The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 29, 1920, Page 5

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__BUY YOUR BEDDING NOW— y DON'T DELAY You wilt be pleased with our * showing of Blankets, Comfort: ers, etc, and all that your > ii MH HEALTH, COMFORT a . ECONOMY Safeguard the health ro} your family. Keep your home always warm and cosy with : Cole’s | of ORIGINAL o Hot Blast Heater Gtves you steady heat day and night. Guaranteed to oll hold fire 36 hours and will burn any fuel, | Come in today while our oll stock in complete, SRPEESE0:0:02b020202002025202:Eu8R1 Two Women Shaken Up as Burien Cars Hit One woman was in the hospital and another confined to her home | Wednesday, due to injuries received when two Lake Burien street cara, running on opposite tracks, met in a head-on collision near Demar Tues- day. Mra. Ida M. Parsons, 59, of Crosby Roads, was in city hospital, suffer. ing from an injured spine. Mrs. Bessie Van Stone, 1029 15th ave. 8. ‘W., incurred a wrenched back. The! cars tried to make a turn at the same time. The tracks did not pro. success of Hood's Sarsaparilia, It mother ahe had ever known; that I vide sufficient clearance, causing the ts just the medicine you need now, Waa too devoted, she feared some collision. tal REGISTRATION I$ 4,902: President Suzzallo Says They | AT a | ha Will Be Taken Care of Total registration at the University of Washington this year ia 4,903, it was announced when the books were closed Tuesday night. Additional reg- istration probably will carry the total well over the 6,000 mark. Altho it had been hoped, according to President Henry Suzzalo, to keep the registration down to 4,600, facili ties at the university are ample to | take care of the excess number en: rolled. Some of the late comers, how: ever, were disappointed to find that some of the classes they wanted had been filled to capacity. Monday was the record day for registration, 1,973 signing up for the term. HE KNOWS HE’S GUILTY, BUT HE CAN'T PROVE IT "Tm guilty,” Oscar Jacobson told Judge J. T. Ronald, “but I don't remember stealing any thing.” The judge batted both eyes, It was & poner, “If you don't remember doing anything, how do you know you're guilty?" he asked Oscar, “Better think this over a few days; then, if you don't remember, don’t plead guilty.” And Oscar went back to his cel! ‘to recall, if he could, how he came in possession of @ hat, shoes and watch stolen from the room of his friend, Charles Ranta, of Kent, at 501% Main at. Hood’s — Sarsaparilla Makes Food Taste Cood Creates appetite, alds aigestion, purifies the blood, and thus relieves ecrofula, catarrh, the paine and aches of rheumatism and gives strength to the whole system. Nearly 50 years’ phenomena! sales tell the story of the great merit and Hood's Pills help—fine cathartic, 4 Meeting the Obligations of Your Position $75 ° The well-dressed man can comfort- ably meet any situation. There is an air of comfort and well-being bred of good clothes that makes for con- fidence and ease for the wearer. This is the kind of clothes Stone the Tailor has been making for twenty years for Seattle’s careful-dressing men, and the kind now offered for very moderate prices, some suitings as low as Notice our made-up overcoats, too, offered at the same reasonable price, $75 and up, worthy representatives in style, quality and workmanship of Stone the Tailor service. Stone the Tailor 1206-1208 Second Avenue (Adjoining Savoy Hotel), Established 1900 (Continued From Yow She told more, much more, about the later years, and the reconellia: | tion; then, some way, she brought things around to Jerry and me, Her face flushed up then, and she didn't Meet my eyes. She looked down at her sewing. She was very busy turning & hem just so. She said there had been a time, once, when she had worrted a little about Jerry and me, for fear we would—separate. She waid that she believed that, for her, that would | have been the very biackest moment | of her life; for it would™be her fault, all her fault. “I tried to break in here, and say, \"No, * and that it wasn’t ber | fault; © shook her head and wouldn't listen, and she lifted her hand, and I had to keep still and let her go on talking. She was looking straight into my eyes then, | and there was such a deep, deep hurt tn them that I just had to laten, She said again that tt would be ‘her fault; that if I had done that she would have known that it was all because of the example she her- self had net me of childish willful (news and selfish necking of personal ‘happiness at the expense of every thing and everybody