The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 3, 1921, Page 9

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[=~] TheSeattle Star =. SEATTLE, WASH., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1921. MURDERER SCHMITT SPENDS NIGHT AT YAKIM GAT GOES 6,000 HOW TO GET SLIM ANKLES: OOD; _ An Attempt to Explain HERIFE Easiaie STILL IS iginal Full announce which was #ent to Los Angeles by MANY SALMON RECIPES GOOD; SOME ENSIVE MILES IN TRUNK | Judging the recipes sent to The ¢ Home otherwise good reel | in the contest just ended in no were eliminated, because it ap } WASHINGTON, D. CG, Feb. 3.—! Mins Martha KE, Dressler, ine peared to me they were too expen- | With all tiy | ktructor in home economics at’ the | sive and too far removed from the |intact, 1 5 | University of Washington, who is pocketbook of the average family,” are purred contentment in Washingt |judging the contest, wants to tell nent of the winners ae after a 6,000-Mile journey in a ward-| |the city #0 and thelr pr recipes will be pub A Metaphysician Gone Askew. robe trunk without food or drink ie lished in ‘The Star tomorrow, ri ry "t) ; | here are #0 many of them,” #he _ are Neither “Hard Boiled” Nor Ignorant. |nnid ‘Thursday, that it’s taking more “ 4 >: . | J time than I ever thought it would to H Held Human Lives as Valueless. _News if ‘ [pian Se hordbetook Councilman’s Wife, Mentality of a Schopenhauer. ‘ " + x | “Some. of the recipes ‘are very Ill; Is Improving Jed he hid in the colonel’s trunk, |good, being among the beet I have| Hope for the recovery of Mem. BY GEORGE CHANNING ever experimented with, and all xhow annie L, Hesketh, wife of Council man Robert B. Hesketh, operated on Swedish hospital, is being held according to report ants, Wednesday. 7 e | il -_ ¥ t t . twee: | mistake, re * ies |the touches of the practical house o Bagel arog a pe pre “ ay, t “ tos a 3 pees et Fed “e : “40 ey hing Washington after! Get into the comfortable position shown above and hang \ wir J «Rpm ce a ct > derer, is a metaphysiclan © | path of his mind and the path of his | 4 > wor . tot : A} P askew, Hoe is a man to wh feet. Hence he thwarted the argu ‘by seemed to be tn exceltent | /our feet in strong elastic bands, Then kick, stretching the| «armost an of the suggestions ve | by big realities of life are vig | ment th and spirits bands. , London girls are doing it. read so far are apparently entirely _ Yakima safely W: Walla at 2 P. M.; Warden | Refuses to Talk Sheriff Matt nesday night with John Schmitt, the condemne ) derer-bandit, lodged his prisoner in | to Starwich with the understanding | That it is to be given to the fund for |.) The county jail there until Thursday | Morning and left for Walla Walla at Pam. The train was due at the penitentiary at 2 p. m. ‘The sheriff reported by telephone that Schmitt continued in a happy frame of mind thruout yesterday's Tedious ride, but was glad to get out And stretch his | Schmitt is sid to have $4,000 “planted” east the mountains, Which he has promised to turn over the aid of the families of Detective Jimmy O'Brien and Policemen W. T. Angie and Nei! McMillan, the ban. @it's last victims. Henry Drum, warden of the peni-| . was asked over the long @istance telephone by The Star to mur mitt has an ordinary mind. It ks over the traces of common | place thinking, and then sets limits |for tteelf in a field where there are Starwich reached | no limita If the realities were wholly real Schmitt, and the unrealities ent, he would dem uld probably be classed er brain, As it in his trouble ts hot that he is indifferent. It is that he cares too much. WHY HE MEETS DEATH WITHOUT A TREMOR This is not a defense of the boy and a few mili other parts of t jt © ask What mann nerved youth who slays} out a tremor who, when caugh ery for his r ‘This is an attempt of men is this own ha to answer ‘Three hours of convermtion with him, on his trial, once in hin cel m he thwarted his at “We understand you once made ‘rial, have the statement that you would not be Perhaps | warden of a penitentiary where a| Chief among | Bian was hanged. Is that a fact?” “I don't know. I don't remember having made the statement publicly,” he replied. “What wil you do tn this case?” “T can't say. “He seems to be; yes.” “Well, I don’t know. pared, as yet, to mak SELLS GIRL AT I'm not pre | mankind's soc’ statement.” |HE THINK’ S ABOV: | Smith is not He ts not “hard-bolled.” He does not talk thru his teeth, nor glare. [nor sulk. | He ts not mentally unbalanced. Is Schmitt in full | His eyes, his speech, hit manner be possession of his mental faculties?” |tray a keen, or rather profound, you kindly tnform me as to whether |conception of the whole scheme of organization. HUMAN LITTLENESS | And that Is the secret of Schmitt | |He understands human littleness| jand, in his outlook, he i# above them | x —but not far enough above them. | : | With the mental sweep of a Kant, | or, better, of a Schopenhauer, he} | ZEXINGTON, Ky., Feb. 3.