The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 12, 1920, Page 7

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’ FREDERICK é& NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET White Enamel Kitchen Table and Stool Attractively Priced t petcony 7 to be a part of the spotless kitchen that every housekeeper loves are these White Enamel Kitchen Pieces, The Table is staunchly constructed of Eastern hardwood, finished in glossy white enamel and eguipped with roomy draw- > The top measures 28x42 inches. Moderately priced at $12.50. White Enamel Stool $3.00 AS pictured, a convenient Stool for use in the kitchen, strongly built and finished in white enamel. Eighteen inches high, with seat 12 inches in diameter. —Fourth Floor. Ex-King Miguel's widow, who, In Burmah people of superior rank reigned six years over Portugal, be-| must not dishonor themselves by came a Benedictine nun some 20/passing underneath persons of tn- years ago. fertor rank. ‘ ‘Hope to Settle Anti-Alien| ——="| missed his kitchen JAPAN ARGUES WITH AMERICA Controversy. BY A. L. BRADFORD WASHINGTON, Oct. 12.--Negotia tions over Japanese immigration and antiJapanese legistation in Califor nia were continued at the state de partment today Roland M. Morris, ambassador to Tokyo, and Ambaasa dor Shidehara were carrying on the While the state department and the Japanese embasy maintain the strictest secrecy, the two countries were anid to have reached an under standing on general principles, and | the negotiations were believed pro- Eresning towagd a settlement Japan may take the position all laws discriminating against her sub: jects already in the United States, wuch ae the existing antialien law in California, must be wiped out, tt was understood here today, The proposed California law for probibh tion even of land leasing by Japan ese also would be included in this demand. This stand of Japan makes the taste between the countries clean cut. The United States is not entirety ‘hatiefied with the “gentlemen's agree mont,” by which Japan voluntarily undertakes to restrict tmmigration, and wants an absolute prohibition of Japanese labor immigration Re vision of the “xentlemen's agree ment™ was believed to be under study, Burglars Pluck Off a Few More Victims Burglars id not conclude thetr local crime wave following a nuccess- ful week-end, but nipped a dozen or more homes and amall stores. Mrs. C. Hutchinson, 708 BK, Union at., had a diamond ripg stolen, while Albert McDonald, 1718 32th ave, stove Monday morning when he started to prepare breakfast. The remainder of (Continued From Our Last Ise) “My namo's Hawkins,” he movin’ over and prese in’ om | what he no doubt thought was a pleasant erin, “I'm with Rabinowits & O'Reilly of Chicago, the big putty concern, 1 dleaned up back in Den ver—-sold @ total of a hundred thou- sand dollars’ worth!" “Then they ain't no more putty? left in the world, if that’s true!” 1) yeaya, “Ha, ba” he gigeiea, “Say~-where have I ween you before, hey?” “1 give it up! 1 rema with a | long drawed out yawn. ybe it wan in east Arabia, or the eto.” | “Like aa not," de mys, noddin’ hin | nead, Then he tries his hand at a new one, “Hay—-can you imagine this whole gountry goin’ dry? “You don't have to bother with) imaginin’ It no more,” Tsay. “Tt int” “A Infernal outrage! he hollers, warmin’ up to hin work and glancin’ around at the other innocent by-| sitters, “What right has them bume got to tell me what I ean drink?” “They ain't tellin’ you whst you can drink,” I corrects him, “They're | tellin’ you what you can’t drink™ “Well, it's the same thing! he bel- Jere, bangin’ his fet on his knee and glarin’ wildly around, “We won the wur with boone, didn't on “Where dye met that we stuff? 1 says, “On the level, now, the nearest you come to the war was when you clipped your first Liberty bond cow pons, wasn't itt “I gotta a weak heart.” he says, very dignified, “or 1 would—* “Then you oughta be giad you) can’t get no boose,” I butts tn, “A food drunk would prob'ly bump you | oft: “I never was drank in my life he} bawin. “I'm a reapectable citizen, a taxpayer and I don't owe no man a nickel. For more than 10 years I've! the| taken a coupin shots a day; has it/the next second he haw : GME SEATTLE STAR THERE'S NO B Copyright, 1990, by Doubleday, Page & BY H. C. WITWER have a drink? 