The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 6, 1921, Page 5

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FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1921. TST conan Grunbaum Bros. Furniture Co., Inc. The House of Service and Accommodation ny (9) GET YOUR CART FOR SUNDAY USE Sulkies—Strollers—Orioles— Go-Baskets, Etc. c'mon now! AA UTTLE PEP! WHAT'S THE MATTER? ae} ALITTLE SPEED way Tuere! THAT'S AN uppercut! A Carriage to be Proud of for a Baby You Are Proud of $42.50 This luxurious “Pullman Sleeper” will make baby’s journies truly delightful. The construction is roomy and comfortable. Finest quality steel springs ab- sorb all shocks. One of our neatest designs, Ivory or Gray. An exceptionally well-balanced model. Others priced up to $80.00. m ‘ THE SEATTLE STAR NES | ee ee ee ee e Ng : The Great American Home | THINK You HAD BETTER START To READ HIM SOMETHING ELSE BESIDE JACK DEMPSEY! | GIRL POISONING FS} | Country club owes him $1,666.50 and | a is insolvent, James 1. Blackwell, #u- | Released After Being Ques- tioned FURMETUDE. WHERE PIKE MEETS FIFTH ’ | perintendent of the city's building | wu EO} CJT NUE® department, has petitioned the supe r ————“| rior court to appoint a receiver for | Believe : the cops grabbed me.” | the club, He alleges he supervised | It or Not; Thus Tom Winters tn police court. | alterations and grading for the club yh the Judge Didn't! | 6 was charged by Serst. J. 8. Don. | and was paid only $119.80 of his bill| T. C. Caverly, 23, last person with lan with gambling. The case was | of $1,786.30. |Irene Arnell, 17, of Auburn, before “Judge, I was just out there to! taken under advisement. — — |nhe attempted suicide Wednesday stop that little gambling game, when PALO ALTO, Cal—Two wards of | 1101 was questioned by deput some one yelled, ‘Jigger! The bulla!"| SPOKANE.—J. B. Campbell takes| government tubercular hospital de | '*) as. @ Cer. T looked at the money and dice lying | oath of office as member of inter-|stroyed by fire. No casualtion; $60) Sheriffs late Thursday concerning « Om the sidewalk; every one ran and | state commerce commission. 000 loxs. jstnail vial of carbolic acid he bad in F = — Sn | s\his pocket. Hoe wan released after several hours on orders of Deputy Prosecutor Bert C. Rows. | Caverly said he bought the acid |for a toothache. fe explained he | put the girl on a bus at Algona Inte |Tuesday night. She was found | Wednesday night lying on the road, | five miles from Auburn, unconscious from poison she had swallowed. Of this act Caverly sild he knew noth ing. ‘The girs attempt at euicide was due, according to her aunt, Mrs. Denton Burke, to her grief over the disappearance of her mother and 13- yearold brother last October. Depu- | ty sheriffs claim they also have proof that a love affair was partly respon- sible for her despondent mood. HE WAS BADLY | WORRIED OVER | HIS CONDITION |Seaftle Man Was in Bad Shape for Many Years But | Says He’s Now Over All His Troubles | iz) >) ry 1?) Tremendous Shipment Just Here From New York WRAPS, CAPES ‘COATS, DOLMANS NEARLY 1,000 Every new and dashingly smart model favored by the most aristocratic dress- ers in the Fashion centers— “I don't believe I ever felt better |in my life than I do right now, and it is Tanlac and nothing else that | has fixed me up in such fine shape,” said Wm. H. Whiteman of 115 Fourth Ave, North, Seattle, recent jly. Mr, Whiteman has been In the lemploy of the city since 1907 and is now connected with the health department. | “For @ good many years I had |been bothered with rheumatism, and at times it nearly knocked me out. My legs would ache and pain me so I could hardly stand on my feet, and the muscles would all get sore and stiff. My arms and shoulders hurt terribly sometimes, and my back was weak and lame, and, in fact, I ached all over, “My stomach got out of order land my appetite went back on me. | Nothing seemed to eet well with ne, and at times I became so nau- | seated I couldn't keep down a thing |1 ate. I had headaches a lot and got #0 nervous I was afraid to drive jan automobile. I slept poorly, fell joff in weight, and my condition | worried me no little. “Well, sir, if anybody had told me Tanlac would fix me up like it has I wouldn't have believed a word of it, but, it’s a fact, five bottles have put me back In asx good health as I ever enjoyed. I haven't a pain any- where about me, eat whatever I please and sleep fine. In fact, I'm in tip-top shape, and every time I |get the chance now I elip in a good word for Taniac.” ‘Tanlac is sold in Seattle by the Bartell Drug Stores and leading druggists.