The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 11, 1921, Page 3

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THE SECOND NEAR SENECA Always on the Job! You Can See Him Here Saturday— The Piayhouse of No Kegrots STARTING SATURDAY Stewart Edward White's Western melodrama that ran as a serial in ‘The’ Red Book” — A clean, fascinating, spine- tingling photoplay, colored with the sweeping romance of a maiden in distress, powerless in the trap of a fiend! A thriller for sure! He’s a smooth society meddler! His eyes—they burn like acid! His words—they melt like fire! He fascinates you! He capti- vates you! He holds you in his spell! This mighty drama is a tri- umph of photoplay art! STRAND ORCHESTRA UNDER S. K. WINELAND Frank Campeau, Claire Adams, Tod Sloan, little Frankie Lee and Jack Con- way are in the cast. ELMORE CROWHURST ON’*THE HOPE-JONES WURLITZER JENSEN & VON HERBERG NEWS FIRST NATIONAL KINOGRAMS Last Times Friday Douglas MacLean and Doris May in “The Rookie’s Return” ca away and the government is un Minister’s Son Eats able to trace them. Chairman Sny der of the house Indian committee has recommended an investigntion, LAST TIMES FRIDAY “THE INSIDE OF THE CUP” IF BACK HURTS: Take a Glass of Salts to Mush Kid- | neys if Bladder bothers you— Drink lots of water, Government Seeks Trace of Indians) WASHINGTON, March 11-—~An other tribe has been lost—the Mon. tauk Indians. The last of the Mon- tauks are known to have lived fo | time on Long Isl JOPLIN, Mo March 11 | a minister's son, a ‘ In 1920 Cuba bought $170,000,000 pod anas in exactly 12 minutes to win worth of goods from the United a bet of $1. He offered to eat 12 ates. more, but found no takers. MI HUH ETHICAL DENTISTS A DOUBLE SERVICE Jean hee Eating meat regularly eventually Produces kidney trouble in some form or other, says a well-known au- thority, because the uric acid in meat excites the kidneys, they become| overworked; get sluggish; clog up and cause all sorts of distress, particular. ly backache and misery in the ney region; rheumatic twinges, vere headaches, acid stomach, con me Mipntion, ‘tatyid ‘hvar) eleeplessneas, - Save you money bladder and urinary ie. ss Maximum of and give you & The moment your bac hurts or P. i kidneys aren't acting right, or if Safety benefit of our bladder bothers you, get about four a . ; ounces of Jad Salts from any good With entire staff of ii pharmacy; take a tablespoonful in Maximum of specialists : a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your k will Interest Our prices are lower because the system of den then act fine, This famous salts is tistry employed in this office enables us to do you a made from the acid of grapes and GUARANTEED wf ay ¢ lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to By the largest capital of s flush clogged k ys and stimulate any Savings Bank in % them to normal vity; also to neu- h N h t. i tralize the in the urine so it the Northwes ates, thus ending blad their life study THIS IS OUR 14 YEARS’ RECORD THE BANK FOR SAVINGS Capital $400,000.00 Pine Street at 4th Avenue Jad Salts cannot injure anyone;| pkes a delightful effervescent lith- a water drink which millions of men and women take now and then to keep the kidney clean, thus avoiding dineane | OPPORTUNITY: ITU | S TARWANTADS . NO CHARGE FORK EXAMINATION WAMOTT 4357 1604:» 4th Beak a Sevings Bl LADY ATTENDANTS ST 1 urinary organs erious kidney ~Advertisernent. OPEN EVENINGS SEATTLE STAR 24 Bananas on a Bet) CITY RUBES | PROVE EASY FOR CROOKS “Wise” New Yorkers Ready | Prey for All the Standard | Old “Con” Games NEW YORK, March 11.—The idea usually so popular with elty people, that all rubes live in the country, | Seema to lack force in New York this season. Too many people are being | cleverly separated from thelr small change. For tn the wake of the crime wave has come an epidemic of petty | graft to which the shrewd, sophisti cated New Yorker has succumbed as easily aarhe did to last year’s “flu.” Hardened shopkeepers of long city training have been buying fake furs and paste jewels with a reckless burb, and thousands Broadway residents have » tributing to fake causes with a nenti jmental abandon rarely exhibited by the citizens of a small town of all the talk about money tight, beggurs and fraud specialists are having a nicer time in New York |this year thansthey have ever had before. In spite being WALL STREET MAN FALLS FOR OLD, OLD LINE The other night a shrewd young | busines man in Wall etreet was on his way me when he waa accosted bullt stranger forth a gloved hand tion you remember | with an ened, well New York we don't speak to people # readily as we do in my home town but I've often wanted Well, I'm awful) y to run into you now for I'm in f od of help. accident and had to haul my car into & garage about three blocks from here, and now I find I'm just $5 short on the repair bill. Worst of it in I promised to meet my wife at station this afternoon. She'll be load j ed down with junk and won't have a} cent As noon as I caught sight | of you, tho, it occurred to me that | you might be able to help me out.” | At this point the stranger drew | forth hit wallet and disclosed a fat | yt of small bills. got $53 here.” he y. ("but the repair bill ts $58."