1 should say not!” “Well,” 1 says, “All T can say in that you have taken on @ large con tract when you are gettin’ ready to defy the dear old U, 8 A. If Ger many couldn't liek America, wh do you get off™ “An tong am they make it I'l get it!" be hollers, caperin’ about “I hear if you take three raisins bottle of grape jules and a cw butts in another guy. of You can + The fourth guy which te aittin’ in & corner and ain't said a word up to thus far, yanks out a card and & pene) “How many raising is that again?” he wayn Joo, I hadda laugh at ‘em all takin’ down this guy's prescription and it must be tough to be a slave of Jack Rarleyeorn, heyg Well, Joe, then this Hawkins guy looks all around the car kinda mys terious and winks at ux one and all and nays would anybody like a slight *waller, Lickin’ of lips become « eral and when Hawking suddenly Pulls out a Mark from his hip pocket you could hear them guys’ thirsus beatin’ ke a tom tom. Kven the silent guy in the corner flicked a mean eyelash, Joo, Well, the flask was paged around whilst Hawkins says it's only @ pint and he hadda pay six berries for it, whereas in the old days before we become a desert, #ix dollars’ worth of booxe would be enough to float a yacht in, He hands the flask of this here forbidden fruit to the first guy and mays to hurry up and kill one quick before the conductor comes in or he's ligble to get pinched and gave about 42 years for bein’ found with the demon’s rum on him. From the longin’ look on this other baby's face, Joe, you could tee that they was little or no need to tell hin to hurry and get that drink. “Well, here's a gol” he anys and leaped a robberies resulted tn losses ranging | burt me? No! Dye think I'm gonna] coupla fect in the air and is cough from clothing to jewelry Power The Gillette Safety Razor men. Company—largest of its” kind in the world—was founded upon an idea. An idea so fundamental that it ' has changed the personal habits of a generation of {t was the idea of a personal shaving service—of putting into a man’s own hands a razor that would shavehim better and quicker and more satisfactorily than he had ever shaved before. Out in the lumber. camps of Michigan, down in the cot- ton fields of the South, in the heart of the big city, inthe country village—the first Gillettes found their way into the hands of men No Stropping-No Honing illette <> Bo let a bunch of #imps tell me I can't} who were in’ and splutterin’ all over the place. an Outspoken on the lookout for better things—men ‘who ,were not content with all the habits their |: fathers and grandfathers had passed down to them. | These men tried out the Gil- lette—found they were They found that it gave them | in it what looking for. theservice they hadalways expected of arazor and had never received. They talked about their discovery. | They passed on the idea to their| neighbors. They gave it their outspoken approval. Today twenty million men of all| classes, in every country onearth, are actively standing behind the Gillette —coming out publicly in favor of it—making it an issue in their personal affairs. They are men of conviction, of ideas —who believe in the Gillette for what it does and what it has done for other men—and who refuse to shave or be shaved with any other s users is the a quarter of kind of razor. 3 3 Outspoken approval on the part of greatest power in business today. The reason, perhaps, why more than a million merchants in this country prefer to be known as “Gillette Dealers” rather than Canadian Poctory: London Medrid Ama Sydai Ca Rio de Janciso 73 St. Atenandes &. bl Parle aun Shanetial Gonsantinopte — Takyo bv any ether title. ‘Mostzeal, Quebec San Francisco Milan Coveaiasee Buenos Alses Singapore Port Elizabetr + se ASE LIKE HOME Company the ther dream, Joe, when I was woke up by somebody shakin’ my shoulder from | ‘nade laughin’. : five that Salome told Jobn tist she had a pleasant | im t before she demat \head for a watch fob. “What hae happened now? says leapin’ from the bed. tell me they ts anything wrong my baby!” “Mon Dieux" remarks Jeanne, & flash of ivory tintin’ the rose of her’ for me in one side to the other 1, I open two of my eyes and in Jeanne bendin’ over me and If they is anything pret than Jeanne in the mornin” or whil#t we are on the subject, in the|checks. “Always you think of te a “Wow? he chokes out. “What the | Sfternoon or nin’ either, Joe, then| most horrible