The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 10, 1920, Page 11

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5 ; t tle former soldiers who did net A. A. Collins, arrested Thursday aft | tary FRIDAY, DECEMBER.10, 1920. charge Papen to |Raid Heme; Arrest 3) F ruit Growers Talk Win Victory Medals in Liquor Charges at C. of C. Luncheon)! mtation of discharge certifi. Charges of having liquor unlowful J. & Crutehfield, of Pitteburg, Pa led at the army recruiting atation | ly in their possession were placed! president of the American Pruit 301 Mutua! Life butiding, will en | aginst i A. Kern, C. & Green and| Growers, and G. C, Corbaley, score of the Puyallup & Sumner in major engagements to im-| ernoon, when Deputy Sheriffs Matt) Fruit Growers’ Canning Co, were | t of a Victory medal. | starwich, Jul tus Von Carste, Asa speakers at the members’ counell to the more m | and ©. H. Ke lunches in the Masonic elub rooms terurban station | Friday noon An electric pen hae been invented time in ine} by & native of India that carbon | tmes paper over which’ it pasos | MONEY Must Be Raised My big stock of superb woolens must be sacrificed. I am simply compelled to raise cash and sell entirely without re- gard to cost.. Any idea of profit is forgotten. Woolens Bought to Sell for $50 to $75 on Sale for One Day - - SATURDAY ONLY MADE TO MEASURE Suits - $30.00 O’coats $27.50 Blue Serges, Fine Tweeds, Good Cashmeres and a fine assortment of Worsteds and Mixtures go at $30. In over- coatings you get choice of a splendid line of medium and heavy weight woolens for $27.50. Please understand this offer is good only for one day—Saturday. Do not come Monday and expect to get these prices. And there will be yt crowd in the afternoon, so came as early as possible in the s| IMPERIAL TAILORING CO. LOUIS SIDELSKY, PROP. 801 THIRD AVENUE, CORNER COLUMBIA - ~ @m a clear day tt ts possible to go Spaniards discovered cocoa tn the im an airplane anywhere in Eng new world and lost no @ and view the sea, troducing it Into Europe. T.HE hl I. STAR “Nothing Is Commonplace Girl Editor’s Success Key Suggestions U. & Army Shoes, Munson last, officers’ drews .. 88.45 U. & Army Field Shoes 86.50 U, & Wool shirta .... $2.50 w ss. 25 60 only, White Hospital Blanketa, double 10x80, MPOCHAL o-04 eee nee 9.00 6 pairs English Socks, heavy WOOL ++ Army Bweators .....--..--. weceeee++- $3.00 to $3.50 Ma& Ord, Sent en Approval CAMP LEWIS WIRELESS 906 Third Ave. SATURDAY Cars Power ' “THE BEST OF You can purchase a used Buick of us now at a substantial saving. LUCK’ WITH AN ALL-STAR CAST The tremendous East Every car is in first- class condition and El- dridge Buick Service is back of every car we sell. Come in and see us. No obligation entailed for demonstration. Pike at Harvard The Home of the GMC Truck Drury Lane melodrama; high romance, sensational adventures, hairbreadth escapes and daring deeds CLEMMER MUSIC Liborius Hauptman, Director COMEDY “THE SCARECROW” with BUSTER KEATON Tonight—Last Times “Parlor, Bedroom and Bath” ”? ” NEW YORK.- ty Matl.)~—Mar @aret Anderson, sole owner and executive of the magazine called “The Little Review! A carver unique in the histary of women! = | Barely out of her teens, with a passion for art and letters and free. dom for the artist. Miss Anderson started this magazine on nothing but enthusianm and 29 cents. FIVE YEARS AGO SHE HAD NEVER BEEN HEARD OF Five yoars ago abe bad never been heant of. Bhe is now recognized as the editor of the only ultra-mogern magasine thru which America has come In touch with such people as James Joyce, William Butler Yoata, Here Pound, Wyndham Lewis, Ford In America there ts almort no such | medium There are many mage zines, it Im true, but none of them but hae te formula on which tts stories are based and its pictures | | painted. Magusines start up and dic | | they dié because the people back of | them have Uttle or no money, little | oF BO courage, [ttle or no following. | NEVER TREATED PERSONS AS | If THEY WERE ORDINARY | “Just how I have sucéeeded tn keeping the Little Review alive ts even to me @ sort of miracle, but 1) think I have discovered what the miracle is—-I have Sever treated any-| ‘hing in Bfe as if tt were common: | ploe Dor Any persons as if they were ordinary.” When Miss Anderson started hor magazine and the proofs were held at the printers because there was no money, she went to several largv houses, whose goods she desired to advertion, and without even so much | as a single copy of her magazine to show, she returned that same eve-| ning with $500 in advertining. | Bhe had convinced them that “the adventure was the value"—the ad. venture of having talked for a few! moments to a woman who would dic for her enthusiasms as the artist would die for his art. Mina Anderson recogiras no aif. ficulties, She says for every diffi-| culty there is