—A re lence. a H ¥ She Refuses to Go to Pur- chaser; Nearly Shot grt from Stanford, Lincoln county, sees tihat time and space are |ilustons—sees even that life and }death, as conceived humanly, are nothing. Consequently he could kill and wonder why it mad h a differ. In just one , the most dangerous’ and unforgivable thing, | George Isaman, a farmer of the |he stooped to become ordinary | Mountain section, has been placed in Jail at Stanford on a charge made by | Riis daughter, Annie, 18, that her father had attempted to shoot her. ‘The girl charges that her father gold her at 10 cents a pound, a total @f $15, to Joseph Zubra. When he came to the home some weeks later ‘to claim his purchase, the father was greatly displeased at the girl's re fusal to carry out the terms of the fame and tried to shoot her. Isaman and his family are highly Tespected in their rural community, It is said. The girl is pretty and well educated Cops to Use Fists ‘Instead of Club JERSEY CITY, N. J.. Feb. 3.— @igned from the police force in order to become a professional prizefighter He will go to the Pacific coast and Start training. He is a middleweight. ‘Patrolman Ernest Schreifer has re} He allowed himeelf to kill. He figured that the value of his own life and liberty gave him the right t bt right the self-real he chose to hew a path fc foet And his head disdained the weeds that tangled his footatepa. HELPED PROSECUTOR AND JURY FIX PUNISHMENT Therefore. courtroom aiding the p torney and the jury to i ed for wayward that in the scheme he sat c of things, th appeal from greextons which or safety of social arr He did not dare to challenge He came in tater, when his attor ney was about to argue for a new And he knew there was no ment under the sun that could (How GOOD IS YOUR MEMORY?| He that wrongs his friend Wrongs himself more, and ever bears about A silent court of justice in his breast, Himself a dudge and gury, and himself | ‘The prisoner at the bar, ever condemned TENNYSON Dorothy Le Roye, aged 4, of Windsor, Vt., the memory | spondency, ‘the blues,’ irritability She can’t read this stanza, but| and backache arise from some dis- marvel of New England. when it was read rapidly to her once, she repeated it imme-| pl ditely without an error. She can rattle off all the presidents | proven tl ;| papers it states I enlisted at Fort jnual per capita cons ¢- dare to challenge it. | his attor | for a new} there was no Argument under the sun that could | justify the divergence between the| path of his mind and the path of} hin feet. Hence he thwarted tho} at nderatood it all, And th 1 to hit is that he is th man in the drama that under t at all He laughs because know what else to do. In a sense, Re ie the victim of cir *. He thought that be iw out of the he doesn't ligation is the of thought. to, but did not keep, his self-made laws. BY WERVEY M LINDLEY Adjutaat's Office, Rainier-Nedie Fost, American Legion. ‘Telephone Wiltets 479. I have lost my discharge win} the party finding ft can use the same in an endeavor té profit by the bonus which should property come to me? I have a photograph of this dis- charge. Will this be sufficient wien applying for the bonus? A WORRIED SAILOR. Tt would be nearly impossible for anyone finding your discharge to use| it to collect the bonus You should | werite immediately to the aceretary of the navy, Washington, D. C., re- questing that a certified copy of your discharge be mailed to you immedi- ately, eee I was in this state since July, 1917. I went to the «tate of Call fornia for three months and return- ed to the state of Washington. 1} have been in this state ever since. 1 was inducted into the army June 5 in this state. On my discharge Worden, Wash. Am I entitled to the bonus? EX-SOLDIER. You must have been a resident of the state of Washington for at least one year prior to your entry into the army, in order to be entitied to the| bonus. It will be necessary for you| to produce affidavits to that effect | when applying for bonus to the county auditor, Haste Is Urged in Irish Relief Work! | Emphasizing the tmmediate dis | nm and children in Ire. | fe in sub- | thin #ec The commit >» | 1 and sectarian issues be dis-| carded. j Between 1880 and 1907 the an- umption of all liquors in try rove from 10 to nearly r 0 NERVOUS How Miserable This Woman Was Until She Took Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound I suffered ter- ache and headache all the time, was se weak and nervous I didn’t know what to do, and could not do my work. My trouble was deficient and irregular periods. I read in the aperswhat Lydia E Pinkh ® Vegetable Com- pond had done or others and de- cided to give it atrial. I results