elve. And she lumid that that would have been the last straw to break her heart {| But she declared that al |nure now that she need not |Such a thing would never be. I guess I gasped a little at this. Anyhow, I know I tried to break in and tell her that we were going to separate, and that that was exact ly what I had come into the room in the first place to say. But again she kept right on talk ing, and I was allenced before I had even begun. Bho said how ahe knew it could never be—on account of Eunice. That I would never subject my litte girl to the sort of wretchedly divided Ufe that I had had to liye when I was @ child. (As she spoke I was suddenly back in the cobwebby attic, with little Mary Marie's dairy, and I thought |what if it were Eunico—writing that) She mid I was the mont devoted |times, for I made Eunice all my world, to the exclusion of Jerry and everything and everybody else. But that she was very sure, because I was so devoted, and loved Bunice so dearly, that I would never de prive her of @ father's love and care. I shivered a little, and looked quickly into Mother's face. But she was not looking at me, I was think- ing of how Jerry had kianed and kissed Eunice a month ago, when we came away, an if he Just couldn't lot her go. ry in fond of Eunice, now that she's old enough to know something, and Eunice adores her father. I knew that part was going to be hard. And now to have Mother put {t lke that— I began to talk then of Jerry. T fust felt that Ia got to any some thing. That Mother must listen. That she didn't understand. I told her how Jerry loved lights and muste and dancing, and crowds bow. ing down and worshiping him all the time. And she said yes, she re membered; that he'd been that way when I married him. Bhe spoke #0 sort of queerty that again I glanced at her, but she still was looking down at the hem she was turning. I went on then to explain that I didn’t Uke such things; that I be Neved that there were deeper and higher things, and things more worth while. And she said yes, she was glad, and that that was going to be my saving grace; for, of course, I realized that there couldn't be anything deeper or higher or more worth while than keeping the home together, and putting up with | Annoyances, for the ultimate good of all, especially of Eunice. She went right on then quickly, before I could say anything, She said that, of course, I understood that I was still Mary and Marte, even if Jerry did call me Mollie; and that if Marie had married a man that wasn't@always congenial with Mary, she was very sure Mary had enough stamina and good sense to} make the best of it; and she was very sure, also, that if Mary would @ little effort to be once the Marie he had mar | ried, things might be a lot casier— for Mary. “DANDERINE” Stops Hair Coming Out; Doubles Its Beauty. A few cents buys “Danderine.” After an application of “Danderine” |you can not find a fallen hair or any dandruff, besides every hair shows jnew life, vigor, brighgness, more color and thickness Py EleanorHPorter COPYRIGHT | But we understood, | derstood. | wonderful it Of course, I laughed at that. 1 had to, And Mother laughed, too, We both an I had never thought of it before, but I had been Marie when I married Jerry. I loved lights and) music and dancing and gay crowds | Just exactly as well as he did. And) it wasn't his fault that I suddenly | turned into Mary when the baby came, and wanted him to stay at home before the fire every evening with his dressing-gown and slippers. No wonder he waa surprised, He |hadn't married Mary—-he never knew Mary at all, But, do you know I'd never thought of that be. fore-—until Mother said what she} did. Why, probably Jerry was just | as much disappointed to find his} Marie turned into a Mary as I~ But Mother was talking again. Bhe said she thought Jerry was man, in some ways; that she never saw a man with such charm and magnetism, or one who could 0 readily adapt himself to | different persons and circumstances. | And she said she was very sure if Mary could only show a little more interest in pictures (especially por- traits), and learn to discus lights | ahd shadows and perspectives, that nothing would be lost, and that something might be gained; that there was nothing, anyway, lke a community of interest or of hobbies to bring, two people together; and! that It was safer, to say the least, | when it was the wife that shared | the community of interest than when it was some other woman, tho, of course, she knew as well as I knew that Jerry never would— She didn't finish her sentence and because she didn't