some approach, some | drama, some victory. | FOREMOST WRITERS OF | EUROPE RESPONDED In this spirit she dpproacted the artists of England and France. She wrote and told them what she ‘want-| ed to do—to establish an internation. al communication of thought, imagt: | nation and pewer——that she wanted tamake It possthle for the struggling artista of America to be heard; “for,” | as she says, “the greatest artist in! the world will become discouraged if | he cannot even get his work print! od.” And they responded at once | with manuscripts, | And this same Miss Anderson, young, handsome and unafraid, te! Jalso capable of the daring necessary | |to print on the back cover “sole own, er and editor” and on the front cover the line: “Making ne compromise with the public taste.” Pedestrians || Hit by Antoo(\()) This Year Harold Stordahl, 7, of 6054 Seo ond ave. N. W., was bruised when knooked down by the auto of W. C, Fletcher, 323 B. Gist st., at EB. 67th st. and Phinney ave, Thursday. |Louis Didn’t Think —Called on Firemen EVANSVILLE, Ind, Dee. 19,— When the fire wagons drove to the door of Louis Mickleson’s grocery store the firemen didn’t take the hose from the carts, They put out the roof fire with Mickleson’s tea- kettle. “Funny 1 didn’t think of that eclaration of Independ- ence 4,500,000 Irish have emigrated to the United States VASHON MAN PAGE 11 Street Sellers Are Pshaw! Who Doesn’ t Now Going South! Recognize Mud Hen? SAN ANTONIO, Texas, Dec. 10 HK N, Ky., Dec. 10 —e 1¢ has been found who “It must be getting oald up North,” h found w maid the old Texan. “I noticed tw SHOT MAY DIE : Vi victim of Indian in Critical this noon as I went to dinner.” Condition Just as the robin ix the harbinger of spring to the winter-bored North, the street b # the announce Too iI to talk, Oncar Bokien, Vanh-| runt tot th that winter in on inland fish broker, shot Wednew | raving in Bo ‘ ' he Deputy Prosecuting Attorney J.D. Carmody 4nd Deputy Sheriff Herbert id ——- Heebe, Who vinited the island Thurs | lay to inventigate, reported no new |Asks py Be Atsociels evidence, Gurand ts tn the county jan Cop Accommodating A NE RE Raw ——- a Eng. Dee. 10 ’ BAN FRA x —Ran 3 dite entered ring| who, acco with three kk: We nt tuke|to police ’ he } o ‘em for the girls,” they mid ‘rear light. Cop accommodated him, N. Oeconomacos. .. Clarinet 4. 4d. Gilbert . .. Plate Harp Accompaniment by Kicanor Nordhoff Beck Assisting Artists THIRD POPULAR CONCERT Tomorrow Night} ALL SEATS RESERVED THERE IS “ROOM FOR EVERY LITTLE TOE” IN “BUD” —AND— “SIS” Strong, serviceable schoo! shoes fer children, made on a perfectly fitting foot-form last, Goodyear stitched, and not a single nail, tack or staple in thém Nothing te burt the little feet and no more torn stockings. Manafactured by ZIMMERMAN - DEGEN SHOE CO.: « SEATTLE, WASIL Bold Wy Gem's Nifty Boots Seat Sale SHERMAN, OLAY & CO, PRICES—B5e, 50c, Te, $100 l meena The INVORTOTS: Goal Puget Sound Power & li Light Company's 8 Per Cent Five-Year Gold Coupon Notes ‘Dated September 1, 1920; Due September 1, 1925 Price, Par, Plus Interest Sizes $100, $500 and $1,000 nt YIELD 8 PER CENT Desa ecivet Wil Sans Halen who invests, or who even seeking ndence—economic indepen teal we from debt. Investment Should Be Independent. Consequently, every one in choosing where to invest the money he has saved—his saved-up human labor—secks a form of in- vestment which itself is as independent of other things as he him- self wants to be. Our Property Unusually Independent. Puget Sound Power & Light Company—which is now offer- ing for sale its five-year 8% notes at par—is unusually inde pendent of the ordinary business conditions. The product it sells is needed by the people whether business is good or bad. Practically all of its power is hydro - electric. This independence has an ‘important bearing on the safety of the bap tion of any company, especially during the after-the-war readjustment period which has now set in. Notes Combine Both Independence and High Yield. When to this independence is added the unusually high return of 8%, the Puget Sound Power & Light Company notes now sell- ing are seen to be both attractive and conservative—a rare com- bination in any times. to save m — freedom OUR OFFER First—Notes in limited amounts may, if desired, be purchased by paying 10% with order and the balance in nine monthly payments, we retaining note until final payment is made. Interest at 6% will be allowed on installments paid. Amounts paid may be withdrawn at any time. before final payment is made, in which case 4% interest will be allowed. Second—Notes may be purchased by 10 per cent cash payment, and the balance on or before January 10, 1921. Fuller Information may be obtained at any office of the Company CONSULT YOUR BANKER Puget Sound Power & Light Company

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