thing. Little Week 7 — what is thet stuft—am- |°°,2ar 1 have mised itt won in safe, but you must érem mon! ides uae ; “Fdounrd’ rhe says, #till gigglin’. | quickly for we have to go at ones i “What then means " " . rive ‘ hour “It's very high proof—must be all PAA wt a ee po et those strange |the river! "Werhave but as to ” maya the proud owner, whilst |My that time: Joe, I wan tutty|%*t. "ot ~ Pxt guy in goln’ astray, “Of Fe ee ne, 20% Tne fay! “pay, stent I aske, “Weaem awake and a glance around the room ; courne, what you get nowadays ain't Showed me Twas unto In try own [mind givin’ me a faintly ides of up to the old stuff, You're in tuck se this boat and river stuff 1 home and not battlin’ with a bevy ry it you can get anything xnoaked to) of gay munket’a earn or the like, about? é you at all, I suppose maybe there|” Wwhat'y the ides of wakine m Well, Joe, at that Jeanne comes ween ee ee eee in the midet of bein’ Over and places a arm ground my gg a \the hero of « historically romance?” |manly neck. Then she releame ® Prune juice, hey” saye the #0!) sayy lamile which as usually makes ond handin’ back the flask with | bis face all nerewed up in a knot. | “They may have started it off with |Prune juice, but that ain't the half jof It. I know now why they oa bootleg licker, It's be outa castaway boots throwed that mens te you Je que ite rn he guy which her oughta ‘ot wat be took out and mb i'm cured Well, hold of this molten gold urely curionity | You know that I never at no time | was no bar fly, bem’ content with a trifle bey or ale from the time to time which any #aloonkeeper will | tel you is good for the h but you also know that they no being whieh 4 somethin’ they been told th It started off with ve, which prob'ly wouldn't of give that eee plant, or mushmelon, or apple or whatever it really wan, a second glance if she hadn't of been ud off of it—get me? And then aguin it | would be very unsoctably for n got to take no drink when all the rest of ‘em had and benides 1 was #0 |nervous from that day in and day Jout riafn’ on the train that I felt « slightly stimuldnt would do me good . So the result was, Joe, that I took eight or prob’ly nine drops of this here booze which went into my; j#tomach about as courteously and polite ay the Germans went thru Belgium, and ft was three minutes }i2 round numbers before 1 could even talk, Sweet Cookie—if that's |}} |the kinda #tuff which is beln’ sneak: |@d around now, I'm off for life! 1 would much rather gulp down al}! weldel of carbolic which ts cheaper | and quicker, If this Hawking guy |[) sent in six bucks for that pint of | paria green he paid about 60 cents a ¢rink for it, hadda humiliate himself | and act like a hophead gryin’ to get dope when ho bought ft’ and with each swalier he took about 24 hours} off his life, And yet them guys| which simply got to have it, think | they're puttin’ somethin’ over.*Weill, | they are, Joe, on themselves! | Yours truly. | j ED. HARMON (The new Mary Harmony Hall, N. ¥ Pickford, | | | DEAR AND ETC. JOSEPH | Well, Joa, no doubt you will gasp |}) with surprise when you see I am CHAPTER VIT. The League of Relations In the Midst of My Cellar, writin’ this 1 my cellar, but I am! not down there for the reasons that | you probly think, which is that I) have gone to work and Iaid in al stock of the Keeley Cure antidote! since probfbition become the ktest state to join the union. The real reason that I am writ tng this letter down in the collar! amongst the coal and bottles of | Krape juice with the conventional |f| three ratsing and a yeast cake Inside | of them, is because I have now be- come a valet to my furnace | This forty dollar the week chauf-| feur which we need the same way I need a third ear, claims he was hired ||| 4s a engineer and not as a fireman, }]) and tf he wanted to shovel coal for a| vin’ he never would of wasted his |}! time goin’ fo night school, and the! two maids simply give vent to hyw terically laughter when I gently in- quired would they look after the furnace. | So bein’ faced with a mutiny on all tides, Joe, with the winter in the/| full sway and It bein’ as hard to get | help here as it would be to get frost bitten in Southern Hades, they i# nothin’ left for me to do but to go! down in the cellar several times a} |day and mingle with the ashes and the ete. | Well, to get way from all this, Xmas has came and