finish It, It made me think all the more. And I won dered if she left it unfinished—on | purpose, Then, in a minute, she was talk: ing again, She was speaking of Eunice. she sud once more that because of her, she knew that she need never fear any serious trouble between Jerry and me, for, after all, it's the child that always pays for the mother's mistakes and short-sightedness, just an it is the soldier that pays for his commanding officer's blunders. That's why whe felt that I had had to pay for her mistakes, and why she knew that I'd never compel my | little girl to pay for mine, She wild | that the mother lives in the heart of the child Jong after the mother is gone, and that was why the a always had to be—so care ul Then, before I knew it, she was talking briskly and brightly about | something entirely different; and) two minutes later I found myself alone outside of ber room. And I hadn't told her. But I wasnt even thinking of that I was thinking of Eunice, and of that round, childish scrawl of a diary upstairs in the attic trunk. And I was picturing Eunice, in the years to come, writing her diary; and I thought, what if ahe should have to— I went upstairs then and read that diary again. And all the while I was reading I thoeght of Eunice. And when it was finished I knew that I'd never tell Mother, that I'd never write to Jerry—not the letter et I was going to writa I knew that— They brought Jerry's letter to me at just that point What a won- derful letter that man can write— when he wants to! He says hi jonesome and home sick, and that the house is like a tomb without Eunice and me, and when am I coming home? I wrote him tonight that I was s0ing—tomorrow, * THE END 800 Russ Children . Arrive at Brest BREST, France, Sept. 29.—Steam- er Yomet Maru, botnd from Brook- lyn to Copenhagen with 800 refugee Russian children on board, arrived here yesterday. The children are on their way from Viadivostok to their homes in Western Russia. They are being repatriated by the American Red Cross. AS IT SEEMS TO ME BY THE OFICE BOY When you have been used to ew! ming About three times a day, And you hear the talk o It takes all the Joy awa: 192° } Because their's ts the worst of gonsip, They take the Joy out of lite; They are talking about the school houre, How it's the best thing In’my life They may to go to, high echoot Would be better In the end. When they get down to facts like that It's when a Feller Needs a Friend, Palms Off Ancient . Confederate Bill: i ‘When secret service operatives in- vestigated the alleged $50 counterfeit bill received by Mrs, Eric Carlson, 1615 Minor ave., they found that the bill was an old piece of Confederate | t paper money, The man who gave Mrs. Carlson the bill received $35 in change, Po- ce are searching for him, not for counterfeiting, but for obtaining money under false pretenses, School Children Hit by Diphtheria EUREKA, Cal., Sept. 29.—Fifty per cent of the 200 pupils in the schools of Scotia, a lumbering town 35 miles from here, have been found to be diphtheria carriers, according to wotd reaching the county school department here. Warner’s Sa A Constant Boon to Invalids Since 1877, mag} Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Remedy. Warner’s Safe Diabetes Remedy. Warner’s Safe Rheumatic Remedy. Warner’ Warner’s Safe Nervine. Warner’s Safe Pills(Constipation and Biliousness) The Reliable Family Medicines Sold by leading druggists éverywhere, Sample sent on receipt of ten cents, | WARNER'S SAFE REMEDIES CO., Dept. 561, Rochester, N. ¥. fe Remedies 's Safe Asthma Remedy. The SPECIAL BALE of wear, have yoke effect front and formerly at $4.95. nein —Special EMARKABLE _re- ductions on 500 yards of edges and flouncings to make a quick clean-up on ac- count of being slightly mussed and soiled from display. EDGES in 2, 3, 4 and 5 inch widths. Priced former: ly at 15e, 200, 26¢ and 35c. While they last, 10c FLOUNCING—14- to 18 inch Longeloth Embroidery Flouncings, for caminolem petticoats, etc. Formerly 0c, 65c¢ and Te. While they last, « 25c FLOUNCIN G—274Inch Battete and Longeloth Flouncing, in several em- Navy Serge Middies— Special $2.95 100 Navy Serge Middies priced for disposal offers sub- stantial economies at an opportune time as these are expecially adapted They are made with sailor collar and Bizes 14 to 44 for misses and women. Choice at broidered patterns. Formerly The to $1.50. While 50c they last, a yard.... FLOUNCING — 2tnch daintily embroidered Batixte Flouncing, suitable for baby dresses. Formerly $2.00 and $2.50, While $1 .00 they last, a cape Miss Elizabeth Cox or New York, representing