—Advertisement. The most picturesque wraps ever fashioned, elegantly trimmed in silk and wool embroidery and full silk lined. Materials include high-grade Bolivias, Goldtones, Velours, Broadcloths and Tricotines. These magnificent Wraps, absolutely the greatest values ever offered in Seattle, are treated in such variety that they are as eagerly demanded by women of mature years as well as the youthful. All sizes and all popular colors. Article tn Read M ny’ Star Seta New Sports New Summer Suits DRESSES Suits New Tailored CAR DRIVEN OVER CLIFF | Stolen $3,500 Limousine Is Smashed Polloe were necking Thursday to determine the identity of the thieves who stole a $3,500 limousine from the Blue Taxi Co. Thursday afternoon and Grove it over a 200-foot cliff on Magnolia bluff, wrecking tt, A black and-white checked cap was | found on a tree near where the ear | plunged down the cliff. It in pomui ble that the cap was thrown from | the ear in its fall. Police point out that there is a possibility that some | ene may have been in the auto when it went over the cliff. They could Very easily have been thrown into the bay if the car dove over the cliff suddenly, ag the tide wag high at the ume. The more probable theory fs that the car was wrecked by enemies of Joe Himethoch, of the company. He was unable to tell Capt. M. T. Pow: ers the names of any avengers that he suspected. The auto was stolen at 845 a, m. Te was found, wrecked, by Joe Con nolly, ‘owner of the Magnolia Beach boathouse, at 1 o'clock. Himelhoch’s loss is covered by Insurance, SEATTLE AFTER BIG CONVENTION Seattle ts going after the 1925 na- tional triennial conclave of the Grand Commandery of Knights Templar to fetch it here, When the Grand Commandery of Washington began its business ses sion at 10 a. m. Saturday at the Ma sonic temple, a committee reported ® program to land the 1925 conven- tion, An invitation wil be sent to the National Commandery when it opens in New Orleans next summer, Following Friday's parade, a Grand Templar ball was held Fri- day night in the Shrine auditorium, attended by Knights Templar in uni- form and their partners, Election and installation of officers ‘was scheduled for Friday. Rich Widow Admits | Helping Burn Home SPOKANE, May 6—Mra, D. C. Corbin, widow of the late D. C. Cor bin, capitalist and widely known rail- road builder, yesterday confessed to police complicity in the burning of the Corbin palace here last Friday She involved her chauffour-care taker, L. E. Lilge, in the fire pact. Lilge, she declared, threatened her with bodily injury unless she com- plied with his plot. The home burned with a loss of $10,000, The fire was discovered in two places, Mrs. Corbin’s nephew narrowly es eaped death by suffocation in the fire. The confession was voluntary. HANDY HINT ON HOW TO EXCHANGE WIVES; JUST CLIP COUPON Necessity may be the mother of invention, but hard Puck is the father of many an original idea, For instance, if you become tired of your husband or wife, just clip the coupon from your mar- riage certificate and exchange your spouse for another. This is the solution for marital incompatability contained in a let- ter to William T. Beéks, chief deputy collector of internal reve. nue, from an American tn British 1 am now devoting my entire time to my dental practice, Having now people $16 $16 $16 All Together—Let’s Make the Great Northwest Greater an ee en Sul] (oNE Den eereeonn = mt ul ar I do not compete with Cheap < | Dentists, nor do | "I y pocket Ae on, Seattle San Francisco Les Angeles ® 1 1m ja dollar, and our interests are | | mutual—we both win, Open, evenings till 7 and till 12:30 for people who w EDWIN OWN, D. D. & Heattle'n Sundays orks Columbia. . The writer states that because of