| Then with*enghging frankness: “1! am going to. sek you if you can let | me have the extra five until tomor row morning. I can run right over to your office from mine in a few minutes and hand it back to you.” — | bs t's all right.” interrupted ovr friend uneasily, but agreeably, tak ing a fivespot from his much smalier | rol) of bills. “Gilad to let you have it I may need some help myreit | some time.” | A few days Inter the morning pa- | pers warned their readers about this particular form of “touch.” HE NEEDED $15 FOR LUNCH—AND GOT IT A young woman was quietly cata | loguing in her office when a nice | looking young man with soft brown | eyes dashed excitedly in the door and | anked to see Mra. J., the young wo | man's employer | “Where is mhe?” he demanded, his face flushed apparently from the ex ertion of running. “I must mee her at once, I ran all the way up here from the hotel down theblock. Gone to lunch? Oh, I say, that's tough In there any way I can reach her im modiate | I'm afraid I don't know where whe is,” said the assistant, “but she ought to be back in about an hour.” | What am I to do?” exclaimed the young man dramatically. “Perhaps | ou can advise me. You see, I've | asked a girl to lunch, and when we/ were seated at the table down there t the hotel I suddenly dincovered I didn’t have a scrap of money on me. | |All in my other clothes, you know,” |he explained in evident embarrass ment. “So, knowing Mra. J. very | well, I thought I could just run up here and get a loan from her, but I suppose it's no use.” The young assistant was sympa thetic. So she took the $18 he said [he needed from her own purse and insisted upon his accepting it. But when Mrs. J. returned, the lyoung assistant was dismayed to 1 that that good lady had never 1 of Gavin Courtney. A few days later, however, when she described him to the police they seemed to be jon quite familiar terms with him. |EVEN A PROFESSIONAL CHAUFTEUR FELL One of the most expensive cases of | fraud which recently occurre on} | Fifth avenue in the shopping district | was one in which the most sophisti-| Jcated of humans, a professional | hauffeur, was hoodwinked, The man’s employer, @ very weal- thy woman, had just removed her | $20,000 sable coat from storage in a furrier’s shop, and upon returning to he car, left it in his care while she ontinued her shopping. As the chauffeur waited, a stranger saun- t up and engaged him tn conver. mation about the town, the weather, ete. Then he sauntered on, and in a few seconds another stranger ap staggering in an almost for anner. The cnauffeur found cond man so interesting that amiied | he failed to see the first stranger ircle the car and calmly remove the ma coat. The first he knew of the cident was when a policeman came | and informed him that a-bus conduc | tor, ftom his position on top of an | avenue bus, had ween it go. A slot machine is paratus in Itself, and \'t he too impressed when you hear about the sagacious invul- | een lity of the New Yorker. Fat Women’s Land | Found in Africa} LONDON, March 11.—Dr, John Roscoe, ethnologist from a visit “Mm tribes Juat had ane f) ust returned }" S PIKE MORE housewives siasm of the But the splendid thin, The praises have si become an almost un qualities in a Monar \Son “Accuses Mother | of Trying to Kill) PARIS, March 11.—Mme. Louise Tissier, a widow, is under arrest, ac cuned by her 13-year-old son of hav: | ing tried to murder him by throwing him down a cliff. Tho severely ruised by the fall, he was able to ramble back to the top. “They WORK while you sleep” ‘ou are bilious, cons’ y, full of cold, unstrung als don't fit—breath low. Take one or t tonight for your liver a els and wake up elear, rosy an ful. No sriping—no inconvenience, Children love Cascarets too, 10. 6b cy arets a “| Hideous Freckles lastently Removed 2 after all other In many instances. methods fail. Fre » Ja om Bartell and the Owl Drug Co. = -Advertisement —only actual cooking on a The 9-piece Aluminum Cooking Set Sketched is now being gi FREE with each Monarch Malleable Range Reliability, Quick Action, Economy, & -\fa] 12 atisfactory Terms Always THE GROTE-RANKIN CO OTTO F. KEGEL, President STREET AND FIFTH AVENUE Pa than ever before speak with unrestrained enthu- MONARCH MALLEABLE RANGE gs they say about it are the same that thousands of Seattle housewives have always said. mply swelled and grown in value until they have iversal chorus of unstinted approval. The delights that come with the installation of a Monarch in your kitchen cannot be enumerated here Monarch can prove its greatness. ven Beauty and Efficiency — are ch Malleable Range that make cooking a con- tinuous delight and pleasure. fal PHONOG CONSISTENCY 1921 Is Pievink a Big Year & It is gratifying to note that great capital—great = equipment—consistent workmanship, and, above all, o consistent prices on their products have produced [§ in the Brunswick Phonograph an instrument sec- ond to none. Where Brunswick superiority is most apparent is in actual competition with other makes of phonographs. This is a test we relish. Wildcat Business Concerns Must Go Slashing prices under various pretexts, misrep- resentation of their products, are never-failing in- dications of failure. An INCONSISTENT Phono- graph concern cannot be CONSISTENT in the price of its products, but must fluctuate UP when the going is good and DOWN when clean business methods crown the CONSISTENT House with suc- cess. Brunswick will not cut its prices on either Phonographs or records. It can’t be done and still RAPHS 1) PET rsp oy <a o a z produce the same HIGH-GRADE PRODUCT that has astounded the Music Loving Public, and in four short years, by leaps and bounds, industries. taken the lead in one of America’s greatest CON- SISTENCY—is the answer, = tolo[o) Compare the Brunswick Phono- graph illustrated at $125.00 with any $150.00 Phonograph on the market. Your ear will tell you, for tone, and lack of mechanical noi Your Terms Our Terms. Brunswick Records can be played on any machine using steel needles are OOO a o}o} ojos) 216 Third Ave., Between University and Seneca. Phone Main 3139 Pojoetotoreroojoreroorerctoforar olor Seeee. ipeccuiaasessienliinateey

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