the McCall Patterns, will be in the store for a few days During this time we cordially invite you to meet her, as we feel astured that you will derive considerable atyle information, suggestive 0f fashions fresh from Parte and New York. Consult her freely and without charge now. Upper Main Fleer . Rhodes Co. $2.65 Main Floor 1B Men's Section, just inside the on the Second Avenue door, has re- | Men’s Dress Shirts at | Entrance, celved a special purchase of 150 © Bhirtsa with French cuffs, Through rinciple of sharing such economies enabled to offer you an ex ue in perfect fitting Shirts made back and sold | of attractive, well wearing Madras, Repps and Percalen in neat stripes and fancy pat- $2. 95 terns, Sizes 14% to 17, HanpsomMe Nae Coa Second Floor T the opera or at the symphony con- - cert, Coats with the smartness of style and character of these will be much in evidence. The rich fur collars of high grade squirrel, wolf, raccoon, beaver, nutria and seal give them an individuality all their own. t Style” for early fall | | | . we ar | Priced at $75.00, $85.00 and up as high as $175.00. HE displays feature the natty wrappy models as well as the straight belted styles, which are always fash- ionable, designed of durable and attractive Evora, Bolivia, Mar- vella, Orlando, Chamois- ine, Veldyne and Velour de Laine in the new autumn shades of dark brown, known as Malay, Zanzibar and Bedouin; also in Reindeer, Chinese and Navy Blue, Ming, Chefoo, Nanking and Black. Sizes 16 to 46 Coat sketched is of Zanzibar Brown made of Evora Superior PHICO 2m 2+ wo mrowec wren wo neces comeccee ses seeees Artful Youagsters at. Queen Anne Have Enthusiasm A Bit Dampened By Hard Labor By AL, the Boy Reporter ‘Woe be to all ambitious young engravers attending Queen Anne high school, if Principal Otte L. Luther has his way. Last year many energetic Quay student-engravers, wishing to dis- play their singular talents, neatly carved their initials and other signs on the school desks. Luther, however, does not approve of this, and so this semes- ter he i@ rounding up all known te be guilty, of the artful doings. They must take the desk tops off, bring them down to the shop and plane them unti) all signs of en- graving have vanished. IFE STOLEN; PETIT LARCENY SUPERIOR, Wis, Sept. 29—A foreigner asked Judge F. Sparker, in| municipal court, for @ warrant! charging petit larceny, The judge! axked what was stolen, and the man replied, “My wife.” WILL RADIUM AT LAST OPEN THE DOOR OF THE GREAT UNKNOWN? If you are sick and want to Get Well and Keep Well, write for li ture that tells How and Why this| almost unknown and wonderfully | new element brings relief to, 80 many sufferers from Rheumatis Sciatica, Gout, Neuritis, Neuralgia, | High Bloo system, causi: overcomin throwing off impuritie: ing the tissues and nerve: mal condition—and the next thing you know y: a Sold ona ter are thoroughly you. before the Nothing to do but wear it. Ni ble or expense, and the most won- derful fact about appliance ts that it f# sold so reasonable that it is within the reach of all, both rich and poor. No matter how bad your ailment or how long standing, we will be Pleased to have you try it at our For full information write tow t tomorrow. Radium Appil $26 Bredbury building. r 122 Cm Third Ave COR UNINERSITY Principal Luther is also a good sleuth—a very good sleuth. Alredy four or five have been apprehended. More are promised to be. This penalty will continue in ef- fect thruout the year, says Mr. Luther. The artistically inclined | stndents have also been warned in advance what they may expect if they disptay their art too mvch. It is expected that the five other Neh school principals will follow suit and intonn the student-engmv- crs at their schools of the new statute. O-Cedar Mops—Special at 85c By using an O-Cedar Mop you can keep your varnished or painted floors looking bright and attractive. These mops are treated with O- C&dar Polish ‘and are made in the battleship shape, mak- ing it easy to get into cor- ners. Special at 85¢. 60c 1 Gal. Stone Jar and Cover | Special at 49c ~ These one-gallon Stone Jars, with covers, are just © the right size for pickles, apple butter or hreserveaa R We offer them special for Thursday at 49¢. Hardware Specials $1.25 Furnace Scoop, special at . .. -98¢ $3.00 Roll Heavy Blue Building Paper.. .$1.98 $1.75 Buck Saw, special at .......$1.49 $3.25 Household Scale (with or without scoop), at ......$2.49 $8.00 Medium-size Garden Wheelbarrow at ccc. cceeee. 6.05 THE STORE FOR USEFUL ARTICLES

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