went, Joe, and it has left me aw usually without the | price of a sunburn in the Sara| Desert. It’s a good thing that the |]! Yuletide i9 aM settled in one day! and ain't ® World's Series, or I! would step right from the festively board into the poorhouss. As it is, I wilt be in hock for about six months payin’ installment collectors | fous gifts I lavished on} ef friends and my un doubtedly wi and family. All I got back for my investment was a belt from Phil Bloom whi! looks suspiciously like the one T gave him last Xmas with the buckle shined up, and I wish now I had marked it last year, T was also | four ties come by the via of the mail and if I ever get crazy enough to wear any one of ‘em I will have to put dimmers on it or the public will go blind. I got at the least 200 cards which says on ‘em Wishin’ 7) | You a Jo Xmas and A Elegant |f} New Years” and which don't, mean nothin’, because the only guy which ever got anything by the via of wish in’ was a young feller by the name of, Aladdin Joe, 1 give Jeanne, for the ex ample, a diamond broach pin which every stone in it is so full of fire and life you could take it in a dark room and read with ft, not that we have to, and in return she give me a china set of dishes to go in the show case which adorns the diner of our mutual castle. I will no doubt ‘have a lot of rare sport these long winter nights playin’ house with ~ them dishes and I expect the doll which goes with the set to arrive at any minute. ge However Joo, they was one Xmas present I got from my beautifully wife which I will recall for some time, as it come near havin’ the bath of us make the acquaintance of the divorce lawyers, a thing which I have always try to avoid. This gift was delivered a coupla- weeks before Xmas and was imported from France and was in the shape of Jeanne’'s family on her mother’s and father's side. Joe, one mornin’ I was peacefully dreamin’ of the various things a successfully movin’ picture hero like me will select to dream of and I was just in the midst of sternly wavin’ aside the charmin'ly princess which craved to wed me, the while re markin’ like they did in the time of Looey the 14, “What the ho, my, | oul” “Arise! gaye Jeanne. “T have tor | dizzy, and says. the delightful surprina Ab,| “Avec. plaisir! We go to pler and meet Ie vapeur—what , 1 prepared for the worst.|@all the steamer from Bordeaux, ‘fe Whenever a woman says she has ch your wtep! not Jeanne my she have the prise for you?” ext neve a (Continued In Our pleasant surprise for ru lay FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE we eat STREET ; | DOWNSTAIRS STORE Adjustable Reading Lamps At $3.95 Exceptional Value R studying, at 3 piano and for the office desk, this Lamp you, eight to} with flexible rod that is adjustable to almost any po sition. Complete with cord and plug—exceptional value at $3.95. Water Set, Special $1.00 JST 72 of these low-priced Sets for J ~~ Wednesday’s selling. Two-quart Pitcher with six tumblers in fluted 4] ey; | Pudding Bowls, 20c Each tern on these bowls for br fast food, fruit and padding. measure 414 inches in diameter. Priced at 20¢ each. 50-piece Bluebird Dinner Set, $17.50 EDIUM-W EIGHT semi-porcelain dinner service, with dainty decor- ation of small bluebirds and foliage and gold edge. Carried in open stock so that the service may be enlarged as desired. Fifty pieces, $17.50. aa a 60 Doll Tea Sets ' Reduced to 35c Each CUNNING little decorated teapot, with creamer and sugar and three cups and saucers to serve as many dolls—nicely packed in pasteboard: box—reduced to 35¢ set. ° ; 114 Fox Numeral Boards Reduced to 35c Each N easy way for the youngsters to learn to spell is by means of these boards with their sliding letters and numerals. The center is to be used as | a slate. r Reduced to 35¢ each. & —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE The Wanda Heater Serves Economically With Coal or Wood TT duplex grate of the: Wanda permits its use | with either fuel, and air-tight joints enable it to hold the fire all night o all day. The Wanda’s large fu door is a grest conv ience and the sectional li ing is an important provement. The Wanda is for its simple, clea lines and for the view it affords of the through the mica front, Priced at $35.00. —THE DOWNSTAIRS i lady. Od's blood, s'death and whoops

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