 _Sofe Wilk for INFANTS & INVALIDS | F Horiick’s |\Congressman Will rlicks Malted Milk Cx. . Aveid GOLD SHIELD Coffee does taste a little bit dif- ferent when you drink it Of course it’s good indoors, too—it couldn't help but be, for shat matter. It’s super- roasted, you know—that's the reason why. Then, too, its flavor never changes— never ts. Gooo Speak From Roof} n Joseph W. Fordney. | of Michigan, who is in the North | Weat, inspecting the fir industry, will | The Original address the 100 Per Cent club next | | Tuesday evening, on the roof of the | «| Koenig candy factory, Westlake ave. | What If, You HAVE Missed This Treat? What if, so far, you have missed the treat of drinking GOLD } SHIELD Coffee out of doors on a terrace or garden- bordered lawn? There’s still time, and there are other ways of enjoying its zest and cheerfulness. For instance—take it with you on your week-end ‘er Sunday auto trip or the little fishing excursion ™ back in the mountains that everyone likes to make now end then. You'll find GOLD SHIELD as delicious and heart-cheering when made in a tin pot over an open fire as when the sange or percolator back home are brought into play. Roasted, Packed and GUARANTEED by Schwabacher Bros. & Co., Inc. IMPORTERS AND ROASTERS OF COFFER THE Le aneneeniilan, 1919 BY EMERSON COPYRIGHT CHAPTER XXVIII Doctor Allen Barnes turned slowly toward the house where the wife of Sim Gage still lay. His heart was heavy with the hardest ever known in all hin life But as he reached a point half way between the two h denly stopped, At that ery man on the little street stopped also. The routine of the patrol had been relaxed in the excitement of these late events Indeed, it seemed t ly agreed that the climax h so that there wa » need n further guards ty, It was not nen he wud moment ev moan, rly as it nding ed, and not a sharp a vast, deep groan, somewher in the earth tho a volcan about to erupt. It was not over ir an instant, but went on, like the suppressed lamentations of some pereuture trying to break its chains It might have been some prehistoric, tremendous unknown to |these times. But it was our crea ure. It was of our day, Else it could never have been, |_ ‘Then the ground under the feet of every man on the little street lifted, |wently, slowly, and sank down again. creature, PROF. ‘FRANK S. GRIFFIS ' | Humanologist and Vocational | Expert 3-Free Lectures -3 | —HUMANOLOGY— The Science of How to Read People at Sight July 6-7-8—8 P. M. Knights of Columbus Hall 1401 Harvard Ave. Class Work—7 Lessons Beginning July 9. Just Ask Your Groce: Seattle's Oldest Business House SEATTLE duty he had | ¢ tle at a time, |portunity could be found | Columbia Colo js better. magi [As It did #0 a tremendous re tion gathered and and ‘oke out, ra up oppe ing an The ma down the canyon, up the cliff face, echoing and ris nae and thick as smoke jrack-rock charge, of no know how many hundreds of pounds, hag done ita work And hell a earth went back to chaos. A new world was in the mak ing, There arose in that narrow roy gorge a havoc such as be like surpassed that of the original breaking thru of the waters, That first slow work of nature might have been done drop by drop, @ lit But now all the out-) |raged river was venting Itself in one epochal instant. Its accumulated power was rushing thru the wall that held it back from the seas—the vast vengeance of the waters, which they had sought covertly all this time, now was theirs An unecontro ble force may measure that lay above Two Forks—it never wa hensible thing A hur town reservoirs lay penned th That there was #0 little actual lows of life was due to the fact that there were few settlements in the 60 miles below the mouth of the great canyon | itself, A few scattered dry farms, edging up close to the river in the valley far below, were caught and buried. Hours later, under the ad vancing flood, all the live stock of the valley was swept away, all the] houses and all the fences and roads and bridg: ere wiped out as tho ad never been But la ble and immeasura wan wot the « the The big dam was broken! The face of the giant dam, more solidly coherent than granite iteelf, slowly, grandiose even in ite ruin, passed out, down in a hundred foot crevasse where the spill gates were widened by the high explosive A vast land slip, jarred from thé cut face mountain side above, thunder ed down and aided tn the crumbling ‘of the dam. A disintegrated mass lof powdered concrete fell out, was |blown apart. The face of the dam on that part slowly « d down into a vast U. Then the waters came thru, leaping—a solid face of water such as no man may compre- hend Ae instant, and the canyon below ¢ dam wan 50 feet deep with a sub-| ‘acide which seemed not water, but ja mans of shrieking and screaming | demons set loose under the name of no known element There came a vast roar, but with it a number of |emaller sounds, as of voices deep down under the flood, glass splinter: | ing, rocks rumbling. The gorge! seemed inhabited by furies. And back of this came the pressure of 20 miles of water, a hundred feet| | deep, which would come thru. The |river had its way again, raving and| roaring in an anvil chorus of its! own, knocking the