illness he earned less than $2,000 during 1920, and therefore will not have to make an income tax return. Also because of his illness, he says, his wife left him and their four children to live || with another man who could sup. coupon attached to the American marriage certificate,” the writer adds, “so that when a woman tires of a man she can exchange him for another, Whether this would cut the divorce records or not, it would at least be legal and horora- ble.” ~The Rhodes Co. J ust Arrived and On Sale: 100 boys’ double - brcasted, two knicker suits, made as sketched, of durable and attractive woolen fabrics. Coat and trous- ers are full lined and splendidly tailored. These suits, if bought and marked in the usual way, would sell at much higher prices. Sizes 8 to 18 years. Saturday, a suit, at Main Floor Jersey Sports Coats For Immediate Wear $5.95 IMPLICITY, combined with smartness, is the real charm of these semi- tailored sports coats. The only trimmings affected are narrow rolled or flat belts and buttoned pock- ets of self material. These Jersey coats, featured for Saturday, are made as model pictured and are shown in black, navy, red, green and brown. range from 16 to 44. Sizes . Millinery For Dress, Street and Sports Wear $7.50 ‘URRENT fashions in millinery are delightful comple- ments to the Spring and Summer frocks. The model pictured is of Biack Transparent Hair Braid, trimmed with @ wreath of brightly colored garden flowers. Priced at $7.50. First Son of West Is Dead in Oregon ALBANY, Ore., May 6.—The first | white child born weet of the Rocky mountains ts dead. Cyrus Hamil Walker, one of the most picturesque | Ggures among the pioneers who set- tied the West, died at his home here yesterday. Walker was born at the historic Whitman mission December 7, 1838, shortly after the arrival of his par. ents, Rev, and Mra. Ei Walker, d, | Girls’ Coats Reduced for Disposal Upper Main Floor Sizes 1 to 6 Years 9 coats, formerly $7.50, reduced, each, to. .$3.95 21 coats, formerly $9.95, reduced, each, to. .$3.95 7 coats, formerly $11.50, reduced, each, to. .$3.95 10 coats, formerly $14.50, reduced, each $3.95 ears 10 coats, formerly $14.50, reduced, each | Boston Bags of Black or Tan Leather, Each at $2.25 | i; | Main Floor 10 coats, formerly a reduced, each 16 coats, formerly $19.50, reduced, © to .. 1 coat, formerly $2 reduced to 2 coats, formerly $27.50, coats, y reduced, each, to. 36.95 Two Young Brides Try Death in Court CHICAGO, May 6—Two brides, one 14 years olf and the other 15, attempted to commit suicide in juve nue court here late yesterday by swallowing iodine. They were in court to explain their marriages. When questioned they both stated they had taken poison and expected to die. An empty bottle lay on the floor. The girls are Mary Todd and Leona Pfister. It was said at the hospital they will recover. Two Chicago St Are Now Se CHICAGO, May 6.—Two of C cago’s three May day strikes settled today and the men to their jobs. “ handlers who out returned to work today after mitting differences with their ployers over @ cut in wages to arbiter. Union printers returned to. Their demand for a 44-hour was granted, but they must @ $4.35 a week wage AVENUE rf y NION STR SATURDAY BRINGS SUPREME VALUES IN OUR SALE OF | MAY SURPRISES SPECIAL SALE OF PLIERS 7 and Sinch KLEIN a Auto Grease Gun Regular $3.00; priced $1.59 Made of heavy brass and very durable. Can be used for oil or grease. Has detach- able nozzle. Cleanser Extra Special Three . LOP. 6.6 seese 25c No more than three to a customer. No phone or C, 0, D. orders. Long-handled side eut- ting. Pattern; some insulated. 5-Foot Stanley Zig-zag Rule 49c Regular 80c Buck Chisels None better made; 1-inch and 34-inch SOCKET FIRMER 2-inch butt chisels, special VARNISHED SCREEN DOORS Special for Saturday $3.69 Exceptionally well made from _se- lected Eastern pine; 4-inch mortised frame, covered with painted black screen wire. Sizes — 80x78-inch, 82x80-inch, 84x 82-inch, 36x84-inch, ss Special $1 -69 Extn PERCOLATORS DOUBLE BOILERS TEA KETTLES COMBINATION COOKERS as shown here Basement The Store for Useful Articles; che

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