from its use so that able to do oy work. I recommend your Vegetable Compound to my friends who have troubles similar to use these facts as irs. C.F, PHILLIPS, pt good am now mine and you ma: ‘a testimonial, ’’— Toomsboro, Ga. Weak, nervous women make un- happy-homes, their condition irritates both husband and children. It has been said that nine-tenths of the nervous prostration, nervous de- jacement or derangement of a wo- man’s 1 ket pa Mrs. Phillips’ letter hat no other remedy is #0 suc- Washington down, and give the population of all the’ cessful as Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege Principal American cities, table Compound, , Here’s a Clarion Call to Seattle’s Small Men Suits and Overcoats for young fellows and for small men will go in the Hub’s great sale beginning tomorrow at $23.85, instead of $50 to $75 A LL new—all fine—all such suits as are pictured in the Saturday Post’s advertisements at six thousand dollars a pagal Plain serges, fancy worsteds, herringbones, hair-line striped effects—the finest ever pre- sented—the quality, like Caesar’s wife—above suspicion. But they will fit only small men or young fellows. Hence the astonishing price — Twenty-three dollars and eighty-five cents for Suits and Overcoats worth $50.00, $60.00 and $75.00. And which cost wholesale far more than the price asked. But that’s not all. ‘ All the rest of the merchandise in the store is half price except the they’re a third less). HIRTS are selling for less than the Hub paid for ’em. Underwear is selling for less than the factories are asking. This is because the Hub’s buyers thought the war was going to last. Hence the Hub has too much merchandise and not enough money. You can get the finest Five Dollar Men’s Shirts you ever saw for $2.50. The best Madras and Percale Shirts for $1.25 instead of $2.50. The Sturdy Work Shirts of Blue Chambray for Sixty- nine cents apiece instead of $1.50. And the Fiber Silk Shirts, which always sold at $8.50, have been cut to $4.25. Gloves are half price, too. Work Gloves, all leather with can- vas gauntlet, at 37c a pair. Fine Dress Kid Gloves at one-half the former prices. Plainly marked — original tick- ets—pay one-half and get them for less than they could be imported for. THE Neckwear is half price, too. The finest Silk Ties are 50c instead of a dollar; the $1.50 Ties are 75c. Arrow Collars and other makes are two for a quarter. Odd lot# of Underwear (Shirts and Drawers), worth up to $3.50, will be sold at 95c a garment. Shirts for Gentlemen (digest it, please), with starched cuffs, worth up to $3.50, will go for $1.15. The finest All-wool Sweaters are half price —$10.00 for $5.00—$7.50 for $3.75, and so on. N odd lot of Overcoats for lads of from twelve to fifteen will be closed out for a song—$7.85 instead of $25.00. But there’s only a baker’s dozen, so it will be well to come early if you want to get one! The Money-Back Store 615-619 First Avenue F,VERY man in town ought to supply him- self with Socks while these prices are in ef- fect. Black Cotton Sox for 123c instead of 25c. Heavy Cotton Sox are same price. Famous “In- terwoven’”’ Cashmere Sox are 373c instead of 75c. - And the best 50c Black Wool Sox are now two- bits a pair. ‘ Hats and Caps are half price—Stetson and Mal- lory and other fine makes included. $10 Hats for $5; $9 Mallory Hats for $4.75. Four-dollar cloth — Hats for a two-dollar bill, and the classiest plaid and checked Golf Caps, such as Movie Heroes wear, are $2 instead of $4. 6¢[ ID you mention Underwear, sir?” Every line is half price, and in some cases less. Two-dollar Ribbed Union Suits are $1. The “B. V. D.” style Union Suits are 75c instead of $1.50. The famous Winsted $2.50 Un- derwear is $1.25, and Wright’s Wool Union Suits that were $7.00 are now $3.50. Oregon City Wool Overshirts are $3 instead of $6. ’ Even the Shoes are marked down— $7.50 Button Shoes for men at $3.75. Heavy Brown Russia Calf Walking Shoes are $5.85 in- stead of $8.50, and Shoes for dress wear, on the new lasts, are the same price. Did we make it clear that the Suits and Over- coats for men are all half price and less? Less for the small sizes, as stated in the opening of this sermon. Did you realize, sir, that the finest Suits and Overcoats that were $75 are now $37.50— that the $50 ones are $25 and so on all through the store, and that the Hub is selling its entire stock at less, in many cases, than the present wholesale cost. AND no matter whether you buy a collar or a complete outfit, you are assured of this one fact: If you want your money back for any reason you have only toask for it. That’s been the rule here ever since this business was started, twenty-five years ago. And it is in force today. WU On the Square Opposite the Totem Pole separate pants (and

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