great bowlders | |together, shrieking its glen The |Two Forks river came thru the Two Forks canyon once more! Against it there stood only the fragmental ruin jof the great, gray face, buttressed with concrete more coherent than | granite itself, but all une’ here. | The tide rose very rapidly. The canyon was too crooked to carry off| t food. The lower part of the te where the street grade sank rapidly, went under water almost at Horses, cows, sheep, chitkens. he odds and ends of such an en pment, gathered by vagrant la ers, were swept down before op to | » save | ru them. Men and the few women that part of town, employes of the k camp, ab med their pe | «and ran st tain side, secking the tide. Their h away like cheese b {up the m ly to get wen were sw Logs we Adv. joe bine rut Deposits made up to and in- cluding JULY 10 wo rac rie r | wa er draw interest eee | JULY 1 4% will | from ey at \t las woo Northwest Trust & Savings Bank Second and Union der Income Tax Service 2012-3 White Building, Seattle Elliott 4853 current to the backw wo! pre might say how much in power of | veal the ancient bed of the river. the remnant of the dam held, that se aspiring to erect such a bar- er, that so few suffered in this ottlements must. havd perished. messenger to get out ahead of the flood. the valley, | the floc | tive, After the first pause of horror me to bestir themselves was the law. | me: |the lower end of the street, to drive |the s_ |[Jout an instant’s delay; for none! Conflounded sem |might say at what time the break in annually. the dam 11d increase, in which |J\case it soon would be too late for any hope. him, after he Kad issued general or- trail above the dam as soon as pos “Come out!” he cried as he opened Caital Stock Tax shall we go? Is there dan- ger?” These questions came all at once fro e two wome The ro These returns must be filed Hoe the watita, coed: Sati Winey during the month of July. Regu-|/"".comeauick) Got into, my, car, lations applying to this tax |It's only a step up the gra ae we'll Bas approved, sthective |be safe on the upper level." : They came, Mary Gage stil! with| “further information, phone Ther bar in place, stumbling, t e uce rices OF \wrrite terrified, but leading thel it Roberts’ Federal |'Tim, who eri down { |terror of his Doctor the incline above the top of the dam. hurried them, little ear qui ‘They paused here at the first PAGE 7 FREDERICK & NELSON | FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET | DOWNSTAIRS STORE | | 75 Coats Reduced to $13.85 important saving is represented by this | 3 . A price on these smart Coats, whose use- | fulness will extend through summer and ] autumn. They are tailored from es Polo Cloth—Silvertone—Velour— Broadcloth in many desirable plain colorings and com- binations, including Cerise, Fawn, Tan, Copenhagen, American Beauty, Havana, Decisively reduced—-$13.85. THE DOWN STAIRS STORE 100 Banded and Trimmed Hats Reduced to $3.95 —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE 318 Pairs of Misses’ and Children’s Oxfords In a Clearance Offering Friday $3.45 | Pair this underpriced offering of Oxfords for general and dress year there is choice of Gun-metal Calf Brown Calf White Nubuck Patent Leather modeled on English-style and broad-toe lasts, with welt soles. Sizes 8} to 2. Sharply reduced to $3.45 pair. 7* —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORB The| wach the y ogether like straws secre toy gerry rapa halisted thru dismissals and granted by the judges. might take cut bank, where they Dr There came th and look down clone to and grouped themselves near dam, that! them and beyond them now several i held. The ¢ people of the camp, and prac 1 under the tic all of the soldiers from the of water 50 feet in ho fell into a stiff, si above them would It was a sc oF t po {the dam which lay before But at the time this wild remaking of the wil farther t made, caused visible at of Ly (Fo Be Continued Tomorrow) ‘ 25 More Jurors THE Pwowe £icsorr/52 uld be #1 of tho Is for Summer Term L HTHOUSE ge ge A summer venire of 25 jurors re h, each h representing none ported Thursday morning for duty | n, it would sink, and in time re-|in the United States district court. ! FREI REDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET SUITS COATS DRESSES Remaining From Spring Assortments, Figure in The July 418-420 UNION ST. IMC uld be true, Happy the human irth of the wilderness. Had the been thick below, all The telephone there was no way for a Only the quick widening of below the canyon's low , eased down the volume of so that it was less destruc ‘There was no settlement at in the canyon proper. er n here at the broken dam began | Discipline was hing forgotten, and sauve qui peut It was some time be-| Doctor Barnes pulled himself ether and began to try to get his n in hand, He ordered them to eople out of their houses with- He himself hastened at it to the house where the two men were, Wid Gardner with s for all the men to get up the Mary Gage and Annio in arm, both of them hys- w | gone,” said Doctor Barnes, bitterly, but calmly after out am's gone.” What it mean? 4 them, and the arried them up| (SECOND FLOOR)

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